Andrew and Eric are with Wenโs body. They are huddled on the floor to his left. They hold her. They surround her. They shield her from Leonard. They wail and scream her name, and then they are just screaming.
Moments ago, the gun and Andrewโs hands were nested dolls inside Leonardโs hands. Andrew was fatigued, weakening, and ready to yield. Leonard felt the waning resistance in Andrewโs quivering, failing attempts to push him away. Leonard was going to graciously accept surrender without judgment, without threat of reprisal, and gently guide the gun out of Andrewโs hands, and salvage salvation from ruin, but then Andrew wrecking-balled himself to the floor and pulled Leonard off-balance, bouncing his head painfully off the wall. Anger flashed like a bright and hissing road flare. He was not cold, blank, removed. Leonard was notย not-himย as when Redmond was killed. Leonard was as angry as heโs ever been and he wrenched and torqued Andrewโs arms like he wanted to rip them off, discard them, and tear the rest of the cabin and then the world into irretrievable pieces. Andrewโs hands were a fistful of hornets inside Leonardโs hands, and he squeezed, trying to crush them all. And when Leonard squeezed, he felt the subtle vibration and click of the trigger under his palms. (Leonardโs hands are currently pressed flat against the floor, yet he is still feeling that trigger click, which is now a physical time stamp delineating his brief history intoย beforeย andย after.) There was the gunshot and the jolt that reverberated up his arms. It was only after Wen fell that he noticed the heat of the passing bullet glowing on his fingers still wrapped around the gun.
Leonard wasnโt looking directly at Wen, but in the instant after the gunshot, there was a blooming flower of red, a sunspot in the blur of her
face. He wasnโt looking directly at Wen, but he saw her fold backward.
He is on all fours and he is crying. His head is down. He will not look at Wen now. He cannot look at what happened to her. He wonโt. He is a coward and a failure, and he doesnโt deserve to see her ever again.
Leonard whispers, โIโm sorry,โ over and over. He says it out loud and he says it in his head, hoping someone will believe him.
He is still going to do what must be done, what he was asked and then commanded to do. He crawls and Adrianeโs legs pass below his carriage like the yellow lines of a lonely mountain road. He makes sure to witness and remember every detail of this small journey over the length of her body. This is the first penance of many to come for breaking a promise to a child, for the hubris of issuing the promise in the first place.
Adrianeโs death, he knew, was a possibility, a probability even. Leonard says, โSorry,โ again, and this one, the quietest one, is for Adriane. He is sorry because when she was shot, he felt relief and a spark of joy that the burden of her death was taken away from him; he wouldnโt have to kill her like he killed Redmond. That Redmond might have had another name and assaulted Andrew (right now, he believes Andrew) shakes his faith in what he is doing here more than he has let on. But what choice does he really have at this point other than to continue? Continuing is neither brave nor cowardly, and it is both. Having seen what he has seen and felt what he has felt, Leonard puts his faith in the soothing power of having no choice. He reminds himself that he is only a vessel, and an imperfect one, but he fears all that has gone wrongโso terribly, horribly wrongโis his fault and his alone.
Leonard continues to crawl over Adrianeโs body and his hands sluice through her still-warm blood. His hands have always been bloody and are finally being honest about it. He was born in blood like we all were.
He slides his right hand under Adrianeโs waist and backside. He retrieves her mesh mask from a back pocket. It is soft and as fragile as a baby bird. He tries to not get blood on the mask, to keep it white for as long as he can. He has the same mask in his pocket, too. He imagines what he will see when it slides over his face. Will he see the world through it or only outlines and dark shapes? Will he no longer see the blood? He wonders if heโll be afforded the opportunity to put the mask on himself or if there will be anyone left alive to fit it over his face after he is dead.
Mask in hand and knees wading deeper into her blood, Leonard crawls until his face is directly above Adrianeโs. Her throat is a mess of ruined anatomy, still leaking blood and fizzing air bubbles and a coppery odor tinged with the acidity of bile. He does not want to linger on the ragged skin and exposed tissue of the wound, but seeing her turned-to-stone face is worse. Her lips are parted, a door thoughtlessly left open. Her squinty brown eyes are obscured by sagging upper eyelids, one hanging lower than the other. This malfunction of her smallest muscles and the resulting asymmetry is a final indignity, and he already has difficulty recalling what she looked like when she was alive.
Leonard does not want to disturb her head or body. He fears the mask erases who you were, but he must put it on her. The mask is part of the mysterious, seemingly random ritual he doesnโt understand, that was never fully explained beyond vague, dire consequences of incompletion; the ritual must be followed bureaucratically; otherwise, Wenโs and Adrianeโs deaths would be wasted. If they die for naught, what would be the point? At this thought he remembers the cabinโs TV hanging on the back wall, that eerie portal to the wider world, and he feels its black screen, that single unwavering eye leering at him. He is afraid to turn on the TV and witness its judgment, but he will have to soon.
