012 part2

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Chapter Twelve: Part two

Day Two

He had a dream that something heavy, violent, was trying to climb its way out of his chest, and awoke to his own violent coughing. Poison. It’s how he thought of the filthy water covering his prison floor, and even while he’d managed to get a lot of it to drain, he’d also managed to inhale more than he wanted to think about in his restless sleep. Twice now. And his skin itched. He’d clawed at his own arms, his neck, his face, trying to make it stop. Completely saturated, he felt infested. Crawling... but crawling with what?

Gasping, Luke sat upright, his hand moving roughly along the wall as he desperately searched for the lighter, swatted at his own face with his free hand in an attempt to relieve himself from some unseen, unbearable pest. And then it was there, cool in his hand; he closed his eyes tightly, hoping it wasn’t too wet. Flick. He opened his eyes to a warm flame, and sighed. It seemed somehow bigger, hotter each time he used the lighter. And as he looked down over his body, he felt relief. He was damp, and filthy, sore and scratched up, but there was nothing he could see that was crawling. And the light made him feel better, but there was no excuse to keep using it. No need to waste. It was day again. He could tell from the small amount of light coming through the vent. It wasn’t as good as the lighter, but after all the nights he’d spent in the basement--in the dark--even a little light was something. And Luke hated the dark. He hated how it isolated him until he disappeared, how it had sometimes taken a full day to see clearly again after being allowed out. Even all the times that Mark had insisted on staying with him, if only for short periods before their parents would fish him out and leave Luke alone had never soothed his fear of it. But now he had some light, so he let the lighter flicker out.

And a moment later he was holding the flame out in front of him again, moving to his feet as if startled.

Luke winced. His ankle was still tender, and his head swam from the motion, but he was up, and too distracted to care about discomfort as he stared across the room, somewhere below the steel plate that served as a locked door. He blinked a few times, as if the red and white lunch box--the hard kind that served as a mini cooler--was a figment of his imagination that could disappear if he didn’t act with caution. He took a step. And then another. It was still there. He smiled like a fool for a brief moment, like he’d won some sort of game. But, the happy face was soon replaced by one of suspicion as he eyed the lunch box, and moved closer. He didn’t see it as a relief for his growling stomach for several long moments, but as an intruder instead, the kind that showed up while he was sleeping. Not paying attention. Holding the lighter lower to the ground, he took a quick look around, wondering if there was anything else he missed. By the time his eyes reached the tall bottle of water his light only lasted long enough to remember where it was before the flame went out and he was on the ground, reaching, lifting... drinking.

He didn’t realize that water could actually taste good. It had always been just water, and it wasn’t as if it were the first time he’d been deprived of such a basic necessity, but this... it was perfect, soothing, and cold against his dry throat, washing away the foul taste he’d been unable to wash from his mouth from his earlier vomiting. But, as soon as he thought of pouring some over his head to wash away the grime he stopped, catching the error in his actions. Coughing, catching his breath, he weighed the bottle in his hand, cursing himself when he’d decided that he’d already drunk down nearly half without knowing that there’d be more coming. But still, he was tempted enough to give in and take one more sip before sealing the bottle and tucking it under his arm.

Luke reached for the lunch box next, intending to take it back to his corner, which he’d decided was the warmest part of the room. But, he didn’t make it that far before that, too, was open and he was reaching in, finding what felt like two plastic-wrapped sandwiches, which he found no interest in once he felt the small thermos. And it was warm. He lifted it in both hands, held it to his chest... to his neck, his face, and he closed his eyes, imagining for a brief moment that the small amount of heat he felt was everywhere, warming him, like being in his own bed covered in the electric blankets that Mark was so fond of in the winter. And for a moment, he imagined that he was comfortable. Comfort would have meant everything to him just then, which was why he made a point to not waste too much time wishing for it as he opened the thermos and sniffed at the contents. Soup. He couldn’t quite tell if it was chicken broth or some kind of beef stew, but either sounded good, and he sipped without caution, oblivious to the way that the hot liquid scalded his tongue before slipping down his throat. He chewed a soft potato between his teeth, and lifted the mug higher in search of more.

