This room wasn’t in Cinderkeep, which was good, but it looked like just another cage, which was bad.
Glancing around the space, I tried to get my bearings as the older doctor crossed his arms, his white smock meticulously clean, apart from a few streaks of blood on the cuffs.
“Harry’s right,” he muttered. “If you get an infection from that cat—”
“I won’t.” Sitting upright, my fingers strayed to the bandage and prickly stitches beneath. The room didn’t stay in one place, but I didn’t feel like I was dying anymore.
I glowered at the men, usual suspicion filling me.
I had a lifelong distrust of everyone, but...if they were going to harm me, they would’ve done it while I was unconscious. Therefore...I would be nice. Or at least try. “Thank you.” The words stuck in my throat. “For sewing me up.”
The younger doctor rolled his eyes; his face caught between professional outrage and sheer disbelief. “You think saying thank you makes all of this okay? Who the fuckareyou? How are you even awake, let alone sitting upright? We gave you a local and a sedative. You’re hypovolaemic. You should be unconscious.”
Whisper punctuated the doctor’s anger with a hiss.
But apparently, the doctor wasn’t done. “We’ve done our duty and saved your life. We’ve ignored the fact that your cells had already started to knit together—which is impossible. Pretended that your unnaturally hot body temperature—that’s three degrees higher than a normal person, by the way—somehow doesn’t give you a life-threatening fever. Your heart rate doesn’t follow the usual cardiac pattern, your coagulation markers are different, and your oxygen saturation is a mess.”
“Harry,” the older doctor warned. “Enough.”
Harry completely ignored him. “I keep telling myself I don’t want to know. I agree with Roger that the more we know, the more danger we’ll be in, but your body isn’t normal.Youaren’tnormal. That cat isn’t normal. That device inserted in your chest isn’t normal. And I want to leave.Right the fuck now.”
The older doctor, Roger, pinched the bridge of his nose. “This is all getting a bit much. I was able to ignore the zoo animal but...” He used his hand to wave at me as ifIwas the problem. “Harry does have a point. There’s no logical explanation to how you’re awake and talking...or why your temperature is so high.”
My gaze shot to Rook’s, craving the cold energy of her company.
Rook gulped and looked at my chest, locking onto the piece of metal that made my life a living hell. Even away from Cinderkeep, I was still a prisoner. Still at the mercy of Marcus’s little remote. I could run to the other side of the planet, and he would still be able to kill me with a flick of a switch.
Rook moved closer. “Lucien...if you’re strong enough. We need to stop wasting time and go.”
“Go?” Harry barked. “Go where?”
Whisper hissed again, throwing his vote into the ring that he was ready to leave, too.
“And justhoware you proposing to go?” Harry continued. “We’ve already told you the B&B is surrounded by guards. When I went to the kitchen to get some alcohol for sterilisation, there were men everywhere.” He pointed at the door. “There are two outside right now.”
Roger stepped forward, his glasses catching the light. “I’ve already promised to call the police the moment we leave here. Just...don’t do anything stupid and I’ll send someone to help you, alright?”
I wasn’t used to other men.
For the past twenty years, the only strangers I met were women. And after a lifetime of conditioning, my system commanded me to kill before I could be betrayed.
But...they’d saved my life.
They’d been dragged into my mess and if they called the police, Marcuswouldkill them.
Swinging my legs over the edge of the bed, I swallowed against the rush of lightheadedness. Whisper came to my side, offering his aid like he’d done so many times in the past. Resting a hand on his shoulder blades, I used him as a crutch as I hid my discomfort and stood.
Rook darted forward, going to my other side. Her slim, small fingers latched onto my bare forearm, holding onto me rather than giving me someone to hold onto.
She didn’t push me back down again. Didn’t try to convince me I was too weak. Instead, she gave me an encouraging smile and tugged me toward the door. “You can stand which is great. Can you walk?”
“He shouldn’t be walking anywhere,” one of the doctors huffed. “He should be in bed.Asleep.”
Rook ignored him, pulling me faster. “If you can manage to walk, then perhaps you can climb down the drainpipe and we can sneak out.” She glanced at the night sky outside the window. “It’s dark out and everyone saw you unconscious. I doubt they’ll be expecting you to escape tonight, so...let’s go.”
Whisper padded toward the door without any further encouragement, and I let her drag me. I let her think I would obey before slamming on the brakes next to the desk where I assumed they’d stitched me up, thanks to the bloody towels.
Prying her fingers off me, I turned to face the doctors again. “To put your minds at rest...as long as Marcus believes he can trust you, he won’t kill you. Not because he’s kind but because you’ve proven yourselves valuable in keeping me alive. You can go about your life as normal. Your families won’t be hurt because he’ll keep you in mind next time he needs you. However...the moment you eventhinkabout dialling an emergency number, you won’t live to see morning. Your bodies will vanish into avery well-used incinerator. Your families will never know where you’ve gone, and they might even become collateral damage to his temper.”