Actions

Work Header

living high until that fatal day

Summary:

Joel picks them off one by one, floor by floor, hardly taking note of how familiar it all feels. He doesn't even give the surgeon a chance to speak before he's dead, a bullet between the eyes. He knows they'll make it to the elevator. He kills Marlene. He drives them away.

He lies.

He wakes up yesterday.

or

joel finds himself stuck in a time loop of that day in salt lake city.

Notes:

this is a (late) birthday/xmas present for sabrina. thank you for letting me write it. additional thank you to bea for being my lifeline and my line editor and my general motivation to be a better writer. this one is kind of intense, folks, so look after yourself. i made up some rules for the loop cause, well, why not? enjoy!

(See the end of the work for more notes.)

Work Text:

Joel lies to her. 

 

He's got dried blood under his fingernails and his shoulder aches from the kick of the rifle and he's so, so tired. 

 

But he lies to her. 

 

If he was a smarter man he'd have thought of something better. Told her that the hospital got raided or they had a FEDRA mole, how the whole thing was a sham from the start. He doesn't know if she was awake for any of it. If the last thing she remembers is him reaching for her and failing to save her. If she remembers what it feels like to drown. 

 

It's hard to look at her in the mirror but he manages. Just keep driving, hands tight on the wheel. Don't white knuckle, don't spook her. She's in the car. She's safe. He did it. 

 

"We found the Fireflies," he says. She doesn't look at him. "Turns out there's a...a whole lot more like you, Ellie. People that're immune. It's dozens, actually." 

 

There's a strange pull in his gut, a pull that he's felt a few times before in the moments before everything went south. When the soldier pointed his gun by the river, when Tess looked at him on her last day, when he fell off the ledge in Colorado. But he ignores it. 

 

"Ain't done a damn bit of good, either. They've actually st--" Ellie closes her eyes, takes a deep breath. She doesn't look at him. "They've stopped looking for a cure. I'm takin' us home. I'm sorry."

 

She turns her back to him and the pull becomes a burn, becomes a black hole under his ribcage taking everything with him. He blinks once, twice, wonders if he got shot and didn't notice, if he cracked a rib and it punctured his lung, if --

 

The road in front of him disappears. 

 

He can't see a damn thing -- not like the lights went out, like there is nothing to see. There is nothing in front of him at all.

 

Then, Joel wakes up yesterday. 

___ 

 

He jolts awake with a strangled yell. Ellie kneels over him, the rifle he taught her to hold slung over her shoulder. It's just past dawn based on the color of the sky and how he can make out most of her face, her withdrawing hand and her unimpressed but slightly concerned frown. 

 

"You were talking again," Ellie says. "Nightmares?" 

 

Joel tears his eyes from her and thunks his head back down on his crumpled up jacket. The trees stretch high above him and he tries to get it together so he doesn't spook her. 

 

They’re camped within sight of the highway. Salt Lake City has been looming for days now and Joel doesn't want to take any chances. The ring-road is almost clear, dotted here and there with cars and a fair amount of supplies, enough that Joel suspects people haven't been here for some time. If this is another Colorado State situation, he's going to have to put Ellie in a car and take them back to Jackson before she does something stupid.

 

She's fine. Well, no, not quite. Things aren't the same and they never will be but he can tell she's doing her best and he won't ask more than that. Their pace has slowed this week and he's having a hard time figuring out if she's sliding back into some sort of post-Colorado haze or if she's nervous about actually arriving in Salt Lake. 

 

God knows he's nervous as hell.

 

But every day she'll walk as far as he tells her to and won't complain. He knows she wants to get there. They have to get there and it has to work -- because he doesn't know what they're going to do otherwise. 

 

She asked him a question. Nightmares. Joel sits up and drags his hand down his face.

 

"Somethin' like that."

 

Ellie shrugs and starts to clean up their camp now that he's awake. He still hates letting her take watch, but she needs to feel in control of things, so they split it most nights. She hums a little bit as she works and he has hopes that today might be a good day.

 

But that dream... It comes back in flashes: the giraffes, the tunnel. Ellie hanging from the side of the bus because she jumped to save him, her small frame sinking slowly, just out of reach. The crack of her ribs underneath his hands. The hospital. The Fireflies.

 

Joel gets up, rolls his shoulder at a phantom pain and looks down at his hands. Crusted with dirt and nothing more. 

 

Jesus Christ. He's losing it. 

 

They set off. 

 

The blue hospital sign seems to shine in the spring sun all too soon.

 

"This is where we get off. Let's go, kiddo."

 

Joel talks even though he knows she's not listening. He talks to take his mind off of the echo that sits at the base of his neck with every step. Has he told her he'll teach her guitar before? He's been thinking it for months. 

