Page 27
Story: Power
“Thank you for being so kind. I know I don’t have to talk about it. But…I don’t know,” she said, shaking her head slowly as she gazed out at the nature surrounding us. “Part of me wants you to know.”
“I’m here to listen to anything you need to share. You’re safe with me, Cali. Always.”
Her shoulders dipped as if relief had slipped through her chest. A small tremor shook her lips into a half-smile. I closed my fingers around her hand, feeling the fine tremor of her bones and the fierce determination beneath.
She drew in a breath that rattled like loose stones.
“I was in the university library, in that glass-walled study just off the special research stacks. One other woman was at a long table carved from walnut, fixated on a blueprint. My security team stood beyond the glass panels. I told them to wait outside so I could think without them looming.
“I wandered toward a corner shelf and reached for a book on Gothic vaults when someone yanked me backward. I never saw it coming. A bag covered my face, and I felt a prickalong my neck. My ears rang, and then the world went black.”
I shook my head, a thread of rage beginning to surge through my body. A pounding in my head drummed a raging beat.
I stayed silent, giving her space to continue.
“When I woke, I was alone. Every wall pressed in, like stone had teeth. Darkness tasted of damp metal. My ribs ached from lying on the concrete slab. My breath came slow, every breath dragging cold through my lungs.”
She paused as if to gather her thoughts. I let the quiet stretch until she spoke again.
“After hours that felt like years, footsteps echoed outside my cell. At first, they only watched. Faces pressed to the bars, silent eyes gleaming in the weak bulb overhead. I pounded on the door until my knuckles split and my voice shredded from my screams. Still, they said nothing. They only watched.”
Her jaw clenched. “When they finally spoke, it was to shred my family’s name. They accused my father of crimes he never committed. They threatened to hunt my sisters, to drag them in there and turn their bones to dust.”
I swallowed, trying to keep from tightening my fingers around hers.
“I thought that was the worst. Then a second group appeared.” She shivered hard, and I could see the vein on her neck pulsing rapidly. “They didn’t stay outside the bars.”
White-hot fury raced through my veins. In my mind, I was ripping the heads from these assholes’ bodies.
“They beat me every day,” she whispered, her voice cracking. “And they…they took turns—” Her voice dropped off.
This was excruciating.
“Cali,” I whispered, squeezing her hand.
“It felt like it was never going to end…” She spoke so quietly I could barely hear her.
My heart broke for her. I wanted to pull her into my arms and hold her forever, but she was sitting rigid and still as if a strong wind might break her in two.
“Thank God for my sisters and Vik.” She raised her head, tears on the tips of her lashes. “By the time they got to me, I was broken. I’d given up. I was frightened that I was going to die there.”
“But you didn’t.”
“No.” She sighed. “I didn’t.”
She faced me, and the intensity of her gaze made my heart clench. “But what they took from me, Leon, I can never get back.”
“Calista, I am so sorry,” I said, my gut twisting.
She waved her hand in the air, shaking her head.
“I’m not even talking about my innocence,” she said, voice catching on the word, “though that vanished too. I mean my strength. Before…before it happened, I loved life like a free spirit. I fought for my freedom, marched into storms without hesitation. I found adventure everywhere I looked. Afterward, it was like someone yanked the wind from my lungs. I jumped at every rustle for months, convinced a threat lived in every shadow.”
I leaned forward. “And now?”
She lifted her chin up, her jaw firm. “I’m gaining my strength. Not as quickly as I’d like, though. It leaves me feeling helpless, and that drives me crazy.”
“I don’t see you as weak,” I said. “Calista, you’re one of the strongest people I’ve ever met. I must admit, it’s taking all my strength right now not to explode with rage after hearing your story. If it were up to me, I’d rip those responsible to shreds. But I recognize that you don’t need anger from me right now. It’s your story. Your anger. Your vengeance. But I can be here for you. I can be your friend. You can always talk to me about anything you want. But again, I never want you to feel the need to discuss anything that makes you uncomfortable.”
