The Housemaid: Part 3 – Chapter 51
The Housemaid: An absolutely addictive psychological thriller with a jaw-dropping twist
âAndrew?â I call out. âAndrew!â
Silence.
I grasp the cold metal of the doorknob once again and twist it with all my strength, hoping it was just a case of the metal sticking. No luck. The door is locked. But how?
The only thing I can think of is that maybe when Andrew left the room to sleep in his own bed (I canât entirely blame him, given how uncomfortable the cot is for one person, much less two), he locked the door automatically, thinking it was still a closet. If he was half asleep, itâs a reasonable mistake to make, I suppose.
That means Iâll have to call him and wake him up to let me out of the room. Iâm not excited to wake him up, but itâs his damn fault Iâm locked in here. Iâm not staying trapped in here all night, especially since I have to pee.
I flick on the light, and thatâs when I see three textbooks that are in the middle of my room, right on the floor. Itâs the strangest thing. I bend down beside them, reading off the hardcover titles.
.
And a copy of the phone book.
These books werenât here when I went to bed last night. Did Andrew bring them up here and stuff them in the room, thinking I would be moving out of here by the morning and he could convert this room back into a closet again? Thatâs the only thing that makes sense.
I kick the heavy books out of the way and search the top of the dresser where I plugged in my phone to charge last night. Or at least, I thought I had. Itâs not there anymore.
What the hell?
I grab the blue jeans that I abandoned on the floor and start searching through the pockets. No trace of my phone. Where did it go? I rip apart my dresser drawers, looking for that little rectangle that has become my lifeline. I even strip the sheets and blankets off the bed, wondering if it got lost during our recreational activities last night. Then I get down on my hands and knees and look the bed.
Nothing.
I mustâve left it downstairs, although I feel like I have a memory of using it up here last night. I guess not. What terrible timing to forget my phone downstairsâwhen Iâm locked up here in this stupid attic and Iâve got to use the bathroom.
I settle back into the bed, trying not to think about my full bladder. I donât know how Iâm ever going to fall asleep though. When Andrew comes to find me here in the morning, Iâm going to give him hell for accidentally locking me in here.
âMillie? Are you awake?â
My eyes fly open. I donât know how I managed to fall asleep, but somehow I did. But itâs still early in the morning. The tiny room is dim, with only a few streaks of sunlight peeking in through my small window.
âAndrew.â I sit up in bed, the tug in my bladder now more than urgent. I scurry off the bed and stumble closer to the door. âYou locked me in here last night!â
Thereâs a long silence on the other side of the door. I expect an apology, a jingle of keys while he tries to locate the one that will let me out. But I donât hear any of that. Heâs completely silent.
âAndrew,â I say. âYou have the key, right?â
âOh, I have the key,â he confirms.
And thatâs when I get a sick feeling. Last night, I kept telling myself this was an accident. It had to be an accident. But suddenly, Iâm not so sure. After all, how do you accidentally lock your girlfriend in a room and not even realize it until hours later? âAndrew, can you please open the door?â
âMillie.â His voice sounds strange. Unfamiliar. âDo you remember yesterday you were reading some of my books from the bookcase?â
âYesâ¦â
âWell, you took out a few books, and then you just left them on the coffee table. Those were my books, and you didnât treat them very well, did you?â
I donât know what heâs talking about. Yes, I did take a few books out of the bookcase. Three, at the most. And maybe I got distracted and never put them back. But is it really that big a deal? Why does he sound so upset?
âIâ¦Â Iâm sorry,â I say.
âHmm.â His voice still sounds strange. âYou say youâre sorry, but this is my house. You canât just do anything you want without any consequences. I thought you would know better, since youâre a and all.â
I flinch at the disparaging way he says my job description, but Iâll say anything to get him to calm down. âIâm sorry. I didnât mean to make a mess. Iâll go clean it up.â
âI already cleaned it up. Youâre too late.â
âListen, can you open the door so we can talk about this?â
âIâll open the door,â he says. âBut you need to do something for me first.â
âWhat?â
âDo you see the three books I left you on the floor of the room?â
The textbooks he left in the middle of my room, the ones I almost tripped over last night, are still right where he left them. âYesâ¦â
âI want you to lie on the floor of your room and balance them on your stomach.â
â
me?â
âYou heard me,â he says. âI want you to balance those books on your stomach. For three straight hours.â
I stare at the door, imagining the twisted expression on Andrewâs face. âYouâre joking, right?â
âNot even a tiny bit.â
I have no idea why heâs doing this. This isnât the Andrew I fell in love with. Itâs like heâs playing some sort of bizarre game with me. I donât know if he realizes quite how much heâs upsetting me. âListen, Andrew, whatever you want to do, whatever game you want to play, just let me out of this room and let me go to the bathroom at least.â
âCan I make this any clearer?â He clucks his tongue. âYou carelessly left my books in the living room, and I had to put them back for you. So now I want you to take these books and bear their weight.â
âIâm not going to do that.â
âWell, thatâs unfortunate. Because youâre not getting out of this room until you do what I tell you to do.â
âFine. Iâm probably going to pee my pants then.â
âThereâs a bucket in the closet if you need to relieve yourself.â
When I first moved in here, I noticed that blue bucket in the corner of the closet. I just left it there, never giving it a second thought. I look over at the closet and itâs still sitting there. My bladder spasms and I cross my legs.
âAndrew, I mean it. I really have to go to the bathroom.â
âI just told you what you can do.â
He isnât giving in. I donât understand whatâs going on here.
was always the crazy one. Andrew was the one who was , who saved me when Nina was accusing me of stealing her clothes.
Are they both crazy? Are they both in on this?
âFine.â Letâs just get this over with. I sit down on the ground and pick up one of the books so he can hear it. âAll right, Iâve got the books on top of me. Can you let me out now?â
âYou donât have the books on top of you.â
âYes, I do. â
âDonât lie.â
I let out a huff of exasperation. âHow do you know whether Iâm lying or not?â
âBecause I can see you.â
My spine turns to liquid. He can me? My gaze darts from wall to wall, searching for a camera. How long has he been watching me? Has he been spying on me the entire time Iâve been here?
âYouâre not going to find it,â he says. âItâs well hidden. And donât worry, I havenât been watching you all along. Only since a few weeks ago.â
I scramble to my feet. âWhat the hell is your problem? You need to let me out .â
âHereâs the thing,â Andrew says calmly. âI donât think youâre in any position to be making demands.â
I lunge at the door. I pound my fists against the wood, hard enough to make my hands red and sore. âI swear to God, you better let me out of here! This isnât funny!â
âHey.
.â Andrewâs calm voice interrupts my pounding. âSettle down. Look, Iâm going to let you out. I promise.â
I let my arms drop to my sides. My fists are throbbing. â
you.â
âJust not .â
Heat rises in my cheeks. âAndrewâ¦â
âI told you what you need to do to get out,â he says. âThis is an extremely fair punishment for what you did.â
I press my lips together, too angry to even respond.
âWhy donât I give you a little while to think about it, Millie? Iâll come back later.â
I swear to God, I still believe heâs got to be joking until his footsteps disappear down the hallway.