Josie took it from his outstretched hand. “If you think of something that might help with this new case, or if you need anything at all, don’t hesitate to call me on my personal cell phone.” He tipped his chin toward the card in her hand.
She nodded, that crease still present between her brows. He had the ridiculous desire to reach up with his thumb and smooth it out. “Thank you for your time and the information.” He looked around at the porch, swept clean, not a cobweb to be seen, but the railing sagging slightly and in need of repair, the furniture old and cracking, pieces of the wicker broken away. “And good luck with getting this place up and running.”
She stood and gave him one last smile. “Thank you, Detective,” she murmured, glancing at his card.
He gave her a nod, their eyes lingering for a heartbeat, before he turned and jogged down her steps, pulling out of her driveway, and moving away from her farmhouse. When he glanced in his rearview mirror, she was still standing on the porch, watching him as he left.
CHAPTER NINE
Before
Marshall knelt beside her, cleaning up the wrappers from the fast food he’d brought. He seemed quieter than usual that night. Different. He’d fed her, given her water, cleaned her wound, changed out her waste bucket—which was a particular indignity on top of all the other indignities she suffered—and now he looked to be packing up to leave. Her heart beat hollowly in her chest.
“What are they saying about me?” she asked. Her voice sounded rusty from lack of use. The only time she spoke was when Marshall came to feed her and do . . . other things. He seemed to be staying for shorter and shorter times. She’d wondered often how her friends and family were reacting to her disappearance, what the police were doing to find her, but hadn’t asked Marshall about it. Maybe some part of her was afraid to know.
She was surprised when he leaned back against the wall next to her, his masked head hitting the cement behind them. “That r-roommate of yours is raising holy h-hell. She calls the police every day. She has a command central going on from your apartment. Other students roaming in and out.” He made a strange chuffing sound. “Printing off f-flyers, making calls until all hours of the m-morning.” He paused. “I volunteer there.” He turned his head as if gauging her reaction to that bit of news, and then turned away. “Your aunt Mavis is there all the time t-too.”
Mavis. Her aunt. Her father’s sister who lived in Oxford. Josie closed her eyes, feeling tears burning behind her lids. She lived in a picturesque old farmhouse in the country. It was a shining beacon of light in her mind. She pictured standing in the field that overlooked the house, where her aunt had brought her to pick wildflowers, and the longing to be there, wide-open sky stretched out around her, hit her so hard it was like a punch to her gut. Josie had loved it there as a kid when her dad took her out. But once her dad left for good, her mom didn’t take her anymore. She said Mavis was weird and kooky, and a bad influence. Which was laughable coming from her mother. The woman who was biologically a mother anyway, though Josie thought of her with no fondness. No, she’d been her first abuser. The person she should have felt safest with . . . but hadn’t.
“And my mother?” Josie whispered, turning her eyes away. She didn’t care. She told herself she didn’t care.
When she looked back at Marshall though, his eyes were narrowed as he studied her. He shook his head. “Your mother hasn’t come by.”
“So you . . . spend a lot of time there? Volunteering?” she asked. She somehow knew he did, thought he probably got off on it. Walking from his apartment to the second floor where she and Reagan lived, acting all concerned, making calls maybe, his stutter growing worse as he spoke to strangers, passing out flyers . . . Leaving to feed her, rape her, returning with her still on his skin to comfort the people who actually cared for her. A shudder went through her.
“As much as I c-can. I have to w-work too, you know.”
“Where do you work?”
He barked out a laugh. “Oh right, you c-care about me now, d-do you?”
She ignored his sarcasm and he