CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
Her thumb was the key.
Isla had learned this at Quantico, in a defensive tactics module taught by a retired Marine who’d spent eleven months as a prisoner of war and had opinions about restraints that he delivered with the calm precision of a man who’d tested every one of them on his own body.
The thumb is the narrowest point of the hand.
Dislocate the carpometacarpal joint and the hand collapses to a width that can pass through a binding designed to hold a closed fist. It hurts.
It hurts worse than almost anything you’ll do to yourself on purpose.
But if the alternative is dying, you do it, and you deal with the pain after.
The cold was the advantage she hadn’t expected.
Her hands were numb—not reduced-sensation numb but gone numb, the complete absence of feeling that came with prolonged exposure and restricted circulation.
She’d been fighting the numbness for twenty minutes, treating it as an enemy.
But it wasn’t an obstacle. It was an anesthetic.
The most brutal field anesthetic imaginable, delivered by the same lake that was trying to kill her.
She braced her right thumb against the heel of her left hand, behind her back where Brune couldn’t see—he was ten feet away, grappling with Sullivan, the two of them locked in a fight that was buying her the only currency that mattered.
She pushed. Hard. Sideways, against the joint.
The thumb dislocated.
She felt it—not as pain, not the way she would have if her hands had been warm and the nerves reporting accurately.
She felt it as a deep, structural wrongness, a grinding shift beneath skin she couldn’t feel, followed by a wave of nausea that rolled up into her throat with enough force to make her gag behind the cloth.
The pain was there—somewhere behind the numbness, banked like a fire under ice, and she knew with certainty that when feeling returned it would be the worst pain of her life.
But feeling wasn’t coming back yet. The cold held it at bay, and she had a window.
She pulled her right hand. The rope resisted.
The nylon compressed the dislocated joint in a way that sent a fresh surge of nausea through her, distant and muffled but real.
She pulled harder. The hand deformed—the thumb folding at an angle, thumbs weren't designed to fold, the width narrowing by the critical half-inch that marine-grade nylon didn't account for, because it was designed to hold rigid objects, not objects that could reshape themselves through injury.
The rope slid over her knuckles. Her right hand came free.
She bit down on the gag to keep silent. The hand hung at her side—a thing she owned but couldn’t operate, the thumb jutting at a wrong angle, the fingers curled and useless.
She couldn’t grip. But she didn’t need to grip.
She needed the other hand free, and for that she only needed the clumsy fumbling of frozen fingers working a knot they couldn’t feel.
On the ice, Sullivan and Brune were still fighting.
James had gotten back to his feet—how, she didn’t know; the man’s capacity to stand up after being knocked down had become something beyond rational explanation.
He had Brune’s jacket in one hand and was swinging with the other, but the swings were slower now, telegraphed, the punches of a man running on fumes.
Brune was bleeding from a cut above his eye but still balanced, still fighting with the patient economy of a man who knew he only had to outlast.
Isla got her left hand behind her back and worked the rope.
The knot was tight, but it had loosened when her right hand came free—the tension redistributed.
A fisherman’s knot, the kind that tightened under load and loosened when the load released.
She picked at the standing end with fingernails she couldn’t feel, caught it, pulled.
The knot gave in stages, each tug releasing another fraction while the fight moved closer to the hole.
Her left hand came free.
She pulled the gag down with clumsy frozen hands and dragged in a breath so deep it burned—the first unrestricted breath since her apartment. Oxygen hit her bloodstream like a drug, clarity sharpening, the world snapping into the hard bright present.
The Shipwrecker saw her.
His head turned mid-grapple, drawn by instinct or the particular alertness of a predator who tracked all variables even while fighting.
His eyes found her—hands free, gag down, fingers scrabbling at the rope around her ankles—and what crossed his face was fury.
The first real, uncontained emotion she’d seen from Robert Brune since the docks.
The fury of a man watching his sacrament profaned.
He broke from Sullivan. Not cleanly—James grabbed for him, caught the back of his jacket, held on with the grip of a man who understood that letting go meant losing everything.
Brune drove an elbow backward into James’s ribs—the same targeted strike, the same intimate knowledge of where the damage lived.
Sullivan’s grip faltered. Brune pulled free and scrambled for the anchor.
“No—” Sullivan threw himself after Brune, caught his ankle, brought him down to the ice two feet from the anchor.
Brune kicked backward—once, twice—the heel of his boot connecting with Sullivan’s hand, his wrist. James held on the way he’d held the doorframe in the apartment, the way he held everything that mattered—with the quiet, implacable stubbornness of a man who’d decided what he was willing to lose.
Brune kicked again. The boot caught James in the face—a blow that opened a cut above his eyebrow—and this time his hands opened.
Not by choice. By the simple mechanics of a body that had exceeded its limits.
Sullivan went down. Flat on the ice, one arm curled around his ribs, eyes open but unfocused, the blue of them glassy in the spotlight’s beam. Conscious, but only just.
The Shipwrecker got to his feet. Blood running from his eye and his lip, breathing a wet labored rasp. He swayed. Steadied. Looked at Sullivan and dismissed him the way he’d dismissed every obstacle between him and the water.
