The Tablet
Chapter 25 · ~3.2k words
I crawled into the vent.
It wasn't a choice. It was a reaction to the sheer, suffocating terror of being trapped in my own house with a monster who knew my passwords.
The metal was cold against my stomach. Dust filled my nose, smelling of ozone and old secrets. I dragged myself forward, elbows scraping against the rivets, the Glock heavy and awkward in my waistband.
I had built this house. I knew every inch of it. I knew the HVAC system was a closed loop, designed for maximum efficiency.
But I didn't know about the sub-basement.
I didn't know about the mannequin.
I kept crawling. The sound of Julian's footsteps below me faded, replaced by the hum of the air handlers.
I needed to get to the garage. But the garage was a dead end if I couldn't open the door.
*Think, Elena. Think.*
The service road.
If I could get out of the house, I could run down the service road. It was washed out, yes, but a person could walk it. A person could run.
I reached a junction. Left for the garage. Right for the kitchen.
I turned left.
The metal groaned under my weight.
I froze.
Had he heard that?
I waited. Silence.
I kept moving.
My phone buzzed in my pocket. The burner.
I couldn't check it. Not in here. It was too tight. I couldn't reach my pocket without getting stuck.
I crawled faster. My knees burned.
I reached the garage vent. I peered through the slats.
The garage was dark. The Range Rover sat in the center, a black monolith.
I pushed the grate. It gave with a quiet *click*.
I lowered myself down, hanging by my fingertips before dropping to the concrete floor.
I landed in a crouch, gun raised.
Empty.
I ran to the side door. Locked.
I tried the keypad.
*Access Denied.*
Of course.
I looked around. I needed a way out.
The garage door opener.
I hit the button on the wall.
Nothing.
The power was cut.
I ran to the manual release cord. I pulled it.
The door disengaged from the track.
I grabbed the handle at the bottom and heaved.
It was heavy. Solid wood. Reinforced.
I strained, my muscles burning.
It slid up. Six inches. A foot.
Enough.
I dropped to my stomach. I rolled under the door.
The cold, wet air hit me like a slap. The fog was thick, swirling around the driveway like smoke.
I stood up. I was out.
I was free.
I ran down the driveway, past the gate, onto the service road.
It was dark. Muddy. The trees loomed over me like skeletons.
I slipped, sliding on the wet leaves. I got up and kept running.
I had to get to the scooter. I had to get to town.
Behind me, I heard a sound.
A car engine starting.
The Range Rover.
Headlights cut through the fog, sweeping across the trees.
He was coming.
I dove into the bushes. I scrambled down the embankment, sliding through the mud and ferns.
The car roared past on the road above me.
I lay in the dirt, heart hammering against the earth.
He was hunting me.
My phone buzzed.
I pulled it out.
*He knows you're out.*
I looked at the screen.
*Where are you?* I typed.
*The old sanitarium,* the reply came. *Meet me there.*
The sanitarium. The ruins down the cliff.
It was dangerous. Unstable.
But it was the only place he wouldn't look.
I stood up. I wiped the mud from my face.
And I ran into the dark.