“You’re finally awake,” says a voice off to my left. Robert is sitting in an armchair that’s in way better repair than my couch, his cheesy smile nowhere in sight.
I don’t know why I ever thought he was handsome. He’s more the butt-ugly type, the kind that eats goldfish for fun and then brags about it.
I say nothing, saving all my brain energy for getaway plans. My eyes roam the space, trying to figure out what my options are. There are no windows I can see. The only light comes from a lamp enclosed in a wire cage, fixed up high in the corner of the room. There’s a metal roll-up door about twenty feet in front of me. I helped Quin’s brother move once, and he had a storage unit where he kept some stuff. I have a feeling I’m in one of those.
“So, we brought you here to ask you a few questions, get something from you.”
I can’t play the silent game anymore. He’s too stupid for words. “If it’s sex, I’m fresh out. Sorry dude.” I point to my crotch. “Herpes. I don’t recommend it.”
“It’s not sex. It’s something you received from your father.”
My brain short-circuits for a moment as I digest that little bit of information. “Say what? What’s my father got to do with the sex trade?”
He frowns. “Sex trade?”
“Yeah. That’s why you kidnapped me, right? Sex slave ring? You’re going to sell me to the highest bidder? Listen, I saw the movie. I know how this works. But rough luck on that, man, seriously. I’m tainted. And not a virgin besides. You’ll be lucky to get fifty bucks for my shit.”
He rolls his eyes and frowns as he shakes his head, like I’m the dummy in the room. “We’re not into that business, thanks.”
“No, thank you.” I look around some more, wondering if yelling might help. I’m just a little worried that the scab eater Dack the Dick is here and that he’s still in the mood to give me a concussion. I’m not sure my skull can take too many more hits before my brain is permanently damaged. Maybe it already is; I have this nonsensical desire to antagonize him when it’s probably smarter to kiss his ass.
“So why exactly am I here getting my ass beat by a guy with an IQ of forty?”
“That wasn’t supposed to happen.”
Robert looks worried so I press my advantage. “If you let me go, you’ll be fine. It’s keeping me and beating my head in that’s going to be a problem for you, legally speaking.”
“I’m not worried about it.”
“Liar.” I smile bitterly. “Federal crime means maximum security, dude. And that means getting it up the butt nightly from an axe murderer. You’ll totally be some big black guy’s bitch for about a week before they kill you with a broom handle broken off in your colon.”
He seems unfazed by the picture I’ve painted. I’ve underestimated his kidnapping skill-set, I think.
“You shouldn’t be talking to me like that,” he says, sounding almost bored.
“Why’s that?”
“Because I’m the guy who decides what happens to you after you tell me what I want to know.”
“Bullshit. You’re not in charge. You’re an amateur.” I look around, wondering when the real bad guys are going to show up. This guy doesn’t even have a weapon. At least the scab eater has his fists. I’m pretty sure the only thing Robert has ever hit is a golf ball.
“I’m a businessman, and I’m here to make you an offer.”
I sit back into the cushions and calm myself with a slow breath in and out. When I’m sure I won’t call him very bad names, I speak. “If all you wanted to do was make a business deal, you could have called me up or emailed me and just asked.”
He smiles without humor. “I tried the nice way, the non-invasive way. But you didn’t cooperate.”
“When? I’d love to know, because trust me, I would have preferred that to the concussion.” I point to my aching head.
“I came to your dorm once and your apartment at least twice.”
I narrow my eyes as I realize another place I saw this turd basket. “You drive a Prius, don’t you?”
“Very good. I had a feeling you saw me.”
“What is it you want?” I have a feeling it’s the toy car, but I’m going to go ahead and play stupid for as long as I can. I’m hoping that if I can get them to believe I’m so dense that I don’t know what it is they’re after, they’ll never suspect me of making copies. Maybe I’ll be allowed to live.
“Your father sent you some documents. We want them.”
