Sweat trickles down my spine as I step over the yellow signs.
The flashlight thatâs gripped tightly in my hand outlines a clear path on the black dirt. The distant hoots of an owl echo in the otherwise silent night.
Itâs been a few months since the discovery of the murders, so the police eventually lowered the security around the crime scene. Currently, itâs almost as if nothing happened here.
Almost.
Now that Maxim Griffin has been sentenced to spend the rest of his life in prison and the victimsâ families were able to give them proper burials, thereâs nothing left here.
Nothing except for the yellow âDo Not Crossâ tape.
I do cross it, not because Iâm bent on breaking the rules, but because if I donât do this now, I wonât be able to in the future.
My hair sticks to my face underneath the baseball cap Iâm using to cover my identity. I went from one bus to another to finally get to where I am now.
The few hundred pounds I have from my savings will be able to get me a motel room and a plane ticket so I can fly outside of England. Not far, though. Maybe Northern Ireland or Scotland. Since Iâll be seventeen soon, Iâll have to figure out a way to forge the new identity I was given in the Witness Protection Program.
Iâll figure it out. I have to. Itâs the only way Iâll be able to escape the hell Iâve been living through during the last couple of months.
Itâs the only way Iâll be able to start anew.
I wrap the coat around my body when a shiver goes through me, and I clutch the flashlight tighter. The graves in which Dad buried the women are still open.
Tears stream down my cheeks as I talk to them and apologise as I did to their families.
Thatâs all Iâve been doing during the trials â apologising. No matter how much I do it, it doesnât seem to be enough.
Sometimes, when they hit or throw insults at me, somewhere in my brain, I feel like I deserve it. Iâm the one who smiled and laughed and danced with the monster who ended the lives of their daughters, wives, and mothers.
Iâm the one who didnât see the devil, even though he was right in front of me.
If Iâd searched before, looked before, maybe I wouldâve noticed it. Maybe I couldâve stopped him.
But itâs useless now. Itâs already done, so all I can do is apologise.
When I reach the empty grave, I kick dirt in it. My stomps are fuelled with the rage and the injustice Iâve been living through. The lie. The smoke and mirrors.
âI hate you, Dad!â Stomp. Kick. âI hate you so much! I wish youâd killed me first. I wish youâd never let me see you like that. I wish I was never your daughter.â
My throat burns with the force of my words, but the tears wonât stop soaking my cheeks and slipping into my mouth, making me taste salt.
I throw my head back and stare into the night, just like I did that day I begged for all of this to be a lie. A shooting star crosses the moonless sky, and instead of finding the beauty in it, a wave of grief hits me again. My sister loved shooting stars, but now, sheâs no longer here to enjoy them. Alicia used to tell me to make a wish whenever we saw one, but I said those donât come true, because Dad never let me believe in illusions. He never let me believe in Father Christmas or in the bogeyman or in the Tooth Fairy.
He forced me to live in reality and told me that actual monsters are scarier.
However, he made me believe in him â my superhero without a cape. Then he pulled the carpet from underneath my feet and left me as this shell of a person with nothing behind or in front of me.
I donât know what to believe in anymore. My own sense of self is starting to fade and I donât even have Alicia to talk to.
Thereâs Jonathan and Aidenâ¦
I shake my head frantically at the thought. I wonât bring my baggage into my nephewâs life. And Jonathan is scary â heâd probably be the one whoâd chase me off.
As my tantrum against Dad withers away, only a bitter taste remains â the fact that Iâm truly on my own in the world now.
The sound of the crunching of leaves echoes behind me. At first, I think itâs one of the night animals who roam around here, but then I hear it again.
In the days when I used to hunt with Dad, he taught me how to recognise the noises animals make. We were marvellous stalkers and could find prey in no time.
Now that I know why he was that way, I want to bleach those memories out of my head.
Thereâs something uneven about the sound coming from the bushes. Itâs a bit likeâ¦hesitation.
Sure, it could be an animal, but an animalâs frantic movements would follow a pattern. If it were scared, it wouldâve run by now. This one isnât running. Itâs more like heâsâ¦stalking. Similar to when Dad and I used to do it in the past. If anything, heâs getting closer.
A shadow passes between the trees at lightning speed. I step back, my old sneakers crunching against the pebbles.
It canât be the police since they wouldâve already caught me for trespassing on a crime scene. Or worse, sent me back to the Witness Protection Program, where I heard the officers discussing me in an unfavourable way.
I donât trust them.
I trust no one. Just like Dad always insisted I shouldnât. Itâs ironic that Iâve come back to his words now.
This leaves only a couple of other possibilities. The most probable one is that it could be a victimâs family member. Or maybe one of the many people who sympathised with the victims and made the trial period a nightmare.
I inhale deeply and slowly, letting my ears capture their movements. Theyâre behind the tree. But the thing is, my ears arenât reliable with the amount of ringing in them.
Wait. Could I be imagining the noises?
For months, I donât remember sleeping a full night. One, Iâve been scared theyâll attack me in my sleep. Two, whenever I close my lids, all I can see are the victimsâ faces, duct tape, vacant eyes, and blood.
So much blood.
Sleep deprivation toys with the brain. Sometimes, I worry that either Dad or the families will come after me.
Tonight, it could be the latter.
I aim the flashlight in the direction of the trees where I suspect the shadow is lurking. âWho are you?â
No answer.
âIf you want to take a jab at me, come out. Youâre neither the first nor the last.â Iâm proud of how my words are steady and confident.
Iâm sure as shit not confident right now.
Those people and the hatred in their eyes frighten me. I always feel as if they want my head on a stick or wish I was buried six feet under like those victims.
âIâm here!â My voice rises. âIâm over here, so if you want to ââ
My words cut off when the shadow runs towards me at supersonic speed.
I lift both my arms to protect my face. Thatâs what they go for the most â the face. Itâs as if they want to erase anything that resembles his face. Mainly the eyes. The fact that I have my fatherâs eyes has made me a monster just like him.
Something crunches against my ribcage. At first, I stare with stupefaction, expression frozen, not sure whatâs happened.
Then pain explodes in my side and hot liquid spills from me, soaking my coat, and when I look up, I see the shadowy form of a masked man snatching a knife away. A trail of blood flows from the wound and drips onto the dark ground. The dim glow from my flashlight turns the view gruesome, haunting even. The blood is nearly black â like a demonâs.
Unable to carry my weight, my legs stumble and I twist my foot as pain spreads across my nerve endings and shoots straight to my brain.
Then Iâm falling.
To keep myself from going down, my fingers dig into his mask and I pull, my nails scratching his skin.
I make out a tattoo on the side of his bald head. A dragon.
He hits my hand, and the flashlight slips from my trembling fingers. I follow soon after. My energy fails me and I drop backwards.
Straight into the eighth grave.
My head hits the dirt, and a metallic taste fills my mouth before blood gurgles out from it.
The dark shadow stands over my grave, the light from the flashlight forming a halo around him. His black-gloved hands rest over each other, the blood on the knife he still holds glinting under the moonlight.
Heâs watching me so intently, as if heâs my father and Iâm one of the victims he suffocated to death. He doesnât move, doesnât make a sound. He justâ¦watches.
My eyes roll back, slowly closing. The last words I hear are Dadâs.
When I see you again, either I kill you or you kill me.