Love in an Undead Age by A.M. Geever (classic fiction TXT) đ
- Author: A.M. Geever
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Mario released her hand and smiled sheepishly. âIâll go see whatâs happened to our girl.â
Miranda watched his ramrod-straight form that somehow moved liked water work its way into the crowd. What had just happened? She had not known it herselfâthe Farm, what it meantâuntil she heard him say it. How could he have known what she didnât know herself? She had scurried off, not wanting to be there when he got back.
Miranda ran her thumb along the edge of the picture. Then Em got pregnant and that was that.
They became more accustomed to the ânew normal.â Getting the Farm underway kept Miranda busy, but she still went on missions. She developed a reputation as an expedition leader, regaling her friends with tales of derring-do. Her skill at killing zombies was second to none, yet Mario urged her to be more cautious.
âYou donât have to sign on for every dangerous thing that comes down the pike,â he would tell her.
âAnd if I donât, who will?â she would always reply.
Miranda smiled as she remembered how, after a while, he began to preempt her by adding, âAnd I donât care who will if you donât.â
Mario worried about her, but he was a worrywart. Anyone still in their right mind worried when a friend went outside the walls, and Mario had become one of Mirandaâs best friends. Maybe he worried a little more than he should, but best friends worry more. Thatâs why theyâre best.
He almost always managed to be there when she rolled home, always on his way somewhere else but long enough to see that she was back in one piece. Sometimes the look of relief on his face unnerved her. She was happier he was there than she had a right to. She tried not to be. She told herself she shouldnât look forward to seeing him so much, but it did not make any difference. She couldnât stop feeling that way. She gave up in favor of trying not to let it show, even as his smiles grew tighter and his hugs more fierce.
And so it went, until the night he offered to walk her home from The Hut. Emily had canceled the sitter and stayed home with Michael, who was almost two and running a temperature. Karen had departed before them with the latest Asshole du Jour. Doug, who had not yet felt Godâs tap on the shoulder, waved them on. He was busy chatting up a girl and told Miranda heâd never get lucky while she was around muddying the waters.
They set out from the bar, but as was becoming their custom more and more when they were alone, they ended up in the St. Clare Garden. The garden was a relic from when SCU had only been a university. It was the length of a football field from the bar, and its small square space offered nothing in the way of privacy. There were two benches on one side. Herbs, succulents, and flowers filled the rest, planted around a statue of the communityâs patroness.
âI hate that statue,â Mario said as he sat down. âShe looks sad and worried. Saints should look serene.â
âYouâd look worried if your kid was being nailed to a crossâoh, no, thatâs Mary. You canât even see her face from this side,â Miranda countered, as if the thought had just occurred to her rather than their banter being the same as the last time and the time before that. She gave Mario a nudge as she sat down. âBudge over so I can stretch out.â
The warm night air felt soft against Mirandaâs skin. She lay down so that the top of her head almost touched Marioâs thigh, then extended her right leg over the arm of the bench to elevate it.
âHowâs your leg?â
âDoc says Iâm fit as a fiddle, but it feels better if I set it up for a bit when Iâve been standing.â
Mario began to tickle her nose with the ends of her ponytail. âI almost had a heart attack when I saw you brought in on that stretcher. Your broken leg took years off my life.â
âStop that,â she said, batting the hair in his fingers away. She felt a little dizzy, with just enough of a buzz that she would not feel it tomorrow. âYou always go straight to the disaster scenario. Tickle fights happen all the time when youâre waiting to clear medical, and Doug is a sadist, I swear. Never occurred to me Iâd thrash my way off the damn truck.â
âI wish youâd quit doing expeditions,â Mario said, his voice unhappy.
Miranda sighed. Theyâd had this conversation a million times.
âYou know I canât do that. There are so many things we still need that help your research. The sewers arenât going to keep working unless we get out there and take care of them. If they donât work then weâve got cholera, and typhoid, andââ
âI know,â he interrupted. âI just wish you werenât doing it.â
Miranda closed her eyes and listened to the symphony of crickets. She turned her head toward the center of the garden, felt Marioâs hand brush against her head as he fidgeted. He did that when he was unhappy.
They had been doing this for months, hanging out like this. Fifteen minutes here, an hour there, never doing anything she couldnât tell Emily all about, but she felt guilty anyway.
âIf itâll make you feel better, Iâll sign a âNo Dyingâ contract,â she offered, trying to sound lighthearted. âWe can even get it notarized.â
She could feel his frustration in the long pause before he said, âThatâs not funny, Miranda.â
âI was just kidding,â she huffed, annoyed.
âNo, you werenât. Whenever I try to talk to you about anything real, you make it into a joke to shut me up.â
Miranda sat up and turned to face him. âThatâs not fair!â
âFor Christâs sake, Miranda. At least have the courtesy not to insult me.â
Mario hadnât raised his voice. It wasnât even tight or angry, but it felt like he had slapped her across the face. The garden wasnât lit well, but it was not completely dark, either. His face was stamped with longing and fear and something that looked very much like hunger.
âYouâre the only thing I think about,â he said, his voice pitched low. âI know I shouldnât. I know itâs not right, but God help me itâs true. Knowing Iâll see you is what gets me out of bed every day. Youâre the first thing I think of when I wake up and the last at night, and every damn minute in between. And I think you know it.â
Panic and excitement seized her. âYou shouldnâtââ she whispered, but then he flung himself headlong into the void where she hid all the feelings she worked so hard to deny.
âI canât stand the thought of losing you, Miri, and I cannot pretend for another second that youâre just a friend. Iâve tried to ignore this, pretend itâs not real, but I canât. I just canât. I canât pretend anymore.â
Miranda tried to speak. She should say something to save them from doing what could not be undone, but instead she leaned into him. They both hesitated when his lips brushed hers, as if to gauge, would the other change their mind? And then they were kissing, a tangle of tongues and lips. The reservoir of pent-up longing she had denied for so long blazed and exploded like a solar flare.
Mario held her tight in a hungry embrace. His lips moved to her forehead, her eyelids, the hollow of her throat. She felt the air slip past her scalp when he inhaled, greedy even for the scent of her hair.
âThis will kill her,â Miranda whispered. âIf she ever finds outâŠâ
His hands settled on either side of her face. âIf I canât feel you, be with you, Iâm going to lose my mind.â
âWhat are we going to do?â
âI donât know⊠The only thing I know for sure is that I love you.â
Her heart soared to hear him say it. She wasnât carrying a lonely torch. It wasnât her imagination. Mario loved her like she loved him. The rest didnâtâcouldnâtâmatter.
They started for Swig without a word. The two-minute walk seemed to take forever. They sauntered through the lobby with exaggerated nonchalance, never looked at one another in the deafening silence of the elevator as it groaned its way to the top floor. Miranda fumbled with her keys outside her apartment, cursing the lock before it finally gave way.
As soon as the door shut behind them, the facade slipped away.
âIâve wanted you for so long,â he said, pulling her to him.
Miranda could not catch her breath to answer. Eventually they made their way to her bed. Their naked bodies intertwined on the soft, worn blanket. He entered her with a gasp, and then they moved as one. Climbing and rising, riding a wild desire filled with longing and need, desperation and joy, until his cries of release had mingled with hers.
Miranda put the picture back, drowning in sweet melancholy for a thing so rare and so irretrievably lost. They had been so innocent then, as they tumbled from grace to answer loveâs heady imperative. Another Miranda, another Mario, another lifetime ago.
âYou canât still miss me, you canât still care. You canât still love me. You canât,â she whispered. Tears blurred her vision. The smiling faces of the photograph warped and ran together. âEven I wouldnât wish that on you.â
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