Page 110 of Sworn in Deceit


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Where is he? Where’s the maddening man when I need him?

I throw open the office door, finding the room dark, the devil nowhere to be seen.

“What’s going on, dear?” Hannah calls from the doorway.

“Where is he? Elias?” I grab her shoulders. She blinks, startled. “He’s here, right?”

I could’ve sworn he was here, the blinking red light and all.

“Mr. Kent? He went to the basement after a call. Seemedagitated.”

The basement?

I rarely venture down there. I’m not a big fan of dark spaces. I thank Hannah and bolt past her, past the utility hall and the guard station. The nondescript black door next to the laundry gives as I shove it open.

My feet pound the stone steps, past the wine cellar, to the small office in the back.

No one’s here.

I clutch my hair, my gaze pinballing around the space. Bookshelf. Desk. Wet bar. This makes no sense. He couldn’t have just vanished.

Then I feel it.

A thread of air grazes my ankle.

My breath grows thready as I force myself to quiet, to listen.

Thump. Thump. Thump.

It’s faint, but there. Then there’s the chilly breeze.

There has to be a hidden passageway. It’s Saints Hollow—of course there are tunnels underground.

Determination rushes through me. I tear through the room, tossing books from shelves, looking under the desk, the chair, feeling for any hidden latches or buttons.

Just when despair seizes me, I freeze, my fingers catching on a recess behind the one book I didn’t think he’d have.

The Bible.

The bookshelf swings open, revealing a stone tunnel dimly lit by caged bulbs.

My palms sweat, the hairs rising on my forearms. I feel it—the answer to a puzzle I’ve been trying to solve. Something I was not aware I was even searching for before.

I hasten my steps, my footfalls light as I make my way down the stairs. The air thins and grows frigid. The sounds are louder.

Groans and grunts. Someone yelling. A crash.

I shouldn’t be here,my mind warns me, every instinct telling me to turn around and flee.

But I press forward, beckoned by a past I can’t let go of.

The boy with soft green eyes and a beautiful smile who complained about his height.

I bet he’d be tall now.

With memories of Kian making me brave, I follow the curve of the tunnel, finally to a room with a door cracked open, light blazing from the gap. Voices sharpen.

“Please! Mr. Kent—”