All The Lies: A Dark New Adult Romance: Chapter 3
All The Lies: A Dark New Adult Romance (Lies & Truths Duet Book 1)
One week later
Help!
Someone help!
Please help me!
âNo one will help you, monster.â
I CRACK my eyes open and wince. The back of my head feels as heavy as metal.
Constant beeping. Smell of bleach and coffee. Classical music.
The moment blinding white light penetrates my eyelids, I screw them shut again.
Iâm obviously at the wrong place in the wrong time.
Isnât there a song about that?
âReina?â
Someoneâs fingers force my lids open and shove another blinding light into my line of sight. My pupils burn with the intrusiveness of it.
âMiss Ellis, can you hear me?â
âReina, honey, open your eyes.â
Reina? Who the hell is Reina?
Thereâs something wrong about that name. Completely freaking wrong.
Wrong place. Wrong time. Wrong name.
The voices continue drifting in and out around me. Someone calls me Miss Ellis. An older voice keeps calling me Reina. And then thereâs another presence, someone I canât quite pinpoint.
His masculine voice is like a dark forest in the middle of a starless night. Itâs deep and rough around the edges as if all the ruthlessness in the world has been injected into it. Itâs scary how much a voice can relay.
Itâs almost crippling how much a voice can become a subject of nightmares.
All the other voices keep asking if Iâm fine and telling me to open my eyes, but not him.
No.
The nightmare voice is calm, unlike them. Heâs composed and speaks with chill-inducing purpose. âWake up, monster. You donât get to die just yet.â
His words register slowly. Itâs my brain. The useless thing understands with delay.
My heart thumps loud and hard at the threat in those words, at what he called me.
Monster.
This canât be true.
Itâs a dreamâno, a nightmare. Soon, itâll all end and Iâll go back to normal.
Onlyâ¦whatâs normal?
Iâm not Reina or Miss Ellis or whatever the hell they keep calling me. Iâm someone else.
Iâmâ¦I donât know who I am. Reina is familiar, but it isnât me.
Wrong. Everything is so damn wrong.
My trips in and out of consciousness become exhausting. Itâs like Iâm playing hide and seek with the darkness; only Iâm not sure if Iâm running away from it or sprinting toward it.
Thereâs something enchanting about the darknessâ¦a push, a pull. Itâs like a haunting lullaby with ever-changing lyrics.
I keep trying to avoid the blinding light and the voices. So many damn voices surround me like audible torture.
They keep heightening and magnifying, and thereâs no way I can stop them from assaulting my senses.
Theyâre like an unreachable itch beneath the skin.
Then, one day, when I think Iâm about to go crazy, my eyes open. Or maybe my brain finally catches up to that fact.
The back of my head aches, and so do my limbs. Itâs as if someone beat me up with a baseball bat.
Waitâ¦is that what happened?
The blinding light renews the urge to close my eyes again, but I donât. I keep them wide openâas wide as I can considering the circumstances.
If I close them again, I might never open them back up. Iâll return to the hide and seek game with the darkness.
Iâll go mad for sure.
My surroundings are blurry. Mismatched shades of white become more and more defined the harder I focus. A headache lodges firmly at my temples the more I try to make out my immediate environment.
White walls. The same bleach smell. No classical music or coffee this time, which probably means the man with the older voice who used to talk to me isnât here anymore.
âMiss Ellis, youâre back,â a soft voice calls from beside me before an Asian womanâs kind face comes into view.
Her black hair is tied into a bun underneath her white cap, and some wrinkles surround her pulled brown eyes.
She checks something on the machines around me and nods to herself with a smile. âIâll call Dr. Anderson. Do you need anything?â
I attempt to shake my head, but the stabbing pain at my nape stops me.
When I say nothing, she asks, âHow do you feel?â
âLike hell,â I grunt in a scratchy, barely alive voice. âHave I been in hell?â
âYouâve been so lucky, dear. You gave us a fright.â She smiles and leans in to whisper, âYour fiancé hasnât left your side the entire time.â
I have a fiancé?
No, that canât be right. I donât have a fiancé. I donât have anyone.
Wrong. Everything is just so wrong.
âItâs rare to see that kind of devotion in college kids these days.â
College.
Okay, so my name is Reina Ellis, Iâm in college, and I have a fiancé.
Did I mention wrong?
None of this adds up in my brainâ¦or is it still trying to keep up with reality?
When I raise my eyes again, the kind Asian nurse isnât speaking to me anymore. Her attention is on somethingâor rather, someoneâover my head. âCongratulations on your fiancéeâs recovery, Mr. Carson.â
âThank you.â
My spine locks and a shiver shoots down my back, covering my entire body.
