by Brynn Kelly
The rain intensified, smoothing the water into a moonscape and blurring gray sea into gray sky for three-sixty degrees. Lucky he had the GPS to track his position because he couldn’t see shit.
But just skidding across the water felt like progress—flying off the crests of waves, launching into the air. Every wave brought him a second closer to the people who, right now, needed him most.
The people he needed most.
* * *
Holly limped across the compound and followed Gabriel’s doormen down a sandy path through the jungle, with Chamuel behind. Water vapor rose around them, from the downpour. Every time she hesitated or stumbled, the pilot groped her ass. Lucky her get-out-of-jail-free cards were in her front pockets. She dug her fingernails into her palms, longing to spin around and smack him one in his leering face. But then what? Limp away into the jungle, pursued by three armed men? She’d get a better opportunity.
They reached a clearing dominated by a dirty concrete hut. Two more men sat on the porch, rifles slung across their laps. One spoke into a walkie-talkie. A reply crackled back. She was losing count, but that made at least twenty Lost Boys. Right now, right here, it was five against one. Four big-ass assault rifles and at least one handgun against one pocketknife. The guard in front pointed with the tip of his gun toward the hut and yabbered something at her, gesturing. Shit. What exactly did they plan to do with her in there? She climbed the steps. If Gabriel considered her more valuable alive, they’d be reluctant to pull the trigger, at least. If they planned to use her in other ways, the best she could hope was that they’d take turns. She’d have more chance against them one at a time.
One of the men shoved her through the doorway. She sidestepped to avoid tripping on something. A leg. The floor was carpeted with bodies—live ones, thank God—sitting cross-legged. Twenty, maybe thirty pairs of fearful eyes stared up at her. All women, all Southeast Asian. Gabriel’s trafficking victims? She dry-heaved on the stench of week-old sweat, unwashed hair, stale urine—and worse. The women had left a wide arc around a bucket in the corner. The toilet? Next to it was a dark red stain that could be only one thing. She swallowed.
Another guard sat in a corner by the door, his chair tipped so he could lean back against the wall, his nose and mouth covered with a red bandanna. Beady black eyes leered at her. The guy from the plane. Holly gritted her teeth. How many shipments of women had been channeled through this place? Her problem had just got a whole lot bigger.
He shouted and the women shuffled. A guy behind Holly prodded her with his gun barrel toward a gap that materialized on a dirty woven mat. She picked her way through the women and sat. Was it selfish to be grateful she wasn’t alone?
As the men talked, the women cast her surreptitious looks. The woman beside her clasped her hand roughly, and squeezed. Holly gave her a grim smile. The room was a bunker with a couple of barred, insect-screened windows, one next to the heavily guarded door. Greasy-haired women with glassy eyes rested against the grimy walls. In the middle of the room, they sat back to back. One slept sitting up, her head slumped. How long did Holly have here? Given she’d come as a surprise, it could take Gabriel a while to find a buyer.
Outside, several pairs of boots receded. The woman released Holly’s hand, rose stiffly and waved at the guard, pointing to the bucket. He nodded slightly. She shuffled her way through the crush of bodies. As she neared the bucket, half a dozen women stood and formed a semicircle around her, facing outwards—masking the guard’s view. After a minute, the woman emerged. She met the guard’s eye, raising the bucket and nodding at the door. He waved dismissively, revealing an S-shaped burn scar on his forearm. The woman was gone for a minute, before returning with an empty bucket and reassuming her seat.
An hour passed, in silence. Maybe two. Holly itched to ask someone what was going on, but the guard shouted at any woman who as much as cleared her throat. The women gave up staring at her and instead studied their hands or the floor or the walls. A girl wearing a Justin Bieber T-shirt sobbed into her neighbor’s lap. The older woman rubbed her back in listless circles. The air thickened and heated as the insect chorus intensified outside. Now and then, a coconut thunked to the ground. The guard hosed the room with insect spray, and stepped out for half a minute while the choking fog cleared. Holly pulled up the collar of her sweater and breathed through it. No doubt the women were worth less if they had malaria.
