cut off.
I open my mouth to scream, but it remains slack and nothing comes out. I contemplate pedalling straight off the edge of a cliff.
Maybe if I do, I won’t feel Dad’s betrayal and Alicia’s loss.
Maybe I can erase today from my memories and I can call Alicia and she’ll pick up. I can solve a puzzle with Dad and make him pizza afterwards and we’ll binge-watch true crime on Netflix.
But driving myself over the edge won’t solve anything.
It won’t bring back life to the dead woman he drug across the ground.
I pedal all the way to the town centre, ignoring the screams of my exhausted leg muscles and the funny way people look at me. Some greet me, but I don’t reply. I can’t.
There are only a few words in my mouth, and none of them are meant to be said back as a greeting.
I stop in front of a shabby building, throw my bike aside, and forge in. I hesitate at the threshold, but then I recall Alicia’s soft voice.
‘The silence of an accomplice is similar to committing the crime.’
Alicia, whom I can’t see again. Alicia, who was stolen from my life as if she never existed.
I barge inside and a few officers pause at my entrance. I must look like a mess, soaked in rain, my clothes glued to my skin, and my face must be pale, lips blue from the cold.
A black officer approaches me, his eyes firm but welcoming. “May I help you, Miss?”
“I…I want to report a murder.”
21
Jonathan
Aurora isn’t home when I get back.
She isn’t answering her phone either. And my last email is still without a reply.
I’m not to be ignored. If she’s throwing one of her fits or acting out, I’m going to take it out on her arse.
Only, she’s not the type who throws a fit without a solid reason. This morning, she came all over my fingers after she licked her plate clean.
When I let her go, she smoothed her skirt and grumbled that she needed a change of clothes as she headed back to her room.
There was no need for a fit.
No matter how she feels wronged, Aurora realises how much she needs the touch only I can provide. She knows that she can’t fight herself when it comes to me. The harder she denies it, the faster her body falls under my command.
There’s euphoria in the way she falls, even when she doesn’t want to. I’m slowly shaping her to be my perfect submissive, but at the same time, I don’t want to extinguish her fire. I also don’t want to erase the way she glares up at me every time she comes down from her high.
She hates that she can’t resist of her trance when it comes to me. And because she can’t do anything about it, she directs that hatred towards me.
I’m fine with it. As long as I have her in my grasp.
It started with the need to unravel her and the blasphemy of thinking she could keep a secret from me.
Now, it’s more.
I don’t even understand it myself, but I’m ready to see it until the very end.
Which brings me to her flat.
A quick inquiry with Harris told me all I needed to know. She had a visit from Maxim’s solicitor and she escaped to here.
I hit in the code and go inside. The security came to ask who I am, but after a talk with Harris, who’s now waiting for me in the car, he backed away.
The flat is dark except for the TV which shows a black screen but it’s not turned off. An automatic light flashes at the entrance as I step inside.
Aurora’s flat is medium-sized with countless pictures of watches on the walls. Her taste is mostly in black and white. Her sofas are black. Her walls are white. The hanged watches are black, the carpet is white.
The colour scheme hints at something different than her taste, highlighting her internal chaos.
At first, I don’t see her, but then I make out a body curled into a foetal position on the floor.
I pause, trying to get a better view of the scene before me. Something inside me moves. No idea what it is, but it just moves.
I stride to her and crouch in front of her motionless body. I exhale deeply when I notice the rise and fall of her shoulders.
Her pale hands hold her knees to her chest, fingers twitching involuntarily and limbs spasming. Her black strands block her vision,