world.â
âTeaâll soon be ready.â Sally Kincaid appeared in the kitchen doorway.
âI have to prepare for a class tomorrow,â Helen said. âI canât stay long.â
The man said, âYouâll stay for tea, surely.â
âMandatory,â Sally said.
Helen Mboto stared at the cheap synthetic material of the manâs trousers. She could smell him. The sweat, the material, perspiration and chemicals. The smell was offensive. She got up from the sofa and the man placed his hands on her shoulders and shoved her down again.
She was baffled by his aggression. A joke, maybe some playful gesture? A local custom? But he wasnât smiling.
âYouâll fucking stay,â he said.
âWhatâs going on, Sally?â Helen asked. âDoes your friend have a problem?â
Sally said, âYou donât leave until youâve had your tea. Rule of the house.â
âThis is some kind of, what, joke?â
The man said, âNo joke. You donât leave until we tell you.â
Helen Mboto remembered something sheâd read, an old newspaper story about how foreign girls were press-ganged into lives of vice, bought and sold and shipped off to the Middle East or Japan. Is this why sheâd been brought here? No, her imagination was flying away with her. She was panicking.
âSally, explain this, please, I donât understand,â Helen said. âYour friendâs behaviour ââ
Sally said, âWeâre only trying to be hospitable.â
The man said, âThe very words I used.â
âIâd really like to leave,â Helen said.
âNo chance,â the man said.
Helen Mboto was too proud to make an imploring gesture; sheâd never begged for anything even though she wanted to beg now: please let me leave . She felt endangered, cornered by an incomprehensible hostility. She made to rise, but the man stopped her again. She reacted the only way she knew how. She lowered her face and sunk her strong teeth into the manâs thigh and he howled even as he tried to step away from the damp she had on his skin. She released him and he backed off a few feet, eyes filling up with tears.
She got up from the sofa and thought sheâd rush for the door, she had time, maybe a few seconds, she was strong, athletic, quick. Before sheâd gone a few steps she felt pressure against the back of her neck.
Sally Kincaid said, Iâm holding a gun. Stand very still.â
âThat black cunt bit a hole out of my leg,â the man said. âThat fucking nigger cunt.â
âSit down, Helen. Sit down and drink your tea. You, Beezer, quit moaning.â
âYouâd moan if youâd had her fucking fangs sunk into your leg.â
Helen sat. âI want to go home.â
Sally said, âBe a good girl. Do as youâre told.â
The man limped inside the kitchen. Still complaining about his wound, he came back with a cup of tea. The string of the tea-bag dangled over the rim. He thrust the cup at Helen.
âDrink, Helen.â
âI donât bloody want to drink.â
Sally Kincaid pressed the gun into Helenâs ear. âDo it.â
Helen took the cup. âPlease donât shoot.â
âThen drink.â
Helen didnât trust the tea. Why should she? It was probably drugged. Or poisoned.
She dropped the cup to the floor.
âOh my,â Sally said. âClumsy. What are you going to do about her attitude, Beezer?â
The man punched Helen hard in the mouth and said, âBlack fucking cunt.â
Helen felt a shellburst of pain. Blood flowed from her lips. âLet me go home. Please. Iâll say nothing about this.â
The man had something in his hand. âLooks like silver, swings like lead.â
Helen stared at Sally and said, Tell him not to harm me, Sally. Please.â
Sally Kincaid said, âHeâs a very bad boy, Helen. I canât tell
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