Page 96 of Make Them Bleed
Juno tilts her head, Ghostface a white oval that knows how to haunt. “Tell me about the Five,” she says. “Coleman. Rook. Beau. Devin. And you. Tell me what you did to my sister. Who hired you? Why?”
“I wasn’t there,” he says, fast enough that I know he came here prepared to say that sentence to himself in the mirror. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Too late for that,” I say. “You were there.”
He laughs again, softer this time. “Do you think you can scare me? Because you’re wearing masks? That’s precious.” His eyes flick to Juno. “And tragic.”
Something tilts. I see Juno’s shoulders tighten, her breathing shift three beats into a pattern I know meansvolcano. I step closer, still careful. “Don’t talk to her,” I tell him. “Talk to me.”
He does, because he’s the kind of man who thinks men make the rules even when women are writing the story. “You don’t know what you’re playing with,” he says. “You don’t knowwhoyou’re playing with.”
“We do,” Render says. “We have names now.”
Merritt’s smile flickers. “Then you know whose house you just?—”
He doesn’t finish. The whiskey he spilled finally finds the slick edge of the rug. Merritt steps back to reclaim space, heel catches pile, and his body does a surprising, ugly thing—fishtails. Knight moves—too late, wrong angle. Merritt pinwheels. The back of hisskull clips the beveled corner of the stone hearth with a sound I will hear in my dreams on the nights I forget to invent new ones.
He drops.
Silence is not actually silence. It’s breath and blood and the house deciding it’s going to keep its lights on because antler chandeliers don’t know what death is. Juno stands perfectly still in a mask shaped like a scream, and for half a second I think she made no sound and then I realize she made all of them at once, inside.
We move the way people who care about living move—fast, urgent, competent. I’m at Merritt’s side in two strides, two fingers at his carotid. The skin is too warm; the pulse is not there. I say his name like that matters. It doesn’t.
“Arrow?” Juno’s voice is small and ninety miles wide.
I look up. Shake my head once. The shape of her shoulders collapses and reconstitutes into something that has to survive. Knight swears under his breath in a language made for swearing. Ozzy shifts slightly. Render goes still in a way that meansI’m watching our perimeter and also trying not to think.
“This wasn’t—” Juno says, and then, helplessly, “I didn’t?—”
“You didn’t,” I say. “He fell.”
“And hit his head,” Ozzy says, voice numb. “On a very rich rock.”
“Arrow.” Gage’s voice snaps into my ear like a rubber band. He hadn’t been on comms, but he is now. “What happened?”
“Accident,” I say, because that’s the catastrophic truth. “He’s down.”
“Do not narrate details,” he says, too brisk to be anything but terrified. “Knight, time?”
“Forty seconds since impact,” Knight says, eyes on the window and the street beyond.
“Then listen very carefully,” Gage says in a low voice. “Leave. Now. You will not discuss anything here on a line that can be traced. You will not tidy. You will not gift-wrap a crime scene. You will—Arrow, are you listening?—you will get Juno out of that house.”
“Wait,” Juno says, voice shaking into anger. “I’m scared.”
“I’ve got you,” I say, and my own voice comes back to me calmer than I feel. “We’re making a call.”
Ozzy whips his gaze to me. “Arrow?—”
“We are not leaving an unreported body,” I say. I spot Merritt’s phone lying on the counter, unlocked and ready for phone calls, and for once I ignore Gage’s hissed objection because this is a thing I amnotwilling to be wrong about. I hit the one button I’ve avoided all year. 9. 1. 1.
“Sir, what is your emergency?” a woman asks, patient and exhausted.
I grab the voice modulator out of my pocket. “There’s been an accident,” I say, my voice unrecognizable. “Man hit his head. He’s— he’s not breathing.” I give the address because ethics don’t care if they’re bad for your op. I end the call before the operator can ask a name.
Render is already at the front window, peeking through a slit in the curtain like a spy novel illustration. “Neighbor lights on,” hesays. “No one in the street. We have ninety seconds before the first siren wails.”
“Go,” Gage says, a prayer disguised as an order. “Now.”
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56
- Page 57
- Page 58
- Page 59
- Page 60
- Page 61
- Page 62
- Page 63
- Page 64
- Page 65
- Page 66
- Page 67
- Page 68
- Page 69
- Page 70
- Page 71
- Page 72
- Page 73
- Page 74
- Page 75
- Page 76
- Page 77
- Page 78
- Page 79
- Page 80
- Page 81
- Page 82
- Page 83
- Page 84
- Page 85
- Page 86
- Page 87
- Page 88
- Page 89
- Page 90
- Page 91
- Page 92
- Page 93
- Page 94
- Page 95
- Page 96 (reading here)
- Page 97
- Page 98
- Page 99
- Page 100
- Page 101
- Page 102
- Page 103
- Page 104
- Page 105
- Page 106
- Page 107
- Page 108
- Page 109
- Page 110
- Page 111
- Page 112
- Page 113
- Page 114
- Page 115
- Page 116
- Page 117
- Page 118
- Page 119
- Page 120
- Page 121
- Page 122
- Page 123