May We Be Forgiven
snacks: pineapple juice, maraschino cherries, white bread with slices of American cheese. They have to feed them to me on account of the handcuffs.
“Try not to crumb,” the girl says.
I almost choke on a cherry. “You might want to check the expiration date on those,” I say.
“What’s tea-bagging?” the girl asks, while feeding me another piece of crustless white bread.
“I don’t know,” I say honestly.
She dabs the corners of my mouth with a napkin and lets me sip from a juice box.
“It’s something grown-ups do; it was in one of my mom’s e-mails,” the boy says.
“It’s not good to read someone else’s e-mail, e-mail is private,” I say.
“Whatever,” the girl says. “I’ll Google it later.” She takes the juice box away.
“Do you have any pets?” I ask.
“I was in charge of the class fish over school vacation,” the boy says.
“Do you like school?”
Both kids look at me blankly. “Do you have friends?”
“It’s more like we know people. We’re not friends but we know them. Like, if we’re out somewhere or something and see them, we might wave or nod but we don’t talk or anything.”
“Do you have a babysitter?”
“Mom let her go. She decided she didn’t like having someone around all the time,” the boy says.
“We have an electronic minder. Every day at three p.m. we have to check in; if we don’t it beeps us, and if we don’t respond it calls a list of names, and if no one can find us it calls the police.”
“How do you check in?”
“You dial a number and type in your code.”
“I always forget mine,” the boy says. “So I write it on my hand.” He holds up his hand; “1 2 3 4” is written in ink on his palm.
“We have chips,” the boy says, standing up.
“Thanks, but I’m trying to watch what I eat,” I say.
“Not chips you eat—chips implanted under our skin so they can track us,” he says.
“Like, if anyone wanted to know where we were right now, they’d know we’re at home. I keep thinking maybe they never installed the software,” the girl says. “Or they don’t care.”
“Look, kids, I hope this doesn’t sound bad, but, despite the fact that you kidnapped me and held me against my will, you seem like good kids—you made nice snacks, you both worry about your parents and wish they showed the same concern for you, and that’s really not asking too much. What about offering your parents a Get Out of Jail Free card? Offer them their freedom and ask them to give you up for adoption? Do you know how many people would love to have housebroken—I mean potty-trained—white, English-speaking children?”
“Wow, I never thought of that,” the girl says.
“You could find a nice family where they’d make sure you went to school, did your homework, and flossed your teeth.”
“Maybe you could adopt us,” the boy says.
I shake my head. “Clearly I’ve got Stockholm Syndrome,” I say.
“What’s that?” the girl asks.
“You’ll Google it later,” I say. “I’ve got a lot on my plate—my brother’s kids, and I’m trying to finish a book on Richard Nixon—do you know who he was?”
“No.”
“He was the thirty-seventh President of the United States, born in the small town of Yorba Linda, California, in a house that his father built with his bare hands. Nixon was the only President in United States history to resign the office.”
“What does ‘resign’ mean?” the boy asks.
“It means he quit in the middle,” the sister says.
“His father must have been really mad,” the boy says.
“What time is it?” I ask.
“Why?”
“I have to teach this afternoon. Do you mind if I use your bathroom?” I ask.
“It’s over there,” the boy says pointing.
“It’s a half-bath,” the girl says.
I slide myself to the front of the sofa and wiggle my arms. “Can’t exactly use the bathroom with my hands behind my back,” I say.
“Obviously,” the girl says.
“Right,” the boy says, coming to unlock me. The kid struggles with the key.
“Do your best,” I say. And somehow encouraging them to do their best calms the kids, and within seconds the cuffs are off and I’m heading towards the bathroom.
“I’ve got news for the two of you,” I say as I come out the bathroom door, fully prepared to fight them if I must. “I’m leaving now, but I urge you to talk to your parents—you deserve better. And I want you to know that what happened here today was a success, you did a
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