The Escape (15 page)

Read The Escape Online

Authors: Hannah Jayne

His heart smacked against his rib cage. His breath was coming in tight, shallow puffs. It was getting harder to breathe.

He had to get away.

He had to escape the doctors who were coming for him.

They would surely arrive any minute. They thought he was crazy, those doctors in their white coats. They were going to prod at his brain and
make
him remember. He didn’t want that.

How could his mother betray him? She was practically begging them to take him away. She looked over her shoulder, then looked away, obviously ashamed at being caught.

There was no time. Fletcher would have to go now, right now, if he wanted to escape. If he wanted to be free, he couldn’t be at home when the doctors came. And he had to find out who had killed Adam. He had to do it now.

Twenty-four
 

The light in Adam’s garage clicked off after the door shut. Avery stood up, her eyes adjusting to the darkness.

The two-car garage was empty, but the walls were lined with shelving and all manner of storage boxes and sporting goods—canoes, a sled, a hockey stick, a soccer goal. Adam had been naturally athletic. Avery swallowed back a lump and went to the door.

It was open.

She stepped into the Marshalls’ living room.

The enormous room was lined with windows overlooking a huge deck that opened onto dense forest. Avery tiptoed through the room, taking in the lush beige-and-white furnishings. Everything matched. She picked her way through the living room and kitchen, then climbed the carpeted stairs, peeking in rooms until she found the one that had to be Adam’s.

She recognized his backpack next to the desk, but it was like looking at a magazine photo, not a teen boy’s room. Everything looked posed. Stacks of books were arranged by size on the desk, and the bed was made so tightly it looked like no one had ever slept there. It was the kind of room that every parent wanted, but no kid would want to live in.

“Okay, now to find a motive,” she whispered to herself. “Maybe Adam was in some kind of trouble? Maybe someone was mad at him…”

She slowly pulled open his top desk drawer, surprised that everything inside was placed just as precisely as everything on top of the desk.

Avery thought of her own room, which was a psychedelic mess of creativity and frustration that resulted in piles of cast-off clothing, books, and nice shoes tossed over in favor of sneakers.

She pushed aside the notebooks and frowned at a wide, flat box. Popping it open, she startled at the contents—a series of knives, arranged smallest to largest, each equidistant from the next. Except for one. Avery fingered the velvet between a short, orange-handled hunting knife and a longer Bowie-type knife.

Avery was vaguely familiar with the rest of the knives in the collection—a simple penknife, a pocketknife with a burnished leather–looking handle and glossy brass studs, and a small dagger with a carved dragon handle, the reptile’s eye a sparkling red jewel.

Each knife was clean and looked unused, polished even.

Was
Adam
a
collector?

Avery had no idea what Adam’s hobbies were, other than sports and Kaylee, but seemingly knife collecting—and an obsessive-compulsive bent toward organization—were important to him. She snapped a picture of the box and carefully put it back in the drawer, pawing through the next two and finding nothing of note.

She went to his closet. His clothes hung in groupings by color and style—long sleeves with long sleeves, collars all facing the same way. The militaristic organization reminded her of her father’s closet.

She fingered a row of soft flannels and dug through the pockets of his jackets, hoping to find the missing knife.

What
if
he
took
it
hiking
with
him?

Her father had never mentioned finding any weapons—but then again, she thought angrily, he probably wouldn’t.
If
Adam
had
taken
the
knife, why hadn’t he used it to defend himself?

She went through his bureau, poking through the neat stacks of clothing until she got to the bottom drawer. It opened slowly, the top of the drawer hissing over the thick stack of sweatshirts folded inside. Avery ran her fingers over them, then dipped to the bottom of the drawer, her fingertips landing on something papery.

She pulled out a stack of hundred-dollar bills.

Eleven of them, clipped with a paper clip and organized exactly as Avery would expect: each facing the same way, edges squared, a perfect rectangular stack. She carefully pulled out the sweatshirts and stared—the bottom of the drawer was lined with stacks of bills. There was a thick stack of twenties and another of tens. Avery was too scared to count them. She snapped a picture with her phone and frowned when the screen went black. Her battery was dead.

A rumble came from downstairs.
The
garage
door!
She ran to the window, ducking low, hoping against hope that she was imagining the sound. But the dark blue Volvo was pulling up the driveway.

• • •

 

Fletcher slipped out his front door. He was so jittery that his hands and feet felt tingly.

They’re not going to get me. They’re not going to get me.

He clenched his fists and started to run. The sound of his regular footfalls reassured him.

“Adam,” he whispered out loud to himself. “I have to find Adam.”

Maybe Adam wasn’t really dead. Maybe this was all some big, horrible joke. The thought made Fletcher feel better. Maybe this was all just some elaborate prank.

He still needed to find out what happened to Adam. If he did, then the police wouldn’t arrest him, and the doctors wouldn’t restrain him and shoot him up with drugs. He had to act quickly.

Run, run!

What
was
that? Who was that?

It wasn’t his fault—his mother, she had—

Put
your
head
down
and
keep
running. Keep running, Fletch.

I had to protect him. I
was
protecting him.

What
the
hell
are
you
doing?

Pain arced through his skull. It throbbed behind his eyes. He kept running.

She
wasn’t there—it wasn’t her—

Don’t ever stop. I can’t ever stop.

I
didn’t mean to. I didn’t mean to. Oh God. Oh God, please, no, I didn’t mean to.

Footsteps
pounding
. A ragged, metered breath. Sweat at his temples. The edges of his lips cracked and bone dry.

“I’m going to give you something to make you feel better,” Dr. Palmer had said. “Something to maybe make you think a little more clearly.”

