The flickering glow of porch candles cast dancing shadows across the weathered wooden steps as Sydney and I approached the house, my bike rolling quietly beside us through the evening mist that had begun to settle over the neighborhood like a soft gray blanket. The familiar creak of the third step—a sound that had become as much a part of our daily rhythm as breathing—announced our return to anyone listening inside. Through the curtained windows, I could see multiple silhouettes moving about their evening routines, probably wondering where we had disappeared to for the better part of the evening.
Sydney walked beside me with a newfound ease in her movements, her raven-black hair catching and reflecting the warm amber glow from the solar lanterns that Rachel had painstakingly rigged along the porch railing. There was something fundamentally different about her posture now—a satisfied relaxation that hadn't been present when I'd first discovered her pushing her superhuman limits at the abandoned stadium. The restless energy that typically thrummed beneath her skin like a live wire seemed more controlled now, channeled into the fluid grace of her virus-enhanced movements rather than the frantic, almost desperate need to test her boundaries that had driven her to those reckless solo training sessions.
I pushed open the front door, holding it steady for Sydney as the familiar warmth and comfortable sounds of home enveloped us both. The rich scent of lentil stew still lingered heavily in the air, mingling with the comforting woodsmoke from the fireplace and the faint chemical tang of the hand-rolled candles that provided most of our evening illumination. Gentle conversation drifted from the living room—Daisy's bright, musical laughter mixing harmoniously with Alisha's characteristically dry commentary and the soft, rhythmic murmur of pages turning as someone continued their reading.
"Well, well," came Elena's voice from somewhere down the hallway, carrying that particular note of amused curiosity that meant she'd been keeping careful track of our extended absence. "Look who finally decided to grace us with their presence. We were starting to wonder if you two had gotten completely lost out there or decided to camp out under the stars for the night."
Elena emerged from the kitchen, methodically wiping her hands on a well-worn dish towel, her blonde hair pulled back in the practical ponytail she invariably favored during cooking duties. Her sharp eyes moved deliberately between Sydney and me, and I could practically see her cataloging details—our slightly disheveled appearance, the way Sydney's hoodie was zipped differently than when she'd left hours earlier, the faint flush still visible in both our faces despite the cool evening air that should have cooled our skin by now.
"We got... delayed," I said carefully, keeping my voice deliberately neutral as I hung my jacket on the hook by the door. "Sydney was testing her enhanced speed capabilities at the stadium, and it took considerably longer than expected to convince her to head home."
Elena's eyebrows rose slightly, and I caught her gaze lingering meaningfully on a small but telling grass stain on Sydney's knee that definitely hadn't been there when she'd left the house earlier. "Testing capabilities," she repeated slowly, her tone suggesting she strongly suspected there had been significantly more than simple athletic training involved in our extended absence.
Sydney simply smiled in response—a slow, knowing expression that carried entirely too much satisfaction and self-awareness. Without breaking eye contact with Elena, she brought one finger to her lips in a gesture that was part playful secret and part gentle warning not to ask too many probing questions. The movement appeared casual, almost innocent, but something about the deliberate nature of it made Elena's cheeks flush a telltale pink as understanding clearly dawned in her perceptive eyes.
"I... I see," Elena said quietly, clearing her throat and looking away with obvious embarrassment. "Well, you both missed dinner, but Rachel made sure to save generous portions for both of you. The stew's still warm if you're... hungry."
The slight but unmistakable emphasis she placed on that last word suggested she was fully aware that food might not have been our highest priority during our time away from the house. I felt my own face warm slightly at the implication, but Sydney seemed completely unbothered by Elena's knowing tone and barely concealed amusement.
"That's incredibly thoughtful of you," Sydney said, her voice bright and cheerful as if she hadn't just essentially confirmed Elena's suspicions with that single gesture. "I worked up quite an appetite during my training session. All that running around really takes it out of you, you know."
Elena made a sound that could have been either a suppressed laugh or an embarrassed cough, then quickly retreated toward the kitchen. "I'll just... get those bowls ready for you," she called over her shoulder, her voice carrying a distinct hint of flustered embarrassment.
As we moved deeper into the house, I could hear the familiar evening sounds of our makeshift family settling comfortably into their established routines. In the living room, Daisy sat cross-legged on the worn sofa, her relatively new guitar balanced carefully on her lap as she worked through chord progressions by flickering candlelight. Her fingers moved with practiced ease despite the dim illumination, picking out a melody that managed to be both melancholy and hopeful simultaneously. Alisha occupied the armchair nearby, completely absorbed in drawing something with intense concentration.