 

Ellie trails behind him, kicking rocks and half-heartedly searching cars when he asks her to. She heads for a faded blue sedan but he stops her. 

 

"Blue one won't open, don't bother." 

 

The look she gives him makes him think about what he just said. "How do you know that?"

 

He blinks. How does he know that? Before he can explain it, Ellie shrugs and keeps walking. 

 

The disinterest is new and it doesn't sit well with him. She's been through a lot, more than any kid deserves, and they're almost there. He figures it's worse today because of that. 

 

"I dreamt about flying the other night."

 

Joel's stomach twists. "Oh, yeah?"

 

"Yeah."

 

"Go on, tell me about it."

 

She tells him about her dream, about how it felt to fly and then fall, and he is dizzy with deja vu. 

 

"I've never been on a plane." Ellie looks at him like he can tell her what it means. Like he has any damn answers at all. "Isn't that weird?"

 

Joel hums and swallows the lump in his throat. The bus terminal. Ellie, drowning. Firefly after Firefly in his path. His hands flex around a gun that isn't there. 

 

"Well, you know. Dreams are weird." It tastes like a lie in his mouth but he can't figure out why. 

 

It gets worse when they find the bus station, when she runs off in search of something that's got her smiling. Her small hand reaches for the giraffe, her eyes bright, but Joel feels like he's watching it through a fog. He knows what she's going to say before she says it. 

 

"So fucking cool."

 

Joel has seen a lot of weird shit in his life but whatever is happening here is leagues above the rest. It bumps up against something in his brain, like the answer is just out of reach but he can't fucking get there. Always a step behind when it counts. 

 

Ellie hands him a picture of his dead daughter and something in him comes dangerously close to snapping. Instead of gratitude or sorrow or anything that would make sense, he's terrified. 

 

He's fucking terrified because this happened. Which means he knows what comes next. 

 

But there's no time to worry about it. They pick their way through the tunnel, through the runners and the clickers and the fucking bloaters. The pressure on his neck gets heavier, gets almost unbearable. He's strung tighter than he's been in years, like the walls are closing in on him and there's a timer he can't see. 

 

When they get to the rapids, he waits for Ellie to get to the other side of the bus until he jumps on it but it dislodges. The dam in his head breaks and he yells, screams at her to run, to leave him, but she jumps on the bus anyway. 

 

She drowns.

 

Joel doesn't doubt that the Fireflies are coming -- he hears them --  but he doesn't take his eyes off of her, doesn't stop the chest compressions until he's knocked out.

 

The rest of it is a blur, his sense of reality already warped by his need to get to the operating room. To save her. 

 

Joel picks them off one by one, floor by floor, hardly taking note of how familiar it all feels. He doesn't even give the surgeon a chance to speak before he's dead, a bullet between the eyes. He knows they'll make it to the elevator. He kills Marlene. He drives them away.

 

He lies. 

 

He wakes up yesterday again.

___

 

It takes a few days before Joel purposely deviates from what he's thinking of as the script. His head feels like it weighs a thousand pounds when he wakes in the clearing, Ellie's eyes on him.

 

He thinks about it as they pack up camp. Can he get them out of here? Would that be allowed? The rules of this aren't clear to him but he figures it can't hurt to try. They could turn around right now and make it back to Jackson in a week or so. 

 

He watches Ellie carefully arrange her things in her bag, watches her stop to admire a butterfly in the branches above. He watches her and tries to see her alive and not pale on an operating table. 

 

"Ellie," he says. "I got a bad feelin' about this."

 

She loves to tell him he's overreacting but today she crosses her arms and sits back on her heels. "What do you mean?"

 

Her scream as she falls into the water. Her ribs cracking beneath his hands. The piercing alarm in the hospital, her body warm but limp in his arms.

 

"What if we waited?" She frowns but he keeps going. "Went back to Jackson, rested up. Took a break. Come back in a few months with a bit of a crew. Tommy'll give us some guys, hell, I bet he'll come with if you want --"

 

"No," Ellie says sharply. There's an edge to her voice he hasn't heard in a long time. "Joel, shut up."

 

"Ellie --"

 

She stands abruptly, takes a few steps back. "I said no."  The look on her face tells Joel he's already lost. "Are you -- are you fucking kidding me? You want to go back? Now?"

 

He sighs. "Just to rest up. We don't know what we're walking into --"

 

Ellie throws her hands around in disbelief. Her eyes look wet. Christ, he's made her cry again. He promised himself he wouldn't do that. 

 

"We don't know if they'll still be there."

 

"We don't know if they are there."

 

"And we won't find out if we fucking run away like cowards!"

