when he held out a burgundy backpack with candy-pink trim.
He grinned back at her. âYou like pink. They had one in stock.â
âMax.â Blinking away the tears, she took it. âWow. Already heavy.â
âI loaded them both upâyours and my manly camo.â
Though he didnât tell her his held a 9mm and extra clips heâd found in a looted storeroom.
âI got each of us a multi-tool and a kit for filtering water, some bungee cords.â He took off his hat, shoved his fingers through his hair. âWeâre New Yorkers, Lana. Urbanites. Weâre going to be strangers in a strange land out there.â
âWeâll be together.â
âI wonât let anyone hurt you.â
âGood. I wonât let anyone hurt you, either.â
âLetâs pack up the rest. We might have to hike awhile before we find something drivable. I want to be out of New York before dark.â
As they added to the backpacks, he eyed her knife roll.
âAll of them?â
âI didnât take a single pair of Manolos. That stings, Max. It stings.â
He considered it, then chose a bottle of wine from the rack, slipped it into his pack. âSeems fair.â
âIt does. You have a knife on your belt. Thatâs a knife sheath, isnât it?â
âItâs a tool. And a precaution,â he added when she said nothing. After a moment, he unzipped the front pocket of the pack, took out the gun and holster.
Shocked, sincerely, to see a gun in his hand, she stepped back. âOh, Max. Not a gun. Weâve both always felt the same way about guns.â
âA strange land, Lana. A dangerous one.â He clipped it on his belt. âYou havenât been out in nearly two weeks.â He took her hand, squeezed it. âTrust me, itâs necessary.â
âI do trust you. I want to get out, Max, get somewhere guns arenât necessary, and knives arenât a precaution. Letâs go. Letâs just go.â
She started to put on the cashmere coatâblue as her eyesâheâd given her for Christmas, but at his head shake, switched to her parka. At least he didnât quibble about the cashmere scarf she wrapped around her neck.
He helped her shoulder her backpack. âCan you handle it?â
She made a fist, bent her arm at the elbow. âIâm an urbanite who uses the gym. Or used to.â
With it, she picked up her purse, put it on cross-body.
âLana, you donât needââ
âIâm leaving my food processor, my Dutch oven, my worn exactlyonce Louboutin over-the-knee boots, but Iâm not leaving without my purse.â Rolling her shoulders to adjust the pack, she gave him a steady, challenging stare. âDoom or no Doom, there are lines, Max. There are lines.â
âWere those the boots you walked into my office wearingâwith one of my shirts?â
âRight. That makes worn twice.â
âIâll miss them as much as you.â
It was good, she thought, good theyâd made each other smile before they left their home.
He hefted the bag sheâd packed. Opened the door.
âWe keep moving,â he told her. âJust keep moving north until we find a truck or an SUV.â
As her smile dropped away, she only nodded.
They moved toward the stairway at the end of the common hall. The door of the last unit opened a crack.
âDonât go out there.â
âKeep moving,â Max ordered when Lana stopped.
The door opened a little wider. Through the opening, Lana saw the woman she knew casually as Michelle. Worked in advertising, some family money, divorced, active social life.
Now Michelleâs hair, the mad tangles of it, flew around her face as if in a wild wind.
Behind her dishes, glassware, pillows, and photos flew in circles.
âDonât go out there,â she repeated. âThereâs death out there.â Then she grinned, horribly,
Tie Ning
Robert Colton
Warren Adler
Colin Barrett
Garnethill
E. L. Doctorow
Margaret Thornton
Wendelin Van Draanen
Nancy Pickard
Jack McDevitt