“I’m here to listen to anything you need to share. You’re safe with me, Cali. Always.”
Her shoulders dipped as if relief had slipped through her chest. A small tremor shook her lips into a half-smile. I closed my fingers around her hand, feeling the fine tremor of her bones and the fierce determination beneath.
She drew in a breath that rattled like loose stones.
“I was in the university library, in that glass-walled study just off the special research stacks. One other woman was at a long table carved from walnut, fixated on a blueprint. My security team stood beyond the glass panels. I told them to wait outside so I could think without them looming.
“I wandered toward a corner shelf and reached for a book on Gothic vaults when someone yanked me backward. I never saw it coming. A bag covered my face, and I felt a prickalong my neck. My ears rang, and then the world went black.”
I shook my head, a thread of rage beginning to surge through my body. A pounding in my head drummed a raging beat.
I stayed silent, giving her space to continue.
“When I woke, I was alone. Every wall pressed in, like stone had teeth. Darkness tasted of damp metal. My ribs ached from lying on the concrete slab. My breath came slow, every breath dragging cold through my lungs.”
She paused as if to gather her thoughts. I let the quiet stretch until she spoke again.
“After hours that felt like years, footsteps echoed outside my cell. At first, they only watched. Faces pressed to the bars, silent eyes gleaming in the weak bulb overhead. I pounded on the door until my knuckles split and my voice shredded from my screams. Still, they said nothing. They only watched.”
Her jaw clenched. “When they finally spoke, it was to shred my family’s name. They accused my father of crimes he never committed. They threatened to hunt my sisters, to drag them in there and turn their bones to dust.”
I swallowed, trying to keep from tightening my fingers around hers.
“I thought that was the worst. Then a second group appeared.” She shivered hard, and I could see the vein on her neck pulsing rapidly. “They didn’t stay outside the bars.”
White-hot fury raced through my veins. In my mind, I was ripping the heads from these assholes’ bodies.
“They beat me every day,” she whispered, her voice cracking. “And they…they took turns—” Her voice dropped off.
This was excruciating.
“Cali,” I whispered, squeezing her hand.
“It felt like it was never going to end…” She spoke so quietly I could barely hear her.
My heart broke for her. I wanted to pull her into my arms and hold her forever, but she was sitting rigid and still as if a strong wind might break her in two.
“Thank God for my sisters and Vik.” She raised her head, tears on the tips of her lashes. “By the time they got to me, I was broken. I’d given up. I was frightened that I was going to die there.”
“But you didn’t.”
“No.” She sighed. “I didn’t.”
She faced me, and the intensity of her gaze made my heart clench. “But what they took from me, Leon, I can never get back.”
“Calista, I am so sorry,” I said, my gut twisting.
She waved her hand in the air, shaking her head.
“I’m not even talking about my innocence,” she said, voice catching on the word, “though that vanished too. I mean my strength. Before…before it happened, I loved life like a free spirit. I fought for my freedom, marched into storms without hesitation. I found adventure everywhere I looked. Afterward, it was like someone yanked the wind from my lungs. I jumped at every rustle for months, convinced a threat lived in every shadow.”
I leaned forward. “And now?”
She lifted her chin up, her jaw firm. “I’m gaining my strength. Not as quickly as I’d like, though. It leaves me feeling helpless, and that drives me crazy.”
“I don’t see you as weak,” I said. “Calista, you’re one of the strongest people I’ve ever met. I must admit, it’s taking all my strength right now not to explode with rage after hearing your story. If it were up to me, I’d rip those responsible to shreds. But I recognize that you don’t need anger from me right now. It’s your story. Your anger. Your vengeance. But I can be here for you. I can be your friend. You can always talk to me about anything you want. But again, I never want you to feel the need to discuss anything that makes you uncomfortable.”
Table of Contents
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