 

Joel stands. "I don't want another Colorado State situation, Ellie --" Her face shutters. Mistake. 

 

"Don't bring up Colorado," she growls. "You don't know what that was like." 

 

Damn right he doesn't. He knows by now what happened but he'll never know how hard it was for her to survive when he was busy dying on that mattress. But he has to try something or they'll just end up here again tomorrow. Yesterday. Whatever. 

 

The idea of her suffering makes his hackles rise, makes his blood run cold

"Can I finish a god damned sentence?" he snaps. Ellie is undeterred and snaps back.

 

"Not if it's going to be about leaving. We-- I -- we're not fucking leaving. Not after everything. We can't."

 

Joel sighs and drags a hand down his face. This girl. He's trying to save her and she can't see it. There's no way to make her see it and it's his fault. She should know by now that he'd do anything, anything, for her. He lost that battle a long time ago, probably longer ago than he'd like to admit. 

 

"I know," he tells her. "Just...if you want to give it all up, to go back, we can. We don't have to go through with this."

 

Ellie's eyes are blazing and her tone is disappointed. It cuts deep. "Yes we do. I thought you'd understand that, Joel."

 

He follows her this time as she stalks down the highway towards the hospital. No mention of six strings, no dreams about planes. They catch the giraffes but she doesn't stick around to watch them for as long. It's a different kind of loss to be without her smile, her laughter. Joel wishes he'd never opened his god damned mouth. 

 

"I'm sorry," he says. "For earlier." Ellie pauses on the stairs and half turns to look up at him. "I know it's important to you."

 

She sighs. "I know you mean well." Joel closes his eyes. He knows what comes next. "But there's no halfway with this. Once we're done, we'll go wherever you want, okay?"

 

He plays his part for the rest of the day, just to get it over with. 

___

 

Next time, Joel waits until they're watching the giraffes to try something different. 

 

"So," he says. "This everything you were hoping for?"

 

Ellie gives him her half-smile. "It's got its ups and downs, but...you can't deny that view, though."

 

He seizes his chance. "Wanna go down there?" 

 

She perks up. "Really? Do you think they'll let us get close?"

 

"They might. Let's try." 

 

They manage to backtrack a little bit and end up on the field. It smells like a zoo but Ellie is thrilled to be so close so they post up on the roof of a rusty FEDRA Jeep. Two of the giraffes end up eating out of the tree right above them. Ellie holds her breath. 

 

"They just...don't care, do they?" she whispers. "How long do you think they've been here?"

 

She leans into his side and cranes her neck to watch one of them use its tongue. 

 

"Don't know," he says. "Big ones could've been from before. But the tiny one s'probably younger than you."

 

"So cool," she says again. "They're from a zoo, right? I wonder if anything else lives in the city."

 

They've been sitting here long enough that the sun has started to set. Joel allows himself to hope. 

 

"Might be. What do you say we spend the night here and look on the way to the hospital tomorrow? Daylight'll do us better."

 

Ellie chews on his suggestion. "I guess," she says. "Are we safe here?"

 

"Should be." Joel has no idea, frankly. He sure as hell wants them to wake up here in the morning. He wants to make good on this idea, wants to show her something else that'll make her smile. He wants this to be a bizarre, unexplainable day that he'll forget about with time.

 

"I'll keep watch."

 

They set up camp crowded against the fence so Joel can see the whole field. The giraffes leave them alone and Ellie falls asleep quickly after they eat.

 

In the quiet open air the dread in his gut returns full-force and he knows he's wrong. Again.

 

A branch cracks and he whirls around, rifle in hand to find three men pointing their guns at him through the wire. They might be wearing Firefly jackets but he can't tell. He doesn't care. Joel dares to look at Ellie for a second and sees she's still asleep. 

 

It's a mistake.

 

One of them follows his gaze and his eyes widen.

 

"Holy shit," he whispers. "She looks like who Marlene said --"

 

"Shut up," the second one hisses. "On the ground, old man."

 

"How are you gonna get around that fence, hotshot?" he says. "Ellie. Ellie, wake up."

 

She blinks a few times and sees his stance. scrambling to her feet with her knife in hand.

 

"Holy shit. What the fuck?"

 

"Get behind me."

 

One of the soldiers points his gun at her. 

 

"Don't move."

 

It's chaos after that. The guys shout at each other. 

 

"Don't point it at her! Don't you remember the fucking briefing?"

 

"You hadn't even joined when we got here, you don't know. We've been looking for her for months --"

 

"If you shoot her we're all dead --"

 

Joel locks eyes with Ellie.

 

"When I say run, you run. Okay?" 

