โIย woke up in darkness. The floor beneath me was cold and made of stone. My head hurt. My body hurtโand that was when I remembered.โ
Ree. The coffee. All of the others, slumped overโฆ
I tried to push myself to my feet, but couldnโt stand. My body felt heavy and numb, like my limbs belonged to someone else.
โIt will wear off.โ
My head snapped up as my eyes searched through the darkness for the source of that voice. I heard the strike of a lighter, and a second later, a torch flamed to life on the wall.
Ree stood before me, looking every bit the woman I remembered.ย No- nonsense. Warm.
โYouโre one of them?โ I meant it as a statement, but the words came out a question.
โIย wasย retired.โ Ree obliged me with an answer. โUntil my former apprentice got himself killed.โ She gave me a look. โI understand I have you to thank for that.โ
โYou recruited Nightshade.โ
She snorted. โNightshade. Boy always did have notionsโbut I owed his grandfather, and the old man was insistent that I choose him as my heir.โ
โYou owed Malcolm Lowell.โ My brain whirred. โBecause he was the one who brought you to the Mastersโ attention.โ
Ree smiled fondly. โI was younger then. My no-good husband had left me. My no-good daughter was already showing signs of being her fatherโs daughter. Malcolm started coming by the diner. Never was a man as good at seeing secrets as that one.โ
Secrets. Like the fact that you had a homicidal streak.
โMalcolm saw something in me,โ Ree continued softly. โHe asked me what I would do if I ever saw Sarahโs father again.โ
The man who left you, pregnant and alone.
โYou would have killed him.โ The feeling was starting to come back into my body. I became hyperaware of the world around meโthe rough stone floor, the crackling of the fire, the shackles on the wall. โHe left you, and
people who leave deserve what they get.โ
Ree shook her head fondly. โYou always did favor your mamaโgood at reading people.โ
You tried to help my mom, and she left. She didnโt even say good-bye. I thought back to Michaelโs read on Ree the first time weโd met her. Heโd said that Ree had been fond of my mother, but that there was anger there, too.
โWere you the one who suggested my mother as Pythia?โ I asked. โYou knew that she was alone in the world, except for me. You had to have at least suspected that there was abuse in her past.โ
Ree didnโt reply.
โYou told me once that we, every one of us, reap what we sow. To become one of the Masters, you had to kill nine people.โ I paused, thinking of the victims on the wall back at Quantico. โYou chose people who deserved it.
People like your husband. People whoย left.โ When I didnโt get a reaction, I continued. โLife is full of drowning people,โ I said, continuing to parrot her own words back at her, โready and willing to drown you, tooโunless you drown them first.โ
For a moment, I thought Ree might snap. I thought she might reach for me. But instead, she closed her eyes. โYou have no idea how different the world looks once you know what itโs like to watch some son of a bitch who abandoned his four kids crumple to the ground. His eyes roll back in his head. His body seizes. Then the pain comes. He scratches at himself, at the walls, at the floorโuntil his nails are bloody. Until thereโs nothing left but pain.โ
The picture Ree was painting was familiar. Beau Donovan had died from Nightshadeโs poison. Heโd scratched at himself, at the floorโฆ
You chose Nightshade. You trained him. You have a gift for poisons. It made sense. Statistically, poison was a womanโs weapon. And when the patrons of the Not-A-Diner had started answering our questions about Mason Kyleโs family, Ree had shut the conversation down with a single word.
Enough.
I pushed myself unsteadily to my feet. I was still weakโtoo weak to be a threat.
โThe people you killed deserved to die,โ I said, playing into her pathology. โBut what about me? Is this what I deserve?โ
I willed her to see me as the child Iโd once beenโone that sheโd been fond of.
โI donโt leave people,โ I continued. โIโm the one who gets left.โ My voice shook slightly. โWhat about my friends, back at the diner? Did they deserve to die?โ
Until now, I hadnโt let myself even think those words. I hadnโt let myself remember Celine slumped in the booth across from me.ย Michael and Lia and Sloane and Dean. Agent Sterling. Judd.
I stared at the psychopath across from me.ย Tell me they were unconscious.
Tell me you just drugged them. Tell me theyโre alive.
