Em had decided to drop the investigation into the Geiger counter and focus on more productive investigations. The work schedule and manual from Mead's closet would bear more fruitful and usable data, but it didn't mean that moving from it was easy. Something about Stu's death was off, they all knew it. Em knew about answer lay in that single page of shorthand gibberish.

Now they were in the library... her and Emily at least. Timothy was in a meeting. Langdon had the worst timing... or the best. Depended on what eyes you looked with.

A book sat in her lap, closed after she had read the last page. Dante's Divine Comedy — she had meant to read it above ground but... well she had meant to do a lot of things. As the days went on the more worry she had over an idea of an afterlife. She was desperate for it and if, as an unbeliever, she was cast to hell, she'd much prefer to have an idea what torture she faced.

Frowning, her hand went to her throbbing leg. Em prayed her sewing skills were enough to mend the wound, small but deep. She had dressed it with some cloth from the towel she had bloodied and tied it in place with a ribbon. Most of the time she could hardly feel it, but one wrong move and she was hissing in pain.

Emily was doing some reading of her own, that of the more productive sort. She understood science much better than Em did and was having a go at the Geiger counter note.

"You know what I hate most about stories?" the brunette mused aloud after staring at the ceiling for a good twenty minutes.

Emily's eyes didn't leave her book, "What?"

"The ending."

Her friend's nose scrunched for a moment before she turned to her, "isn't that the whole point of reading? To make it to the end?"

"It's sad," Em sighed, "isn't it?"

Em shrugged, watching her friend stare at the sky, "depends on the ending."

"No... happy or not... it's sad."

Emily sighed, closing her book and stashing the note in her corset, "I think you've been spending too much time in your own head."

"So have you," Em reminded.

"Because I'm trying to figure something out."

This piqued Em's interest, eyes glimmering with the excitement of something new as she leaned towards her friend. "A mystery."

Emily laughed and shook her head at the other woman's antics, "you make it sound dramatic."

"We're some of the last people on earth... everything we do is dramatic as there is nothing to compare it to."

"You're eccentric, you know that?"

Em was starving for something new to investigate. Her mind needed a focus or else it would go into the worst places. "What's the mystery, Miss Holmes?"

Her friend rolled her eyes but quickly turned to business.

"Venable is hiding something."

"Venable is hiding a great deal of things," Em noted, "that isn't something new. So is Langdon, but that's part of his job description."

"Why the secrecy, though?"

"Knowledge is power."

"But what is the truth?" Emily said, "we've been here for almost two years and all we've found out is when certain Wardens work and decontamination procedures and whatever else is in that manual."

"Then how do we find out their secret plot?" Em asked, "preferably before we have to put that manual to good use."

Emily rose from her seat and quickly made sure the library was empty. It wasn't a particularly large library... about the size of the one at her high-school. She looked down every aisle before coming to sit back down, leaning in close to Em.

"Timothy and I are working one out,"

"Oh?" Em asked, raising an eyebrow.

Emily's face flushed, "Not like that!"

"Don't dash the power of a romantic subplot."

"Did you always speak in poetry or have you finally gone insane?"

"I've simply lost my filter," Em dismisses with a wave of her hand, "this plan of yours?"

"We need you to distract Langdon."

El laughed, quickly quieting when she realized her friend wasn't laughing along.

"That man would see right through any attempt."

"He likes you," Emily reminded, "why else would he call you to his office so often?"

"Bored cats will catch mice and watch them run around, barely surviving death for hours on end, just for their own amusement."

"...so Langdon's a cat."

"He something far worse."

Emily sighed, "will you help us or no?"

Em really didn't want to tell her friend that she would be a hindrance to the investigation due to her injured leg. However, saying that would bring up more questions and she really didn't want the girl to think she had completely lost her mind. Blackouts were one thing... homicidal urges were something else entirely. And the possibility of them happening at the same time? Not a cocktail she was willing to try.