 

The fear in her eyes turns to determination. Brave girl, he thinks. I'm sorry. He waits for the idiot pointing at her to look away and takes a deep breath. What's one more day?

 

"Run!"

 

Joel doesn't check to see if she obeys before firing through the fence. The rifle is incredibly powerful at such a short range and where there was once a head there's only mist. Joel clears the chamber as fast as he can and gets the second one in the shoulder but he's not fast enough for a third and before he realizes it he's on his back in the grass. 

 

The Firefly's assault rifle litters Joel's chest with bullets but he doesn't feel it until he tries to take a breath and nothing comes. It's like he's underwater.

 

At least he didn't make her cry this time.

__

Joel isn't much of a believer in anything but he decides fairly quickly that he's in Hell or something close. God knows he deserves it. 

 

His sins are countless, his ledger dripping with red just like his hands. They will never be clean. What he can't figure out is how he got here. Did he die somewhere in St. Mary's? Is the real world somewhere else beyond his reach, now? If he died then what happened to Ellie?

 

He tries to make tallies in the bark of a tree on the edge of camp but they disappear every time he wakes up. He makes do with his own slowly unspooling brain. Two, five, ten.

 

Ellie is much the same every time but somewhere around day twenty she asks him about it. "How do you know where everything is?"

 

They're in the bus depot before the tunnel. He's taking them quickly around the tents, putting off Ellie handing him a photo of his dead daughter. It's muscle memory at this point. A pair of pliers here, some rags there. A half-empty but uncracked bottle of hooch behind that blood-stained bed, some bullets under that overturned partition. 

 

"Just payin' attention."

 

"I pay attention!"

 

Joel uses the excuse to grin at her. It's hard sometimes to remember that she has no idea what's coming, that he can and should be good to her every chance he gets. The violence has already started to blur together in his mind. Killing everyone in the hospital is by far the easiest part of this fucking loop. These parts are harder. 

 

"Didn't say you don't."

 

"I feel like that was a double negative."

 

She's still energized from the giraffes and he knows she's working up the courage to talk about Sarah, but right now he wants to spend time with her. He spots the Firefly medal tangled in the shattered floodlight and points it out. 

 

"Ellie," he says. She's at his side in seconds, looking up at him with eyes brighter than he's seen in weeks. "Wanna get that down?"

 

She gives him her classic why are you like this look. "Are you going to be weird and pick it up?"

 

Joel shrugs and leans on the rotting tank nearby. "Just want to check your aim."

 

"My aim is really fucking good and you know it!" Even so, she picks up a brick from her feet and palms it, eyeing the silver circle before winding her arm back and hurling the brick towards it. 

 

She misses. Maybe three hundred miles and a trail of dead bodies ago she'd have stormed off, embarrassed and pissed. But she just makes a face at the still-swinging medal and then looks at him. "How did I miss that?"

 

He pushes off the tank and scoops up a glass bottle. "Sun s'probably in your eyes." Joel stands next to her and eyes the target, trying to compensate in his mind for her height. "Stand here." Ellie moves over in front of him and he hovers his arm over her. "Can I?"

 

She nods. Joel presses the bottle into her hand and she takes it as he maneuvers her with a hand on her elbow until she's got the trajectory he thinks will work. 

 

"Now?" she asks. "Feels pretty fucking similar to what I was doing."

 

"Just trust me. Throw a little lighter than last time. And higher."

 

Ellie sighs, but once he steps back she does as he says and nails the medal hard enough that it drops to the ground. She whoops and turns around, hands high in the air and a wide smile on her face. Joel tries to breathe through how easily she puts her faith in him. 

 

"Fuck yeah! Did you see that?" She holds both hands out for a high five and he obliges. 

 

"Sure did. Nice job, kiddo."

 

When Ellie hands him the picture of Sarah, he pulls her in for a hug. He half expects her to shove him off but instead she allows it, twisting her hands in his shirt as he cups the back of her head. 

 

"Thank you," Joel says quietly, thickly. 

 

Later, when he finds her on the operating table, he presses his lips to her forehead for an extra moment before picking her up and heading for the elevator. 

__

 

He messes with the order of things a little bit. Tries to make their morning last longer, tries to stay watching the giraffes for an hour or so. 

 

Sometimes it works. 

 

Sometimes it doesn't. 

 

Watching Ellie drown over and over fucks with his head more than the hospital does because he can't stop it. At least while he's leaving behind corpse after corpse he knows that she's asleep upstairs, waiting for him. In the tunnel, he knows that the only way out is through, but she has to fucking drown first. 

 

He gets sloppy. 

