The Housemaid: Part 2 – Chapter 41
The Housemaid: An absolutely addictive psychological thriller with a jaw-dropping twist
By seven oâclock, I have accomplished the task.
I obtained about twenty strands by running my fingers repeatedly through my hair. After that, I knew I was going to have to pluck the rest out by the root. About eighty times, I grabbed a strand of my hair, braced myself, and pulled. I tried doing a few strands at once, but that was agonizing. Thankfully, my hair is healthy, so most of the strands yanked free with the hair follicle intact. After I had Cecelia, I would have had to pluck myself bald before I got enough usable hair.
So when seven oâclock hits, I am sitting on the cot, clutching an envelope containing a hundred strands of my hair. I canât wait to hand it over to him and get out of here. And serve him with divorce papers. That sick bastard.
âNina?â
I look down at my watch. Seven oâclock on the dot. Heâs promptâIâll give him that.
I jump off the bed and press my head against the door. âI have it,â I say.
âSlide it under.â
I slide the envelope under the gap below the door. I imagine him on the other side. Ripping the envelope open, examining my hair follicles. I donât care what he does at this point, as long as he lets me out. Iâve done what he wanted me to do.
âOkay?â I say. My throat feels painfully parched. I finished the other two water bottles over the course of the day, saving the last one for the final hour. When I get out of here, Iâm going to drink five glasses of water all in a row. And pee in an actual toilet.
âGive me a minute,â he says. âIâm checking.â
I grit my teeth, ignoring the angry growl in my stomach. I havenât eaten in twenty-four hours now and Iâm dizzy with hunger. It got to the point where the hair was starting to look tasty.
âWhere is Cece?â I choke out.
âSheâs in her playpen downstairs,â he says. We created a gated, safe area in the living room where she could play without worrying about her hurting herself. It was Andyâs idea. Heâs so thoughtful.
No, heâs not thoughtful. That was all an illusion. An act.
Heâs a monster.
âHmm,â Andy says.
âWhat?â I croak. âWhat is it?â
âSee,â he says, â
all of the strands are fine, but one of them doesnât have a hair follicle on it.â
Bastard. âFine. Iâll give you a new one.â
âIâm afraid not,â he sighs. âYouâll have to start all over again. Iâll check in on you tomorrow morning. Hopefully by then, youâll have one hundred intact hairs for me. Otherwise, weâll have to just keep trying.â
âNoâ¦â His footsteps disappear down the hall, and it hits me heâs really leaving me. With no food and no water. âAndy!â My voice is hoarse and not much better than a whisper. âDonât do this! Please! Please donât do this!â
But heâs gone.
I have the extra hundred strands ready by bedtime, on the off chance he returns, but he doesnât. I even put in an extra ten strands. Somehow, theyâre coming out easier now. I barely feel it anymore as the hair separates from my scalp.
All I can think about is water. Food and water, but mostly water. And of course, my Cecelia. Iâm not sure Iâll ever see her again. I donât know how long a person can go without water, but it canât be very long. Andy swore he was going to let me out of here, but what if he was lying? What if heâs going to let me die here?
All because I missed a hairdresser appointment.
When I drift off at night, I dream of a pool of water. I lower my head to the pool and the water moves away from me. Each time I try to drink, the water escapes me. Itâs like one of the tortures of hell.
âNina?â
Andyâs voice wakes me. Iâm not sure if I fell asleep or passed out. But Iâve been waiting for him all night long, so I need to get up and give him what he wants. Itâs the only way Iâll ever get out of here.
As soon as I sit up in bed, my head spins violently. Everything goes black for a second. I clutch the edge of the thin mattress, waiting for my vision to clear. It takes a good minute.
âIâm afraid I canât let you out unless I get those hairs,â Andy says from the other side of the door.
The sound of his horrible voice sparks a wave of adrenaline that boosts me to my feet. My fingers are trembling as I grab the envelope and stumble over to the door. I slide the envelope under the door, then collapse against the wall, sliding to the floor.
I wait while he counts. It seems to take an eternity. If he says I havenât done it, I donât know what Iâll do. I canât last another twelve hours here. That will be the end. Iâll die in this room.
No, I have to keep going no matter what. For Cece. I canât leave her to this monster.
âOkay,â he finally says. âGood job.â
And then the lock turns. And the door swings open.
Andy is dressed in his suit, already ready for work. I had imagined the moment I saw this man after being stuck in this room for two nights, I would jump up and scratch his eyes out. But instead, I remain on the floor, too weak to move. Andy crouches beside me, and thatâs when I notice heâs holding a large glass of water and a bagel.
âHere,â he says. âI brought you this.â
I should throw the water in his face. I want to. But I donât think I can get out of this room if I donât eat and drink something. So I accept his gift, gulping down the cup of water and stuffing chunks of the bagel down my throat until itâs all gone.
âIâm sorry I had to do that,â he says, âbut itâs the only way youâll learn.â
âGo to hell,â I hiss at him.
I try to get to my feet, but I stumble again. Even after drinking that water, my head is still spinning. I canât walk in a straight line. I doubt I can get down the stairs to the second floor.
So even though I hate myself for it, I let Andy help me. I let him lead me downstairs, and I have to lean on him heavily the whole way. When I get to the second floor, I can hear Cecelia singing downstairs. Sheâs okay. He didnât hurt her. Thank God.
Iâm not going to let him have another chance.
âYou need to lie down,â Andy says sternly. âYouâre not well.â
âNo,â I croak. I want to be with Cecelia. My arms ache for her.
âYouâre too sick right now,â he says. Like Iâm getting over the flu rather than him trapping me in a room for two days. Heâs talking to me like the crazy one. âCome on.â
But whatever else, heâs right that I need to lie down. My legs are trembling with every step and my head wonât stop spinning. So I let him lead me to our king-size bed and he tucks me in under the covers. If there was any chance I might make it out of here, that chance is gone once I get in the bed. It feels like sleeping on a cloud after passing out on that cot for the last two nights.
My eyelids feel like leadâI canât fight the urge to fall asleep. Andy sits beside me, at the edge of the bed, running his fingers through my hair. âYou just havenât been feeling well,â he says. âYou need a day of sleep. Donât worry about Cecelia. Iâll make sure sheâs taken care of.â
His voice is so kind and gentle, I start to wonder if maybe I imagined the whole thing. After all, heâs been such a good husband. Would he really lock me up in a room and make me pull out my hair? That doesnât sound like something he would do. Maybe I just have a fever and this is all a horrible hallucination?
No. It wasnât a hallucination. It was real. I know it was.
âI hate you,â I whisper.
Andy ignores my statement as he continues to stroke my hair until my eyes drift shut. âJust get some sleep,â he says gently. âThatâs all you need.â