Page 91 of Five Survive
He cleared his throat.
“No.”
Oliver crumpled the piece of paper in his fist.
That crushing weight lifted from Red’s chest, just a little. She could breathe again and she did. No. The final vote was no. Threeno,twoyes.Which meant they weren’t going to kick her out of the RV, they weren’t going to send her out to her death. She was alive.
Arthur sighed, closing his eyes.
Maddy clasped her hands to her cheeks, bottom lip threatening togo.
Simon nodded, his mouth tight, and Reyna looked up at the ceiling, stretching out her neck.
Oliver kept the vote in his hand, fist tightening around it, crushingit.
Something curdled in Red’s gut, beside the cool rush of relief, something hot and unwelcome. Two people voted for her to die. Oliver she’d expected, it was his idea after all. But of the four left—Maddy, Arthur, Reyna and Simon—one of them voted for her to go. That hurt more than she could say, twisting through her insides, the feeling making itself a home there beside the guilt and theshame, those hot, red feelings. What was worse, knowing or never knowing who it was?
“Thank god,” Maddy exhaled, rushing forward, past the others. She stepped up to Red and wrapped her in a tight hug, trapping Red’s arms by her sides. “Thank god,” she said again, pressing her cheek against Red’s, not letting go. Red could feel her heart too, wingbeat fast in her chest.
“It’s okay,” Red said as Maddy finally pulled away. “I’m fine.”
Maddy stood back and studied her face, eyes brimming with the threat of tears. “You sure?” she asked.
No, Red wasn’t fine at all, put another check in theNObox on the back of Arthur’s hand. She wasn’t fine but she was alive and, really, how was that much different from the rest of her life?
Arthur caught her eye across the way. He lifted his chin up, blinking slowly at her, his hands clasped together in front of him, squeezing, like it was her hand he was holding.
Red squeezed back, fist at her side.
“What do we do now?” Simon asked, speaking into the emptiness of the RV, only their breathing and the swirl of the ever-present static.
No one answered, no one knew how to. Especially not Red. Should she thank them for not sending her out, was that what everyone was waiting for? Thank three of them, at least. How was she ever going to stop thinking about that?
Red pressed her elbows into the counter and leaned into them, taking the weight off her feet. Fuck, she was tired. Bone-tired and bone-scared, and when would this terrible night ever end?
Oliver blew out a mouthful of air, cheeks ticking as his mouth flickered. He turned, collecting the unfolded votes from the table,dropping them back one by one into the bowl. Twoyes,threeno.It had been close. What if just one more person had turned?
Oliver picked up the bowl and walked toward the kitchen counter, toward Red.
He placed the bowl down, skidding around its lower rim, the ceramic clattering against the surface before it came to a final stop.
Red watched it and then she watched him. He glanced up then, meeting her eyes, dark shadows across his.
“I’m sorry, Red,” Oliver said, voice too flat, too normal in this most un-normal time and place.
It happened so fast.
Oliver lunged at her, arms coiling around her waist, iron-tight, pinning down her arms.
“Oliver, no!” Red screamed.
He lifted her off her feet, body braced against his as he stumbled toward the front door.
“NO!” Maddy screeched, inhuman, the sound curling in and out of Red’s ears as she writhed in Oliver’s grip.
She couldn’t move her arms, but she kicked out, trying to catch the wall and push back against him.
Her feet slipped off.
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