Chapter 6

Kristopher's face was inches from hers, his eyes half-closed in anticipation.

Alissa didn't panic. Her mind was a cold, empty room.

She dropped her center of gravity. Her knees bent sharply, and she slipped her body sideways, sliding out from under his heavy hands with a fluid, unnatural grace.

Kristopher lunged forward into empty space. His chin smashed violently against the rough bark of the oak tree.

He let out a sharp cry of pain, stumbling backward.

"You little bitch!" he snarled, spinning around. He swung his right arm in a wide, clumsy arc, aiming to grab a fistful of her hair.

As his hand flew toward her, Alissa moved.

She didn't try to block the strike with force. Her frail bones would snap.

Instead, she stepped inside his guard. Her left hand shot up, slapping the outside of his incoming wrist to redirect the momentum. Simultaneously, her right hand snaked under his arm, gripping his elbow joint.

She locked her grip. She threw her entire body weight backward, hanging off his right arm like an anchor.

The sudden downward force pulled Kristopher off balance. He pitched forward.

Alissa didn't try to overpower him. Using his own momentum against his collapsing frame, she hooked her right foot sharply behind his ankle and twisted her hips, sweeping his leg out from under him. It wasn't a strike of brute strength, but of desperate, anatomical precision.

A sickening pop echoed in the dark. Kristopher's leg completely gave out.

He crashed to his knees in the wet mud with a heavy thud.

Before he could even process the pain of hitting the dirt, Alissa dropped her weight. She didn't scramble up his back; her frail, trembling arms couldn't possibly support that kind of explosive movement. Instead, as he fell forward, she slipped behind him, using her legs to hook around his waist for a desperate anchor. She didn't have the bicep strength for a traditional hold. She slid her left forearm across his trachea, grabbing her own right wrist to create a crude, bone-on-bone lever.

She threw her entire body weight backward, using gravity rather than muscle to lock the choke. Her own shoulders screamed in agony, threatening to dislocate from the strain.

Kristopher's eyes bulged in absolute terror. He couldn't comprehend what was happening. The weak, pathetic girl was suddenly a machine of violence.

He reached back wildly, his fingernails clawing at her arms, trying to rip her off.

Alissa squeezed.

She didn't crush his windpipe. She adjusted the angle, pressing the hard bones of her forearm into the carotid arteries on both sides of his neck.

She was cutting off the blood flow to his brain.

Kristopher's face turned a deep, mottled purple. A wet, gurgling sound tore from his throat.

He thrashed violently in the dirt, kicking his legs, sending wet leaves flying into the air.

Alissa's face was pressed against the back of his head. Her expression was completely blank. She felt his frantic pulse hammering against her arm, slowing down with every passing second.

One. Two. Three. She counted in her head.

His thrashing became weak. His hands dropped from her arms, falling uselessly into the mud.

Six. Seven. Eight.

His eyes rolled back into his head. His body went completely limp, turning into dead weight.

Exactly at the eight-second mark, Alissa released the choke.

She uncrossed her legs and pushed herself backward, landing lightly on her feet a few yards away.

Kristopher collapsed face-first into the rotting leaves.

For a terrifying moment, he didn't move. Then, his body convulsed. He rolled onto his side, coughing violently, gasping for air like a drowning man pulled from the ocean.

He retched, spitting a mouthful of saliva into the dirt.

Alissa stood perfectly still, watching him. Her breathing was slightly elevated, but her hands were steady.

Kristopher managed to push himself up onto his elbows. He looked up at her, clutching his bruised throat. His eyes were wide with a primal, paralyzing fear. He was looking at a monster.

He tried to stand, but his right knee screamed in agony, and the lack of oxygen made his head spin. He collapsed back into the mud, pathetic and broken.

Alissa reached into her pocket and pulled out the black cassette recorder.

She held it up so the faint moonlight caught the plastic casing.

Click. She pressed the stop button. The sound was loud in the quiet forest.

Kristopher stared at the box, his chest heaving.

Alissa pressed rewind. The machine buzzed angrily for a few seconds.

Then, she pressed play.

The tiny speaker crackled to life.

"Ainsley doesn't know how to take care of you... Only I can make you feel good."

Kristopher's own voice, dripping with predatory intent, echoed through the dark woods.

"As long as you keep your mouth shut and do exactly what I say, she will never know a thing."

The color completely drained from Kristopher's face. He looked like a corpse. The reality of what she had just done crashed down on him.

He was ruined.

Chapter 7

The cassette tape reached the end of the recording and stopped with a sharp, mechanical click.

The silence that followed was heavier than the humid night air.

Kristopher stared at the black plastic box in Alissa's hand. Panic, raw and desperate, finally broke through his physical pain.

"Give me that," he croaked, his voice a ruined, raspy whisper.

