Jonah.â
âConsider it done.â He rose. âIâll be back,â he told Katie.
âI know you will.â
âAll right, Katie, letâs have a look.â
âDr. Hopman?â
âRachel. Itâs Rachel, since we appear to have formed an alliance.â
âRachel, when youâre done, can I hold my babies?â
âAbsolutely.â And the spark that had died inside her over the past horrible days rekindled.
Â
ESCAPE
How shall man escape from that which is written;
How shall he flee from his destiny?
âFerdowsi
Â
CHAPTER SIX
While Katie nursed her daughter for the first time, Arlys Reid decided to take her show on the road. For days now sheâd depended on Chuckâs reports, on what she could dig out of the shaky Internet, with the few observations from her quick hikes to and from the studio mixed in.
Sheâd wanted to be a reporter, she told herself as she checked the batteries in her tape recorder. It was time she went out on the street and reported.
She didnât check with her producer, her director. Whatever happened, the decision would be hersâand part of that decision, she knew, weighed from holding back the worst of what Chuck had told her that morning.
Help wasnât coming.
As she got up to put on her coat, Fred looked over from her desk.
âWhere are you going?â
âOut. To work. I need you to cover for me, Fred. Just say Iâmtaking a nap or something. I want to get a man-on-the-street segment. If I can find one who doesnât want to rob, rape, or kill me.â
âNot going to cover.â Fred stood up. âIâm going with you.â
âAbsolutely not.â
Little Fredâall five feet, one inch of herâjust smiled. âAbsolutely am. Iâve spent plenty of time out there. Somebodyâs got to get the Ho Hos and chips, right? And twoâs better than one,â she added, swinging on a bright blue jacket covered with pink stars. âThereâs a marketâwell, kind of a hole-in-the-wall placeâacross Sixth on Fifty-first. Itâs boarded up, but some of us know you can pull back a couple of the boards and squeeze in.â
She pulled a pink cap with a tail ending in a bouncing pom-pom onto her curly mop of red hair. âThereâs still food, so we can pick up a few supplies. Nobody takes more than they need. We made an agreement.â
ââWeâ?â
âItâs like ⦠the neighborhood. Whoâs left. You donât take more than you need so everybody gets a share.â
âFred.â Arlys shouldered on her briefcase and studied the little redhead with the perky, freckled face. âThatâs a story. Youâre a story.â
Eyes of soft, quiet green clouded. âYou canât broadcast it, Arlys. Some people, if they find out thereâs food theyâll take it all. Hoard it.â
âNo addressânot even the area.â To seal it, Arlys crossed a finger over her heart. âJust the story. One about people working together, helping each other. A bright spot. Who doesnât need a bright spot right now? You could give me some detailsânot names or locationsâjust how you came to the agreement, how it works.â
âIâll tell you while weâre out for the MOS.â
âAll right, but we stick together.â Arlys thought of the gun in her bag.
âYou got that. And donât worry. Iâve got a way of seeing if somebodyâs friendly or an asshole. Well, some assholes arenât looking to kill you or anything. Theyâre just assholes because they always were.â
âCanât argue with that.â
They started out.
âYou know, Jimâs not going to like you taking chances.â
Arlys shrugged. âHeâll like if I get a story out of it. There are real people out there, just trying to get through another day. How do they do it? What
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