CHAPTER 24 THE CAGE WITHOUT WALLS POV SYBIL
The transition from absolute, freezing hell to paradise does not happen instantly. It is a slow, vibrating blur of hours suspended in the metallic belly of the Sikorsky helicopter, soaring high above the chaotic, burning wreckage of the life we left behind.
I do not know how long we fly. Time loses all meaning in the dark, pressurized cabin.
I spend the journey curled entirely against Thayer’s uninjured right side, my face buried in the heavy charcoal wool of his topcoat, listening to the steady, stubborn thud of his heart.
Every time the massive aircraft banks or hits a pocket of turbulence, his arm tightens around me—an autonomous, iron-clad reflex of a predator refusing to release his prize.
Eventually, the deep, mechanical roar of the rotors shifts pitch. The nose of the helicopter dips.
The change in altitude makes my ears pop. I slowly lift my head, my neck stiff and aching from the awkward angle. The small, reinforced porthole window of the cabin is no longer entirely black.
It is flooded with a blinding, brilliant, impossible blue.
I blink, my eyes stinging from the sudden influx of light.
I press my hand against the cold glass. The heavy, impenetrable storm clouds of Chicago, the gray misery of the Midwestern winter, are completely gone.
Below us is an endless, glittering expanse of turquoise ocean, so clear and vibrant it looks like crushed gemstones.
The helicopter descends rapidly toward a small, emerald-green jewel of land rising out of the water.
"Where are we?" I whisper, my voice a dry, scratchy reed.
Thayer shifts beside me, a low grunt vibrating in his chest as the movement pulls at the thick black sutures buried in his left shoulder. He leans forward, his pale gray eyes looking out the window, tracking the approaching island.
"The Caribbean Sea," he answers, his voice a dark, rough rumble. "International waters. Completely unmapped on any commercial or federal registry. I bought it through a series of six blind shell corporations four years ago."
Four years ago. I was fourteen. He was building my gilded cage before I even understood what it meant to be trapped.
The helicopter hovers over a sprawling, flat expanse of white sand, the downdraft violently whipping the lush, towering palm trees bordering the beach.
The landing gear touches down with a heavy, mechanical thud.
The engine begins to cycle down, the deafening roar of the blades slowly fading into a high-pitched whine.
The automatic side door of the cabin slides open.
The air that rushes into the helicopter is a physical shock.
It is not the biting, freezing wind of the Chicago railyard or the damp, moldy chill of the haunted mansion.
It is a heavy, oppressive, suffocating heat.
It smells of hot sand, blooming jasmine, and raw sea salt.
It wraps around my freezing, trembling body like a thick, heavy blanket, instantly thawing the ice that has been living in my marrow for the past forty-eight hours.
I shiver violently, my body entirely confused by the sudden, drastic change in environment.
Thayer doesn't wait for the pilot to assist us. He pushes himself up from the metal floor, his face paling slightly from the exertion, the muscles in his jaw locking tight. He reaches down with his right hand, his large, calloused fingers wrapping securely around mine, and pulls me to my feet.
We step out of the helicopter and onto the blinding white sand.
The heat of the sun beats down on my dark, heavy turtleneck sweater and tactical pants, instantly turning the clothing into a suffocating sauna. I squint against the glare.
There are no heavily armed Syndicate soldiers forming a perimeter. There are no armored SUVs. There is no Dante waiting with a satellite phone.
There is only the endless ocean, the blinding sky, and a massive, sprawling architectural masterpiece nestled directly into the lush jungle bordering the beach.
The villa is constructed entirely of sleek, polished teak wood, white stone, and massive panels of floor-to-ceiling glass.
It is open, airy, and entirely exposed to the elements.
It is the exact opposite of the subterranean bunker.
The pilot steps out of the cockpit. He doesn't look at me. He doesn't even look at Thayer’s blood-stained shirt. He pulls two heavy, waterproof duffel bags from the storage compartment and drops them onto the sand.
"The perimeter sensors are active, Don Thorne," the pilot says, his voice strictly professional over the dying whine of the rotors. "The supply caches are fully stocked. The secondary generators are online."
"Refuel at the designated coordinate in the Caymans," Thayer commands, not looking back at the man. "Then ground the bird and disappear. Do not attempt to contact this island unless the frequency broadcasts a red signal."
"Understood."
The pilot climbs back into the cockpit. The doors slide shut.
