I step back from the fridge and close it, nearly jumping out of my skin when I see herâa young woman, who looks about my age, leaning casually against its side like she belongs here. Except Iâm pretty sure she doesnât. Sheâs shorter than me, her brown hair pulled back away from her face, highlighting her soft features. A button nose. Small pink lips. Pale brown eyes that glint with something unreadable.
Sheâs stunning. And I hate that itâs the first thing I notice.
My brows knit as I glance past her, scanning the kitchen and past the glass door to the living room, and even the shadows beyond, hoping Marco will storm in any second.
But he doesnât.
The fire alarm went off a few minutes earlier, and he had to run outside to guard the door while the men rushed downstairs to stop the fire from spreading. So Iâm alone.
My pulse ticks faster. âWho are you? How did you get in?â
Her lips tilt up in a smirk, and she pushes away from the fridge. âSo, Maximo really got himself a little Albanian wife. Interesting.â The words drip with a bitter undertone that makes my skin prickle.
My frown deepens as I study her, not sure what to say to that. Thereâs something off here.
I open my mouth to respond, maybe demand answers, but before I can string two words together, she moves.
Fast.
One second, sheâs near the fridge, and the next, sheâs right in front of me. My heart jolts as a healthy dose of fear settles in my spine.
No way sheâs an ordinary woman. That movement was smooth. Too smooth.
Instinct kicks in. I raise my fists, ready to take her in a fight, but sheâs faster. Her hand snatches my wrist, twisting it hard, and suddenly Iâm spun around, her boobs pressed firmly to my back. âMarââ I try to shout, but the sound barely escapes before something covers my noseâa pink bandana, sickly sweet and cloying.
Shit, not again, is all I can think as a wave of dizziness and fatigue crashes over me. My eyes roll back, vision fading as my limbs turn to jelly. Helpless, I sink into the darkness.
The soft vibration of an engine and the gentle sway of motion startle me awake. My head feels stuffed with cotton as I blink groggily at the back of the leather seat in front of me. Disoriented, I glance around.
Iâm in a car. My gaze flicks to the window, squinting at the bright lights of the city whizzing past me.
A moving car.
What the heck?
The last thing I remember, I had just put the salad into the fridge andâI jerk upright as the rest of the memories rush through me. The sudden movement sends the car spinning in a dizzying haze, and a fierce headache erupts at the back of my skull.
âUgh.â Groaning miserably, I clutch my head, squeezing my eyes shut as I try to breathe through my nose and ground myself. Gradually, after what feels like an eternity, the spinning subsides, and the insistent throb at the back of my skull begins to ease.
When I finally dare to open my eyes, I lock onto the driverâs seat. Itâs her. The woman from my kitchen is driving the car. The passenger seat is empty.
So, Iâm alone in the car with her.
I glance out the window, straining to recognize the streets, but nothing looks familiar. Cold fear settles at the base of my spine. How long was I out? Where are we? Are we even still in Queens?
My voice cracks when I finally find it. âWhoâwho are you? Why did youâ ââ
âHi, Elira. Iâm an old friend of Maximoâs. Though he wasnât exactly thrilled to see me earlier.â She shrugs carelessly, sparing me a brief glance through the rearview mirror. âI wish we could have met under better circumstances, but I doubted youâd follow me willingly.â
An old friend of Maximoâs? What does that even mean? âFollow you willingly? Follow you where? What do you want with me? Ransom money? Someâ ââ
Iâm cut short by her light laughter, and she stares at me through the rearview mirror again, brown eyes twinkling with mirth. âRansom?â she echoes, like Iâve told a bad joke. âPlease. I donât need yours or Maximoâs blood money, Elira.â Her laughter fades, and her expression shifts, softening into something almost⦠mournful.
âWhat I want,â she says, voice quieter now, âis for your husband to stop.â Her fingers tighten on the steering wheel, knuckles whitening. âTo go back a couple of years and get my old friends back. I want them out of the clutches of that fucker andââ
Her breath catches on the last words, and her eyes darken with a rage so fierce it has me worried what sheâll do if that anger is directed towards me. But then she exhales, shaking her head as if to banish the storm inside her. âWhat I want doesnât matter. Itâs impossible to get it anyway. But I will make them see the error of their ways.â
Slow realization pierces my fog of confusion as I stare at the woman, and it all clicks into place. I know who she isâor at least, I know of her. âWhere are you taking me, Emily?â If I hoped saying her name would rattle her, Iâm in for some disappointment.