Women went to the toilet, one by one, others forming a wall each time. The younger guard appeared with bottles of water, which the women passed around. A G was burned into his forearm—for Gabriel?
When she could no longer stand the heat, Holly took off her sweater and laid it over her lap to cover the bulges in her pockets, ready to pull it on again in an instant.
It was prison all over, but with no laws governing her treatment, no path to parole, no trial—fair or otherwise. Her only chance at surviving was to break out, with zero idea where she was, a child to protect and a couple of dozen women she could hardly leave behind. She couldn’t even be sure what ocean she was hearing.
One of the men—the dark-skinned one, marked with a G—appeared in the doorway and gestured to his mouth, miming eating. Four women pushed to their feet and filed out. Holly gripped her sweater, searching the women’s faces for signs of fear. Nothing but listless resignation.
She let maybe ten minutes pass, then pulled on the sweater. Time to put Plan A into action, which really wasn’t much of a plan. Even if she could get a message to Rafe, what could she tell him? Theo’s alive, but they think you’re dead? No one was going back for him. Could Rafe get word to his guy and get off the island that way? She stood, gesturing to the bucket. The guard nodded. As before, the human shield went up. Facing the wall, she crouched over the bucket, and pulled out the phone. The senator’s people had briefly entrusted her with an iPhone so they could keep in contact while arrangements were made for her trip, so she was familiar with its basic functions. She switched it on and wrapped it in the sweater, anticipating the trill as it fired up. Her stomach muscles clenched. She bent double over the muffled phone, and coughed loud and long as the first beep came. She froze. No footsteps, no shouts.
She extracted the phone and switched it to silent, blowing out her cheeks. It had a signal—only one bar, but that could be enough. A low battery warning flashed. She dismissed it. Feet shuffled up the steps to the hut. She hit the internet icon. The women around her muttered, and began to move off. Shit, her protective wall was crumbling. Sweat prickled her forehead. She pressed the phone’s sleep button and shoved it in her pocket.
* * *
Rain pelted Rafe’s skin. The waves surged like a roller coaster, the constant rebalancing straining his quads and abs. He could do sixty chin lifts and carry a two-hundred-pound man five kilometers, but this demanded a strength and agility his body had forgotten.
He peered at the GPS. He’d been out three hours, averaging fifteen knots. He was maybe two-thirds of the way across, making good time but being swept too far northwest.
Salt spray burned his throat. Could he risk pulling out a water bottle? The board crested a swell and hit air in a gut-flipping flight, before skidding back onto the choppy surface. Teeth clenched, he strained to keep the Windsurfer from landing flat and killing the power.
He adjusted his grip as the board righted. That was too damn close. The drink would have to wait until he was in the lee of the archipelago. The waves were getting bigger, slamming him down and pushing him toward an island he hadn’t intended getting anywhere near. He jibed head-on to the swell—he had no choice but to cross it and head southwest.
He launched off a crest, too high. Putain. The harness dropped away. He didn’t need to wait for the landing to know he was in trouble. Gripping the boom, he tried to angle the board to ease the nose in first, but it slapped flat onto the water, the boom twisting with his weight. Crack. Shit.
The boom slipped from his fingers and he plunged backward into the water, his bag dragging him down. Everything muffled. Bitter seawater swamped his airways. He fought to the surface, broke through with a surge and spluttered: spitting out water, sucking in air. The board was already being pushed away by the current, its limp sail dragging in the white-flecked water. The mast had snapped at right angles. Christ. He was screwed. He powered through the water and grabbed the edge of the board. The GPS had slipped off. No sign of it in the surging waves.
He unclipped the rig and dragged himself up to lie on the bare board—just a worthless surfboard now. Panting, he peered at a smudge of gray on the horizon, between the charcoal sea and the concrete sky. The cay? The island to the northwest? Or a trick of his eyes?
He’d have to paddle for it and hope for a miracle.
* * *
Holly yanked the sweater down to cover her pocket and turned, fists clenched. The four women had returned with two large metal platters. One was heaped with rice, the other noodles.
