The bodyguards shoved Karli forward. She stumbled over the top step of the steep wooden staircase.
She lost her footing completely. Her body tumbled downward, her shoulders and hips slamming against the hard edges of the wooden steps. She hit the bottom with a sickening thud, sprawling across the damp, freezing cement floor.
Above her, the heavy oak door slammed shut. The metallic clack of the deadbolt sliding into place echoed in the confined space.
The basement plunged into near-total darkness. The only light came from a tiny, grime-covered ventilation window near the ceiling, casting a weak, gray beam onto the dusty floor.
Karli gasped, her lungs burning. Fire flared in her scraped knees and bruised right shoulder. She placed her palms flat against the gritty cement and pushed herself up, her arms shaking with the effort.
Myra's shrill voice bled through the thick oak door. She told Karli to enjoy the dark. She promised that three days without food or water would make her beg for a pen to sign the marriage contract.
The sharp clicking of Myra's heels faded away. Absolute silence settled over the room. The air was thick, smelling of mildew, old cardboard, and wet earth.
Karli leaned her back against the freezing concrete wall. Her stomach churned violently. The panic tried to take over, but a white-hot fury burned it away. She refused to be their victim again.
She pushed away from the wall. She squinted, letting her eyes adjust to the gloom. She began tearing through the piles of junk stacked in the corners, desperate for anything she could use.
She shoved heavy, rotting cardboard boxes aside. The rough staples sliced into her fingertips, drawing beads of blood, but she didn't stop.
Her hand brushed against cold metal inside a rusted toolbox. She wrapped her fingers around the thick wooden handle of a heavy claw hammer.
Karli gripped the hammer tight. She tilted her head back, her eyes locking onto the narrow ventilation window high above her.
She dragged three wooden crates to the wall, stacking them haphazardly. The wood groaned under her weight as she climbed up, her legs trembling from the precarious balance.
Standing on the top crate, her face was inches from the filthy glass. She raised the hammer, took a deep breath, and swung it as hard as she could.
The glass shattered with a deafening crash. Jagged shards rained down, slicing across her forearms. Blood instantly welled up from the cuts, hot and stinging.
A violent gust of wind howled through the broken frame, driving cold rain directly into her face. The shock of the cold water cleared her mind.
Karli stripped off her thin prison-issue jacket. She bundled it up and jammed it over the bottom edge of the window frame to cover the worst of the broken glass.
She grabbed the sides of the concrete frame and hauled herself up. Her shoulders wedged tightly against the narrow opening. She gritted her teeth, ignoring the tearing of her shirt and the scraping of her skin, and forced her body through.
She tipped forward, falling headfirst into the muddy bushes lining the back of the estate. The impact knocked the wind out of her. Mud and dead leaves coated her face and hair.
From the front yard, the deep, aggressive barking of the estate's Dobermans shattered the night. The security system had tripped.
Karli didn't check her bleeding arms. She scrambled to her feet, her shoes slipping in the mud, and sprinted into the pitch-black, rain-soaked night.
She ran alongside the towering wrought-iron fence. The rain blinded her, matting her hair to her skull. Her heart hammered against her ribs so hard it felt like it would break bone.
She reached the side gate. The electronic lock hadn't fully engaged. She grabbed the wet metal bars, pulled with all her remaining strength, and squeezed through the narrow gap.
Behind her, the sweeping beams of heavy-duty flashlights pierced the rain. The shouts of the bodyguards echoed over the barking dogs.
Karli hit the asphalt of the suburban road. Her wet shoes lost traction. She went down hard, her knees and palms scraping against the rough pavement, sliding into a deep puddle.
She bit her lip to keep from crying out. The metallic taste of blood filled her mouth again. The sheer terror of being dragged back to that basement forced her to stand.
She ran blindly down the road, her lungs screaming for oxygen. She needed a car, a phone, a crowd-anything.
In the distance, the flickering neon sign of a 24-hour convenience store cut through the heavy rain. It looked like a beacon.
Karli stumbled toward it, her legs feeling like lead. Her vision blurred at the edges. She was running on pure adrenaline, seconds away from total collapse.
She reached the edge of the store's parking lot. Under the narrow, dry awning, parked in the shadows, sat an old, unassuming Volkswagen. Leaning against the driver's side door was the tall, broad silhouette of a man smoking a cigarette.





