The Housemaid: Part 3 – Chapter 54
The Housemaid: An absolutely addictive psychological thriller with a jaw-dropping twist
Andrew screams when the pepper spray gets him in the eyes.
The nozzle is about three inches away from his eyes, so he gets a good dose of it. And then I press it a second time for good measure. While I do it, I turn my own head away and close my eyes. The last thing I need is to get pepper spray in my eyes, although itâs hard not to get a little bit of residue.
When I look up again, heâs clawing at his face, which has turned bright red. His phone has fallen from his hands onto the floor, and I scoop it up, being very careful not to touch anything else. Everything has to go exactly right in the next twenty seconds. I have spent over six hours planning this while three books were resting on my belly.
My legs are wobbly when I stand up, but they work. Andrew is still writhing on the cot, and before he can get his sight back, I slip out of the room and close the door behind me. Then I take the key Nina gave me and fit it into the lock. I turn the key and pocket it. Then I take a step back.
âMillie!â Andrew screams on the other side of the door. âWhat the hell?â
I look down at the screen of his phone. My fingers are shaking, but Iâm able to get into settings, and I shut off the Lock Screen setting before the phone locks automatically, so the phone wonât require a password anymore.
âMillie!â
I take another step back, as if he could reach through the door and grab me. But he canât. Iâm safe on the other side of the door.
âMillie.â His voice is a low growl now. âLet me out of here .â
My heart is beating fast in my chest. Itâs the same way I felt when I walked into that bedroom all those years ago and found Kelsey screaming at that asshole football player, And Duncan was laughing drunkenly. I stood there for a second, my body paralyzed as my chest filled with rage. He was so much bigger than either one of usâit wasnât like I could pull him off of her. The room was dark and I felt around on the desk until my hands made contact with a paperweight andâ¦
I will never forget that day. How good it felt to smash the paperweight against that bastardâs skull until he became still. It was almost worth all those years in prison. After all, who knows how many other girls I saved from him?
âIâll let you out,â I say. âJust not .â
âYouâve got to be kidding me.â The outrage in his voice is palpable. âThis is house. You canât keep me hostage here. And youâre a criminal. All I have to do is call the police and youâre right back in jail.â
âRight,â I say. âBut how can you call the police when I have your phone?â
I look down at the screen of his phone. I can see him standing there, in vivid color. I can even see how red his face is from the pepper spray and the tears on his cheeks. He checks his pockets, then scans the floor with his swollen eyes.
âMillie,â he says in a slow, controlled voice. âI want my phone back.â
I let out a hoarse laugh. âIâm sure you do.â
âMillie, give me my phone back right now.â
âHmm. I donât think youâre in any position to be making .â
â
.â
âJust a moment.â I slip his phone into my pocket. âIâm going to grab a bite to eat. Iâll be back soon.â
âMillie!â
Heâs still calling my name as I walk down the hall and go downstairs. I ignore him. Thereâs nothing he can do when heâs stuck in that room. And I have to figure out my next move.
The first thing I do is exactly what I said I was going to doâI go to the kitchen, where I drink two heaping glasses of water. Then I make myself a bologna sandwich. No, not . Bologna. With lots of mayonnaise, and white bread. After Iâve got some food in my belly, I feel a lot better. I can finally think straight.
I pick up Andrewâs phone. He is still in the attic room, pacing back and forth. Like a caged animal. If I were to let him out, I canât even imagine what he would do to me. The thought of it makes a cold sweat break out at the back of my neck. While Iâm watching him, a text message pops up on his phone from âMom.â
I scroll through some of the previous messages. Andrew has told his mother all about his falling-out with Nina. Iâve got to answer her, because if he doesnât, she might come over hereâand then Iâm screwed. Nobody can suspect something has happened to Andrew.
The reply from Andrewâs mother comes back almost instantly:
I get a jab of sympathy in my chest for Nina and Cecelia. Itâs bad enough that Andrewâs mother never liked Nina. But to speak that way of her own grandchild? And I wonder what Andrewâs mother had in mind for âdiscipline.â If itâs anything like Andyâs idea of punishment, Iâm glad Nina never went through with it.
My hands are trembling as I type my reply:
Now I have to deal with that asshole.
I shove his phone back in my pocket, then I climb the stairs to the second floor, then all the way up to the attic. When I get to the top floor, the footsteps in the attic room go silent. He mustâve heard me.
âMillie,â he says.
âIâm here,â I say stiffly.
He clears his throat. âYou made your point about the room. Iâm sorry about what I did.â
âAre you?â
âYes. I realize now I was wrong.â
âI see. So youâre sorry?â
He clears his throat. âYes.â
âSay it.â
He is silent for a bit. âSay what?â
âSay youâre sorry that you did a terrible thing to me.â
I watch his expression on the screen. He doesnât want to tell me heâs sorry because heâs not. All heâs sorry for is that he gave me the chance to get the better of him.
âIâm so sorry,â he finally says. âI was absolutely wrong. I did an awful thing to you, and I will never do it again.â He pauses. âWill you let me out now?â
âYes. I will.â
âThank you.â
âJust not .â
He inhales sharply. âMillieâ¦â
âIâm going to let you out.â My calm voice belies the pounding in my chest. âBut before I do, you have to be punished for what you did to me.â
âDonât play this game,â he growls. âYou donât have the stomach for it.â
He wouldnât talk to me that way if he knew I beat a man to death with a paperweight. He has no idea. But Iâm betting that Nina knows. âI want you to lie down on the floor and put those three books on top of you.â
âCome on. This is ridiculous.â
âIâm not letting you out of this room until you do it.â
Andrew lifts his eyes to look into the camera. I always thought he had nice eyes, but thereâs venom in them as he stares at me.
I remind myself. Heâs looking at the camera. âFine. Iâll humor you.â
He lies down on the floor. One by one, he picks up each book and stacks them on his abdomen, the same way I did only hours earlier. But heâs bigger and stronger than I am, and he only looks mildly uncomfortable with those books on top of him, even when all three are stacked on him.
âHappy?â he calls out.
âLower,â I say.
âWhat?â
â
.â
âI donât know what youââ
I press my forehead against the door as I speak: âYou know what I mean.â
Even through the door, I can hear the sharp inhale of his breath. âMillie, I canâtââ
âIf you want to get out of that room, youâre going to do it.â
I stare down at the screen of his phone, watching him. He pushes the books down his chest so they are squarely on top of his genitals. He didnât look very uncomfortable before, but that has changed now. His face is frozen in a grimace.
âJesus Christ,â he gasps.
âGood,â I say. âNow stay that way for three hours.â