Total pages in book: 48
Estimated words: 46398 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 232(@200wpm)___ 186(@250wpm)___ 155(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 46398 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 232(@200wpm)___ 186(@250wpm)___ 155(@300wpm)
He tells me how worthless I am. But I already knew he would say things like that. It means nothing now. His opinion is shit.
Even through my pants, my knees hurt like the skin is being cut.
Both my knees will be bruised and raw by the time he lets me out of here. That’s what always happens. That’s probably why there are concrete floors and no rugs anywhere. Students spend too much time on their knees. Rugs would only make that easier, and we’re not here for things to be easy.
My knuckles get scraped, too. My hand is cramped around the toothbrush when a bucket thuds down next to me.
“Keep going. And this time, use the soap.”
I answer diligently, “Yes, sir.”
The warm, soapy water does a better job on the filth, but all I have is a toothbrush. I don’t have a mop or even a rag, so the water just gets dirty and red and collects in a pool on the floor. I tried my best to push it toward the drain with the toothbrush. The floor isn’t slanted like it normally would be in a room with a drain, so I have to do it one toothbrush-sweep at a time.
I stop thinking about how long it will take. I’ll be in here as long as Mr. Jay wants me to be. The floor and the mess are just his excuses. I could probably clean it until it was spotless, and he’d walk across it again with mud on his shoes just so I had to start over.
I go through the alphabet while I scrub, then count to a hundred. I try to remember science facts I learned in school. In my real school, not this one—I don’t think I’ve ever learned anything here except cruelty.
But then I think of him. Of a different life where we’re together and there’s no pain.
The pain in my knees and my knuckles becomes background noise.
I swallow back tears. I had done so well keeping my mind blank, but now the thought of him blurs out the blood and dirt on the floor.
Is this his blood?
Did he lose too much to survive?
I force myself to stop thinking about things I don’t know are real. I force myself to keep scrubbing. To get the room clean.
My legs hurt from my toes to my hips when I finally scrape the last bit of soap and blood and dirt into the drain. The door opens and shuts behind me. I hadn’t realized I was alone. Hours must’ve past.
“Rinse the floor.”
I stagger to my feet. My ankles were bent in an awkward position for too long, so I struggle to keep my balance. Mr. Jay points at the bucket of water. It’s a deep, dirty gray color now.
The metal handle cuts into my palms when I pick it up. There’s still quite a bit of water left, and I nearly fall over from the weight of it.
But I don’t.
I walk a few crooked steps toward the drain, then start pouring as carefully as I can. The water streams out of the bucket and pushes the last of the mess into the drain. This floor will probably never look completely clean again, but it doesn’t look like a murder scene anymore.
I did that.
I’m not proud of the job I’ve done—the punishment I’ve endured. I’m more surprised that it was possible at all. I thought the toothbrush would never get anything off that floor, even with the water.
The last of the water spills out of the bucket, and I put it down on the floor. I’m exhausted and shaking, the toothbrush still clutched in my hand. Does every room in the school look like this? Will I be scrubbing floors until I fall over dead?
It’s hard to pick my head up, but I do.
Mr. Jay narrows his eyes. “Now brush your teeth.”
My mouth drops open, but I close it again. I’m too numb to be shocked, but this—
“I—” My tongue is so dry that it struggles to move. “I don’t have—”
“There’s no need for toothpaste.”
I lift the toothbrush to my mouth and push it inside. I’m not here. I’m not here, and I’m not doing this. This is happening to someone else. I’m watching it happen to someone else.
The taste is awful. I gag on it, but I know better than to think he’ll let me off after a few seconds.
Mr. Jay doesn’t.
He makes me open my mouth so he can be sure I’ve brushed every single one of my teeth with the foul toothbrush, covered in blood and dirt and soap.
When I can’t stand to brush for another second, I pull it out of my mouth and bend over to spit into the drain.
“You will swallow.”
I don’t want to. God, I don’t want to. Saliva fills my mouth. I’m going to be sick. I’m going to be sick, and then—