Escape
The room was suffocating. The darkness pressed against me, a tangible thing, heavy and smothering. I sat tied to the rickety chair, my wrists raw from the rough rope. Across the room, the man who had dragged me back here after my failed escape sat slumped in a chair, his head tilted back, snoring softly. The sound was rhythmic, almost taunting.
I tugged at the bindings around my wrists, twisting and pulling. The knot wasn’t tight—he had been careless, his overconfidence his weakness. Slowly, painstakingly, I worked one hand free. My fingers ached, but I couldn’t stop. Time was slipping away, and I knew he could wake at any moment.
Finally, the rope fell away, and I stifled a gasp of relief. My body was screaming in protest—every muscle aching from the abuse—but I forced myself to move. I slipped from the chair, my bare feet silent against the cold floor. The man stirred slightly but didn’t wake.
I crept toward the door and slipped out into the hallway, heart hammering. The corridor was dimly lit, the flickering lightbulb overhead casting eerie shadows along the cracked walls. My breath came in shallow gasps as I opened the nearest door.
Inside, the room was empty except for a single dusty window. My heart leaped. A way out.
I rushed to the window, my fingers fumbling with the latch. It was stuck, rusted shut from years of neglect. Panic surged through me. I pushed harder, the metal creaking in protest. A sudden crack of sound behind me froze me in place—a groan of floorboards under weight.
I whirled around. The doorway was empty, but the hair on the back of my neck stood on end. Someone was coming.
Desperation sharpened my thoughts. I spotted an old desk in the corner of the room and rummaged through it, my hands shaking. A piece of paper. A pen. It wasn’t much, but it was something. I scribbled frantically:
Help! My name is Jamie Jacobs. I’m being held at 132 Walnut Street. Please call the police.
I folded the paper and slipped it into an envelope I found in the desk. I scrawled the address across the front, my hands barely holding steady. I returned to the window, straining to force it open just enough to slip the envelope through the gap.
The faint sound of footsteps reached my ears, growing louder. I slid the envelope through the gap and watched as it fluttered down into the night. A small hope in the vast darkness.
The door behind me flew open.
“She’s trying to escape!” The man’s shout was like a gunshot in the silence.
I turned, but it was too late. Another man barreled into the room, a cloth in his hand. I struggled, but the sickly-sweet smell of chloroform filled my lungs. My vision blurred, the room spinning violently before plunging me into blackness.
At the station, Lt. Chalmers leaned over the map spread across the table, his face etched with concern. Mrs. Jacobs sat nearby, her hands trembling as she gripped a tissue.
“We’ve got a report from Walnut Street,” an officer said, stepping into the room. “A jogger found an envelope and heard some unusual activity near one of the warehouses. The address matches the location we’ve been monitoring.”
Lt. Chalmers grabbed his radio. “All units, converge on 132 Walnut Street. We may have a lead on the Jacobs girl. Move quickly, and approach with caution.”
Mrs. Jacobs stood, her voice cracking. “You have to bring her back. Please. Just bring my Jamie home.”