In the After

In the After by Demitria Lunetta

Book: In the After by Demitria Lunetta Read Free Book Online
Authors: Demitria Lunetta
Tags: english eBooks
even walk around in socks without stomping like a baby elephant. She also snores more often than not.
    She isn’t snoring now, though. I walk across the basement floor with a strange feeling in my stomach. Something isn’t right. I pull back the blankets.
    Amber is gone.

CHAPTER ELEVEN
    I broke the news to Baby as soon as she woke up, after I checked to make sure the gate was locked and Amber hadn’t taken anything important. Baby is crushed. We don’t say it, but we both think Amber is dead. She couldn’t make it a block on her own, much less live out in the city with no comfy, secure house. With no one to feed her and take care of her, she would be alien lunch in no time.
    You’re glad she’s gone , Baby accuses, her face dark with anger.
    I shake my head. I’m sorry I yelled at Amber, but she put us in danger. I needed her to understand . I try to put my hand on her shoulder, but she pulls away, her arms crossed. She’s never been difficult like this before and I’m worried.
    Baby’s lip quivers. She turns away, not wanting me to see her cry. I reach out to hug her, but change my mind. Maybe she just needs some time alone. She doesn’t remember ever losing anyone.
    I go downstairs to the basement. Amber taped up a bunch of Baby’s drawings and pictures cut out from old magazines. I start to take these down, grimacing at long-dead models and TV heartthrobs.
    I fold up the blankets and place them to the side. The papers I gather and put in a plastic bag. I’ll throw them away on our next outing. Baby doesn’t need to be reminded of Amber every time she comes downstairs.
    I sit on the couch and put my head in my hands. I’m not that horrible. It was all just a coincidence. I should have exercised more caution, but I can’t blame myself, even if Baby resents me. Whether or not I meant for all this to happen, I still have to make it up to Baby somehow. There are other survivors. I can watch a few, see who is trustworthy. I can invite people to live here. We don’t have to be alone.
    I feel a tap on my shoulder. I turn to find Baby glowering at me, angry. She is so damned quiet. I didn’t hear her come down the stairs.
    What are you doing? Her little fingers move furiously. Sometimes I forget how young she is.
    I’m just trying to clean up , I explain.
    Baby grabs the bag of drawings and cutouts. Amber and I made these . She crumples them against her chest.
    I know. I thought it would be better . . . I stop signing. I’ve never seen Baby so mad. Once again I’ve made the wrong choice. I should have left Amber’s room the way it was, for Baby to sort out when she was ready.
    I’m sorry . I don’t know what else to say. I’m not perfect. I don’t have all the answers. I’m just trying to keep us safe. I start to cry softly. Please . I hold out my hand. Please don’t hate me .
    Baby’s face softens. She places the bag of papers on the floor and sits next to me on the couch. I hug her close.
    I don’t hate you , she tells me. I just feel . . . She searches for the right word. I feel empty .
    I rest my head on top of hers. I am so sorry .
    Baby nods and scoots onto the floor. She opens the bag of papers and begins to sort them into piles. Can I put these in my room? she signs, without looking up. For when Amber comes back .
    I place my hand on her shoulder. Yes . I don’t tell her that Amber is almost certainly dead.

    Baby no longer sleeps in my room. She is more withdrawn. She likes to sit alone and look at her picture books. She isn’t even very excited when I bring her new, better-fitting clothes. She glances at me, shrugs, and puts them in her closet.
    Don’t you want to try them on? I ask.
    Maybe later .
    I go to my room to read. Baby doesn’t want me around and I don’t want to force her. I wonder if my parents felt the same way; I never wanted to hang out with them either. Not once I turned ten and decided they were lame. I wish I’d done more things with them, not given them such a

Similar Books

The Bad Widow

Barbara Elsborg

Bone Crossed

Patricia Briggs

Hunted

Jaycee Clark

Making Out

Megan Stine

Bannon Brothers

Janet Dailey

Hero!

Dave Duncan

Everything to Him

Elizabeth Coldwell

More

Keren Hughes

The Osage Orange Tree

William Stafford