by Zoey Parker
I looked into the face of the man who had grabbed me. Yes. He was the man I’d spoken to in front of the bar. I’d been right all along. Not like it helped me now. There was no helping me now.
He looked even worse than he had when I first saw him, and that had only been a couple of days earlier. There was a wound above his eye, and the eye itself was blackened. Thorn. What had he been up to?
“What is this?” I asked. “Why did you set me up?”
He laughed. “You think that was a setup? That was nothing. It took no effort to get you here. You’re so desperate, you would have believed anything I told you. Didn’t anybody ever tell you to look before you leap?” He laughed again.
I scowled at him, even though I was terrified. I could hardly think straight. I felt like a caged animal. What were they planning to do to me? My wrists were bound together, tight. I winced, trying to wriggle free.
“Don’t try anything,” Thorn muttered, staring me in the eye. “Or you’ll end up like your sister.” He pulled out that knife, the one he’d used to threaten me at the bar. The knife I had seen in my dreams. It was even longer than I remembered, the light from the lamp gleaming off its steel edges.
He waved it around in front of my face. “Remember this? I remember pressing it against your throat. It took no pressure to break the skin. Imagine what would happen if I used just a little force?”
I whimpered, trying to hold back my tears. I didn’t want him, or either of these scumbags, to see me break down. But I couldn’t manage it. All I could think about was Sabrina, and his choice of words.
“You killed her, didn’t you? She’s been dead all this time?”
He shrugged like he didn’t even care. That was it. The tears burst out of me, along with gasping sobs. My hands were behind me, bound at the wrists, and my ankles tied to the legs of the chair. I couldn’t even wipe my nose as I cried.
She was gone. Did she know I had been looking for her? I hoped she did. I hoped she knew I never stopped looking, and never stopped loving her.
But I’d be able to ask her myself, soon enough. Wouldn’t I? This whole act they were playing, tying me to a chair, was just another way of screwing with my head. Just like they’d lied to get me here. I was going to die.
Even with all this going through my mind, there was one big question which I needed to have answered. I had to ask. It was killing me, not knowing the truth.
“Did Gabriel know she was dead? That you killed her?” I struggled to speak clearly through my sobs.
He looked at me sharply. “Did he know?”
“What you did? He kept telling me he didn’t. Did he? Or was he just lying?”
He sat, staring at me. “You really care? After all this?”
“Yes. Did he? Was he lying to me?”
His face changed. It was softer now. “He was just trying to protect the club, you know? That’s how he is. He wouldn’t do anything to betray us, or put us in a bad spot with the police.”
“So he knew, and he was lying to me to protect you guys? Is that what you’re saying?”
“No, you dumb bitch.” I winced, his words cutting me like a knife. I wondered if he ever spoke to my sister like this, and if he had, why she hadn’t left him long ago. Men didn’t just randomly start calling women dumb bitches out of nowhere. He snarled at me. “I’m saying he didn’t. I didn’t wanna put more on his shoulders than he already had there. It would have been too much. No. He didn’t know anything. Happy now?”
I couldn’t say I was exactly happy, but I was relieved. At least I knew he hadn’t been using me. It was cold comfort in a moment such as this, but it was some little bit of hope to hold on to.
Then, another thought hit me. He must have known I was on my way here. It was the only thing that made sense when I remembered the texts he’d sent me. Why hadn’t I replied? Damn my pride! He had ordered me to stay home, which told me he must have known something was going to happen if I let Thorn lead me to the hotel.
I thought about that text message, the one he had sent to Gabriel. The one I had found and spiraled out of control over. Son of a bitch, they’d planned the whole thing out. He’d led Gabriel away from me, knowing that he would never let me go to the hotel alone when I got that phone call.
I glared at Thorn. “I guess he has no idea we’re here either. Right? That you intend to do something to me?” I was trying as hard as I could to push the fear aside, so my voice would sound stronger than I really felt. I couldn’t tell whether or not it was working.
He shook his head, now looking worried. “No, he doesn’t. But I’m going to tell him. He has to know why I’m going to do this. Why I need to.” He took his phone with him and stepped outside.
What did he mean, why he was going to do this? Going to do what?
Then my eyes fell on my other two captors, and the guns sticking out from the waistbands of their jeans. I had a pretty good idea what he had in mind for me. He wasn’t playing around or trying to scare me. He really meant to kill me.
Chapter 20
Gabriel
I rode as fast as I could in the direction of the hotel. Was Kat there yet? How long had she been there? If Tracee was right and Kat had gotten an hour’s head start, I might still have a chance to get there before anything bad happened. I doubted I could catch up to her no matter how fast I rode or how many cars I swerved around. She would be driving fast, too.
I couldn’t believe Thorn actually meant to hurt Kat. I still couldn’t, even when I knew how far he had gone to threaten her. He was all talk. Wasn’t he?
