Her Last Day (Jessie Cole #1)(54)


“Four nights,” Zee said, ignoring the voice in her head. “Scar had said something about owning a horse, an old gray mare with a swayback, so when I—”

“What city do you live in?”

“Woodland,” Zee told her, trying not to get overly annoyed by the interruption. “Anyway, I passed a few horses on the way, but when I saw the gray horse with the swayback, I was pretty sure it had to be his horse and that I was on the right track. Sure enough, there he was in the middle of a field, digging a hole in the ground.”

Zee frowned. “He was digging a hole when I found him. Do you think he’s going to kill us and bury us in that hole?” She shivered. She didn’t like being confined, trapped in small places. The cell was bad enough, but being put in a hole didn’t sit well with her. And what about the person in the box? she wondered. For the first time since being thrown down here, she remembered the box. “When I was outside walking toward the house,” Zee told Natalie, “there was a box, the same size as a small coffin. I think someone was inside, pounding their fists against the wood.” Zee grabbed both sides of her head and squeezed. She could feel her heart thumping against her ribs. “That’s when he hit me over the head with his shovel.”

“I think we should concentrate on getting out of here,” Natalie told her.

Zee looked up at the rebar.

You’re weak and dumb. You’ll never get out of here.

“I’m pretty strong,” Zee said, “but I don’t know if I can break through these bars.”

Natalie pushed herself to her feet. “That’s okay. We’ll just have to think of something else.”

“I know!” Zee rushed over to their shared wall of rebar. “If he enters your cage, try to get him to stand over here so I can grab him.” She reached both arms through the space between the bars to demonstrate. “I’ll lock my elbow around his neck so you can get the keys out of his pocket, or wherever he keeps them, and get us out of here.”

“I think that’s a great plan.”

For the first time in a long while, Zee felt proud of herself. She opened her mouth to say thanks when the door above the stairs creaked open. She couldn’t see the door from her cell, but she could hear someone rustling about at the top of the landing. She hoped he was bringing food and water. Her mouth was dry, and she couldn’t remember the last time she’d been so thirsty.

Natalie hurried back to the far corner of her cell while Zee returned to her door and wrapped her fingers around the bars.

He’s coming. He’s going to kill you. I told you months ago that he was bad news. You should have listened to me.

“It stinks in here,” the asshole said as his feet hit the cement.

He set his canvas bag on the floor and lit one of the kerosene lamps. Then he fished around in his bag and pulled out a dead chicken, feathers and all, opened the mail-slot-like door in the cell where the howling came from, and shoved the dead bird inside. She heard a thump when it hit the ground on the other side.

“Hey, Dog,” he called through the opening. “I brought you some food.” He tossed a couple of water bottles inside, too, then let the metal door fall back in place with a loud clang.

Zee heard chains clinking as someone moved about inside. Why would his prisoner be chained? It wasn’t good enough that he was locked inside an enclosed cell? She looked over at Natalie, who was sitting with her knees up close to her chest and her head down.

“Who do you have locked up in that cell?” Zee asked him.

“None of your business.”

“Why are your eyes so red?” She crinkled her nose. “And your neck is bleeding. Did you get into a fight?”

“Why did you have to show up here and ruin everything?” he asked, still angry. “I thought we were friends.”

Zee stiffened. “You said you would meet me at the park.”

“I got sidetracked.”

“With what?”

“A stranded girl on the side of the road,” he stated proudly, all anger gone.

Who’s the schizo now? she wondered.

“Her car had a flat tire,” Scar said. “She needed help.”

“Where is she now?”

“In a box.”

So she had heard someone in the box. She knew it!

Natalie stirred, rustling the straw.

The young man Zee no longer recognized as the guy she once thought was sort of cool walked over to Natalie’s cell and pressed his face up against the bars. “Are you awake?”

Nothing.

He chuckled. “I know you are.”

“She’s sick,” Zee told him. “She’s a diabetic and needs her medicine.”

“What about you?” he asked, turning to face Zee. “Don’t you need your medicine?”

“I can take it or leave it,” she lied. Even when she took her pills, she still heard voices, but her medication eliminated other problems, like hallucinations. She wanted out of there. “Let me go.”

“It’s too late for that.”

“Why are you doing this?”

“I already told you,” he said, his attention back on Natalie. “Natalie’s mother could have saved me, but she did nothing. She simply looked the other way. Someone had to pay. Since I couldn’t locate Sue Sterling, I figured her daughter should be punished in her place.” He sighed. “Look at me, Natalie.”

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