The engines roar back to life, blowing a chaotic storm of white sand around us.
Thayer steps in front of me, his broad back shielding my face from the abrasive grit until the heavy aircraft lifts off the ground, banks sharply over the water, and disappears into the endless blue horizon.
The silence that crashes down over the island is absolute.
It isn't the heavy, expectant silence of a room waiting for a lock to turn. It is the vast, consuming silence of total isolation. The rhythmic, soothing crash of the crystal-clear waves against the shore is the only sound in the world.
We are completely, terrifyingly alone.
Thayer turns to me. The harsh, brilliant sunlight catches the dark, bruised exhaustion under his eyes and the pale, ashen tint of his skin.
He is running on pure, unadulterated willpower.
The adrenaline is completely gone, leaving a man who has lost half his blood volume and undergone amateur surgery on a dirty motel mattress.
"Come," he murmurs, picking up one of the heavy duffel bags with his uninjured arm.
He doesn't drag me. He walks slowly, his limp pronounced, guiding me across the hot sand toward the massive glass villa.
We step onto a sprawling, polished white stone terrace that completely surrounds the house.
There are no doors to unlock. Entire sections of the glass walls are slid open, inviting the ocean breeze directly into the massive, open-concept living space.
The interior is decorated in stark, pristine whites and natural woods, a jarring contrast to the dark mahogany and black marble of the Chicago penthouse.
"There are no locks," I whisper, my voice echoing slightly in the vast, airy space. I look around, my mind desperately trying to find the catch, the invisible bars of the cage. "Thayer, the walls are entirely glass."
Thayer stops in the center of the living room. He drops the heavy duffel bag onto the pristine white floor. He turns slowly, his pale gray eyes locking onto mine with a dark, terrifying intensity that completely eclipses the bright tropical sun.
"We don't need locks here, Sybil," he states, his voice a low, rumbling vibration. "There is no one to keep out. And there is nowhere for you to run. The nearest piece of inhabited land is four hundred miles away. The ocean is the wall."
The realization hits me with the force of a physical blow.
He didn't just build a house. He built a completely self-sustaining universe where he is the only god.
"You're bleeding," I say, desperately changing the subject, my eyes dropping to the dark, fresh stain seeping through the fabric of his black shirt, right over his left pectoral. The climb up the rope ladder to the helicopter tore the stitches I put in.
"It's fine," he dismisses, swaying slightly on his feet, his jaw clenching.
"It isn't fine," I snap, a sudden, fierce surge of protective anger completely overriding my awe. I step forward, my hands reaching out to grip his uninjured arm. "You are going to collapse. Show me the bedroom."
A dark, breathless smirk curves his pale lips, entirely amused by my sudden assumption of command. He nods toward a wide hallway on the right side of the villa.
I guide him down the hall. The master suite is a sprawling, sun-drenched sanctuary. The entire back wall is completely open to the ocean, a sheer drop-off to the crashing waves below. A massive, low-profile bed draped in crisp, white linen sits in the center of the room.
I guide him to the edge of the mattress. He sits down heavily, a sharp, ragged hiss of pain escaping his teeth as the jarring motion aggravates the torn muscle.
"Don't move," I command, my voice shaking slightly. "I'm going to get the medical kit."
I turn to run back to the living room, but his right hand shoots out, his massive fingers wrapping entirely around my wrist. His grip is weak, lacking the bone-crushing iron strength he usually possesses, but it still completely stops me in my tracks.
"Sybil," he murmurs.
I look back at him.
"You're safe," he whispers, the absolute, undeniable truth of the words hanging heavy in the warm, salted air. "The war is over. Your father is dead. Bastian is dead. The Commission doesn't know this coordinate exists. No one is coming through that door."
The words are a psychological trigger.
For forty-eight hours, my brain has been operating on a continuous, blinding loop of pure survival. Adrenaline, terror, gunfire, blood, and the desperate, frantic need to keep breathing. I haven't had a single second to actually process the catastrophic destruction of my entire reality.
But here, in the sun-drenched silence of this immaculate, beautiful tomb, the adrenaline finally, completely abandons my bloodstream.
I look down at my hands.
My fingers are trembling violently. I can still see the faint, microscopic traces of dried brown iodine and Thayer’s blood clinging to my cuticles. But that isn't what makes my stomach pitch into a sickening, bottomless freefall.