“I gave up on that one,” Wendy admitted. They generally worked out once a day for about an hour switching between strength and cardiovascular sessions. Lately, though, they had been concentrating more on weight training; Wendy was trying out for a “professional” emergency services position and Elgars was backstopping her training. Today Wendy had stuck to warm-ups; when they were done she was going to go to the tryouts and she didn’t even want to
“You ought to start at a lower weight and rep,” the captain said. “It’s good for the wrists.”
“I can see that,” Wendy admitted, looking at the captain’s; the woman’s forearms were starting to look like a female Popeye’s.
“Makes it easier to climb ladders among other things, most of the stuff in your PPE.”
“Yeah, well, time to go to
“One of these days I will figure out the purpose of a fire department in this place,” Elgars said, wiping off her face with a towel and wrapping the towel around her neck. “Every fire that has broken out was extinguished before the crew arrived; that is what sprinklers and Halon are for. I think they’re just a very overtrained clean-up crew.”
“Well, at least it feels like you’re doing something,” Wendy said sharply.
“And caring for screaming children is not doing something?” Annie asked with a thin smile.
“Do
“No,” the captain said, leading the way out of the gym. “But, then again,
“You get along with Billy,” Wendy said with her own tight smile.
“That is because he doesn’t say
“Well, there is that,” Wendy snapped. “You weren’t in Fredericksburg; you can’t know what it was like.”
“No, I can’t,” Elgars said. “Thank you very much for pointing that out. I was not in Fredericksburg and I wouldn’t remember anyway.”
Wendy stopped and looked at the officer for a moment. “When did we start fighting?”
Elgars stopped in turn and cocked her head. “I think when I complained about the fire department.”
“Okay,” Wendy said. “It’s something to do that
“I’m tired of wiping noses. I’m tired of not making a contribution. I’m tired of being treated like some sort of brood mare, especially since the only guy I’m willing to be one with is NEVER HERE!”
“Okay,” Annie said, raising a hand. “Gotcha.”
“As to Billy,” Wendy continued, leading the way down the corridor, “Shari was the last person out of Central Square. Billy… looked back.”
“I don’t know what that means,” Elgars said with a sigh. “What and where is Central Square?”
“It was the big shopping center outside of Fredericksburg,” Wendy explained patiently. “The Posleen dropped right on it. Shari just… walked away. Carrying Susie and leading Kelly and Billy. Billy… looked back. He’s never been right since.”
“Okay,” Elgars said patiently. “I
“The Posleen were… eating the people there.”
“Ah.” Elgars thought about that for a second. “That would be bad.”
“And they apparently were… spreading out towards Shari. She says she doesn’t really know because she wouldn’t look back. But Billy did.”
“Okay,” the captain said with a frown. “I guess that would be bad.”
“You don’t get it, do you?” Wendy asked. She’d noticed that sometimes the sniper was sometimes almost inhumanly dense about stuff.
“No,” Elgars replied.
“It was like one of those nightmares,” Wendy said with a shudder. “Where something’s chasing you and you can’t get away no matter how fast or where you run. The docs think he’s sort of… locked up in that. Like he can’t think about anything else; he’s just replaying the nightmare.”
“I still don’t get it,” Elgars opined. “I don’t have that nightmare.”
“You don’t?” Wendy asked. “Never?”
“I did once,” Elgars admitted. “But I turned around and killed the thing that was following me.” She shuddered. “It was one of the octopuses again.”
“Octopuses?” Wendy stopped and turned to the captain. “What octopuses?”
“You don’t dream about giant purple octopuses?” Elgars asked in surprise. “I do. Usually I’m watching from the outside and they’re pulling out my brain. It’s like it’s all squiggling worms and they lay it out on a table and hit the worms with mallets to get them to quit squiggling. Every time they hit one of the worms, I can feel it in my head. You never have that dream?”
Wendy had gone from astonishment to wide-eyed shock and now turned back towards their destination shaking her head. “Huh, uh. And, friend that you are, I have to admit that that falls into the category of TMI.”
“TMI?” Elgars asked.
“ ‘Too Much Information.’ ”