mouth, and dropped pills into it, whispering, âIbuprofen.â
I swallowed, with the help of some water from a glass he held to my bruised lips. And the kid was not just taking care of me out of the goodness of his heart, I sensed; I felt as if, for the moment at least, Justin was totally on my side against Stoat. So I said what I had not dared to say before.
âJustin, why not just call 911? Get us both out of here?â
âThereâs no phone.â
I had kind of figured that, as I had never heard one ring. âThereâs my cell phone, in my house on the kitchen table. Or else maybe in my handbag.â
âStoat has the key to your house.â
âHeâs asleep.â
Justin sighed, kneeling beside the bed and leaning against it as if to explain life to a kindergartner. âItâs not like he keeps it in his pants pocket. Maybe itâs under his pillow with his gun. Maybe hidden in the suspended ceiling somewhere. He hides things. He already has your purse and your cell phone, but I donât know where he put them.â
âOh.â I lay with hope leaching out of me.
âI would call 911 if I could, to get you out of here,â Justin murmured after a while, âbut if I did, Uncle Steve would take me someplace else and beat me silly, maybe kill me.â
âNo, he wouldnât! Heâd go to jail and the police would take you back to your parents.â
Justin said, very low, âI donât want to go back to my parents.â
Aside from exhaustion, the reason I did not gasp in disbelief and protest was because Plato believed in timeless norms, but Heraclitus had said nothing was constant except change, and Descartes could only just manage âI think, therefore I am.â In other words, because philosophy had taught me no rules were absolute. If anybody believed all kidnapped children longed to go back to their parents, well, here was the kid to prove them wrong.
Trying to keep it light, I quipped, âI thought you said your parents didnât beat you.â
âThey didnât! Thereâs nothing wrong with my parents.â
âThen whyââ
âThey donât want me back! They just think they do.â
âBut, Justinââ
âListen, Miss Lee Anna, just go to sleep, okay?â He left me.
I didnât think I could possibly sleep, yet I did. I awoke to see daylight at the windows. It had to be morning. Tuesday. I felt my face and ribs aching from having been beaten, I needed to go to the bathroom, and I truly with all my heart loathed that bed I was shackled onto.
The bastard had done the same thing to Justin for a month. A
month
. All alone, nobody to keep him company. How had the kid not gone crazy?
âNothing wrong with my parents,â Justin had said. Did it follow, then, that he thought there was something wrong with
him
?
Day looked kind of dim, my two useless windows showed wet spangles, and I heard the sound of rain falling on the roof, a sound I usually found pleasant. But at this point I didnât like it. You could have brought me lobster Newburg and I would not have liked it.
The door opened, and mentally I braced myself against the possibility of Stoat, but it was just Justin with a glass of milk in his hand. âUncle Steve left for work already,â he said, obviously reassuring me although I thought I had hidden my fear.
On his knees at my bedside, he lifted my head with one hand and guided the glass to my mouth with the other. âAll we have besides milk is Dr Pepper and Mountain Dew. Neither of those are good for you.â
I sipped obediently, then said as best I could through my swollen lips, âI bet you also have Jack Danielâs.â
âNot me. Uncle Steve. Iâm not allowed to touch it.â Justin did not seem to get that I was trying to joke.
âWell, it wouldnât go so great with milk anyway.â
The kid remained utterly solemn but
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