I stared at the phone in the middle of the table, unable to look way ever since theyâd dragged us into the room and forced me to sit.
My dad was due to call. The Principal scoffed when he called him that. He scoffed and laughed, those sick, fucking, gleaming eyes fixed on my every move. He wanted to see my pain. He craved it.
But I refused to give in. He didnât deserve to see the real me. None of them did. Caleb was a dark blur at the edge of my vision. He saw me. He comforted me. He took me away from this Hellâ¦even if it was only in fleeting moments of pleasure.
Still, my cheeks burned, remembering the lies The Principal had told me. Lies that my father wasnât my blood and that Tobiasâ¦Tobias was deadâ¦
âRemember, say nothing about where you are in the building.â That icy tone came at my back. âIf I even suspect youâre scheming, the call will be terminated immediately.â
I didnât meet that sick fucking glint in his stare. I didnât dareâ¦but I felt his gaze burn on the back of my neck. The Principal. The Teacherâ¦The Priest. The three pieces of shit who ran this place. I hated themâ¦almost as much as I hated the man they worked for, Haelstrom Hale.
Caleb glanced my way and reached for my hand. But this time, his touch wasnât comforting. Noâ¦nothing could prepare me for this. I inhaled deep, fighting the tensionâ¦until the phone gave a sharp, loud chime and vibrated against the surface.
I jumped and reached.
âWait.â The command came.
My knuckles ached. My breath caught until it burned
Still the phone rangâ¦and rangâ¦and rangâ¦
âNow.â
I snatched the phone from the table, stabbed the icon with a shaking finger, and answered. âHello?â
There was silence. Silence while my chest ached, then came my fatherâs warm voice. âRyth, honey?â
My shoulders sagged. âDad.â I couldnât stop the hitch in my breath. âDad, is that you?â
âItâs me, my little lioness.â His voice grew louder. âAre you okay?â
Am I okay? I didnât dare look over my shoulder. âFor now,â I answered carefully.
âIâm getting you out of there, okay, sweetheart? Just hold on.â
I pressed the phone hard against my ear. âOkay.â
âRiven,â he started, then corrected himself. âI mean, The Principal, is he watching you?â
That chill prickled at the back of my neck. âYes.â
âOkay, so this is whatâs going to happen. In a minute, I want you to pass him the phone. Iâm going to talk to him, then weâre going to get you and Caleb out of that fucking place.â
My fingers twitched as I fought the need to rock with relief. âHow?â
âDonât you worry about that,â he answered, but still the heaviness in my stomach said otherwise. âWhatever happens, you need to leave. Nothing good will come if you stay in that fucking place a second longer.â
I glanced at Caleb.
âPromise me.â My father drew my focus back. âPromise me youâll leave with Caleb.â
My stepbrother just held my stare, those dark hazel eyes consuming as I answered. âI promise.â
There was a hard exhale before his voice turned cold, colder than Iâd ever heard it before. âGood, now put me on to the sonofabitch, and sweetheartâ¦â
âYes?â
âI love you.â
I closed my eyes, letting his strength wash over me. âI love you, too, Dad.â
Even though tears welled in my eyes and my damn hands shook, I still turned in my seat and held out the phone.
There was a second where the bastard refused to move, the corner of his mouth twisting with displeasure. I only wished it was his fucking heartâbut then I doubted he had one. âHeâs waiting,â I snapped.
That stony stare glinted before he stepped forward and took the phone from my hand and lifted it to his ear. âYes.â
Words were exchanged, ones I wasnât privy to. But I could see it play out on the bastardâs face. This time there was no savage bark from The Principal, just a venomous, âI agree to the terms. Itâs not like I have a choice, now do I?â No. He didnât. And he knew it. âThen Iâll look forward to meeting you face-to-face, Jack.â
He looked at me when he said those words and I just wanted to scream. This place wasnât safe for dad. I knew that. These men were dangerous, maybe more dangerous than he knewâ¦but then again, the way he spoke, and the things he didâlike going into hidingâmade me think that maybe he knew exactly what he was getting into.
The Principal ended the call, then turned to the men standing beside him and said the words Iâd been desperate to hear. âGet them ready for removal.â
Neither of them liked this.
