âFuck, fuck,â Addisonâs rocking back and forth on the bed, her legs tucked up under her as the guns continue to fire.
Men shout from the floor below us and farther down the streets outside.
âIâve never heard it last for so long,â I whisper as I peek out into the black night. I watch as each of the streetlights is hit, one by one, spraying shards of white light before fading into the darkness.
Addisonâs voice is strained and coated in worry as she asks, âWhy would they do that?â
âSo they canât see,â I tell her.
âBut then no one can see.â
âItâs a risk they decided was worth taking.â I feel the numbness flow through my blood.
âWho did it? Who shot them?â she asks me as if Iâd know.
Tires squeal in the distance and metal crashes against metal. She cries harder, falling apart and then checks her phone again. She buries her face in her knees, rocking harder.
âWe can hide in the closet,â she offers although her words are panicked, and I donât know if she means it or not. âWeâll put the clothes on top of us,â she gasps for breath and rocks again, âtheyâll open it but not see us. I used to do it when I was younger. They wonât see us. They wonât see us.â
Sheâs losing it. The way she rocks, the rapid rate with which sheâs talking and the look of terror in her eyes are clear signs. Sheâs fucking losing it.
âWe should have left,â she croaks with tears in her eyes and the numbness turns to a freezing cold along my skin.
âHe told us to leave.â
âIt was intuition, Addie,â I breathe an excuse even as the gunshots sound louder, closer, the violence making its way to the finish line.
âWhereâs Daniel?â She covers her mouth as she cries again and struggles to breathe.
I donât know what comes over me as I watch her wither away and dissolve into nothing but fear and sorrow, but my hand whips across Addisonâs face and she stares up at me in shock before slowly moving her hand to cover the bright red mark.
My hand stings and my heart lurches with the fear of hurting her and losing a friend, but I move closer to her, gripping her shoulders and staring into her eyes to tell her, âWe will not die like this.â
Her chest rises and falls with heavy breathing as she waits for me to tell her more.
âCome on,â I say and pull her wrist. âWeâre leaving,â I tell her, but she pulls away.
âHe told us to stay here,â she breathes and lets her gaze dart between the door and me.
âI donât care what Eli said.â The frustration, the anger, the terror, and lack of sleep, it all makes my body feel as if itâs on fire and like Iâm losing control, but I raise my voice to yell at her, âCome with me!â My dry throat screams in pain as I swallow and tell her, âWe need to run.â
The gunshots get louder from outside and steal our attention. Theyâre getting closer. My heart pounds in my chest and the sound of the door opening behind me makes both of us scream. Addisonâs is shrill and so sharp it nearly punctures my eardrum.
Casonâs out of breath as he makes his way toward us and says, âWeâre going to the basement.â Addison shakes her head violently, and asks the only question sheâs been praying to have an answer to, âWhereâs Daniel?â
The pang in my chest strikes hard and I feel like Iâm suffocating as I pray to know the same, but about Carter.
The phone is silent. My text to him unanswered.
Are you okay?
Itâs all I wanted to know. And he didnât answer.
âBasement. Now!â Cason yells just as bullets fly past us. The windows shatter, the small pieces raining over Addison, who covers her head with her arms and drops as far as she can forward onto the bed. I fall instantly, lying flat on the floor as I hold my breath, too afraid to move at all. Her shrill scream fills the room again as bullets ricochet and leave a trail of marks from left to right over the wall and bedroom door.
My eyes reach Cason as he stands up straight. He didnât move. He never had the chance to move. The bullet holes in his chest slowly bleed out, the bright red diffusing and spreading like watercolor paints on canvas.
âNo,â I breathe, tears pricking my eyes as his hand moves to one of the punctures at the same time as he falls to his knees. âCason!â I scream out his name and reach for him, but itâs useless.
The gunshots have stopped; it was a single string of bullets that clattered across the house. But they return again within seconds. Hitting him again in his neck and head, eyes closed before he falls to the floor.
Addison doesnât scream this time although I can hear her sobs from where I am. Reaching up for her, I pull her down and together we crawl on our stomachs under the bed.
âDaniel,â Addison cries his name over and over, her hands clasped as she prays for him to be all right.
I canât breathe. Itâs so hot and the bullets rain down with no signs of letting up for minutes. More time passes with nothing. No signs of anything and thatâs when I see the gun on the floor. Casonâs gun. As I crawl out, Addison grabs me and yells for me not to leave her. My heart lurches at the sound of a door being kicked in downstairs.
âShh,â I hush her, putting my finger over my lips and then nodding to the gun. With wide eyes, she watches me as I crawl out to get it. The cold beating in my veins picks up as the sound of a man coming up the steps gets louder and louder. The open bedroom door shows his shadow in the hall just as I reach the gun with my fingertips.
The cold metal slips in my grasp and the sound of it sliding across the floor rips my gaze up to the doorway. Without looking, I snatch the gun and Addison pulls me back under the bed.
The gun is heavy, so heavy in my hand. Addisonâs hands are covering her mouth as a shadow steps into the room. The floor creaks with the manâs weight and his black boots are splattered with blood.
I grip the gun with both hands as he takes three agonizingly slow steps closer to Casonâs body, right before kicking his shoulder over with his boot to see his face.
Bending down, I get a partial glimpse of the man as he steals Casonâs phone from his pocket. The fear is paralyzing. I canât breathe. I canât do anything.
My gaze moves to the vanity and I can see my reflection, but I can see the manâs too as he scowls down at Casonâs dead body and lifts his gun to his head.
Bang, bang!
The gun goes off and Addison jolts each time, her eyes closed tight and her hands pressing harder against her mouth.
