Authors: Jettie Woodruff
“Your wife was a cop too?” I asked. I never knew
that. I had seen a picture at his house once of a graduating
class, and I assumed one of the two females was her, but
had no idea that she was an officer. I was shocked that
Lauren never mentioned it. Not that she was much on
gossip, but she would answer my questions. I guess I
never asked what his wife did.
“Yes, she was a cop or
is
, I should say. She went
back home to Chicago after one year here. Her dad was
also a cop, so she knew that there was more action than
writing parking tickets in some small hick town.”
“I like this small hick town,” I smiled up at him.
He carried a heavy heart. I could see it in his eyes.
“I need for you to talk to me, Ry.”
“I’m not telling you who he is, Dawson,” I assured
him.
“Then don’t, but I need some answers.”
I took a deep breath. I owed it to him. There was
nothing that I could tell him that would scare him away. If
he was going to run, he would have done it before now.
“What do you want to know?” I asked, turning
back to lie on his chest. It was easier not to look at him
when I talked about my past. I didn’t want to see the
disgust on his face.
“How did you spend your days there?”
“Most days were good. He traveled a lot, so I
spent most of my time either alone or with Rebecca.”
“Tell me about Rebecca. She knew. She knew that
you were there against your will. Why didn’t she help
you?”
“Rebecca helped me in more ways than you could
ever know. I don’t know that I would have survived
without her.”
“How old was Rebecca?”
I’m not sure why that mattered, but I answered.
“She was probably in her mid-thirties when I first got
there.”
“And she was just the help there?”
“She was more than the help. Her only job was to
take care of me.”
“What do you mean take care of you? What did she
do?”
“Hmm, a little bit of everything I guess. She made
my appointments for my hair, dress fittings for his stupid
dinners, made sure that I had my birth control shots. She
cooked for me too, but I think that was because she liked
to do it. I remember her always being close by. I used to
ride around the property on one of the golf carts, and
sometimes I would see her in a distance checking to see
where I was.”
“Were you able to talk to her?”
“Not much. Every room in that house had cameras,
and he could hear everything that was said. Sometimes she
would ride with me on the cart, and we would talk, but she
was always afraid to say anything.”
“Why would she work for a man like that?”
“Rebecca too, came from the same side of the
tracks as I did. She grew up very poor and never had
much. She was waitressing in a diner in some small town
when Drew approached her about working for him. I don’t
think she really knew what she was getting into, and I think
she too was afraid of him. She had a five year contract to
take care of me. He would give her, her own suite, take
care of all of her needs, and once her contract was up, she
would be paid a half a million dollars for her time. I guess
Drew thought that five years would be enough time to train
me.”
“So she too was weak. What a coward. So she left
before you?”
“No, she signed another one year contract. I think
she was afraid to leave me. She was the one that came and
put me back together when he decided to come home
pissed off and take it out on me. But she was leaving
shortly after I left. I hope she did,” I added.
“How often were you…”
“Punished, you can say it,” I said, finishing his
sentence.
“You were a grown woman. You shouldn’t have
been punished.”
I ignored that part. “It depends. Sometimes I would
go months without any encounters. He would come home
and do his thing with me and leave me alone. Other times,
mostly when I had to go out with him,” I added. “I always
said something or looked at someone or something that he
made sure that I was going to be punished for.”
“And this Derik prick, did he leave you alone?”
I snorted. “No. Once I was trusted enough to go out
and shop or go to the library, Derik had to be the one to go
with me. He always made sure that he took a back way
home, but I did become friends with his wife Jena and was
occasionally allowed to go out to a show or to eat with
her.”
“You couldn’t talk to her?”
“And tell her what, Dawson? Hey, your husband
has sex with me, and I am living in this mansion with
everything that a woman could want with this good
looking rich guy against my will. We didn’t talk about
personal things, well I didn’t anyway. She did. I used to
be absolutely repulsed when she would giddily tell me
about their sex life.”
I almost felt bad thinking about it. I said, almost. I
did start to somewhat enjoy sex with Derik. Not that I
liked him or anything. I hated the slime ball, but at least he
would let me finish. He loved for me to come and tried to
make sure that I did every time, unlike Drew who used it
to torture or punish me when I did.
“So you were getting raped by not only Drew but
his business partner as well.”
He didn’t say it like a question. He knew what it
was.
“Not for long with Derik. I got up enough nerve
one night and told Drew that I thought Rebecca should go
along the next time I was going to the library. I told him
that I didn’t think it looked good to be running around the
city with him so much alone. The bastard agreed. He made
sure that Rebecca was with me from that point on.”
Our deep conversation was interrupted by none
other than my annoying neighbor.
“I’m making coffee. You guys going to sleep all
day?” Lauren called from the kitchen.
We both laughed.
“Why don’t you have any leftovers in here?” she
asked as I made my way out to meet her.
“We had pizza at the shop last night, remember?”
“Yeah, but what happened to that lasagna?”
“You ate that yesterday.”
“Great, now I’m going to starve,” she pouted.
“Or you could go home and cook. Hey, I know.
How about you cook once and let me come over and eat
your leftovers?”
