Sweet Home AlabamaÂ
Summary: Ellie recalls a rare, lighthearted moment with someone close, only to be brought back to a harsh and emotional present.
Warnings: Major character death (kind of vivid description of body after death), displacement.
Word count: 4.5k
Something frome me: It's not a pairing, just a description/story of Ellie and Joel's relationship. Most of it is lovely, charming, just nice but.. all good things come to an end, right?
The wind howled through the shattered windows of the old concert hall, carrying with it the scent of dust, dampness, and something elseâsomething indescribable. Maybe memories.
Joel carefully pushed aside the cabinet blocking the door and peeked inside. Empty.
"Clear," he muttered over his shoulder.
Ellie stepped in behind him, flashlight in hand. Her eyes lit up when she saw the stage. Coated in a thick layer of dust, its wood cracked and stands overturned, it still looked like a place where something had once happened.
âWhat was this? A theater?â she asked, walking over to a rusted piano.
âMusic school,â Joel grunted, scanning the room, ready to reach for his gun at any moment. âPeople used to come here to learn instruments. Singing. That kind of stuff.â
The girl touched a key. It let out a faint, hollow soundâlike it was embarrassed to still be alive.
Joel turned toward her with a scolding look, but this time, the silent reprimand wasnât enough to stop Ellie. Her small fingers began pressing the keys one by one. Most were dead, but a few respondedâroughly, but still recognizable.
âTell me more,â she said.
Or maybe demanded it, with a crooked little grin playing at her lips.
Joel pretended to keep scanning the area, even though there was nothing left to see.
The hall was stripped bare. Weeds poked up between worn floorboards, and there was no trace left of the placeâs former glory. All the chairs were goneâsome broken into splinters, others completely missing. Shreds of the red curtain still clung to the rafters high above, their burned, blackened edges a silent reminder of whatever had happened here. Even the wood itself was scorched in places.
Joel frowned and glanced back at the piano.
How the hell did it survive?
âCome on,â Ellie pressed, fingers still resting on the keys, her face puckered with impatience. âAnything?â
Joel rolled his eyes and sighed. The weariness in his faceâpart genuine, part performativeâmade him look even more tired. Finally, he looked at her. At the spark dancing in her eyes. He recognized that lookâcuriosity. So familiar, yet so rare in those green eyes of hers. As if on cue, the words came to him.
âLike I said⊠people used to come here. To play music. Sing, dance. Perform in front of others.â
Ellie scrunched her nose, and Joel instantly regretted how awkward that sounded. Her laughter rang out, echoing far too loudly in the empty space. Joel lunged forward, clapping a hand over her mouth.
âEllie..!â he hissed, a trace of panic in his voice.
He had to pull back quicklyâthe girlâs surprisingly sharp teeth sank into his hand. He recoiled, not so much from pain as surprise. He looked at the semicircle bite mark on his palm in disbelief, which didnât go unnoticed.
âI just gave you the reverse immunity technique,â she declared, raising a single finger like a scholar. âYouâre welcome.â
Joel shook his hand, then wiped the damp spot on his pants. He kept his eyes on her, still looking like he half-expected her to pounce.
âWe should go,â he said flatly, turning on his heel.
And just like that, he was already moving to the next door, trying to push aside whatever was blocking it from the other side. Ellie, meanwhile, stayed by the piano. Her cheeks puffed out like a hamster as she leaned on her arms and watched her guardian with a quiet frown.
âJoel?â she called out.
No response. Joel seemed fully absorbed in the task heâd set for himselfâget the door open. Right now.
âJoel..?â she tried again, this time more softly.
She winced as he slammed his shoulder into the door with a low grunt. It didnât budge. Still, he tried again. Harder. Wincing again.
Ellie hadnât even realized she was holding her breath. She didnât know why, but her heart suddenly picked up, her fingers slipping from the keys. She blinked. Even if just for a second, what she saw in front of her felt too real. Like a memory carved into her mind.
Blood. So much blood.
âWake up!â Her own scream echoed in her head.
Joel lay on the floor. Right in front of her. Blood gushed from a wound beneath his right rib. His face twisted in pain. Pale as death. He didnât respond to her cries, her begging, her sobs. Nothing.
âJoel... I donât know what to do,â she confessed in a trembling voice.
Still, he didnât move. His head lolled to the side, limp. Lifeless.
âJoel?â A tiny hand shook him desperately, but there was still no answer. âJoel!â
âWhat?â he finally said, pausing his assault on the creaking door.
Their eyes met, and Ellieâs gaze was clouded, as if haunted. The grin from before had vanished from her face, along with the spark of joy in her eyes. Joel didnât look away, but slowly stepped back from the door, a weight settling in his chest.