"Your best bet is to observe his behavior and watch for patterns," She noted, "find out when he's distracted. You're smart, Emily, that's why you're here."

"So you're not going to help us?"

"I want to live," Em insisted, "the best I can do is keep silent while you two work. Venable's already watching me like a hawk and she'd gladly take down all of us if it meant killing me."

Emily understood her friend's reluctance. Last time Em had a more hands-on role. She could take action if things went wrong.

"Don't you want to know?" She asked, grabbing her friend's hands and squeezing them, "knowledge is power, right?"

Em remembered her vision, Emily and Timothy laying on the floor while foaming at the mouth. Their eyes staring desperately at the sky as if begging god to spare them.

She cursed under her breath and pulled away from Emily's touch, pinching her nose and sighing.

"Where do you need me to be?"


By the time Timothy arrived Em and Emily had long grown bored of talking plans. In all honesty, the less Em knew of what they were doing the better it was. If she got caught there'd be nothing to pry from her. All that mattered was Em would make a distraction at the right time, pretend to search through his office while Timothy and Emily searched his room.

For now, however, they were content to play Heads Up and pretend the real world didn't exist.

"Am I a pretty… lady?" Em asked. She was never good at this game.

Emily was sitting in Timothy's lap, draped over him like a cat with her legs propping up on the armrest of the sofa.

"Would she be?" Timothy asked her.

Emily hummed, "I'm not sure."

"Let me rephrase it," Em proposed, turning to Emily, "is she my type?"

"Yes," Timothy answered a bit too quickly, Emily giving him a look and shaking her head.

"But she has—" he tried to reason.

"But she doesn't have—" Emily reminded, the pair staring at one another until they burst into laugher. Emily curled into Timothy, her head resting in the crook of his neck.

They were interrupted, as always, by a screeching of the library doors. Laughter halted in their throats, eyes turning towards the sound of feet on carpet as silence overtook the room save the small sizzling of melted wax meeting fire.

Mead appeared from the shadows of the room, arms crossed as she came to stand before them. Her eyes narrowed as she realized two-thirds of them had a piece of paper taped to their heads, something written upon them which she could not see.

She turned to Em with and sighed, "Michael wants to see you.

Not bothering to hide her annoyance, Em rolled her eyes and rose from the armchair.

"Who was I?" She asked the pair.

"Gwyneth Paltrow," Emily said with a smile.

Em turned to Timothy and gave him a look. Her type? Really?

"Oh, honey," She said, "bless your heart."

Emily smiled and leaned in to whisper in his ear, "That's southern for stupid."

"You said Pepper Pots could get it!" Timothy exclaimed.

"Pepper Pots is a badass," Em noted before turning to follow Mead.

"They're the same person!" Timothy shouted, exasperated as Emily's laughter echoed through the room. It only stopped when the door closed behind Em, sealing off the pair from the rest of the world.

"You have a—" Mead noted, motioning to Em's head.

"Oh!"

Em laughed and took the card from her head, staring at it for a moment before turning to Mead.

"Do you mind?" She asked the woman, holding out the card. There were some things she'd like Langdon to not know, small as it may be.

Mead sighed, trying to sound annoyed as she took the paper.

"Half the time I don't know what to expect with you three."

"Have to pass the time somehow."

"Who's Gwenneth Paltrow?" Mead asked, opening the paper and turning it back and forth in her hand.

"Actress," Em told her, side eying the paper and trying not to think of the dull ache in her leg, "always on about that crazy new-age stuff that makes no sense."

Mead shrugged and pocketed the paper, "never was one for all that crap."

"Me neither," Em admitted, "only know the name because she got into some crazy cult shit."

Her companion let out a barking laugh, an infectious smile crawling onto Em's lip, "so did half of Hollywood."

The woman showed no hint of suspicion towards Em. Then again, Mead was the type of person who knew how to control her speech and emotions until it was time to strike.