He stretches the mask open and slides it over the crown of Adrianeโs head. There is no maybe about it; he is erasing her with this mask, and it is a blessing, one he hopes he is worthy to receive. Leonard only wants this to be done and then to be taken away from this cabin and never be made to remember the promise he broke. He is careful to not jostle or displace Adrianeโs head, but his hands were not made for this task and he is rough and clumsy. It takes two attempts to get the mesh over the back of her skull and all that blood-soaked hair. When he finally coaxes it onto her, the mask hugs her face and features, a new simplified skin. Given how much blood is on his hands, the mesh is remarkably white. He has the defiant urge to protest what has happened and all the shitty things heโs been made to do and smear a red slash over her mouth and dots over her eyes.
Andrew is now standing next to Leonard and pointing the gun. He shouts, โFucking get up!โ His eyes are glowing coals. His teeth are bared and his cheeks are blotchy red; the blood underneath is eager to come out and be free.
Leonard does not fear the gun. He does not fear for his own safety. That will never again be his concern. Whatever happens to him, he deserves. He says, โI promised Wen she would be okay and I wouldnโt let anything happen to her. Iโm sorry. Iโm so sorryโโ This is not the right thing to say and he knows this confession will only torment both Andrew and Eric, but he has to say it; he selfishly has to have it on record. For all the blood already spilled and for all the blood to come, he still meant to keep that promise to Wen for as long as he was standing, until the end of everything.
Andrew pistol-whips the side of Leonardโs face, just below the temple. A bright light goes supernova, washing out his view of the room. A stabbing pain quickly morphs into the simmering sting of an open cut and the dull ache of swollen tissue. Leonard falls off his knees and returns to all fours, a reversal of the evolutionary ascent-of-humans pictograph. His hands are again baptized in Adrianeโs blood. Thereโs a high-pitched tuning fork ring in one ear, and he is gazing into Adrianeโs masked face when Andrew kicks him in the ribs. Leonard remains prostrate, penitent, and ready to accept more. He deserves this.
Andrew shouts at Leonard to stand up. His shouts degrade into incoherent, larynx-shredding growls. He presses the gunโs barrel against Leonardโs face in the same spot where he hit him.
Leonard stands up slowly, an electric current of agony splintering through his head. Over Andrewโs shoulder he sees Wenโs body on the floor and the red on her face and he looks away. He says, โIโm sorry. Iโm so sorry . . .โ
Tears, spit, and snot stream from Andrewโs face. His arm shakes; his whole body is shaking. He hits Leonard with the gun again, smashing his jaw, spinning his head, and redlining the volume of the whine in his ear.
Leonard looks at Wenโs body again because he canโt help it. He prays for her to get up, yet another prayer of his that wonโt be answered.
Eric lumbers up from his crouched position by his daughterโs side. After two foal-like steps, he stumbles and falls to the floor, blocking Leonardโs view of Wen. Eric throws up and he sways and swoons into a sitting position, a line of vomit hanging from his open mouth.
Leonard says, โIโm sorry, Iโm sorry, Iโm sorry . . .โ
Andrew limps backward, never taking the gun off Leonard, and grabs the chair Eric was tied to. He drags it across the short distance and it
tumbles into Adrianeโs legs. โSit in that chair. And donโt fucking move.โ He asks Eric, โAre you all right?โ
Eric rocks back and forth. His eyes are closed and his head is lost in his hands. He says, โNo.โ His voice is a sigh, as heavy and lonely as a name whispered into an empty room.
Leonard says sorry again and again. Heโll be doomed to say sorry for eternity and no one will listen and no one will believe him. He picks up the chair and takes two small steps toward the kitchen so he is not sitting in Adrianeโs blood. Before placing the chair upright on the floor, he kicks aside a coil of rope with which he tied up Andrew. The rope careens into the end table and wobbles its little yellow-shaded lamp, which spins in two slow, drunken circles, waiting until he places the chair on the floor before going still. He sits, ending the concatenation. He will follow Andrewโs instructions. He will not move. He will sit there and he will wait for Andrew to do whatever it is heโs going to do.
Andrew goes to Eric and coaxes him onto his feet. Eric says, โWe have to leave. We have to take her with us,โ and they both look behind them at Wen, and they rest their foreheads together, and they break down into more tears, the kind that bow, bend, and mesh the menโs bodies into the shapes and symbols of grief.
