THE MAZE by Catherine Counlter

She looked at Hannah, who was standing with her back against one of Marlin’ s props, her head down. At first Lacey thought she was numb with fear, but then she realized she wasn’t terrified senseless, which Marlin and Erasmus probably thought. No, it was an act. Hannah was getting her bearings, thinking, figuring odds.

Good. Let them think she was broken. Lacey called out, her voice filled with false concern she was sure Hannah would see right through, “Hannah, are you all right?”

“Yes, but for how long?” Hannah didn’t look at her, just kept breathing deeply, staring at the filthy wooden floor. “I don’t suppose there’s a chance that Savich will get here?”

“I don’t know.”

“Shut up, both of you cunts!”

“Really nice language from your daddy, Marlin.”

“He can say whatever he wants, Marty. You know that. He’s a man.”

“Him? A man?” It was Hannah, her voice hoarse because Erasmus had choked her when she’d tried to get away from him. “He’s a worm, a cowardly worm who raised you to be a rabid murderer.”

Hannah didn’t even have time to ready herself before Erasmus hit her hard on the head with the butt of Lacey’s SIG. Lacey knew she’d lost it. Otherwise she would have forced herself to be silent.

“I’ll enjoy cutting her throat,” Erasmus said, standing over an unconscious Hannah. She was drawn up in the fetal position. There was a trickle of blood from her nose.

“So you will kill her,” Lacey said, and smiled at Marlin. “I’m not going into your maze. There’s no reason to. She isn’t leverage. You’re going to kill her too. You heard your sweet daddy.”

Erasmus raised his hand to strike her, but Marlin grabbed his wrist. “Marty’s mine. I’ll handle her. Lookee here, Pa, a little druggie. You want to take care of her?”

A young black girl, dressed in ragged filthy jeans and an old Washington Redskins jersey, with holes in the elbows, was crouched by the door of the warehouse, her eyes huge, knowing she was in the wrong place and knowing too there was nothing she could do about it. Erasmus walked to the girl, took her by the neck, and shook her like a chicken. Lacey heard the girl’s neck snap. It was unbearable. She closed her eyes but not before she saw Erasmus toss the girl aside like so much garbage.

“I’ll see if there are any more scum inside,” Erasmus said and slid through the narrow opening into the huge derelict building. The area was godforsaken, bleak, an air of complete hopelessness about it. All the buildings had been abandoned by people who had just given up. All were in various stages of dilapidation. There were old tires lying about, cardboard boxes stacked carefully together to cover a homeless person. It was the nation’s capital and it looked like the remains of Bosnian cities Lacey had seen on TV a while back.

Marlin took her chin in his palm and forced her face up. “Guess what, Marty?”

“My name’s Lacey.”

“No, you’re Marty to me. That was how you came on to me in Boston. That’s how you’ll go out. Guess what I found?”

She just stared at him mutely.

He pulled her Lady Colt out of his pocket. “I remembered this little number. This is the gun you shot me with in Boston. You were hoping I’d forget, weren’t you? You wanted to blast me again, didn’t you? Well you aren’t going to do anything now. I win, Marty. I win everything.”

“You won’t win a thing, you slug. I’m not going to walk into your maze.”

“What if I promise you that I’ll let her go?”

She laughed. “Your daddy’s the one who’s going to kill her, Marlin, not you.”

“All right, then. I have another idea.” Marlin twisted her chin, then slapped her. “Come on, Marty, Show Time.”

Erasmus came out of the warehouse, dragging a ragged old man by his filthy jacket collar. “Just one, Marlin-this poor old bastard. He’s gone to his reward. I bet he’d thank me for releasing him if he had any breath left.”

Erasmus lowered the old man to the rotted wooden planks outside the warehouse, then kicked him next to a stack of tires. “Take your girlie, Marlin, and have her walk the walk. I want to get out of this damned city. It’s unfriendly, you know? And just look around you. People ain’t got no pride here. Ain’t nothing but devastation. Don’t our government have any pride in their capital?”

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