âOh my, donât you clean up nicely?â
A strangerâs voice stops my hand at mid-stroke; a fluffy makeup brush with a sprinkle of pink powder hovering over my cheekbone.
But itâs not a strangerânot quite.
Masten.
Ruth snuck back home at sunrise, only achieving an hour of sleep. She didnât want her parents to wake and find her bed empty. If she were still here, I might not be so afraid.
Masten has planted himself on the edge of my bed, watching me as I carefully apply a subtle amount of shadows and colors at my vanity. In the reflection of my mirror, I see his face over my shoulder. His hair is the same glossy-black shade of Aurickâs, but longer with gentle curls at the ends and tousled in gelled strands for a messy middle part. He wears his long black topcoat and holds that cane with the wolfâs-head handle.
What is he doing in my bedroom?
I donât dare make another move.
âI brought you a spot of morning tea,â he offers as if it is a white flag. âI was hoping for a quick chat with you.â
I stare at his hand, holding the white cup of tea, and shake my head. I watch him set it down casually. Iâve learned to never accept tea from those who threaten me. Ever.
âIs this quick chat similar to the last one we had?â I ask carefully. Where is Aurick?
He chuckles, raising his eyebrows like weâre sharing an inside joke.
âI hope not. But I was wondering if youâd be so kind to take off work today? Perhaps spend time with me. I do feel as though we have started off on the wrong foot.â
I turn around at this. What is his motive now?
âAnd why do you think that is?â I ask, squishing my tongue between my teeth to keep from grinding them.
He holds his hands up as if Iâm about to strike him. âI know, I know. I was hardly a gentleman. But Iâd appreciate the chance to make that up to you.â His sapphire-blue eyes sparkle in the orange morning sun, flaring through the curtains of the window.
His tone is tranquil now, sober, and without hard edges. His pleading gaze makes me want to give in, accept his non-apology and start over. But like the thunder of Dessinâs cautious voice, I have a strong, persistent hand pulling me away from the notion. A thud in my gut begging me to not fall for the chivalrous ocean eyes.
âIâd like to butâ¦â
Heâs standing now, a hand like a feather landing on my shoulder. âI think we owe it to Aurick. I am his oldest friend, and you are his newest friend. Donât you think it wise to be on the same side?â
âSkylenna!â Aurick hollers from his study. âEmerald Lake called for you. They need you in immediately.â
I release a long, shuddering breath. Thank God. Relief loosens the knots building between my shoulder blades.
Mastenâs eyes droop, a theatrical frown animating his mouth.
âAnother time, then?â
I smile politely but am hesitant to answer. Iâd rather not be pressured by him again. I need to remember to keep my door locked at all times.
Once he takes the hint and starts to exit my bedroom, he stops in the doorway, and without looking back at me, he says. âYou look nothing like her. In case you were wondering.â
~
Judas waits for me on the front steps of Emerald Lake, watching my buggy pull in across the gravel driveway.
He hurries me inside, doing his best to explain that Dessin had an outburst, somethingâtheyâre not sure whatâsent him into a ferocious rage. Suseas took the liberty of arranging a treatment she finds to be highly effective on him. Judas warns me that they have only seen him like this on two separate occasions. When he was first admitted four years agoâhe burst through the front doors covered in blood, terrorizing the staff until they locked him in a roomâcompletely isolatedâfor seven days. The second time was only a few months ago; he destroyed his room and ripped out the plumbing in his washroom.
âYou have never seen him like this,â Judas says quietly, opening the doors to the intricate section. âI want you to be prepared.â
Like stepping into a war zone, the grunts of a grown man ripple down the hallway, ricocheting off the walls like a blast wave from a bomb. His howls are muffled, enclosed in the thirteenth room. I throw both heels off and sprint to him. Panic ripping into my chest when I recognize the groans to be Dessinâs voice, roaring deep in his chest, like a lion. I see orderlies hovering around his door, I wave them aside, and they thank me with looks of relief. The door clicks, and I shove it open with all my weight.
I choke on a gasp, taking in an image that twists my gut.
Suseas stands to the side of a long table, controlling a machine connected to Dessinâs ears with small black earmuffs. A cream-colored tin box with black knobs that Suseasâs hands shift up and down. Dessinâs ankles, legs, stomach, arms, wrists, and head are strapped down. With a wooden stick between his teeth, he howls again, flexing his entire body under the restraints, causing his muscles to swell around the straps like a large body of water being held back by a dam.