A familiar sound of a cane caught the pair's attention as they made it up the stairs— tap-ta-tap, tap-ta-tap. Em looked to Mead, trying to read any emotion on her face. There wasn't… something that wasn't much of a surprise.

Venable's face greeted them as they turned onto one of the many upstairs hallways. Em took some satisfaction in the momentary widening of her eyes as the woman saw them. The expression quickly straightened, lips pursed as Venable tore her eyes from Em and laid them upon her escort.

"Miss Mead," she said, voice reminding the brunette of when her parents pretended they weren't at one another's throats just a moment before they sat down for dinner, "May I have a word."

Mead's only response was a subtle nod before she turned to Em, "you know the way."

Em offered her a friendly smile, making sure it remained on her face as she walked past Venable. Her contempt was so easy to read.

"Have a good day, Miss Mead."


Langdon was standing by the fire when Em entered. It felt like he hadn't moved since their last visit, affixed to the same spot she had left him with his hands behind his back. She took a moment to read the room as she closed the door quietly behind her.

There were no wardens in the room, meaning he probably didn't see them in Mead's room and that Venable most likely didn't inform him of her suspicions. So Venable didn't trust him… that was revealing.

"Is this another interview?" Em asked as she took a few steps forward. She imagined he already knew she was there, but her words finally forced him to turn and acknowledge her. A smile flickered to his lips as he turned to her.

"This time more of a social call."

"Oh?" she said, a brow quirking up her forehead and a smirk finding it's way to her lips, "Is that what you're telling residents now?"

Langdon glanced to the floor, still smiling as he shook his head. Finally, he gestured to a set of armchairs facing the fire. She rounded them, taking the one on her right. Her hands rested on the back as she waited for Langdon to move.

His eyes were focused on her skirt, eyes slightly narrowed in thought. Her awkward gait was obvious to him, slight as the limp may be. Langdon didn't note it, simply staring at the woman until she finally sat. Em did so with a sigh, eyes turning to the chess set that sat on a small table between them. It looked like he had been mid-game with someone.

"You play?" she asked as he sat next to her, legs crossing as he turned towards her ever slightly.

"On occasion. You?"

"I used to be good once," She admitted with a rueful smile, hands going to straighten one of the knights, "but I haven't played since I was a child."

This visit felt different from the others. Langdon seemed almost relaxed, leaning back into his chair and hands free of any files. The fire crackled before them, making the world feel a little more quiet than usual.

"Why is that?" he asked. She felt his eyes on her but refused to look at him, occupying herself by fiddling with the pieces.

"My parents weren't overly fond of spending time with me… though they pretended they did."

"Perhaps I can reteach you." Langdon offered.

Finally, Em's head rose from the chess set. He watched as green eyes flickered between himself and the fire, never quite meeting his gaze.

"I'd like that."

They set to fixing up the chess pieces, exchanging pieces that lay on the other's side. He chose the black pieces and she took the white — she'd have to make the first move. Though, that wasn't surprising when it came to conversations with the man.

"You've spoken a lot about your parents," he noted, "what about the rest of your family."

"Emotionally abusive father and a codependent mother," she noted, "are a perfect equation for isolation. One that kept us from reaching out to others and ensured that my siblings would rarely return home."

"You feared him," he noted, taking a bishop she held out to him, "your father."

"Fear," she corrected, "present tense."

"But the bombs—"

"Fear is illogical that way," Em noted, "What about you?"

"Me?"

"What was your family like?"

Langdon paused, eyes betraying his amusement as he debated what he said next. A few details wouldn't hurt.

"I was adopted by a family friend after my grandmother committed suicide."

She didn't apologize as most people did. Her eyes said enough. He expected the usual questions, the kind one would encounter in therapy. Em was debating which ones would be appropriate.

"Do you miss her?"

"Which one?"

"Either."

Langdon sighed and placed his last pawn in place, "someone once told me that nostalgia is much nicer than true memories."

"smart person," Em noted, moving her first piece — a knight.

"She was."

