Logan closes his eyes for a moment, and then says, “You can come because I don’t see any other option. But Willow and I are the ones who will capture him.”
“And me,” Adam says.
“And me. For Thom. For all of us.” Fury and grief breathe power into Frankie’s words.
“That’s fine. I’ll be your backup plan,” I say.
“He knows you’re weak from your injuries. He’ll exploit that if he has the chance,” Logan says.
“I certainly hope he tries.”
“I refuse to bring either of you if you aren’t protected by more than your instincts.”
“Where are the weapons?” Quinn asks.
“Are you planning to carry one?”
He shakes his head. “Rachel needs one. I can find her something easily concealed. Seems to me you, Willow, and Adam need to check this floor. Ask around. See if anyone knows where Ian is before we rush through the city looking like a mob ready to burn someone at the stake. Wouldn’t hurt to have a few more people with us when we find him.”
Logan nods and points to the right. “Our cache of weaponry is four doors down. We’ll canvas this floor, get some help, and return for you in just a few minutes. Be ready.”
Quinn leaves to find a weapon for me, and I bite my lip as agony radiates along my arm while I try to button my pants. The pain still feels sharp and real, but I try not to let it comfort me.
My teeth scrape against a swollen nub on the inside of my mouth, and I remember Ian crushing my lips against my teeth as he said, “Shh.”
I’ll show him what happens to someone who shushes me.
By the time Quinn returns, I’ve managed to untangle most of my hair and am hunting for my boots. My hair smells like lemongrass, and so does my skin. Clearly, somebody washed me while I was unconscious. I sincerely hope that somebody wasn’t Logan.
My body flushes with heat at the thought, and I shake it away. I have a killer to destroy. I can think about romance later.
My head feels heavy and off-kilter, and every breath I take burns against my lungs as if the smoke I inhaled still lives deep inside me.
“Which one do you want?” Quinn asks.
I look up as he tosses a silvery metal vest, as thin as a layer of silk, onto the cot beside me and holds out his hands. On the left, a small dagger with a double-edged blade barely fills his entire hand. On the right he holds the knife I’ve carried since the day we discovered the cache of weapons in the Commander’s compound.
I stare at the blades and my mouth goes dry.
Guilty.
Melkin’s tormented gaze mocks me as his blood pours over my hands. I start shoving it away, but stop before I can seal up the cracks in the silence that still crouches inside of me. I don’t want to go back to feeling disconnected from myself. I’m a long way from better, but to refuse to face this now would be to unravel the tiny bit of healing I’ve managed to find.
“I thought the dagger would be better since you’ll be using your left hand, and it’s your weaker—what’s wrong?”
I shake my head and draw in a deep breath. I’ve carried a knife for the duration of this journey, and it hasn’t made me sick with fear. I see no reason to feel this way now, but still I stare at the dull gleam of the blade and tremble.
Quinn’s hands slowly close over the weapons, and he lowers them. “You don’t have to choose one.”
“Yes, I do.” I do. Because I’m not going to confront that monster without a way to bring him down.
But if I kill him, if his blood covers my hands, will it break me like killing Melkin broke me?
“You have other choices, Rachel.”
“Like what? Like facing down a professional killer with nothing but my bare left hand?”
“Yes, if you’d rather. You could trust your survival instincts and trust in our ability to take Ian down as a group. It’s up to you.”
My fingers trace the outline of the bandage on my right arm as Melkin’s face floats to the surface of my mind again. I press lightly and the instant bite of pain distracts me from his accusing eyes.
“It’s not about trusting myself or anyone else to get me out alive. I’m not afraid to die,” I say.
Quinn tosses the blades onto the cot and gently pulls my fingers away from my wound. “What are you afraid of, then?”
“He needs to die. Someone like this—someone who could do the things he’s done and take pleasure in them—needs to die. If I’m close enough to him to deliver justice, then I need to be able to do it.”
“Do you think you’ll hesitate?”
“No. I know I won’t.” I glance at my hands as if I can still see the crimson evidence of my guilt slowly drying on my skin. “But maybe I should. After the Commander killed Oliver and then imprisoned Logan, I was driven by a need to seek justice. But after finding my father’s grave, I wanted nothing more than revenge. Melkin got in my way.”
I look at Quinn. “He got in my way. He didn’t know how broken I was. He didn’t realize what the Commander had done to me, and I didn’t hesitate. I killed him.”
Something dark and painful seeps out of the silence, but I can’t succumb to it. Not when we have a killer to catch. I also can’t bear to shove it away from me, because it’s mine.
It’s mine, and it’s time to stop acting like it isn’t.
