I lift a hand to my head. My fingers tremble as they traverse this alien territory.
He’s cut off at least a foot of my hair. It falls just past my ears now, the edges jagged.
“Ha!” Brit cackles. “Not so pretty anymore.”
Belov turns and walks out of the room without another word, but the she-devil stays.
I crawl back until my spine hits the wall just beneath the barred window. The dingy light comes through the thick slats and lands on Brit, illuminating her as she moves towards me. She drops to her hands and knees and comes in so close that I can see the blue lines radiating out from her irises.
She’s as beautiful as she is terrifying. An angel of death, sent to torture me and me alone.
Her hand lashes out and tightens around my neck. My mouth opens, but this time I can’t scream because she’s blocking my windpipe. It’s not the first time she’s made me fear for my life since I was locked in here. But judging by the look in her eyes, it might be the last.
Then something weird happens.
Her other hand finds mine. Our entwined fingers are squeezed against her chest, and I feel something cold and metal settle into my closed fist.
“The walls have eyes. At eleven o’clock tonight, they’ll close,” she says in a soft, accentless voice I don’t recognize. “When you see a light at the window, use this key to get out.”
What?
Her fingers curl around my hand, pressing the key inside my palm so hard I think it will fuse with my skin. Then she backs away and gets to her feet.
“It’s going to be fun breaking you into little pieces,” she sneers, her voice once again sharp and acidic.
Then she turns and leaves.
I stare after her, gasping. But I don’t dare look at the new weight resting in my left palm. I’m too scared to.
The walls have eyes. At eleven o’clock tonight, they’ll close.
This is a game. It has to be.
She’s taunting me with freedom. If I bite, they’ll pull me back into this cell and torture me some more. These people—her, Belov—they play mind games. This is a trick. I know it.
But what if it isn’t?
I spend the next seven hours veering between wild hope and panicked fear. I pace despite the fact that I have no strength left in my body. When my tray of food appears, I force myself to eat every morsel. If this is an opportunity for freedom, I can’t waste it. I have to gather what little energy I have left.
As the little daylight I can see through the bars fades and then disappears entirely, I find myself drawn more and more to the window.
If there’s no light like she said there would be, I promise myself I will abandon this futile hope and get into my bed. I’ll try to sleep. To prepare myself for another day of torture and mind games.
My cell grows dim, and then full dark. I sit and wait. My eyes go blurry as I search for the light, but my lips keep moving soundlessly as I repeat the words she said to me.
The walls have eyes. At eleven o’clock tonight, they’ll close. When you see a light at the window, use this key to get out.
The walls have eyes. At eleven o’clock tonight, they’ll close.
The walls have eyes.
The walls—
There.
There it is.
The light.
Trick or not, this is my chance. Maybe my only chance. I turn towards the door and uncurl my hand, stiff from being clenched into a fist for so long. The key is warm against my palm.
When I slide it into the keyhole, it fits beautifully. It doesn’t make a sound as I turn it.
I half expect Brit and Belov to be standing on the other side, waiting to dole out their punishment with glee. But there’s nothing and no one but darkness.
The thin, pointed windows remind me of an old gothic castle. I follow the tracks of light that spill out onto the floor until I come to a door that appears to be a dead end.
I glance at the key again. Will it open every door I encounter?
But before I can figure out my next move, the door opens. I jump back as a woman walks towards me. For a moment, I assume the feminine figure emerging is Brit, and my heart leaps into my throat.
But then I realize that this woman is much shorter and much plainer. Her eyes land on me.
Come, she mouths.
I follow her silently through the house. When we make it outside, I inhale deeply. I haven’t been outside in a week. There’s so much air I feel light-headed.
I’m doing my best not to think about how or why this is happening, or what might be coming for me next.
I know in my heart it’s Leo. It has to be. There’s no other person on earth who has this kind of power, this kind of reach. He’s the puppet master, the man pulling all the strings.