Liu Mei had claimed her usual spot on the floor cushions, surrounded by what looked like a fortress of books she'd systematically accumulated from various scavenging runs over the past weeks. In the flickering candlelight, she appeared younger than her actual years, completely absorbed in whatever story was unfolding on the pages before her.
"There's our wandering duo," Daisy called softly, looking up from her guitar with a genuinely warm smile. "We were honestly starting to think you'd decided to make a proper night of it out there."
"Sydney needed some time... alone to look around for anything valuable," I said, settling into the empty chair near the fireplace while quickly correcting myself before accidentally revealing that she'd been testing her inhuman speed capabilities.
Alisha glanced up from her artwork with sharp, curious eyes. "Find anything interesting?" She asked, her tone casual but her gaze carrying the same knowing curiosity I'd observed in Elena's expression.
Sydney dropped onto the sofa beside Daisy, stretching her legs out with a deeply satisfied sigh. "Oh, I discovered all sorts of interesting things about my capabilities tonight," she said, her voice deliberately carrying multiple layers of meaning. "Turns out I'm capable of much more than I originally thought possible."
Liu Mei looked up from her book, blinking slowly as if returning from a distant world. "Capabilities?" She asked, her voice soft and slightly confused by the obvious undercurrents in the conversation flowing around her.
"Physical training," I said quickly, before Sydney could elaborate with another obvious double entendre that would make the situation even more awkward.
Before anyone could respond further, Rebecca barged into the room with a distinctly irritated expression clouding her features.
"About time," she said sharply, her voice cutting through the comfortable atmosphere as she took in Sydney and me sitting comfortably in the living room. "Three full hours past when you should have been back. Three hours of the rest of us wondering if we needed to organize search parties or write off two more people as lost to complete stupidity."
"We're back safely," I replied evenly. "No one was lost, and Sydney got the training time she needed."
Rebecca moved closer, her intense green eyes fixed on mine with the focused intensity of someone who was accustomed to being listened to when she spoke. "Training time?" She repeated with obvious skepticism. "Is that what we're calling it now? Because from where I'm standing, it looks more like you decided group safety protocols don't apply to you anymore."
The living room had gone completely quiet, all conversations stopping abruptly as everyone present felt the tension building steadily between Rebecca and me.
I stood up slowly, keeping my movements deliberately calm and non-threatening despite the irritation building steadily in my chest. Rebecca had been pushing these direct confrontations more frequently lately, asserting her authority in ways that felt less about genuine group safety and more about establishing personal control. I'd been letting most of it slide, choosing to focus my energy on bigger threats than interpersonal politics, but her increasingly hostile tone was beginning to seriously grate on my patience.
"The protocols exist for very good reasons," I said, my voice quiet but carrying clearly in the suddenly silent room. "But they also need to be flexible enough to account for changing circumstances and individual needs. Sydney needed time to understand what was happening to her. She may have also developed some of my capabilities, so I decided to observe and evaluate the situation. This was my judgment call to make."
Rebecca's expression hardened noticeably, her lips pressing into a thin, disapproving line. "Your judgment call," she said, stepping closer until she was well within what most people would consider uncomfortably close personal space. "And what happens when your precious judgment gets someone killed? What happens when the rest of us are sitting here wondering if we need to risk more lives searching for people who decided the established rules don't apply to them?"
This was becoming genuinely tiresome. I let the silence stretch between us, growing increasingly uncomfortable by the second, until I could see visible frustration building in her rigid posture.
"Don't you ignore me now," she snapped, her voice rising enough that it would definitely be audible from the kitchen. "When I'm talking to you about group safety—"
"That's enough, Rebecca." Rachel's voice cut cleanly through the mounting tension from the doorway, her tone calm but carrying definite authority. She stood with her arms crossed, still wearing the apron she'd put on for kitchen cleanup, her expression clearly disapproving as she looked back and forth between Rebecca and me.
Rebecca whirled toward Rachel, obviously ready to expand the argument to include her. "This is about group security, big sister—"
"This is about you picking unnecessary fights when people are tired and hungry," Rachel interrupted firmly, her voice steady but not angry. "Ryan and Sydney are back safely. Whatever training they were doing is finished now, and we can discuss protocols at tomorrow's group meeting if you think changes need to be made. Right now, we're going to eat dinner like civilized people."
Rebecca looked like she desperately wanted to argue further, but something in Rachel's authoritative tone made her reconsider. She shot one final glare in my direction, then stalked purposefully toward the stairs that led to the second floor bedrooms.
Rachel sighed deeply, running a tired hand through her hair as the sharp sound of Rebecca's door slamming echoed from upstairs. "I'm sorry about that," she said to the room in general. "She's been on edge all week. Ever since she heard about the Screamer threat, she hasn't been feeling safe..."