He was quick to counter her move, choosing to move a pawn near the outer edges of the board. The fire crackled as a log snapped in two, settling into the center of the fire with a rippling crack.

"I have to admit your quick thinking is intimidating."

"Take all the time you need," he reassured.

Her hands hovered over the board, fingers twitching as she ran through possible outcomes in her head. When she spoke, her voice sounded distant.

"So you can pick at my brain while it's distracted?"

Langdon chuckled, moving a piece after she moved forward another knight, "Something like that."

A comfortable silence filled the room as they got into the game, Michael's movements quick while Em took more time to play out moves in her head.

"Are you sure about that?" he had taunted at some point, a devilish grin on his face. Em paused for only a moment. If she didn't move the rook to take his bishop he'd have check in two.

"Fuck off, Langdon," she laughed, moving the piece despite his warning. Her laugh was infectious as he shrugged his shoulders and moved another piece.

"Don't say I didn't warn you."

Langdon won, naturally. Though Em had a feeling he hadn't played fair. His smugness filled the room, leaning back in his chair with an air of content at having beaten her. It both annoyed and amused her — like when her brother beat her at Super Smash Bros.

"Another round," she demanded and he rose a brow, sitting up in his seat. He rose an amused brow and she shook her head. "This time we play checkers."

"Checkers?"

"I lived in the south," she reminded, ignoring a stare that displayed how much the man was judging her, "there were Cracker Barrel restaurants on every major exit. One was right across from the college dorms I stayed in."

"So you've had a lot of practice."

"Don't worry," she teased, "perhaps I can teach you."

He smiled and put the chess pieces away as she pulled the checkers out from the compartment inside the board. She set them out and waited for him to make the first move.

"Can I ask you a few questions?" Em said as she quickly countered his move. He chuckled at the symmetry of her actions and waved his hand for her to proceed.

"Why was this place designed to fail?"

The way his hand hesitated over his piece betrayed his surprise, quickly recovering and completing his move. Her pieces clicked against the board as she countered, waiting for him to respond.

The blond straightened back into the iron mask he wore around the rest of the residents. "What makes you say that?"

Answering questions with questions. That was also a game she knew well.

"This whole place was designed on the tip of a knife," She explained, balancing a checker on the tip of her finger, "We're just waiting to lose our balance."

To emphasize her point she allowed the checker to fall. It clattered on top of the other pieces she had stolen from Langdon.

"And what would you do to make it better?" he posed, lips pressed into a thin line.

"Do you want me to alphabetically or categorically?"

Langdon leaned back with a short barking laugh. He stared at her with what she'd almost consider pride… the cat's favorite mouse. He waved a hand again, prompting her to continue.

"Whatever is easier."

The board lay between them, game abandoned in light of a more interesting chain of events. She mirrored his actions, considering which point to bring up first.

"This place was built by the rich, yes?"

He nodded, watching her intently.

"Why the hell would the rich settle for unfulfilling cubes?"

"Those cubes—"

Em cut him off with a sigh, "have all the nutrients we need but not all the calories. An extreme coupon mom would have a greater quantity and quality of rations than we do."

The blond prepared himself for a long conversation, leaning his head against a hand that was propped up on the armrest of his chair. She stared at him, waiting for a response.

"What else?" he asked with a sigh.

"The Cooperative put in place a NASA-esk water filtration unit, but couldn't find a way to have a self-sustaining food resource?"

"You make it sound easy," he noted.

"It is," She stated, "Scientists already had designs in place before the bombs dropped."

"This does nothing to prove we intended the worst," He nearly sang.

"Then why do you claim there is a sanctuary more equipped for this? Why is that not the standard for all the outposts?"

Langdon thought back to his first interaction with the girl. Her first accusation. He should have known she'd be trouble from the start… but perhaps he could use this to his advantage. Leaning forward, he moved another piece across the board.

He opened his mouth to speak, but Em was intent to get to her thesis — the final blow.

