John Savage was one less person to investigate. One more death for Travis to feel guilty about. I tried to remember if I’d seen John after the fire broke out. He was knocked out. Maybe he’d never gotten up. I thought of those frightened girls Trent and I saw in the hall of the basement. I thought about Hilary Short, who I knew from calc class, and was smiling as she stood next to her new boyfriend near the opposite wall of Keaton Hall five minutes before the fire. How long the list of the dead really was and who was on it was something I’d tried not to think about.
Maybe we should all be punished. The truth was, we were all responsible, because we were all irresponsible. There is a reason why fire marshals clear these kinds of events and safety precautions are taken. We ignored all of that. Turning on a radio or the television without seeing the images on the news was impossible, so Travis and I avoided them when possible. But all this media attention meant investigators would be all the more motivated to find someone to blame. I wondered if their hunt would stop with Adam, or if they were out for blood. If I were a parent of one of those dead students, I might be.
I didn’t want to see Travis go to jail for everyone’s irresponsible behavior, and right or wrong, that wouldn’t bring anyone back. I had done everything I could think of to keep him out of trouble, and I would deny his presence in Keaton Hall that night to my dying breath.
People had done worse for those they loved.
“Travis,” I said, nudging him. He was facedown with his head buried under a pillow.
Uggggghhhhh, he groaned. “You want me to make breakfast? You want eggs?”
“It’s just after ten.”
“Still qualifies as brunch.” When I didn’t respond, he offered again. “Okay, an egg sandwich?”
I paused, and then looked over at him with a smile. “Baby?”
“Yeah?”
“We’re in Vegas.”
Travis’s head popped up and he flipped on the lamp. Once the last twenty-four hours finally set in, his hand emerged from under his pillow and he hooked his arm around me, pulling me beneath him. He nestled his hips between my thighs, and then bent his head down to kiss me; softly, tenderly, letting his lips linger on mine until they were warm and tingly
“I can still get you eggs. Want me to call room service?”
“We actually have a plane to catch.”
His face fell. “How much time do we have?”
“Our flight is at four. Checkout is at eleven.”
Travis frowned, and looked over at the window. “I should have booked an extra day. We should be lying in bed or by the pool.”
I kissed his cheek. “We have classes tomorrow. We’ll save up and go somewhere later. I don’t want to spend our honeymoon in Vegas, anyway.”
His face screwed into disgust. “I definitely don’t wanna spend it in Illinois.”
I conceded with a nod. Couldn’t exactly argue that. Illinois wasn’t the first place that came to mind when I thought honeymoon. “St. Thomas is beautiful. We don’t even need passports.”
“That’s good. Since I’m not fighting anymore, we’ll need to save where we can.”
I smiled. “You’re not?”
“I told you, Pidge. I don’t need all that when I have you. You’ve changed everything. You’re tomorrow. You’re the apocalypse.”
My nose wrinkled. “I don’t think I like that word.”
He smiled and rolled onto the bed, just a few inches from my left side. Lying on his stomach, he pulled his hands under him, settling them under his chest, and he lay his cheek against the mattress, watching me for a moment, his eyes staring into mine.
“You said something at the wedding . . . that we were like Johnny and June. I didn’t quite get the reference.”
He smirked. “You don’t know about Johnny Cash and June Carter?”
“Sort of.”
“She fought him tooth and nail, too. They fought, and he was stupid about a lot of stuff. They worked it out and spent the rest of their lives together.”
“Oh yeah? I bet she didn’t have Mick for a dad.”
“He’ll never hurt you again, Pigeon.”
“You can’t promise that. Just when I start settling in somewhere, he shows up.”
“Well, we’re going to have regular jobs, broke like every other college student, so he won’t have a reason to sniff around us for money. We’ll need every dime. Good thing I still have a little left in savings to carry us through.”
“Any ideas where you’ll apply for a job? I thought about tutoring. Math.”
Travis smiled. “You’ll be good at that. Maybe I’ll tutor science.”