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Chapter 3

作者: Lucy Grove
Mom held me against her chest, her whole body trembling. She looked down at me, barely conscious in her arms, then back at Dad, who stood there waiting with all the patience of someone reviewing a contract.

"I'll sign," she said.

In the car, I leaned against Mom while Dad drove in silence, the financial news radio program murmuring from the front speakers. When the market was up, the corner of his mouth lifted. When it dipped, his brow tightened.

The daughter burning up on the backseat did not factor into his calculations. As long as I did not die, the investment could still be recovered.

At the hospital, I did not cry when they put the IV in. The nurse smiled and told me I was incredibly brave for not making a peep.

She did not know that I was not brave. I just could not afford to cry. If I had made a sound when the needle went in, it would have cost another hundred dollars, and that was several days of Mom's grocery money.

I watched the IV drip and thought about how each drop was money flowing directly into my veins. I was becoming more and more expensive with every passing minute, and the more expensive I became, the less I felt I deserved to exist.

Dad was right. I was a liability. If I had not gotten sick, those 890 dollars could have gone into something that actually grew in value. It was my fault.

By the time we got home, it was evening and the fever had come down a little, though my head still swam. Dad took the hospital bill and pinned it to the front of the refrigerator in the most visible spot he could find.

"Sandra, remember that this gets paid back. We'll take it out of next month's household budget."

I lay on the couch and stared at the decibel meter on the wall. 25.

The house was as quiet as a graveyard, broken only by the sound of Dad typing at his desk, logging every expense with careful precision. That included the five dollar parking fee at the hospital, which had already been added to my tab.

I reached into my pocket. The coin was still there, the one Aunt Lisa had slipped me, the one that existed nowhere in Dad's ledger. It was my only secret and my only hope.

I let myself wonder, just for a moment, whether one day I could save up enough coins to buy my way out.

I wanted to buy my freedom, the right to cry as loud as I wanted and laugh without watching a number on the wall. However, right now I had one dollar and could not even afford a single scream.

The storm rolled in hard that night, thunder shaking the windows as the decibel meter jumped constantly. 40, 50, 60.

However, this was nature's noise, and Dad had no authority over the weather. He put in his earplugs, shut his bedroom door, and that was that.

Mom had fallen asleep too, worn out from the day of taking care of me and from enduring Dad's criticism all day.

I could not sleep. My arm still ached where the IV had been, and I was thirsty.

Still, I did not dare move. Outside, the thunder swallowed every sound, including the sound of the window being pried open.

It was a soft click, so faint that anyone else would have missed it entirely, but not me. In this house, I had learned to hear everything. My ears were sharper than any five year old's had a right to be.

I opened my eyes and saw a dark shape slide over the windowsill and drop into the room. It was a man, dressed in a black rain jacket, holding a knife. When the lightning flashed, the blade caught the light and glinted pale white.

My heart seized.

It was a burglar. Someone had broken into our house.

The word "help" rose up through my chest and reached my throat. I opened my mouth.

Then I saw the decibel meter. The living room was dark, but that red number was perfectly visible even in the blackness. 35.

If I screamed, the meter would spike well past 100, and the fines would start stacking immediately, a base charge for the outburst, billed per second after that, with an additional fee tacked on for disturbing Dad's sleep.

My account was already in the negative. Mom's household budget for next month had already been wiped out. We could not pay.

The man moved slowly toward the hallway, toward Mom and Dad's bedroom.

Was he going to hurt someone? Or just steal something?

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  • The Noise Tax   Chapter 9

    On the evening of the third day, the sun went down. No police car pulled up outside. No phone call came.Dad sat in his chair in the basement without moving, like something carved from stone. When the last sliver of light disappeared from the gap beneath the door, he stood up, took the hammer in one hand and the decibel meter in the other, the same one that had defined every hour of my short life.He was going to settle the final account.Rat had fled. He had crawled out of his hospital window and dragged himself on a broken leg through the city's back alleys and drainage tunnels, vanishing the way a rat always does, into the dark places no one thinks to look.He had not counted on Dad's ability to map every vein of a city the way other men read a balance sheet.Dad found him in an abandoned civil defense shelter on the edge of town. Rat had been trying to climb aboard a freight truck to get out of the city for good, and Dad blocked the only exit.The shelter was dark and damp,

  • The Noise Tax   Chapter 8

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  • The Noise Tax   Chapter 7

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  • The Noise Tax   Chapter 6

    The officers pulled Dad away. The paramedics lifted my body onto a stretcher and drew a white sheet over me, and I left the house for the last time.Mom sat crumpled on the floor, her expression completely blank. Aunt Lisa arrived not long after, and the moment she took in the scene she fainted where she stood.When she came to, she threw herself at Dad with everything she had, and it took two officers to pull her off him.The apartment descended into chaos, and through all of it the decibel meter climbed and climbed, until Dad finally stopped moving and the number drifted back down on its own. 28. That same dead, familiar 28.In the days that followed, Dad became someone else. He stopped talking, stopped eating, and stopped sleeping. He sat on the edge of my small bed and held the decibel meter in both hands, staring at the number on its face without blinking.He gathered every ledger in the house and burned them. He deleted the black accounting app from his phone completely an

  • The Noise Tax   Chapter 5

    Dawn came and the rain stopped.I was awakened by screaming, except I was not really awake at all. I was already gone. I drifted somewhere above it all, looking down at the scene below me.Mom was on her knees, holding my bloodied body, and the sound that tore out of her was unlike anything I had ever heard her make."Jenny!"The decibel meter maxed out instantly, its red light flashing and shrieking in the early morning silence.Dad came bursting out of the bedroom, hair disheveled, still in his pajamas. "What is all this noise about? It's barely even mor..."The words died in his throat. He saw the blood on the floor. He saw me, pale, still and no longer breathing, cradled in Mom's arms.Then he saw the cabinet across the room, ransacked and hanging open. The metal lockbox lay on its side in the middle of the floor, completely empty.Dad's eyes went to the box. He crossed the room, picked it up, and turned it upside down. Not even a single coin fell out."Where is it?" His v

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