Chapter 25

Jennie

As soon as Lisa disappears through the door, I sink to the floor, clutching the gun she gave me. My legs are trembling and my head is spinning, waves of nausea rolling through me. I feel like I'm hanging on to my sanity by a thread. Only the knowledge that Lisa is on her way to rescue Rosé keeps me from slipping into complete hysteria. Drawing in a shuddering breath, I wipe at the moisture on my face with the back of my hand, and as I lower my arm, a streak of red catches my attention.

Blood.

There's blood on me.

I stare at it, repulsed yet fascinated. It has to be from the man Lisa killed. Lisa was covered in blood when she touched me, and it's all over me now, the streaks of red on my arms and chest reminiscent of one of my paintings. Strangely, the analogy calms me a bit. Drawing in another breath, I look up, turning my attention to the dead man lying a few feet away.

Now that he's not attacking me, I realize with shock that I recognize him. He's one of the two young men Rosé was dancing with. Does that mean that the second attacker is the other man? I frown, trying to remember the second man's features, but he's just a blur in my mind. I also don't recall ever seeing the teenage guy who was guarding the entrance to this room. Was he with Rosé's dancing companions? If so, why? None of this makes any sense. Even if the three of them are serial rapists, how could they have thought they'd get away with such a brutal assault in a club?

Of course, the motivations of the dead man don't matter anymore. I know he's dead because his body is no longer twitching. His eyes are open and his mouth is slack, a trickle of blood running down his cheek. He stinks of death too, I realize—of blood, feces, and fear. As the sickening smell registers, I scoot away, crawling a few feet to huddle closer to the couch.

Another man was killed in front of me. I wait for horror and disgust, but they don't come. Instead, all I feel is a kind of vicious joy. As if on a movie screen, I see Lisa's knife rising and falling, sinking into the man's side again and again, and all I can think is that I'm glad the man is dead.

I'm glad Lisa gutted him.

It's odd, but my lack of empathy doesn't bother me this time. I can still feel the man's hands on my body, his nails scraping my skin as he ripped at my clothes. He'd managed to pin me down while I was dazed from his blow, and even though I struggled as hard as I could, I knew I was losing. If Lisa hadn't come when he did—

No. I shut that down mid-thought. Lisa did come, so there's no need to dwell on the worst. All things considered, I've gotten off with minimal damage. My split lip throbs and my back feels like one giant bruise, but it's nothing irreparable. My body will heal. I've been hit before and survived.

The real question is: will Rosé?

The thought of her hurt, broken and violated, fills me with rage. I want Lisa to slaughter the other man as savagely as she killed this one. In fact, I want to do it myself. I would've insisted on coming along, but arguing with Lisa would've only slowed down Rosé's rescue.

For now, all I can do is wait and hope that Lisa brings her back.

Spotting my little purse on the floor, I crawl over to pick it up. Every movement hurts, but I want that purse with me. It has my phone, which means I can reach Lisa. And that's important—because it suddenly dawns on me that Rosé is not the only one in danger at the moment.

So is my wife.

No. I push that thought away too. I know what Lisa is capable of. If anyone is equipped to handle this, it's the person who kidnapped me. Lisa's life has been steeped in violence from childhood; killing a scumbag or two must be like cutting grass for her.

Unless said scumbag is armed or has buddies.

No. I squeeze my eyes shut, refusing to entertain such thoughts. Lisa will return with Rosé, and all will be well. It has to be. We're going to be a family, build a life together . . .

A family.

My eyes pop open, my hand flying to my stomach as I gasp out loud. For the first time, it strikes me that without Lisa's intervention, Rosé and I might not have been the rapists' only victims. If I had been brutalized, knocked around some more, there's no telling what might've happened to the baby.

The terrifying thought steals my breath away.

I begin to shake again, fresh tears forming in my eyes. I don't even know why I'm crying. Everything is fine. It has to be.

Clutching my purse, I focus on the door in the back. Any second now, Lisa will walk through it with Rosé, and our lives will go back to normal.

Any second now.

The seconds tick by slowly. So slowly that it's all I can do not to scream. I stare at the door until the tears stop and my eyes begin to burn from dryness. No matter how much I try, I can't keep the dark imaginings away, and the fear inside me feels like it's going to swallow me from within, eat away at me until there's nothing left.

Finally, the door starts to creak open.

I jump to my feet, aches and pains forgotten, but then I recall Lisa's parting words.

She's not the only one who might walk through that door.

Lifting the gun she gave me, I take aim with trembling hands and wait.