Without any windows, I began to feel a little claustrophobic. There wasn’t even anything on the walls. This room was just a concrete box. My heart pounded against my ribcage.
I looked down at the table legs. They were bolted into the ground. I nodded to myself and looked at the door, but I didn’t hear anyone coming. I supposed it took a while to go and get the inmate.
There was nothing to do but wait.
And wait. As I scanned the walls I noticed a clock above the door that nearly touched the ceiling. Once I’d become aware of the ticking noise, I couldn’t get it out of my head.
I took a deep breath and tried to settle myself down. The clock ticked. My breaths became more shallow. I caught myself clenching my jaw. My tongue went between my teeth. I bit down. My hands were shaking and I couldn’t steady them. I tried to tell myself that it would be okay. This would all be over soon, I’d get my answers and be on my way.
Footsteps came down the hall. I closed my eyes and tried to slow down my breathing, but my throat felt like it was closing off. The world began to spin like a top.
The door opened. I jumped even though I’d been expecting it. A man in a cheap-looking charcoal suit came in and closed the door.
He had wavy, black hair that was going gray at the temples and brown eyes. I couldn’t read his expression and a jolt of panic surged through me.
“Lorrie Burnham?” he asked. His voice was raspy, like he smoked cigarettes by the pack every day.
I nodded, and he sat down.
“Lorrie, I’m Michael Rizzo with the Prison Bureau. I understand you are the stepdaughter of Marco Peralta. Is that correct?”
A shiver ran up my spine when I heard Marco’s full name coming from someone else. “Yes,” I answered shakily.
He nodded and clasped his hands together in what seemed to me to be a nervous gesture. My chest tightened until I was afraid I would need to lie down.
“Your stepfather was found hanging in his cell earlier this morning.”
The room spun around me and my stomach felt like it was in freefall. “Marco?”
“Marco Peralta, yes. I’m sorry for your loss.”
His words came from far away.
“But how?” I asked, trembling.
His hand came up to his mouth for a moment as if covering his expression. “For what it’s worth, when they found him, he had a smile on his face.”
I stood up, my legs unsteady. The news finally hit me, a dull throbbing pain starting in my gut. Panic seared through my chest and tears stung my vision. There would be no answers. I wouldn’t be able to confront Marco and find out the reason everything had happened. There was nothing.
My heart hammered in my chest and I couldn’t breathe. Sweat beaded on my back and I felt droplets slide down my spine, sending shivers through me.
Michael shot up to his feet and made his way to the door. “You can stay here,” he said quickly. “I understand this has come as quite a shock.”
“No,” I said, barely able to muster a whisper. “Please let me go.”
The room was too small and I couldn’t stand another moment trapped in here.
“You’re sure?”
I came to the door and stared at it, barely aware of his presence in the room. At some point, the door opened and I was led back out to the visitors area. I shuffled along in a daze, hoping that I could make it out of the prison before I broke down.
He was gone. When he had taken his life in that cell, he had locked the explanation for why he killed my mother away forever.
I was buried under the rock he’d left, and I would never be free.
Chapter Twenty-eight
STORM
I walked out into the parking lot, a hollow pain throbbing in my chest.
Rain had begun to fall from the sky while I was inside and the day had somehow gotten even darker. Water quickly soaked through my clothes as I trudged to my car, but I barely felt it.
I was lost. Marco was gone. I was never going to know what had happened to my mom. He had trapped me in a world that made no sense. Just like he did to my dad. Hunter had been right. Marco had wanted to torture me one last time. In fact, he’d been willing to take his own life to do it. My heart felt like it was being sliced open bit by agonizing bit.
Tears welled warm at my eyes and mixed in with the rain pelting my face from the sky. The parking lot seemed to go on forever. My shoes sloshed through puddle after puddle. I was wading through quicksand, unable to make any progress. My hair stuck to my head like a threadbare blanket soaked through.
Why did I even come? I was stupid. So stupid. How could I really think something good was going to come from this?
I’d thought this would be the last piece to get away from my tragedy and focus on helping Hunter with his condition, but now I had only made things worse and felt more lost than ever. Hunter still couldn’t walk and I was spiraling downward again. I felt beaten and exhausted. Our happy ending had been doomed from the start.