Fallen - Mia Sheridan Page 0,136

him—"clearly that’s not the case. It’s why my hopes were so high. So high.”

Camden heard the disappointment in the sheriff’s words. He shook his head, screwed up his face. So many questions, so many, and yet he knew the clock was ticking. He had to get out of there. If the sheriff was telling him this, it was because Cam had become dispensable. He wasn’t going to let him simply walk out the door. Not now. Whatever roles he’d played in this town were over.

Still, he had to know. This might be the last chance he got. He recalled what the sheriff had told him just fifteen minutes before about the three runaways. “Our mothers. They left? With us?”

“They did. One of them must have heard you. Babies aren’t the quietest of creatures. They figured things out somehow, hatched a wicked plan, snatched all three of you and they ran.”

They ran. Camden’s head pounded. He’d dreamed it, or at least that’s what he’d thought it’d been. A dream. But no, it was a memory. A memory of being carried through the forest, a mirror in his hand. Why did she make me carry a mirror? Some strange superstition? Or was it simply a toy he’d brought along, clutched in his grasp, his own eyes wide, jaw slack, as he stared back at himself?

God, the memory made his head hurt. He’d been so young. He was likely misinterpreting most of it. “You killed them,” he said in a monotone. “You had to because we were proof of what you’d done.”

“The right thing is not always the easiest thing, Camden. Farrow men have always known this. If more of my blood than hers filled your veins, you’d know it too. You’d believe.”

More of my blood than hers. Thank the Lord. Thank the Lord above he had more of his mother in him than this sick, twisted bastard who stood before him now.

“We tracked those girls down. They’d hidden you in that forest, but we found you, brought you home, made things right.”

Home. Lilith House. He didn’t trust himself to speak.

“But we failed in our mission thirteen years ago. We let that girl get away. And because we fell short, evil gained strength. Our Women’s Ministry was struck down and engulfed in flames. And still, because of what we didn’t do, our town, Farrow’s people, our very way of life has been cursed. Just like the Bancroft family who died off when those natives escaped their God-ordained fate! That beast roams the woods, it grows in ever-increasing power, it plagues the children of even our most pious citizens with unearned signs of sin, it returns them to us when we attempt to cast them off.”

Cast them off? He recalled the whisperings he’d heard of a scattering of animal attacks on infants. But that had been while he was gone, and nothing of the sort had happened since. There was no evidence to substantiate those rumors, and nothing at all in the sheriff’s database. Now he knew why. And in that moment, he realized the truth that had only skated around the periphery of his mind, too terrible to comprehend. Camden swallowed, horror filling his veins, horror and rage. They’d tortured young girls for their own pleasure, they’d murdered, they’d left babies to die in the woods and they believed their sin was unearned? And that the punishment was delivered by some horned devil, emboldened by their failures, and out to exact his long-awaited justice?

Perhaps he—it?—deserved the vengeance he sought.

But he wasn’t the only one.

“Only ten families now,” the sheriff went on. “My own wife barren. We needed you. Farrow needed you. We thought you were lost to the outside world, but then you came back of your own will and hope was renewed. You were to replenish, not to replete!”

Like hell.

The anger flaring inside fueled him, primed his muscles. The sheriff must have noticed the hot burn of fury in his eyes because he removed his weapon and reached for his phone. Camden didn’t waste a moment. He leaped forward, smashing the gun into the sheriff’s cheekbone with all his might. The sheriff howled, blood spurting as he whirled sideways and gripped his desk. Camden raced past him.

The sheriff lunged for him but missed, and a loud boom filled the hallway, a gunshot smashing into the door at the end of the hall, wood splintering. Camden swore, ducking as he rounded the corner, another gunshot ricocheting off the wall next to him.

“There’s no

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