That was me. An outlier.
An outsider.
The outcast.
“They got the littlest one for ten minutes.” He stood. “And this is what we know about these types of people. They will try again, and they do not care about the ex-girlfriends or ex-mistresses, so while your mother will be safe, you will not be. If you return to Brookley, the quaint small town it is, they will try again. If you leave with me, your mother does not have to have her life upended. She can return there, live her life happily but away from her daughter, while you give us time to search out your abductors and eliminate this threat.”
* * *
And here we were, heading to a hotel.
We had two SUVs with us.
There was no word to describe this.
Everything was different.
I glanced over to my mom. Chrissy was gazing out the window, a slight excited smile on her face. When I got out to the SUV, she looked at me, but I only said we’d talk later. I might’ve growled it. Or grunted it. I didn’t know. I was still peeved, so I had transferred from the Numb Train to the Not Giving a Shit Train. Either way, she just seemed relieved.
We were driving through downtown Chicago, so her eyes kept going up, her neck craning to see the tops of the buildings all around us.
I recognized the look in her eyes.
She thought everything would be fine now. She was relieved, more than anything else.
I twisted my hands together in my lap.
Brookley had her job. Bingo night at the local VFW. My aunt Sarah. Chrissy was a godmother to two of my cousins. My two uncles. My grandparents. Her younger sister. There was a family tribe there, and they all had their own friends, who were my mother’s friends. Yes, there were issues and divides, but she wanted to be there.
My mom was tough. Hardworking. She never wanted a handout, refused them 102 percent of the time. She got into nursing school, dropped out for a year to have me, then finished the next.
I took that one year from her.
How could I take everything else from her?
“Oh!” Her hand grabbed my arm and squeezed. “Bailey.”
We were pulling into a hotel parking lot. The Francois Nova. It was one of those skyscraper ones, a hotel that could’ve been in a magazine. I might have been impressed a day ago.
Now it was just the last time I’d see my mom.
For a while. That’s what that asshole had said. He needed time. Things would get safe, and I could go back.
Right. I was going with that. It didn’t make my insides feel like they’re being ripped out of me.
“We’re here,” Chrissy said, just as the doors on both sides of the SUV opened and we clambered out.
We were surrounded by cement on a dark parking ramp.
Six guards stood around us, most facing outward, but one went to the door connecting the hotel to the parking ramp. He knocked once, and it opened.
Another two guards stood on the other side, along with a hotel employee. Make that two employees. A woman with her name pinned to her shirt, a pencil skirt, and hair pulled up in a tight bun waited for us. Another employee stood behind her, a bellhop. He was in full hotel uniform, even wearing white gloves.
The woman took us to our room, but it had to be inspected by the guards first.
My mom went inside, and I turned to look at the guards. They all watched me back, their faces impassive. I was going with my gut here. “You guys work for him, don’t you?” I didn’t know the setup, the hierarchies, but while my father might’ve been the big boss, I knew Asshole Kashton was their boss, too.
I didn’t get a response. I didn’t expect to.
“I’ll let you know my answer in the morning, and not a second before.”
Then I slipped inside, not feeling satisfied at all.
I checked the peephole. Two guards were outside the door. I’m sure they had one at each stairway, maybe even at the elevator too.
Chrissy came out from the bedroom. “This place is amazing.”
Yeah. It sure was. Amazing.
She headed for the bathroom. “They gave us clothes … and what’s this?” She picked up a small bag, unzipping it. “And toiletries. There’s almost everything in here we need, but no…” She was sifting through it. “I’m going to need some Tums. With the wine I’m planning on drinking tonight, my reflux will not be pretty.”
“They probably have some in the lobby. I’ll get you some later.”
I couldn’t bring myself to interrogate her throughout the rest of the day.
Maybe I’d already made my decision.
Maybe I wanted to enjoy this last day with my mom.
Or maybe I was already tired, knowing that tomorrow we’d be ripped apart, and I didn’t really know how long this would last.