My heart hammers, praying he didnât hear her, but it doesnât matter if he did or not, because the manâs eyes reach mine in the mirror. Cold and dark, with wrinkles that show his age. Heâs in the same black hoodie as the man I killed earlier, and I know this man is not one of my fatherâs men.
The attacks out there, I think theyâre from my father. But the men who have made it to the safe house⦠theyâre not.
Heâs quicker than me, taking a large stride and grabbing me from under the bed. His grip on my left forearm is paralyzing and I nearly drop the gun. My back scratches against the underside of the wire bedframe and the pain forces a scream from me.
My finger is on the trigger and I canât get it to go off. I pull it again and again.
âThe safety.â Addisonâs voice is hoarse, and the words pushed through clenched teeth.
He reaches down with his other hand, grabbing my other wrist and thatâs when Addison rips the gun from me and fires. The heat from the barrel of the gun singes my skin and I scream from the pain.
Bang! Bang!
She pulls the trigger again and again as my left side falls to the floor with the manâs grip nonexistent.
I can hear Addisonâs gasp and the clunk of the gun as the manâs dead white eyes stare back at me.
My hollow chest is gutted as I stare at him and then to the doorway. My heart beats too loudly to hear anything and I have to swallow and blink away the fear to grab the gun Addison dropped and point it at the door.
I lie half under the bed, half out, with a burn scorching my forearm and wait. Time passes quickly, as quickly as my blood races through my veins.
âHeâs dead,â Addison whispers a painful truth. âI killed him,â she whispers.
âShh,â I hush her, âQuiet!â
The pounding of my heart slows as I realize the man almost got me and she saved me.
âYou saved me,â I whisper with tears in my eyes although I stare straight ahead.
âI killed him,â she says back in a harsh whisper.
Itâs only then that I realize itâs silent once again. No gunshots. Not from outside and not a sound inside the house.
I listen closely and hear cars outside a few blocks down, but they arenât rushed and the tires donât squeal. Rising slowly, I nearly scream when Addison grabs my ankle.
âFuck,â I barely get out the word over the harsh beat of fear in my chest.
âIs it safe?â Addison asks, and I tell her the truth, âI donât know.â
Itâs hard to contain terror, even when thereâs no present danger. My gaze doesnât leave the doorway as I crawl to the window. Even as I rise up slowly and pull the curtain ever so softly, I donât dare take my eyes from the doorway for a few minutes longer.
No more gunshots and lights are on inside the houses that were black now. A car passes with its headlights and I see some men I recognize a street down.
âI think itâs over,â I whisper to her but still crawl to reach her. âTake the gun,â I put it in her hand and when she objects I tell her Iâm taking the dead manâs gun.
âIâm going downstairs.â With my words, Addisonâs eyes go wide and she grips my wrist with a bruising force. My breathing is still unsteady, and my heart doesnât find a normal cadence either.
âI have to make sure itâs okay. Iâm going to find Eli,â I tell her, and the mention of Eli seems to calm her down. Her cheeks are red, and tears still linger in her eyes.
âStay here,â I whisper and put my hand over hers. I squeeze it once before leaving her, crawling past the dead man, and taking his gun with me. I donât stand up until Iâm past the door. Blood coats my pajama pants from where I crawled through it. Standing outside the door and staring at the stairwell, I breathe in deeply over and over, trying to calm myself.
Small shards of glass pierce my forearms and I pick them out, wincing as I do. The pain is nothing with all the adrenaline running through me, but still, Iâm mesmerized by the bright red and the evidence of what weâve just been through.
The moment I close my eyes, a phone rings behind me.
Ring, ring and my heart shudders in my chest. A shuddering as if being brought back to life. âDaniel,â Addisonâs voice rings out clear, the moment I think Carterâs name.
My throat goes dry as I swallow and hear her tell him how worried she was.
Carter didnât call.
Itâs not Carter.
It takes everything in me to step forward. The feeling of loss runs deep in my blood and I struggle to keep it together. One heavy step after another, with the gun in my right hand and my left hand gripping the railing, I walk down the steps quietly, hearing the faint sounds of Addison from the bedroom and nothing else in the house.
I may not have felt anything for the man I killed upstairs, nothing but hate, and less than that for the other man in the same black hoodie who died earlier today, but as I stand over Eliâs dead body in the foyer, I cry.
Heavy sobs that bring me to my knees and steal the warmth from my body.
I canât breathe as my trembling fingers touch his throat, searching for a pulse, but finding none.
My feet kick out and I crawl backward, away from his body until my back hits the wall.
Covering my face in the crook of my arm, I canât stop crying.
His life was wasted on mine. Casonâs life wasted on mine.
How much death can I be responsible for, before I lose any love I could possibly have for myself?
The opening of the back door, the slamming of the knob into the wall forces me to go silent. I hold my breath and crawl to the other corner as the footsteps quicken.
âFuck, no,â Danielâs voice carries into the foyer as he reaches Eli. âShit,â he breathes the word with true mourning before his heavy footsteps hit the stairs.
âAddison!â he cries out her name as my head hits the wall and my breath comes in staggered, sharp pulls.
The back door is still open, the wind carries through the house and the cool air calls to me like a siren.
Iâm numb as I stand and make my way to the door, with trees lining the back of the yard, itâs pitch black, but I can see thereâs no one here.
Thereâs nothing here.
Nothing but the dark and the quiet as I take a single step out. And then another as the cold flows over my skin. And another.
The thoughts of how life has spiraled downward ever since I laid eyes on Carter Cross run through my mind. Or maybe ever since he laid eyes on me. Itâs hard to know which, really.
The thoughts consume me as I breathe in the cold air.
The thoughts⦠and then the hard chest that slams my back into it and the large hand that covers my mouth as I scream.