Breaking Hailey: Chapter 36
Breaking Hailey (Shadows of Obsession Book 1)
The last fucking thing I need after a twelve-hour drive from Chicago is Lakeside College drowning in a sea of red and blue lights. Shadows dance over the old asylum walls, mixing with the yellow light from inside.
A crowd have gathered on the manicured lawn, murmuring between themselves while the dean talks to the police.
If I didnât know any better, Iâd think the three squad cars haphazardly parked by the main building were called in to bust up an illegal rave⦠but the two ambulances tell a different story.
My first thought is Jensen, but itâs highly improbable he could crawl back here. I left him seven miles out. No compass, no phone, no map, and strapped to a chair.
Itâd be pretty fucking impressive if he freed his broken wrists and found his way to campus with both eyes swelled shut, and at least three bones in his face broken.
He was soaked in his own bloodâa scent that quickly attracts wild animals. I knew that when I left him.
âNash!â someone calls out as I move through the shadows toward the dorm building. âNash, wait!â
I pause, turning around just as Levi approaches, Amari following suit. Their wide eyes, jittery body language, and the fact they stopped me are enough to send a chill down my spine.
The surrounding chaos, police chatter, and hum of the crowd morph from my private joke to a game of survival.
My fucking survival.
It hinges on the answer to one question, âWhereâs Hailey?â
âSheâs⦠well, she and Chloe, I think theyâre lost.â
âLost?â I take a threatening step forward. âLost where?â
âIn the woods.â
I push a steadying breath down my nose, every word leaving my lips like a bullet from a gun. âWhy did she go into the woods?â
âJensenâs been missing since Saturday, so we all went looking for him. Weâve been back for hoursâ¦â Levi points between himself and Amari, ââ¦but Hailey and Chloe are still out thereâ¦â
âWhat time did they go in?â
âAround ten this morning. We were supposed to make sure we got back before sunset.â
âFucking reckless,â I snap, pulling my phone out. âDo you know where she went in?â
âBy the derelict building. I can show you in the morning.â
âYouâll show me in ten minutes. Wait here.â
I turn back around to grab a few bits from the trunk of my car, going through a mental tick list of things Hailey might and might not have thought about. Iâm back outside the main building a moment later, shoving a flashlight, a can of spray paint, and two bottles of water into Leviâs hand.
âYouâre going with me.â
âWhat? No way!â Amari exclaims, instinctively stepping in front of her boyfriend like a human shield.
âNo, heâs right, baby. If theyâre hurt, he canât carry them both back,â Levi explains, wrapping his arms around Amari. âWeâll be fine.â
âYou donât even know where they are!â
âAnd you knew where Jensen was when you went looking?â I clip, pulling my phone out.
Ignoring her arguments, I press the phone to my ear, listening to the dial tone.
âMissed me already?â Ryder chirps. âWhatâs up?â
âGet me Haileyâs location.â
âWhatâs going on?â
I start walking, waving Levi to follow. Itâs late and Haileyâs been in the forest for hours. If she took any food and water with her, thatâs all gone. Sheâs probably not fucking dressed for cold weather, her phoneâs out of range, andâ
Fuck. Focus.
I take a deep breath, shaking off the weakness in my limbs. Sheâs scared, lost, and she needs me. I canât let the metallic tang of fear sitting on my tongue spread any further.
âShe went looking for a guy that went missing,â I say vaguely, though Ryder knows exactly who Iâm talking about and where the fucker is. âShe shouldâve been back hours ago.â
I hear him tapping a keyboard, hacking Haileyâs phone through the bug I planted there weeks ago. Leviâs hot on my tail, and by the sound of it, Rachel and Amari are coming along.
Not into the woods theyâre not.
Theyâll slow us down and I donât have time.
âWhere do you think youâre going?â The deanâs voice sounds on my left, but I donât slow down. âHey! Iâm talking to you Mr. Wright.â
Itâs Willard. Carter Willard.
âWhere are you going?â she repeats.
âWhere do you think Iâm going?â I turn to face her, keeping my tone level. âIâm getting my girl back.â
âOh⦠I didnât realize you and Hailey wereââ She shakes her head. âThatâs beside the point. I canât let you go. Weâre already missing three students.â
âThe dean is right.â A young officer comes closer, his stance hinting that the minuscule power his badge bestows is doing a number on him. âYou need to calm down, son.â
âIâm not your son, and itâll be better if you get out of my fucking way.â I clip, the order laced with a dangerous edge I donât bother softening. âMove.â Itâs torture holding back from ripping the guyâs arm out of his socket, but I hold it in.