âWhat is it?â he asked again, seeing her lips parted but no words following. As if sheâd forgotten why she even called him.
She didnât answer. She just stared at him, breathing heavily, eyes searching his face. Joel shifted uncomfortably under the scrutiny, but he let it happen. Deep down, he knew something was off. Something had changed.
âLetâs stay here tonight,â she said suddenly, still staring at him.
He stood there for a moment, as if struggling to process what heâd just heard.
âItâs noon. Weâve got a whole day aheadââ
âI know,â she cut in quickly. âI know, Joel.â
They stared at each other. Joel couldnât pinpoint exactly what felt wrong, but he knew he needed to say yes. It didnât make sense. It wasnât like Ellie to ask something like thatâand thatâs exactly why he agreed. He gave a slow nod in quiet surrender and finally broke eye contact.
Scratching the back of his neck, he shuffled around the edge of the stage.
âWhere are you going?â she asked in a whisper so soft, Joel might not have heard it if his senses werenât razor sharp.
âIâll check the upper floors. Maybe Iâll find something useful,â he said honestly, pausing briefly. âYou coming?â
The girl nodded almost immediately. Too fast, a bit too eagerly â a few wild strands of hair fell across her forehead. She brushed past the man, nudging him lightly in the side.
âTag!â
With that, she shot forward like a missile. She cleared the steep stairs in a heartbeat, vanishing from Joelâs line of sight.
âEllie!â he called after her. âWe donât know whatâs up there!â
âGuess weâll find out!â she shouted back, her voice already distant.
Joel grabbed his pistol. Pure habit. He moved slowly upward, unlike the girl, watching every step.
He found himself facing a surprisingly long hallway lined with just as many rooms. There were no windows. He squinted, trying to see through the dark, but eventually gave in and switched on his flashlight. The light flickered ominously, and he clicked his tongue in frustration. No spare batteries.
Suddenly, a loud crash echoed.
He froze mid-step. His eyes locked on a door to the left, and he slowly approached, pressing his ear against it. Nothing. He grasped the handle and swung it open in one smooth motion. A few rats scattered at his feet, knocking over a cardboard box on their way out.
He sighed â a meaningful one â and lowered his gun.
âItâs hide and seek, not tag...â he muttered to himself, quickly scanning the room.
Nothing caught his eye enough to warrant stepping inside.
He moved on, checking room after room. He gathered a few useful items, and when he came across an old, dusty box full of energy bars, he nearly smiled.
âEllie! Found some bars!â Miller called out, trying to coax the girl out of hiding.
Only silence answered. He scratched his chin.
âThen Iâm eating all of them without you!â he declared, loudly ripping open a wrapper just for effect.
Still, no response from the girl. Joel had time to ransack the entire room, stuffing his backpack with more surprisingly useful junk.
His last stop was a bookshelf. The layer of dust coating it was thick. Old textbooks, sheet music notebooks, an entire music encyclopedia. He grabbed one, brushed off the dust, and opened to a random page. Thatâs when he noticed a scratch along the cracked floorboards out of the corner of his eye.
Joel tilted his head. He grabbed the shelf and â surprisingly â slid it aside, revealing a small hidden room. Inside was a desk, a few scattered papers, and a dead lamp. The star attraction, though, was the armchair. Joel glanced over his shoulder, as if checking for onlookers. He stepped in, but didnât close the shelf behind him. The small gap heâd squeezed through was still there.
He sat in silence for a while, soaking in the peace. The only sound was the soft rustle of turning pages and his own breath. He didnât know how long heâd been there, until Ellieâs voice snapped him out of it.
âMan⊠you are so boring, Joel,â her voice cut through the air out of nowhere. âI thought youâd at least try a little.â
Joel didnât reply, figuring it was a fair price for her earlier disobedience. He wasnât exactly hiding from her â but he wasnât helping her find him either.
âYou already downstairs?!â she called, louder this time.
He flipped another page and leaned slightly to the right. The girl stood barely two meters away, but she didnât seem to notice the gap in the corner of the room.
âYou left the bars...â she muttered, picking up the whole box in her arms.
Joel raised an eyebrow as he watched her scan the room briefly, then, completely unaware, walk away. He exhaled â a soft huff of laughter â and actually smiled. He crossed one leg over the other, propped his foot against the desk, and kept reading the book, which suddenly seemed really interesting.
Time passed. Enough for him to start growing restless. Ellieâs silence wasnât natural â but he knew her well enough to predict exactly when sheâd start getting uncomfortable with zero action or response.
