Sylvie
Three hours earlier
Heather, Alec’s doctor, listened as I laid it out for her. The Pit. Aedan. My brother’s fight. The fight I’d have to have with Aedan. I explained why we couldn’t go to the police and then I explained what I needed from her.
“I can’t kill him,” I said simply. “And he can’t kill me. And that means Rick will kill us both. Our only chance is for me to do it to myself.”
I swallowed and looked her right in the eye. I spoke slowly and deliberately.
“I need you to give me something that’ll kill me,” I said. “Quickly. Within seconds. I don’t care if it hurts or not. But I need to be able to inject it, so I can do it just before Aedan knocks me down.”
Heather’s mouth moved soundlessly. “He’ll think he killed you!” she said at last.
“I know. And it’ll destroy him. But he’ll be alive and so will Alec.”
She shook her head. “You’re talking about suicide! I can’t do that! I can’t help you!”
“You’re saving two lives. If you don’t do this, we’re all dead.”
Heather stood up and walked away. My chest tightened because I thought she was going to call security and then the cops, but she started to pace instead. “No. No way. There’s got to be another way.”
“There isn’t, Heather. This is the way things are when you’re dealing with people like Rick. There are no ways out. Only ways to minimize the damage.”
She walked back around to the chair she’d been sitting on and braced herself on it, staring down at the floor, thinking. I sat down, shut the hell up and let her think.
“What if I gave you something to knock you out?” she said at last.
I shook my head. “They’re not stupid. They’ll see I’m just unconscious. Then they’ll try to make Aedan kill me and he won’t be able to do it. Then we’re all dead—Aedan, Alec, me....”
She went quiet again, hanging her head and letting her long blonde hair hang down to cover her face.
I could see her knuckles whitening as she gripped the chair.
I really thought she was going to snap and call security.
But then she spoke and her voice was drawn from somewhere way down deep, as if each word made her feel physically ill. “I can’t give you poison,” she began.
I stood up. “It’s okay,” I said. “I shouldn’t have asked you. Bleach will work, right? If I get a needle and shoot it into—“
Her head snapped up. “Sylvie, stop trying to be a fucking hero and listen!” Her voice was like the crack of a whip.
I shut up.
She took a long breath. “I could mix you something,” she said.
“Vecuronium would paralyze you. I could put in something to lower your heart rate and breathing. It wouldn’t be perfect.
Any half-decent paramedic will be able to tell you’re not dead.
But your boyfriend, in a panic...it’d fool him.
” She bit her lip. “There’s a very good chance it’d just kill you.
And there’s no way to tell when you’d wake up. ”
Daylight.
That was the first thing that crept into my awareness. A red, warm light. My eyelids were closed. Why were my eyelids closed?
I tried to open them, but couldn’t.
There was sound, but it seemed muffled and distant. I was being carried like a baby. Then a softness under my ass and back. I was lying on a bed. Ow, my head hurt like a motherfucker.
The bed shook and the room started to move. A car. I was in a car. Stretched out on the back seat.
I hauled and hauled with all my strength but I couldn’t get even one finger to move. So I listened, instead, and the sounds I was hearing gradually changed into words.
“—sorry,” I heard. “I don’t know what I’m going to do, but I swear, when all this is done, I’m going to get that bastard. I’m going to make him pay.”
I felt my body roll back against the seat.
The car was climbing up what felt like a winding hill.
Where was he taking me? Now that my mind was swimming up out of the blackness of sleep, things started to sink in.
We’d done it! The plan had worked. Aedan was alive and so was I and now we could move on!
We slowed and then I felt myself roll awkwardly onto my side as the car jerked to a stop.
I tried to turn back onto my back but my body still refused to respond.
Some of the cocktail Heather had given me had worn off, but not all of it—I was still paralyzed.
I wanted to tell Aedan I was alive. He was hurting so much and there was no need.
I could grab and hug him and everything would be okay.
If I could just...move...something.
I heard him open his door and get out. And then there was a sound that was familiar and yet unplaceable to my drugged brain. A sort of metal scraping and the patter of something soft falling. Rhythmically, over and over again.
At last, he stopped and I heard the rear car door open. I could see only reddish daylight through my closed lids, but I could feel Aedan looking down at me. “I picked a beautiful spot,” he said, his voice thick with emotion. “Looking out over the water.”
Oh God. Oh Jesus, no. I wanted to throw up with fear. I wanted to scream. But my drugged body just lay there like a lifeless doll.
He leaned over me and wrapped me up in his arms and I felt myself being carried. There was the sensation of being lowered and then cold dampness was soaking through the back of my tank top and the smell of earth surrounded me.
MOVE! But no matter how hard I strained, my body didn’t even twitch.
I heard a rustle of clothing and the scrape of his sneakers as he knelt down. When he spoke, it didn’t sound like the Aedan I knew. He was stripped down, his soul bared; he was talking the way he talked when there was no one else to hear.
“The first time I saw you,” he said, “I thought you were an angel.”
Going by where his voice seemed to come from, he was kneeling right beside my grave...but it still sounded horribly far away. The hole must be deep. I was going to be deep down in the earth, with hundreds of pounds of soil on top of me.
“I thought you couldn’t be...because nobody would send someone to save a feckin’ waste of space like me. I thought I was long past saving. But you showed me—But then I couldn’t—“
He took a breath. Something warm and wet splashed onto my cheek.
“—I couldn’t save—God damn it, Sylvie! It was meant to be me!” More wet drops on my face. When he could speak again, he continued. “I promise I’ll take care of Alec. And I’ll find a way to get Rick. I’ll get that bastard, if it takes me twenty years.”
I heard him pick up the spade and stand up. “You were the sweetest girl I ever met,” he said. “And I will never, ever forget you.”
MOVE! I tried to open my eyes, but they weighed a thousand tons each.
There was a whump and something heavy and powdery landed across my legs. A few bits bounced as far as my neck.
MOOOVE! But nothing happened.
And the earth kept falling.