 

He forgets about the runners in the side rooms when he ducks in to avoid a clicker and takes a step too close. Ellie is behind him as always and he shoves her back blindly as three runners slam him against the metal railing of the stairs before he can reach for his gun. He's too surprised to feel anything, but their breath smells like rotting meat and something worse, something that makes his eyes water. 

 

Joel searches the room for her and finds her -- pale-faced and terrified, already reaching for her knife. He tries to say her name but it comes out as a scream when one of the runners goes for his shoulder, jagged teeth ripping through his shirt in an instant. 

 

"Ellie -- run, Ellie -- GO --" He begs her to leave him but his voice stops working as his throat is ripped out. The last thing he sees is her horrified face as she raises her pistol.

 

And then he wakes up yesterday. 

___

 

It occurs to him on day 30 -- if he's keeping track accurately -- that he's got one of the smartest people he knows at his disposal. Kid's got an encyclopedic knowledge of space as well as science fiction stories. He asks her while they're still on the highway, stalling though he can see the blue H sign from here.

 

"Y'ever read stuff about time?" No reply. "Ellie?" She's staring at that deer again. "Ellie."

 

"What?" 

 

"You read any stories about time back in school?"

 

"Uh, sure," she says. She tugs her sleeves over her hands and catches up to him, eyes on the ground. "Why?"

 

"Saw a weird movie 'bout it once. Somethin' reminded me of it this mornin'. Guy gets stuck in a...shit, what did they call it?" Joel peeks inside an RV and smells rot so he leaves it be. "He lives the same day over and over."

 

"A time loop!" Ellie sounds more excited about this than anything they've talked about for days. "Those are so fucking cool. Scary, though. I feel like I'd go crazy."

 

Joel drags a hand down his face. "Yeah," he says. "How do you think you get outta one?"

 

"Well, how did the guy in the movie do it?"

 

"He stopped bein' an asshole," he says. Ellie laughs. 

 

"Well, we know that's not possible for you. Guess you're fucked."

 

"Guess so," he mutters. 

 

The H sign is close enough that she'll see it any minute. He wishes for the hundredth time that they could just stay out here all day, just talking. If he had a guitar he'd play for her. If he had a fucking car he'd put her in it and turn around, even though it wouldn't do any good. They'd just end up right back here because he can't fucking figure out how to get out of this. 

 

"I think you just have to change, right?" Ellie says. She's looking at the photo of an airplane on the bus. This time she doesn't tell him about her dream. Is he losing pieces of her, already? "I guess it doesn't have to be about yourself. Maybe something you do, or something you say. It's the universe telling you to make a different choice, right?"

 

That's the fucking thing. The choice isn't an option. It's not even a choice. 

 

The one thing he hasn't tried and will not try is leaving the hospital when Marlene tells him to. He'd rather die a thousand times, rather live this shit show over and over for the rest of eternity than let them cut her brain out. They will not touch her while there is still breath in his body. 

 

He'd do it all over again. He will.

__

 

Joel tries a hundred things and they don't work. 

 

After his conversation with Ellie he decides to really fuck with the day. Doesn't matter, right? So long as she's not put in any extra danger he considers it. He begs her to walk away, get on his knees and pleads with her throughout the day. Doesn't work. She just gets pissed at him like that first time and he doesn't push it because he can't bear to see her cry. He lengthens their morning in the clearing, fakes sick or says the rifle is jammed and needs cleaning. That goes south, too, when a pack of runners wanders through the woods and straight into them. They make it to the highway and have to miss the giraffes because they're running. 

 

One time Joel spends all day zig-zagging them around the city to avoid the tunnel. The Fireflies find them much the same way except they shoot him on sight and grab Ellie right out of his arms as he bleeds out on the cracked asphalt, her screams echoing in his ears. 

 

Another time, he ties them together in the tunnel with some fraying rope and they both drown. 

 

Killing Marlene early gets him a bullet in the head and not killing her at all gets him back where he started, no change. 

 

Joel even begs the doctor to run more tests first, to try blood, to try anything, but it takes too long and the alarm sounds and he's cornered in the operating room before he can grab Ellie and go. 

 

Nothing fucking works. 

 

But what is there left to change?

__

 

His mind starts to fray. He loses count of the loops and it becomes hard to detach himself from the slaughter. Not even the good moments -- Ellie's laughter, the awe in her face when she sees the giraffes, her jokes and her muted but still sharp sarcasm -- keep him afloat. He's lost, adrift in a sea of blood and bullets and it starts to eat away any humanity that was left in him. 

 

The blood of hundreds, thousands maybe, is on his hands and he feels nothing.

 

Once and only once does he get there too late. Everything else goes like it always does but maybe he took too long on the first floor, maybe he took too long picking the guys one by one instead of using the assault rifle, maybe maybe maybe. 

