Read The Stones of Angkor (Purge of Babylon, Book 3) Online
Authors: Sam Sisavath
Tags: #Thriller, #Post-Apocalypse
*
After she got
Jen settled into one of the many available rooms in the hotel, Lara showered, spending her full five minutes. That was their daily limit: five minutes in the morning and another five at night if they needed it. She always needed it. After all those months on the road, every shower counted.
Afterward, she stood nude in front of the sink and dried her hair, while Will leaned against the open bathroom door and watched her. She didn’t acknowledge him for a while, and he seemed content to just stare at her with that smile on his face that all men got when a woman took her clothes off in front of them.
Finally, she said, “My hips are fuller, have you noticed? Must be the steady diet of seafood.”
“Your hips? I haven’t really noticed your hips.”
She rolled her eyes at him. “You’re such a charmer, Will.”
“Is that why you love me?”
“Uh huh. Your ability to shoot things in the face was a close second.”
“Good to know, good to know.”
He walked over and picked her up. She yelped and turned around in his arms, wrapping her legs around his waist and kissing him.
Will carried her to the bed and laid her down, then sat back and watched her for a moment.
She stretched her arms and legs lazily in front of him. “Like what you see?”
“Very much.”
“So do something about it.”
“I should let you know. I expect my good-bye sex to be spectacular.”
“You’ve had a lot of experience, have you?”
He shrugged. “Ladies like a man in uniform.”
“You’re not wearing a uniform.”
“I could put one on.”
“You have it with you?”
“For the purpose of this conversation? Yes. Yes, I do.”
“Lame-o,” she said, and pulled him down to her.
*
Afterward, she lay
in his arms, their bodies sticky and tangled, glistening from either the heat or the sex, she wasn’t entirely sure. It should have been uncomfortable, but it wasn’t. Maybe she was just used to it. She had learned to get used to a lot of things these days, but this was one of the more pleasant ones.
She stared at the darkening patio window across the room, secured in the knowledge that they were safe here—in this hotel, on this island. It hadn’t been easy after that first night, when they uncovered the island’s true purpose. But day after day, week after week, it got easier, until she stopped looking at every coming nightfall with mounting dread. It still happened every now and then when she least expected it, but they were rare these days.
“You’re awake,” he said softly.
“Uh huh.”
“You okay?”
“I’m fine. Better than fine.”
“Good.”
“When was the last time we were apart for longer than a day?”
“Before Starch.”
“Not since?”
“I don’t think so. Why? Are you tired of me already?”
“Yes, but that’s not the point.”
“What is the point?”
“I was just wondering…”
“The good kind of wondering, or the ‘I think we should see other people’ type of wondering?”
“Really? And what other people would I be seeing at the end of the world? Blaine? Danny? Maddie?”
“Maddie?”
“What, you think I should limit myself to just the boys?”
“Then why not include Carly?”
“Gross. She’s like my little sister.”
“I’m just saying, if we’re already going there…”
“That’s disgusting, Will. Don’t ever talk about me and Carly like that again.”
“A guy can dream, can’t he?”
“Only if he’s Danny.”
“Gotcha.”
“Anyway, I was
wondering
…about this thing we have. You and me.”
“What about it?”
“It’s been good. This thing.”
She saw a ghost of a smile creasing his lips in the semidarkness. “You’re not trying to get me to buy you a ring and make this official, are you?” he asked.
“Perish the thought. Besides, where would we find a minister?”
“Whew, escaped the noose by the skin of my nose.”
“Oh, that’s funny.”
She punched him as hard as she could in the chest. He laughed it off, grabbed her by the shoulders, and reversed their positions until she was lying on the bed underneath him. He kissed her, then pulled back a bit to trace the length of her breasts with his fingers as if they had all the time in the world.
She loved these moments. The quiet and solitude of the island, especially in the evenings, was a gift she was determined not to waste. To have someone to share it with, someone who had been through everything she had, made it all the more special.
Please, God, don’t take this away from us.
Lara watched his face, letting herself become lost in his soft-brown eyes. They didn’t speak for a while. It used to drive her crazy, the way he could be silent for so long. Will could do that. He was so unlike Danny in that respect. Unless someone was shooting at them—and even then—Danny always felt a need to fill the void. Will, on the other hand, could look at her in the darkness for hours without saying a word.
“By the way,” she said, “you still owe me one.”
“I do?”
“Oh, right, you forgot. Give me a break. You didn’t forget when you reminded me it was your turn last time.”
He laughed. “I’m going to take your word for it.”
“Trust me, you definitely owe me one.”
“I was hoping you’d let me get away with it. After all, I am leaving the island for who knows how long.”
