I slipped on my sunglasses and turned to leave but stopped and spun back around.“You won’t tell Tate about any of this, right?” I checked. “Getting arrested, my family, me staying
here?”
He looked at me like I’d just told him that broccoli was purple. “Why would I do that?” Good enough.
Not twenty-four hours later I stood in front of another cop, getting patted down, only this time I wasn’t in trouble.
According to Mr. Brandt’s judge friend, I didn’t have to start the visitations for a few weeks. They wanted my mother’s approval first, but I had no interest in waiting. The sooner I started, the sooner I’d be done.
“Through those doors, you’ll find lockers where you can put your keys and phone. Get rid of that wallet chain, too, kid.”
I eyed the Neo-Nazi-looking corrections officer like he could take his orders and shove them up his ass. He was bald, white-like-he’d-never-seen-the-sun, and as fat as a dozen Krispy Kremes a day will do to you. I wanted my shit on me, because I fully expected to turn around and walk out of here the moment I laid eyes on the sick bastard that was my father.
My father. My stomached turned at those words.
“How does this work?” I asked, reluctantly. “Will he be like in a cage, and we talk through some air holes or are there phones we use?”
Asking questions wasn’t my style. I either figured it out for myself, or I shut up and fumbled along. But the idea of seeing the twisted fuck made my muscles tense. I wanted to know exactly what I was walking into. Looking like a helpless kid to this cop was nothing if I could walk in there like a man in front of my father.
“Cages with air holes?” the Nazi-with-a-badge teased. “Watching a little Prison Break lately?”
Date: 2015-02-16; view: 791
|