"You intended this from the beginning — make people desperate enough to see their true colors then pick them off one by one."

He chuckled, twirling one of her pieces in his hands and he shook his head and stared into the fire.

"Someone's done their research."

"Venable and yourself are the most openly condescending people I've ever met… you both think you're so smart and with this crowd that's mostly the case." She said with a scoff.

Em took one of his pieces, then another, "you're so pleased with yourselves that anyone with a brain can look right through you and see your intentions. No offense."

"None taken," he said with a smile, "…Mostly the case?"

"Timothy and Emily were chosen for their genetics. That's the only good choice The Cooperative has made thus far."

"Your care for them makes you blind to their faults," he noted, "no offense."

"None taken." Em said, offering a shrug as she collected three more of his pieces, "King me."

They lapsed back into a comfortable silence. Langdon lost and as she had expected he did so poorly, immediately challenging her to another game. That meant what she had said had some effect on the man. He sought to cover his fumble with conversation as they began the next round, asking about her observations of Outpost Three's inner-workings.

Even that conversation came to comfortable silence, Langdon far more intent on this game compared to the last. Em stared at him when he wasn't looking, too busy playing out moves in his head. His lips would twitch ever slightly when he thought.

"Do you ever feel lonely?" she asked him, playing the question in her head a few times before speaking.

"Lonely?" He echoed, voice distant as he finally moved a piece, "I thought we already had this conversation."

The brunette sighed and stared at the pieces for a long moment as she ran through what to say next.

"Do you ever have that feeling that something is supposed to be there, but isn't?"

He also took a moment to think, mouth open for a moment as he chose the right words to say, "I'm afraid I am unfamiliar with the emotion."

"You're lucky then," She admitted, "sometimes it's often claustrophobic in nature… like looking for a friend in a sea of thousands."

"I thought you said you were content with your own company?" he asked, moving his piece to the other side of the board, "king me."

"I am, but… I can't place it. It feels different somehow."

He looked at her, brows knitted together as he moved another piece, "how so?"

"It's the same yearning I feel for a sense of purpose," she said, shaking her head and speaking before she could think. Her eyes were on Langdon, but the man could tell she was looking at something past the physical realm. "But more specific. I yearn for someone or something, but I can't place it's… like I'm looking at it through a fog."

"We all left things behind in the old world," he noted, giving her his full attention "perhaps you are searching for something you lost."

She sighed, "but reminiscing on such things is a fruitless task. Nostalgia is only healthy in small doses."

"Nostalgia can be good."

"Too much of anything is a bad thing," Em noted.

"That it is."

A buzzing in her head made Em focus back on the game before her. The sound of pieces moving made the blond turn back towards her, out of his thoughts and back into the current moment.

"What is it like?" Em asked, changing the subject, "traveling from outpost to outpost?"

"Is that what prompted your question?" he asked, sighing as he forced his mind back on strategy.

"In part." She admitted.

"I'd call it a time to reflect," he noted with a sigh, "but it's hard to think when you're keeping an eye out for cannibals."

Em's gaze turned to the fire, brows bunched together at the bridge of her nose. Venable had been right. She had somewhat hoped the monsters the woman spoke of would be nothing but fear-mongering.

"It's only been a year and people are already—"

She cut herself off. Biting her lips and shaking her head, she chided herself, "no… that's not fair of me to say."

"Law was the only thing keeping humankind from its unlimited cruelty," Langdon noted, hardly phased as he got yet another piece to the other side of the board. He was a quick learner. "The outcome isn't that much of a surprise."

Em was quick to change the subject, "What did you see out there?"

"Nothing pleasant."

For some reason, he wished to keep the reality from her. Whether out of compassion or a desire to keep her ignorant, she couldn't quite tell.

"I'd like to know," she finally insisted, "Venable has only told us so much and we're forbidden from leaving the premise… even with hazmat suits."

Langdon nodded. He expected as much from the two women — Venable and Em. Pausing from the game, he gave her his full attention — turning in his chair and resting his elbows on the armrest closer to her.

