“I know. You, me, Dex, we are the only ones who know it and wil ever know it. You’l have to tel them that Dex took me to a native shaman. But that he applied some herbs and did a healing session. My fever broke. It turns out I was delirious. I’m fine now and I don’t remember a thing.”
She gave me a wary look. “Do we real y have to lie?
Mom and dad aren’t the enemy anymore. You are fine.”
“Yes, we do have to lie.” And they are my enemy, I thought.
“Can you do that, little fifteen?” Dex asked.
She crossed her arms. “Wel , yeah, I’m pretty good at lying. I just don’t think it’s going to be the end of the world like you are both brewing over. They’l be upset and hel a mad but real y they’l be glad you’re OK. When I spoke to them, they were just real y, real y worried.”
Dex and I exchanged a weighted glance and spent the remainder of the drive in silence. Silence except for my heart that was beating faster with every street we passed.
By the time we turned onto our fair street, twilight hung in the sky, casting a moody glow over everything, and I was nearly sick with nerves. As we came up the house, we saw three extra cars in the driveway; two of them had Portland Police displayed on the sides. I gasped. Dex reached out for my hand and I clutched it hard.
“Wow,” Ada said under her breath as she looked over the scene. “Think mom and dad overreacted much?”
The Highlander came to gradual stop, the asphalt crunching under the tires.
Ada hopped out of the car and started walking slowly toward the house.
Dex held my hand tighter and leaned across the console to me. “I have you. You’re going to be OK. I won’t let anyone take you anywhere.”
Forget my parent’s overreacting; I hoped Dex and I were the ones overreacting.
I nodded but my lips couldn’t find a smile.
We got out of the car. He came around to me and grabbed my hand, holding it as tight as before. Ada was almost at the front door when it flung open and my father came roaring out like a charging rhino.
“YOU!” he screamed, as he stormed toward us, not even giving Ada a glance. He was surprisingly fast and his fury was directed at Dex, not me.
He came right up to Dex and swiftly clocked him across the face.
I screamed as my dad’s punch knocked Dex back a few steps. He didn’t fight back but he protected his nose with his hands as my father went after him again.
“That was for my daughters!” he yelped, as he threw another punch, which Dex managed to dodge.
There was something a bit touching about my father doing that for Ada and me, but that feeling didn’t last long when there was a flurry of activity and three cops ran out of the house, fol owed by my mother and Maximus. My mother grabbed Ada, crying and holding her close, while Maximus cal ed my name and trotted over.
I moved away and went to join Dex but the three cops were at him, one of them holding back my father while the other two grabbed Dex’s arms behind him and threw him against the cop car. They fished out the handcuffs and began to read him his Miranda rights.
“What the fuck!? Nooo!” I cried out, and started running but suddenly arms were wrapped around me from behind as Maximus held me back. “Let go of me, you fucking asshole!”
“Perry, calm down,” he said, but didn’t let up.
I screamed at my father, “What are they doing? They can’t arrest him!”
“He’s wanted for kidnapping,” the officer with my dad said, letting him go. My dad adjusted his tie and kept his beady eyes on Dex, his face read and sweating.
“We’ve been looking for you al around the state,” said the other officer who was holding Dex’s head down against the car. I now recognized him as the Channing Tatum cop from the other day. “Two cases of kidnapping, crossing state lines.”
“Hey, I chose to go with him!” Ada yel ed, flinging herself out of my mother’s hug.
“You’re a minor,” the officer responded.
I strained against Maximus’s stronghold. “But I’m not! I wil ingly went with Dex too!”
“But you’re not of your right mind,” I heard a voice say from my right. I looked at the house, past Ada who was marching up to the cops, past my mother, who failed to grab hold of her, and saw Dr. Freedman walking calmly down the steps. “You’re not wel , Perry, and you cannot make decisions for yourself.”
“No,” I uttered, and tried again to get away from Maximus. I wanted to run to Dex, pul him away from the cops and run free. I could see from his face, as the cops frisked him, as his head was squished hard against the car, that he felt the same. Panic and indignation flared in his eyes.
“Don’t fight it, Perry, do as I say,” Maximus whispered in my ear. “I won’t let them take you anywhere but you have to play nice and play fair. Calm down.”
I didn’t care what Maximus had to say. There was only one person I was going to listen to and he was being arrested.
Dr. Freedman stopped in front of me and smiled in his condescending way.
“Perry, take a deep breath and look where you are.
You’re with us. With your family. We’re going to help you.”
I heard Dex cry out and tore my eyes away from the doctor. Dex was shaking his head, trying to fight and losing as the cops tried to force him into the back of the cruiser.
“Dex!”I screamed. But it was useless. The car door slammed in his face and the two officers got in the front.
The car started and pul ed away from the road, leaving me in the dust.
I screamed again and struggled but it was useless. I was trapped.
“Relax, Perry,” the doctor said. “You’re in my hands.”
He stepped closer to me until he was al I could see.
“You’re safe now.”
“You’re safe now.”
I screamed somewhere deep inside.