âJoooooel,â came the drawn-out groan, accompanied by dragging footsteps. âI checked everywhere, where are you?â
He shrugged as if she could see it. That smirk still lingered on his lips â though it faded fast when he heard her approach the room again.
A candy wrapper crinkled dangerously close. Something shuffled, followed by a sigh.
âHope you can at least hear me⊠I give up,â she said.
Joel realized just how close she really was. Her voice sounded like she was right next to him â and she was. Out of the corner of his eye in the darkness, he saw her dirty sneakers dangling off the desk she sat on. He could barely make out her outline.
She sighed again. Her posture seemed smaller now â like sheâd slumped from some kind of disappointment or sadness. That was enough to make Joel want to get up, but before he could, her voice returned.
âAt least now I can say it⊠âcause otherwise I donât think Iâd be able to,â Ellie began, her voice trembling just slightly.
Joel froze. The weight of her tone hit him like a freight train.
âRemember when you fell⊠on that piece of rebar? And then you were lying in that godawful basement?â she asked, continuing quickly. âI donât know why, but I canât forget it.â
Joel said nothing. Partly to give her space, but also â even if he wanted to speak â he wasnât sure he could. He sank back into the chair, suddenly feeling a strange chill despite its softness.
âYou didnât talk to me⊠for days. I knew you were asleep, that you needed to rest, but I donât know whyâŠâ she faltered. âIt scared me.â
He hadnât noticed when he stopped breathing. Her now quiet voice faded somewhere into the dark, and even though he knew she was here, it felt almost like he imagined it. She was never one to open up â neither was he. A sharp ache bloomed in his chest.
âYou said weird stuff when your fever was high⊠you know?â she went on, barely audible. âYou thrashed around in your sleep, and when I woke you up, you looked at me like⊠like you didnât see me.â
Something snapped back into focus in Joelâs mind. He shot up so fast the world spun for a moment. The book dropped from his lap with a dull thud. His knees cracked â but he didnât care. Ellie had to have heard him.
âDonât come out,â she said, her voice carrying a clear plea. âI know where you are, just⊠itâs easier this way.â
He froze in place but kept his eyes on the girlâs slightly turned figure. Only from this angle could he see that Ellie had almost completely curled into a ball. Her legs were no longer hanging off the edge; heels resting on the rim of the furniture, knees tucked under her chin. Only messy strands of hair stuck out above her forearms, her eyes hiddenâjust so she wouldnât catch any movement from Joelâs direction.
Ellieâs heavy breaths pierced his heart like daggers, but he respected her request. Barely.
âI donât want you toâŠâ she murmured, barely audible, and paused, as if the next words were painfully hard to get out, ââŠsuffer because of me.â
Before Joel realized what he was doing, he slipped through the gap. In one stride, he closed the distance between them and wrapped his arms around the girl. His chin naturally rested on the top of her head, and Ellie melted into his embrace. Like thatâs exactly how it was supposed to beâlike they did this every day.
He didnât know what to say, so he said nothing. He tried not to react to the faint trembling of her body or the soft sniffles that got lost in the fabric of his torn shirt.
Joel was gathering his thoughts. Slowlyâprobably too slowly. Luckily, he could afford it, because Ellie didnât seem eager to pull away. Quite the opposite. She clung to him, and before long, anchored him in place with a tight grip around his neck.
Despite the time passing, he still felt like his thoughts were going nowhere. He closed his eyes and exhaled as much as he could. His hand moved gently along her back, hoping to calm her down even a little.
âEllie,â he said, stopping his hand halfway up her spine.
A faint, barely audible murmur was all she could manage.
âWhat is the downside to eating a clock?â he asked, fighting the smile suddenly tugging at his lips.
Ellie slowly pulled away from his shoulder. Her tear-filled eyes still held sadness, painâbut also a hint of curiosity, maybe even confusion.
âWhat?â she asked first, then shook her head. âI donât know.â
âItâs time consuminâ.â
They stared at each other. The girlâs eyes gradually widened, in perfect sync with the smile stretching across Joelâs face. Ellie couldnât believe what she was seeing. Miller looked like he was about to burst out laughing. His face, still partly hidden in shadow, was slowly turning redâmaybe from embarrassment, maybe from trying to hold in the laughter. Ellie finally snorted, a laugh bubbling up from her chest.
âGod⊠that was awful,â she said, now laughing out loud, which only fueled Joelâs effort to keep a straight face. âYouâre going to explode.â
He shook his head like he was trying to shake off the laughter building inside, but he couldnât. Something between a snort and a suppressed chuckle escaped him, and Ellie lost it, laughing freely and openly.
âWhat even was that?â she giggled.