He lunged forward from the mud, reaching a trembling, dirt-caked hand toward her legs, trying to snatch the recorder.

Alissa didn't step back. Her eyes hardened into chips of ice.

She lifted her right boot and brought the hard rubber heel down viciously on the back of Kristopher's outstretched hand.

She ground her heel into his knuckles, pinning his hand to the earth.

Kristopher let out a high-pitched scream of agony. His entire body curled inward like a dying spider.

Alissa leaned over him. Her shadow completely engulfed his trembling form.

"Listen to me very carefully," she said. Her voice was barely above a whisper, but it carried the chilling weight of absolute authority. "Tomorrow morning, this tape goes into a hiding spot. A place you will never find."

Kristopher whimpered, trying weakly to pull his hand free, but she pressed down harder.

"If I trip and fall down the stairs," Alissa continued, her tone dead and flat. "If I get sick. If you ever look at me, speak to me, or come within ten feet of me again... this tape lands directly on the principal's desk. And then, it goes to the police."

Kristopher's entire life-his respected career, his clean image, his freedom-flashed before his eyes, burning to ash.

Tears of pain and profound terror streamed down his dirty face. He nodded frantically, his chin scraping the mud.

"I swear! I swear to God, I won't touch you!" he sobbed.

Alissa lifted her boot.

"Get up," she commanded. "Go home. And you better think of a really good lie for why your knee is busted."

Kristopher scrambled backward like a beaten dog. He dragged himself up, putting no weight on his injured leg, and hobbled frantically into the dark woods, never looking back.

Alissa watched him disappear. The moment she was alone, her adrenaline crashed.

Her legs shook violently. She leaned heavily against the oak tree, sliding down until she sat in the dirt, gasping for air. Her muscles burned with lactic acid. The fight had taken everything she had.

She rested for ten minutes, then carefully made her way back to the house, slipping through her bedroom window unseen.

The next morning, a thick, damp fog rolled through the streets of the Red Sorghum community.

Alissa walked slowly down the cracked sidewalk. She wore her oversized sweater, her shoulders hunched, her head bowed. She looked exactly like the fragile, broken girl everyone thought she was.

At the corner, near a row of rusted mailboxes, stood Tammy-Lynn Boggs.

Tammy-Lynn was the town's loudest gossip. She was currently leaning against a mailbox, waving a lit cigarette as she spoke to two other neighborhood women.

"I'm telling you," Tammy-Lynn squawked, her voice cutting through the fog. "Ainsley said the girl is completely unhinged. Talking to the walls. Staring into space. She's crazy."

The women murmured in agreement. When they saw Alissa approaching, they abruptly stopped talking. Their eyes tracked her with a mixture of pity and deep suspicion.

Alissa felt their stares, but her heart rate didn't spike. This "crazy" narrative was the perfect camouflage. No one suspects a lunatic of calculated extortion.

Just as Alissa passed the mailboxes, the screen door of the McCoy house banged open.

Martha McCoy marched down her driveway, carrying a heavy plastic laundry basket.

Martha took one look at Tammy-Lynn's smug face and slammed the basket down on a wooden bench.

"Tammy-Lynn Boggs, you shut your filthy mouth!" Martha barked, pointing a stern finger at the gossip.

Tammy-Lynn gasped, clutching her chest. "Excuse me?"

"You heard me," Martha snapped, walking right up to the fence. "This girl isn't crazy. She's exhausted from doing all the work in that house while her sister plays dress-up. She borrowed my tape recorder to keep a diary because she's lonely. Not crazy. Lonely."

Tammy-Lynn's face flushed a deep, embarrassed red. The other women looked down at their shoes, suddenly ashamed.

Alissa stopped at the fence. She pulled the black recorder from her pocket and handed it to Martha with both hands.

She looked up, letting her eyes shine with unshed, grateful tears.

"Thank you, Mrs. McCoy," Alissa whispered softly.

Martha smiled warmly, patting Alissa's cold hand. "You're welcome, sweetie. You get some rest now."

High above them, a faint, rhythmic thumping echoed from the second floor of the Knox house. It was the sound of Kristopher pacing the length of his bedroom, unable to sleep, dragging his injured leg in frantic, terrified circles. The pacing suddenly stopped near the front window.

Alissa turned to walk back to her house.

As she walked, she kept her head bowed, staring at the cracked pavement. She knew, without needing to look, that someone was watching. On the second floor of the Knox house, the curtains in the master bedroom were parted by a fraction of an inch.

Standing in the shadows, looking down at the street with wide, bloodshot eyes, was Kristopher.

Alissa didn't break her stride. She didn't lift her gaze to meet his terrified stare. She remained the perfect picture of a timid, defeated girl.

But hidden beneath the shadow of her oversized collar, a tiny, razor-sharp smirk touched the corner of her lips.

