
My Fiancé Faked His Kidnapping to Break Me
Chapter 3
The text arrives at 2:17 AM, pulling me from a nightmare where I'm drowning in coffee.
"Task 23 of 1000: Collect all physical belongings of your deceased mother. Photographs, clothing, jewelry, mementos. Take them to the alley behind 342 Mercer Street. 9 AM tomorrow. Burn everything. Film the entire process."
I read it seven times. The words don't change.
My fingers find the locket at my throat—Mom's locket—and I grip it so hard the clasp digs into the back of my neck. Not this. Anything but this.
My phone buzzes again: "Everything, Harlow. Or Anthony loses a finger. We'll send you the video."
I'm going to be sick.
---
The box sits on my bed at 8:30 AM. Cardboard, ordinary, containing everything I have left of Sarah Kennedy.
Photographs first. Mom on her wedding day, radiant in a dress she sewed herself. Mom holding newborn me, her smile tired but infinite. Mom and Oakley and me at Coney Island, cotton candy staining our faces blue. I trace her face in each one, memorizing the curve of her smile, the warmth in her eyes.
Her favorite scarf—cashmere, dove gray, still holding the ghost of her perfume after eight years. I press it to my face and breathe in, but the scent is fading, has been fading, will soon be gone entirely.
The recipe cards in her handwriting. Blueberry pancakes. Pot roast. Christmas cookies. Her letters loop and dance across the index cards, each one a small piece of her voice.
I can't do this.
But Anthony's face—bruised, bleeding, terrified—burns behind my eyelids.
I pack everything carefully. Reverently. Like I'm preparing a body for burial.
---
The alley behind 342 Mercer Street smells like rotting garbage and piss. Dumpsters line the brick walls, their metal sides tagged with graffiti. A rat scurries past my feet.
I set the box down on the cracked asphalt. My hands won't stop shaking.
My phone buzzes: "Begin. Camera on. We want to see your face."
I prop the phone against a dumpster, angle it so they can see everything. Then I pull out the lighter fluid I bought at the hardware store, the clerk's bored expression never changing as he rang it up.
The photographs go in first. I arrange them in a pile, Mom's face staring up at me from a dozen different moments. Weddings and birthdays and ordinary Tuesdays that meant nothing then and everything now.
I squeeze the lighter fluid. The chemical smell makes my eyes water—or maybe that's the tears already falling. The liquid soaks into the photographs, warping them, making Mom's face ripple and distort.
"I'm sorry," I whisper. "Mom, I'm so sorry."
The lighter sparks once. Twice. On the third try, flame catches.
The photographs curl and blacken. Mom's smile melts. Her eyes disappear into ash. The fire eats through our Coney Island trip, through her wedding day, through every captured moment of joy. Smoke rises, acrid and thick, carrying her memory into the sky where I can't follow.
I'm sobbing now, the kind of crying that steals your breath. The scarf goes next. I watch the cashmere catch, the gray turning black, the last trace of her perfume consumed by flame. The recipe cards follow—her handwriting crisping, curling, disintegrating into nothing.
Each item feels like cutting off a piece of my own body. The fire grows, fed by everything I have left of the woman who gave me life. Heat blasts my face but I don't step back. I deserve to burn too.
My phone buzzes but I ignore it. Let them watch. Let them see what they've done.
The fire burns for eleven minutes. When it dies, there's nothing left but ash and twisted metal from a picture frame. I sink to my knees in the filth of the alley, my hands black with soot, and I scream. The sound echoes off brick walls, raw and animal and broken.
My phone buzzes: "Task 23 complete. Beautiful performance, Harlow."
---
I'm still sitting in the alley at 10:15 AM when my phone rings. Not a text—a call. Oakley's name flashes across the screen.
I stare at it. Let it ring once. Twice. On the third ring, I answer.
"Harlow." His voice is sharp with concern. "Where are you? Marcus showed me footage—you were crawling through Times Square. What the hell is going on?"
My throat closes. Oakley can't know. They said no family. They're watching. Always watching.
"It's nothing." The lie tastes like ash. "Just—performance art. For a friend's project."
"Performance art." His tone could cut glass. "You were barking like a dog. You poured coffee on your head at Café Luminoso. Harlow, this isn't—"
"I said it's nothing!" I'm shouting now, my voice cracking. "Stop spying on me! Stop sending Marcus to follow me around like I'm a child!"
Silence. Then: "I'm your brother. I'm worried about you."
"Well, don't be." I grip the phone so hard my knuckles go white. "I'm fine. I'm perfectly fine. Just—leave me alone, Oakley. Please."
I hang up before he can respond. Before I break down and tell him everything. Before I beg him to save me.
My phone buzzes immediately. Not Oakley—them.
"Good girl. Task 24 arriving soon. Keep your family away, or Anthony pays the price."
I look at the pile of ash that used to be my mother's memory. The locket at my throat feels like a noose.
What have I become?
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