Secret Obsession: Chapter 58
Secret Obsession: A Dark Hockey Romance (Hockey Gods)
Greyson drops me off around the corner from Willowâs house. I walk the rest of the way, my hands empty. I have the knife that killed his brother in my pocket and Knoxâs phone in my other.
Besides those two things, Iâve got nothing.
No bargaining chip, nothing to offer. No platitudes.
Iâm going to die, or she is, or he will.
I ball my fists.
The door to Willowâs house is open. I step into the foyer, glancing at the door on the first floor. The landlordâs apartment door is shut tight. I continue up the stairs, a sinking feeling in my chest.
He wouldnât have lugged the case freezer up here.
So either sheâs not in it, orâ¦
Theyâre not here.
Except for the light on in the apartment, I would think Iâm right. The light spills out into the hallway. I step inside the apartment and push the door shut behind me. Nothing moves. Not a whisper of sound reaches my ears.
My brotherâs phone chimes in my hand.
Fuck this guy.
I do a sweep through the rest of the apartment. Itâs still destroyed, and my shoes pick up bits of soil as I go. I leave tracks as I check her bedroom and bathroom. Both empty.
Basement?
I pick up a knife from the counter and adjust my grip on it, the blade extending from the bottom of my hand and facing out. I make my way back downstairs silently and go around the stairwell, to the closed door that leads down.
I take the steps slowly, the light from Knoxâs phone illuminating the stairwell. It goes down five steps to a landing, then makes a right turn and descends farther.
When I get to the bottom, the lights flicker on over my head. They buzz as they come to life. I spin around and stop in my tracks when I find the masked brother. Heâs sitting on the case freezer, a gun in his hand. Heâs got it resting on his thigh, pointed at my feet.
âDid you lure me here to kill me?â I ask.
My gaze keeps going to the case.
Willow is in there.
Can she hear me? Does she know Iâm here?
The man chuckles. âI havenât decided whether this ends with your death or just hers. Toss the knife, Miles.â
I glare at him, my fingers tightening on the handle.
âDonât make me shoot you so soon.â
Fuck it. I toss the kitchen knife away. It clatters to the concrete floor, and I kick it backward. Away from both of us.
He pats the lid that heâs sitting on. âWillow Reed. What a peculiar name for an ordinary girl.â
I grit my teeth. âSheâs not ordinary.â
âNo? Neither was my brother. He competed in the two thousand and four Olympics. He had a familyââ
âHe tried to rape her,â I growl. âSo clearly he didnât think she was so ordinary either.â
âInteresting.â He tilts his head, staring at me through the holes in the mask. âSo youâre saying it was in defense?â
âYes.â
âDefense of a girl you werenât with at the time. Of a girl who you bodily carried out of that club.â
âYes.â My heart is hammering. âWhat do I have to do for you to let her out?â
He shifts. The gunâs muzzle shifts in my direction, and he raises it when I take a single step forward. âStay where you are, Miles Whiteshaw.â
I raise my hands. âOkay, okay.â
âYour brother.â He leans forward. âKnox. Will you forgive him for delivering Willow to me? No, no, think before you answer. Mull it over. If the girl dies, itâs his fault, isnât it? He put her into his car and drove her exactly where I said. He told her to go inside the house. He told her to come to me.â
My mouth opens and closes.
And I do think about it.
I think about him and only see a selfish bastard who put his love of me over my love of her.
âI donât know,â I finally say. âMaybe Iâd eventually be able to look him in the face again.â
He nods slowly. âA broken relationship. A wound that splits your family in two.â
âYes.â
âAnd the love of your life, gone. Would you visit her grave? Would you go to her parents and her sister and tell them how it happened? How, when you finally get the padlock smashed and off, you were too late? Her skin will be mottled and blue from lack of oxygen. She wonât be pretty.â He raises the gun higher, his finger moving to the trigger. âAh, ah. Careful.â
I step back. I truthfully hadnât even noticed my jolt forward.
But I am envisioning everything heâs saying. Heâs painting a bleak future for me.
âShould I tell you about the awful scream my mother let out when I told her that her baby was dead?â He sighs. Itâs ragged, scarred. âOr should I let you wait to experience a motherâs cry of grief on your own?â
âPlease donât hurt her. Kill me if you must. Okay? Just shoot me in the fucking face and get it over with.â
He laughs and rises. âOn your knees.â
A chill goes through meâand with it, my emotions. I drop to the floor. The impact rattles my bones, but I keep my chin up, and my eyes on him. Heâs got everything, hasnât he? Willow, his brother, me.