Andrew breaks from their embrace, is the first to stand upright, and he props up Eric. He whispers in a flash flood of words, โI need your help. We need to tie him down. Weโll tie him down so he canโt follow us and then we can go. The three of us will go away.โ
Eric says, โOkay, okay,โ but he doesnโt appear able to focus and he sinks to his knees. Eric is not well. Because of the physical strain and exertion of the fight, he must be experiencing renewed symptoms of his concussion.
Andrew speaks in a conspiratorial lower register. โYou hold the gun, and hold it on him. Iโll tie him to the chair. All right? Iโll tie him, you watch him, make sure he doesnโt get up. You can do that, right? I know you can do it.โ
Eric says, โNo.โ He shakes his head as deliberately as a shadow creeping across a sundial. โI canโt do that.โ
โYou have to, please. Iโll tie him down and you hold this.โ Andrew looks at the gun in his hand and his eyes widen as though utterly horrified by what he sees, or horrified by what he saw.
โIโll tie him. I can do that.โ Eric staggers and careens away.
Andrew continues talking as though Eric is still next to him, leaning on him, listening to him. โAnd you shoot him if heโโ He canโt get it all out and he breaks down and the gun rattles in his hand.
Eric wobbles like heโs navigating a high wire. He veers around Adrianeโs legs instead of passing over her and plops himself onto his butt in front of Leonard. Ericโs eyes are all whites and pupils. He looks at Leonard once, or through him. He reels in coils of rope; one end is still tied to the leg of the chair in which Leonard sits. Eric then winds the nylon around Leonardโs legs, making no mind of knots, snares, and tangles. He isnโt doing a good job; thereโs no pattern or reason to the loops and he isnโt pulling tightly on the rope to ensure thereโs no slack.
Leonard initially thinks he will be able to wiggle free if he wants to, but there is a lot of rope and Eric uses it all on Leonardโs now mummified legs. Eric then belly-crawls behind the chair and gathers the other rope Leonard kicked away moments ago.
Leonard puts his hands behind the chair before Eric asks him to do so. He tells Leonard to do it, anyway, and his voice floats up like heโs speaking from the bottom of a hole. He winds a couple of lines around Leonardโs chest, under his arms, the back of the chair, and then spindles the rest of the rope around his hands and wrists.
A blast of wind crashes the open front door into the wall and drags into the cabin its tail of dirt, dried grass, leaves, and pine needles. Eric cries out, startled and terrified, and he collapses to Leonardโs left. Eric cries and talks to himself, and he crawls to the front door that indecisively hovers on whorls of air, pushed and pulled by unseen hands.
Andrew limps over Adrianeโs body and stands in front of Leonard, well within armโs reach if Leonard had a free one. The gun is lowered. He isnโt looking at Leonard and he isnโt looking at Eric. He looks at his red swollen hands and the gun.
Leonard knows what he is thinking. How can he not think it? Saying it will not help, but he says it anyway. โItโs not your fault, Andrew. It was an accident. You canโt blame yourself. I know you didnโtโwe were wrestling and the gun was in both our hands and . . . and . . .โ and Leonard canโt bring himself to say that he squeezed his hands and the gun went off. He is not going to say that out loud. He is not going to say that he knows, ultimately, Wen is dead because he and the others heedlessly went along with what
they were told to do and he couldnโt say no because it was too hard, maybe even impossible, but he still shouldโve tried to say no anyway. He is not going to say that despite the horror of whatโs already taken place, he will still try to save the world, even as he fears it is no longer worth saving.
During Leonardโs stammering pause, Eric makes it to the door, which winnows in and out of his grasp.
Andrewโs face is stippled with overnight growth of black beard stubble and his hair hangs in front of one eye, and the other doesnโt blink. He presses the end of the gun barrel, that black dot rimmed in steel, against Leonardโs forehead.
Leonard hopes he shoots. He wants this to be over. He is sorry he couldnโt save everyone. He couldnโt even save one child.
The front door slams shut and Leonard jumps in his chair and exhales the breath he didnโt know he was holding. He grieves that the slamming door was not a gunshot. He wants to cry that he is still here with Andrew looking at him the way heโs looking at him.
Leonard finishes off his long pause because heโs selfish. โThe gun just went off, Andrew. Itโs no oneโsโit just went off. And Iโmโโ
Andrew pulls the trigger. Leonard hears the empty click. He hears it even though Andrew is screaming in his face. Andrew pulls the trigger again and again and again. He presses the gun harder into Leonardโs forehead, forcing his head back until Leonard is looking up at the ceiling. The dusty old wagon wheel hangs above. Leonardโs eyes water and the wheel is blurry and it sways slightly, acknowledging the struggle below it, but the wheel is not turning and it will never turn again.