Vance drives me to Meredith’s as I silently flick through the photos.
When I was a teenager and first looked into my parents’ disappearance, Meredith found out quickly and squashed the delusion of searching for them. Even when I did—behind her back—all I came up with was dead ends.
The house beside her had been burned down and was nothing but barren property that she’d bought by the time we were brought into her home.
This entire time, everything was there, and Alek and I were too brainwashed to realize. Too young to understand. Not anymore, though.
I pull out my phone and hit call on Alek’s number. I feel like I’m in a calm fury, something I’m not used to.
It rings.
And rings.
And rings.
Until his voicemail picks up.
“Hey, Alek, I’m about to do something pretty stupid,” I say and lick my lips. “I don’t know what you’re going to say about it, so before I proceed, I want you to know that I love you. Even if you hate my decision right now. You’re all I have left. I mean, I like River too, which is rather surprising since he’s an asshole. You’re both kind of the same in that regard, which is why I know you’ll hate each other.”
I shake my head. “I digress. Alek, please don’t be mad at me. I’m not mad at you for leaving me with this decision on my own, but it looks like I have one more loose end to clean up for us.”
I hang up the phone. Vance looks at me in the rearview mirror.
“Are you sure about this, miss?” he asks.
“You can stay in the car, Vance. It’s going to be messy. Family arguments always are, aren’t they?”
“No, miss, we’ll come with you,” Clay says from the passenger seat. “We’re here to protect you no matter what.”
I let out a heavy breath. “I appreciate you both. But this, I have to do on my own.”
Meredith’s driveway gates come into sight, and I’m not surprised to see them open. As if she’s expecting me to show up and grovel and apologize. But it’s most likely for an entirely different reason.
“I want you two to take care of her guards. Leave Meredith to me,” I say, and that unfurling anger rises as I look at the pictures of my parents one more time.
My heels hit the pavement as I step out of the car. I look up at the home in a new light. I’ve always hated this fucking house. I turn to the left, knowing a smaller home once stood there. Where a family of immigrants from Russia lived, and the woman next door was powerful enough to wipe them out overnight.
One of the maids opens the door with a smile, her stomach swollen in pregnancy. I glance down at it and whisper quietly into her ear, “If I were you, I’d make myself scarce.”
My tone is lethal. She turns pale and nods. “She’s in the kitchen.”
I smirk as I walk to the kitchen, enjoying the click of my heels against the wooden floors.
“How many times have I told you to remove your shoes?” the old bitch’s voice rings out.
“You were expecting me, were you not?” I ask as I come around the corner. She has a cigarette hanging out of her mouth as she stirs some poisonous concoction that’s possibly supposed to be muffin batter.
A cold, bloody fury pumps through my veins. But I’m calm. Collected. Stalking. I’ve killed for money. Killed for power. But never have I killed for the satisfaction I’m about to receive now.
For those in their graves who cannot defend themselves. For two children who had no idea the monster who had shaped and molded them was the very thief of joy they could never touch or understand.
“Come to apologize?” she says. “It better be in the way of money and assets. And I’ll be dealing with half of the auctions now.”
I smirk. She watches me skeptically. She and I both eye the assortment of knives on the counter. Beside them is the very lighter my father once owned. It was a trophy to her, and I’d been so blinded, I never realized it was under my nose the entire time.
“I’m not the one with a need to apologize.” The voice doesn’t even sound like my own.
Realization dawns on her, and tension crackles in the air. She lunges for a knife, but I’m already on top of her, so she reaches back and grabs the gun from beneath her jacket. I push her hand that’s holding the gun out of the way, narrowly missing being shot, as she thrusts a flip knife from her pocket toward my stomach. I dodge it and slam her wrist against the edge of the counter, satisfied by the snapping noise.
She screams as I snatch one of the other knives and plunge it into her gut. She’s shocked, hunched over me as she tries to grapple for my face. I lean back as I fight her for the gun and shove her back.
She’s holding her stomach now, glaring at me.
I look at the gun and then her. “No worries, I didn’t pierce anywhere you’ll bleed out immediately. You taught us well, after all.”
“You ungrateful little bitch!” she says with shallow breaths. I drag the set of knives away from her reach and place the gun beside me.
I grab one of the knives and flip it in the air. “I only came for an explanation.”
“You’re choosing that fucker over your own family?” she seethes.
My eyebrows shoot up. “No, actually, I’m choosing my family. My real family, which you took away from me.”
She seems to go a shade paler and then that scornful, twisted expression appears. “I knew I should’ve killed that fucker the moment I realized he was looking into me.”
I throw another knife into her leg, and she screams as she drops to one knee. She pulls it out and throws it back at me. I dodge it, and it impales the wall behind me.
And we both know if she pulls the one out of her stomach, she’ll bleed to death.
“It would appear that you’ve become senile in your old age after all. Why did you kill our parents, Meredith?”
She stares at me, a smile blossoming on her lips, and then she tries to laugh. It’s short lived as she coughs in pain. “You both always thought you were so clever. But you were just two traumatized little kids who couldn’t even remember your parents’ faces.
“I didn’t lie when I told you it was only so I could do dealings with the Italians in town. No deeper meaning at all. Your parents simply moved into the wrong house and caught my attention, so I befriended them. Killed them. Took you two ungrateful shits in. The only reason I handed the auctions over to you was because I’d found myself in some strife, forcing me to step down. So I thought, why not have you two take my place and flip me a fortune.” She sneers. “Not as mysterious as you were hoping?” She chuckles, and blood leaks from between her lips.
An inner turmoil twists in my stomach, but I’m past the point of acting on it or questioning it. I’m sure to most it’s painful to hear, unbearable to know. But I have been empty for a very long time. Becoming an orphan will not change that.
Meredith is a predator.
Unfortunately for her, the cubs that she trained have far surpassed her.
“I think this is the most honest you’ve ever been,” I say as I flip another knife and then smile. “How I’m going to cling to your every scream, you old bitch. Try your best to haunt me for the rest of my days and hinder any kind of happiness I might have like you already have.”
I step closer, pocketing my father’s lighter. Because once I’m done with this old bitch, this place is going up in flames.
For the first time in my life, I see a sweep of fear cross her expression, and it fills me with satisfaction.
“It would appear, Meredith, that you’ve lost your touch.”
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