Chapter 5

Blaire Olson POV:

"Institutionalize me?" I scoffed, my voice flat, a bitter laugh escaping my lips. "You really think that's going to work, Heath?"

He met my gaze, his eyes cold and unwavering. "It's for your own good, Blaire. You're clearly unstable. You need help."

"I'm unstable?" I shot back, my voice rising. "Or am I just inconvenient? Am I just exposing the truth you've tried so desperately to bury?"

He didn't argue. He simply turned to Ember, who was still huddled on the couch, her face buried in her hands. "Ember, I've made arrangements. Dr. Thorne at the Serenity Hills facility. He's expecting her."

My heart pounded against my ribs. Serenity Hills. A private institution, known for its "rehabilitation" programs. A place where dissidents, inconvenient truths, and troublesome individuals often disappeared.

Two burly orderlies suddenly appeared from the hallway, their faces impassive, their movements swift and decisive. They grabbed my arms, their grip like iron.

"Let go of me!" I screamed, struggling against their hold. "You can't do this!"

Heath stepped forward, his face a mask of detached concern. "It's for the best, Blaire. Trust me."

"Trust you?" I laughed, a raw, broken sound. "I wouldn't trust you with a dying cockroach, Heath David!"

I was dragged out of the apartment, my screams echoing in the empty hallway. Ember, her face pale but her eyes gleaming with a malicious satisfaction, watched me go.

"Don't worry, Heath," she said, her voice a low purr. "I'll take care of everything."

He nodded, his gaze still fixed on me as I was forced into a waiting car. The last thing I saw was his conflicted expression, a flicker of something almost like regret in his eyes. But it was fleeting. And it was too late.

The car sped off, leaving my screams and the echoes of my fury behind. I struggled, I fought, I cursed, but it was no use. The orderlies were too strong, too impassive. They were just following orders. Heath's orders.

We arrived at Serenity Hills, a sprawling, imposing structure that looked more like a fortress than a healing sanctuary. The gates clanged shut behind us, a chilling finality.

I was led to a sterile, white room. The air was thick with the faint scent of disinfectant and something else, something metallic and unsettling. A nurse, her face devoid of emotion, strapped me into a chair. My protests were met with silence, my struggles with firm, unyielding force.

Then, Ember walked in. She was no longer the frail, traumatized victim. Her eyes gleamed with a predatory satisfaction, a cruel smile playing on her lips. In her hand, she held a set of electrodes, their metallic gleam reflecting the harsh fluorescent lights.

"Well, well, Blaire," she purred, her voice dripping with venom. "Looks like we're finally going to have a little chat."

My blood ran cold. Electroshock therapy. She was going to try and break me. To erase me.

"You won't get anything from me, Ember," I snarled, my voice hoarse. "You can try all you want, but you'll never break me."

She chuckled, a chilling sound. "Oh, we'll see about that, darling. We'll see."

She pressed the electrodes against my temples. A jolt of agonizing pain shot through my body, my muscles convulsing, my vision blurring. I screamed, a primal sound torn from my throat.

"Now," Ember said, her voice calm, almost clinical, "tell me, Blaire. Was your father a sexual predator?"

"No!" I shrieked, the word a desperate defiance. "He's innocent! You framed him!"

Another jolt. Another scream. The pain was unbearable, a searing agony that threatened to rip me apart.

"Tell me, Blaire," she repeated, her voice unwavering, "did your father molest me?"

"No!" I cried, tears streaming down my face, mingling with the sweat and the pain. "He never touched you! You're lying!"

She smiled, a cruel, triumphant smirk. "Oh, Blaire. You're so stubborn. But we have all day. And all night, if necessary."

The torture continued, an endless cycle of pain and defiance. Each jolt of electricity threatened to shatter my mind, to erase my memories, to break my will. But I held on. I clung to the truth, to the memory of my father's kindness, my mother's love. I would not let her win. I would not let her erase who I was.

Suddenly, a different thought, a desperate, cunning idea, sparked in my mind. I had to play her game. I had to lull her into a false sense of security. I had to escape.

