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Authors: Suzanne Brockmann

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BOOK: Breaking Point
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“Oh, no you don’t.” Molly got in her face. “I never lied to you.”

“ ‘Where are you going?’ ” Gina imitated herself and then Molly’s response: “ ‘Just out for some air.’ Left out a little, didn’t you? Like, ‘And to help some local girls escape from their parents to a place where they won’t be harmed.’ ”

Their argument—done in whispers so that no one would overhear—was all the more strange due to the fact that Gina was shivering in her bed, sick from what was looking more and more like an early version of the stomach virus that had taken down that busload of visiting priests.

Jones hadn’t caught it. Probably because there was nothing about him that was even remotely holy.

Molly alternately scolded Gina and pressed a cool cloth to her head. “Don’t be melodramatic,” she told her now. “I’m just the intermediary.”

“These days,” Gina corrected her. “Because you’re a potential target.” She looked over at Jones. “She’d probably be attacked if she left the camp. Did she tell you that?”

Attacked? “Jesus, Molly!” Frustration rang in Jones’s voice.

They finally both turned to look at him. “Shhhh!”

It would have been funny if this wasn’t so serious. The thought of Molly putting herself in danger made his stomach churn.

“My turn to talk,” he said, working hard to keep his voice low.

“Okay,” Molly admitted, “at one time, I may have put myself into danger, but over the past year, Paul Jimmo has smuggled the girls up to his farm and then—”

“My,”
he said, “turn to talk.”

Or not talk, as he tried to make sense of all the information that had come flying at him over the past few minutes.

Starting with the fact that Gina had “figured out”—according to Molly—that he was really Dave Jones.

Which, in itself was a mind-bender, considering that he wasn’t “really” Jones. His real named was Grady Morant. Jones was just another AKA in a string of AKAs. But at least Gina didn’t know that.

Some of the facts were far more clear.

Paul Jimmo, a friendly young Kenyan man who frequently visited this camp, had just been badly injured in a tribal dispute over water rights. He’d been airlifted to the hospital in Nairobi. It wasn’t yet known whether he would survive.

A fifteen-year-old Kenyan girl named Lucy was currently hiding here—in Jones’s very own tent, as a matter of fact. Apparently, yesterday Molly had made an arrangement with Paul Jimmo to take the girl north to Marsabit.

Which Jimmo obviously now couldn’t do.

“What’s the girl running from?” Jones asked. “An arranged marriage?”

Molly and Gina exchanged a look, and his heart sank. Whatever they were about to tell him couldn’t be good.

“Do you know what FGM is?” Molly asked him.

He shook his head. “No.” But he knew he was about to find out.

“Female genital mutilation,” Gina said. “Also known less descriptively as female circumcision . . . ?”

Oh,
shit.
“Okay, yeah,” Jones said. “I know what that is.” It was a rite of passage ritual done to women, and it was as awful as it sounded. The medical term was clitoridectomy. But it was usually performed by people with no medical training, using knives or even chunks of glass that were nowhere near sterile. The idea of it made him shudder.

“I used to think I knew what it was,” Gina said. “And then I came here.”

“It’s a purification ritual,” Molly explained. “Certain cultures believe that female genitals are unclean—that contact with an uncut woman can be dangerous to a man.”

Jones laughed his disbelief. “So, like: ‘Look out, I’m going to touch you with my unclean parts!’ And all the men run away screaming?”

He came from a very different culture.

“The cutting is just one part of the process,” Molly told him. “Some tribes perform something called infibulation, too.”

“That’s where they sew what’s left together, so that when it heals, the girl is essentially scarred shut, with an opening that’s maybe a little bigger than a pinhole,” Gina said. “It’s the equivalent of a physical chastity belt—what a terrific way to keep all the girls and women in line, huh? If the fact that their clitoris is completely gone doesn’t put a damper on their hankerin’ to step out, they’re stopped because penetration is impossible.”

“And it gets worse,” Molly said, sympathetic to the fact that he was turning pale. “When they marry, on their wedding night, their bridegroom has to cut or tear open the scar tissue in order to—”

“Yeah,” Jones said. “I get it.” Okay, that would make
him
run away, screaming.

“That’s if they survive the initial ritual,” Gina said. “Narari didn’t.”

Narari was . . . Oh, damn, those little girls who were still in the hospital . . . ?

