
Her Escape Thwarted
Chapter 3
The next morning, Mercy returned with a thermos of hot soup and clothes that didn't smell like the basement. Her face was set with grim determination, and I could see she'd made her decision.
"We're going to get you out of here," she said without preamble, wheeling closer to help me sit up properly. "But it has to look real. Permanent. So they never come looking for you."
My hands shook as I accepted the warm bowl. "What do you mean?"
"Oliver's planning a family ski trip to Mount Rainier next week. Some ridiculous attempt to 'bond' before your supposed wedding." Her mouth twisted with disgust. "We're going to use it."
Over the next hour, she outlined her plan with military precision. An avalanche. My coat and identification left in the snow. A grieving family with no body to recover. It sounded impossible, but as she spoke, I began to see the beauty in its simplicity.
"My late husband had connections," she explained, producing a manila envelope from beneath her wheelchair cushion. "Men who understood that sometimes good people need to disappear. These documents will get you started as Aliyah White."
I stared at the forged papers—birth certificate, social security card, even a partial work history. "Why are you doing this? He's your son."
Mercy's eyes hardened. "I've spent forty years watching the men in my family destroy everything they touch. My husband. Now Oliver." She reached out and touched my bruised wrist gently. "I won't watch him destroy you too."
The ski trip unfolded exactly as Mercy had predicted. Oliver played the devoted fiancé, all smiles and gentle touches that made my skin crawl. Violette stayed behind, claiming she didn't ski, but I caught her watching from the lodge window as we prepared for our final run of the day.
Mercy had positioned herself at the base of the slope, her wheelchair parked near the ski patrol station. When I gave her the signal—removing my red scarf and waving it overhead—she created the perfect distraction, claiming to have spotted someone in distress further down the mountain.
I had maybe three minutes while Oliver and the patrol rushed to investigate. Three minutes to strip off my distinctive blue coat and stuff it into a crevice where the avalanche would find it. Three minutes to scatter my identification and the engagement ring I'd kept as evidence. Three minutes to become someone else entirely.
The controlled avalanche was smaller than I'd hoped but devastating enough. When the snow settled, Penelope Collins was buried somewhere beneath tons of white powder, and Aliyah White was already hiking toward the road where Mercy's "friend" waited with a different car and a new life.
Nevada's desert landscape couldn't have been more different from Seattle's evergreen mountains. The classified aerospace facility sat like a mirage in the emptiness, all clean lines and purposeful angles against the endless sky. Dr. Marcus Chen barely looked up from his calculations when I introduced myself as the new satellite propulsion specialist.
"Your credentials are impressive, Ms. White," he said, finally meeting my eyes. "MIT, aerospace engineering, stellar recommendations. We need someone who can think outside conventional parameters."
I threw myself into the work with desperate intensity, as if solving navigation equations could somehow chart a course away from my nightmares. The satellite propulsion systems were elegant puzzles that demanded every ounce of my focus, leaving no room for memories of basement darkness or the phantom ache in my abdomen.
Sarah Mitchell became my first real friend in years, perhaps the first genuine friendship I'd ever had. She was brilliant, irreverent, and completely unimpressed by the male-dominated culture of the facility.
"You know what I love about space?" she said one evening as we worked late on trajectory calculations. "No one up there cares if you're a woman. Physics doesn't discriminate."
I smiled, feeling something loosen in my chest. "Just competence."
"Exactly. And you, Aliyah White, are scary competent."
By my third year, I'd published two papers on advanced spacecraft navigation that earned international attention. By my fifth, I was leading my own research team, designing systems that would guide humanity to the stars. Each achievement felt like a small victory over the people who'd tried to reduce me to nothing.
Dr. Chen called me into his office on a crisp October morning, his usually serious expression touched with something that might have been pride.
"Congratulations, Aliyah. The Pentagon wants to expand your navigation research. Full funding, unlimited resources." He paused, studying my face. "You've built something remarkable here. A reputation that stands entirely on its own merit."
I nodded, feeling the weight of those words. Penelope Collins had been someone's fiancée, someone's victim. Aliyah White was a scientist, a pioneer, a woman who belonged to no one but herself.
That night, I stood outside the facility watching satellites trace their perfect paths across the star-filled sky. Somewhere out there, my navigation systems were guiding humanity's reach toward infinity. It was more than I'd ever dared dream in my old life.
I touched the small compass necklace I'd bought myself—a reminder that I'd found my own direction at last. For five years, I'd been free. Free to think, to create, to become exactly who I was meant to be.
I had no idea that freedom was about to be tested.
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