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Midnight Purgatory (Bugrov Bratva #1)(127)

Author:Nicole Fox

I look unhinged. Hair flying everywhere, eyes wide and desperate, mouth parted in a heaving inhale. In that same reflection, I see one of my captors pull a rag from his pocket and bring it toward my mouth.

“No…”

But it doesn’t matter what I want anymore. He presses it over my face and that chloroform stench invades my senses. My stomach throbs with pain and my last half-formed thought before I see darkness is, My baby…

63

ALYSSA

Everything hurts.

My arms and legs are stinging in a thousand places. My head is aching and my gut roils uncomfortably. Even blinking my eyes hurts.

It’s dark wherever I am, but after a few minutes, my vision adjusts to the darkness just enough to confirm that all my limbs hurt because I’ve been tied to this bed.

There’s nothing to see in here—bare concrete walls, water-stained ceiling—apart from a second bed with a dark lump on it. “P-Polly?” I get only a whimper in response but she’s starting to take shape and I’m pretty sure it’s her. “Polly, it’s me. Alyssa.”

“A-Alyssa… where are we?”

Suddenly, my pain feels so much less important. All I can think about is Polly, tied up like I am, terrified and helpless.

“I don’t know, sweetheart.”

“The same people that took L-Lev… they took u-u-us… oh God…”

“Hey, Pol,” I say softly, using the same voice I use with Lev, “I need you to take a deep breath and concentrate on my voice, okay? We need to stay calm.”

She lets out another couple of sobs, but slowly, she finds the rhythm of her breathing. It still shudders, but it’s less soaked with fear than it was a moment ago.

I blink and a tear slips down my cheek. I remind myself to take my own advice. Breathe. After a couple of breaths, my own inhales and exhales even out.

“We’re going to get out of this.”

“Is that another promise?”

“It’s a hope and a prayer all wrapped up in one.”

“I don’t believe in prayers. They don’t come true unless you make it happen.”

I laugh tearily. “That sounds like something Uri would say.”

“Actually, it is what he says. I used to hear that all the time from him when I was growing up.”

I nod. “It’s hard to believe in a higher power when you’ve lost people you love early in life. I had a crisis of faith when I was a teenager.”

“What happened when you were a teenager?”

I didn’t intend to talk about Ziva. I mean, I never consciously intend to talk about Ziva—but I’m also realizing that talking about her doesn’t feel quite as impossible as it used to. I wonder when that happened. “I lost my sister when I was seventeen. We were twins.”

“Oh my God.” Polly straightens up as much as her restraints will allow. The moonlight through the window is falling on her in slanting beams, casting half her face in a pearly white glow. “That must have been rough.”

“I’m thinking no rougher than losing your parents at… How old were you?”

She chews on the inside of her cheek. “Seven.”

“Do you remember them?”

“Parts of them,” Polly admits. “I remember Mama tucking me into bed at night. I remember Papa swinging me in the air and carrying me on his shoulders. But sometimes…” She sighs. “Sometimes, I’m not sure if I’m remembering my dad or if I’m remembering Uri.” The unshed tears sparkle in the gloom. “He replaced a lot of memories for me. There are days when I don’t know if that’s a good thing or not.”

“Are they happy memories?”

“Yes.”

“Then it’s a good thing.”

She smiles sadly. “How did your sister die?”

“Cancer. She was diagnosed with leukemia right after we turned sixteen. It was a rough year and a half.”

“I know this might sound… bad… but at least you got to say goodbye, y’know?”

I swallow the acrid taste in my mouth. “You’d think so. But that’s the thing about death: even if you can see it coming, you’re not really prepared. I spent a lot of that year and a half refusing to believe anything anyone told me. I guess I was hoping that Ziva would beat the odds. I convinced her to keep fighting, to continue chemo because I honestly believed she could recover. I thought I was championing her. But really… I was just in denial.”

“You had hope,” she offers. “I get that. Uri was my hope, you know. I think I slept next to him for the whole first year after Mama and Papa died. When I woke up with nightmares, he’d lift me into his arms and carry me around the room until I could breathe again. Or if I couldn’t go back to sleep, he’d sing to me.”