Read Held & Pushed (2 book bundle) Online
Authors: Kimberly A. Bettes
Returning
to his seat, he asked, “You like it?”
“I’d like
it more if I were somewhere else eating something else with someone else.”
He nodded.
“It’s going to be fun having you here. You’re so unlike the others.”
There were
so many things wrong with that
sentence,
I didn’t even
know where to begin. First of all, it sounded like he planned to keep me around
for a while. I suppose it was good that he didn’t plan to kill me. At least not
yet, but I didn’t want to be here.
And for him to compare me
to ‘the others’ frightened me.
How many others had there been?
He must’ve
seen the look on my face. “Don’t worry. I’ll take care of you.” He leaned
forward over the table and added, “I like you.”
Somehow,
that didn’t make me feel better.
“Would you
like to play a game of Gin Rummy?” he asked after we’d finished eating.
“Yeah.
At home, without you.”
“How about here, now, with me?
You’re going to be here a while, so you might as well get used to the
idea and have a little fun.” He stood and walked across the room to a drawer,
from which he produced a deck of playing cards. He returned to the table, sat,
opened the box and began to shuffle the cards.
“How long
do you think I’m going to be here?” I asked. “You certainly seem to have some
sort of plan.”
He
shrugged. “You’ll be here as long it takes.”
“As long
as what takes?”
“As long as it takes for me to do my research.”
He began dealing the cards.
I sighed
in frustration. I wasn’t getting much from him and it was pissing me off. I
needed answers.
He had
already picked up his cards and organized them. With his elbow on the table and
the cards fanned in his hand, he looked at me. “Are you going to pick up your
cards and play with me?”
“Why would
I want to play with you? Why would I want to do anything with you? You brought
me here against my will and handcuffed me to your table. What makes you think
I’m even in the mood to play?”
“It’s true
that I brought you here against your will, but you have to admit that I’ve been
nothing but nice to you. Isn’t that right?” He waited patiently for me to
answer.
Though I
hated to admit it, he was right. I nodded.
“So why
wouldn’t you want to play with me? Am I not good company?”
He
actually had been decent to me so far. But who knew what lay ahead? I was still
being held hostage in his house. I really didn’t know what to think. Even if I
did know what to think, I doubted that I could’ve thought it because my head
was spinning.
I picked
up the cards in my left hand and brought them down to my lap, placing them in
my right hand. I straightened them out and arranged them. This was the weirdest
thing that had ever happened to me. It even trumped the time at the supermarket
when someone’s kid tripped and fell, grabbing my elastic
waisted
Capri pants on the way down. I’d stood there in the crowded store, arms loaded
with bags, while my pants slid to my ankles. And that wasn’t even the weird
part. The weird part came when some guy behind me bent down, grabbed my pants,
and pulled them up.
Then patted my ass.
Compared to
this, that was nothing.
As we
played, I had questions I needed answered and I wasn’t going to let him slip
out of answering them.
“What’s
your name?” I asked.
“Why do
you want to know?”
“So I’ll
know what to call you.”
“Well, it
would be nice to hear you call me something other than asshole.” He smiled at
me over his cards. “My name is Ron.”
I waited
for him to ask my name, but he didn’t. “Don’t you want to know my name?”
“I know
your name, Nicole.”
“How do
you know that?”
“Are you
surprised?”
“A little.”
He
chuckled. “It’s nothing spectacular, though it would be nice to be able to
shock and awe you with some fabulous story of how I studied you for quite some
time, took notes of your movements, did a historical report on your family and
such. But I’m afraid it’s much simpler than that. I looked in your wallet while
you were in the bathroom. Saw your name plastered throughout on checks, credit
cards, and your driver’s license.”
I relaxed
a little with relief knowing that he hadn’t been following me and planning
this. I mean, I knew he had planned to kidnap someone; it was just a relief to
know it was happenstance that it ended up being me.
“Did you
think I’d been stalking you? Hunting you perhaps?”
I
shrugged. “I didn’t know. You’re a psychopath and I can’t guess what you do in
your spare time.”
“A psychopath?
Well, that’s a step up from asshole, I suppose.” He smiled. “I planned to bring
someone home with me today. I wasn’t sure who until I saw you.”
I watched
him pick up some cards from the discard pile, and couldn’t help but ask, “What
about me?”
“Look at
you. You’re a young adult. You’re beautiful. You have gorgeous brown hair,
which has always been my preferred color. Your smile is enchanting. Your teeth
are bright and straight. Your skin is clear and just the right shade of tan.
You’re fit. When I brought you here, I had no idea just how much fun you were
as a person. So as it turns out, not only do you have the looks, but you also
have the personality. You’re the whole package.”
I watched
him sort through cards, and I thought about what he’d said. Clearly, he didn’t
know how to read a person. He called me a young adult, but I was twenty-eight.
My smile was enchanting because I had a dentist who worked magic with teeth
whitener and veneers. My skin was the right shade of tan because my best friend
owned a salon and was an expert at spray tans. Had her salon not also contained
a gym, I wouldn’t be fit either. And as for my personality, well, I couldn’t argue
with him there.
Continuing
both the game and the interrogation, I asked, “So what do you do, Ron, since
you don’t work at an asylum?”
He smiled.
“Don’t you recognize me?”
I looked
at him, studying his face. “You mean from the Wanted posters hanging in the
Post Office? Sure.”
He
laughed. “Your charm just grows on me, Nicole. I thought maybe you would’ve
recognized me from the back of my book.”