Phase one was complete. The predator was now the prey.

Chapter 8

The late afternoon sun cast long, orange shadows across the Knox family kitchen.

Ainsley sat at the chipped Formica table, humming a pop song off the radio. She was carefully applying a coat of bright, cherry-red polish to her fingernails, blowing on them gently.

The front door opened with a heavy creak.

Kristopher limped into the hallway. His face was a sickly, pale gray, and the dark bags under his eyes made him look like he hadn't slept in a week. His right leg dragged stiffly behind him.

Ainsley looked up, the tiny brush freezing over her pinky nail.

She took in his disheveled hair, the mud caked on his expensive trousers, and the way he leaned heavily against the wall. Her perfectly plucked eyebrows drew together in deep disgust.

"Look at you," Ainsley scoffed, waving her wet nails in the air. "Did you go drinking behind the bleachers again? You're tracking mud all over my clean floor."

Kristopher swallowed hard. He avoided her eyes, staring fixedly at the scuff marks on the linoleum.

"I... I stayed late to fix the old tractor behind the gym," Kristopher stammered, his voice trembling slightly. "I slipped off the metal pedal. Banged my knee pretty bad."

Ainsley rolled her eyes, completely buying the pathetic, logical lie. She didn't ask if he needed ice. She didn't ask if he needed a doctor.

"Whatever," Ainsley sighed, returning her attention to her nails. "Just don't expect me to make dinner. Alissa hasn't done a single chore all day. The lazy bitch is probably faking sick again in her room."

At the sound of Alissa's name, Kristopher's entire body violently flinched.

His breath hitched, and a flash of pure, unadulterated terror widened his eyes. He gripped the doorframe so hard his knuckles turned white.

"Don't... don't bother her," Kristopher blurted out, his voice cracking.

Ainsley stopped painting. She looked at her husband like he had just grown a second head.

"Excuse me?" she snapped. "Since when do you care if she rests?"

Kristopher realized his mistake. He licked his dry lips, trying to backtrack. "I just... I have a headache. I don't want to hear you two yelling. Just let her sleep."

Without waiting for a response, Kristopher turned and practically dragged himself up the stairs, fleeing the conversation.

At the end of the dark hallway, standing perfectly still in the shadows, Alissa watched him go.

She had heard every word. The tape was working. The fear was absolute.

Alissa turned and slipped quietly back into her bedroom, locking the wooden door behind her with a soft click.

She peeled off her oversized sweater, leaving her in just a thin, faded tank top and shorts.

She walked over to the cracked full-length mirror leaning against the wall.

She stared at her reflection. Her collarbones jutted out sharply. Her arms were thin, lacking any real muscle definition. The dark purple bruise on her thigh from Ainsley's pinch was turning a sickly yellow.

The fight last night had been a victory, but a costly one. Her muscles ached with a deep, throbbing soreness. She had pushed this fragile body far past its breaking point.

Tricks and leverage would only get her so far. If she faced someone who knew how to fight, she would be crushed. She needed physical strength.

Alissa stepped away from the mirror and stood in the center of the room.

She couldn't do push-ups or heavy cardio. This malnourished body would suffer from rhabdomyolysis or a heart attack. She had to rebuild from the foundation up.

She began with isometric exercises.

She stood next to the bed and lowered herself into a quarter squat. Just a few inches.

She held the position. She focused her mind entirely on her quadriceps, forcing the muscle fibers to contract and hold the tension without moving.

Ten seconds passed. Her legs began to shake violently.

A sharp, tearing pain radiated through her thighs. Sweat beaded on her forehead, sliding down her pale cheeks and dripping onto the dusty floorboards.

She gritted her teeth, breathing in a harsh, rhythmic hiss through her nose.

She held it for thirty seconds before slowly standing up. Her legs felt like jelly, but her eyes burned with a fierce, fanatical light.

She moved to the wall, pressing her palms flat against the wood, and pushed. She didn't move the wall, but she forced her chest and triceps to engage, holding maximum tension for twenty seconds.

After thirty minutes of agonizing, silent work, Alissa collapsed onto the edge of her bed, her chest heaving.

She reached into her bra and pulled out the crumpled seventeen dollars.

She stared at the pathetic amount of cash. Muscle required protein. Protein required money.

She looked out her bedroom window. Below, in the overgrown backyard, was a small, neglected vegetable garden.

The original Alissa had painstakingly cultivated a few hidden rows of late-season sweet corn at the very edge of the property months ago-her only sanctuary away from Ainsley's demands. The stunted stalks were finally bearing fruit. They were a pathetic yield, but right now, they were food, and they were currency.

Alissa tucked the money away and grabbed a towel to wipe the sweat from her neck.

Tomorrow, she was taking control of the household's resources. And she knew exactly who would try to stop her.

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