Sadly, the tiny girl could not move the stone obelisk that was Alec Lanning. As she began to walk away with Alec's hand, she'd feel a tug in the opposite direction when she reached the length of their combined arm span; Alec barely noticed what was going on, but that tiny tug snapped him out of his deep concentration. He turned to Harold, using the same speech-bubble language as before, "Mr. Harold, I know of a place I'd like to go. Could you drop us off? I'll see that Yan makes it home safely."
Harold peered at Alec nervously once again, thinking to himself that the girl was in absolutely no way his responsibility and that if the zombie ate her and caused an epidemic to spread, wiping out the entire human population of whatever country the zombie wanted to go to, that was also not his fault. Though, it would be bad for business, as zombies aren't civilized enough to be collectible and would have the bad habit of trying to eat house guests. Still, better to distance himself from this problem before anyone found out. Without another word, Harold plucked the location the zombie wanted to travel to from his memories and called upon the shadows he used to travel. Darkness surged from underneath Harold's cloak, forming a hazy bubble around the three acquaintances, sucking them into a universe separate from the established one; an ethereal plane where two points were only as far as you willed them to be--but also a place where neither Alec nor Yan could technically exist, so Harold made sure to keep their time there as brief as possible. In some amount of time less than a moment but greater than negative point zero two seconds, Alec Lanning and Yan were deposited at their destination. Harold, on the other hand, was speeding home, away from the little girl who didn't exist and would very likely soon die by the hand of a zombie he'd accidentally not created. Thank God he'd never deviated from his course when he didn't hear the little girl who didn't exist screaming for someone to save a corpse who was not there either. Yes. Thank goodness for that.
Yan and Alec would find themselves in a large, open field of green grass at the center of a ruined stone labyrinth. Most of the walls had crumbled and fallen even before The End, many of them straining to maintain waist-height. A few pillars still stood, an archway here and there, but The End hadn't affected things as much around the perimeter as it had the place which was once Alec's home in the center. The grass was scorched in places, and whole boulders of sod were missing, blasted from the earth by some tremendous force; but many of those had been there as well. The smell of ash filled the air, and smoke could be seen a few yards across the grass, on the opposite side of the field. They stood in front of a circular stone building, barely as wide as two men standing abreast, with a heavy wooden door. Alec sighed heavily when he saw his family crest in eye-popping brilliance above the doorway.
"Just like I left it..."