“He didn’t send me any documents.” I have my stupid face expression going full court press, giving it everything I’ve got. “He sent me a letter telling me to keep his toy car safe, that’s it. It was a single page, and it wasn’t really a document unless you consider four sentences a document.”
I roll my eyes and do the best imitation of an overacting Disney show actress that I possibly can. “Geez, if you want the damn car you can have it. How much is it worth, anyway? Like a thousand bucks or something? I knew I should have put that thing on eBay.” I bite my fingernail, feigning a complete lack of interest in his silly car obsession.
“You didn’t, did you?”
“No. But I wish I had.” I flop my hand down by my side. “I can’t believe you actually kidnapped me for a toy car. Are you on drugs?” I squint at him, acting like I really believe what I’m saying. “That’s really sad. You can get clean, dude. One day at a time and all that stuff.”
“Where’s the car?” Apparently he’s not interested in my Narc-Anon intervention.
“Uhhh … it’s in my sweatshirt pocket.”
“Where?”
“At Rebel’s.” My stomach goes into knots as I realize I’ve just directed this guy over to my new boyfriend’s house. I move quickly to try and undo the mess I just made. “I think that’s where it is. But maybe it isn’t.” Rebel won’t let anyone in there without a fight. God, please don’t let Rebel get hurt.
I’m sick over the idea that I’ve finally found a guy I can get serious with, and I’m going to get him killed by a redneck who doesn’t know how to dress for a barbecue and a turd who doesn’t know how to arrange a proper kidnapping. Life is so damn unfair.
Robert stands. “Come on. Let’s go.”
“Go where?” I struggle to stand, the dizziness and pain from my head injury making me wobbly.
“To the toy. I want it now.”
“Fine. Whatever.” I clamp my lips shut so I can focus on putting one foot in front of the other and not saying something that will blow my cool cover story.
I wait off to the side as Robert rolls up the door, revealing a hallway in front of us. Sure enough, we’re in one of those storage buildings.
“What are you going to do with me after I give you the car?” I ask.
“I’m not sure what Dack has planned for you.”
I swallow hard. “I could guess,” I say, knowing now that once they have the car there’s no reason to keep me around. Tears come when I realize that I’m about to become a statistic.
Adrenaline rushes back into my veins and I begin to shake. I want to run, but I know I wouldn’t get five steps before being tackled. My head hurts too much and it’s affecting my equilibrium. Maybe if I get outside at some point where there are other people, I’ll be able to scream or something.
I hold onto that slim hope as we move out into the sunshine.
CHAPTER FORTY-ONE
THE THREE OF US PULL into the empty Rebel Wheels parking lot. I don’t know whether to be happy or sad about the fact that my kidnappers have a wide open opportunity not only to get what they came for but to murder me and leave me to be found by the only people in town who would give me a job.
The selfish part of me was hoping someone would be there to come to my rescue, but deep down I know it’s better that no one is. This is my mess and I need to clean it up. All I can hope now is that one of those heavy tools in the garage might make a good weapon … if I can get my hands on it before Dack slams my skull into something, that is.
I get to the door and try the handle. “It’s locked.” A few seconds of relief wash over me before Dack comes up with the brilliant idea of getting a tire iron out of the truck and using it to pry the door open. The lock cracks after just a few hard pulls on Dack’s part and the door swings wide.
“Where’s the car?” asks Robert.
“In the apartment upstairs,” I say, pointing inside. I stay where I am, hoping he’ll be content to just search around himself. I find it harder to believe that they’ll kill me out in public view, so my plan is to stay out here as long as I can.
“Go get it,” says Dack, pushing me on the back with the tire iron.
So much for staying outside. And now he’s the one with a heavy weapon in his hand. I am so screwed.
My feet drag and I keep my eyes on the floor. I don’t want my last view of this world to be the inside of a mechanic’s garage. I want to remember the blue sky, the view of Rebel through the smoke of Quin’s barbecue, and that fruity purple punch with sherbet floating in it before I threw it up.
