Authors: Marisa Logan
Chapter 2
Slight change of plans,
Jenny typed into the chat window.
I'm going to have to find alternate transportation tomorrow.
What happened to your mom giving you a ride?
Jeremy typed in. His messages popped up under his username,
WizardWil98.
In their online collaborative writing, Jeremy always played the part of the Dark Wizard Wilhelm, the Crimson Star's arch nemesis. Though in their fan fiction, they altered the two characters, developing stories that forced them to work together, and developed a forbidden romance between the two.
Mom has apparently decided to go full-on Sheltering Christian Mom,
Jenny typed.
The Campbells are on full lockdown for the remainder of the weekend.
Jenny looked over her shoulder, to make sure no one caught her at the computer this late at night. It was almost 2:00 AM, and Mom had a strict “no electronics after 10:00 rule.” Which was in addition to her “no electronics on the Sabbath Day” rule and her “no electronics when Mom is in a bad mood” rule. Technically, Jenny was breaking all the rules simultaneously. Though considering what she was planning for tomorrow, she doubted getting caught on her computer would make much difference.
That's totally lame,
Jeremy typed.
So, how are you getting to the convention? You're still going, right?
Heck yes I'm still going.
There was a pause, while Jenny stared at the blinking cursor. Then Jeremy typed,
You need a ride? I could swing down that way.
No way,
Jenny typed.
First off, my mom would kill you if she caught you down here. You know how she is about me having online friends. She's convinced you're a serial killer or a sexual predator.
Her mother hadn't approved of Jenny's friendship with Jeremy since she first found out about it. If him being an “internet stranger” wasn't bad enough, he was also eight years older than Jenny. As far as her mother was concerned, that meant he was only after one thing. And that was a thing that “good, pure Christian girls” didn't do.
Besides,
Jenny added,
I'm in the complete opposite direction from you. Aren't you already driving like eleven hours?
I'd drive two more for you,
he typed.
Jenny bit her lower lip. It made her feel warm when he said things like that.
It'd be four, dork. Two down, two up. You'd be dead at the convention if you spent fifteen hours driving, and I need my Wilhelm to be looking good for the cosplay contest.
Okay. So how are you getting there?
Jenny drummed her fingers on the desk. She glanced over her shoulder again, but there was no sign of movement in the house.
I'll figure something out. Worst case scenario, I can catch a bus heading that way. Or I'll hitchhike.
Don't go taking any risks, Jen. I want to see you there in one whole Jennifer-shaped piece.
She smiled as she read his words. Jeremy was the only person in the world who ever called her “Jen.”
I'll be safe,
she typed.
You just get some sleep, and I'll meet you there in the morning.
Jenny logged off the computer, then pulled up Google maps to check the directions from her house to the convention. There was no bus on a direct route from her town to Atlanta, where the convention was being held. If she had a car—not that she even had her license, since her mother refused to give her driving lessons—it would have been a two hour trip. If she could get to the nearest bus station, she could catch a bus for a more than four hour ride to Atlanta. But even the bus station was an hour away.
She looked at the clock. The convention started at 10:00 AM. She could catch the first bus of the day and be there mostly on time, but only if she could get herself across the fifty miles to the main bus station before 6:00 AM. An hour long cab ride, if she had money for a cab. Or a twelve hour walk, if Google was accurate.
Or she could hitchhike. And while she knew that was dangerous, she was just desperate enough to do it.
She went back to her room and dug her backpack out of the closet. She shoved a change of clothes inside, along with her black and red Crimson Star costume and her silky red wig. She shoved in her nightsticks, which were really just two lengths of copper pipe she'd covered in electrical tape, and added a flashlight, her cell phone charger, and a few comics to read on the bus. She strapped the backpack on, pulled on her boots, and climbed out the bedroom window.
“What are you doing?”
Jenny froze and looked back into the room with one leg already outside. It would figure that the one night Kathy slept in her own bed would be the night Jenny snuck out.
“I'm going to Atlanta,” Jenny whispered.
Kathy sat up in bed, leaning on one elbow. “Are you running away?”
“No, skreb.” Jenny smirked and shook her head. “I'm just going to the comic convention. I'll be back tomorrow.”
“Mom's going to kill you when she finds out.”
Jenny looked at her sister, hurt by the fear in Kathy's eyes. They both knew how much of a temper their mother had. It had been years since she actually raised a hand to one of them, but Jenny still had nightmares about the beatings Mom used to give.
“You didn't see me leave, okay?” she whispered. “Go back to sleep.”
Kathy laid back down, watching her big sister leave. “Be careful.”
“I will.”
Jenny dropped down to the ground outside, then shut the window. She moved quietly as she made her way around the house, then hopped over the chain link fence. Her skirt got caught on the fence and ripped, leaving a shred of cloth behind. She left it there, hurrying down the street and getting as far away from the house as she could.
It took her half an hour to walk to the highway. Once she got there, she started walking backwards down the road, holding her thumb out and watching the cars that passed her by.
There weren't many cars out on the highway at this time of night. When a car finally started to slow down, Jenny's heart began to race. She wished that she still believed in God, so that she could pray to Him to keep her safe, just in case whoever picked her up had something in mind beyond just giving her a lift.
Chapter 3
The car was a black four door, with the rear windows tinted. A man who looked to be in his forties sat in the driver seat. He rolled down the passenger-side window and leaned over, peering out the window at Jenny.
“Do you know how dangerous hitchhiking is?” he asked.