He picked up the anchor. Lifted it to his chest. His eyes were on the hole—the black water, the offering, the altar. Blood dripped from his chin onto the shank. His lips were moving in the shape of prayer or promise, the private language of a man communing with the only god he’d ever served.
He threw the anchor into the hole.
The splash was enormous—black water erupting upward and raining down on the ice. The anchor vanished instantly, and the chain followed—link after link feeding through the hole with a metallic hiss that sounded like something breathing in.
The chain ran. Six feet of it, racing across the ice.
Isla watched it go and felt nothing—no tug at her ankles, no pull toward the water because she'd found the shackle.
The D-shaped metal fitting that connected the chain to the rope, secured with a screw pin she'd twisted free with both ruined hands while the Shipwrecker fought Sullivan, while the spotlight held them all in its white beam, while her frozen fingers substituted desperation for dexterity.
The pin was in her palm. The chain was disconnected.
The rope at her ankles was just rope now, attached to nothing.
But the chain was not falling alone.
She saw it at the same moment Brune felt it.
The chain, running across the ice toward the hole, had looped during the fight when Sullivan tackled Brune, when they'd grappled beside the hole.
When Brune scrambled for the anchor and Sullivan brought him down.
Somewhere in that chaos, the chain had wound itself around the Shipwrecker's ankles in a tangle of links that looked accidental but felt, in the way that certain things felt on this lake, like something else entirely.
The chain went taut against his boots.
Robert Brune looked down. The realization arrived on his face in stages—confusion first, then understanding, then something she had never seen on him before.
Fear. Real fear, uncontrolled and absolute, the fear of a man who had spent his life believing the lake loved him and was discovering, in the final seconds, that the lake did not love.
The lake took. That was all it had ever done.
“No,” he said. Not the calm conversational tone. This was the voice of a man who understood what was about to happen and could not stop it. “No—I’m not—this isn’t—”
The chain pulled him off his feet.
He hit the ice flat on his back, and then he was sliding—dragged across the frozen surface toward the hole by thirty pounds of steel sinking through water that never gave back what it was given.
His hands clawed at the ice, fingers scraping the surface in a sound she would hear in her sleep for years.
His boots kicked. His body twisted. And for one suspended moment his eyes found hers.
They were not calm. They were not devout. They were the eyes of a man who had finally heard the lake clearly and understood, too late, that the whispers had never been asking him to give. They had been calling him home.
He went into the hole. The water swallowed him completely, instantly, with a sound that was less a splash than a gulp—the lake closing over him with the finality of a door shutting. The surface churned for three seconds, then stilled, and then there was nothing but black water and ice and silence.
“James.”
She crawled to him, ankles still bound, dragging herself across the ice on her forearms. He was on his back, breathing in the shallow rhythm of a man whose ribs were accounting for every movement. Blood from the cut above his eye had pooled on the ice beneath his head.
“Stay with me.”
His eyes focused. Found her. The blue of them was glazed with pain but present—conscious, aware, alive.
“Is he—”
“Gone.” The word came out hoarse, scraped raw by the gag and the cold. “He’s gone, James. It’s over.”
His hand found hers on the ice. The grip was weak—weaker than it had been in the hospital—but it was there, his fingers closing around hers with the stubborn pressure of a man who had dragged himself across a frozen lake to save her and was not letting go now.
“You’re shaking,” he murmured.
“I’m cold.”
“Me too.” The corner of his mouth twitched. Even now—bloody and broken on the ice, sirens closing in, his ribs doing whatever cracked ribs did when they’d been asked to do too much. Even now, James Sullivan could almost smile. “Your hands—”
“Don’t look at my hands.”
Boots on the ice. Flashlight beams, voices—organized, professional, close enough to make out words. Agent Rivers. We’ve got you. Paramedics on the way. The cavalry, arriving the way cavalry always arrived—after the battle was over, in time to treat the wounded and document the dead.
Isla didn’t look up. She looked at James. At his hand in hers. At the blood on his face and the stubborn, impossible fact of his being here—on a frozen lake, in a flannel shirt, with cracked ribs and no coat, because she had been in danger and he had come.
“You shouldn’t have followed me,” she said.
“Yeah.” His eyes crinkled. Just barely, at the corners—the ghost of the expression she’d spent three years learning to read. “Well.”
He didn’t finish the sentence. He didn’t need to.
The first responders reached them. Blankets, questions, warm professional hands.
Someone worked the rope at her ankles. Someone crouched beside James, checking his pulse.
The spotlight held steady, and beyond its beam the lake stretched into the dark—vast, cold, patient, keeping its secrets the way it always had.
One more secret now. One more body in the deep. The Shipwrecker, taken by the water he’d worshipped, pulled into the same cold dark he’d sent so many others. There was no justice in it—justice was a courtroom and a trial and a sentence read aloud. There was only the lake, doing what the lake did.
Taking.
Isla held James’s hand and let the responders work and stared at the hole in the ice where Robert Brune had disappeared, and she wondered if he was hearing the whispers now, in the deep, in the cold, in the water that had never been speaking to him at all.