They couldn’t have been more than thirteen years old. He looked at Molly, who nodded.

“There’s a new law in Kenya,” Molly told him, “that allegedly prohibits the cutting of any girl younger than sixteen. At which time, she supposedly has to give her consent to have the procedure done.”

“But there’s not a lot of Grrl Power in this part of the world,” Gina added. “An unscarred girl can’t prove her purity, so men don’t want to marry her. Which means a family will lose her bride price. A girl may say no, but when the family who feeds and houses her says yes . . .”

“This girl—Lucy,” Molly told him, “has said no.”

Jones nodded. “Okay,” he said. “With Paul Jimmo in the ICU, how’re we going to get her to Marsabit?”

S
HEFFIELD
R
EHAB
H
OSPITAL
, M
C
L
EAN
, V
IRGINIA
J
ANUARY
9, 2004
S
EVENTEEN
M
ONTHS
A
GO

Ajay’s older brother finally came to visit.

After being noticeably absent during both Christmas and New Year’s, he just appeared, without advance notice, walking into the rec room where Ajay and Max were playing a hand of their ongoing game of gin rummy, while waiting for Gina to show up.

“Yo, Jay-man . . .”

Ajay looked up. Blinked. “Hey, wow, Ricky.” The kid was remarkably unenthusiastic, considering he always spoke of his brother with such reverence. “Finally found the place, huh?”

Tall and skinny, Rick Moseley was much older than Max had imagined—in his mid-twenties. He was also much whiter—as in Scandinavian—with hair that might’ve been blond if he’d bothered to wash it. He hadn’t. He also wore clothes that looked as if he slept in them.

Even though a lot of younger people worked hard to achieve that rumpled, messy-haired look, this was obviously not a fashion statement. The kid was ripe, like he’d done his sleeping in his clothes behind a dumpster.

He also moved like he couldn’t stand still for too long.

“Dude!” Rick took a wide berth around the table, heading for the big picture windows that looked out over the countryside. “You got some kind of view here, huh?”

“Yeah,” Ajay said. “It’s great.”

Rick hadn’t given Ajay a hug, hadn’t so much as touched the boy’s shoulder. It was possible he didn’t want to get too close, so as not to offend with his stench, but Max doubted it. Rick didn’t even look at Ajay. He just gazed out at the view during their whole conversation. If you could call this wimpy exchange of words a conversation. How about asking,
How are you
?

Ajay tried a variation on that theme, since it was obvious that Rick wasn’t doing too well himself. “Hey, how’s Cindy?”

“Ashley,” Rick corrected him. “Cindy is so over. Ashley’s much cooler. She’s uh, you know, out in the car . . . Yeah, this is some view . . .”

Max cleared his throat.

“Oh, hey, this is Max,” Ajay said, taking the cue. “Max, Ricky. We’re stepbrothers, in case you were wondering,” he explained. “My dad did the Brady Bunch thing with his mom. We shared a half-sister, but she didn’t . . . you know.”

Max did know. She hadn’t survived the crash.

Over by the window, Rick ran his hands down his face.

Granted, it had to have been difficult for him to deal with the loss of his entire family. No doubt it was hard, too, to see his little brother in a wheelchair, unable to walk, with those terribly scarred hands. Max could only imagine.

Still, Rick’s refusal to look at the boy came across as revulsion—at least that was the way Ajay appeared to interpret it. He’d tucked his hands out of sight, beneath the tails of his too-big shirt, as if they were something he had to hide.

“Max,” Rick said, finally turning. “You work here, Max? ‘Cause I’m wondering if you can’t push Jay’s chair to his room, so we can—”

“Max is a patient,” Ajay said, his voice a little higher pitched than usual. “Believe it or not, he plays cards with me because he wants to.”

“Lucky Max,” Rick said, approaching the back of Ajay’s chair. “Some of us have bills to pay.” He tugged on the chair, which didn’t budge. “How the fuck do you work this thing?”

“There’s a brake,” Max said, pointing. “You have to release . . . You know, Ajay can use the controls—”

“No, I can—” Rick tried to release the brake a little too forcefully, which made Ajay grab for the armrests. But he quickly hid his hands again.

Max pushed himself to his feet, but Rick finally got it, and rolled his brother away.

“How’re the nurses treating you? Good?” Max heard him ask Ajay as they went out into the hall.