And then he heard something. Something that he imagined he wasn’t supposed to hear from in there. Luke closed his mug and placed it carefully back into the cooler before he stood and moved closer to the vent where he strained to hear. His right ear sounded muffled, waterlogged, and so he turned his head to listen with the left. One. Two... One. Two. Three. Four. Footsteps in the grass.

“Hey!” His voice cracked, his throat ached, but he made it work again, anyway. “Hey! Who’s out there?”

“I hear you, Luke.”

Luke took in a breath, let it out slowly, and closed his eyes. He almost cried, but didn’t, of course, because Luke Tuan just didn’t do things like that. “Mark!”

“I hear you, Luke!” Mark repeated, louder this time, feeling laced in his voice. “But...but...”

Mark’s words trailed off, and Luke struggled to be patient. “I can hear you, too, Mark,” he called up. “But only when you talk loud... and you’ve gotta hold still, alright? It’s easier to hear when you’re not movin’ around.”

Apart from the sound of his own breathing, Luke heard silence for several moments, and began to feel uncertain.

“Mark?”

“I’m not moving now, Luke... and I can still hear you.”

Luke sighed. “Good, so listen, okay?” He found himself leaning against the wall, suddenly feeling exhausted, and eyed the lunch box. He’d eat more, he decided. Regain his strength... talk to his brother. “Right... I need you to find out how long they plan on keeping me down here...It’s different this time, I don’t know if I can...”

“But, Luke, I’m not supposed to,” Mark interrupted, his voice sounding absent in a way that seemed familiar to Luke. “I’m not supposed to hear you anymore. And I’m not supposed to see you. I don’t, Luke. I don’t see you, so I’m good, right? Right, Luke?”

Luke found himself slowly looking up, picturing his brother sitting somewhere above, not noticing the wet grass seeping through his clothing... and he went numb inside. He didn’t become frustrated or confused, or even angry that Mark didn’t seem to grasp the severity of his predicament, because Luke knew better. He knew Mark.

“Mark... why aren’t you supposed to hear me anymore?” he asked, and when he found no response from his brother, he shouted the question. “Why aren’t you supposed to hear me, Mark?”

“Because you’re not real, Luke.”

“What?”

“But I know the truth,” Mark continued. “So I told her... I told her it’s a lie. You’re my brother, Luke. I told her you’re my brother.”

Luke could have asked many questions just then, but he found himself staring straight ahead, darkness swarming his vision as he swallowed against his sore throat. “What did she say?” he finally asked.

“It’s a secret.”

“What she said is a secret?” Luke asked, perplexed. Mark didn’t keep secrets from him.

“No, Luke... it’s a secret. Dad will get mad...  he can’t know you’re real... and Jackson got mad. He left, Luke.”

“What do you mean, he left?” Luke demanded, once again thinking of his call to Jackson Wang, remembering his car in front of the house.

“He won’t talk to me anymore, Luke,” Mark said, sounding strained. “He won’t come see me if I talk about you, Luke.”

“Because I’m not real?” Luke mumbled, unsure of whether or not his brother even heard him this time. Not real. Didn’t exist. It was the same thing, wasn’t it? But what did it mean? His father couldn’t know. Jackson couldn’t know... They didn’t know. But his mother knew.

Luke started to pace, thinking harder. What had she done? If his dad didn’t know where he was... something was wrong. If he didn’t know where Luke was, he couldn’t hurt him... but something was wrong. What had she told his father?

Luke wished that he could remember that night. How long had it been since she’d trapped him here? A few days maybe, he didn’t know. It felt longer. And what had she said to him?

I’ll make it better. You’ll see.

If you go away.

Luke froze, his fists clenching at his sides.

“Mark!” he suddenly shouted. “You have to get me out of here! Hurry!” It wasn’t a demand he would have made minutes ago. He’d thought of it, but never would he have asked, not if it would get Mark in trouble. But the game had suddenly changed, and now he knew. He wasn’t supposed to get out. His mother had lied to his father, and while Luke didn’t know exactly what she’d said, he knew well enough that she’d have to keep her secret now. Because it wasn’t safe. None of them were safe if caught in a lie to Raymond Tuan. But, unfortunately for Dorine Tuan, Luke couldn’t have cared less if she was caught.

“But I can’t, Luke!” Mark suddenly said. “Mama says it’s not safe! It’s not safe, Luke. She said it’ll be alright if we just wait... if we just...”

