Authors: Tess Sharpe
is the most perfect sound.
He jerks the wheel, an involuntary movement that nearly
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sends us into a tailspin down the mountain. Choking, he
fi ghts back, scrabbling to hook his free hand between my
wrists as we swerve across the narrow two-lane road. Any
second, we’ll veer off the pavement, down the red clay cliff
on one side or tumbling into the lake on the other—and I
don’t care.
I don’t care.
I hope we crash. It’ll be worth it, as
long as he’s dead, too.
“Soph—” he gurgles, frantically clawing at me with his
free hand, his blunt nails digging into my skin.
I lock my arms, muscles straining as I pull back as hard
as I can. He’s wedged a fi ngertip between the zip tie and his
neck, and my arms are trembling with the effort of resist-
ing him. He’s so much stronger than I am, but if I can just
hold out . . .
The gunshot splits the air, and the windshield implodes
in a shower of shards. I fl inch from the fl ying glass, jerk-
ing back, and suddenly Adam’s hands aren’t on the wheel
anymore. One’s holding the gun and the other’s pinning
my wrists, and the car’s spinning, too fast, too close to the
safety rail. I have one second, one hysterical breath to take
in before metal screeches and sparks, and we’re through
the guard rail and racing down the slope, trees and boul-
ders blurring as our speed picks up and I know it’s over.
The end.
Third time’s the charm.
60
FOUR MONTHS AGO (SEVENTEEN YEARS OLD)
I wake to the sound of Mina dying. A death rattle.
“Mina, oh my God,
Mina
.” I crawl over to her, it’s like I’m moving
underwater.
She’s lying on her back a foot away, bathed in the light from the car’s
brights and the blood,
her
blood, has already stained the dirt around
her. Her hands rest against her chest, and her eyes are barely open.
There’s blood everywhere. I can’t even tell where the bullets went
in. “Okay, okay,” I say, words that have no meaning, just to fi ll the air,
to drown out the sound of her breath, the way it comes too fast and
shuddery, wet at the end, like her lungs are already fi lling.
I rip my jacket off , press it against her chest where the dark wet-
ness keeps spreading. I have to stop the blood.
“I’m sorry,” she breathes.
“No, no, it’s okay. Everything will be okay.” I look over my shoul-
der, half-convinced he’s lurking somewhere, waiting to fi nish us off .
But he’s gone.
She coughs, and when blood trickles out of her mouth, I wipe it
away with my hand. “I’m so sorry, Sophie,” she whispers.
“You don’t have to be. It’s okay.” I press harder into her chest with
both hands. “It’s okay. It’ll all be okay.”
But the blood bubbles up against my fi ngers, through the denim
of my jacket.
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How can there be this much blood? How much can she lose
before . . .
She swallows, a convulsive movement, and when she breathes out,
more red stains her mouth. “Hurts,” she says.
When I reach out with one hand to smooth the hair off her fore-
head, I leave a trail of blood behind. All I can think about is that time
in third grade. She fainted when I cut my arm open so badly I needed
stitches; she didn’t like blood. I want to hide it from her now, but I
can’t. I can see it in her eyes, that she knows what’s happening, the
thing I can’t accept.
“It’s okay,” I say again. I swear it, when I have no right to.
“Sophie . . .” She lift s her hand, clumsily drags it toward mine. I
twist our fi ngers together, hold on tight.
I won’t let her go.
“Soph—”
Her chest rises with one last jagged breath and then she exhales
gently, her body going still, her eyes losing their light, their focus on
me dimming as I watch. Her head leans to the side, her grip slowly
loosening in mine.
“No, no, no!” I shake her, pound against her chest. “Wake up,
Mina. Come on, wake up!” I tilt her head back and breathe into her
mouth. Over and over, until I’m drenched in sweat and blood. “No,
Mina!
Wake up!
”
I hold her tight against my shoulder and scream in the darkness,
begging for help.
Wakeupwakeupwakeuppleasepleaseplease.
No help comes.
It’s just her and me.
Mina’s skin gets colder by the minute.
I still don’t let her go.
61
NOW (JUNE)
I smell the smoke fi rst. Then charred metal and gasoline,
the tang fi lling the air, sharp in my nose. There’s a rhythmic
ringing in my head, growing louder and louder. I blink, but
something spills into my eyes, moisture that I smear off my
face.
I squint down at my bound hands, trying to focus as the
wetness drips down my chin, splattering red on my arm.
Blood.
It hurts. I realize it between one shaky breath and
another. Everything hurts.
Oh, God.
My legs. Do they work?
I push forward with my good one, and it hurts,
it hurts
,
and I never thought it’d feel so good to hurt that much, but
pain is good. Pain means I’m not paralyzed. That I’m still
alive.
Is Adam? I try to push myself up to see, but the ringing
in my ears grows louder as I lean forward through the gap
between the seats. I tilt my head up, trying to get a good
look at him, slumped over the steering wheel. His dark hair
is matted with blood on one side, and his chest is rising and
falling steadily.
