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Blakely stands over the desk, her light aimed on the laptop. She slips on a pair of disposable gloves and flips it open. “I’ll check to see when the next cremation is scheduled.”

Which leaves me to explore the unit itself. I take out my phone, making sure it’s on airplane mode so I’m not pinged in this location. As I push through the double doors into the back, the pungent scent of antiseptic stings my nose. My reservations are high for this course of action.

There are ways to produce the degree of heat necessary to incinerate remains rather than taking the risk to transport bones into the city, and then unload them into a building. Where anyone can become a witness. There are too many unknown variables and contingencies; nothing feels within control.

I’m a scientist. Solving problems with science is what I do. Before I even locate the unit, I’m decided against this method and am in the process of turning around when a sound pricks my ears.

The telltaletickof a second-hand reverberates through the dark room.

I stop moving, aware of the unnatural silence, the absolute blackness pushing against me from all corners. Focusing on the sound, I try to decipher if there’s an actual ticking wall clock, or if it’s a manifestation of my anxiety.

My calf suddenly aches. The louder the sound grows, the more intense the pain. Like the phantom pain of a missing limb, the ghost of the antique Rolex reminds me that our time is limited.

The neurotic need to find the source threads my muscles, and I light my phone as I coast farther into the room. I should be attentive to the sounds in the front—Blakely’s movements, the front door, possible trespassers—but I’m attuned to the cleansnickslicing the air, drawing me toward the center, where the light catches on the gleam of an object.

I stand frozen.

My lungs burn as I claw for a breath, the pressure damn near cracking my chest.

I’m in the dark room of my cabin again. The walls pitch as coal, the only light source stemming from the mounted pendulum clocks that appear to float all around. There’s a familiar weight in my hand. Not comforting, but habitual, like getting a hit of a drug you can’t bleed out of your system. Toxic, but alleviating the bitter pang of homesickness.

I know what the object is…but I also know it’s impossible.

I destroyed my pocket watch.

I killed the tormenting demon in my head.

But it’s right there before me—hovering mid-air, spinning in slow oscillations to the rhythm of the relentless ticking. I lower my phone as I approach my pocket watch, trepidation slowing my steps until I’m right up on it, the clock face staring into mine.

As I reach for it, a loudclangshatters the trance. I whirl around, my guard shooting up like a high-rise.

Blakely stands in front of me, her hands pressed to the grids of a chain-link door.

She snaps a padlock into place, the harshclickdetonating around us as her eyes never leave mine.

Awareness begins to trickle in past my stupor. I watch Blakely turn her back to me, then after a moment, the overhead lights illuminate the space.

I glance around as all five senses absorb my surroundings at once, piecing a very twisted puzzle together.

When I look at the suspended watch again, it’s still there. The timepiece wasn’t a hallucination. With a twinge of apprehension, I grasp the pocket watch with a trembling hand, realizing the hands of the clock aren’t moving. The time is set to the exact moment I struck the watch with a river rock.

Forever stuck.

Just as I’m stuck where Blakely trapped me.

In a cage.

39

THE VILLAIN

BLAKELY

“The watch doesn’t work. It’s still broken,” I tell Alex, answering one of his obvious questions as he reverently touches his pocket watch where I strung it from the top of the crate.

I doubted this would work, luring Alex into a literal trap with a literal dangling carrot. The idea seemed comical to me yesterday. But I knew if there was any carrot tempting enough to transfix him for even a second, it was the pocket watch he destroyed. The one I unearthed at Devil’s Peak.

“I didn’t really have time to have it repaired,” I say. “And really, I wasn’t sure if I wanted to. I always hated the fucking sound of it. So I opted for this instead.” I hold up my phone and point to a small Bluetooth speaker positioned on one of the wall shelves.

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