I settled back into my chair, feeling some of the tension leave my shoulders. "It's not your fault," I said sincerely. "She's worried about the group's safety. That's not necessarily a bad thing, even if her approach could definitely use some improvement."
Sydney had been unusually quiet during the entire confrontation, but now she stretched languidly like a satisfied cat and stood up from the sofa. "I don't know about the rest of you, but I'm absolutely starving," she announced with obvious relief at the change of subject. "Elena mentioned something about saved portions?"
"In the kitchen," Rachel confirmed, her expression brightening noticeably at the shift away from conflict. "We made sure to set aside plenty for both of you. We weren't entirely sure when you'd be back, but we figured you'd both be hungry when you finally arrived."
As we made our way toward the kitchen, the rest of the group began to settle back into their interrupted evening routines.
The kitchen felt wonderfully warm and welcoming after the uncomfortable tension in the living room. Rachel and Elena had indeed kept generous portions of the lentil stew warm, along with thick slices of the bread that Daisy had somehow managed to bake using flour from our steadily dwindling stores. The simple meal smelled better than anything I could remember from the restaurants that used to exist in the world before everything changed.
"Sit," Elena commanded gently, gesturing toward the small table that had gradually become our informal dining area. "Both of you look like you've been through quite a workout."
Sydney grinned knowingly at that observation, shooting me a quick look that made me focus intently on my bowl to hide my expression. "Something like that," she said with studied innocence.
Elena blushed bright red before she walked off in disbelief.
I looked at Sydney asking her why was she like that and she just shrugged.
As we ate, Rachel joined us at the table, nursing a steaming cup of the herbal tea she'd become remarkably skilled at brewing from various plants we'd identified as safe during our scavenging runs. The conversation flowed easily and naturally, touching on plans for tomorrow's supply runs, updates on the ongoing solar panel maintenance project, and discussions about the Jackson Township Community.
The conversation continued pleasantly as we finished our meal, the practical concerns of daily survival creating a comfortable backdrop for the companionable silence that had settled over our small group.
As the evening progressed, other members of the group drifted casually through the kitchen for their own late snacks or cups of tea. Liu Mei appeared to refill her water bottle with characteristic quiet efficiency.
"Good book tonight?" I asked her.
"Something you would definitely not understand, Abraham Lincoln," she replied with her typical sharp tongue.
"If you say so," I replied shortly, not rising to the obvious bait.
"Well, I could teach you if you're really that eager to learn?" She said suddenly, her tone shifting unexpectedly.
"What?" I turned toward her, genuinely surprised by the unexpected offer.
Wasn't she usually the somewhat arrogant woman who didn't want to waste time on social interaction and preferred to read alone in peace?
"Forget it actually," she said abruptly, walking away quickly before I could respond.
"You two have become quite close," Daisy giggled, though her observation didn't seem to please Elena, who frowned slightly.
At that moment, I noticed Cindy descending the stairs, moving with obvious awkwardness. When I looked directly at her, she quickly averted her gaze.
"You both took quite a long time out there," she said carefully.
"I just wanted to check if I had also contracted the Dullahan Virus," Sydney blurted out without the slightest care for discretion.
Cindy looked at me with obvious bewilderment.
Elena and Rachel seemed already somewhat aware that I had been intimate with Sydney, but Cindy clearly didn't know about our relationship or its implications.
She continued looking at me with questioning eyes.
"That would be truly impressive if Sydney actually became a superwoman as well," Daisy giggled beside us, completely unaware of what specific act needed to be performed for Sydney to obtain the Dullahan Virus—namely, sexual contact. She was probably thinking Sydney had obtained that power simply by spending time around me, Rebecca, and Liu Mei, using that same logic to explain the enhanced strength of Rachel and the others.
In our group, only Daisy, Rebecca, Liu Mei, and Ivy weren't aware of my ability to cure infected women through intimate contact while simultaneously transferring my Dullahan Virus to them, making them stronger and awakening supernatural abilities.
As the night deepened considerably, people began to drift away from the communal spaces toward their individual bedrooms. Elena disappeared first, mentioning something about updating her detailed supply inventories. Daisy followed shortly after, carefully storing her precious guitar in its protective case.
Sydney helped Rachel and me with the dishes, the three of us working in comfortable synchronization that spoke to the domestic routines we'd carefully developed over the past months. The warm, soapy water felt genuinely luxurious against my hands—a simple pleasure that I'd never fully appreciated in the world before, when hot water had been nothing more than the casual turn of a handle.
