He felt a surge of hope, small but energizing. If he could see, his chances of working his way out of this improved dramatically.
He held on to the bars as he looked over at Noelle. Yes, it was definitely her. He didn’t know why or how they’d ended up here together, but he had to believe it had been by some sick design. They’d been chosen purposefully. Why, he couldn’t guess, but their connection wasn’t a coincidence. He was all but sure of that.
Your father is Leonard Sinclair. He killed my mother.
What the fuck? Who is behind this?
She looked over at him, eyes still partially squinted, skin pale. She was wearing black leggings and an oversize pale-pink sweatshirt. Her feet were bare like his. His heartbeat quickened. He could feel his pulse thrumming in his neck. As they’d first spoken in the dark, even after she’d told him who she was, he’d half believed he’d made her up. He’d finally cracked after so many days and nights alone in the pitch black, and she was nothing but a figment of his deranged imagination. It even seemed appropriate somehow that it was her he’d summoned to torment himself as he descended into all-out crazy.
She’d turned her head as he stared, and leaned forward, studying what was in front of them. He faced forward, too, toward the counter against the wall. It was about six feet away from them, out of reach, but there were several items on it. He couldn’t see the things on the back of the counter from his position, but he could see one that was slightly toward the front. “There’s an ice pick,” Noelle said breathlessly. Her eyes were wider now as she glanced quickly at him and then away. He craned his neck, blinking his one eye rapidly as the room came into sharper focus. Yes, yes, he saw the ice pick among the things that were farther back. It looked like an ice pick anyway. But all he saw was a weapon.
He turned around, looking desperately around his cage for something he might use to retrieve it, but the enclosure was empty except for the metal toilet in the far corner. He reached his arms wide, gripping the bars on either side of his metal prison and throwing his body forward in an effort to move the entire structure with the force of his weight. The cage trembled, causing his teeth to vibrate, but it didn’t budge. It felt like it was bolted to the floor. He let out a grunt of frustration, returning to the front and peering at the counter.
“One of the things near the back has a cord attached to it . . . I think,” Noelle murmured, her head touching the top of her cage as she attempted to peruse the elevated table. “It’s hard to tell.” She looked his way.
He could only see out of one eye, and so her account was going to be better than his. His gaze hung on the weapon he could see clearly for a moment before he huffed out a breath, sitting down and leaning against the bars before drawing his knees up and planting his feet on the ground. He raked his hand through his greasy, unwashed hair. “Fuck!” he yelled. “What the fuck good is a goddamn machine gun, much less an ice pick, when it’s halfway across the room and we’re caged like fucking animals!”
“If we can retrieve it, maybe we can jimmy that thing somehow,” she said, glancing up at the identical lock at the top of her own cage.
“Jimmy it?” he asked. “Do you know how to jimmy a keypad lock with an ice pick? If you even had a way to get the ice pick? Jesus, even if you managed that, you couldn’t fit your hand through these bars to grab hold of the lock anyway,” he said as he jerked his head toward the bars of the door portion of the cage, skinnier and closer together than the bars that made up the rest of their enclosures and going in two directions so they formed a grid.
“Do you have a better idea?” she spit out.
“Someone turned on the lights,” he said, ignoring the derision in her tone. “Maybe that someone will make an appearance.”
She let out a thin laugh. “Is that your plan, then? To charm your way out of here? Flash them that megawatt smile? Maybe you can promise them a few bars of gold if they don’t already know who your daddy is.”
So it had come to that very quickly. How could it not? Even in this unimaginable situation—trapped and traumatized.
He felt himself spiraling, disbelief and horror fighting to take control of any rationality or calm he might try to hold on to in an attempt to figure his way out of this.
He gripped the bars again, shaking them with all his strength and letting out a feral roar. For a few minutes, he allowed himself to rage, to fight, even though he knew it would be fruitless when what he fought was steel and circumstance. Some ghastly plan, the meaning of which—so far—was beyond his understanding. Evan yelled and bellowed and shook the bars of his prison until his muscles weakened and his throat was raw. And still, no one came. Finally, depleted, he fell back against the bars, gripping his hair in his hand as his head dropped forward.