Lunch. Just lunch. She’d have to bide her time. She released her hands. The women settled the dishes on the floor. The others surged at them, snatching handfuls of food and shoving them into their mouths. The guard stood, stretched and ambled to the doorway. Facing out, he spoke to the other goons.
A woman wearing a grubby yellow dress grabbed Holly’s sleeve and urged her toward the food. Holly shook her head. She’d been eating like a princess for days—she had plenty of reserves. By the way the women were sucking up the food, she guessed they needed it more. The woman sank her fingertips into Holly’s biceps. “Come!” she whispered, her eyes wide with meaning, yanking Holly toward the dish furthest from the guard.
Holly stumbled after her. The woman knelt, grabbed a fistful of rice and held it over her mouth. Holly copied. “You are English?” she muttered into her hand.
“American. You speak English.”
“Yes. You are here to be trafficked, too?”
“So I’m told. Who are these women? What happened to them, to you?”
“They are from Cambodia. Some of them were sold by their families, some are from the street, some paid a lot of money to be secured factory jobs in other cities, other countries. You see that girl?” She nodded to the girl in the Justin Bieber T-shirt. “She is twelve.”
“Twelve?” Holly’s throat dried.
“Her name is Devi. She was sold by her mother, who has too many children and cannot afford them all.”
“Her mother sold her.”
“Many girls are sold by their mothers. The mothers convince themselves they are sending the girls out to work, just like in the fields, but they know the truth.”
“And you?”
“I am not like these women. I was born in Cambodia but I am an Australian national. I work for an aid agency trying to stop human trafficking. I was working undercover to find out what was happening to women like these, and I was kidnapped, too.” She shrugged. “The plan worked a little too well.”
“What will happen to them? You?” Me?
“We will be sold to brothels, probably in Asia or Europe. We will be told we can earn our freedom, earn money for our families. But that won’t happen. We will be kept in servitude for as long as we are useful, then we will disappear.”
Holly bit her lower lip. Hell, compared with that her own life had been sheltered. “Where are we?”
“I don’t know. We left Cambodia from the Port of Sihanoukville, but we spent so long locked in the hold of a cargo ship that I lost track of night and day, let alone direction. When I was taken, I tried to leave behind a message for my colleagues to at least tell them which gang we were dealing with, but I was caught. People will be looking for me, but they won’t know where to start.”
“I was taken from Indonesian waters. It was a short flight—maybe half an hour, plus a helicopter ride—but I don’t know which direction.”
“Still, that suggests the boat came south, putting us in Malaysia, maybe, or Indonesia.”
Holly swallowed. “Would it help if your colleagues knew that?”
“They would at least know which authorities to pressure.” She shook her head. “But it is hopeless.”
Holly ate a few grains of rice. Maybe not so hopeless. Could she trust this woman? “How long have you been here?”
The woman paused. Noting the change of subject? “Two weeks, I think. They are breaking us. Forcing us to accept our new fate, showing us we are worthless.”
Holly nodded at the bloodstain on the floor. It glistened—still wet. “They’re being violent?”
The woman followed her gaze. She crossed herself. “One woman...she...stood up to them, last night. These men are monsters. I’ve never seen men like this. They are dead in their eyes.”
“Are you let out of this room? Other than to empty the bucket and to bring in food?”
The woman eyed the guard, who was paying scant attention to the scrabbling women. “Only to be raped.”
Holly choked on the rice. She coughed and swallowed, her eyes watering. “Have you...?” The words stalled in her windpipe.
“We all have, except the youngest ones.” She indicated the girl in the Bieber T-shirt—Devi. “They are virgins, so they are worth more intact, but the threat is still there. These men—” She shook her head, her lips pressed tightly together.
Anger flashed hot in Holly’s chest. “How long will you—we—be kept here? Do you know?”
“We believe women are usually kept in holding areas for a few weeks. Just long enough to break their spirits.”
Holly made a snap decision. “Do you have someone you can text? Do you know how to use an iPhone?”