“Damn it, can’t you see she’s lyin’ to you?” Luke screamed. “D’you think I’ll live down here? I won’t! I won’t Mark! She’ll die before I do! Do you hear me? I’ll make her stop breathing! Get me out of here! Get me out of here!” Luke’s voice rose to a screech in his panic, his blood rushing to his head so quickly that he barely heard a thing as his brother fled, leaving him alone once again before he deeply inhaled the stale air, and then collapsed.

***

He felt betrayed. Luke told himself that it wasn’t Mark’s fault. His brother was just afraid. Mark had been manipulated by their parents, and if Luke knew anything, it was that Mark was easily taken advantage of. He’d do what he thought was best for anyone; in this case, he’d leave Luke down there based on the belief that everyone would be safe, and perhaps ultimately happy that way. And Luke had played right into his mother’s hands when he’d threatened her to Mark. But he still told himself that it wasn’t Mark’s fault. He knew Mark, and his brother wouldn’t have walked away if he hadn’t believed that doing so would be good for Luke, too. But then, telling himself this was true, and believing it, were two very different matters for Luke Tuan because... he felt betrayed.

He was in a damn hole! Hurt, tired, and for all he knew, dying. And his brother had left him there. Even more distressing was that he didn’t know if Mark was even going to remember it... and if anyone had the right to forget the last days, Luke strongly felt that it should be him.

And while he might have had many things to be jealous of regarding his brother, this was the one thing he felt strongly about. Mark lived in a world where he got to pick and choose the moments he lived in. Perhaps he didn’t have the control over it that Luke was imagining at the moment... but Mark still got to forget, and often did. It had always been difficult for Luke to hear Mark tell him how much he wished he could remember the moments that he out, but it had never been because Luke sympathized with him, but because more often than not, Luke knew what Mark had forgotten, and found his brother’s talent for wiping unpleasant things from his memory something to be envious of indeed. And when he wasn’t jealous of it, Luke had been grateful for it, for Mark’s sake, and his own. He’d never abandoned his brother. He’d never betrayed him. He’d failed him, though. But Mark couldn’t remember. Mark didn’t remember, so why the hell did it feel like he was trying to get even now?

He’s not trying to hurt you, Luke told himself. That’s not what’s happening. Mark just needs time. He’ll think. He’ll come back. He’ll save you.

Because Luke was quickly doubting his ability to save himself. After Mark had left, Luke had quickly come to the conclusion that his mother would be back again. Perhaps with more food, or words that didn’t make sense. He didn’t understand what her plan was just yet, but he knew that she hadn’t left him there to die, and if she was going to come back, this time he intended to be ready. He forgot about rationing what little food and water he did have, and ate until he was full, and while he felt as if there wasn’t enough water in the whole town to quench his thirst, he used what he had, even sparing a small amount to clean the wound at the back of his head, which had swelled beneath his hair, the broken skin becoming increasingly irritated by the filth he found himself in. He’d even removed his wet shirt, and while it didn’t make him feel any warmer, his skin started to dry, and that was a comfort in itself.

All of this was supposed to help him get stronger, be ready. But as the first few hours passed, Luke developed a strong sense that something was wrong. Because he didn’t feel stronger at all. If anything, he felt even more drained than he had when he’d awoken to the lunch box. And it felt like more than just the bitterness that his brother’s abandonment had left with him. His feet. They’d been numb before, cold. But now his toes felt strange, as if they were falling asleep, and the same sensation was in his gut... but admittedly, that could have been the knots, the anxiety he felt over being alone. Without Mark. That seemed to bother Luke more than anything because Mark had always been everything he had. And maybe Mark didn’t know it, but Luke was all that he had.

Luke closed his eyes, deciding that he should rest for a few minutes before he had to be alert, waiting for his mother to come back. Just a small rest wouldn’t hurt anything, he decided. He needed to calm down, anyway, before his stomach decided there wasn’t enough room for the food he’d consumed alongside all of his grief. He tried to think of things that were good, things that gave him comfort. Unfortunately, when Luke closed his eyes, the only place he ever found himself was back in the dark.

He remembered when he first started spending most of his nights in the basement. Before he’d killed the fawn, it had always been hours at a time, mostly during family meals when his father said he couldn’t stand to look at him. But after the day that Luke had found himself crawling out of that hole with the blood on his hands, things had changed.