“Nice try. Now get down there.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
He kissed her on the lips, then moved down to her breasts. By the time he was at her belly, the last remaining light in the room had begun to fade and she was only aware of Will, existing in this space with her, at this moment.
His touch against her skin, the warmth of his breath against her belly…
As he continued moving southbound, she sighed into the darkness, closed her eyes tightly, and found his shoulders somewhere around her waist. She held on and tried to make the night last as long as possible.
GABY
She was happy.
The last time she was this happy was when she finally hit something with the M4. After that first hit, it was all uphill. It was like sex that way—once you got it over with the first time, the second—and third, and fourth, and fifth—times came naturally.
Training on the M4 and the Glock with Will and Danny were some of the best times of her life. For the first month, it was almost exclusively Will, with Danny still recuperating from his wounds. Will didn’t so much as teach her to become a soldier as he taught her how to become
more
. More than she had ever thought she was capable of, or realized she had the potential to become.
“Muscle memory,” he had told her. “When you can do it without thinking about it, that’s when you can stop.”
By the end of the second month, Will had enough faith in her abilities to give her overwatch duty when either he or Danny were occupied elsewhere. She became, essentially, the third most valuable shooter on the island, and Gaby didn’t take the job lightly. Their trust in her put her on a high that she still hadn’t come down from yet.
So when Will came to her room last night and asked how she would feel about coming with him to the hospital with Jen, it was all she could do not to blurt out,
“Hell yeah.”
She was packing for the trip the next morning when Danny showed up. He had a palm full of blueberries, one of the island’s more abundant fruits, and his mouth and hands were already stained with blue and purple juices. From a distance, Danny could have passed for an old teenager and not a thirty-year-old ex-Army Ranger.
“Ready to go?” he asked.
“Almost.” She stuffed only the bare essentials into the field pack she was bringing with her—a pair of shirts, pants, underwear, and socks—before filling the rest of the space with spare magazines for the Glock and M4 that she couldn’t fit into the pouches around her waist.
“Your first field work.”
“Got any advice?”
“Stay close to Will and do what he says.”
“That’s it?”
“What were you expecting? Something more Mr. Miyagi-like?”
“Who?”
“Mr. Miyagi.”
“I don’t know who that is.”
He grunted. “Never mind.”
“What else?”
“Always use a condom.”
“My mother could have told me that.”
“Don’t go into the barn.”
“The barn?”
“It’s tough getting hay out of ass cracks.”
“Good to know.”
“And finally, always follow the Army Ranger creed: It’s not your job to die for your country, it’s your job to make the other guy die for his.”
“That’s the Army Ranger creed?”
“Of course. Would I lie to you?”
“Yes.”
“I’m hurt.” Danny touched his chest, then went the extra mile and slid down the wall and let his hands flop away, the berries spilling onto the floor.
“Finally, he shuts up,” Gaby said. She slung her pack, grabbed her M4 off the bed, and stepped over Danny on her way out into the hall. “You’re cleaning up my carpet before you go.”
“Yes, ma’am,” he said after her.
*
She found Lara
on the patio outside the hotel, watching Will, Blaine, and Maddie loading three heavy green ammo cans into Jen’s helicopter.
Lara smiled at her. “Excited, afraid, a little bit of both?”
“A little bit of both, but mostly excited.”
“You’ll do great.”
“Thanks.”
Of all the people on the island, it was easiest for her to bond with Lara. The fact that they could have passed for sisters didn’t hurt. Gaby was a few inches taller, but they had almost the exact same blonde hair, except Gaby kept hers tied in a ponytail so it wouldn’t interfere with her aim.
“Do me a favor?” Lara said. “Blonde to blonde?”
Gaby smiled. “Sure.”
“I really love him. If you could bring him back in one piece, I would really appreciate it.”
“Okay, but if he accidentally puts his hand on my thigh, can I accidentally shove my tongue down his throat?”
“Only if he puts his hand on your right thigh.”
“Not the left?”
“No. The left means he’s only mildly interested. The right is the serious thigh.”
“Deal.”
Lara turned around and hugged her, and Gaby felt a sudden flood of emotions she wasn’t prepared for. It almost got the best of her, but she managed to push it down so she wouldn’t start crying like a girl.
Girls cry. Soldiers don’t. You’re not a girl anymore.
“Take care of yourself, Gaby,” Lara whispered. “And him too, if you have the time.”
“I will. He and Danny are like the brothers I always hated.”
Lara laughed. “You’ve been spending too much time with Danny.”
“You think?”
“Just a tad.”
“That would explain the strange desire to punch myself in the face for absolutely no reason.”
They heard the helicopter’s rotor blades starting up behind them, the
whup-whup-whup
getting faster and faster, pushing the wind all the way over to the patio.
She looked over, saw Will waving at them.
“That’s my signal,” Gaby said.