The Housemaid: Part 2 – Chapter 47
The Housemaid: An absolutely addictive psychological thriller with a jaw-dropping twist
I have been in the attic for about twenty hours.
Andy marched me up here right after Cecelia went to bed last night. Iâve learned not to argue. If I do, itâs another stay at Clearview. Or maybe when I try to pick Cece up at the school the next day, she wonât be there and I wonât see her for a whole week, while sheâs âout of town.â He doesnât want to hurt Cecelia, but he absolutely will. After all, if the police didnât arrive exactly when they did, she couldâve drowned in that bathtub all those years ago. I brought it up with him once, and he just smiled at me.
Andy wants another child. Another little person who I will love and want to protect, who he will use to control me for years to come. I canât let that happen. So I drove to a clinic in the city, gave a fake name, and paid in cash for them to insert an IUD. Iâve practiced my perplexed expression when the pregnancy tests come back negative.
This time my transgression was spraying too much air freshener in our bedroom. It was exactly the same amount I always spray, and if I hadnât used it at all, he would have locked me in there with something malodorous, like a rotting fish. I know how his mind works now.
Anyway, somehow last night the air freshener was too much and it irritated his eyes. My punishment? I had to pepper-spray myself.
Oh yes.
He left the bottle of pepper spray in the dresser drawer.
So Iâve done it. I sprayed myself with pepper spray just to get out of this goddamn room. Have you ever been pepper-sprayed? I donât recommend it. It stings terribly, and right away, my eyes started to tear up like crazy. My face felt like it was burning. And then my nose started to run. A minute later, I felt it dripping into my mouth where it stung and tasted terrible. For several minutes, I sat on the bed, just struggling to breathe. I could barely open my eyes for nearly an hour.
It was definitely worse than a little air freshener.
But now itâs several hours later. I can open my eyes again. I still feel like I have a sunburn on my face and my eyes feel puffy, but I donât feel like Iâm going to die anymore. Iâm sure Andy will want to wait until I look more like my usual self before he lets me out of here.
Which means it could be one more night. But hopefully not.
The window isnât boarded up, like he keeps it sometimes, so at least I have some natural light in the room. Itâs the only thing keeping me from going completely crazy. I walk over to the window and peer out into the backyard, wishing I were out there instead of in here.
Thatâs when I realize the backyard isnât empty.
Enzo is working out there. I start to back away, but he happens to look up at the window at the exact moment Iâm standing there. He stares at me, and even from the third floor of the house, I can make out the darkening look on his face. He yanks off his gardening gloves and stalks out of the yard.
Oh no. This isnât good.
I donât know what Enzo is going to do. Will he call the police? Iâm not sure if that would be a good thing or not. Andy has always managed to flip these things around on me. Heâs always one step ahead. About a year ago, I started stashing some money in one of my boots in my closet, saving up in hopes of escaping him. Then one day, all the money disappeared, and the day after, he forced me up to the attic.
About a minute later, a fist pounds on the attic door. I step back, cowering against the wall. âNina!â Itâs Enzoâs voice. âNina! I know you are in there!â
I clear my throat. âIâm fine!â
The doorknob jiggles. âIf you are fine, open the door and show me you are fine.â
It hits me at that moment that Enzo is speaking pretty good English. I had been under the impression that he understood some English and spoke far less, but his English seems excellent right now. His Italian accent isnât even that thick.
âIâ¦Â Iâm busy,â I say in an abnormally high voice. âBut Iâm fine! Just getting some work done.â
âYou told me your husband tortures you and locks you in the attic.â
I suck in a breath. I only said that to him because I thought he didnât understand. But now itâs clear he understood everything I said. I have to do damage control. I canât do anything to anger Andy. âHow did you get into the house anyway?â
Enzo lets out an exasperated sound. âYou leave a key under the potted plant by the front door. Now, where is the key to this room? Tell me.â
âEnzoâ¦â
â
.â
I do know where the key to the attic door is. It doesnât do me a lot of good when Iâm in here, but I could direct him to it. If I wanted to. âI know youâre trying to help, but this isnât helping. Pleaseâjust stay out of it. Heâll let me out later today.â
Thereâs a long silence on the other side of the door. I hope heâs thinking about whether itâs worth it to get involved in a clientâs personal life. And I donât know what his immigration status is, but I know he wasnât born here. Iâm sure Andy and his family have enough money and power to get him deported if they want.