The woman’s brown eyes widened. “You have one?”
Holly chewed her lip. She could be jeopardizing her only means of contacting Rafe.
“Please. I can contact my agency.”
Holly glanced up at the door. The men were still talking. She caught the eye of Devi, who shyly averted her gaze. Quickly, she reached under her sweater and pulled out the phone, keeping it covered by her hands. She pressed it into the woman’s stomach. “What’s your name?”
“Amina.”
“Be careful, Amina. Don’t get caught.”
The guard turned, and shouted at the women. He strode up to the nearest dish, and kicked aside a woman who was leaning over it. Lunch was over.
“I won’t get caught.” The woman—Amina—teared up, as she slipped the phone down her top, into her bra. “God bless you.”
The four women who’d brought lunch removed the empty platters. The guard in the bandanna returned to his chair. Another water bottle was passed around. Holly leaned against the wall. Across from her Amina did the same. She’d better have made the right call. Amina had people looking for her, which was more than Holly could claim.
After the room settled into silence, Amina stood. Holly’s heart hammered. She tipped her head back against the cool concrete wall and focused on a mouse-sized cockroach creeping along the ceiling. In her peripheral vision, she tracked Amina as the woman approached the bucket. Her mouth filled with saliva, forcing her to lower her head to swallow. She didn’t dare look at the women who stood sentry around Amina. Minutes passed. Holly pulled off the sweater. It caught on the amulet. At least she had less to hide for a while. She pressed her spine into the concrete, allowing the rough surface to cool the sweat seeping through her T-shirt. Hurry up, Amina.
Footsteps and voices sounded outside. Several men had arrived. The woman next to Holly hugged her knees, letting out a whimper. Devi hid her face. With a clatter, three men appeared in the doorway. None of the women looked up. Those standing around Amina remained frozen to the spot, fear pulling at their faces as they dropped their gazes to the ground.
One of the men stepped forward, c
runching on a woman’s foot. She screwed up her face, internalizing the pain. His gaze moved from woman to woman, then he advanced on one and yanked her to her feet. She cried out and tried to pull away, but his grip was sound. Holly made to stand, to defend her, but the woman beside her caught her shoulder and yanked her down, with surprising strength. The guy hoisted his quarry over his shoulder and carried her outside. She cried out, pleading. Holly’s neighbor sank her fingertips into her shoulder. A second man grabbed another woman. Her face was set in solid hatred, but she shook him off and rose of her own accord, her spine rigid.
A shadow fell on Holly. Her nape prickled. Chamuel stood over her, sneering. He presented his hand with a flourish. “Miss America.”
Chapter 22
Rafe’s head felt like it was jammed in a slowly tightening vise. Groaning, he tried opening his eyes. Daylight shot bolts of pain into his skull. Pain was good. Pain meant life. He was on a beach, fringed by thrashing palm trees. How did he even get here? He remembered thirst, muscles about to explode, an overwhelming urge to sleep.
Water surged around, sucking at his legs. He commando-crawled out of its grip. His muscles seemed to be working, at least. The only real pain was in his head. Dehydration, probably. He spat out salt and sand and unclipped the life jacket with fumbling fingers. Had he made it to the cay? It felt like he’d paddled to Singapore. Merde. He was a lucky bastard, of sorts—with all that open ocean he could have been paddling for weeks. But now he was stranded, again. What was that English expression the missionary school cook was fond of? Up shit creek without an oar?
He eased off the backpack, swung it around and yanked a piece of kelp off it. Soaked. Seawater poured out of the laptop bag. No sign of the board. He chugged from a water bottle, closing his eyes against the brilliant white clouds.
He sensed movement to his left. A boot flew toward his face. He rolled as it whooshed past, and tried to drag himself up. What the fuck? Something hard smacked into his back, knocking him flat—another boot. Groaning, he staggered to his feet and swiveled, just in time to see Kung Fu Pirate launch a foot into his stomach. Oof. He careened backward and landed on his ass. His pain neurons ping-ponged.