"I think I'm going to turn in," Rachel said eventually, methodically drying her hands on a dish towel.
"Good night, Rachel," Sydney said. "But try to handle your little sister better. Ryan doesn't need that kind of confrontation constantly."
She added quite dryly.
"I know... I apologize for her behavior, Ryan," Rachel said, looking at me with genuine regret.
"No, I don't really mind it that much," I replied.
After Rachel disappeared upstairs, Sydney and I finished the last of the cleaning in companionable silence. The house had settled into its familiar nighttime rhythm, the old wooden frame creaking softly as it cooled from the day's warmth, the distant sound of someone moving around in one of the upstairs bedrooms creating a comforting backdrop of human presence.
"Thanks," Sydney said suddenly.
I looked up from the pot I was methodically scrubbing. "For what?"
"For coming to find me tonight. For not lecturing me about safety protocols or making me feel like a reckless child." She paused thoughtfully, her hands still submerged in the dishwater. "For understanding that I needed... what I needed."
I set down the pot and turned to face her fully. "You don't need to thank me for caring about you, Sydney. That's just... what family does for each other."
"Family," she repeated with a knowing smirk. "I definitely like the sound of that."
We finished the cleaning and made our way through the darkened living room toward the stairs. The house felt fundamentally different at night—more intimate somehow, with the shadows and pervasive quiet creating a sense of privacy that was genuinely rare during the busy daylight hours. Our footsteps were effectively muffled by the runner carpet that Rachel had salvaged from an abandoned house and positioned strategically to reduce noise between floors.
At the top of the stairs, we paused outside the doorway to what had once been Christopher's bedroom and was now exclusively mine. The space was considerably larger than necessary for one person, furnished with a king-sized bed that had come with the house and far too much empty floor space that served as a constant reminder of absence and loss. When Christopher had been with us, the room had felt cozy and lived-in, filled with the comfortable clutter of two people sharing a space. Now it felt almost cavernous, despite my ongoing efforts to make it feel more personal and welcoming.
"Good night, Ryan," Sydney said, but she made no immediate move toward her own room down the hall.
"Good night," I replied, pushing open my door and reaching for the battery-powered lantern that served as my bedside light.
I went through my usual evening routine—changing into comfortable sleep clothes, checking the locks on the windows, setting out clothes for tomorrow's anticipated activities.
I had just settled into bed with a book of my own—a technical manual about solar panel maintenance that Mark had specifically requested I review—when I heard the soft creak of my door opening slowly. I looked up, half-expecting to see Rachel with some last-minute detail about tomorrow's plans, but instead Sydney slipped quietly into the room, closing the door behind her with careful precision.
She was wearing an oversized t-shirt and comfortable sleep shorts, her dark hair loose around her shoulders, her feet bare on the cold wooden floor.
"Sydney?" I said, genuinely surprised by her unexpected presence. "Is everything alright? Did you hear something concerning?"
She didn't answer immediately, instead moving across the room with that fluid grace that had become noticeably more pronounced since her viral enhancement. When she reached the edge of the bed, she simply pulled back the covers and slipped underneath them naturally, settling herself against the pillows as if this was the most natural thing in the world.
I stared at her, completely bewildered by this unexpected development. "What are you doing?"
"Sleeping," she said matter-of-factly, pulling the blanket up to her chin. "This bed is certainly big enough for two people, and my room gets uncomfortably cold at night when the wind picks up like this."
Well, maybe sleeping with Cindy and Daisy was still too much and my bed was big enough for her but that wasn't the problem…
I continued to stare, my book completely forgotten in my lap. "Sydney, I don't think... I mean, what will the others think if they find out you're..."
"The others aren't going to find out anything, because they're all sound asleep in their own rooms, minding their own business," she interrupted calmly, turning on her side to face me directly. "Besides, we're adults. We can make our own decisions about sleeping arrangements."
She had a valid point, though I wasn't entirely sure the rest of the group would see it that way if they discovered her here in the morning.
But as I looked at Sydney, curled up comfortably in the bed beside me with her eyes already beginning to drift closed, I found that I genuinely didn't mind the situation at all.
"Are you absolutely sure about this?" I asked softly, setting my book aside and adjusting my own position under the covers.
"Completely sure," she murmured, already half-asleep. "Just... sleep, Ryan. Or do you want another round of sex?"
"Just sleep already," I replied with tired amusement.
I reached over and turned off the lantern, plunging the room into the comfortable darkness that came with truly rural nights. Beside me, Sydney's breathing had already settled into the steady, relaxed pattern of someone completely at peace.
I found myself smiling looking at her before closing my eyes.
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