The Teacher jerked his gaze my way. For a second, I thought he was going to disobey the command, that he was going to give one of his ownâ¦one where he took me back to that classroom and forced me to my knees.
What a shame youâre not to be trained, Ryth. His words resounded in my head. You are a goddamn natural if Iâve ever seen one.
He wanted to train me.
He wanted to do a whole lot more.
But he didnât disobey, he just nodded, his voice so fucking calm. âPeter, see to Ms. Castlemaine and Mr. Banks.â
The guard stepped forward, as well as another, who stood at his back. The guard grabbed me by the arm, his fingers cruel as he hauled me out of the chair. âMove.â
Caleb pushed out of his seat. âGet your fucking hands off her.
But The Priest blocked his way. âYou want to change how this goes, Banks? Because we can just as easily take you out in a goddamn body bag.â
âCaleb.â I stumbled as the guard yanked me toward the door. âNo, itâs okay. Look, Iâm okay.â
But rage glinted in his eyes.
âSay another fucking word, Banks,â The Priest warned. âAnd Iâll make good on my promise.â
They walked us out of the interrogation room and into the hall, past the room theyâd kept us in, and through the automatic doors.
Ghosts stared at us as we passed. Ghosts of the women confined in this place.
âPlease.â One of them pressed her hand to the glass.
But we were gone before I could even answer. The guardâs long steps forced me to take twice as many to match.
âKeep walking.â He shoved me forward.
Behind us, Caleb unleashed a snarl. I looked over my shoulder, seeing him and the three men whoâd kept us in this place following.
We were close now, so close.
Please. I prayed Caleb saw my plea as I was jerked toward the scanner for another set of automatic doors. A beep came before we pushed through. My bare feet were a blur as I hurried. They moved on their own now, quickening as I lifted my gaze to the massive front door and those two terrifying words carved into the black steel, The Order.
We slowed, leaving The Principal to step close to the door and press his card against the scanner to open it. With a jerk of his head, he glared at me and commanded. âOut.â
I wouldâve walked barefoot across broken glass if it meant freedom for the both of us. It was my turn to all but drag the guard out as I hurried through that oppressive door.
Cold night air rushed around me as I stepped out, my bare feet stinging with the cold stone of the pavement. But I didnât care at all.
Silence waited. Caleb stepped out, but they didnât let him touch me, holding me too far away for the connection. I stared down that long, empty driveway to the towering, guarded gates.
My teeth chattered and my knees shook, the sound grating in the night. At least I had a sweatshirt and long fleece pants. Caleb stood there in the same white cotton shirt and black pants theyâd taken us in. He had to be freezing, but he never said a word, just fixed that careful stare on me. Easy, princess, it whispered.
I gave a nod and turned my attention to that darkened road as we waited, and waited, and waited. Slowly, a seed of doubt sprouted.
Maybe he just wasnât coming.
Maybeâ¦maybeâ
He isnât nowâ¦or ever was, your father, Ryth. I glanced at The Principal as his words resounded in my mind. Weâre not abducting you. Weâre reclaiming what was already ours.
But I didnât believe them. All they did was manipulate and tell lies. He was my fatherâ¦dad was my father. He had to be.
In the distance, far back along the road, the tiny glint of headlights shone in the dark.
âEasyâ¦â Caleb whispered, his gaze riveted on the same glimmer of lights.
As the spark grew bolder, I held my breath, watching the headlights come toward the compound. There was a second set of headlights, ones that stayed back from the first, maybe it was backup? Some kind of bodyguard from the Rossisâ¦
The Rossis. My panicked thoughts caught on them as a squeal of metal on metal reached my ears and the gates to The Order slowly opened. The first car nosed in, leaving the second to slow, until it followed behind. But I didnât watch that car. It was the first oneâ¦with the driver shrouded in darkness I cared about.
âWell, well, well,â The Principal muttered beside me. âSo he does have balls after all.â
I clenched my jaw at the words. Fuck you! I wanted to scream in his face. Fuck you all.
Heâd get us out, then weâd leave. The faint burn on my cheek lingered. It would bruise too, in the shape of Motherâs hand. Pain flared in my chest, but I shoved it down. It didnât matter now that dad was here.
Heâd fix it for me.