âShe has to live.â I never thought Iâd plead or beg anyone for anythingâbut for her life? Of course. Iâd give everything. âShoot me and open the freezer, let her outââ
âYouâre bargaining? Youâre on the floor, with nothing left to give.â He strides toward me, pushing the muzzle of the gun into my forehead. âYou stupid boy. Iâve followed you for weeks. I know the perverted little games you play. I know that you thrive on chaos. You like to temper stormsâbut this is one you cannot quell.â
âYou canât kill me and leave her in there,â I growl. âWhat do you think my brother will do when he discovers me dead and Willow still locked in there?â
âBeg.â He shifts back a step, his weight transferring.
âPlease just let me say goodbye.â I rise on my knees. My hand is so close to my pocket, to the knife that killed his brother, that my hand almost twitches. But somehow, it stays steady. âPlease. She deserves a goodbye. Wouldnât you have wantedââ
âShut up,â he hisses. He takes a few steps back and jerks the gun toward the caseâitâs clear permission to move. And from his pocket, he withdraws a key. He throws it on the floor in front of the case freezer.
I lunge for the key and pick it up. I unlock it and yank the padlock off, stuffing it into my pocket and palming the folded knife in one movement. And then Iâm shoving the lid open, and light and air rushes into it.
For a moment, I think Iâve been tricked.
But then I lean over farther and find Willow curled at the bottom of the case. Sheâs bleeding from a cut on her temple, and her wrists and ankles are duct taped. Her eyes are closed. Sheâs in the fetal position, for fuckâs sake, looking half-dead. I reach inside and quickly slip the knife into her hand.
Then I feel her throat. For the pulse that I need to be there. It takes an agonizing few seconds to feel it. But then itâs there, bumping against the pads of my fingers, and relief whooshes through me. I cup her jaw, which is still warm, and move her head.
âWake up, wild girl,â I whisper, shaking her shoulder. âYouâre okay. Wake up.â
The edge of the freezer digs into my stomach. I keep reaching for her, but I donât try to haul her up and out. I just want herâno, I need herâto open her eyes.
When they do, when she comes back to consciousness, theyâre the prettiest, most dazed jewels Iâve ever seen.
âAm I dead?â she whispers.
âNo, baby.â My voice catches. âIâm so sorry. I love you. Please remember that.â
I squeeze her hand, folding her fingers harder around the knife.
The masked man looms over us. He kicks out, his heel connecting with my ribs and sending me crashing sideways to the floor. I sprawl, then crawl backward. I glare at him, my heart skipping.
âAre you going to shoot me in the face?â I ask.
He scoffs. âAnd make you unrecognizable? Maybe I should.â
âWhat did you do with your brother?â
He continues to follow me. âHeâs in a safe place. After youâre dead, Iâm going to frame your girl, here. It happened in her apartment, didnât it? By the faint smell of bleach, you tried to be thorough with your cleaning. Except the odds are in my favor. All it would take is a speck of blood⦠and the body.â
I grit my teeth.
âCheer up,â he adds. âAt least sheâs not dying. Sheâll live a long, miserable life in prison⦠well, I guess unless she gets the death penalty.â
âFuck off,â I snap.
His eyes harden. He pulls off the mask and stares down at me. His face is a lot like his brotherâs. Not handsome. Not particularly masculine. Heâs got a weak jawline that slopes into his neck and a hooked, crooked nose. His brow bone is the most prominent thing on his face, and thick eyebrows.
He looks like an asshole.
âOn your knees.â He widens his stance and bringing the gun up. âIâm going to enjoy watching your girl scream as she watches you die.â
I grimace.
He presses the gun to my forehead again, looming over me. His finger twitches on the trigger, and my whole body goes tight.
Bracing to die.
At least I got to tell Willow I love herâand the knife will give her a fighting chance of escaping this madman. Maybe sheâs already cutting herself free and getting ready to run.
I keep my gaze locked on his face.
My murderer.
I taste it in my mouth, roll the words around.
They feel wrong. Like accepting this fate is something only an idiot would do. But what can I say? Heâs threatening the only girl I care about. The only one Iâd give up everything for.
And heâs askingâno, demandingâthat I give up my life to save her.
Done.
Easy.
âAre you sorry for killing my brother?â he asks. âYour final words, Whiteshaw. Better make it count.â
His thumb pulls back the safety. I donât know shit about guns, but clearly everything up until now wasnât a real threat.
Now, itâs ready to go.
I lift my chin and stare him down. âIf I knew this was how it would end, I wouldâve tortured him a bit more first.â