âI understand youâre worried, but itâll be better if you calm down.â He slips his hand onto the holster. âTake a step back.â
âDonât make me repeat myself.â
âNow, now,â the sergeant says, stopping beside us. âLetâs all take a deep breath.â He drops a heavy hand on my shoulder. âWeâre here to find them, and, as much as I appreciate you trying to help, we donât need any more students roaming the woods. Leave this to us, we know what weâre doing.â
My hands ball into tight fists, my attitude like a loaded gun unsure where to aim. âYou donât know shit.â
I harbor a deep-rooted brand of hatred toward cops, and it has little to do with my line of work. If anything, years of working with Chief Jeremy Smith in Chicago taught me some deserve an ounce of respect.
Most, however, deserve a bullet to the head. Like the two on-call officers sent to my house the night my motherâs boyfriend battered her to death.
Those bullets found their marks six years later, after a long torture session. I took out every ounce of hatred and rage on the fuckers who laughed and belittled my dead mother that night.
âRight now you have two options,â I continue, towering above the old man. âEither you remove yourself from my way, or Iâll do it for you.â
âSargeâ¦?â The rookie urges, his gun drawn now.
âGo over there, Malik.â The sergeant motions ahead.
âBut, Sarge! Heâsââ
âUnderstandably frustrated.â
My phone pings, and I pull it out. Haileyâs location appears on the screen when I click the link Ryder sent.
Another message follows.
Ryder: Five clicks.
âThis isnât safe, Mr. Wright,â the sergeant starts again.
I have to give it to the man; he has extraordinary patience. By the look of him heâs nearing retirement, and heâs probably seen it all during many years of duty.
âYou donât know where they are. They could beââ
âI know exactly where she is.â I turn the phone, showing him the red dot pinpointing Haileyâs location. âEvery second you stand in my way is another second sheâs alone in the dark. You want to help? Start walking.â
I shoulder past him, motioning at Levi to keep up.
âMalik and Frederick!â the sergeant yells, defeat tainting his tone. âYouâre going with them.â
Good call.
A part of me thought heâd argue, snatch the phone and send his men. That would not work out well for him, but apart from patience, the manâs been blessed with common sense.
âYou girls stay here,â the dean hijacks Amari and Rachel just as the two cops fall into step with me and Levi.
We walk in silence until weâre on the other side of the lake, four flashlight beams illuminating our way.
A white X on one of the trees catches my eye as soon as Levi points out where Hailey entered the forest.
âThatâs my girl,â I mutter under my breath, a smile tugging the corners of my mouth despite the gnawing worry in my gut. âReckless but smart.â
âIf they marked their way, they shouldâve been able to get back easily,â Malik drawls behind me.
âThey mustâve lost the trail,â Frederick replies, then clicks the radio strapped to his chest, informing the sergeant about the markings and telling him weâre going in.
We pass the line of trees, every flashlight checking left and right to follow the Xs that get progressively smaller the deeper we sink.
It takes half an hour before cocky Malik levels his stride with mine. âHow did you get her location?â
âA helpful friend.â
He lowers his voice so only I can hear him. âThat tracking appâ¦â He motions to my phone. âThatâs not standard find my phone. Itâs a bug. Highly advanced.â
Everyoneâs suddenly a fucking tech whizz. Malik looks young, fresh in the force, probably barely twenty. He hasnât had time to learn the ropes. Most old cops have a sixth sense about them, one that helps them gauge who they shouldnât poke. Rookies lack that sense.
âObservant,â I praise. âSmart, too, I assume?â
He shrugs, feigning modesty, but in the faint glow of our flashlights, his chest expands.
âSmart men mind their own fucking business,â I say, catching his face fall with the corner of my eye.
He clears his throat, ready to spew some bullshit, but my patience is not as vast as the sergeantâs. Especially not right now when Haileyâs alone in the woods.
I know sheâs technically not alone with Chloe by her side, but Chloe canât protect my girl.
âYouâre young and eager to prove yourself,â I tell Malik. âBut you need to learn how to pick your battles. You think your sergeant didnât notice the tech? He did, but heâs smart. He knows what it means and knows itâs safer for him to stay out of my fucking way.â
He doesnât say anything else, silently mulling over my words, the cogs in his brain whirring while we plod on, the cold night thickening along with the trees.