"The trees are barren and everything is covered in thick green fog," he said, slow and methodical as if he were trying to recall every last detail, "the animals have gone rabid or are in the very late stages of cancer. You cannot see the sun in the sky… an eternal night."

"What about the people?"

"Killing each other for food or simply out of paranoia. Cancer and tumors are the norm for most."

Her arms had come to brace themselves on the arms of her chair, knuckles white and jaw clenched. She stared into the fire but did not see it, darkness clouding her vision as she was sent back into that first day in the outpost. How many of those messages weren't their last? How many survived only to face torment? How many had she abandoned in the wastelands?

"The children?" she forced herself to ask, forcing herself to look at him. His eyes widened every slightly before he glanced away, conflicted. She watched his chest rise and fall, his eyes close momentarily as he centered himself before speaking.

"On the way here, I came across a woman," He told her, "A young mother, with two children. They were some of the unlucky ones who were far from the blast radius to survive the fireball, but… not the radiation."

Em's mouth opened every slightly in shock as she realized he was crying, a single tear breaking free and racing down his cheek.

He held his hand up, the other hovering over it and tracing up his arm as he continued to recall the incident before resting at his chest, "they were covered in tumors — sores. Their lungs were burned from the toxic air."

With a clench of his fists, he fell back in his chair and refused to meet her eye, "After a few moments I realized that the child she was carrying in her arms was dead. She was begging for us to murder her other child out of mercy… she didn't have the strength to do it herself."

Em didn't even realize she was crying until he turned to her. She stiffened as he reached out a hand to her cheek, cupping it and brushing away the tear gently with his thumb.

"Did you?" she asked, voice hardly above a whisper and his hand still on her cheek.

Blue eyes refused to look away from her, "Did I what?"

"Have mercy."

An emotion she had never seen on him before tainted his features. It made his face fall, his eyes shine in a way that wasn't pleasant and his lips part every slightly. His hand pulled back from hers and he turned away from her, closed himself off.

"No," he finally answered, "I couldn't bring myself to."

Langdon felt regret… shame.

"I doubt anyone could."

"Why do you cry for them?" he asked.

"I have nieces and nephews," she said, "friends and—"

A frog sat in her throat keeping her from speaking. She waited a few moments before clearing her throat and drying her eyes, forcing the unpleasant emotion back from whence it came. After a few more breaths of unprompted tears, she spoke again.

"I'm sorry for bringing up a depressing topic."

"Knowledge is power," he noted, "and the desire of power is in our nature."

Langdon cleared his throat as well before turning back to the game. It seemed both of them were content to pretend the last few moments be forgotten… for now, at the very least.

"What would you do to survive?" he asked her, waiting for her to make a move.

She sighed rather loudly. Naturally, he was using interview questions to take back the power he had relinquished for but a moment. Still made her head feel light like she had whiplash.

"What would I want to do?" she asked, moving a piece without much thought. Langdon was keen to take advantage, quickly moving his piece to take over it. "Or what I would actually do?"

He scoffed, "is there a difference?"

"Of course. I'd like to think I'd preserve some of my humanity — morality and the like."

"But in reality?"

Em opened her mouth and closed it again. What would she do? So far she had certainly become more… adventurous wasn't quite the right word. Admitting that, however, would be giving him and, in turn, The Cooperative more information than she was willing to part with.

"I don't know," she said, "It's hard to know what you'd do until you are forced to take action."

"You like to skirt around questions," he notes, "despite my warning against hedging."

"You want honest answers," she reminded, "that required introspection — especially with these questions. It's rarely linear."

"How do you react to conflict?" he asked, sounding like he was reading from a list. Em wouldn't be surprised if he had all the questions memorized at this point.

"What kind of conflict?"

He sighed, trying to be annoyed but failing as a hint of a smile let itself be known, "Your answers tend towards the circumstantial."