She simply gives me a cool, surveying glance through the rearview mirror, not even showing a flicker of surprise that Iâve figured out who she is. âIâm taking you somewhere youâll be safe,â she answers. âI know all about how Maximo kidnapped you and threatened to kill your family if you didnât marry him. Iâm saving you from him.â
Somewhere Iâll be safe? Away from my husband? My stomach twists violently at her words. âBut I donât want to be saved from him,â I say softly. She doesnât respond. Her silence, coupled with the unyielding determination on her face, squeezes my chest, making it hard to breathe.
Sheâs not going to listen to me.
Panic claws its way through me, my body going ice-cold as I glance outside again. We must have taken a turn somewhere, because weâre now driving through an old-looking area with cracked streets and little potholes that rattle the car, jostling me on my seat. Large, abandoned warehouses loom on either side of the road, their dark silhouettes casting an eerie shadow over the path ahead.
Shit. This is bad.
I canât let her do this to me. I wonât be a victim again. Never. If she gets me to wherever it is sheâs planning to take me, I know instinctively that it will be over. Iâll never be back in this city again. Never see my father or brother.
Never see my husband again.
The fear spreads through me, chilling me even further, and I shudder in horror. I want to remain with Maximo. It doesnât matter how we started, weâve gotten to a better place now, and I love him andâI gasp, making Emily glance back at me with a furrow between her brows.
I love my husband.
Somehow, Iâve gone and fallen in love with the asshole, even though I tried my hardest not to, holding back my kisses like that would save my heart from him.
âWhere is this âsafeâ place youâre taking me to?â I force the words out, trying to sound calm, even as my mind races through a dozen plans in a blur. Iâm buying time, scrambling for anything to stop this. I refuse to be taken away from Maximo just when Iâve made the realization about my feelings for him.
No. Iâm not some helpless girl, some damsel in distress. My brother made damn sure I wasnât going to be anyoneâs victim. It was bad enough that I let Maximo kidnap me, but back then, I was naïve, lost⦠vulnerable. No more. If thereâs anything Iâve learned from that incident, itâs to never trust a strangerâs motive, especially when they claim to be trying to help meâor in this case, trying to save me.
I glance around the car, searching for something I can use to make my escape, but the interior is squeaky clean and empty. Not even a bottle of water or a pen or used wrapper. But there has to be a way. There has to.
âYouâre going to Budapest,â she answers, grabbing my full attention.
âBudapest?â I gape at her. Thatâs like millions of miles away.
She nods. âThatâs the one place he wonât think to look for you. A couple of documents are waiting for you on the plane. A brand new passport with your new name. Youâll have to dye your hairâred is far too distinctive. Black or blonde will do. Weâll change everything about you until even your father wonât be able to recognize you. Tonight, Elira Përmetiâor rather, Elira Leonottiâwill die.â
I break out in a cold sweat, my heart roaring in my ears as I picture what sheâs saying. Erasing my identity? Changing everything that makes me me? âWhatâwhat if I donât want that?â I ask, not able to raise my voice past a shaky whisper under the weight of my fear.
Emily shakes her head, and for the first time, thereâs a flicker of something like regret in her eyes. But her voice remains firm. âIâm afraid thatâs not an option.â
The car takes another turn, and suddenly, weâre driving through a rusty gate into a wide sandy field where a small plane waits at the far end. And reality sets in. Unless I do something to change my fate, this is happening.
âWhatâs the difference between what you are planning to do and what Maximo did to me?â The supposed kidnapping that sheâs attempting to rescue me from. Can she not see how horrible and demonic her plan is?
She glances at me as she slows the car down and turns off the engine, taking the key from the ignition. âI donât pretend to know Maximoâs motive, but Iâm saving you from him⦠and from yourself. This is for your own good.â
My own good? What the hell is she talking about? My whole world is spinning, and sheâs acting like sheâs the hero here.
She rolls her neck, thenâout of nowhereâpulls a gun and waves it at me. I immediately freeze as she speaks. âNow, I donât want to have to hurt you, Elira. So you must cooperate. Hold on, sit tight, and Iâll be back before you know it.â
She opens the door and slips out, slamming it shut behind her. Then her eyes fix on mine through the window, the gleam of the gun still in her hand as she lifts her key fob and locks the car with a soft click, trapping me inside.