Say It's Forever (Redemption Hills #2)(93)



His words, not hers.

She was second guessing that decision right then.

Chills scattered when she heard the voices coming from his office at the back.

She edged that way, quietly…so quietly.

Not because of the way the voices were lifted. But because of the way they were controlled.

She made it to Carlo’s office door that was cracked open an inch. Her heart battered at her ribs as she heard his words curl through the air, “You had a second chance. You were warned, were you not?”

His tone was casual and cruel.

Condescending.

She peeked through the slit left in the door.

Her entire being stuttered. Coiled and locked.

A man was on his knees in front of Carlo’s desk. His hands were bound behind his back and a gun was to his head.

Carlo sat behind the desk, an elbow propped on the arm of the chair and the side of his head rested against his fingers. As if he were more annoyed than anything else.

As if this were common.

An everyday problem to be dealt with.

“Carlo, please,” the man begged.

Carlo shook his head. “You know the rules. You had your second chance. You failed.”

Salem jolted when the shot rang out. Her hand flew to her mouth to stop the scream that raced her throat and fought to make its way out.

Tears blinded her eyes.

Heavy and horrified.

Her heart screamed.

Her stomach soured.

Her still flat stomach that she clutched like she could keep the child safe.

She had to.

She had to.

“Clean this mess up,” Carlo ordered, and footsteps began to thud.

She pressed herself behind the partition. Hid. Stifled her cries.

And when it was clear, Salem ran.





A scream tore up Salem’s throat as she was tossed to the floor of Talia’s apartment where she’d sought refuge until she knew where she was going to go. She tumbled then scrambled around to sitting, holding her knees to her chest.

Violently, she shook.

Shook and shook.

Carlo treaded forward on his shiny dress shoes.

He knelt in front of her, tilted her chin up with the tip of the knife.

The blade gleamed in the slivers of light that burned through the room.

“Salem.” He tsked. “Why so foolish?”

“I…I—” She couldn’t find the words.

A reason to give.

A purpose other than the one that she had to get away from there.

Whatever the cost.

“Did you see what you made me do?”

He gestured to Talia’s body slumped in the middle of the room where her best friend had bled out. Agony clutched Salem’s spirit. Horror and guilt and hate.

How could he?

She squeezed her eyes closed as if she could block it.

“Such a shame.” He tipped her chin up higher. The tip pierced her skin the barest fraction.

She suppressed a scream, though her body still shuddered.

“I thought you were smarter than that, no?”

A whimper got free.

He clicked his tongue, and she shrieked when he suddenly took her by the hair and yanked her to standing. He hauled her to the middle of the room and forced her to look down where Talia lay. He was behind her when he hauled her back against his chest, the knife at her throat. “I warned you not to waste my time with ridiculous antics. I was worried…searching everywhere for you…for two days, Salem. How could you put me through that?”

“I’m sorry.” It rocked from her throat.

“You’re lucky I believe in second chances, Salem. You get one,” he warned in her ear.

Then he gripped her by the chin and dragged the knife up her jaw.

Blinding pain seared through her being as he cut deep into her flesh.

Her head spun and the world canted to the side.

Blackness flickered at the edges of her sight.

Still, she heard the warning before passing out on the floor. “It’s the last one you get. I suggest you don’t forget it.”





TWENTY-NINE





JUD





I’d often wondered the day the demon was born.

If who I’d become had purely been a circumstance of my upbringing. If it was due to my mother’s fear when we’d been little boys, the way she’d tried to shield and protect, all while her cries would seep through the walls at night, fill my ears, and make me be the one who wanted to shield and protect her. The way she’d promised she’d find a way out, that everything would be better, until the day all four of us had to stand and watch as she’d been brutally mowed down.

If it’d manifested that day into abounding rage and eternal hate.

Possibly it’d bloomed in my blood the day I was conceived, and the wickedness of my father had been passed on to me.

Or maybe it had already been a piece of my soul, grabbing a free ride when I’d been plucked from Hell to walk this Earth.

I was betting on the latter right then.

Because fury had taken up residence at the base of my throat. Wrath was the only thing I could taste. Bitter venom on my tongue because God knew, the vengeance itching at my hands was sharp as a blade.

I didn’t think I’d ever felt more helpless than I had yesterday afternoon.

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