Breakout Paul Herron (books to read in your 20s female .TXT) đ
- Author: Paul Herron
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âAmy?â
He nods. âStaring right at me, but, like⊠intensely. Like she was concentrating on some math problem or something. I wasnât even sure she was looking at me. I thought she was just distractedâyou know when you stare at nothing?â
Sawyer nods.
âBut then she got up and came to sit next to me.â
She laughs. âJust like that?â
âJust like that.â
âWhat did she say?â
âHi.â
âWhat did you say?â
âNothing.â
âNothing?â
âI may have grunted or something. See, back then I wasnât the suave ladiesâ man you see before you now. I was pretty screwed up. I was in the middle of realizing that I hadnât actually come back from my tour without any issues. Not like I first thought. I wasnât in the best of spaces.â
âWhat did she do? When she sat next to you?â
âShe stared at me.â
Sawyer laughs again. âYouâre kidding. Like, from right next to you?â
Constantine nods. âLike she was trying to memorize my face. I could feel her looking. Then I start to go red. I can feel the color creeping up my neck.â
âAnd she still kept staring?â
âStill kept staring. I finally turn to look at her. I canât take the social embarrassment anymore. And she breaks into this smileâŠâ He trails off, remembering. âHer face just transformed. She hasâhadâthese laugh lines around her eyes. They made her look like she was about to break into laughter even when she wasnât. But when she did⊠man, those eyes just lit up the room.â
âWhat did she say?â
âShe said, and I quote, âYou look like a puppy thatâs been yanked from a kidâs warm bed and kicked out into the rain.ââ
âWhat did you say?â
âNothing. Then she asked if I wanted to go get a drink.â
âDid you go?â
âHonestly, I donât think sheâd have let me say no. So yeah, we went to a dive bar, played pool, talked about life. It was the first time Iâd smiled since I came back from Afghanistan. Looking back on it now, I think it was the best night of my life.â
Sawyer is about to respond when Felix closes the door and turns to face them, interrupting their conversation.
âCoast is clear. I guess theyâre all still busy killing each other.â He shakes his head in amazement. âMan, did you see that guy? I heard stories about Preacher, but that shit was crazy.â He holds his arms up in the air. âAnd you know I am the Lord when motherfuckers spray bullets in my name.â
Sawyer glances at Constantine. He shrugs and smiles. So much for conversation.
Felix turns his attention to her. âWhatâs the word, little lady? You doing okay after all that?â
âIâm fine.â
âGood to hear. Youâre tough, yeah? Or are you like my ex-wife? Hides all her emotions till they explode out and she comes at me with a knife.â Sawyer doesnât even get a chance to answer before he turns to Constantine. Jesus. Itâs like heâs on speed or something. âSo whatâs the next move?â
Constantine suddenly holds a finger to his lips. They all fall silent as the sound of people wading through the water passes outside the door. He waits a couple of moments, then gets up, opens the door, and ducks his head briefly outside. He closes it softly. âPreacher and his men.â
âThey heading the direction we want to go in?â asks Felix.
âLooks like it.â Constantine glances at Felix and then breaks into an unexpected grin. âIâd heard stories too, but, man⊠none of them do him justice. That guy is intense.â
Thereâs something off about Constantine, thinks Sawyer. He seems different since he came back from the armory. Somehow⊠lighter? Sheâs not sure if thatâs right. But thereâs a barely suppressed energy about him that seems like itâs about to burst out at the slightest chance.
âYou sure the inmate corridor is out of commission?â he asks Felix.
âSaw it myself. Highway to the danger zone.â
Constantine sighs and looks over at Sawyer. âWhat do you think? Stick to the plan? Go through the prison units.â
âWhat about the staff corridor?â asks Felix.
Constantine shakes his head. âWe canât.â
âWhy?â
âKincaid was there. He chased us out.â
âConstantine,â says Felix patiently, like heâs talking to a kid. âWhat do you think is the most immediate danger to us? Trying to get through seven prison units with one gun, or spooky Kincaid, who Iâm telling you right now is not sitting in that corridor like a creepy doll in a horror movie just waiting for you to walk by?â
Constantine still looks unsure.
âCome on, man. No harm in trying. We have guns now.â
âYeah,â says Sawyer. âBut it seems everyone else does too.â She looks at Constantine. âWhatâs with that?â
He shrugs. âWe were attacked. Preacherâs guys got the keys, opened up the armory. Iâm assuming itâs been emptied by now.â
âAnd Ramirez?â
âI killed him.â
âYou killed him?â asks Felix. âWhy?â
âHe shot up a lot of unarmed people. Then he killed Henry. Right in front of me.â
âHenryâs dead?â says Felix. âFuck, man.â
âWhoâs Henry?â asks Sawyer.
âThe guy I worked with in the maintenance shed,â says Constantine. âOld guy. But he was one of the good ones.â
âOh⊠Iâm sorry.â
He shrugs. âWeâve all got to go sometime. I guess tonightâs as good a night as any.â
She thinks this is an odd thing to say, but before she can question it, Constantine glances up at the old analog clock on the wall. âFive minutes are up. Letâs go. Weâve got two hours till the eye of the hurricane hits.â He hesitates, looking like heâs going to say something more. But he doesnât. Instead, he opens the door and checks the hallway before stepping outside.
They leave the mail room. Sawyer can hear gunshots echoing around the prison, but theyâre not just coming from back in the direction of the gym. Theyâre coming from up ahead too, from far in the distance. From everywhere.
The mail room is near the first door leading into the prison units. As they make their way through the corridors, Sawyer canât help noticing that the building is not coping well
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