This is the last place I ever expected to walk into with my own feet.
But now that I think about it, the reunion was meant to happen sooner or later.
Thereâs too much black water between us, and I was never going to move on without having this confrontation.
The security Jonathan has following me around is waiting outside. I have no doubt that they called him, so I donât have much time before he barges in here and drags me back home.
The room Iâm in is sterile with bland grey walls. A few armed guards stand at the corners and cameras blink from every angle possible. Prior to coming inside, I was searched thoroughly and even got sniffed at by dogs. This is what it feels like to be the offspring of a dangerous criminal and to carry his sins on my shoulders.
A large glass with a few holes separates me from him as I sit facing the man I once called Daddy. The man who held me and raised me on his own. The man who taught me everything and nursed my colds. The man who took me to festivals and on hunts and hikes.
The man who was my superhero but other peopleâs monster.
Seeing him in that interview doesnât lessen the impact of meeting him face-to-face. Or, more accurately, through the glass.
Heâs wearing elegant trousers and a matching striped shirt. His blond beard is trimmed short but not gone. His eyes have some lines underneath them, but he doesnât appear much older than the last time I saw him â in court, eleven years ago.
Heâs gained some muscles, and considering heâs tall, heâs always appeared as a bodybuilder champion of some sort.
Maxim Griffin is still the same man from my memories. Once a father, now a devilâs spawn. Or maybe he was a devilâs spawn before he was even a father?
A small smile paints his lips, making him appear normal, approachable even. The guy next door, whoâll eventually kidnap you, strap duct tape on your face, and watch you slowly die as he cuts you.
I push those images away because if I get lost in the memories of those vacant eyes, I wonât be able to keep my cool and address the reason Iâm here.
âClarissa. Long time no see.â His voice is still the same â suave, posh, welcoming. He rarely spoke with the heavy Yorkshire accent. His mum, my grandmother, was a Londoner, and he somehow kept that accent. However, he switches to a northern accent whenever he feels it can get him closer to people. His ability to blend in with others and attract them with the sheer power of his charisma is the scariest thing about the Duct Tape Killer.
âIâm not here for a reunion.â Iâm surprised my voice is calm, considering the jittery emotions sinking at the bottom of my stomach.
âThen what are you here for?â
âYou know. You sent me that recording on purpose.â
âIt was the final attempt to bring you to me. And here you are.â
âWhy havenât you sent it before? Why now?â
âBecause youâre stubborn. You take after me, in that respect. We share DNA, Claire â I know how to push your buttons. I thought the interview and the media attention would be enough to make you crumble, but youâre not that sixteen-year-old kid anymore, youâre stronger.â I donât miss the pride in his voice as he says the last word.
âNo thanks to you.â
He laughs, the sound long and a bit deranged. âItâs all thanks to me, Claire. I made you, and you were only able to grow because you rebelled against your maker.â
âI reported the truth. I saved people.â
âAnd how did that feel, my little muse?â His humour disappears as he leans closer on the table, his fingers intertwined while he watches me closely with unhinged eyes that match mine in colour. âDid they worship at your altar, or did they bite the hand that fed them? They attacked you, cursed your existence, and are currently plotting your demise. Didnât I tell you that humans only exist to be used?â
âIâm not you.â The words clog my throat before they come out.
âYou are in many ways. Thatâs why you turned me in, Claire. You did it because you were afraid youâd become like me, and that type of freedom scared you. It still does. Admit it, weâre one, my little muse. We always were.â
My fingers shake and I grip them together on my lap. âI did nothing wrong. You did. So donât you dare put me in the same category as you.â
âBut we are. Thatâs why youâre here. You were always meant to come see me and apologise for the misjudgement you made by turning me in.â
âThe only reason I came here is because of the recording of Aliciaâs last moments. You said someone was trying to make her believe she was crazy. Who was it?â
âOh, that. Itâs the same person who sent us the recordings of Aliciaâs messages. They also knew about my fixation on Bridget and Alicia. See, the first time I met your mother, I wasâ¦experimenting, but no matter what I did, it always fell short. Bridget came to Yorkshire for a festival and was sitting alone in a pub. The moment I saw her, it was as if Iâd found purpose, inspiration, beauty, and madness. She was the muse that Iâd spent so long searching for.
âI planned to suffocate her after I fucked her that night, but I couldnât. The light in her eyes kept me going and going andâ¦going. We spent the weekend together, then she went back to her husband. I followed her from afar, and she was different in London â boring almost. She was nothing like the woman who threw away all her inhibitions and showed her true colours at that festival. However, she did inspire me, and for that, I kept her alive.
âMy obsession with her bled into women who resembled her, and letâs say, she suspected it. When she gave birth to you, she dropped you at my doorstep and disappeared into the night. I was so busy with you, I didnât pay her many visits. Then Alicia came for you of her own volition. She was a carbon copy of Bridget, so when your mum killed herself, I latched onto Alicia for inspiration. She became my new muse, and I assume the one who poisoned her knew that fact.â
My lips tremble and I set them in a line as I absorb what heâs said and hear the confirmation that heâs a monster with his own words. âWho is it?â
âI have my theories.â
âWho?â
âWhy do you want to know, my little muse? Do you suspect theyâre after you now?â
âI want justice for Alicia.â My heart dips in its cavity as I murmur, âIs it Jonathan?â
A part of me has already started mourning the fact that it could be Jonathan. After all, Alicia named him, and he made me feel as if I were insane when I mentioned the flash drives. He couldâve easily bribed Paul, the concierge, so that heâd lie and say he didnât receive any packages.
If he hurt Alicia in any way, I wonât be able to forgive him. I donât care that she did. Iâm not her, and deep down, Iâll always hate him.
