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“Kill me,” he pleaded. “Please.”

Livid, I shoved him hard enough that the chair fell backward. I’d known there was a reason Sera was tied up in this mess, but paying her father’s debt with her body was something I’d tried to deny was the truth.

For her sake.

“He must have owed Gabriele money.” Francesco moved forward, towering over Edoardo.

“He wouldn’t have sold his own daughter,” I added. “Something else is up. Could he be working with someone?”

I licked my lips, tucking my hands in my pocket as I looked down at the mess I’d made. I locked eyes with a terrified Edoardo.

“I don’t believe you for a second,” I said firmly. I turned to Francesco. “Do what you want with him. I have some calls to make.”

I walked out of the room, my mind drifting to Sera, who was likely asleep upstairs and safe.

But her safety wasn’t a promise if Andre had made similar deals with other men, other bosses. I’d only killed one. How many more people were after the woman upstairs?

And how many people would come looking for her, only to find me?

CHAPTER 33

SERA

It’s been hours now since Olivia brought me breakfast. An entire day had passed. I paced beside the windows overlooking the mist-covered garden two stories below me. Night was falling. Stars played peek-a-boo through breaks in the clouds, and I counted a handful of constellations before the cloud cover darkened the sky entirely. Down below, a guard paced back and forth across the patio, his shadow stretching out across the grass in front of him.

I ground my teeth as I picked through what was left of the dinner that had been delivered, and not by Olivia. I hadn’t seen her since this morning, which was odd. The new maid bustled in and out so quickly I didn’t even get a look at her face.

I sucked my lower lip between my teeth and let it go with a pop.

This wouldn’t do. I was trapped up here while someone, possibly my father from the sound of it, was downstairs.

Could he have left already? No, Killian wouldn’t have just let him walk out the door like that. If a deal had been made, I would be halfway home by now—halfway to my father’s home. Not stuck up here in my room rotting my life away.

I ran my hands over my face before stalking forward and jiggling the knob. Locked, of course. Always locked. I tried the windows next like I had the physical skill required to scale the walls to freedom. I went into the little sitting room where the phone had been, but the door leading out to the hallway was locked as well. I went as far as to pull all of the books off the bookshelf and slide the massive shelf out of the way, looking for a trap door or something behind it. A house like this, run by a criminal mastermind, had to have a hidden exit—or ten—tucked out of sight.

But there was no way out.

Resigning myself to another night spent wasting away in bed, I started for the bathroom.

I picked up the bobby pins I’d been using to hold back my hair while washing my face when a thought struck me.

“Oh my God.” I twirled the pin between my fingers.

I called myself an idiot for the millionth time as I looked down at my outfit. I wore heather-gray sweatpants and a matching crewneck sweatshirt. I looked down at my socks and immediately went to the little closet in the corner of the bedroom, fishing through the outfits Olivia had brought me some time ago. I found a pair of sneakers and put them on, then pulled my hair up and away from my face, the bobby pin secured between my teeth.

I’d be cold for a little while, but if I made it out of the house I could run far in these shoes. I’d been watching that tall, waving grass for days now. It would be easy to blend with it, especially under the cloak of darkness descending over the house. I was short enough that no one would be able to see me as I ran, and ran, and ran until I made it to the woods and, eventually, freedom.

I twirled my tongue over the bobby pin and walked to the door, taking a breath. I knew how to do this.I could do this. My life depended on it.

I pushed the thought of Killian’s tongue in my mouth away as I started to pick the lock. It took far longer than it should have, but I finally snapped something deep within the doorknob and slowly inched the door open, finding the hallway empty.

I went for it, breaking into a silent sprint and slowed to a tiptoed creep when I reached the stairs. I didn’t know where the doors to the back terrace were, but if I could get through the front door, I could run around the house before the men guarding the gates at the end of the long driveway noticed me.

This was it.Escape.

I ran down the grand staircase, jumping over the last few steps and landing silently on the mosaic tile in the foyer. I paused, listening for any noises or voices.

“I’m keeping her. She might be useful to me in the future.”