She didn’t speak. Didn’t move. Hell, I wasn’t entirely sure she was breathing.
I shifted my weight, unease trickling through my gut. Finally I hooked a thumb at the vacant bed. “Let me guess—that one’s mine?”
Khloe nodded slowly, lifting her wide eyes to meet mine.
I almost flinched. Shit, I hadn’t seen eyes that haunted since I’d left the trailer park. There was zero hope left in them, just resignation and exhaustion.
“So, what’re you in for?” I tried, willing some sort of life to spark in her gaze.
The tiniest frown furrowed her brow.
“Right,” I muttered to myself, turning away to inspect my side of the room. In addition to the twin bed and nightstand, there was a tiny closet pre-stocked with clothes and no door and a small desk with a light bolted to the table.
There was a window between the beds, so that was something, even if it was covered by wire mesh and looked out into a bleak yard with dead grass under a gray sky. A hundred or so yards away, a concrete fence topped with barbed wire separated the enclosure from a line of trees.
As if that wasn’t enough of an escape deterrent, I spotted watchtowers to the far right and left.
Highwater might be an institution, but it was also a prison.
“Do you know where we are?” I asked her.
“Highwater,” she replied.
I tried not to get annoyed. “Right, but where is Highwater?”
She stared at me.
“I wasn’t conscious when they brought me here,” I explained. “So, I’m wondering where here is.”
“Wyoming.” Another soft whisper. She started wringing her hands together, her shoulders hunching as she tried to make herself smaller.
Jesus, if I breathed too hard, I might knock this girl over.
I stared out the window and noted that the mesh was bolted into place. But even if I could twist the metal to slip out, there was no way I’d survive a straight drop to the ground without breaking something.
“Guess I’m not jumping,” I sighed, mostly talking to myself.
“No!” Khloe cried.
I spun to see her literally cowering away from me. She staggered back until she hit the wall and then slid down, shaking violently.
“Whoa. I was—”
“You can’t say that,” she hissed, fear dripping from her tone. “They’ll hear, and then they’ll come. They always come, and they always know.”
I held up my hands innocently. “Khloe, I didn’t mean to upset you.”
“Promise me you won’t try it,” she begged, tears filling her eyes and spilling over her ashen cheeks. “I can’t go back to purgatory. I won’t.”
I frowned. “What the hell is—”
An alarm chirped overhead, and I jolted, my eyes rolling toward the ceiling.
“D-dinner,” Khloe stammered.
Footsteps echoed in the hallway, and girls started walking past. Most were alone, though a few walked in pairs. Only a very few spoke.
A girl with long dark hair and darker eyes hesitated in our doorway, staring at me. “New girl?” She cocked an eyebrow.