The rough, deep voice with the slight huskiness.
The nightmare voice.
The one who called me a monster andâ¦something else.
There was something else, but Iâve forgotten what it was.
Hell, Iâve forgotten a lot of things.
I donât even remember why Iâm here, my age, or my damn name.
Everything is a blur. Itâs like I can reach the answer, but the moment my fingertips brush against it, it turns into fog.
The nurse says something else, but I miss her wordsâagain, my brain has trouble keeping up. Everything happens too fast, like in some futuristic show.
Wait, are we in a Black Mirror episode?
How do I even know Black Mirror and not my own life?
The last thing I focus on is the door hissing open then closed behind the nurse.
My throat chooses this exact moment to become scratchy and sour. I glance to the side, searching for water.
A bottle sits on a small table, and I reach my arm out to grab it.
Huge mistake.
Something in my right shoulder pops and pain explodes in my muscles. I groan and bite down on my lower lip to stifle the sound.
Pain is temporary. Pain is temporary.
Momâs words echo in my head like a mantra.
I blink twice. I remember having a mother.
Thatâs the first thing Iâve remembered since waking up in this sterilized room.
âLook who returned to the world of the living.â
My movements freeze as that same voice echoes around me. I forgot he was still in the room in the first place.
I donât hear the sound of footsteps or feel him approaching.
The attack is silent and fast. One moment Iâm thinking the nightmare is a reality, and the next, a broad, tall figure looms over my bed.
You know that color a tropical forest has when itâs raining heavily? Thatâs the color of his eyes. Dark green, almost black.
Harsh.
Emotionless.
Thereâs something about those eyes that pushes me into a high-alert mode.
I want to run.
I want to hide.
But I canât. Something tells me itâs not only because of my physical injuries. Iâm unable to run from him.
Heâs wearing a simple white T-shirt and a black leather jacket along with dark jeans. His hair is the color of a moonless night with a bluish hue. Itâs short on the sides and long enough in the middle to be tousled.
The straight, chiseled jawline and the thick brows give him a fatally attractive edgeâthe kind serial killers have.
His broad shoulders and lean waist increase the intimidation of his already dark exterior tenfold.
Well, the physique is understandable. After all, heâs an athlete who slaves at the gym and practices constantly.
Waitâhow do I know that?
His upper lip lifts in a cruel smirk as if he injected all the shadows in it. âI knew you would come back.â
Unlike the nurse, he doesnât seem relieved about that. No. Heâs like a hunter whoâs closely observing his prey right before the attack.
A lightning strike right before the thunder.
The click of a gun right before the shot.
Suddenly, I wish Iâd surrendered to the darkness of unconsciousness. That type of darkness is better than this one.
Donât they say some monsters are better than others?
His hand reaches out for me and I instinctively push against the pillow. Pain explodes in my head and my upper shoulder, but I donât stop.
I need to stay away from his hold.
Run.
Run!
My instinct has caught up with my slow brain and is now shouting at me to get the hell out of here.
In my condition, itâs impossible to move a muscle, let alone run.
I glance behind me at the emergency call button. Maybe if I ask the kind nurse, she can remove him from my side. Maybe someone can help me.
Because I need help right now.
I can feel it in my bones and taste it on my tongue.
He releases a tsking sound that gets past my ears and embeds under my skin. âNo one will save you. Itâs just you and me.â
Like doom coming closer, his hand reaches for me, and he clutches my chin between his thumb and forefinger.
Itâs a soft touch, so soft it shocks my warm skin. The emotionless look in his dark eyes is anything but gentle, though. A sadistic smirk lifts the corner of his lips.
A shudder emerges from deep within my soul.
Itâs the look of someone out to destroy, to maim and mutilateâand heâll do it all with a smile on his face.
âL-let me go.â Itâs the pleading of the dying, my voice. The last murmur of the dead.
His grip tightens on my jaw until I wince. âThatâs not how it works. Remember the rules?â
âW-what rules?â
âBreak willingly and I might let you collect the pieces.â
My heart thunders until the machines erupt with sound. âWhatââ
My words are cut off when he leans closer until his breath tickles along my skin. Another involuntary shudder slides down my spine, and goosebumps form along my limbs.
I donât know if itâs because of fear, or if itâs something else.
This close, heâs even more fatally gorgeous and dangerous. A flicker of connection grips hold of me.
I know him from somewhere, but where?
He runs his tongue from under my eye to the corner of my lip. Something violent and out of control takes over my body, and more goosebumps erupt.
I stare at him with trembling lips.
âWelcome back to your custom-made hell, monster.â