“You don’t carry a weapon anymore,” I say. “Why not?”
“And me,” Adam says.
“And me. For Thom. For all of us.” Fury and grief breathe power into Frankie’s words.
“That’s fine. I’ll be your backup plan,” I say.
“He knows you’re weak from your injuries. He’ll exploit that if he has the chance,” Logan says.
“I certainly hope he tries.”
“I refuse to bring either of you if you aren’t protected by more than your instincts.”
“Where are the weapons?” Quinn asks.
“Are you planning to carry one?”
He shakes his head. “Rachel needs one. I can find her something easily concealed. Seems to me you, Willow, and Adam need to check this floor. Ask around. See if anyone knows where Ian is before we rush through the city looking like a mob ready to burn someone at the stake. Wouldn’t hurt to have a few more people with us when we find him.”
Logan nods and points to the right. “Our cache of weaponry is four doors down. We’ll canvas this floor, get some help, and return for you in just a few minutes. Be ready.”
Quinn leaves to find a weapon for me, and I bite my lip as agony radiates along my arm while I try to button my pants. The pain still feels sharp and real, but I try not to let it comfort me.
My teeth scrape against a swollen nub on the inside of my mouth, and I remember Ian crushing my lips against my teeth as he said, “Shh.”
I’ll show him what happens to someone who shushes me.
By the time Quinn returns, I’ve managed to untangle most of my hair and am hunting for my boots. My hair smells like lemongrass, and so does my skin. Clearly, somebody washed me while I was unconscious. I sincerely hope that somebody wasn’t Logan.
My body flushes with heat at the thought, and I shake it away. I have a killer to destroy. I can think about romance later.
My head feels heavy and off-kilter, and every breath I take burns against my lungs as if the smoke I inhaled still lives deep inside me.
“Which one do you want?” Quinn asks.
I look up as he tosses a silvery metal vest, as thin as a layer of silk, onto the cot beside me and holds out his hands. On the left, a small dagger with a double-edged blade barely fills his entire hand. On the right he holds the knife I’ve carried since the day we discovered the cache of weapons in the Commander’s compound.
I stare at the blades and my mouth goes dry.
Guilty.
Melkin’s tormented gaze mocks me as his blood pours over my hands. I start shoving it away, but stop before I can seal up the cracks in the silence that still crouches inside of me. I don’t want to go back to feeling disconnected from myself. I’m a long way from better, but to refuse to face this now would be to unravel the tiny bit of healing I’ve managed to find.
“I thought the dagger would be better since you’ll be using your left hand, and it’s your weaker—what’s wrong?”
I shake my head and draw in a deep breath. I’ve carried a knife for the duration of this journey, and it hasn’t made me sick with fear. I see no reason to feel this way now, but still I stare at the dull gleam of the blade and tremble.
Quinn’s hands slowly close over the weapons, and he lowers them. “You don’t have to choose one.”
“Yes, I do.” I do. Because I’m not going to confront that monster without a way to bring him down.
But if I kill him, if his blood covers my hands, will it break me like killing Melkin broke me?
“You have other choices, Rachel.”
“Like what? Like facing down a professional killer with nothing but my bare left hand?”
“Yes, if you’d rather. You could trust your survival instincts and trust in our ability to take Ian down as a group. It’s up to you.”
My fingers trace the outline of the bandage on my right arm as Melkin’s face floats to the surface of my mind again. I press lightly and the instant bite of pain distracts me from his accusing eyes.
“It’s not about trusting myself or anyone else to get me out alive. I’m not afraid to die,” I say.
Quinn tosses the blades onto the cot and gently pulls my fingers away from my wound. “What are you afraid of, then?”
“He needs to die. Someone like this—someone who could do the things he’s done and take pleasure in them—needs to die. If I’m close enough to him to deliver justice, then I need to be able to do it.”
“Do you think you’ll hesitate?”
“No. I know I won’t.” I glance at my hands as if I can still see the crimson evidence of my guilt slowly drying on my skin. “But maybe I should. After the Commander killed Oliver and then imprisoned Logan, I was driven by a need to seek justice. But after finding my father’s grave, I wanted nothing more than revenge. Melkin got in my way.”
I look at Quinn. “He got in my way. He didn’t know how broken I was. He didn’t realize what the Commander had done to me, and I didn’t hesitate. I killed him.”
Something dark and painful seeps out of the silence, but I can’t succumb to it. Not when we have a killer to catch. I also can’t bear to shove it away from me, because it’s mine.
It’s mine, and it’s time to stop acting like it isn’t.
“You don’t carry a weapon anymore,” I say. “Why not?”