The chalk marks guide our way until an hour later when they donât. A quick glance at my screen tells me Hailey and Chloe veered left, so thatâs where we go.
âMark the trees,â I tell Levi.
He whips the can of spray paint out of his back pocket while Frederick checks in over the radio. My focus narrows to the red dot on the screen, the distance between Hailey and me diminishing with every step.
Still, it takes another fifteen minutes before weâre close enough for her to hear me.
âHailey!â
âChloe!â Levi yells a minute later.
Leaves rustle ahead, and a soft, tentative âNash?â follows, sending my pulse skyrocketing.
All four flashlights follow her voice, illuminating a fallen tree a hundred yards ahead. Chloeâs on the ground, resting against the bough and Haileyâs up on her feet, relief flooding her features.
âYouâre so fucking irresponsible,â I growl, closing in on her. Anger takes the stage, hot and violent.
Her face is scratched.
Long, thin, red lines on her cheeks and neck. I grab her chin, turning her head every which way, inspecting every tiny cut while the other three tend to Chloe.
âYouâre hurt. Where else?â My shaking hands roam her body, checking for injuries. I canât control the worry frying my nerve endings. âWhere does it hurt?â
âItâs just a few scratches,â she sighs. âIâm fine.â
âI decide that.â
Wrapping her fingers around my wrists, she stops me checking her over, and leans forward, nuzzling into my chest, her body cold against mine. âIâm sorry⦠we got lost.â
No shit. She got lost in the woods while looking for the scum who would have date-raped her if not for me.
Fuck. Between Hailey, Boston, Chicago, and Jensen I didnât think to sort an alibi for what I did to him.
Haileyâs frying my brain. Iâve never done anything this sloppy.
âFucking reckless,â I clip, stripping off my hoodie to pull it over her head, even though sheâs already wearing one. âYouâre freezing, Hailey.â
âIâm⦠exhausted,â she whispers into my chest, her voice breaking, the emotions sheâs kept in surging to the surface.
I pull her closer, pressing small kisses to the top of her head, reassuring her and myself. âYouâre okay, pretty girl. Youâre with me. Iâve got you.â
Chloeâs with Levi a few steps away, her face white, lips blue from the cold.
âWe found them. No sign of the missing male. Weâre heading back now,â Frederick says into his radio.
I haul Hailey into my arms, her legs cinching my waist.
âI can walk,â she whispers, though it sounds like sheâs only arguing for the sake of arguing. âIâm fine.â
âDonât play this down. You came out here to look for that scumbag and you got hurt. You got lost. Why did you stop marking the trees?â
âWe heard noises. Chloe thought it was Jensen, and we ran, butââ She pauses, letting out a calming breath. âIt was a fox caught in a snare.â
âI swear if you say you helped that fucking foxâ¦â
Now she smiles. I donât have to see her face, her lips curling against the curve of my neck is enough.
âYouâre worried again,â she sighs, awe in her tone.
âItâd be nice if youâd stop giving me reasons.â
I have enough of them without her stupid ideas, now with the added flavor of every man who Rhett ever wronged getting word about Hailey holding the key to his downfall.
Theyâll want the evidence. Some will think itâll secure their freedom, some, that itâll send Rhett down for life, some will use it as blackmail. And the one thing they all need to get their hands on the file Alex assembled is the one thing Iâll never let them haveâ¦
Hailey.
âââ
Sunrise isnât far off by the time the ambulance crew have checked Hailey over and weâve both answered the sergeantâs questions.
Itâs unnerving how deep Haileyâs hold on me reaches. How quickly sheâs become an obsession chewing my mind, heart, and fucking soul. Sheâs mine to care for, mine to shield from the world, harm, men like Jensen, and⦠men like me.
Iâm the villain in disguise, but she doesnât know that⦠and as I climb the narrow staircase to her room, her trust weighs heavier than her delicate frame.
Half of meâthe half thatâs only for herâwhispers that I should come clean and face the consequences.
The darker half, the one steeped in blood, silences it quickly.
âI should keep you under lock and key,â I grit out, adjusting my hold to free one hand and open her bedroom door.
My room doesnât have a bathtub.
And her diaryâs here.
Iâve only been gone one day. She probably hasnât written much, but my time with Hailey at Lakeside is no longer unlimited. The news about the evidence will spread like wildfire if it hasnât already and, soon, she wonât be safe here.
She wonât be safe anywhere unless Iâm with her.