“I know what you know,” she snaps. “She went to Crown Point Ballet. She’s been paranoid about someone following her for months, but no one did anything. We couldn’t prove it.”
I growl. “This isn’t helping.”
“You’re the obsessive one,” she argues. “Don’t you have some way of finding her? You’re psychotic enough to plant a tracker under her skin. Didn’t think of that, did you?”
Well, there’s a fucking thought. An idea I should’ve had already.
“I’ll track her phone again.” Even as I say it, I’m doubtful it’ll work. I last checked less than an hour ago. In fact, I’ve repeatedly checked when I felt my mind fraying.
Willow creeps closer as I pull up the app and try to ping Violet’s location.
Sure enough, a blue dot appears in the middle of fucking nowhere. Her location shows as having only just updated twenty minutes ago. At four o’clock in the morning.
“Oh my god,” Willow breathes.
I glance at her. “You recognize where this is?”
“On the edge of a state park. There’s just one road in or out.”
Good. “Call the cops,” I order her. I storm out the door, my keys clenched in my hand. I don’t know that I’ve ever been so strung up, the need to get to her so badly. Not even when I realized she was with my father.
I get all the way to my truck when I realize it’s a little tilted to one side. I circle it, and my heart stops. Two of my tires are cut, the front and back on the passenger side. Flat all the way down to the rim.
Someone cut them, but I don’t have time to throw a fit about it.
I go back inside and lift Erik’s keys off one of the hooks by the door. He’s still out searching with Jacob, the two of them checking the library—again—while Knox and Steele are checking her and Willow’s apartment.
Erik will be mad as hell that I took his car, but I can deal with that later. Before I get in, I grab the crowbar out of the back of mine. My heart is beating out of my chest by the time I make it out onto the road. I grip my phone in one hand, the steering wheel in the other.
Twenty minutes later, I’m bumping down a narrow dirt lane. My headlights swing wildly against the trees pressing in, and I spare a thought about turning them off. To sneak. It doesn’t really matter—the sun has risen, casting the forest in streams of golden light.
Plus, I’ve never snuck up on anything—and I’m not about to start now. As bull-headed as it may be, I don’t give a fuck.
Violet’s stalker has nothing on me.
The road finally dead ends at a log cabin. There’s a porch light on, and a dog immediately rises to attention from its spot on the porch. It snarls at me, drool dripping from its mouth. No car, though. Nothing to indicate anyone is actually here.
Maybe it’s a dead end.
But I recheck the tracker on her phone, and it has mine practically on top of hers. Sure enough, I spot the slim phone on the porch step. Like it was waiting for me.
I eye the dog, but it doesn’t move when I climb the steps up onto the leaning porch. The boards are loose under my feet. The dog seems to be chained to the house far enough away as to not impede the people coming and going.
Vicious thing. The growl that comes out of it is steady and low, a warning that doesn’t explode until I grasp the handle.
I shove the door open and raise the crowbar, ready to attack. Not sure what I’m going to find—and terrified that I’m going to see Violet dead. Or hurt.
The room is a mess. All the furniture has been shoved aside, leaving an empty expanse in the middle. There’s a lingering smell of rot, like stagnant water and mold under a heavy artificial pine scent.
I keep the crowbar up and step farther inside. The door creaks as it drifts closed behind me.
Then I see her.
She’s curled on the floor off to the side, next to a stereo speaker. Someone draped an ugly blanket over her, obscuring her form.
I rush to her side and fling the blanket off, running my hands over her body. Checking for damage, I guess. I don’t know.
She’s still breathing. And she moans when I shake her shoulder.
Blue and red lights slip in through the partially open door, and the dog barks in earnest. I drop the crowbar and tip my head back, letting out a disbelieving laugh. I fucking hate the police. The last time I saw their lights, I was arrested.
Of course, I deserved it back then.
I cup the back of Violet’s neck and pull her halfway into my lap. “Wake up, baby,” I urge.
She blinks up at me, her expression going from sleep to surprise in an instant. She reaches for me, and I curl my hand around hers.
“I’ve got you.”
Then the police swarm inside.
57
VIOLET
“The cabin has been abandoned for almost thirty years,” the police detective says. He’s sitting in the chair beside my hospital bed, a pen poised over his notepad. “And you’re saying your captor never showed their face?”
I look away. I’ve been claiming memory loss due to the drugs, but it’s officially all out of my system. I’ve been in the hospital for two days, for no other reason than Grey is worried and demanded the best care for me.
But this detective, a guy named Samuel Beck, is persistent.
“We found a trapdoor in the kitchen,” he says. “And a hidden room where we found your clothes. A cuff and chain attached to the wall. There’s no doubt someone was holding you against your will, Ms. Reece. We just need you to give us a name.”
I open my mouth and close it. My chest constricts, and my heart rate on the monitor picks up speed. I catch the increasing numbers out of the corner of my eye as my body reacts to the panic.
I can’t tell him. Mia will kill Grey. I don’t doubt it.
It was too easy. Grey found me from my phone, which Mia had left on the porch like a freaking beacon.
Maybe she knew that help would be on the way and she didn’t want to be caught with me. Her warning rings in my ears, her voice loud and grating. If I tell anyone it was her, she’ll kill Greyson.
After Grey was let off the hook so easily, I find it hard to believe Mia will go to prison and stay there. Not if she has the right people on her side.
“Violet,” Beck tries, drawing my focus back to him. “We can protect you.”
Someone knocks on the door to my room, and the detective jumps to his feet.
“Give us a minute, Sam.” Senator Devereux steps inside. He shoots him a bland smile.
My stomach turns. Greyson had to go to class. School has resumed, spring break officially over. I’ve got a doctor’s note to miss another week, and the professors all sent messages that they’d help me catch up when I return.
So it’s just me.
The senator takes a look around the room and plucks a card off one of the flower arrangements. “From Shawn Meridian,” he reads. “He choreographs for ballet companies, no?”
I don’t answer.
He sighs and sets it aside, then stops next to my bed. “How are you feeling?”
“You care?” My brows furrow.
“I had a conversation with my son that has led me here,” he says. “Do I care? About you? Not particularly. I don’t care about much except my own flesh and blood.”