“What
book?”
“I’m not
surprised that you don’t recognize me. My first novel was the farthest thing
from a success. But it’s okay, because my next novel,
Held
, is going to be a bestseller.”
“You sound
pretty confident about that for a guy who failed so miserably the first time,”
I taunted him. I was aware that it wasn’t a good idea to poke the bear, but I
couldn’t help it. The guy got to me.
“Oh I am
certain that the second time will be a success.”
“What
makes you so sure?”
“You’re
going to help me.”
I didn’t
know what the hell he was talking about. First he tells me he’s a horrible
writer, and now he tells me I’m going to help him. I’m not a writer, and I
never claimed to be. I didn’t know what kind of help I could offer him.
“How could
I possibly help you?” I asked, laying down the last card from my hand.
“Well
played,” he said. We added up our points and he wrote them down on a small
notepad. He then shuffled the cards and resumed our conversation. “I mentioned
earlier that you were going to help me with my research.”
“Yeah, you
said that, but you never explained it.”
As he
dealt, he said, “I need someone to study while I write the book.”
“What do
you mean, study?” I was as lost now as I was five minutes ago.
He rested
his hands on the table and thought of a better way to phrase his words. “The
book is about a girl who’s held captive, and I’m going to hold you captive
until I’m done writing it. That way, I can base what I write on real
experiences. I will base my character on you, and if you cry about certain
things, the character will cry. Make sense now?”
I
shuddered at the thought of the things he would do to me just to gauge my
response. “That sounds retarded.”
He sat
back and looked as though I’d slapped him. “What do you mean it sounds
retarded?” He looked as if those words tasted bad in his mouth. His face
scrunched up as he said them.
“I mean it
sounds stupid. No one wants to read something like that even if you could write
it well, which based on the sales of your last book, you can’t. It’s never
going to work.”
He pounded
his fist on the table, knocking a couple of his cards to the floor. His eyes
were wide with anger. His nostrils flared. His chest heaved with his heavy
breathing. I quickly thought of a way to calm him. I didn’t like him when he
was calm, but I certainly didn’t like him when he was angry.
I quickly
added, “Then again, Ron, with me here to add the realism that you need, you
might just pull it off. Who knows?”
This
seemed to satisfy him. It took a full minute, but he calmed down and regained
his composure. He picked up his cards from the floor and set about arranging
them in his hand.
“I’m
sorry,” he said.
I didn’t
know what to say, so I said nothing.
We played
that hand in silence. I won again, and he wrote down our scores. As he shuffled
the cards, I wondered if my husband had begun to worry yet. Looking at my
watch, I saw that it was almost four o’clock. I’d been gone from home since
eleven thirty, and had been officially missing since one o’clock. It was nearly
dinner time, and I never failed to be home for dinner with my husband and son.
If he hadn’t started worrying yet, he soon would.
“Sometimes
I get...angry.” After a moment, he added, “I don’t suppose there’s a need to
apologize. After all, you’ll learn soon enough about my anger.”
“What does
that mean?” I was afraid it meant he was going to take his anger out on me.
“Don’t
worry about it,” he said. “Let’s just play. No need to ruin a perfectly good
evening with talk of anger. Now what do you like to do in your spare time?”
I opened
my mouth to smart off to him, but before I could, a clatter came from the
hallway. Ron jumped up from his chair and I spun around. I didn’t know what had
caused the sound, but I had a feeling he knew.
At first I
saw nothing, as there was nothing to see. But then, the first door on the right
in the hallway burst open and what emerged was beyond my imagination.
It was a
woman, I could tell that much because she was naked. But I couldn’t have given
her description to the police because she was covered in blood and filth. Her
hair was long and stringy and caked with both wet and dry dirt. Her eyes were
wide, and even from this distance, I could see the fear. And I could smell her.
It was a combination of body odor, fecal matter, and piss.
I wasn’t
sure whether she saw me, but I knew she saw Ron. When her eyes found him, she
screamed. Then, she turned and ran into what I assumed was the living room. Ron
bolted after her. I listened to the sounds coming from the next room and tried
to figure out what the hell was going on.
Something
crashed to the floor, probably a lamp, and then there were sounds that could
only be Ron hitting her. Some were slaps, others sounded more like punches. She
yelled and screamed. He told her to shut up. Then, Ron came out of the living
room backward. He was dragging the woman, who was on the floor kicking and
screaming. Ron’s hands were wound around clumps of her hair. She tried to move
his hands, tried to scratch him, tried to hit him, but managed to do nothing
except make him angry. And what I’d seen at the table just minutes earlier was
nothing compared to this.
He slammed
her head to the floor and pivoted on his left foot. He sat on her belly, one
leg on each side of her. As she continued to kick and scream and thrash around,
trying to get in some good blows, he got in a few of his own. He punched her in
the face repeatedly. He slapped her. At one point, he choked her.
I looked
away. I couldn’t watch any longer.
When the
slapping stopped, I looked back and saw him dragging her now limp body through
the open doorway, back to where she’d been.
I was left
sitting in the kitchen wondering who she was and what was going on.
Suddenly,
everything was real. I was being held in a house with a madman who had been
torturing a woman for no telling how long. I didn’t dare ponder how long she
might’ve been here. He had two sides of which I was now aware. He had a calm
side, which allowed him to seem friendly and normal. Then, he had a dark side, full
of anger. He was capable of anything.