 

When Joel gets to the pediatric ward he knows something is different -- he can hear a buzzing sound, something loud and unnatural. The stale air is thick with something metallic, tinged with death. The buzzing stops and he finds his feet glued to the floor outside the operating room. Voices on the other side of it, murmuring and the clink of metal on a tray. Joel's hand shakes when he reaches for the knob because he knows whatever he finds on the other side is going to kill him. 

 

But he opens it because he has to. The doctor is at the sink this time, the nurses nowhere to be found. Ellie's body is covered in a sheet, blood seeping through the fabric. Joel looks away. He just stands there, his heartbeat loud in his ears as the world ends. 

 

The first time his daughter died, Joel thought he could will it not to be so. He held her as long as he could, whispered her name with her blood drying on his hands until Tommy begged him to get moving. 

 

This time, he knows it's true and he knows there's only one ending. 

 

He raises his gun at the doctor who is now leaning on the edge of the sink. The door swings open and the nurses return, eyes wide and vibrating with the energy of a job well done. He swings over to them and kills them both with quick headshots. The doctor has barely turned around when he's dead, too.

 

Joel breathes, ears ringing. He manages one step closer to the operating table but his knees buckle and he goes down hard on the cool tile. His vision is blurry. Is he crying?

 

"I'm sorry," he says. "I'm so fucking sorry, baby." He angles himself so he won't get any blood on her and then presses the barrel of his gun to his temple and pulls the trigger. 

__

 

If Joel was on the edge of losing his mind before, now he's laser focused. He doesn't pull any more shit. He settles back into the loop, savoring Ellie's laughter with the giraffe and gunning down every sorry motherfucker in his way at the hospital. He will not get there late ever again. 

 

So when Marlene says something different the next time around and he almost misses it.

 

Ellie is dead weight in his arms but she's warm and he can see the rise and fall of her chest. The hospital was messier than usual because he rushed this time, cutting down the Fireflies like it was his last stand. There's blood in his hair and crusted under his fingernails and his shirt is beyond ruined. 

 

"Are you going to tell her what happened here?" Marlene presses her hand into her side, blood leaking from around her crimson palm. "Are you going to tell her what you did?"

 

He lies to her.

 

Every time.

 

It's never occurred to him to try something else. Even though he's changed almost everything about this damn day except that. 

 

Because Joel knows what happens if he tells the truth. He knows what that will cost him.

 

And he doesn't know if he'll survive it.

 

He's afraid. Joel doesn't want to lose her and if that makes him selfish then so be it. He wants to take her back to Jackson and give her a bedroom of her own and as many stupid comics as she wants and three meals a day for the rest of her long, peaceful life. He wants her to grow up and grow old. 

 

He'd kill a thousand more Fireflies to make it happen.

 

He'd damn the whole world. 

 

Because he loves her and it fucking hurts. 

 

This girl and her puns and her comics and her god damned bravery and her bleeding heart. He doesn't want to lose her. 

 

But is this, whatever this endless hell is, is it fair to her? 

 

If it's breakable, if he has the ability to get them to tomorrow, to get them to Jackson, to get them home, shouldn't he? If he loves her shouldn't he give her a life even if he's not in it?

 

Joel gently arranges Ellie in the backseat and shoots Marlene in the head. 

__

 

For a few seconds Ellie thinks she's in the car on the way into Pittsburgh. The hum of the old engine, the rocking motion of the truck. But -- wait. She's lying down. The car smells...musty. And she's cold like she's wearing a dress and --

 

"What the hell am I wearing?"

 

She flutters her eyes open. Different truck. Backseat. Is she in a...hospital gown? What the fuck? Where is she?

 

"Just take it easy," Joel says. Okay, so she's with Joel. Something in her chest settles. She must be safe. "Drugs are still wearin' off."

 

Drugs? Ellie pushes back into her memory and tries to find something, anything that'll give her a clue as to what's going on here. They were in the bus tunnel. The water was rushing, Joel jumped on the bus and it started moving and she...fell into the water? 

 

It's a blur after that. More of a blank, really. Did they get to the hospital? Did they find the Fireflies? Based on her weird fucking outfit it sure seems like it.

 

"What happened?"

 

Joel's eyes flick up in the rearview mirror to look at her. "Let's get you into some clothes, first. Then we'll take a break and I'll tell you everythin'."

 

He sounds tired. More tired than he's ever sounded, frankly, but she can't imagine why. And he can't seem to stop looking at her like she's going to disappear. Like he hasn't seen her in ages. 

 

"Okay," she says slowly. "Where the hell are we going to get those?" 