He’d felt the doctor tug the sleeve of his shirt up. The cold bite of an alcohol-soaked cotton ball had swabbed his arm. He’d felt a prick in his shoulder. Then everything had gone dark.

“Fletcher? Fletcher, can you hear me? It’s Dr. Palmer. You’re safe. We’re friends. Can you tell me again what you remember?”

Fletcher stopped on the sidewalk when the images—memories, thoughts, whatever the hell they were—kept coming. He pinched his eyes shut and willed them to go away, then slammed his palm to the side of his head, trying to shake them out.

“Something’s taking over my brain.” He whispered it like a mantra. “Something’s taking over my brain.”

He was walking at a quick, clipped pace, unsure of where he was headed. He stopped and stared when the sidewalk abruptly ended.

He was in a cul-de-sac. Fletcher was in front of Adam’s house.

He heard the rumble of a car engine. It was Mrs. Marshall’s midnight-colored Volvo. He instinctively crouched behind a bush.

He watched her back out and then was compelled to go forward, his sneakers crunching on the gravel driveway. The house looked mostly dark. But a flicker of movement caught his eye. A dark figure slowly edging open the door of one of the bedrooms.

Fletcher squinted. The door that opened was in Adam’s room.

Whoever was walking around inside was drenched in shadows and moving slowly, carefully, pausing every few steps to cock his head and listen. Fletcher held his breath.
Who
would
be
in
Adam’s room?

Adam was a middle child, with a college-age brother and a little sister still in grade school. Fletcher remembered Adam saying his dad traveled a lot.

Was there a prowler in Adam’s house?

He thought of the rocks hurling through his windows, the eggs, the graffiti, the searing notes in his locker and mailbox. Surely no one would do that to Adam’s family. He considered knocking or trying the door but dismissed the idea. If the person in Adam’s room was a cousin or a friend, what was he supposed to say? “Hey, I’m the kid the whole town thinks is a killer, and I thought it would be cool to drop in and say hey…”

He cut his eyes to Adam’s window again and the figure was gone. Had he imagined it?

No.

Another flash of movement.

Fletcher stayed close to the tree line, advancing toward the house. He still hadn’t worked out a plan to get inside when he heard the hum of an engine moving closer. Then the nip of headlights cutting through the dim twilight. He glanced over his shoulder at the dark blue Volvo and broke into a run, breath ripping through his lungs, sweat beading down his rib cage.

He zipped across the front yard and bolted down the side of the house, hoping for a cut through to a side street or a thickened clump of trees. What he heard was a window scraping open and the scuffling of feet down wood siding—before the person attached to the scuffling feet landed right on top of him.

“What the—” He landed facedown on the moist grass, the breath sucked from his lungs.

It’s happening again, it’s happening again…

An
immovable
weight
against
his
chest. His arms and legs pinned. His whole body useless, betraying his brain, synapses telling him to move. Then the surge of strength that came from somewhere, that promised to make everything okay.

• • •

 

The first wallop caught Avery between the eyes. White-hot needles of pain sparked out across her forehead, and she pressed her face into her hands, sure she would only feel mealy mash where her skull had once been.

“Owww!”

Another bash, this one to the back of her head. This one far less painful because her thick ponytail took most of the blow.

“Avery?” Fletcher’s voice was veiled in shock and horror.

Avery moved her hands so she could open an eye.

“What are you kids doing?”

Avery and Fletcher startled at the shrill tone of Mrs. Marshall’s voice. Her eyes, ice blue and piercing like Adam’s had been, darted from Fletcher to Avery and back again as she stood over them, cell phone clutched in one hand.

“What are you kids doing here?” she snapped again.

Avery and Fletcher looked at each other, dumbfounded. Avery had no idea why Fletcher was at the Marshalls, and she prayed that he wouldn’t tell Mrs. Marshall that she’d been inside the house.

Fletcher started speaking first, winding the lie as he went. “I was just out walking—jogging—and I…” He shot a glance at Avery. “I saw Avery, and I guess I scared her because she took off running.”

The hard look on Mrs. Marshall’s face didn’t change. She looked at Avery. “Avery?”

Avery cleared her throat, hoping some miraculous story would tumble out.

“I knew Avery was coming over to give her condolences,” Fletcher said carefully, his eyes never leaving Avery’s. “I thought I might catch her so we could do it together, but like I said, I guess I surprised her.”

Avery nodded, relief flooding over her. “I wanted to see how you and your family were doing,” she said, the lie bitter on her tongue. “I wanted to tell you how sorry I was for your loss. You weren’t home, and then I ran into Fletcher. I got startled, I guess.” She pulled her feet up and dusted off her pants, shoving herself off the grass. “I’m really sorry to have disturbed you.”

Mrs. Marshall’s demeanor seemed to soften, her blue eyes going glossy. “You both surprised me. That’s all.” She glanced down at the phone in her hand. “Sorry, we’re all very jumpy.” She shot a quick glance to Fletcher. “As you can understand.”

It was then that Avery realized Mrs. Marshall had never actually looked at Fletcher. Sure, she had glanced at him for a beat but her eyes had flicked over him, as if unwilling to take in his face, his presence, for any longer than necessary.

The sirens cut through their awkward triangle.

“I’m sorry,” Mrs. Marshall said again. “I just heard the screams and called the police.” She turned and pushed her cell phone into the back pocket of her jeans, straightening the hem of her Windbreaker. She waved an arm over her head.

Avery’s stomach dropped low when she saw the flashing red-and-blue lights attached to the grill of the black GMC pulling into the Marshalls’ driveway.

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