in his eyes. Almost. Instead, I purse my lips and hold my chin high.
When he’s at arm’s reach, I pull the tray up and bring it down on his chest. Aaron is faster. He grabs and twists my wrist with bruising force. My fingers unclench and the tray clatters to the ground.
“No!” I struggle against him, kicking at his chest and legs. “Let me go!”
Aaron’s arms wrap around me from behind. The brute force subdues all my struggles.
I can’t win against him. Not physically.
A tear rolls down my cheek. “Please...” I whisper, adrenaline leaves place to tremors.
“Stop it.” Hot breaths caress my neck as his low merciless voice penetrates my ear. “I will not kill you.”
His words reverberate in the space before they strike me. I swallow. “Y-you’re not?”
“I am not.”
Chancing a glance at him, I study his face for any signs of truth. Nothing. Only that expressionless façade. “T-then where are you taking me?”
“A change of location.” He releases me with a gentle push. I stagger at the lack of the strong hold. “Follow me.”
My feet are too numb to move. “To where?”
He pivots around, a fog of annoyance clouding the twitch in his left eye. “Shut the fuck up, Mae. One more word and I will drag you out by the hair.”
I bite my lower lip to keep my mouth closed. That was the first time he cursed, and it was only due to irritation. I don’t want to see what this man’s anger looks like. I force my feet to follow his strides.
Once the darkness of the corridors meets us, I freeze at the doorway. My mind screams at me to crawl back into the light.
“Move.” Aaron glares. “I have no time for this.”
My fingers tug at the hem of my baggy T-shirt. I’d rather anger him than what awaits me outside. “I can’t. It’s too dark.”
He extends his arm to me. “It will help, right?” He motions for my hand. “Take it.”
My lips part. Is this another cruel psycho joke? He smothers his victims with fake care then takes sick pleasure in crushing them?
“Mae.” My name is called in a form of a warning— one whose repercussions I don’t wish to know.
I reach for his arm and clutch the soft material of his jacket as a safe line. My soul curses me for not being brave enough to refuse his help.
The long corridor walk is spent in silence. My eyes stray behind me, expecting the monsters to appear and chase my brains out.
They don’t.
Aaron’s presence scares them away. Even monsters are afraid of this monster.
Still, my harsh breathing doesn’t decrease. Being forced into a jog to keep up with Aaron’s pace is of no help.
We climb the stairs— that almost led me to freedom before— and pause at the top for Aaron to open a double metallic door.
Glimmers of white blinds my eyes. I halt, my hands fly up to protect my vision.
Heat infiltrates my skin as I tentatively open my lids. Light burst in sharp lines through large windows.
Sun. Warmth. Light.
“Move, mouse.” Aaron tugs on my hand and I follow his steps, my eyes trying their best to adjust. It’s been so long since I was exposed to daylight— a week judging from the soup I got twice a day.
Who knew I would miss such small necessities in life?
Four tall windows adorn the length of a vast hall we walk through. Or more like Aaron walks. I’m struggling to keep up with him. The sound of my slippers against the white and granola marbled floor is anything but quiet. The white walls are decorated with bold vertical lines of gold painting and horizontal beige patterns, obviously designed by an artist. The ceiling holds more gold, less white. A round chandelier with a thousand crystals dangles to the centre. The size so massive that I duck when we pass underneath it. What if it falls atop my head?
You’re being silly, Mae.
The longer we walk, the more I’m dazzled. It’s like I’m assessing an evocative painting. The hall is symmetrically filled with leather chesterfield sofas, high tables and elegant curtains. My mouth drops when we approach the stairs. Beside it, on a high platform, sits a marble statue of a knight on his horse. A black panther in dark stone rests by the horse’s