If he was willing to go this far, I couldn’t deny it: he had killed Sabrina. And if that was true, he was desperate. He’d do anything he had to do to protect himself.
I remembered when we were kids and how hard it always was to get him to tell the truth when he did something wrong. He used to drive teachers crazy. He could do something right in front of them, in front of the entire class even, and he would swear he hadn’t done anything. They could have had him dead to rights, and it wouldn’t matter. He would swear up and down that they were all crazy for accusing him.
Even when it was obvious someone was on his track and was going to prove he was lying, he would make up all kinds of crazy lies to cover up. The stories would get so thick, he would confuse himself after a while. It never worked, ever. And it only made things worse when he finally fessed up. But he still did it, every time. He never learned. Maybe it was part of his personality, and would never change
I would always back him up in those days. Maybe this mess was partially my fault because I always stood by him even when I knew he was wrong. I would be right there next to him, telling lies just as big as the ones he was telling, just to back up his story. Even if the lies made me look bad. I thought that was what brotherhood meant. I still did. Maybe it was time to rethink my definition of the word.
I should have turned him in to the cops a long time ago, when I first thought he had something to do with Sabrina. I shouldn’t have wasted my time trying to talk to him about it. I should have known he would never tell the truth, no matter how bad it looked for him. Why didn’t I know better?
I hadn’t wanted to get us in trouble with the cops. Now we’d be in deeper trouble than before if he killed a second time. What was he planning to do? How did he think he could cover it up? I didn’t think he had much of a plan in place. He couldn’t, or else he would see how pointless his actions were. He was just doing whatever came to him, making it up as he went along.
There would be no way to get around the cops this time. They would blame us for sure. Then what? That would be the end of the club for a long time.
Now Kat was in trouble because of me not being able to step up and do what I had to do as a leader. Maybe she was about to die. All because I couldn’t imagine my best friend doing something so terrible, and couldn’t bring myself to get the truth from him or tell the police what I feared. I should have known what he was capable of.
I beat mysel
f up like this for miles down the highway. I could have stopped it. I could have stopped him. I could have given Kat a little peace instead of warning her how dangerous it was to put her nose where it didn’t belong. What a stupid thing to say! Of course she had every right to know what had happened to her sister.
I remembered the way she tried to hit me, too. When she was screaming over how unfair it was that she was expected to roll over and pretend nothing happened instead of the club acting like rational people who didn’t commit crimes. Damn it, she’d been so right. I had to keep telling myself at the time that she was wrong so I could live with myself. Now she was going to die because of me. How could I live with myself once that happened? I gunned the engine, pushing the bike faster.
And she would die hating me, too. She would think I had set her up. Of course she would. When she kicked me out of her house, she thought I knew something. She wouldn’t have to think hard to blame me for this.
My phone rang. It was Thorn. I didn’t wanna pull over—I would lose time—but I couldn’t ignore the call. If it wasn’t already too late, I might be able to talk some sense to him.
“Thorn!”
“Hey, man,” he muttered.
“Where are you? I went to the house like you asked, but you weren’t there.” I didn’t wanna tell him I was on my way. It might spook him into doing something drastic.
“I had something to take care of,” he said. His voice sounded dead, just flat and hollow. My blood ran cold. Had he already killed Kat?
I closed my eyes, reminding myself to stay calm. Otherwise, he’d hear the panic in my voice and know I was on to him. “Where at? I can meet you wherever you want. You said you wanna talk? Let’s talk. Okay?” The traffic was rushing by, and I knew he had to hear it through the phone. Would he figure out I was already more than halfway there?
“No. The time for talking is over now. There’s nothing more to say. Nothing can make this better, man.”
“How can you say that? You only texted me this morning. What could have happened between then and now?” How many miles did I have to go? Twenty-five? Thirty? How fast could I ride them?
“I didn’t really wanna talk this morning. I only sent that message to distract you.”
“Distract me from what?”
“From what you were doing.” How had he known?
“I wasn’t doing anything. What are you talking about?” I hated this cryptic way he was speaking. Like we were playing word games. I cut to the chase. “Hey, I’m worried about you. I don’t want you to do anything drastic.” Right, make it sound like you’re afraid for him. Not her. Don’t let on you know he has her.
“It’s too late for that. It’s all too late. I’m sorry I didn’t come clean with you sooner.” His voice had this funny sound to it. A very final sort of sound. I wondered if he wasn’t planning on killing himself when it was all over.
I realized, finally, that he had never planned to talk to me this morning. He had only wanted to get me away from Kat so he could lure her to him. I had been so blind. He’d read me, known what I would do. And I’d walked right into his trap.
“You can do it now. Come clean with me now.” I was getting desperate. I couldn’t push him over the edge, but I was in a hurry to get to him. To her.