Itâll destroy me in the process, but I wonât be able to trust him ever again.
âJonathan.â Dad raises a brow. âWhat is it about him that got you both tangled up? I didnât raise you to take other peopleâs leftovers, Claire.â
âIs it him?â I insist.
âApologise first and I might consider forgiving you and telling you.â
âWhat?â
âYou heard me. Say, Iâm sorry I turned you in, Dad. Iâm sorry I fucking betrayed you.â
âI didnât betray you, Dad. You betrayed me. You painted the world for me, then you turned it all black. You became my hero just to pull the carpet from beneath my feet. The world shattered in front of my eyes the moment I saw you dragging a corpse with complete nonchalance. I was sixteen, Dad! Fucking sixteen. I hadnât even lived yet and you killed me. I hadnât breathed yet and you smothered me. I spent the past eleven years gasping for air and finding smoke. The moment I start to pull my pieces together, the memory of you scatters them apart all over again. So donât you dare sit there and say I betrayed you. You betrayed me. You were my world, but you metaphorically buried me alive in that eighth grave. Iâm finally digging my way out, and I will not allow you to push me in that hole again.â
Tears soak my cheeks by the time I finish, but theyâre not sad or weak tears. Theyâre angry tears. Injustice tears. Because I was finally able to tell him what I think, what Iâve always thought.
The reason I felt so guilty towards those victims was because, even though I hated him for what he did, I couldnât stop considering him as my dad. The little girl in me still loved him. She still saw him as the father who picked her up, after her mother threw her away, and raised her as if his world revolved around her.
But he tarnished that world. He smashed it to pieces.
Maybe thatâs why sixteen-year-old me thought I needed to take the jabs and the hits. She even thought being stabbed was karma for not being able to hate my father as much as I should. For secretly still loving him. For secretly missing him.
I needed to come to terms with the fact that itâs okay to consider your father a father, despite him being a monster. I just have to move on from those memories where I considered him my world.
He isnât.
Heâs just a monster who doesnât deserve respect.
Dad remains motionless. His expression doesnât change, but his jaw clenches. âYou will not get anything from me unless you apologise, Claire.â
âIâll never apologise for turning you in, Dad. That was the best decision I made in my life, even if it flipped it upside down.â
I stand up because itâs useless to try to extract information out of him. Heâs right. Weâre both too stubborn, and he wonât give me anything unless I comply with his condition.
âTheyâre only after you because youâre my muse now, Claire. Theyâre after me, not you.â
âThen I hope they get you.â A tear slides down my cheek as I stare him in the eyes that are identical to mine and, in a way, it feels like Iâm bidding farewell to the little girl I always saw in those eyes. To the me from the past. âThis is our official goodbye, Dad. Iâll never visit you again. If you still want to go on with the parole process, Iâll stand there again and tell them you deserve every second you spend in prison.â
I take one last look at his face, at the drawn brows and the golden beard and hair and I finally grieve my father.
When I get out of the building, I inhale a deep gulp of air.
Real air.
Actual air.
The feeling of being alive hits me straight in the chest and itâs so strong, I have to brace myself against the wall for a second.
Iâm finally alive.
Finally breathing.
Iâm finally out of that grave. Literally and figuratively.
âAre you all right, Miss?â One of my security men clutches me by the elbow.
I straighten, clearing my throat. âIâm perfect. Thank you.â
âMr King has been calling nonstop,â he says as he leads me to the awaiting car.
Of course he has.
Once Iâm in the back seat, I check my phone, and sure enough, there are a dozen missed calls and emails.
From: Jonathan King
To: Aurora Harper
Subject: Answer The Fucking Phone
Refer to subject. Donât make me come find you from fucking Oxford.
Then another one.
From: Jonathan King
To: Aurora Harper
Subject: Iâm On My Way
You better be ready for that arse to be turned red.
I power off my phone. Dad didnât deny that Jonathan could be the one behind Aliciaâs poisoning. If he is, this will get ugly.
âMiss.â The bodyguard hands me his phone with a pleading expression. âPlease answer or heâll fire us all.â
The fucking tyrant.
I swipe the green button.
âIf you donât put her on the fucking phone right now, consider your future ruined.â
My heart picks up speed at the sound of his voice, and I want to murder that heart. I want to bury it with Alicia so it never beats again.
âIâm on my way home,â I say in a bland voice that I donât even recognise. âAnd stop threatening people.â
I hang up before he can say anything.
By the time we reach home, Jonathan has called the guardsâ phones a few more times, but I took them and powered them off.
âTell him I did it,â I say to the men as I leave the car and stride into the house.
They nod, but their expressions remain unsure.
My steps are long and confident. Jonathan better be ready for the hell Iâm going to bring him the moment he walks through the door.
Heâll tell me everything, and he better be convincing, because Iâm not in the mood to be trifled with today.
A shadow passes in my peripheral vision, and I freeze. The screeching sound of my heels echoes in the silence.
Oh, no.
No, no, no.
I make a run for the entrance. The security guys are there and â
A body hits me from behind and we both crash to the ground. I scream, thrashing and clawing at them. A hand covers my mouth from behind, muting any sound I have to make.
I manage to roll onto my back and claw at the mask covering his face. I remove it, my nails pulling at his hair, then I freeze. The dragon tattoo. How come I didnât see it before?
âYou,â the word falls from me in a murmur.
Renewed energy rushes through me and I hit him in the crotch. He wails and I use the chance to jump to my feet. Adrenaline tightens my muscles and Iâm about to make a run for it again when something prickles my nape.
I fall into the shadowâs hand, eyes rolling to the back of my head.
âJ-Jonathanâ¦â I whimper as the world turns black.