Prologue
Melanie
I had no idea how long I had been in the room. The man in black had brought me food once, and though I hadn’t been hungry, I ate. I had been over every inch of the room, trying to find an escape, but it was impossible. Whenever I was thirsty, I drank from the sink in the tiny bathroom. I still had no idea what my fate would be.
As if in answer, the man in black unlocked the door and entered. “Good morning, Doctor.”
Did that mean it was morning? I had no idea. I had slept…I thought. Or had I just relived sessions with Gina in a semi-hypnotic state?
“Today’s your lucky day,” he said. “You’re getting out of here.”
Though the thought should have made me ecstatic, I sat there grimly. The memory of Gina’s session—I’d rather die—had numbed me again. Had I missed a cry for help? There’d been no other indication that she might be suicidal. She’d held down a job, done volunteer work at a local children’s shelter…had been in a lot better shape than Talon Steel had been when he first came to me, and he hadn’t been suicidal. To the contrary, his overwhelming will to survive had completely overshadowed his desire to die.
The man in black interrupted my thoughts by pulling me from the bed and turning me around to face the wall.
He bound my hands behind my back, this time with duct tape. “Can’t have you trying anything funny,” he said.
Anything funny? As if I could. The room held nothing that could be used as a weapon, and this man had already demonstrated that he was much stronger than I was.
“Don’t you want to know where you’re going?”
“Not particularly,” I said.
“Okay. Have it your way.”
We walked out the door, and I realized I was in a house. This little room with no windows had been built in the middle of the basement. He led me up the stairs, through a laundry room. To the left was a kitchen. We went to the right. Into a garage. It was a large garage, big enough for three vehicles. However, only one old car sat there.
“This is a very special car, Dr. Carmichael.”
It was huge, like an old pimp car from a few decades ago. “It doesn’t look that special to me. It looks like a piece of crap.”
He laughed. “Yes, it is that. It belongs to someone you knew, and the funny thing about this car is that it’s an older model. I can start it and then lock it so no one can get in while the motor is running.”
“So?”
And then it hit me.
“No!” I tried pulling away from him.
“So you figured it out?”
He pushed me into the garage, against the car, and then jiggled a set of keys in my face. “You won’t be able to open the door and turn off the ignition without these. And guess what? They’ll be locked inside the car.”
My heartbeat raced as cold fear pulsed through my veins. “Let me go! Let me go!”
“I’m afraid not, Doctor. You’re going to die. In this garage, at the mercy of this car. Just like Gina Cates did.”