She was in a 1998 Jeep Cherokee with a quarter tank of gas, a gas mask, and a bolt cutter. The ship was turning.
She ran past the rusted pickup, past the silo with Howard’s radio tower, past the fence line where the woods began. She ran until her lungs ached—not from poison, but from hope. 10 Cloverfield Lane
The next afternoon, she stopped eating. She scratched at the chain until her skin bled. She screamed at the hatch until her voice cracked. Howard didn’t get angry. He got sad. He sat across from her, hands folded, and told her about a girl named Brittany. His daughter. “She didn’t listen,” he said softly. “She tried to go outside. She didn’t want to wear her mask.” He tapped the gas mask again. “She didn’t last an hour.” She was in a 1998 Jeep Cherokee with
Three days later, she heard the argument. Emmett had tried the hatch. Howard was crying. “You’re letting the bad air in! You’re killing us!” A thud. Then silence. Then Howard’s voice, calm again: “Emmett had an accident. He tried to hurt us.” She ran until her lungs ached—not from poison,
Days passed. Michelle learned the bunker’s layout: a main living area with a jigsaw puzzle of a sailboat on a card table, a pantry stacked with canned chili and powdered milk, a radio that only hissed static. And Emmett, the young man from town, who’d helped Howard build the place. Emmett had a bruised rib and a nervous laugh. He believed Howard.
That night, Michelle cut the chain. She crept past the corner where a tarp now covered something long and still. She climbed the stairs. Howard was sitting at the card table, finishing the sailboat puzzle. One piece missing. He looked up.