"C'est la vie," Em said with a shrug, moving a piece and watching Langdon frown as she captured one of his kings.

"It certainly keeps at least one of these conversations interesting."

Em gave him a look, "is this a conversation?"

"We're communicating, are we not?"

"You're asking questions and I'm talking about myself for…"

She glanced at the clock in the corner of the room, "… an hour. Not much of a conversation."

"Therapists would disagree."

"You're my therapist now?

He didn't look at her, but she could see him smirk, "…of a sort."

The brunette leaned forward in her chair, regarding him for a moment, "Then what do you see?"

Langdon's head quirked to the side as he eyed her, "I see a woman who hides her insecurities behind bold and intelligent words… a philosopher without students."

Em could only laugh, sparing him an amused but unbelieving look, "You give me far too much credit."

"My records indicate you were quite introverted and withdrawn before," he noted, "What changed?

"When you stare at death he does not care what mask you ware," she told him, voice distant as if it was not her own, "so why bother with pretenses and polite society?"

"Why, indeed?"

They finished the game, coming to an impasse with two kings following each other across the board. Langdon rose from his chair and wandered over to the pitcher of water from before.

"You care for some?" he asked.

"Yes, please."

He turned to her with a Cheshire grin, "what happened to polite society?"

"Born in the south, remember? We mind our P's and Q's and say 'bless your heart' instead of 'go to hell.'"

"I hear it's quite pleasant this time of year," he said, turning with two glasses of water.

"Hocus Pocus," she noted.

"A staple in my house during Halloween," he noted, a sad smile coming to his lips.

She rose and took a step forward as he approached her, hand extended to take the glass from his hands. A thankful smile turned tense as too much pressure was placed on her bad leg. After sitting for so long, she had forgotten it was there. She leaned back on her good leg and regulated her expression.

Langdon didn't seem to notice and she pulled back and carefully lowered herself into the chair, waiting for him to move and do the same. Placing the glass on the table beside her, she turned to make a comment about a third and final match only to find him crouched on the ground.

Red coated his fingers, a small puddle on the ground the size of a silver dollar. One of her stitches must have torn. Of all the timing…

"You're hurt," he noted, looking up to her, "where?"

"Oh," she tried to write off, "it's embarrassing, but I think that's— "

His eyes were deadly as he stood and stepped towards her, a growl in his throat, "we agreed not to lie."

With a sigh and a roll of her eyes, Em lifted up her skirt to reveal the comically small injury that sat three inches above her knee. As she feared, unbinding the bandages revealed the stitching had come undone.

He kneeled down in front of her, hand hovering over the wound. "What happened?"

She tied the bandages around it, resolving to cauterize it later as she knotted the ribbon extra tightly around her leg. Langdon retreated as she threw her skirts over it once more, obviously not wanting to let the incident rest or for her to leave his office without treatment.

"A fucked up side-effect of conditioning."

Langdon sighed, "this is why I said—"

"I'd be better off acting on my anger?" she snipped, "oh, yes, I remember. You were quite insistent on that point."

Em averted her eyes, staring past him and into the fire with venom. From the corner of her eye, she could see Langdon sigh, shoulders falling ever slightly.

Her shoulders tensed as she felt a hand upon them, finally turning towards Langdon as she realized he refused to pull away. He wanted to speak, she could tell that from the way his lips pressed together. Why was he speechless? Langdon had a response for everything.

Green eyes couldn't look away from him— his knitted brow and the frown that marred his features. His hand rose to her cheek and all she could feel was her heart beating in her ears as the heat rising up her neck. His thumb ghosted under her eyes, over the tired circles where tears had been not even thirty minutes before.

This strange and witty woman… why did she have such an effect on him?

Hands curled around the back of her neck as he moved her hair from around her face. The pieces she had pinned back had begun to fall from their confines.

His fingers pulled her forward, thumb hovering under her chin. She felt like she was under a spell, unable to move. Did she want to move? All she could feel was her heart trying to force its way through her chest.