He’d rebelled against his father, and he’d been punished for it. He knew that was the reason when they’d locked him in the basement. But it hadn’t been the one his father had given him when he’d unlocked the door and allowed bright, blinding light in for a few moments as he inflicted one of his long-winded speeches upon Luke’s poor ears. The words hadn’t had any effect. Luke had heard about what a terrible burden he was so many times that words like that had lost all effect. But when his father had mentioned that Luke was being punished for being evil, a cruel boy who’d slaughtered one of God’s helpless creatures, as if he’d made the decision to do so on his own, Luke had known that his days spent in the dark would likely be increasing. And he was right. He just hadn’t realized that his brother would be sharing the experience with him, even when he didn’t volunteer to do so.

Cats. In the year since Luke had sent the fawn to somewhere better, there had been many cats. Sometimes, when he was out hunting with his father they’d come upon one of the scraggly creatures, particularly when they were close to the old shack across the lake. And the woman who had lived there then had given Luke something in common with his father. Neither of them liked her.

The first time it was supposed to be a joke. They’d taken one of her cats and hung it in a bag on her front porch--after they’d gotten it riled up, of course. The point was to make sure the witch-lady got scratched up real good when she went to the trouble of getting it down. But that hadn’t been the way that it had happened.

It was a Sunday morning, and while Gail Lewis never went to church, it was the morning she went into town for her supplies. Mark had been with them as they watched, waited, and for the first time Luke could remember, it had been Mark angering their father as he whined about what was happening to the cat. Luke remembered the spark of protective fury towards his father that had arisen in his chest when their dad had told Mark that he was stupid, a baby, that he should just shut up.

But he’d kept quiet... and Mark didn’t. It was when Mark suffered a strong hand to the back of his head that Luke had had enough. Instead of attacking his father, though, he’d walked right out into the open and up to the front porch. The cat’s claws had come right through the cloth sack to scratch up his hands as he took it down, but looking over at Mark, he’d known that he was doing the right thing. Which is exactly what made his next decision one that likely would have been difficult for any normal person to understand.

Gail Lewis was a large woman. The kind that easily had the old floorboards in her house screeching, or her old little car sinking an inch closer to the ground when she sat in it. So inside the house, when she’d moved towards the door, Luke had heard her, and made a quick retreat, taking the cat with him.

But, he couldn’t go back to his own family. They were practically hiding right in front of the door, and as soon as it opened, she’d see him, so he’d moved behind her car instead, hoping to duck away once she got in. In the bag, the feline started growling, hissing. He dropped his hand over its head and squeezed hard. It struggled, but the sound was muffled suitably enough. He could hear Gail Lewis getting closer... and then she stopped. Turned back.

Luke’s head popped up and he saw her looking in her purse as she headed back towards the house. She’d forgotten something. It didn’t matter what. She was headed back towards her house, which meant that Luke could get himself into a more suitable location. He stood, stepped away from the vehicle, and then froze when he saw the faces of his brother and father watching him. Mark looked frightened, and along with a familiar, soft look in his eyes there was something else. Anxiety. He watched his brother’s eyes shift from his face to the bag the squirming cat was trapped in. The cat. That’s what Mark had been nervous about. He didn’t think the animal was safe yet. And, Luke realized, it wasn’t.

Looking at his father just then might have been a mistake, but that’s where Luke’s eyes wandered next, and with one look, he received a promise. Not just one that threatened something worse if Luke continued his present course of action. Sure, there were plenty of other ways that his father could play the “Luke’s evil” game if Luke let this one cat go for his brother, but that didn’t bother him so much. Not anymore. It was the way that their father was looking at Mark that happened to be a bother, and Luke had a feeling that if he made the wrong decision now, Mark would be the one suffering later.

Luke heard something in the direction of the house, and a quick look told him that Gail was on her way back, if the way his father and brother hadn’t lurched back hadn’t already told him. But, Luke didn’t move. He looked down at the sack hanging from his hand, and then back at his father, smiling when the old man’s head looked ready to explode as he wondered if Luke was purposely going to get caught. And Luke thought of doing just that, too. If anything, to watch his father try to explain when he pointed out exactly where he was to Gail.

