Page 115 of Broken By Silence

Page List

Font Size:

Then he shuts the door, the lock clicking into place. I clutch my ruined shoulder, tasting blood, and force myself to breathe.

Tracey sighs and lifts me onto the bed. “Go to sleep, Scarlett. It’s better this way… for everyone.”

I lie down on my back, staring at the ceiling. They think they’ve broken me, but I’ve survived this house once before. And this time… This time, I’m not leaving without making sure it burns to the ground.

Chapter 38

Lottie

It’s my wedding day…

Which is weird cause I’ve never been proposed to, and I’m already married to someone else.

The irony would almost be funny if it didn’t make me sick.

I stare at my reflection in the mirror, barely recognizing the girl looking back. My hair has been twisted and pinned into some elegant shape that doesn’t feel like me, my makeup painted on so perfectly that it looks like a mask. A veil lies heavy over my shoulders, and the wedding dress—white, lace, sleeveless—fits too tightly across my chest. Every breath hurts, but not as much as my shoulder does.

The joint is swollen, purpled, and angry, my arm nearly useless, but Tracey doesn’t care. She’s standing behind me, forcing the zipper up, her movements brisk and rough. Every tug sends a ripple of pain through my body, but I don’t make a sound.

Not a whimper. Not a cry.

I’ve gone silent again.

It’s safer this way. Lorenzo thinks he’s broken me, and for now, that’s exactly what I want him to believe.

“Hold still,” Tracey mutters, jerking the fabric higher. I flinch,but she doesn’t notice, or doesn’t care. Her face is pinched, her hands trembling slightly. She’s been crying, I think. But not for me. Never for me. “You could at least pretend to be grateful. This is good for us. Think of the life we’ll both get to live now.”

I meet her gaze in the mirror, but I don’t speak. I can’t. I just stare at her, hatred in my eyes. Tracey looks away first, just as the door creaks open, and Lorenzo steps inside, immaculate as ever.

Black suit, silver cufflinks, hair slicked back like he’s walking into a boardroom instead of a wedding. He looks at me the way someone looks at a prized horse. “She’s beautiful,” he says to Tracey, as if I’m not standing right here. “Almost perfect. Pity about the bruising.”

He reaches into his jacket and pulls something small and metallic from his pocket—a gun. My blood runs cold.

Tracey stiffens. “Lorenzo?—”

He holds it out to her, grip-first, with a smile that doesn’t reach his eyes. “In case our little bride gets any ideas.”

For a moment, I think she won’t take it. Her fingers twitch. Her throat moves as she swallows. But then she does because she always does. “Make sure she walks down that aisle, Tracey.”

Tracey’s hand shakes as she presses the weapon against my ribs, the cold press of it burning through the fabric of my dress. “Don’t make me use it,” she whispers.

I don’t respond. I just nod once, mechanical, and she exhales in shaky relief.

The house feelslike a tomb as they lead me through it. The air smells like roses and champagne. I can see the garden through the glass doors… a vision of beauty that feels obscene. It’s been transformed. Rows of white chairs line the manicured lawn, draped in ribbons. The archway at the end of the aisle is covered in ivory roses. There’s music playing, soft and classical, and people—guests—sitting and smiling as if they’re about to witness something holy.

They have no idea they’re attending a hostage situation dressed as a wedding.

The sun is blinding when I step outside. The heat presses against my skin, thick and suffocating. My bare feet sink slightly into the grass as Tracey nudges me forward, the gun still hidden beneath the bouquet she’s pretending to adjust.

The guests stand.

Lorenzo waits at the end of the aisle, hands clasped in front of him, his expression smug, composed. He looks like a man who’s already won.

Each step feels heavier than the last. My shoulder throbs, my chest feels tight, and the world narrows down to the sound of the strings, the hum of whispers, the pressure of metal against my ribs.

By the time I reach him, my vision’s gone blurry. Lorenzo steps forward, takes my hand, and when I don’t resist, his smile widens.

“See?” he murmurs. “Obedience looks good on you.”