He laughed a little. “Remember when we first joined the club? How excited we were?”
“Yeah, I do. We were trying so hard to be cool,” I said. Where was this going? He was wasting time now. I wished I could ride and talk on the phone at the same time, but I needed both hands.
“I didn’t know how it was gonna go. I wonder if I had, would I have joined?”
“I don’t know. I think you would have. We both needed to feel like we were part of a family.”
“Yeah. You’re right. It was the only way to feel like I was a part of something. Look where it got the both of us.” Was he sniffling? I thought I heard him starting to cry. He was losing it.
“Where did it get us? Where do you think it got you? Man, I have to be honest. You’re scaring me a little right now.”
He was crying for sure. “I didn’t mean for this to happen. For any of it. I swear.”
“Thorn? Where are you, buddy? Come on. Let me come to wherever you are, and we’ll talk about things. I know we can work it out.”
He laughed bitterly. “Stop fucking with me, man. I know you know where I am. I already talked to Tracee. You know everything already.”
Shit. I closed my eyes, a hand on my forehead. “You’re wrong about one thing,” I said. “I don’t know everything. I don’t know why you’re doing all this.”
“Sabrina, of course. It’s all about Sabrina.”
“What happened? Come on. Tell me.”
“I loved her!” He was crying, a mess. I could hear from his voice that he meant it, or thought he did. He had loved her as much as he could ever love a woman. I believed him.
“I know you did, man. And I’m sure that whatever happened was an accident. But this isn’t helping. You know that, right?”
“No, I don’t.” He was totally irrational. I had to find a way to get through to him. Kat was depending on me.
“There’s gotta be a way to get through this with anybody else getting hurt,” I said. “I mean, all the shit we’ve done together? How many times did you think we were never gonna get out of whatever trouble we were in? But we always did. Because we trusted each other. We were all we had, right? You still have me.”
“No, I don’t,” he said. “I can’t bring you into this. It’s not fair. I fucked up, and this is all my fault. I can’t make you pay for what I did. There’s no way out.”
“What did you actually do? You still haven’t told me. It’s probably not as bad as you think it is.” I was stalling, saying whatever I could think of just to keep him on the phone and away from Kat. As long as he was talking, he wasn’t hurting her.
“It’s bad. Murder’s bad, man.” Fuck me, I thought. He was finally ready to admit it. But that meant he’d come to the end of his rope. He was capable of anything.
I scrambled to get through to him. “Murder’s only murder if you meant it to happen. And I know you wouldn’t have hurt Sabrina on purpose. Right? Anyone could see that. All you have to do is tell the truth.”
“Nobody will believe me. You know how it is. People don’t believe us, even when we’re honest. I’ve been thinking about it for weeks, you know. There’s no way out of it.” He had a point, even though I hated admitting it. The cops wouldn’t believe it was an accident, no matter what happened. Especially since he’d been covering it up for weeks now. That didn’t look good. Besides, we were criminals. That was how they saw us. They wouldn’t care about the truth.
“There’s gotta be a way. Just wait there, and when I get there, we’ll talk it out. We’ve always talked things out, haven’t we? We can work on it together.”
“No. It’s not worth it. She’s too close to the truth. She wouldn’t let it go, you know? I didn’t wanna have to do this.” He cried again. “I don’t wanna kill anybody. Not a woman.” Kat. He meant Kat. He had to kill her because she was too close to the truth about Sabrina. But the way he made it sound, she was still alive. That was a good thing. How much longer would she be?
“So don’t. You don’t have to. You have a choice, Thorn. You can make the right choice.” God, if you’re there, let me get through to him. Or let me get there in time to help her.
“There’s no choice, and you know it just like I do.” He wasn’t crying anymore. He was serious. My blood ran cold again.
“You’ll only make things worse by doing this!”
He laughed. “How much worse could it get? Shit, I killed Sabrina, and I loved her. What do you think I’ll do now?” The line went dead.
“Fuck!” I wanted to throw my phone, just to hurt something, but instead I started the bike up and got back on the road. Now I was riding faster than ever.
I couldn’t let myself imagine being there too late to save he
r, but every time I thought of her, all I could imagine was her dead body. Holding it in my arms. Would her eyes be open? Staring at me, blaming me for letting her die? She wouldn’t have to blame me. I would blame myself for the rest of my life.
What would I do without her?
Now that she was in danger, and I couldn’t be there for her, I knew how deep my feelings ran. Why had it taken me so long to figure it out? I had always tried to tell myself there was no such thing as love, but she showed me otherwise. It would be just perfect if I lost her now, wouldn’t it? I laughed bitterly to myself. At least my life was consistent. Just when I learned I could love a person, she would be taken from me.
No. That wasn’t going to happen, not if I had anything to say about it. But what could I do if I didn’t get there in time?