She smelled sweet— lavender and earth overwhelming him in the best way. His eyes flickered between her mouth and her eyes, his neck craning to the side as he felt her breath on his face.

Then, she suddenly tensed. Breaking free of the spell, she pulled back— jumping off the chair and past him to the door. She had let her guard down and… she didn't know what to feel. The hammering in her heart told her to run, but—

"I'm leaving," She whispered.

Langdon took a step towards her, a hand outreached. He moved as if he were approaching a wounded animal, slow and tentative.

"The interview isn't over," he said, hand coming gently around her wrist.

"Yes," She growled, realizing something that made her steel herself against him and tear her hand from his grasp, "it is."

"This could forfeit your place—" he began, cursing himself as he realized how he sounded.

"So be it. I don't care."

She tried to open the door and his hand went instinctively to keep it from opening. He needed her to understand. He needed—

"I'm not here to hurt you," He all but pleaded, "take a seat."

"…You're right—" she finally said after a moment. His grip on the door loosened and a smile of relief came to his face, tenseness leaving his body.

The door slammed into his head as she threw it open. With a grunt of pain, he fell back and gripped at his head. When he looked up a satisfied smirk was on her face, the door blocking her body from him like a shield.

"— My anger is best used outward instead of inward." She said, disappearing back into the hall. By the time he stumbled to the door and threw it open once more she was gone… like she had never been there in the first place.

The thought of that terrified him.


Em was… well, she wanted to pace, but the newly cauterized wound on her leg would have protested too much. So there she was, seething on her bed. Her hands dug into the comforter, pretending it was someone's throat.

At least this time she had been sure to put away her knife first. Then again, the now blistering skin took care of any destructive and impulsive urges she may have.

She had been blind, the desire for having her life mean something clouding the reality of logic and fact. Langdon wanted her to depend on him. He wanted her to think she was special. Em wasn't. She was an average person with a tragic childhood. A dime a dozen case.

Coco probably got the same treatment. They were both single and desperate to survive, desperate to be wanted. Langdon weaponized sex.

… But that wasn't what it was. Not to Em, at least. It was vulnerability, understanding, trusting someone with—

He was playing with their emotions. All their emotions. Part of her was willing to be strung along. Was certainly an easier route.

With a sigh, she hung her head in her hands. She didn't know what she wanted anymore. To live or not to live… wasn't that the fucking question? She was supposed to graduate this year, get a shitty job with shitty pay, and live in a shitty apartment. It's why she had sacrificed so much, stayed in a less than happy place in the hopes that one day—

A knock at the door pulled her from the spiral. Straightening her back and clearing away her misty eyes, Em turned to the door.

"It's unlocked," she informed the person on the other side.

"That's new."

Emily's head pocked through the door before she slipped inside, closing the door behind her after checking her six, "You didn't come to finish our game."

The bed dipped as she took a seat next to the brunette. Her worry was transparent on her face, lip quirking to the side and eyes focused on Em's face as she waited for the woman to say something. "We were worried."

Em could only shake her head, "I can't do this anymore."

Though her eyes were focused on the floor, she could feel Emily's hands cover her own. A familiar squeeze curling around her hand.

"We'll make it through this," Emily assured. It did little to convince Em. No matter what the brunette did, she couldn't shake the feeling of being on the wrong path.

"And then what?" she couldn't help but ask, teeth gnashing with every word, "we leave here and play the game somewhere else in some mysterious sanctuary or play Mad Max as we slowly die from cancer?"

For once, Emily didn't have a retort.

"I can't live like that anymore!" Em hissed, finally turning towards her companion, "My whole life I've lived one day to the next just to say I made it another day. I can't! I— "

Her companion could only stare at her friend, mouth open but no words. What could she say? Emily hadn't much thought about what would happen next, the cost of living. It was quite like what doctors faced, wasn't it? Determining whether quality of life justified the means to the end. What was the future when they faced the end of the world?

Em shook her head, "I just can't."