“They still get a little wound up when mommy and daddy aren’t home.” She set the monitor on the table in front of them and angled it so they cou...ld see the screen. “Where’s the remote?” Jon faked a yawn and draped his arm across Mia’s shoulders. “I think I saw it over on the counter.” She snuggled in. “Slick move, Casanova.” Jon reached down her chest and started stroking a nipple. She rewarded him with a simple, “hmm.” “Remember how I used to sneak in to help you babysit?” “I do, even after. I’d picked out my wedding dress, figuring that then I would look as beautiful to him, as when we were married. He’d loved me in that, so what better way to greet him once again?” “It is rather romantic.” Andrea smiled, looking out into the room, and still seeing no one. It was also downright creepy, romantic and a little disturbed. “It was blustery when I started on my walk to the cliffs edge, and I found it odd that the closer that I got to the edge of the cliff, the more the wind blew in the. "It's the place," it went on, "where children are injected and shaped bydoctors and teachers to become creatures even God couldn't imagine."The mocking, cynical words echoed into silence."Ffffreaks, they are called; ffffaggotsss... ssssissssiesss..."The hissing s-es dissolved into the night."Instead of healthy, red-blooded American boyssss, they become sssickcreatures like the blushing fashion models you only moments ago sawprancing past your table. Like the gracious ballet-dancers you saw,. Maybe 'nothing' was what she needed? Her days outside, on her own, had been hell. After fleeing from the priest's porch — holding her torn blouse closed, smelling his piss, feeling the slime on her face congeal — she'd stayed in her house, in her bed for days. Paula tried to reach her, but she'd ignored her calls — even the ringing of her doorbell. There had been an important business deadline; she'd let it slip and never responded to e-mails or phone calls. She felt destroyed. Even the last.
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