I donât answer Gracin, because what is there to say? He doesnât deserve the courtesy, and Iâm too tired to say or do all the things I want to, so I close my eyes and pretend to be asleep until he leaves me alone.
It takes me a few hours to figure out that Iâm not in an actual hospital. No, Iâm in a bedroom in someoneâs house. Gracinâs house. The doctor and a woman I assume is a nurse check in on me for the next few hours. Most of the time, itâs quiet, and when night falls, I let the tears come. They fall in streams down my cheeks. I shake so hard I feel paralyzed, but I let the emotions come. I thought Iâd cried all I could in the warehouse, but I was wrong.
It seems to go on forever, until I spend all the energy I have left, leaving me to stare at the wall feeling empty. More empty than I used to after Vic fucked me into submission and ignored me like I was less than a person. That tiny life was the only positive thing that came from the last three years of my life, and now itâs gone.
âBaby?â comes his voice from the darkness. I hear it, but Iâm so tired, so thoroughly used up that I canât summon the energy to move.
I know he means it as a question and not the endearment.
âYou were pregnant?â he asks.
âSo it would seem,â I say dully. âIt doesnât matter. Iâm not anymore.â
âIt was mine.â It isnât a question. He says it like a claim. Like itâs something vital and real. And it was, but it isnât anymore, and I donât want to talk to him, especially about this, so I say, âProbably,â even though I know for certain it was.
âIt was mine,â he repeats, his voice more insistent. I hear the chair creak, and my aching body tenses, bracing for whatever he has planned next.
He doesnât touch me as I expect. He just moves the chair closer to my bed. âHow?â I canât tell if heâs merely curious or furious. He wants to know how I lost the baby, but that isnât something I can talk about right now . . . maybe not ever.
My hands knot in the thin bedclothes. âI donât want to talk about it.â I pause to clear the tremor in my voice. âDoes it matter?â
He sighs, and the sound caresses my skin. I can almost imagine that I feel his breath coasting along my flesh. âI guess not.â
For some reason, his words cause my eyes to water again. I donât let them come this time, blinking furiously to stem the flow.
The questions bubble up inside me, and I nearly choke on them. The reasons why Gracin did what he did donât matter anymore. They seem so very childish in comparison to all the things that have happened since then. One day, Iâll demand answers, just not today.
I roll away from him, unwilling to say anything else. Thankfully, he doesnât pry. I must fall asleep because the next time I open my eyes, I find the sun has risen and Iâm alone. I watch the light for a long time before a knock sounds and a young woman enters. Sheâs wearing scrubs, so I assume sheâs at least a nurse. I donât ask. I also donât ask how she knows Gracin or came to be in this room taking care of me. I donât want to know.
âHello,â she says in a soft voice that is warm and soothing. I want to lean into it for comfort. I want someone to hold me more than anything, but instead, I swing my legs over the side of the bed.
âWould you mind helping me to the restroom?â I ask brusquely.
She nods, her hands efficient and capable as she helps me navigate the wires and tubes and bears my weight as she guides me to a door off to the left. The bathroom is sumptuous with granite countertops and expensive tile. I spot a walled in shower with a dozen knobs and heads. After I do my business, I ask her to help me undress.
âDo you want me toââ
âNo, Iâm fine.â I soften my harsh words with a small smile. âThank you, though.â
Thereâs a bench seat in the shower, and I ease myself down onto it with a small grimace. There isnât a part of me that doesnât hurt. Dr. Haversham had bandaged my thighs and calves with breathable gauze and some sort of waterproof plastic wrap. According to the nurse, they recently changed them, and I should be okay to shower, provided that it isnât too long. I donât even want to imagine what they look like.
A cursory check of myself reveals blood, which streams down to mix with the shower water. I canât find it in me to be embarrassed. Thereâs only room for the constant ache of grief.
I donât know how long I sit in the shower, but itâs long enough that the blood abates, at least for a while. Long enough that the thick glass walls are steamed from top to bottom, and my skin is puffy and wrinkled. Long enough that the bandages on my legs need changing. No matter how long I sit in the spray, though, I feel like I wonât ever get clean.
Itâs Gracin who retrieves me when theyâve deemed my shower has gone on long enough. I donât fight him, although his touch makes my skin crawl. He simply appears on the other side of the glass and reaches in to turn the water off. Then he sticks his arm in and offers me a towel. I expect him to peek as I wrap myself in it and step out, but he doesnât.
âHow are you feeling?â he asks.
I hate that his voice doesnât betray any emotion. The man I knew who was calculating, devious and flirtatious is nowhere to be found. It only reinforces my belief that it all truly was an act. And like the idiot that I was, I fell for it.
Guess itâs a good thing Iâm not an idiot anymore.
I level him with a look, and he says, âFair enough. Is there anything I can get you to make you more comfortable?â
âYou can tell me when I can get out of here.â Thereâs no point in dancing around it. I didnât spend two months on the run because I wanted him to find me. After what he did, the only thing I want is to get as far away from him as possible. Perhaps theyâre taking new bids on the International Space Station. Yes, that or another planet might be far enough away.
His expression doesnât change, but for a moment, his mouth tightens. âIt isnât safe for you to leave right now,â he says.
