Page 94 of Exposed
Bennie was about to scream when a blow to the head stunned her. She cried out in pain and felt herself falling.
The last sound she heard was a horrible guttural sound, barely human.
It must have been Mary.
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
Mary heard a man’s voice yelling at her. The noise crashed through her skull. Her head exploded in pain. She couldn’t make out what he was saying. Her head hurt so much. All she felt was pain. It paralyzed her. She couldn’t think. She couldn’t focus. She couldn’t stay awake.
“Are you alive or not?”
Mary heard the question louder. The man was right at her ear. Her head hurt so much. Everything was dark. She couldn’t see anything. She tried to open her eyes but something covered them.
She tried to speak but she couldn’t talk. Something filled her mouth like a gag. She bit down. It was wet cloth. It tasted like blood. She realized that it was her own.
“Wake up!”
Mary tried to say something but her mouth was so dry. The words stuck in the back of her throat. She almost gagged and ended up coughing. She tried to pull the cloth out of her mouth but she couldn’t move her arms. They felt wrenched behind her back. She felt pressure against her left side. She was lying down.
“Shut the hell up!”
A rough hand grabbed Mary’s arm, shaking her. Agonyarced through her skull. Her head throbbed like a solid ball of pain. Reflexively she tried to talk. Only a weird ah-ah-ah came out.
She heard heavy footsteps on the floor. She felt the vibration with each tread. A door slammed close. The deadbolt was thrown. She was locked inside a room of some kind. Somewhere.
Mary didn’t know what was going on. She couldn’t think through the pain. She had never felt anything like it before. She tried to remember what had happened. She tried to shout but only the weird sound came out again.
She felt afraid but it was veiled. She was in a mental fog. It muffled everything. Feelings. Thoughts. She could barely put a sentence together in her head. There was too much pain to feel anything. So much pain that it numbed her. All she wanted to do was sleep to get away from it.
She closed her eyes and tried to go back to sleep. Lose consciousness. Then she heard voices, not far away. Something told her it was in another room. Not far away. It sounded echoey. She tried to listen.
“She still alive?” a man asked.
“Yes,” another man answered.
“How’s her head?”
“What do you think?”
“Is she conscious?”
“No.”
“So she’s still bleeding.”
“Yes.”
“How much?”
“What am I, a doctor? Go in and look for yourself.”
“I’m doing something here. Can’t you see? I asked you if she’s bleeding.”
Mary tried to stay awake. To listen. To understand. They were talking about her. She was bleeding. She couldn’t remember how she got here. She couldn’t remember why she was here.She didn’t know what was going on. She could barely stay awake. She wanted to go back to sleep but she didn’t. Something inside her told her to stay awake and listen. Something was telling her to survive. Whatever was happening to her, it was something she had to survive.
“What’s the difference? She bleeds now or she bleeds later? Who cares?”
“It’s called evidence. I told you to put the tarp down.”
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