“Six years.” Hendricks slowed down. “You’ve been alone six years?” “No. There were other people for awhile. They went away.” “And you’ve been alone since?” “Yes.” Hendricks glanced down. The boy was strange, saying very little. Withdrawn. But that was the way they were, the children who had survived. Quiet. Stoic. A strange kind of fatalism gripped them. Nothing came as a surprise. They accepted anything that came along. There was no longer any normal, any natural course of things, moral or physical, for them to expect. Custom, habit, all the determining forces of learning were gone; only brute experience remained. “Am I walking too fast?” Hendricks said. “No.” “How did you happen to see me?” “I was waiting.” “Waiting?” Hendricks was puzzled. “What were you waiting for?” “To catch things.” “What kind of things?” “Things to eat.” “Oh.” Hendricks set his lips grimly. A thirteen year old boy, living on rats and gophers and half-rotten canned food. Down in a hole under the ruins of a town. With radiation pools and claws, and Russian dive-mines up above, coasting around in the sky. “Where are we going?” David asked. “To the Russian lines.” “Russian?” “The enemy. The people who started the war. They dropped the first radiation bombs. They began all this.”