"Okay," I gasped, my voice weak, broken. "Okay, Ember. You win. I... I admit it. My father... he's a monster. He molested you. He's guilty."

Ember's eyes widened, a triumphant gleam in them. She leaned closer, her face flushed with victory. "Good, Blaire. Very good. Now, tell me, how did it feel to betray your own father?"

She was reveling in my supposed defeat, basking in her triumph. This was my chance.

As she leaned in, her guard down, I gathered every ounce of strength left in my battered body. With a sudden, explosive kick, I launched my foot forward, connecting squarely with her chest. She gasped, a surprised cry escaping her lips, and stumbled back, dropping the electrodes.

The orderlies, momentarily stunned, moved to restrain me. But I was faster. I used the momentum, twisting in the chair, and broke free from the restraints. My wrists were raw and bleeding, but I ignored the pain.

I scrambled towards the door, my heart pounding, adrenaline coursing through my veins. It was locked. Of course.

"Get her!" Ember shrieked, regaining her composure, her face contorted in a mask of fury.

The orderlies lunged. I dodged, my body a blur of motion. I grabbed Ember, who was still reeling from my kick, and used her as a shield.

"Stay back!" I warned, my voice hoarse, a desperate strength in it. "Or I'll take her with me!"

The orderlies hesitated. Ember, caught off guard, struggled in my grasp.

"Blaire, you're crazy!" she screamed, her voice laced with genuine fear.

"Am I?" I whispered in her ear, a chilling smile touching my lips. "You haven't seen anything yet, Ember."

I dragged her towards the window, my eyes scanning the distance. We were on the third floor. Not ideal, but I had no other choice.

"You took everything from me, Ember," I hissed, my voice filled with a cold, desperate resolve. "My father. My mother. My life. And now... I'm taking you with me."

With a desperate cry, I flung myself and Ember towards the window. The glass shattered with a deafening crash, showering us with shards. One last desperate act of defiance. One last desperate attempt at revenge.

We plunged downwards, a terrifying freefall, the wind roaring in my ears. I closed my eyes, a single thought echoing in my mind: I will make them pay.

Chapter 6

Blaire Olson POV:

The world was a kaleidoscope of pain. I blinked, my vision blurry, and found myself staring at a pristine white ceiling. The sterile scent of disinfectant filled my nostrils, a familiar unwelcome smell. I was in a hospital. Again.

A nurse, her face kind but weary, noticed I was awake. "Welcome back, Ms. Olson," she said, her voice soft. "You gave us quite a scare."

"What happened?" I whispered, my throat raw, my head throbbing.

"You fell from a third-story window," she explained, her voice even. "You have a few broken ribs, a concussion, and a sprained ankle. Your companion... Ember Huff... she's in critical condition. Sustained severe head trauma."

Ember. Critical condition. A flicker of something akin to satisfaction, cold and fleeting, passed through me. Then, a hollow ache. It wasn't enough. Not yet. She was still alive.

The nurse left, and a moment later, the door creaked open. Heath. He stood there, his hair disheveled, his eyes red-rimmed and bloodshot. He looked like he hadn't slept in days. The sight brought me no joy. Only a deepening sense of weariness.

"Heath," I said, my voice flat. "Come to gloat?"

He didn't answer. He just walked to the side of my bed, his gaze sweeping over my bruised and battered body. His face was a mask of exhaustion, but beneath it, I could see a flicker of something else. Something I couldn't quite decipher.

"Why, Blaire?" he asked, his voice low, tinged with a raw desperation. "Why did you do it? Why did you jump?"

"Why?" I scoffed, a bitter laugh escaping my lips. "You really have to ask, Heath?"

My voice hardened. "Ember was trying to break me. To erase me. With electroshock therapy. She was trying to force me to confess to lies she invented."

His eyes widened, a flicker of shock in them. He looked genuinely surprised. Had Ember kept that from him? Or was he just a master of feigned ignorance?

"Electroshock?" he whispered, his voice barely audible. "She wouldn't..."

"Oh, she would," I interrupted, my voice sharp. "And she did. She's a monster, Heath. A manipulative, calculating monster. And you, the great champion of justice, you fell for it hook, line, and sinker."