Now the roles had reversedâJoel was the one hiding his face in her shoulder. Thankfully, not from sadnessâthis time it was something else entirely.
âYou laugh like a choking cat.â
âHey.â
The mock anger in his voice only made her laugh harder. She clung to his arm with the last of her strength just to keep from collapsing to the floor. Joelâs theatrical offense disappeared just as quickly as it appeared.
âIâm trying to tell you,â Joel began once they both settled down a bit, âthat you have no idea how wrong you are.â
Suddenly, they were looking into each otherâs eyes. And surprisingly, it wasnât awkward. They stared deep, as if trying to read each otherâs thoughtsâthough there was no need. Theyâd laid their hearts bare. Both broken, both waryâbut trying to rebuild trust in each other.
Now it was Ellie waiting, seeing there was more. Finding the right words came with the same heaviness. She understood perfectly. Thatâs why she waited. Joel looked away the moment the words began forming on his tongue.
âBecause of you⊠things are better,â he finally said, slowly.
As if those words weighed a ton.
âAnd I donât ever want you to think otherwise. Even if we fight, even if we get separated, even ifâŠâ he paused and looked back at her.
She listened. Closely.
ââŠIâm gone,â he finished, watching her reaction. âItâs not your fault. Never. No matter the reason. I donât suffer because of youâI never have. And I hope you donât either.â
Ellie exhaled the breath sheâd been holding and smiled. Broadly. A single tear rolled down her cheek, but it wasnât sadnessâit was relief. She nodded, biting her lip.
Whatever had been crushing her under its weight suddenly seemed to vanish in an instant. She felt lightâlike a feather. For a moment, she thought she could float away if she wanted. She hadnât even realized just how much this had been tormenting her. Only now could she see how badly they both needed this.
Joel looked calmer too. Like heâd somehow grown younger through it all. He watched her reaction carefully, but it was obvious he felt proud. Maybe of himself, maybe of Ellieâhard to say. But the care with which he studied her was something new. Something raw, and open.
They sat in silence for a while. Then Joel stood up, without a word. Ellie watched him curiously.
âWhat are you looking for?â she asked, seeing him move things from a bigger pile to a smaller one.
He didnât answer. Just raised his eyebrows and glanced at her briefly over his shoulder. Ellie rolled her eyes and got up, following him. Eventually, he inspected one of the covers in his hand and, seemingly satisfied, headed to another room.
It was three doors down. Of course, Ellie followed, curious what he was up to. At first, she was disappointed. The room was nearly empty. Just one thing stood there, aside from the toppled shelvesâa record player.
âAre we gonna sing?â she asked, eyes sparkling. âAre you gonna sing too?â
Joel gave her that typical ânot a chance in hellâ look, but after a moment, he managed to get the thing working.
âDoes it make you all nostalgic?â she asked with a smirk. âThrowback to your times?â
âItâs actually before my time,â he noted. âBut itâs still a winner.â
The notes spread through the empty room with a soft echo, giving the song even more charm.
âWhat is it?â
ââSweet Home Alabama,ââ he said, arms crossed. âFigured you should hear it. I think itâs worth it.â
âOh no no,â Ellie said immediately. âYouâre not just gonna stand there with your arms crossed while musicâs playing! Weâre either dancing or singing. Pick one.â
âNo,â he said firmly. âNot happening. I sing as badly as I dance.â
âI donât care! You think I can sing?â she shot back, watching as the calm on his face shifted to mild panic. âDonât be like that⊠just this once!â
âNo, no, no,â he repeated, like saying it three times would make a difference.
Ellie dug in her heels and tugged on his hand. At first, he wouldnât budgeâhe leaned against the table with deliberate stubbornness, refusing to move an inch. But after much struggle, they finally stood face to face, surrounded by broken wooden debris scattered under their feet.
Ellie dug in her heels and tugged on his hand. At first, he wouldnât budgeâhe leaned against the table with deliberate stubbornness, refusing to move an inch. But after much struggle, they finally stood face to face, surrounded by broken wooden debris scattered under their feet.
âI donât dance,â he reminded her again, as if to ward off whatever she was planning.
At those words, Ellie grabbed his handsâjust before he could slip them behind his back. She started bouncing to the rhythm, even if it looked nothing like actual dancing. She swung his hands around just to try and coax some kind of movement out of him.
âJoel!â she scolded when he still hadnât made a single step without her help. âIâll be sad.â
It bordered on emotional blackmail, but Ellie didnât feel bad about it. Joel wasnât about to start jumping around like she was, but he did help her spin a few times on the spot. He went along with it, moving somewhat in time with the music, which Ellie considered a borderline miracle.
