them, as the dog yipped and whined like one bereft.
Kolk was telling Sophie that he loved her — he loved her and he wanted her — he loved her, that she had come to him — in Sourland, where he’d dreamt of her — for so long he’d dreamt of her in Sourland — mistaking the woman’s agitation for passion, for a sexual need ravenous as his own — was this it? — was this what was happening? — for it was true, Sophie clutched at the man — as a drunken dancer clutches at her partner, so Sophie clutched at the man, to keep from falling — each was only part-dressed now — the man’s shirt was open, the man’s trousers were open — he’d pulled the cashmere sweater over her head — the linen shirt he’d unbuttoned hurriedly, tearing off a button — on the bed amid the rumpled bedclothes the lovers were lying asprawl — like lovers drowning together they were clutching at each other’s bodies — Kolk pushed Sophie’s legs apart — Kolk pushed Sophie’s thighs apart with his knees — he’d pulled down her fine-woolen trousers, he’d torn at her white silk panties — his fingers were inside her suddenly — Sophie screamed, Sophie gripped his shoulders with her fingernails
Trying to speak but she could not speak. Her throat was shut up tight, her eyeballs turned in their sockets. Trying to protest
Waking then, later. How many hours later. In the tangled and smelly bedsheets. And the man was gone from her. Rising painfully — she was naked, barefoot — her hair in her face and her eyelashes stuck together — she began to pull on her clothing — what she could find of her clothing — the fine-woolen trousers, the linen shirt, the sweater — quickly and clumsily she dressed — she stumbled to the door, that was shut — she turned the knob, and the door opened — she had not expected the door to open.
In the other room the man turned to her, startled — in waning firelight his face was a demon’s face, she could not bear to see it.
Sophie told him she wanted to leave. She was desperate to leave this place. She would leave now, he must drive her back to Grand Rapids now, she’d been very sick, her head pounded. She’d been very drunk. She was certain, she was not drunk now. Except she’d been sleeping with her mouth agape, the interior of her mouth was parched as sand.
Kolk came to Sophie, to touch her — to calm her. Sophie threw off his hand, like a snake. Sophie could not have said what was wrong, why she was so furious with the man. She began to scream —
All that she had dreaded in Sourland, had happened.
What happened next, Sophie would not fully recall.
She’d been furious with her captor — she’d been hysterical — she shook and turned the doorknob, to no effect — she pounded her fists against the door, to no effect — the door was solid planks, it would not yield. In the other room the fierce little dog continued to bark, there was a hysterical elation in the dog’s barking. The man stood close outside the door and spoke to Sophie — he was telling her to be still, to be quiet, to lie down and try to sleep, he would not hurt her, he would not touch her, but she could not leave.
In a voice of forced calm the man spoke to Sophie but she knew, the man was furious, shaken. His manhood had been insulted, he would never forgive her. He would keep her captive forever, he would murder her. He was not to be trusted. The mock-calm of his speech, the “logic” of his manner — he was not to be trusted. Between her legs Sophie was raw, luminous with pain. Something liquid-hot ran down the insides of her thighs, revolting to her. She smelled of her body, and of the man’s body. She could not bear it, she’d been violated by him. She would never forgive him. The man was saying she couldn’t leave by herself — it was the middle of the night — and he wasn’t about to drive her. He had driven more than six hours that day, he was not going to drive her anywhere now. In the morning, maybe — if she still wanted to leave. In the morning — maybe — he would drive her to the airport at Grand Rapids.
This, he told her: but she paid no heed to him. She did not trust him, she detested him. Her body crawled with the memory of having been touched by him, there was no part of her that had not been violated by him. She was screaming until her throat was raw, she was pounding at the door with both her fists. Everywhere, her body was covered in bruises. Her fists throbbed with pain, her knuckles were skinned, bruised. She could not bear it, the man had locked the door and would not open it. The man had locked her in the room, and would not release her. She was his captive now, he had triumphed over her and would not release her until she was broken by him, annihilated. In a faint she stumbled back to the bed. All her senses were alert, spinning. Her brain was so alert, so alive the nerve-endings pained her. She was so distraught she’d begun to hyperventilate, she could not breathe normally. She crawled onto the bed, she burrowed beneath the blue-striped comforter that was a soft-down comforter, and kept her warm.
She woke later, it was very quiet. The air in the cave-like room was close and stale and chilly but beneath the comforter, she’d been warm. She stood now, shakily. She was not so furious now. The hysteria had subsided. Her quick sharp vaulting breath had subsided. She breathed more normally, her thoughts came more normally. The door — she tried the door — was still locked. She was at the man’s mercy — was she? He would wait for her to beg him — would he? Through the single window she saw a bright moon. Half the moon’s face had been battered, there were bruises, creases. Yet the moon was cunning, glaring light into the clearing. Snow had ceased falling hours ago,