He flinched at my accusation, his jaw tightening. "Blaire, you're delusional. Ember would never do something like that."

"Delusional?" I laughed, a mirthless, broken sound. "You want to talk about delusion, Heath? You're the one who built your entire life on a foundation of lies. You're the one who destroyed an innocent man's life, all for your own twisted sense of 'justice' and Ember's pathetic ambition."

He stared at me, his gaze intense, unreadable. He looked like he wanted to say something, to argue, to defend himself. But no words came out.

He reached for a small tube of antiseptic cream and a cotton swab on the bedside table. He pulled up my hospital gown, exposing my bruised and battered foot.

"Don't touch me," I snapped, trying to pull my foot away. The movement sent a jolt of pain through my ankle.

He ignored my protest, his grip firm but gentle on my foot. He dabbed the cream onto a raw scrape, his touch surprisingly soft. He looked up at me, his eyes filled with a familiar tenderness, a ghost of the man I had once loved.

He gently blew on the scraped skin, just like he used to do when I was a child and scraped my knee. A wave of unexpected emotion, sharp and painful, washed over me. It was a cruel reminder of the past, of a love that had once been so pure, so uncomplicated.

My heart ached, a deep, hollow pain. How could the man who had once been so tender, so loving, become this cruel, broken shell? How could he have allowed himself to be so easily manipulated, so easily blinded?

"Why are you doing this, Heath?" I whispered, my voice thick with unshed tears. "Why are you still pretending?"

He looked up, his eyes filled with a profound sadness. "I'm not pretending, Blaire. I never was."

"You were," I accused, my voice trembling. "You pretended to love me. You pretended to care. All while you were destroying my family, all while you were falling for Ember's lies."

My eyes blazed with a fresh wave of fury. "You watched my mother die, Heath. You watched my father rot in prison. And you did nothing. You championed it."

He flinched, the words striking a nerve. He closed his eyes for a moment, a painful grimace twisting his features.

I looked down at his hand, still holding my foot. His fingers were long and slender, the fingers of a prosecutor, of a man who wielded words like weapons. My gaze fell on his thumb, stained with the antiseptic cream. An impulsive, desperate fury surged through me.

With a sudden, violent movement, I brought my mouth down onto his thumb, biting down with all my strength. The taste of blood filled my mouth. He cried out, a sharp, pained gasp, but he didn't pull away. He simply squeezed my foot tighter, his grip unwavering.

"Blaire!" he choked out, his voice a mixture of pain and disbelief. "What are you doing?"

I held on, my teeth clenched, the taste of his blood a bitter satisfaction on my tongue. I wanted to hurt him. I wanted him to feel a fraction of the pain he had inflicted upon me.

"Blaire, please," he pleaded, his voice raw. "Let go. You'll hurt yourself even more."

His words, laced with a genuine concern, were a painful echo of the past. A time when his concern had been real, his love unwavering.

My grip loosened. I released his thumb, my chest heaving. Blood welled up from the wound, a crimson stain against his pale skin. He looked at it for a moment, then back at me, his eyes filled with a complex mixture of pain, confusion, and something else. Something almost like pity.

He picked up a small bandage and carefully wrapped it around his bleeding thumb. He didn't say a word, his movements slow and deliberate. When he was done, he looked up, his eyes meeting mine.

"Ember's injuries are severe, Blaire," he said, his voice flat, devoid of emotion. "The doctors say she might lose the use of her hand. Permanently impaired fine motor skills."

My heart pounded. Her hand? The hand that had so cunningly crafted the lies that destroyed my family? The hand that had wielded the electrodes against me?

"What do you want, Heath?" I asked, my voice low and dangerous. "Are you going to demand a pound of flesh?"

He stared at me, his gaze unwavering. "She needs a tendon graft. A donor. And you're the closest match."

My blood ran cold. He wanted me to donate my hand tendons to Ember. The woman who had destroyed my life. The woman who had tortured me.

"You're insane, Heath," I whispered, my voice trembling with a mixture of shock and disbelief. "You actually expect me to do that?"

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