He didn’t hear Ajay’s response.

Max found himself following them—not right on their heels. He still wasn’t up to that kind of speed.

By the time he reached the reception desk, the hallway that led down to Ajay’s room was empty. He and his brother had disappeared.

Max stood there, tempted to stroll past Ajay’s door, see if they’d shut it, see if he couldn’t hear them talking.

But that was just crazy. He’d definitely been in law enforcement for too many years. Not everyone was a criminal.

Rick wasn’t dangerous, he wasn’t a threat—at least not to his own brother. He was merely a twenty-something slacker who’d had a rough Saturday night, who was struggling to get his life back together after a terrible tragedy. He hadn’t been in that car with Ajay, but it was obvious that, in some ways, he was as badly scarred.

Max made himself take a right turn, going through the front doors toward the garden with its pretty sitting area, sheltered from the wind. On an unseasonably warm day like today, it was a good place to wait for Gina.

Nice and public.

He’d just sat down when the front door opened with too much force, hitting the side of the building with a crash.

It was Ajay’s stepbrother, coming back out.

Some visit. It hadn’t even been five whole minutes since he’d pushed Ajay out of the rec room.

The kid was moving fast and, cursing loudly, he nearly knocked over an elderly man—nice guy named Ted, served on a sub in World War II—who was on his way inside to visit his sister.

Max stood up. “Hey!”

Rick didn’t stop, he didn’t even slow down.

As Max shuffled for the rehab center door, Rick ran for his vehicle—a beat up pickup truck with West Virginia plates—climbed in the driver’s side, and left the lot, tires squealing.

Old Mrs. Lane had left her wheelchair outside the ladies room, and Max appropriated it, throwing himself onto the seat. He zoomed down the hall.

Ajay’s door was ajar.

He nearly killed himself braking, steering into the wall to come to a complete stop, instinctively reaching too far to stop himself and zinging his broken collarbone.
Christ.
He pulled himself up, shoved the chair back down the hall, then went in, knocking on the door as he opened it wider.

Ajay was sitting by the window.

“Are you okay?” Max asked. “Rick left in such a hurry . . .”

“Ashley was waiting for him in the car,” Ajay said, but he was close to tears.

There were pills on the floor. Lots of them, crunching underfoot.

“What just happened here?” Max asked.

“Nothing.”

“Did you spill a bottle of Tylenol?” he asked, knowing that wasn’t the case, bending down to pick one up, take a closer look.

“Yeah,” Ajay said. “That’s what happened. I have a headache. A bad one. I think I’m going to lie down—”

“These aren’t Tylenol,” Max said.

“That’s funny,” Ajay said. “Because the bottle said—”

“What’dya do?” Max asked him. “Steal these from the medicine lockup for your brother, only you took the wrong bottle by mistake?”

“No! Screw you! You don’t know
shit
—”

“I know Ricky was tweaked. What’s he using, Ajay? Crystal Meth?”

“Get out!”

“He must need money, right? That kind of habit is expensive—”

“You don’t have the right to come in here—”

“I also know,” Max said, speaking over him, “what happens when stolen prescription drugs are sold on the street for recreational use. Someone takes them for shits and giggles, doesn’t realize how much their judgment is impaired, gets behind the wheel and drives their car into another car and kills an entire family. Just wipes them off the face of the earth.”

“I didn’t steal them!” Ajay was crying now. “I didn’t! He wanted me to, but I didn’t. He said they kept something called Oxy-something in the closet, that there were bottles of it here, that I could just help myself and no one would even notice. Only, they keep the drugs locked up and inventoried, and even if they didn’t, I’m not a thief—he might be but I’m not! These were
my
pills, only he didn’t want these . . .”

Max realized that there was more than one type of medication on the floor—dozens of doses of medicine that Ajay apparently had fooled the nurses into thinking he was taking, but had actually never even put in his mouth.

Because he was saving it for his tweaked-out, wicked stepbrother.

God
damn
it.

“Hey, guys.” Gina knocked as she pushed open the door. “What’s . . .”

“Get the nurse,” Max ordered. “This idiot hasn’t been taking any of his meds for—” He looked at Ajay. “How long?”

“Since Christmas,” he admitted through his tears. “I’m so sorry. I just wanted him to come see me, so I told him I had the stuff he wanted, only it wasn’t, so he threw it at me . . .”

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