
Mafia's Bloody Wife
Chapter 2
The basement door slammed shut above us with a finality that made my heart stop. The sound echoed through the stone chamber like a gunshot, followed by the scrape of something heavy being dragged across the floor—blocking our only exit.
"No, no, no," I whispered, my voice barely audible over the sound of my own thundering pulse.
Kasha's laughter was like broken glass as she and Peter maneuvered me toward the rusted iron cage in the corner. The thing looked like it belonged in a medieval dungeon, its bars thick with decades of corrosion and salt air. Heavy ship chains snaked around its base, anchoring it to iron rings bolted into the stone wall.
"The old fog signal cage," Peter said conversationally, as if he were giving a tour. "They used to lock the lighthouse keeper's supplies in here during storms. Amazing how well it's held up."
My wedding dress caught on the cage's rough edges as they shoved me inside. The beautiful lace that had belonged to my mother—the dress I'd dreamed of wearing since I was a little girl—tore with a sound like a dying breath. I stumbled, my hands scraping against the rusted metal as I tried to catch myself.
The cage door clanged shut with a sound that reverberated through my bones. A heavy padlock clicked into place, sealing my fate.
"The tide comes in fast here," Kasha said, crouching down to meet my eyes through the bars. Her face was illuminated by the kerosene lamp, making her look like a demon wearing my mother's dress. "In about an hour, this whole basement will be underwater. The lake doesn't give up its dead easily."
I pressed myself against the back of the cage, my mind reeling. This couldn't be happening. This was supposed to be the happiest day of my life. I was supposed to be dancing with my new husband, cutting cake, laughing with friends and family. Instead, I was trapped like an animal, watching the two people I'd trusted most in the world prepare to murder me.
"Why?" The word came out as barely more than a whisper.
Peter's expression didn't change. "Nothing personal, Anna. Just business. The insurance money will set us up nicely, and Kasha deserves to be a Novak wife more than you ever did."
"She understands the family," Kasha added, standing and smoothing down the stolen wedding dress. "She knows what it means to fight for what you want. You were just handed everything on a silver platter."
They turned to leave, taking the lamp with them. The basement plunged into near-total darkness, broken only by thin shafts of dying daylight filtering through cracks in the foundation.
"Sweet dreams, Anna," Kasha called over her shoulder.
Their footsteps faded up the stairs, leaving me alone with the sound of my own ragged breathing and the distant crash of waves against the lighthouse's foundation. I could already smell the dampness in the air, feel the subtle change in pressure that meant the tide was turning.
Panic clawed at my throat, but I forced myself to think. There had to be a way out. There was always a way out.
My fingers found the rose-shaped hairpin my mother had worn on her own wedding day—the one I'd insisted on wearing for luck. The steel was tarnished but still strong, its pointed end sharp enough to work as a makeshift lock pick.
I fumbled with the padlock in the darkness, my hands shaking so badly I could barely hold the pin steady. The mechanism was old and corroded, the tumblers sticky with rust and salt. I worked frantically, sweat beading on my forehead despite the basement's chill.
A metallic snap echoed through the cage. The hairpin had broken off in the lock.
"No!" I screamed, pulling at the padlock with my bare hands until my palms were raw and bleeding. It didn't budge.
That's when I felt the first touch of water against my feet.
The lake was seeping through cracks in the foundation, just as Kasha had promised. The water was shockingly cold, like liquid ice that seemed to burn my skin. Within minutes, it had risen to my ankles, then my calves.
Desperation gave way to a primal survival instinct I didn't know I possessed. I searched the cage frantically, my hands exploring every inch of the rusted interior. In the far corner, my fingers found something loose—a copper pipe that had once been part of the lighthouse's old plumbing system. Time and corrosion had weakened its mounting, and I was able to work it free with a series of sharp jerks that sent shockwaves of pain through my shoulders.
The water was at my knees now, soaking through the layers of my wedding dress and making the heavy fabric cling to my legs like a burial shroud. I could feel the current tugging at me, trying to pull me toward the lake's hungry depths.
I wedged the copper pipe between the links of the ship chain and began to pry with everything I had. The metal groaned and protested, but it was old, weakened by decades of exposure to the elements. My knuckles split open against the rough iron, blood mixing with the rising water, but I didn't stop.
Above me, I heard footsteps again. Peter's voice drifted down through the ceiling: "Just splash it around and get out. We need to be back at the reception before anyone notices we're gone."
The acrid smell of kerosene grew stronger, seeping through the floorboards. My stomach lurched as I realized what they were doing. They weren't content to let me drown—they were going to burn the lighthouse down around me, destroying any evidence of what had happened here.
I threw my full weight against the copper pipe, using it as a lever. One of the chain links began to stretch, the metal singing under the strain. The water was at my waist now, its icy grip stealing the feeling from my legs.
"Come on," I whispered through gritted teeth. "Come on!"
Above me, I heard the strike of a match.
The lighthouse exploded into flame with a sound like the world ending. The fire moved faster than Peter had anticipated, racing along the kerosene trails with a hungry roar. Heat began to radiate through the floorboards, and smoke started seeping into the basement.
With a final, desperate heave that felt like it might tear my arms from their sockets, I snapped the weakened link. The cage lurched free from its anchor point, and I immediately began pushing it toward the deeper water, using the rising lake as a shield against the growing inferno above.
But as I shoved the heavy iron box into the water, the trailing end of the broken chain whipped around my ankle like a living thing. The weight of it dragged me down, the metal links biting deep into my flesh as the cage sank toward the flooded basement floor.
The last thing I saw before the dark water closed over my head was the orange glow of flames dancing across the ceiling, turning my mother's wedding dress into a ghostly beacon in the depths.
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