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I have to get out of here before he comes to.
My mind’s made up in a second. I hook the edge of the
zip tie around the jagged edge of the broken window, saw-
ing it back and forth until it snaps. My hands free, I grab
the door handle, trying to push it open, but it’s jammed.
The ringing sound’s getting louder, like someone’s
turned up the volume on me, and underneath the insistent
tones, there’s a moaning.
Adam begins to stir in the front seat, and I try the oppo-
site door handle, my heart pounding as more blood dribbles
down my cheek. This door’s also too mangled to open, so
I heave myself up and out of the broken window. The fi t’s
tight, and glass digs into my stomach as I push myself
forward, but I keep going, pitching headfi rst, almost som-
ersaulting out of the car. I hit the forest fl oor with a thump,
my shoulders tightening as pain fl ares down my back.
The car had gone straight down the embankment, the
hood crumpled like ribbon candy. Smoke is rising off the
engine, choking me, and I cough weakly, something sharp
knifi ng through my ribs.
I stumble up to standing, unsteady on shaky legs, and
look around. We’ve ended up in a fl atter area, but there are
trees looming everywhere. Deep forest spreads ahead of
me on all sides. I want to get the gun and my phone, but
I don’t see either of them in the car, and I don’t have time
to look—I’ve got to go. Leaves and branches crackle under-
neath my feet. The full moon is climbing in the sky, its light
illuminating the forest.
I have to move. I forge ahead, my bad leg dragging in the
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305
dirt, catching on rocks and branches, leaving a trail a mile
wide, dotted with blood. Even with the moonlight, it’s hard
to see. I stumble, falling to my knees, my palms scraping
the dirt as I push myself back up.
Getting back up the embankment isn’t an option. Not
like this, not with my bad leg, and not with my good one,
which is trembling almost as badly.
Hiding’s the only option.
The trees thicken as I limp farther into the woods as fast
as I can, weaving between the pines as the smoky smell
from the crash starts to fade into the dark scents of earth
and water, a stronger tang of copper sharpening the breeze.
My stomach’s wet; my shirt’s heavy with blood, slapping
against my belly with each movement. I don’t have to look
down to see the darkness of blood spreading. The cuts on
my stomach are shallow but long; they sting with each
breath I take, along with the pain in my ribs. But I keep
moving. I have to keep moving as fast as I can.
For what feels like forever, it’s just me and my harsh
breathing and each step crushingly loud in my ears, hurt-
ing, hurting, hurting, and wondering if it’s going to be my
last. If I’m going to fall.
I collapse behind a group of boulders before my leg
gives out, panting at the effort it takes to lower myself to the
ground. My eyes droop shut, and I force them open again.
I have to stay conscious. I have to focus.
I have to stay alive.
I curl myself up, my knees tucked up near my chin, try-
ing to make myself as small as possible, pressing against
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the solid rock. It hurts, makes me bite my lip hard, but I
power through it, my ribs throbbing with each breath.
When I hear the footsteps, quick and solid through the
brush, my heart leaps, my muscles seize up, and everything
in me says
run, run, run
. It’s a death sentence, I know that,
but I’m hardwired for fi ght or fl ight, even though I can’t do
either.
I quiet my breathing and focus on the footfalls—are they
coming toward me or heading away?
The crunching suddenly stops. I bend farther into
myself, every muscle shrinking, as a deep voice in the dis-
tance, laced with panic, breaks the silence of the forest.
“Adam? Adam? Where the fuck are you?” More footsteps,
closer now.
Heading toward me.
Now there’s a snapping sound, someone thrashing
through the underbrush.
Two sets of footsteps, coming from different directions:
one sure and steady, the other stumbling, injured.
Matt and Adam. I curl up tighter, dread settling in my
bones.
“Adam!”
They’ve found each other. They’re still a good
twenty feet away, but I can hear them.
“Did you see her?” Adam’s slurring his words. He must
be really hurt.
Good. I hope he bleeds to death.
“See who? What the hell happened? That car . . . Your
head! We need to get you to the hospital!” Matt’s voice,
urgent, almost angry, sounds strange.
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307
“
No!
We gotta fi nd her! She knows everything. We gotta
stop her before . . . before . . .”
“What are you talking about? Let’s go!”
“
No, listen.
She
knows
.”
“Knows what? Who? Come on, let’s move it!”
The footsteps start up again, and the voices are getting
closer. Too late for me to move now. I cringe against the
rock, wishing it’d swallow me up.
“I didn’t tell anyone.” Adam’s babbling, his words jum-
bled together. “All these years, I never told anyone. But I
saw her get into your truck that day. I know what you did
to Jackie. But I didn’t tell anyone; not even Mom or Matt.
I thought it would be okay. But then Mina started asking
questions. I had to stop her—I
had
to.”
“What are you talking about?” Matt’s voice growls,
incredulous.