My kidnappers are mumbling behind me, but I can’t focus on what they’re saying. All I can hear is the sound of some specter in my head, calling out, Dead girl walking! I can almost picture cells lined up on either side of me with death-row criminals egging me towards some chamber that will hold my doom. Electric chair. Lethal injection. Firing squad. Hanging. I’m going to die and I’m not even old enough to rent a car yet.
The phone rings in the office. I hesitate, wondering who’d be calling on a Saturday. Could it be a customer? A telemarketer wanting to sell me cable service for the eighteenth time this week? Normally I’d want to reach through the phone and yank a telemarketer through it, so I could berate him for being the scourge of polite society, but today I’d gladly jump through the phone in the other direction to hang out with him in his little cubicle in India. We could be best friends if only he’d save me from being killed over a toy car.
Rebel has one of those old-school answering machines with a cassette tape in it. The thing’s so dirty you can’t even see through the plastic window the tape sits in. I hear a voice come out over the speaker and it echoes all over the garage.
“Teagan? Are you there?”
My heart sinks like a rock down into my stomach. I want to scream, Rebel! I’m here! But I say nothing because it’s no use anyway. He can’t hear me. He’s still at the party, and the answering machine only answers; it doesn’t transmit.
There’s a scrabbling sound coming over the speaker and then Quin’s voice. “Give me that phone … Tea! Can she hear me? Hey, Tea? It’s me. Your best friend of all time forever, even when I’m a dick. I’m sorry, okay? I shouldn’t have said that. I’m an asshole of the highest degree. Please come back to the party. I’ll eat a piece of liver to prove to you I mean it, okay? You know how much I hate liver. Are you there? I know you’re there, pick up. Stop being a baby.”
Dack shoves me in the back again and I trip out of the office in my efforts to not have a bruised spine. I’m crying like a baby by the time I’m at the top of the stairs. Quin’s begging and cajoling fades out as we go through the door into the upper hallway.
I want to tell my best friend of all time I’m sorry too, that I didn’t mean what I said, that she doesn’t need to ask for my forgiveness because friends just offer it freely and without condition. I’m painfully aware that it’s too late for me to learn that lesson about always treating your friends as if it’s the last time you’ll ever see them. I hate that she’ll never get to hear my apology but that I heard hers. And I both hate and love my dad more than I ever have in my entire life.
The nearness of my own death has brought a hyper-awareness that makes everything crystal clear. I’m almost sure that my dad didn’t die of natural causes. He died because he was a good guy trying to do the right thing and he was married to a demon with an equally evil brother. Maybe he wasn’t dad of the year for me, but he wasn’t a bad person. And he was counting on me to have his back, but I fucked it up. All those years he took care of me and made sure I never wanted for anything, and when he asked me to do one for him, I let him down.
I put my hand on the doorknob and turn to face my kidnappers and eventual murderers. “It’s in here, I think.”
Dack nods. “Open it.”
The complete lack of remorse in his expression redlines my anger gauge. He’s taking my memories of my friends and turning them to shit. Yes, it’s partially my fault that I’m going to die and probably be a restless spirit for all of eternity because I left unfinished business on this planet, but it’s also going to be his fault that I’m a murder statistic. I’ve never been good with accepting unfair situations, and nothing strikes me as more unfair than being killed right before I know for sure whether Rebel loves me or not.
I slowly pull my hand off the doorknob.
“I said, open it,” Dack growls.
I speak through gritted teeth, matching his tone and letting all my anger seep into my voice. “Fuck you, Dick. Open it yourself.” I prepare myself for massive pain as he raises the tire iron above his head in a threatening gesture.
It’s in that moment, right as he’s opening his mouth to deliver his last and final order to open the door, that my previous planning-for-kidnap skills and maneuvers finally kick in. A surge of pure adrenaline jacks me up like a hit of lab-quality speed. Testicles, spectacles, wallet, and watch! Here I come!
His legs are spread wide open and I waste no time in bringing my foot up and planting it firmly between his legs.