Jenny looked around. There were barely any other cars on the road. If this man wanted to, he could do just about anything to her. She wondered for a moment whether she'd be able to defend herself with her prop nightsticks.
“I just need a ride to the bus station,” she said.
The man rubbed his chin. “Are you a runaway?”
“What?” She frowned at him. “No. I'm just taking a trip. Besides, I'm nineteen.”
He continued studying her, then hit the button to unlock the door. “Get in.”
Jenny hesitated. The man didn't
look
dangerous. Not really. But he did look muscular and fit. She wouldn't stand a chance if he tried to manhandle her.
She took a deep breath and decided the risk wasn't great. After all, what were the odds of her stumbling across a serial killer or rapist?
She took off her backpack and got into the car, dropping her bag on the floor. “Thanks,” she said, pulling on her seat belt. “As close as you can get me is fine. I don't mind walking a ways.”
The man reached into his jacket. Jenny froze. Then he pulled out a leather wallet and handed it to her.
She opened it and found herself staring at a police badge.
Her heart hammered in her chest. Her mouth felt dry. “Am...am I under arrest?”
“No,” the police officer said, taking back the badge. “I'm not on duty, and I wouldn't arrest you for hitchhiking. Usually when I spot a teenager alone at night, I just contact their parents. You sure you're nineteen?”
“Of course I'm sure.”
He started driving, and Jenny already felt a sense of progress compared to her slow walk from home. “It's not common for people to get hurt while hitchhiking,” the man explained. “It's not like it is in the horror movies. But still, in the middle of the night like this, you could be a target for just about anyone. What's so important that you'd risk yourself like that?”
Jenny's face heated up. She turned away, looking out the window. “I'm going to a convention. I didn't have a ride, and I need to get to the bus station early.”
The man sighed. He drummed his fingers on the steering wheel. “You still live at home?”
“I live with my mom.”
“She know you're out?”
“No.” Jenny turned back towards the man. “But I'm old enough to make my own choices. It's not her business.”
“Maybe it isn't. But that doesn't mean you should worry her like this. If I woke up in the middle of the night and found out my daughter had snuck out of the house?” He shook his head. “Did you at least leave a note? Or call to tell her where you were going so she knows you're not dead somewhere?”
Jenny lowered her head. She hadn't even thought about it like that. She'd assumed her mother would be angry with her for sneaking out. But it hadn't occurred to her that Mom might think she'd been hurt, or kidnapped, or anything else. “I'll leave a message in the morning,” she said. “I guess it'll be a good idea, so she doesn't call the police and report me missing.”
The man laughed. “What's your name?”
“Jenny.”
“Well, Jenny, nice to meet you. I'm Officer Hank Wilson.”
They chatted for a little while as they drove. Jenny found out that Hank was divorced. He had two kids, both still living with their mother. And he'd been a member of the Georgia State Highway Patrol for fifteen years.
“So what are
you
doing out driving in the middle of the night?” she asked, once she got more comfortable in his presence. He reminded her of her own father. Gruff and stern, but the sort of man who would never hurt a fly.
“My brother in law is sick,” he said. “He's in the hospital in Macon. My ex and the kids are there. He took a turn for the worse, so the whole family, my ex's family that is, is heading down there. I'm driving up for the weekend to help take care of the kids.”
“What's wrong with him?”
“Pancreatic cancer.”
Jenny touched trembling fingers to her lips. She looked down at her feet. “My dad died of lung cancer.”
Hank looked at her for a moment, silent, as if he weren't sure how to comfort her. “I'm sorry. How long ago?”
“A year and a half.”
“It's a terrible disease.”
They were silent for most of the drive after that. Hank made a few attempts at small talk, but neither of them was much in the mood for chatting.
When they neared her exit, Jenny said, “You can just drop me off here. I can walk to the bus station.”
“Nonsense,” he said. “There's no way I'm dropping a teenage girl off on the side of the highway all by herself.”
He drove her right to the bus station and dropped her off at the front entrance. She opened the car door and grabbed her backpack. “Thank you,” she said, smiling at him. “I really appreciate this.”
“Do yourself a favor,” he said, “and next time, find a safer way to travel. Here.”
He pulled out his wallet and handed her a hundred dollars in twenties.
“I can't take this.” She held the money in her hands, torn between guilt over accepting it, and gratitude for the man's charity. It would be enough to cover her bus fare, and maybe leave enough left over for her to buy some breakfast. She'd brought a little bit of cash with her for the trip, but not much. She hadn't planned this little adventure out very well. Without Hank's gift, she might have been able to afford a one-way ticket to Atlanta, but she realized now that she would have been stranded there.
“Take it,” Hank said. “And this.”
He reached into the glove compartment and pulled out a small black cylinder. Jenny turned it over in her hands for a moment, examining the little button at one end.
“Mace?”
“Pepper spray.” He nodded to the vial. “In case you run across someone who might want to take advantage of a young girl.”
She stuck the pepper spray in one pocket, and the cash in the other. “Thanks. If there were some way I could repay you...”
“Just get yourself where you're going safe,” he said. “And call your mother. Promise me that.”
“I will.”
“Good luck.”
She got out of the car and shut the door. Hank watched her from the car until she was safely inside the bus station. Then he drove off, his tail lights gradually fading into the distance until they disappeared into the night.
Jenny pulled her backpack on and took a deep breath. She walked into the bus station, glad that the difficult part of her trip was already behind her.