
After My Abuser Planned Our Death Together
Chapter 4
The Appalachian air was supposed to smell of damp earth and crushed pine. Instead, as I trailed behind my university geological group through the limestone quarry, the atmosphere curdled. The ambient chatter of my classmates faded into a muffled, unnatural static.
In the distance, a sudden, piercing chorus of police sirens wailed, echoing violently off the canyon walls. The group's guide turned, distracted by the rising commotion on the highway below. A diversion.
Before I could step closer to the group, the trail beneath my boots seemed to stretch and warp. The temperature plummeted, turning my breath to white vapor. The unmistakable, suffocating stench of ozone and rotting sulfur coated the back of my throat. Joel's magic. The vibrant autumn trees twisted into jagged, shadowy silhouettes, weaving an invisible labyrinth that swallowed the path forward. I was entirely alone.
Then came the damp rag from behind. The chemical fire of chloroform burned furiously through my nasal passages. My thumb twitched instinctively toward the raised scar on my wrist, but the void dragged me under before I could scream.
I woke to the vicious bite of coarse hemp rope grinding against my skin.
My head throbbed with a toxic, rhythmic ache, but the ice in my veins crystallized instantly. The air tasted of oxidized iron and stagnant water. I was bound to a rusted metal chair in the center of a cavernous, decaying industrial warehouse. Shafts of pale, gray light cut through the dust motes, illuminating the absolute ruin of my captors.
"You leave me no choice, Aria."
Joel paced the cracked concrete like a starving, rabid dog. The immaculate tuxedo from my birthday gala was gone, replaced by a rumpled dark coat that hung off his tense shoulders. His right hand—the one my father’s protective charm had incinerated—was wrapped in filthy, weeping bandages. He dragged his good hand through his hair, his eyes feverish and wild.
"I offered you eternity," Joel rasped, his voice vibrating with a terrifying, manic edge. "I offered you my soul! But you force my hand. If you don't come back to me, I will butcher them. Your new father, your mother, that arrogant brother. I will drown the Watkins name in blood until you have no one left to turn to but me."
I didn't flinch. I didn't pull at the ropes. I let my gaze hollow out, giving him nothing but the absolute void he had created in me centuries ago. "You couldn't even keep your own soul intact, Joel. You have nothing left to offer."
"Look at the little princess."
A harsh, grating voice echoed from the rusted catwalk above. Selene descended the metal stairs, her footsteps heavy with spite. She looked ethereal only in her decay—gaunt, her skin sallow, her fingers compulsively twisting the frayed ends of her dull hair. She stepped into the light, her sunken eyes darting over my tailored field jacket. Her jealousy was a palpable, acidic thing in the damp air.
"You spent two hundred years as a pathetic, hollowed-out husk in the dark," Selene sneered, her upper lip curling. "Do you really think you deserve the sun now? You’re just playing dress-up in a life that isn't yours."
"And you're playing the devoted lover to a man who uses you as a battery," I replied, my voice a quiet, razor-thin blade. "How does it feel, Selene? Knowing he's only looking at you because I refuse to?"
Selene’s face contorted. She lunged forward, her hand raised to strike, but Joel caught her wrist with a brutal jerk.
"She's mine to break!" he snarled at her, spit flying from his lips.
The tug-of-war between them was pathetic. They were drowning, violently dragging each other down into the abyss. I shifted my weight, feeling the familiar, solid weight of my favorite silver pen pressing against my breast pocket. Austin had gifted it to me days ago. *For your field notes,* he had said, his dark eyes holding a depth of quiet, unyielding promise.
Before Joel could turn his manic attention back to me, the warehouse erupted.
A deafening shockwave shattered the high frosted windows. The heavy corrugated steel doors blew inward with the agonizing screech of tearing metal. Blinding tactical lights sliced through the gloom, accompanied by the sharp, authoritative sweep of red laser sights painting Joel’s chest.
"Armed police! On the ground, now!" Detective Sarah Chen’s voice boomed through the settling dust, sharp and lethal.
Flanking her was a wall of black-clad tactical gear. Marcus. My brother’s face was a mask of pure, controlled fury as his elite security detail swarmed the perimeter, cutting off every shadow and exit.
Joel stumbled backward, raising his uninjured hand. Violet sparks of dark magic sputtered off his fingertips, but panic severed his focus. A rubber kinetic round slammed into his shoulder, dropping him to the concrete with a breathless, agonizing gasp. Selene shrieked, scrambling toward the rusted machinery, only to be ruthlessly pinned to the floor by two heavily armored officers.
Through the chaos of shouting voices and securing targets, a singular, steady figure walked straight toward me.
Austin.
He didn't carry a weapon. He didn't spare a single glance for Joel groveling in the dirt. His dark eyes were locked entirely on me. He knelt by my chair, pulling a sleek pocketknife to slice cleanly through the thick hemp ropes.
"You found me," I breathed, my wrists screaming as the blood rushed back into my hands.
Austin slipped the silver pen from my pocket, turning it over to reveal a microscopic, blinking blue light hidden seamlessly beneath the clip. The GPS tracker.
"I told you I'd recalibrate the security protocols," he murmured, his voice a low, grounding rumble that chased the sulfur completely from the air. He tossed the pen aside and wrapped his warm, steady hands gently over my bruised wrists. "Let's get you home."
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