âWhat was it you said? That you canât dance?â she teased, tilting her head up to catch the visible discomfort on his face.
âYou lied too,â he countered.
In response, she laughedâand then spun five more times until she stumbled slightly, just as the music ended.
âThatâs not fair, you keep spinning me around and I canât spin you,â she whined, catching the amused look on his face.
âMaybe when youâre a bit taller. Right now, Iâm scared Iâll step on you.â
âJoel!â
They both chuckled softly.
As the next melodies bounced off the scraped walls, the memory replayed in Ellieâs mind. It was the best moment they ever hadâmaybe the best moment of her life. She remembered it like it had happened yesterday, even though it had been years.
The room was silent, but inside her head was chaos. Her fingers felt sticky. The metallic scent filled her nostrils. In front of her stretched a sea of blood. A red stain slowly spread its territory, its edges bleeding into smaller droplets around it.
Where am I? she thought.
Her eyes dropped lower. It all hit her in an instant. The memory crashed back with such violence it nearly knocked her unconscious.
âJoelâŠâ she whispered, terrified by the sound of her own voice. âJoel⊠get upâŠâ
No.
This isnât real. Heâs going to get up any second now.
This was a lie. Her imagination. That had to be it.
Joel would walk in from around the corner. Heâd smile at her, despite everything. Heâd pull her into a hug, tell her itâs okay. This wasnât happening. It was just in her head.
Just like last timeâright?
âJoel⊠please,â she sobbed, unable to stop herself. âI canât⊠I canât do this anymore. Itâs been too long. I get it, Iâm sorry, okay? Whatever I didâplease, donât do this. Help me⊠get upâŠâ
Her pleading turned into a whisper. The mantra froze in her chest. Her breathing was uneven as she leaned against his cold, rigid body. She still didnât believe it. This wasnât him. This was a nightmareâher worst fear, from which she was about to wake.
âEllie, let go,â came a voice from nowhere.
A voice. Familiar. Slightly distorted. Slightly offâbut almostâŠ
She looked up, immediately soaking in the sight before her.
âJoel⊠finallyââ
She started, but never finished. Her heart cracked open, then stopped beating altogether.
Tommy. It was Tommy.
She looked down again, as awareness crept back into her slowly. She didnât even know how long sheâd been lying there.
She saw a hand. Pale. Blue-tinged. The fingers had turned a sickly violet. Reflexively, she reached for it. For a second, she thought sheâd grabbed something else by mistake. But no. The hand was stiff, unyielding. Cold as metal. Like a block of ice.
And just beneath it⊠the watch. Old, broken, its face cracked.
âEllie, we have to go,â she heard again.
That voiceâso much like his. A tightness gripped her chest. A lump rose in her throat so large she could barely breathe.
âShut up,â she hissed through clenched teeth. âGet out! Where is he?!â
âEllieââ
âBack off.â
Suddenly she drew her knife. Tommy straightened instantly. Jesse, standing further back, watched with concern. But Ellie didnât see either of them. Her vision rippled. The tears made everything blur. The blade trembled in her bloodstained hand.
âWhere is he?â
They both looked away. They knew who she meant. They didnât want to answer.
âWhereââ
âEllie,â Tommy cut in, clearly shaken. âTo your right. On the ground. You understand?â
âNo,â she denied instantly, stumbling and barely catching herself before she fell. âThatâs not him.â
They were saying something. She could see their mouths moving. They were getting closerâbut not too close. Not within reach of the blade. Step by step, slowly.
But Ellie didnât care.
âEnough.â
A voice, sudden, from her right. She turned in a flash. Dropped to her knees. Pain radiated through her limbs, up her spine.
âJoel, Joel!â
She was sure of it. Still crying, she turned him over onto his back with effort. She didnât register the horrible thud his body made as it fell. He was aliveâthatâs all that mattered. Everything else could wait. She could swear he smiled, just slightly. Beneath the blood, the unshaven stubble. She saw it. Heard it.
âI knew itâŠâ
She never finished. Again.
Even though she saw it. Even though she heard it. Even though she was certain.
The pale face. Hollow cheeks. Sunken eyes. The dark, dried stain on the side heâd been lying on. Blood pooling beneath his skin. Then came the choking wave of rotânot just the stench of blood anymore, but the unmistakable smell of decay. It burrowed into her brain, forced more tears from her eyes, made her gag with every breath she took.
And then, she understood.
She screamed. Once. Again.
Until her limbs went numb.
Until her throat gave outâjust like the rest of her.
Until everything was swallowed by darkness.
And she wished she could believe she vanished into the same void Joel had.