CHAPTER FORTY-TWO
DACK GOES DOWN IN SLOW motion, his face paper-white and his expression a mix of fury, pain, and surprise.
The tire iron falls from his grasp with a clang against the wall and flips end over end onto the floor. He’s in a heap at Rebel’s door and Robert is behind him, trying not to go down with his friend while also attempting to give him some support.
I’d fist pump in triumph over my glorious ninja moves if I weren’t so panicked about dying. Instead, I begin to back away, sliding my hand along the wall to keep from tripping on my own feet.
Before I get too far, Dack lands on the ground and his leg goes over the tire iron. I lean down to snatch it away before Robert can get to it, but it’s hooked on Dack’s jeans.
Screaming, I yank it free, but it comes loose too suddenly. I fall to the ground on my ass, jarring my skull and making my headache flare up to new painful heights.
Robert drops Dack’s armpits and jumps over him, coming for me.
I swing out blindly with the weapon, nearly crying with joy when it comes into contact with his shin.
He roars in pain but somehow has the presence of mind to grab me by the hair.
I thought I had a headache before, but that pain was nothing compared to what I’m experiencing now. A sound comes out of my mouth that could never be considered human.
And then suddenly there’s another shouting voice and my head is yanked to the side as a chunk of my hair is ripped out by the roots. I squeal like a pig and then grunt like one too when body parts start slamming into me from what feels like all directions.
Confusion reigns for about three seconds before Robert goes flying backwards into the air like Superman doing the backstroke.
Big hands lift me up by the armpits and put me on my feet. What’s left of my hair is hanging in my face and I’m too dizzy to see what the hell is going on, but when I hear the voice of my savior, I nearly collapse with relief.
“Teagan, what the hell are you doing?”
“Oh, Colin!” I turn around sloppily and throw my arms around him, hugging his neck as hard as I can. I was drowning in near-death sorrow half a second ago, but now I feel saved. The relief is overwhelming. “I’m so glad you’re here!” I’m screaming and crying at the same time.
“Sit here,” he says, detaching me from his neck with strong hands and pushing me down to the ground.
I fall half the distance to the floor on my ass and have just enough
time to push my hair out of my face and enjoy the show. Colin closes in on my attackers and begins to systematically pound their faces into purple mush.
At first I cheer him on, seeing my life expectancy gain ground as my kidnappers become weaker and weaker, but I soon downshift into worried. Killing my attackers might not be the best revenge I can think of nor the best plan for convincing Rebel that I’m a good bet for a girlfriend. I doubt that me being the reason his brother ends up in prison for life would be considered good family relations.
“Colin! Stop!”
He keeps going, some kind of deaf, dumb and blind rage fueling his fists. And they’re big fists, holy mother of Trouble, thank you very much. Each one looks like a sledgehammer, and from all the blood and swollen body parts I’m witnessing, I’m thinking they probably feel like sledgehammers too.
I crawl over on hands and knees, grabbing his ankle. It flexes and bends under my fingers as he continues to punish Dack’s body. Robert has long since passed out. Or maybe he’s dead. I can’t see his face, but he’s not moving and he’s face-down on the concrete floor.
“Colin! Stop! Don’t kill him! I need to know who he works for!”
Colin’s fist hovers above him in the air as he pauses. “What?” he asks, turning around to look at me.
I can barely get the words out, I’m so breathless with the whole freaking-out thing. I sound like I just ran a marathon in flip flops. “They’re working for someone. They came to steal something from me that my dad gave me. I need to know who their boss is.”
Before they lawyer up, I want to know what and who I’m dealing with. In the hours before these turds came and ruined a perfectly decent barbecue and then tore some of my hair out, I might have been content to just let things lie, but not anymore. Nobody gives me a bald spot and gets away with it. I want justice. Really, I just want my hair back, but since I can’t have that, I’ll settle for a little revenge. The word vigilante suddenly has a nice ring to it.