But, Luke decided, that kind of fun was just going to have to wait. Mark looked as if he’d reached his maximum stress intake as it was, and unfortunately, Luke was going to have to cause just a little more for him before this was over. He waited until the last possible second before Gail might have seen him, and walked away from the car, towards the side of the house. But, he didn’t do that before dropping the sack that the cat was trapped in. Right behind the rear tire of Gail’s vehicle.

By the time the engine roared to life, Luke was out of sight. But he saw it all. He made sure of that, watching with wide eyes. The bag moved. He heard the cat, and then he didn’t anymore. Just the engine as the car backed up, the cloth sack disappearing under the first tire, and then the second. And then it didn’t move anymore.

He cocked his head, looked harder at the sack, the little lump in it, and stomped down the urge to go peek inside. But his attention was turned when the vehicle came to an abrupt halt, the front bumper facing the cloth sack, the motionless lump within. He moved stealthily alongside the house, closer. Probably closer than he should have come. But he was watching Gail, feeling interested in the curiosity he saw on her face as she left her car and approached the thing that didn’t have a place on her drive. And then as she knelt down, he saw it on her face before she even opened the bag. Realization.

Luke somehow knew that there was no doubt in her mind when it came to what was in that bag, and he couldn’t understand why she was reaching out, acting as if she needed to see it, anyway. She cared. About every one of those strays that he saw as nothing more than an infestation that kept breeding, populating the woods. She cared about the dead cat, like he’d cared about his fawn, and he was troubled by this. He didn’t want to believe that it was the same thing because then, he’d done to Gail Lewis what his father had done to him, and he wasn’t sorry for that because he sympathized with the witch-lady, but because that made him something that he couldn’t be. It made him like his father.

It was Gail Lewis’s sudden sobs that pulled Luke from his startling thoughts, and for what felt like impossibly long minutes he watched her with a growing curiosity, trying to understand what he was feeling as it occurred to him that other than his mother, he’d never heard a woman cry before. And when it came to his mother, her tears had given him a sense of accomplishment. That’s why he was confused when he couldn’t determine how he felt about Gail’s.

“Why’d you do that?” Nothing could have surprised Luke more than his own brother at the moment, because he couldn’t have been anything but surprised when he found Mark suddenly grabbing him from behind, gripping his shoulders, pulling, shoving until he was on his back and looking up at a face not unlike his own. Only, Mark’s face was undeniably furious at the moment, more so than Luke had ever seen it. “Why’d you do that, Luke? You didn’t have to!”

Luke started to sit up, his frustration current outweighing his shock. This wasn’t supposed to be his fault. “Mark, I had...”

“No!” Mark was suddenly over him, attempting to hit, scratch. It wasn’t very threatening, Luke was quick to decide, and opted to shield his face rather than risk harming his brother. “You don’t have to be bad, Luke! You don’t have to hurt things! Why did you have to hurt it? Why, Luke?”

“Mark, you’ve got to be quiet!” Luke hissed. “It was just a stupid cat! And I did have to, didn’t you see the way he was looking at me, can’t you get it, Mark, it’s always been...”

“Who’s there? Who’s over there?” Gail’s voice suddenly shouted. “You bunch of murderers, you are! I know you!”

Luke’s eyes widened, and he was quick to stop Mark’s nonsense as he grabbed his brother and hauled him to his feet, seemingly undeterred when Mark continued to fight him.  But ultimately, it was Raymond Tuan who put an end to the scuffle when he grabbed the back of both of the boys’ shirts and hauled them back through the woods before they were discovered.

That morning Raymond Tuan had led his boys home without dinner, but a hidden smile at the corner of his mouth; Gail Lewis buried her cat before getting rid of her car for good; Luke was sent to the basement to pay for his crimes, believing that Mark hated him; and Mark...Mark did what he always did when his heart was hurting.

Luke remembered that later that night, when the basement door opened, he wanted to stay trapped in the dark for the first time in his life. It seemed far less threatening than having to face Mark, because while he was stuck in the basement, he’d done something that he’d always tried to put as little effort in as possible. He thought about what he was supposed to be being punished for.

