“I don’t have the key,” I confessed.
“What?” he asked.
“I lost it years ago and never replaced it because I never felt the need to lock my house.”
“You really have no key?” he asked.
I nodded. “It’s okay, the backdoor’s unlocked too.”
“Uh, no it’s not.”
“What? You went around and locked all the doors?”
“Well, yes. That’s what normal people do when they leave.”
“Oh, Luke,” I said trying not to laugh or get too angry with him.
“Did Thomas ever have a key to your place?”
I shrugged. “I can’t remember. Maybe, but probably not.”
“Because you never lock your doors,” Luke said getting frustrated.
“Maybe there’s a window open,” I suggested.
We walked around the entire house checking each window. Of course, it was the tiny bathroom window that was open.
“I can’t fit through there,” I said.
“Of course, you can,” he tried to assure me.
“No, I can’t.”
“Can we please stop arguing and just try?”
“Fine.” I huffed.
Luke lifted me easily into the air. I raised the window as far as it would go. I still didn’t believe I was fitting through that hole, but I grabbed hold of the bottom of the window sill and hoisted myself up. My arms burned and I decided maybe it was finally time to start hitting the gym. Luke grabbed my feet and set them on his shoulders. That helped steady me a ton.
I went in head first. Halfway through and staring down into my bathtub, I was contemplating what an idiot I was for agreeing to this. Luke gave me a little push and I was in up to my hips. I was just dangling there with nothing to grab hold of. I was going to fall head first into a bathtub and I couldn’t stop it.
I tried to reach for the shower head, the curtain rod, anything to help slow my impending doom, and then I heard a throat clearing behind me.
“Don’t rush me Luke, I’m trying not to die here,” I said only joking a little.
“Syd is that you?” I heard a male voice that wasn’t Luke’s.
“James?” I asked.
“Um, yeah,” he confirmed.
“What are you doing here?”
Someone was out for a run and called in to report that your house was being robbed.
“No one is robbing my house,” I argued. The window sill was starting to cut into my hips.
“Do you need some help?” he asked.