Shelter on Level Three
Daylight never reaches the second floor anymore. Sunlight filters through broken skylights, pale and thin, barely enough to illuminate the toppled mannequins and shattered glass in what used to be Allendale Mall. Now, it’s shelter—a mausoleum for past lives, and for us.
Ellie clings to my hand, her small fingers cold even through my worn glove. She’s nine—just old enough to remember birthday cakes and laughter that didn’t echo off concrete walls. But today, she’s quiet, shadow-eyed and watchful as we search for canned food or anything useful.
We pass a storefront I once knew: a neon sign clings to life above racks of obsolete electronics. Discs in cracked cases litter the floor—a strange relic in an age where electricity is as rare as safety. Ellie nudges a box with her foot. "Dad? What’s this?"

I squat beside her. The dust comes away easily, revealing a cardboard sleeve: eight seasons of some sitcom I barely recall from my own childhood. Home Improvement—Tim Taylor grins from the cover with tools slung over his shoulder like everything’s still okay somewhere.
"It was a TV show," I say softly. "About a dad who built things. Made mistakes. But he always fixed them in the end."
Ellie looks at me with something close to skepticism. "Did he fix everything?"
I shake my head. "Not everything. But he tried." I slip the box set into our pack—not for trade or for warmth, but because sometimes remembering is all that keeps you moving.
---
We settle for the night in what used to be the children’s play area, barricading ourselves behind overturned benches. As I inventory our meager supplies—two cans of beans, one bottle of water—I catch Ellie staring at the DVDs.
"Why keep those?" she asks quietly.
I fumble for an answer. "It reminds me of when things felt safe." The words sound hollow in this echo chamber of loss.
She nods, curling up beside me under a faded blanket patterned with cartoon bears. I want to tell her about Saturday nights on our old couch, about laughter that filled our home instead of silence and fear—but those memories hurt too much tonight.
Instead, I hold her close and trace circles on her back until her breathing slows.
---
Morning brings new dangers—a group scavenging near Macy’s, their faces sharp with hunger. We stay hidden until their voices fade away. When we finally move again, Ellie slips on a pile of plastic wrappers and falls hard against a display case.
She doesn’t cry; she hasn’t cried in months. But she sits there trembling while I check her scraped knee.
Desperate for comfort, I pull out one disc from the box set and hand it to her like a talisman.
"What do you think happens in this one?" I ask.
She turns it over in her hands—Season 4, Episode 12—and tries to read the faded print on the back. "Maybe they build something together," she guesses.
"Probably mess it up first," I add, forcing a smile.
For a moment—a fleeting moment—we’re not hiding from danger or counting calories; we’re just imagining family comedy in some long-gone living room light.
---
Later that afternoon we meet Mara—a woman maybe my age but older in spirit—camped out by what was once a movie rental kiosk. She eyes our pack warily but softens when she sees Ellie clutching the DVD case like treasure.
"Trade you for some batteries," Mara offers.
Batteries mean flashlight beams on dark nights; they mean reading stories when storms rage outside; they mean hope. But Ellie shakes her head fiercely.
"It’s all we have left from before," she whispers to Mara.
Mara nods like she understands—maybe she does—and gives us half a chocolate bar instead, no trade required. We eat it together under flickering candlelight while Ellie sets up an imaginary screening: holding up discs as if introducing episodes to an invisible audience.
I watch her face soften with each story she invents about Tim Taylor fixing what’s broken—houses and hearts alike—and realize that sometimes survival isn’t just about food or shelter; it’s about holding onto fragments of normalcy when everything else is lost.
---
At nightfall I stare out at the empty atrium below us—the carousel frozen mid-spin under gnarled vines—and think about how nothing can ever be fixed completely now. Not by me, not by anyone. But as Ellie drifts off beside me, clutching her favorite season close like a stuffed animal, I understand:
Some things endure because we carry them forward—memories of laughter, glimpses of comfort—and give them new meaning when all else has fallen away.
Tomorrow will bring more searching and more fear. But tonight there are echoes of home here on level three—flickering quietly between sips of cocoa dusted from an old vending machine cup, between stories told by candlelight and dreams shaped by sitcom families who always found a way back to each other before the credits rolled.
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