โYou came to Gaither asking questions,โ Ree said sternly. โRunning around with your FBI friends, making us wonder if there was some memory buried in your headโsome clueโthat would lead you straight to our door. You found Malcolm. It was only a matter of time before you found the rest of us, too.โ
โAre we still in Gaither?โ I asked. โAre we nearby?โ
Ree didnโt answer the question. โThere were some who wanted you dead
โallย of you,โ she said instead. โOthers made a case for an alternative solution.โ
I thought about what Nightshade had told me about the Pythia. She was judge and jury. She was the one they tortured, purifying her so that she could pass judgment.
Again. And again. And again.
My mother had tried to get me out of Gaither. Had they broken her? Had she told them to bring me here?
The sound of a door creaking open ripped me from those thoughts. A figure in a hooded robe stood in the door. The hood fell down over his face, obscuring his features.
โIโd like a word with our guest.โ
Ree snorted. Clearly, she didnโt think too much of the guy in the hood. The exchange told me something about the power dynamics at play here.ย Youโre a veteran. Heโs a blowhard on the front lines for the first time.
I turned my attention from Ree to the man in the hood.ย Youโre young, and youโre new. Sheโs a Master, and youโre notโnot yet.
I was looking at the man whoโd killed my cousin. The one whoโd killed Tory and Bryce. And there was something familiar about him, something familiar about his voiceโฆ.
โI told you once,โ the hooded figure intoned, โthat if you gaze long enough into the abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you.โ
โFriedrich Nietzsche.โ I recognized the quoteโand the haughty, overblown delivery.ย โTA Geoff?โ
Iโd met him on the Redding case, when heโd attempted to pick me up in the wake of a girlโs death by sharing his โvastโ knowledge of serial killers. Iโd spent an evening in an abandoned lecture hall with this guy, Michael, and Bryce.
โItโs Geoffrey,โ he corrected tersely, lowering his hood. โAndย yourย name isnโt Veronica.โ
The last time weโd met, Iโd given him a fake name. โReally?โ I said. โThatโs the issue you really think is worth discussing here?โ
When last weโd met, Iโd pegged Geoffrey as being low on empathy and
high on himselfโbut he hadnโt struck me as a killer.ย You werenโt then. You werenโt even an apprentice. Death was a game to you. It was abstract.
How had the Masters found him?
โYouโre asking yourself how you could have been so wrong about me,โ Geoffrey said smugly. โI know all about you, Cassandra Hobbes. I know that you were investigating the Daniel Redding case. I know that you helped catchย hisย apprentices.โ He offered me a twisted smile. โBut you didnโt catch me.โ
You killed Bryceโshe always did get under your skin. Then the Pythia whispered in your ear. Did she play to your ego? Tell you who to kill? Was she the abyss, looking at and into you?
I took a step forward on legs that werenโt as unsteady as theyโd been a moment before. โYou burned those girls.โ I let myself sound mesmerized, playing to his ego the way my mother had. โYou strung them up, and you burned them, and you left no evidence behind.โ I stared at and into him. โYou need nine, but the nineย youย will choose?โ My voice was low, seductive as I advanced on him. โTheyโll make you legendary.โ
โEnough,โ Ree snapped. She stepped between Geoffrey and me. โSheโs playing you,โ she informed him. โAnd I donโt have the time or stomach to stand here and watch.โ
Geoffreyโs eyes narrowed. His hands hung loosely by his sides. One minute, he was just standing there, and the next, his left hand had reached for the torch. โLet me test her,โ he said. โLet me purify her, bit by bit.โ
The flame flickered.ย You want to burn me. You want to watch me scream. โNo,โ Ree said. โYour time will comeโafter your ninth kill and not a
second before.โ She removed something from her pocketโa small, round tub, no larger than a container of lip gloss. โOver time,โ she told me, unscrewing the lid, โone builds up immunity to poisons.โ
She dipped her finger into a colorless paste.
I thought of Beau, whoโd died screaming, and of everything Judd had told me about Nightshadeโs poison of choice.ย Incurable. Painful. Fatal.
Reeโs left hand closed around my chin. She jerked my face to the side, her grip like steel.
Too late, I tried to fight. Too late, my hands tried to block hers. She smeared the paste down my neck.
Some poisons donโt have to be ingested. My heart thudded in my chest.
Some poisons can be absorbed through the skin.
Ree let go of me and stepped back. At first, I felt nothing. And then, the world exploded into pain.