I launch myself forward, climbing on top of Dessinâs writhing body, straddling his hips as I rip off the black ear muffs that seem to be the source of his pain.
âStop! What are you doing?!â Suseas shrieks at me.
A force like a speeding train bulldozes me off of the table, throwing me to the floor like a train blasting through a spiderweb. An orderly falls on top of me, his meaty weight pumping the air from my lungs, leaving me breathless and in shock. My eyes shoot open, leaking tears of panic as I struggle to gasp in the oxygen I need to move again. But the orderly holds me down, clamping his sweaty hands down over my forearms. And just over his shoulder, Dessin stares at me, eyes wide, suddenly awake and alert. Much like a grenade before it detonates, thereâs a beat of silence, and the dark steam behind his lethal expression sparks into a flame that lights the fuse. Voices murmur in the background as Dessinâs right arm tears through the restraints and he untangles himself to freedom. Two guards barrel into him, holding him against the wall, but his eyes fall back to me, and I bear witness to the emotions shaking from his insides, pressurizing before they burst out of him. A volcano.
The guard holding me down goes to help, only to fall to the ground with his hands making a steeple over his bloodied nose.
Fast and with undeniable precision, Dessin twists an orderlyâs arm around his back, and much like the time he snapped my assailantâs neck, another loud crack pops from the orderly. One with a broken nose, and now one with a broken arm. Dessin punches the third one in the jaw, and with a momentâs pause, blood drips from his mouth.
I scream as the air refills my lungs. I jump to my feet, shuffle around the table, and throw myself between Dessin and the orderly. Dessin blinks furiously as I push him against the wall, his eyebrows cocked upward, making no effort to hide his surprise at my intervention. But he doesnât hurt me. Does not push me out of the way.
His chest is moving wildly under my hands with a loss of breath. I question if it is from the fight, the rage, or my hand touching his chest.
âPlease, stop,â I plead. His fiery gaze bounces back and forth between each of my eyes, and his jaw grinds Heâs probably still in some sort of pain from whatever they were doing to him.
I stare at him another moment and recognize the panic in his eyes. When I was four years old, my father brought me to the red oaks, and we swam in the lagoon below. I wandered off on my own in the water and decided to swim as deep to the bottom as I could. I didnât get far before I ran out of air, and me being only a little girl, I panicked. Before I could inhale the water, my father pulled me out and threw me onto a rock to make sure I didnât drown. I spit out the water Iâd swallowed and began to cry hysterically. The look I saw in his eyes was the same look I see in Dessinâs.
âIâm okay. Iâm okay. Iâm not hurt,â I whisper, placing my hand over the side of his face. The sting of hatred is muted for a moment in his glossy-brown eyes, then replaced with pain. His head falls back against the wall in defeat.
âWhat happened?â I growl at Suseas.
âWe donât know. It happened so suddenly. He started throwing things around in here, yelling, and pounding on the walls. When we tried to calm him down, he went ballistic and kept telling us to âleave her alone!ââ I look back at Dessin, who just stares at me, unyielding in his supreme knowledge.
âWhat were you doing to him? Why was he in so much pain?â
âWe used a radiation mobilization on him until you came.â
I step toward her and try to remain calm. âI need you to leaveâ¦Â now.â I enunciate each word, each syllable, carefully, as if I am speaking to a child. But on the inside, Iâm unhinged like a wounded animal. Seeing him howling in pain conjured a feeling Iâve never come close to feeling. I wanted to hurt them. To strap them in and watch them suffer. They hurt him. And that struck me like a bat to the cheek.
Suseas leaves with the severely wounded guardsâno objections, no farewells. Dessin slides down the wall I pushed him against, adjacent to his bed that is flipped over on its side. Unbolted from the concrete.
He sighs. Eyes closed. I sit down on the floor, trying to pull my uniform down as much as possible. This feels like the time when he took me to the basement when I tried so hard to break through his steel armor. That feels like a lifetime ago.
âWho were you talking about?â I ask.
âDid he hurt you?â He scans my face with his eyes.
I shake my head. âNo, he just knocked the air out of me. Iâll live.â But apparently, Iâve answered his question incorrectly. He just nods and smiles as if Iâm living in another world. Like Iâm the one institutionalized.