âStep back,â Enzo finally says. âI will break down the door.â
âNo, you canât!â Tears jump to my eyes. âLook, you donât understand. If I donât do what he says, heâll hurt Cecelia. And heâll have me locked upâheâs done it before.â
âNo. This is just excuses.â
âNo, theyâre not!â A single tear rolls down my cheek. âYou donât understand the kind of money he has. You donât understand what he could do to you. Do you want to get deported?â
Enzo is quiet again. âThis is wrong. He is hurting you.â
âIâm fine. I swear to you.â
Itâs mostly true. My face still feels like itâs burning, and my eyes still sting, but Enzo doesnât need to know that. In another day, Iâll be completely fine. Like it never happened. And then I can go back to my normal, miserable life.
âYou want me to leave,â he acknowledges.
I donât want him to leave. I want nothing more for him to break the door down, but I know how Andy will twist it around. God knows what heâll accuse the two of us of doing. I never thought he could get me locked up in a mental institution multiple times just for trying to tell the truth. I donât want that to become Enzoâs life too. Except Andy had reason to want me to get outâhe would have no problem with locking Enzo up indefinitely.
âYes,â I say. âPlease go.â
He lets out a long sigh. âI will go. But if I do not see you tomorrow morning, I will come up here and break the door down. And I will call the police.â
âThatâs fair.â Iâm down to my last tiny bottle of water, so if Andy hasnât let me out by the morning, Iâll be in bad shape.
I wait to hear his footsteps walking away. But I donât hear them. He is still standing on the other side of the door. âYou do not deserve to be treated this way,â he finally says.
Then his footsteps disappear down the hallway as the tears run down my cheeks.
Andy lets me out of the room that night. When I finally get to a mirror, Iâm shocked at how swollen my eyes look from the pepper spray, and my face is bright red like I was scalded. But by the next morning, I look almost back to normal. My cheeks are pink, like I got a little too much sun the day before.
Enzo is working in the front yard when Andy pulls out of the garage, with Cece strapped into the backseat. Heâs dropping her off at school while I rest today. Heâs usually very nice to me for several days after he lets me out of the attic. Iâm sure tonight heâll come home with flowers and maybe some jewelry for me. As if that could make up for any of it.
I watch from the window as Andy drives through the gate, pulling out onto the road. After the car disappears, I notice Enzo staring at me. He isnât usually in our yard two days in a row. Heâs here for a reason that has nothing to do with the state of our flower beds.
I come out through the front door to where Enzo is standing with his clippers. It occurs to me how sharp the clippers are. If he drove them through Andyâs chest, that would be the end. Of course, he wouldnât need to do that. He could probably kill Andy with his bare hands.
âSee?â I offer a forced smile. âI told you Iâm fine.â
He doesnât return my smile.
âReally,â I say.
His eyes are so dark, itâs impossible to make out his pupils. âTell me the truth.â
âYou donât want to hear the truth.â
âTell me.â
In the last five years, every single person I have told about the things Andy has done to meâthe police, the doctors, my best friendâhas called me crazy.
. I have been locked up for talking about what he has done to me. But here is a man who wants to hear the truth. He will believe me.
So as we stand on my front lawn on this beautiful sunny day, I tell Enzo everything. I tell him about the room in the attic. I tell him some of the ways Andy has tormented me. I tell him about finding Cecelia unconscious in the bathtub. It was years ago but I remember her face under the water like it was yesterday. I tell him everything as his face grows darker and darker.
Before I even finish, Enzo lets loose with a string of Italian. I donât know the language, but I know curse words when I hear them. His fingers squeeze on the clippers until they turn white. âI kill him,â he hisses. âTonight, I will kill him.â
All the blood drains out of my face. It felt so good to tell him everything that happened to me, but it was a mistake. He is beyond furious. âEnzoâ¦â
âHe is a monster!â he bursts out. âYou do not me to kill him?â
Yes, I want Andy dead. But I donât want to deal with any of the consequences. Especially the letter that will go to the police in the event of his death. I want him dead, but not enough to spend my life in prison.
âYou canât do it.â I shake my head firmly. âYouâll go to jail. Weâll both go to jail. Is that what you want?â
Enzo mumbles more Italian under his breath. âFine. Then you leave him.â
âI canât.â
âYou . I will help you.â
âWhat can you do?â Itâs not entirely a rhetorical question. Maybe Enzo is secretly rich. Maybe heâs got some mob connections I donât know about. âCan you get me a plane ticket? A new passport? A new identity?â
âNo, butâ¦â He rubs his chin. âI will find a way. I know some people. I will help.â
I want so badly to believe him.