Born, Madly (Darkly, Madly 2) - Page 88

I smile. “I was always curious if I could escape it.”

As we watch the island get smaller in the distance, London turns to me. “Well, lucky for us, you’ll never have to find out.”

I place a lingering kiss to her forehead. “I’ll try to stay out of prison.”

“Oh, I know you will, Cain. Because I’m setting the ground rules now.”

My smile widens. “Yes, doctor.”

I have no choice but to trust her on that. She’s the one who designed my death, after all. I owe every bit of my freedom to her.

While London was crafting the trap, I rigged the container unit with an inner-glass chamber that not only provided a stabilized environment for the concentrated acid concoction, but also housed a separate compartment, obscured from view. Once the lift arms lowered beyond a certain level, it pulled a cord that dragged the container lid farther back, exposing the compartment. Which to anyone else, simply looked like part of the contraption.

But it was my safety net for the fall.

Being off by even an inch could’ve killed or exposed me. I had to be angled precisely, so that Nelson tumbled to the acid, and I could use his dead weight to propel myself away and land in the compartment.

I then had ten minutes to make it to a storage unit in London’s name and administer the antidote she concocted. Seems she had a scientist friend in the forensics’ department who enjoyed a challenge. And who enjoyed money even more.

The key to the antidote is under the container.

Her whispered words to me right before she pressed the knife to my neck.

Then she sank the blade into Nelson and pushed us to our deaths.

Perfectly planned and executed.

Yet, it was more than a gamble. Anything could’ve gone wrong. Foster may have not arrived in time, responding to London’s urgent text too late. He could’ve brought police with him, giving us too many witnesses to construct our narrative.

Foster’s broken arm might not have delayed his climb to the top of the container, giving us less time to eliminate Nelson, or for me to make my escape.

I’m still uneasy about the way it went down; trusting too much to chance. But change and acceptance are a part of becoming a couple. A duo. A team.

And that’s all there is. Fin.

Endings suck. Why shouldn’t they? We’re sad when life ends. We’re disappointed when something good comes to an end. No one wants an ending; we’re designed to want to last forever. So very difficult to bring an end to something brilliant that’s taken a lifetime to build.

For London and I, it should’ve been tragic.

All epic love stories have a tragic ending. The classic failure of two great souls is what makes their brief union passionate. Intense. Epic. And everyone enjoys a good love story. Give them what they want, so the story can end without dispute. A finality with a standing ovation.

I study London’s profile as she stares across the bay. She is stunning, beautiful. My dark goddess. My angel and savior.

There is one loose end…but I’ve decided not to pull that thread. London was the architect, and she waited until we were in the moment before she revealed the poison aspect of the trap.

I smile to myself. Maybe she thought I’d enjoy the surprise. Maybe it was a late addition to the trap. Or maybe she was waiting until the big reveal of my life before she made her final choice.

She won’t talk about it. And I won’t pull that thread. But I believe she went to Ireland to find that answer. She knew there might be a chance she’d have to sever our relationship.

I take her hand in mine and lace our fingers. Locked together.

The madness is held back for now. The fear that my genes will ravish my mind one day is never too far from my thoughts. Even so, London’s presence helps hold the compulsive thoughts at bay.

Because I know, if that day ever comes, London won’t fail me. She’ll give us the tragic ending we truly deserve.

Epilogue

London

Tags: Trisha Wolfe Darkly, Madly Romance
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