 

"Your bag is on the floor by your feet." Joel veers off the highway down an exit ramp and Ellie sits up. Her head feels light for a second and then really heavy so she braces her hands on the seat in front of her and takes a few deep breaths. "You okay, kiddo?"

 

"Yeah. Fucking...drugs, I guess. What'd they do that for?"

 

"They ran some tests. We'll talk about it."

 

Normally she'd push him but something feels off. Ellie tries to get a good look at his face but she can't, not from this angle, and not with her head fucking pounding like it is. She's missing so much time. It makes her skin crawl, makes her heart race. Joel is here, she tells herself. He wouldn't let anything bad happen to her. 

 

He parks them at the edge of a cemetery and gets out of the car to stand guard while she changes out of the gown. Her last pair of jeans, apparently, and a grey t-shirt with a few holes in the collar. She wishes she had a sweatshirt or something to wrap around herself, to pull over her hands and feel covered. But beggars can't be choosers. At least someone put her shoes in her backpack. 

 

Joel doesn't turn around when she opens the door but she sees him stiffen. 

 

"I'm done." He looks back at her and she finally sees his face. "Jesus Christ, Joel, what happened to you?"

 

It's not just the blood. Sure, he's got dried streaks of it on his neck and in his hair. Ellie glances at his hands and sees it crusted under his fingernails, too. But he looks wrecked. Older, somehow. He looks like something terrible happened, the way she remembers his face when he fell from the balcony in Colorado, when he found her in the burning restaurant. But somehow it's worse. 

 

He's looking at her like he can't believe she's real. 

 

"Alright." Joel lowers the rifle and ignores her question, clearly. "Didn't see anythin'. Should be fine to sit here for a bit."

 

"Are you going to tell me what the fuck happened?"

 

He moves like he's going to drag a hand down his face but thinks better of it. "Yeah," he says. "I am." 

 

Ellie swings her legs so they're hanging out the door. Joel leans the rifle against the truck and crosses his arms. "You're making me kind of nervous, man."

 

"Just...promise me you'll hear me out to the end."

 

Yeah, something is going on. She doesn't like it.

 

"Uh, sure."

 

"What do you remember?" 

 

Good fucking question. "The tunnel. The bus and -- water. I fell in, right?"

 

Joel nods, clears his throat. "Jumpin' on the bus was dumb. Don't do that again." 

 

She snorts. "Yeah, okay. Point taken. But I was afraid you were going to drown!"

 

"You did." He delivers the news in a flat tone she doesn't like. She drowned?

 

"Are you serious?"

 

"I got us out of the water and tried to get you breathin' again." Ellie realizes her chest is sore. She imagines Joel doing compressions like they showered her in school, imagines his panicked face, his hoarse voice calling her name. Fuck.

 

"Did it work?"

 

"No," he says. "Fireflies found us first and knocked me out." 

 

"That doesn't make sense." She frowns. "They knocked you out?"

 

Joel shrugs. "Just tellin' you what happened."

 

This isn't how she imagined it would go. She never told Joel, but for weeks she's been thinking about waltzing up to the hospital and telling them who she is. She pictured Joel telling her jokes while she got her blood drawn, pictured him staring down nurses and doctors while they made the cure. She figured it would take a few days, maybe a week, and then they'd be on their way back to Jackson. She had hoped Marlene might be there, too. She has so many questions about her mom. 

 

"What did they do with me?"

 

Joel looks troubled. "I...don't exactly know. It was a while before I saw you again."

 

It makes her skin crawl. He must be able to tell because he keeps talking. "I'm sure they just ran some tests while you were out. They brought you back, made sure you were breathin' okay."

 

"Tests?"

 

"I'm gettin' there." She feels like he's having a hard time looking at her. Something close to but not quiet dread sits heavy in her stomach. What happened?

 

"Joel..."

 

"I woke up inside the hospital. Marlene was there. Told me they didn't know it was us, that they'd been waiting." He pauses, drags a hand down his face. "You didn't wake up or nothin'? You sure?"

 

Ellie shakes her head. She doesn't remember anything after the tunnel. 

 

"Well, she told me they could do it. They had a doctor who could make the cure."

 

The air rushes out of Ellie all at once. "Are you fucking serious?"

 

"And then she said..." Joel chews on his words and looks away from her. He looks angry

 

"What did she say?"

 

"Makin' a vaccine...would've killed you."

 

The bottom drops out of Ellie's world. It's like a hundred doors in her brain open at once.

 

It would have killed her? Are they sure? Did they do enough tests? Were they going to? Why didn't they wake her up? Were they going to ask her? How did they get out?

 

She swallows them all and manages just one in a broken whisper. "What did you do?"

