“But there’s one more test.” Josh swiped his fingers across an electronic tablet. He held it out so Mac could see the screen.
Gianna.
And Mac knew exactly what Josh was planning: a no-win situation for Mac. Josh didn’t want to find The One person who had beaten addiction. He wanted to kill.
Josh shook his head. “She’s not doing very well. I expect the toxins are building up in her bloodstream.”
The girl’s body was tinted green with a night vision light. She stood in front of the door, her fists raised as she beat on the wood. Water lapped around her knees. The part of the basement in which she was being held prisoner must be lower than the room Mac was in. As he watched, the water rose past her knees. God, it was pouring in. How quickly would the room fill?
“Let her go,” Mac tried. “She hasn’t done anything. She’s sick.”
“Maybe we can come to an agreement.” Josh raised the syringe. “You take this, and I’ll leave her outside the ER. She hasn’t seen my face. She doesn’t know who I am.”
Mac felt defeat flowing over him. The pain in his hand slipped away. “How do I know you’ll actually do it?”
Josh looked offended. “I always keep my word. Why would you even question my offer?”
“Because you’re a psycho killer?”
“I assure you,” Josh gave him a condescending, fuck you smile, “There’s a method to what seems like madness.”
“Let me guess. That’s a fatal dose of heroin.”
“It is,” Josh said as if the conclusion was inevitable.
“Why go to all this trouble?”
“The fallen have to be punished,” Josh said simply. “They have to be stopped. We both know there’s no such thing as a recovered addict. Sobriety is a temporary status. I used to be optimistic. I thought I could save people from themselves. But Gary’s relapse made me realize how dangerous addicts are. Anyone who fails my test needs to be culled from society like a diseased animal. Sooner or later, you’ll all relapse, and when you do, you’ll hurt someone else. The decision is yours.”
“But you’re not giving me a choice.” Mac argued in an attempt to stall for time.
“There’s always a choice.” Josh’s attitude turned pissy, as if he was tired of explaining himself to an intellectual inferior.
“My choice is to sacrifice an innocent girl to save myself. Hardly heroic,” Mac pointed out.
“Your integrity should trump all.” Josh lifted both hands. “She isn’t worth your life. She’s one of the fallen. Her life is misery, hardly worth sacrificing yours to preserve.”
“Says you.” Mac turned the discussion around. “Is this about your brother?”
Josh’s eyes went icicle. “My brother was perfect until she cast him in her spell. Sex and drugs were his end. She was supposed to be recovered, but obviously she wasn’t. There’s no such thing.”
“She?” Mac slipped his first two fingers into his front pants’ pocket. Did he have one of Stella’s hairpins? Please. Please. Please.
“Lucas’s girlfriend.” Josh spit out the words like venom. “She dragged him into her sordid life. She ruined him. My brother was weak, and he followed that whore right into hell.” Josh reached for the needle again. Victory shone like insanity in his eyes.
Mac’s fingers closed on a thin slip of metal. He drew it out slowly, holding it between the pads of his fingertips. Carefully he drew it onto the gurney at his side.
Josh was focused on the tablet. “Just like this piece of trash.”
Mac knew Josh wasn’t seeing Gianna. He was envisioning his brother’s girlfriend standing thigh-deep in the flooded cell. Josh was beyond reason. Mac inserted the hairpin into the handcuff lock. The angle was tricky, and he had to pick the lock blind and one-handed. If he moved his gaze, Josh might notice.
This was Mac’s sole chance of escape.
His only hope to save Gianna.
The lock gave with a thin click.
Josh froze. His head cocked and turned slowly toward Mac.
Oh shit.
Mac yanked his hand free. He snatched the knife from the rolling table and cut the leather straps around his ankles, but the blade was useless on the handcuffs. Josh dropped the tablet and lunged toward him. Grabbing Josh’s shirtfront with his freed hand, Mac slammed his forehead against the bridge of Josh’s nose. Bone crunched and blood flowed. Josh stumbled back, both hands covering his face.
The remaining cuff rattled on his wrist. He’d dropped the hairpin. Mac searched the bedding, but it was gone.
Josh staggered across the room and reached for the Taser.