Not just hurting his brother. Making Mark that way. Luke had long since come to accept that there wasn’t anything he could have done, or could do, to change that. But today, when his brother had begged him to let that cat go with one little look... Luke could have done something about that. Or at least, he considered the possibility. Maybe it wouldn’t have been so bad to just let the cat go. It would have made Mark happy. He certainly would have found himself punished for it later, but he could take it, and besides, as it was, he was being punished for doing exactly what his father had wanted him to do... But it could have been worse. He was sure of that, and unfortunately, the fact that Mark shut down whenever he felt traumatized wasn’t helping at all. It meant that their father was being less careful with Mark, and Luke was growing concerned that if things continued as they had been, Mark would end up suffering much more than mental tragedies. And that wasn’t something that he was willing to let happen. It was better if he kept his father’s negative focus on himself. He could take it.

And in the end, he had to believe that his brother wouldn’t hate him. He had to believe that they had each other, because without Mark, Luke didn’t have anyone else.

He left the basement that night, considering how he wanted to convince Mark that he wasn’t a monster--how he could make the day’s deeds somehow right. Or at the very least, right for his brother.

That night after leaving the basement, Luke wandered through the kitchen, feeling disoriented, as he often did while reacquainting himself with the light, and half heard his mother tell him that he’d missed dinner. He’d also missed lunch, and he was hungry, but food hardly mattered. He’d always taken what he wanted from the kitchen on nights like this. He’d killed most of it, after all. But that could wait until later. Now, he wanted to see Mark, even if part of him hoped that his brother was already asleep. He couldn’t hate him while he was sleeping. Or at least, Luke hoped that was the case.

But, as Luke silently entered their room, cracking an ache from his neck in the process, he found the light on, his brother half tucked into bed with a children’s story book in his hands. But, Mark didn’t seem to be very focused on the pages as he blinked his red, puffy eyes and scratched at the scars hidden beneath his hair.

“You were crying,” Luke heard himself say, feeling bad about it in the process. But instead of responding affirmatively, Mark surprised Luke with a smile.

“I was waiting for you, Luke. I saved some dinner for you, see?” He nodded towards the small stand between their beds, where there was in fact a plate of food. It wasn’t steaming hot, but at the moment, it looked perfect to Luke’s stomach, which growled in protest when he didn’t make it over soon enough.

“Thanks,” Luke replied, although he felt cautious even as he lifted a long green bean from the plate and brought it towards his mouth. “So... I guess you’re not mad at me no more?” The way that Mark’s brow knitted as he put his book down and looked up was all Luke needed to know that Mark being upset with him was currently the last thing he needed to worry about. “You don’t remember, do you?” Mark’s frown deepened, his expression becoming something mixed between guilt and shame, and Luke was quick to sit at the edge of his brother’s bed and force a smile. “Hey, it’s okay.  Probably better that...”

“Mom was hugging me, Luke. And I was crying, but I don’t know why. I’m not a baby, Luke.”

“I know you’re not,” Luke said quickly.

“I’m not stupid, either, Luke.”

“And if anyone says otherwise, send ‘em to me,” Luke responded loyally, but it didn’t provoke the smile from Mark that he’d hoped for.

“When I forget... when I forget...”

“Mark, it’s alright... I think... I think sometimes its better that way. I know it doesn’t feel like that, but believe me, there are some things you’re just not supposed to see.”

Mark fell silent as he studied his brother, weighing the meaning before he finally said, “But you see it, Luke. You’ll tell me...”

“I tell you the good things,” Luke said. “All the good things you miss.” Which, Luke would admit wasn’t very much. In fact, he doubted it was anything at all. But still, he conjured a reassuring smile as he reached out to pat his brother’s ankle beneath the bedsheets. “I won’t let you forget nothing important...it’s you and me, okay? You and me. I’ll remember for you. Like I always have, haven’t I? It’ll be okay... I know you hate it, but I think one day, you’ll stop forgetting.”

“When, Luke?”

“When it’s safe to. When things are right... just you and me.”

Mark suddenly frowned. “You’re doing it again, Luke.”

“What?”

“Pretending, Luke. Like they’re not going to be there. Mom and dad.”

Luke actually smiled. “Because they’re not, Mark. Not now.... not then. It’s you and me, and some day it’s going to be better for us, you’ll see. I’ll get us there, Mark. I will.”

But over a year later as he closed his arms around himself and breathed in the stale air of the cistern, Luke wondered how that was even possible now....how was he supposed to get them anywhere better when he was stuck in a hole, and Mark was too afraid to let him out?