I lower myself onto the bed cautiously and then allow him to cover me with the blankets. âWhat is that supposed to mean?â
He glances away, and I have to swallow back the urge to force him to look at me. âIt means youâre staying here until itâs safe.â
âAnd where is here?â
âMy house.â
I slump back against the pillows, more than a little stunned. Gracin has a house? I think back to the bathroom that must have cost a small fortune. It doesnât compute with the man I met at Blackthorne.
The questions give me a bitch of a headache, which probably shows on my face since he closes the shades and dims the lights without my asking him to.
âGet some rest. We can talk later.â
âIdonât want to go to dinner,â I shout at the woman whoâd come to invite me down. âI want to leave. Now!â
My imperious tone does little to intimidate her, though sheâs five foot nothing if sheâs an inch. If anything, she absorbs my rudeness, and her fierce scowl intensifies.
âMaster Kingsley would like you to join him for dinner. Six oâclock sharp.â
The implication that tardiness is a mortal sin is implied. She leaves, and I throw myself back on the bed, muttering obscenities I donât have the balls to say to the tyrantâs face.
Three weeks have passed, and I havenât left the room once. At first, I was too listless, too emotionally and physically drained to do more than the bare minimum: sleep, eat, bathe, repeat. Once the good doctor gave me a clean bill of health a week after arriving, I thought it would either be time for the conversation Gracin and I were supposed to have or time for me to leave if IÂ wanted.
Boy, was IÂ wrong.
As soon as the doctor left, I showered, dressed in the clothes provided for me, and went to leave. But the door was locked. It stayed that way until the woman, who I only knew as Marie, delivered my meals. She wouldnât answer any of my questions and only speaks in orders.
I get the feeling Gracin knows how I am doing, but he hasnât come back to visitânot that I actually want him to. He could go to hell first. Heâd have to starve to death before he found me willingly joining him for dinner.
Four oâclock comes and goes, then five. Then six. My apprehension grows with each ticking of the second hand. The television he must have had installed while I was sleeping only entertains me for so long, and then Iâm right back to watching the clock. Ten minutes after, then twenty.
The clock strikes half past and the lock on my door clicks. I expect to see Marie; I get Gracin.
He leans against the door. âNow the only reason why I think youâd refuse dinner is that youâre still too sore to walk yourself downstairs. I wish youâd said something. I would have come up sooner, little mouse.â
The reminder of the prison, of what had transpired between us, is almost too much. I launch myself to my feet. âDonât call me that. Iâm fine. The doctor says the burns have healed nicely. You donât need to keep me locked in here anymore.â
He studies me as if he doesnât quite understand me but is desperate to figure me out. I donât like it. In fact, I want him to stop.
âIf I go to dinner, will you let me leave?â
âIf you come to dinner, Iâll consider it,â he says.
We both know he negotiates deals only to renege after heâs gotten his way, but I donât have any other choice. I glance around the room, hating these four walls and knowing that his consideration is about all Iâll get. Besides, at least this time, Iâm going down on my terms, not his.
Gracin waves an arm, inviting me outside into the hallway. Part of me is afraid of what Iâm going to find. I take hesitant steps past him, and my jaw nearly drops. There are elaborate hallways in both directions with dozens of doors on either side. This isnât a houseâitâs a goddamned mansion.
What the hell was a man who could afford a house like this doing in prison?
I shiver as I remember Sal and decide that maybe I donât want to know. Maybe I just want to get out of here and as far away as possible.
When he puts a hand on my arm, I jerk back. Touching hasnât been easy for me since the night with Danny and Co. Gracin must realize that, because he doesnât try it again. He just says, âThis way,â when we have to turn a corner or go through a doorway.
I rub the spot on my arm where it came in contact with his hand and try not to remember where else his hands have touched me. He leads me to an intimate dining room with a view of gardens, which are bursting with color. Itâs a far cry from the cold grays of Michigan. Itâs funny how you donât know you miss something until you donât think youâll ever see it again, not that I ever thought Iâd miss the snow. But in this moment, I do.
Silently, he offers me a seat at the table, and Marie brings out the platters of food with a smug smile in my direction. âAnything else, Master Kingsley?â she asks Gracin.
âThank you, that will be all. See that we arenât disturbed.â
I help myself to the steak and salad as he watches. After weeks of bland hospital-like food, my mouth waters at the mere sight. I keep my mouth full so I donât have to talk to him, but it doesnât bother him in the slightest. He doesnât eat, just watches, still with the curious expression on his face.
âWhy didnât you tell them anything?â he asks when Iâve finally cleared my plate.
As I reach for seconds, I consider the man across from me. The dressings may have changed, but the air of brutality sure hasnât. Heâs violence wrapped in a pretty bow. Danger made to shine. Only instead of the prison jumpsuit, his warning label is an Armani suit and a Rolex. Money is power, but on him, itâs also lethal.
âThey only would have killed me faster,â I tell him as I take a bite.
âSome people would prefer a quicker death,â he says.
âSome people are also cowards.â
He chuckles, surprising me. âI guess we both know youâre far from a coward.â
âAre you going to tell me who they are? I think you owe me at least that.â
He leans back in his chair, his legs spread and his hands resting on his thighs. Posed that way, he owns every syllable of his nickname.
âTelling you any more than you already know will only put you in more danger.â
The rope. The blood. My murdered child would say otherwise. âIâd rather know what Iâm involved in than be in the dark. Besides, itâs about time you tried honesty for a change.â