she was on. Her other hand was free, and with that hand she reached up and touched her face. She could feel a tender sticky scab on her chin where she’d been punched by the pilot. Her mouth was dry and tasted sour.
“Hello?” she said into the room, her voice sounding cracked and slurred in her own head.
“Hello,” came a voice back, from maybe about ten feet away. A woman’s voice, anxious, a little hopeful.
“Who’s there?” Abigail asked.
“It’s Jill Greenly.” The words were whispered. “Is that Abigail?”
“Yes, it’s Abigail. Oh my God, what’s happening? How long have you been in here?”
“I don’t know. What day is today?” And then Abigail could hear stifled crying.
“It’s Wednesday, I think. Wednesday night or it might already be Thursday. It was Wednesday afternoon when they gave me a shot of something.”
“Who gave you a shot?”
Abigail thought back to the events that had happened after the plane had come for them. Eric had arrived, telling her that he wanted to take her off the island himself. Eric and Bruce arguing, and then suddenly they weren’t. They were laughing, all of them, and it was like she was in some movie, that moment when it’s clear that everyone is evil, that the pod people are everywhere and there’s nothing you can do about it.
“It was Chip,” she said to Jill in the dark. “Chip who owns this place gave me the shot that knocked me out. But they’re all in on it. My husband, and Eric, and everyone. They’re all part of it.”
“What do you mean?” Jill said. “Who’s Chip?”
“He runs this place, but he’s in on it.”
“In on what?”
“All of it. All of them. I think we’re here to be punished or something. We’re the only women here.”
Jill was quiet for a moment, and Abigail said, “You still there?”
“I’m here. That’s what they told me, actually. They told me I was being punished for my sins.”
“Who told you?” Abigail said.
“Alec told me the night I tried to run.”
“I saw you that night. Outside of my bunk.”
Jill started crying again. Abigail waited, even though she wanted to tell her to stop crying so they could talk to each other. She didn’t know how much time they had.
“That was you?” Jill said at last.
“Yes, you ran away from me.”
“I didn’t know what … I didn’t know what was happening.”
“Why were you bleeding?”
“Alec … and Porter …”
“Porter was the man you used to be engaged to, right? The man who showed up here, and you were upset about.”
“I don’t know if I should talk about this,” Jill said. “They’re probably listening.”
“So what? We need to know each other’s stories. It can only help us.”
“I don’t know,” came Jill’s voice, quiet. Abigail thought she could hear her crying a little.
“Talk,” she said. “Tell me everything that happened. Who cares if they’re listening?”
“Okay,” Jill said, after a period that felt close to a minute. “Okay.”
“Take your time,” Abigail said.
Jill started right away. She coughed, then said, “I didn’t tell you the whole story when we talked that night. I said that Porter was a nice guy, basically, but he isn’t. I mean, he was at first, but the more I got to know him, the more controlling he got, the more jealous. He told me that he didn’t want me to work anymore as an actress, and that after we got married he would forbid me from working. He said it would make him look bad, like he wasn’t able to provide enough money for the two of us, which was crazy because Porter’s incredibly rich. I said that it had nothing to do with money, that I really did love acting, and wanted to keep doing it. It just got worse and worse between us. We fought all the time, but I kept flying back to L.A. for acting auditions. Then I got a job in Vancouver, a web series that was only paying minimum daily rates, but I told Porter I wanted to do it and that we should break up. He agreed to let me take the job, but he wouldn’t agree to the breakup.
“I should have insisted, I know, but I just wanted to get away from him at that point, and the job in Vancouver was for three months. Anyway, in Vancouver I met this guy. He was a bartender, really good-looking, and I knew that at this point Porter and I were finished, so we got together, me and the bartender, just for one