The first car drove closer to the building, but the second car stopped further back, the engine still running, the headlights on. How could a bodyguard protect him there? I tried not to look ahead. I tried to trust that dad and the Rossis knew what they were doing, and as the engine died and the driverâs door of the first car opened, I knew without a doubt, those bastards had lied.
Because the man who stepped out was my father.
He couldnât be anybody but.
The thud of his door closing was followed by the crunch of footsteps. My pulse was hammering, the sound deafening inside my ears. The cold night air blurred my sight. I blinked, fixed on that dark shape that headed toward us, then in a blink, his face cleared.
âDadâ¦Dad!â I lunged, tearing from the guardâs hold.
He let out a snarl behind me, but it was too late.
âLet her go,â The Principal ordered.
I tore across the driveway and leaped.
Strong arms caught me with a grunt. Dad was there, staggering under my weight. âRyth,â he croaked, squeezing me until I could hardly breathe.
But I didnât care. I didnât care at all, just buried my head into his neck and wept. âI thought they killed you. I thought you wereââ
âIâm right here.â He gripped me tighter, his big hands driving my face against his chest. âIâm right here, honey.â
The last time Iâd seen him, heâd been beaten and bruisedâ¦and terrified.
Now I knew why.
âAre you okay, my little lioness?â
I just nodded, my voice breaking. âI am now.â
Behind us, the crunch of boots sounded. I stiffened, pulling away and looked into my fatherâs eyes. He grew colder, harder as he fixed his focus on those men. I hated them now even more than Iâd hated them before.
They stole and ruined and degraded all for some sick desire of their own.
âMr. Castlemaine,â The Principalâs blunt tone shattered the fleeting fear, joy, and worry.
I straightened and slowly pulled back. In front of me, my father became someone else, a man Iâd never seen before. His lips twitched, baring his teeth as he set his sights on the monsters.
But he didnât stop at The Principal, and scanned the others beside him. There was a look of disappointment, then that curl of his lips tightened. âHaleâs not here, I take it?â
âNo,â The Principal answered.
âWe had an agreement.â
Agreement?
âThere seems to be a problem with his fiancee,â The Principalâs voice was filled with contempt. âApparently sheâs been kidnapped from an island off Africa.â
âFiancee?â My father sounded surprised. âThen I pray itâs a quick and painless death for her. Itâll be better than living with a monster.â
In my head, I saw Hale as heâd sat in that restaurant, surrounded by disgusting old white men who loved nothing more than to use women like me. He was a monsterâ¦a monster with moneyâa monster they all feared.
âStill.â The Principalâs voice was caustic. âWe had a deal.â
I turned then, meeting the bastardâs stare as he looked at me. They had a dealâ¦what deal?
My father reached back and gently broke my hold, pulling my hands around. âYou remember what we said, honey. No matter what, thatâs what you promised.â
âNo matter what, Dad?â
But he didnât answer, just gave a nod. The guard at Calebâs back shoved him forward and he stumbled toward us.
Dadâs gaze narrowed in on my stepbrother. There was a flare of anger, one he smothered. âGet her out of here, Caleb, and as far away from these goddamn people as possible. And this time, son, stay the fuck away.â
Dad stepped away, leaving C to wrap his arms around me. âLetâs go, Ryth.â He dragged me away as dad headed for them.
âWhatâs happening?â I turned in his arms. âDad? Dad, whatâs happening!?â
But Calebâs hold never slipped as he pulled me away, past the first car and along the drive.
âDad, no! DAD, NO!â
They closed in like a pack of wolves, swarming him. I tried to tear away from Caleb, to lunge toward dad, who just let them take him without a fight. What the fuck was happeningâ¦WHAT THE FUCKâ
âWe have to leave, princess,â Nickâs voice filled my ears.
Tears came, blurring his face, but I blinked hard and he was thereâthe sight was a punch to my chest. âNick?â I stared as he neared. Then, in the wash of headlights, a dark silhouette came. One that limped when he walkedâ¦
One that came closerâ¦and closer.
I couldnât look awayâ¦
I didnât understand.
Because I was looking at a ghost.
One who looked exactly like my stepbrother.
Tobias stopped in front of me, lifted his hand to graze my cheek with a curled finger, and murmured, âThereâs my little mouse.â