âSuseas said you were yelling âleave her alone.â Who did you mean?â
He contemplates lying for a momentâI can tell by the way he lifts a brow a single millimeter in amusement. Then answers vaguely. âI had a visitor.â
â
â I say. âYou arenât allowed to have visitors other than me.â
He rolls his eyes at this. âPerhaps youâve underestimated a higher power.â
âLike Martin?â
Dessin wrinkles his brow and grimaces like what Iâve said has insulted him. âCertainly not. That sweaty bastard would likely piss himself before facing me again.â
I push my fingers against my lips and let out a sound I havenât heard since I was young and small. It hums pleasantly from my chest, tickling its way up my throat.
Immediately his eyes meet mine, stretching wide, eyebrows arched to the sky.
And now he is grinning.
âYou laughed,â he says, flustered with levity.
I look down, smiling. I forgot how good it felt to actually laugh, release the built-up tension from my chest. âYes, I did.â
âThat wasâincredible.â His eyes soften. âYou know I havenât heard thatâwell, itâs a pleasant change from your constant frowning.â
âWhy?â I twist my fingers in a loose strand of hair. âEveryone laughs.â
âNot you,â he argues. âNot genuinely, at least. You force it or donât have the urge to let it out at all.â I think about this. Heâs right. My world has clipped my urge to laugh, darkening my thoughts, dimming that airy tickle that rises like a gentle summer breeze in the back of my throat. Laughing is hard when youâre always fighting the urge to keep from crying.
I look back up at him to find that heâs watching me, dark eyes searing into my soul. My heart takes a tumble in my chest.
âWhat was wrong with you earlier?â I change the subject.
He bites his bottom lip curiously. âHas Aurick ever heard you laugh?â
Iâm not sure. He may have caught a brief chuckle. But a full-on, belly-deep laugh is hard to come by.
âThatâs irrelevant,â I answer.
âIt will be when you start to see what I see.â
âPlease answer my question,â I beg. What was his breakdown about? What was the trigger?
âHow about we make a little deal?â he suggests, waving his hand in the air.
âDepends on the deal.â
Dessin moves closer. âStay here with me. Just for tonight.â
âWhyâ¦
â I ask, leaning back, hesitant to fall into another game, even though it intrigues me, sending every nerve surging through my brain with excitement. He grabs my arms to pull me closer.
âSkylenna, I wouldnât ask you if it wasnât important. Pleaseâdonât leave.â I start to shake my head. âAt least not until youâre sure Aurick went to bed.â
âI canât. Iâm already in the doghouse from the last two times you had me stay out dark.â
âHeâs getting stricter now?â His eyes narrow, and he has to take a moment to process.
âYes.â I donât want to share how Masten was in my bedroom before I left this morning. I still donât understand his motives.
âLook at me.â He tilts my chin up so that I can see the urgency in his eyes. âDo you trust me?â I donât have to think about this. I nod with confidence.
âThen hereâs the deal. You stay with me tonight without contacting Aurick. And Iâll tell you something youâve been dying to know.â One by one, every muscle that holds me up hardens to iron.
âIf I stay with you, youâll tell me a part of your story that made you who you are today â I canât even breathe correctly. Iâm stunned, in total disbelief. Whatever happened to him all of those years ago to make him the way he is today, I will know before anyone.
He nods. Itâs not something I have to consider. I will face Aurick when this is over and accept the consequences. At the very least, Iâll stand up to him, knowing this was all worth it.
I want to know whatâs in Dessinâ
âIf you tell me a piece of your story, I will tell you a piece of mine.â
I freeze up. âIâve already told you everything there is to know.â
He shakes his head. âI want you to tell me what youâve told no one before.â He narrows his focus. âI want you to tell me what happened to you. I want you to tell me about your father. I know there is a far more despairing story for you to share with me. I wonât ask that of you just yet. But I will ask about your father.â
I suck in a weak breath. âDessin, I donâtâ¦â
He takes my hand in his. âIâll only tell if you will.â We stare each other down, waiting for the other to yield or merely confirming that neither of us will. I blink first and look away.
âOkay.â An unsteady rush of air fills my chest as quickly as it rushes out. Iâve stored these memories in a prisonâtheyâve been locked up, restrained from moving, frozen in time and space so they can do little to no damage from where they sit. I meant to keep them there the rest of my life.