 

Joel looks right at her. "I stopped them."

 

If Ellie wasn’t already sitting down she thinks her legs would give out. She knows that Joel meant what he said to her in Silver Lake. Knows that he'd do anything for her.

 

But this?

 

"What do you mean?" He shakes his head. "Joel. What do you mean, you stopped them?"

 

His shoulders slump. "They told me to leave and I refused. And I made sure no one can follow us to try again."

 

Static builds in her ears. She can read between the lines. She speaks Joel now. He killed them all, that much is clear to her. He killed them all, Marlene, too, probably, because she was supposed to die to save the world. Hot tears sting her nose and gather at the corner of her eyes. 

 

"But I -- but we -- I was supposed to...I'm the cure!"

 

"You're a person. You're a kid. Don't matter what's in your brain, you ain't dyin' for --"

 

Ellie pushes out of the truck and to her feet. Joel steps back to give her room but she knows he probably wants to touch her, to reassure her. The anger fills her, makes her face hot and her heart race.

 

"Who said you get to make that choice? If they said I had to die maybe I should have? Then it would mean something --"

 

"Your immunity ain't the thing that matters most. You are. So I picked you," Joel yells.

 

She's really crying now, huge heaving sobs that make it hard to talk, make it hard to convey how angry she is. "Well, you picked wrong, asshole."

 

"I ain't gonna apologize for it. I'd do it all over again, the exact same way. Every time." Joel's expression is as serious as it gets. He used to look this way all the time. No nonsense, no room for argument.

 

She tries to find the words anyway but they don't come.

 

"Now, you've got some options here," he says. "I think the best one is for us to go back to Jackson. I know Tommy'll take you in, and --

 

She laughs, or tries to.

 

It sounds like something bitter and awful to her own ears. First he tells her she was supposed to die today and now he wants to leave her?

 

"Are you fucking serious, Joel? You want to leave me again?"

 

Joel's brows pinch together. He looks pained. Good. It feels like her chest is caving in, like her lungs aren't working right anymore. This must be what it felt like to drown in the bus terminal, to sink slowly, to fade away entirely. She read once that drowning was supposed to be peaceful. This hurts. 

 

"I want you to be safe," he says. "Jackson is the best place for that. I don't have to be there if you don't want me there --"

 

"I didn't fucking say that!" she yells. "I -- Jesus, give me a fucking second, okay?"

 

He stands by the door as she paces back and forth, tugging her hands through her hair.

 

She was supposed to die. But she didn't. There's no cure. And it sure fucking sounds like Joel didn't leave any option to try again.

 

He traded saving the world for her

 

It's too much.

 

"What do you want, Ellie?" Joel sounds like he's been awake for days. Like he's in pain, like he's being hollowed out. He sounds like how she feels.

 

She digs the heels of her hands into her eyes.

 

"I want none of this to have happened! I want us to go back to this morning and I want us to not have gone into the bus tunnel and I want you to have asked for tests first, I want them to try something else. I want Marlene to tell me why they didn't wake me up. I want to do it again but differently, I want things to be different, I --"

 

Her words break off into a sob. "Ellie..." She opens her eyes and finds him reaching for her. His shirt is stained with dried blood but she steps into his hold and his arm wraps around her. 

 

"I don't know what to do, now," she whispers.

 

Joel exhales a shaky breath. "I know you wish things were different. I wish things were different. But they ain't."

 

They stand there, his hand dragging up and down her back. She listens to his heartbeat and remembers those nights in the basement when she thought it would stop any minute. 

 

"Fuck," she whispers, then pulls away. He lets her go. "Fuck, Joel."

 

He sighs. "Yeah, kiddo. Fuck."

 

He told her the truth and that means something. It hurts, it hurts so bad, and it doesn't absolve him of anything, but that matters

 

"I'm so angry with you," she says. "I don't know how to forgive you for...for...saving me."

 

It sounds stupid as she says it but Joel nods solemnly. 

 

"That's alright." 

 

"But I..." She wants to get this part right. "Let's go back. To Jackson. We'll figure it out there. But you...you have to swear to tell me the truth. Just like this. We have to be honest with each other."

 

Joel meets her gaze without blinking. "I swear."

 

Ellie takes a deep breath. The anger, the horror, the disbelief at what he's done settle a little bit. She has no clue what comes next, but this is a start. 

 

"Okay."

__

 

Joel wakes up. 

 

His back hurts and his shoulder aches. It's dark, darker than it should be, darker than it's been for hundreds of days.

 

Ellie is asleep in the backseat of the truck. 

 

It's tomorrow. 

Notes:

please let me know what you thought! talk tlou with me on tumblr @elliebeanwilliams.