Lauren laughed. “Nah, I kind of hate that idea.
What are you guys doing today? Wanna go hangout at the
mall?”
“No. We’re staying in today,” Dawson said,
joining us. I knew then that our conversation wasn’t over.
“You guys are pathetic. You act like you’re forty
or something,” she stated.
“I am forty,” Dawson said. I laughed. He wasn’t
forty. He was only thirty.
I made us all breakfast and noticed how Dawson
kept staring at me. It wasn’t his sexy, I want you stare. It
was more of a trying to determine whether or not I was
okay kind of stare. I wasn’t okay, and was beginning to
wonder if I ever would be. Some days I did think I was
okay, and couldn’t be better. Other days, like that day,
made me question that.
I smiled a warm smile at him. He returned it.
After Lauren left we got dressed and walked down
the path to the beach. It was chilly but not too bad for
October in Maine. Dawson held my hand as we walked.
He was quiet, and I didn’t quite know what to say. We
spoke to John, out for his daily walk with his dog, and then
sat in the sand. The sand was warm from the sun. It felt
nice, therapeutic.
“I want to know how you got here, Ry.”
I knew it was just a matter of time before the
questions continued. I picked up a handful of warm sand
and let it funnel through the bottom of my hand. I looked up
to him, and he leaned in and kissed me.
“Please talk to me,” he begged. “I think maybe
getting it off your chest will help.”
“It doesn’t help, Daw. It makes me relive it.”
“I need to know, Ry.”
“Because you need to decide whether or not you
should marry me?” It wasn’t actually a question. I was just
stating a fact.
“I am marrying you, Riley Murphy. I love you. But
we have been together for over a year, and I know that
there is so much that you haven’t disclosed. Why won’t
you tell me?”
“Why did I ever get involved with a cop? I should
have gone out with Levi. He probably wouldn’t care about
my past. But nooo. I had to go fall in love with someone
with investigating training.”
“Investigating training?” Dawson said light
heartily with a smile. I smiled back. I couldn’t help it. He
was just too darn cute.
I took a deep breath. “What do you want to know?”
“I want to know everything, but right now I just
want you to tell me how you left. What made you decide to
leave?”
“Remember that I told you that Rebecca started to
go everywhere with Derik and me?”
“Mmhmm.”
“Well, after a few times. Derik stopped stalking
me in the library. He was pissed that he couldn’t get me
alone anymore, and pretty much pretended that I didn’t
exist.”
“Did Derik always drive you?”
“Mostly, I think he was the only one that Drew
trusted. Drew gave me a cellphone so that he could track
my whereabouts and call when he wanted.”
“Did you drive?”
I snorted. “No. I did get my driver’s license when I
turned twenty one. I’m not sure why. I was never allowed
to leave without Derik, Rebecca and sometimes Jena, but
if I was with Jena, either Derik or Drew himself
followed.”
“And Rebecca?” he asked.
“We were in the library right after Drew had
agreed to keep her on for one more year. I was looking for
a book that I had been waiting to come out. It was the third
in a series.”
I smiled, when I noticed that Dawson wasn’t the
least bit interested in the book that I had been so excited
about.
“Anyway, I looked up, and Rebecca was giving me
some sort of strange look. We were never close, like in
talking about anything personal. We talked, but she would
mostly just listen. I think she was afraid of what Drew
would hear.”
“What, Rebecca,” I asked.
“You need to leave, Morgan,” she stated, and for
some reason I knew that she wasn’t talking about leaving
the library. I feigned ignorance anyway.
“I have twenty more minutes,” I stated.
“You need to leave Drew, Morgan. I am going to
help you. We have nine months to get you out of there, and
I will be gone. I don’t think I would ever forgive myself if
I left and didn’t at least try. I may end up dead, but at least
I would die without a guilty conscious.”
“Rebecca, you know that I can’t just leave. I can’t
even leave the house without a babysitter. I have nowhere
to go. I wouldn’t go back to where I came from. He would
just find me.”
“We are going to figure it out. I promise, Morgan.”
I kept looking to Dawson, trying to read his face.
Every time that I did, he leaned in and kissed me.
“So, how did you two scheme up your
disappearance?”
“We never talked about it again for a month. Drew
had beaten me pretty good one evening, and the next day
she brought it up again while she brought me food.”
“Why did he beat you up?”
“I thought you wanted to know how I got out.”
“I want to know it all,” he insisted.
I turned my gaze back to my little mountain that I
had been forming from funneling sand through my hand.
“I had to go to another one of his events,” I started
with a heavy sigh. I hated Drew’s events, dinner parties,
and prospect meetings. I knew what it meant. I was never
going to make it through one of his engagements without
messing up. He knew it. He thrived on it. He knew that we
would come home, and he would play his sick games with
me. That was really the only time that he raised a hand to
me. It was inevitable. I would screw up somehow.
“I was having my hair and makeup done when he
came into to check on my progress. He was rushing me, or
the stylists, I guess. I wasn’t intended to go to this
particular event. I overheard him telling someone that I
wasn’t feeling well, and I wasn’t going to be able to make
it. He then went on to suck up to whoever was insisting