***

It was the food. Maybe the water, too. There was no other explanation for why Luke felt so... heavy. Sleepy. It was more than just the obvious exhaustion. His eyes felt heavy, his chest warm, and the shaking had stopped, not because he wasn’t cold, but because his body seemed too relaxed to shake. And most noticeable, was that the aches and pains over his body had become nothing more than a dull throbbing ache. And it had all started happening after he’d eaten the damn food. That had drugged him again, and he’d fallen for it. But, as Luke discovered upon opening his eyes from a far-away dream, that wasn’t even the worst part. The worst of it was how she’d gotten right by him, and any opportunity he’d hoped for to take her by surprise had snuck by him, too. Now his mother was there. There. There! And much too close.

It was night, fresh humid air coming down from above, where his doorway was open, and mingling with the stale

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Gamergirl_503 #1
Chapter 16: This was one of the best story’s I have ever read. I just found this story and I don’t know who u are but I hope you never give up writing even if you don’t write on this app that I just found. I don’t know if you’ll ever see this message since they fic was posted so long ago but if you do I hope you know that I’ll never forget about this fan fic ever. I do wish there was more lovey markson moments tho lol.

Now I’m going to go see if you have any more other markson story’s :)
Manna-chan #2
Chapter 16: Woah, this is so well written and it was so hard for me to put it down and focus on Christmas with my family! I hope you publish a book at some point, because I would by it. The story the plot and all the twists were amazing, and I definitely have to read it again at some point. This is truly a gem ❤️
ambxrr #3
Chapter 16: Okay, my last assumption was wrong but holy . This fic. Its a master piece! The plot twists are all mind blowing. And its simply amazing!
ambxrr #4
Chapter 10: It just suddenly drew to me.. Mark and Luke are two individuals and when Raymond says Dorine had killed one of their son, I was thinking perhaps, she did end up murdering Luke. And there, the tuans, they are not just a family of four, are they? Gosh, now this is sort of spine chilling
iSimplicityy #5
Chapter 16: This fic is material that should be published. Since there isn't much resemblance between your characters to the actual people, you can definitely change some of the names to get this published. The beginning was fairly light in suspense and action. But once you picked up steam, there was twist after twist and I was trying very hard to catch up to everything that was going on! I honestly believed that Mark had split personality disorder when the Tuans used it to hide the truth about Luke. When you threw the truth at us I was so surprised. I was even more surprised when you revealed that Luke murdered the poor old lady. You made it seem like Mark was the one who murdered his mother too... which is an idea I don't know if I can accept. All of the Tuans, except Mark, are really twisted... I'm glad the craziest of them all is dead. Until now, I have difficulty understanding Luke. At times he does things that are expected and then other times he does something completely unexpected. I was really sad that he could have possibly died when he was trapped. I was super shocked when he actually replied to Jackson, I got a bit spooked too. I am a bit scared what will happen to the brothers now that Luke is free... There is a lot of potential for a sequel so I hope you can consider one, since we didn't get to see much Markson at the end. I'm greedy, I know haha. Anyway, thank you for sharing this. It's a really great story.
Clovye #6
Chapter 16: Omg I read all this in less than 24 hours and so help me this was one of the BEST fics I'very read out there. GEEZ I hope there is a sequel because damn I'm sure as hell so in deep with this story I just can't. I love your writing and how you describe situations and changes of scenery, it keeps me thrilled and on edge when there's a cliffhanger. Omg, I'm gonna cry if you haven't written a sequel for this... *sigh*
markson_15 #7
Chapter 16: yesss, thank god that they are really twins! i really love luck! he is amazing! i love this story hope u make a squeal!
hcaebb
#8
Chapter 16: This is probably one of the best stories I've ever read. So much detail and plot twists. Had me confused the whole time lol. But I really enjoyed it. So much suspense!
Berserker198 #9
Chapter 16: I love love love your story. It is so amazingly written, the plots, the twists, and the genius use of flashbacks and perspectives, it sent me on a rollercoaster all the way. The ending is a bit unsatisfying, but it's your ending and so I gotta respect it. I really think you should publish this :))))
ambxrr #10
Chapter 1: I have a feeling that Luke is Mark's split personality