Zane’s POV
The warehouse slls like rust and damp concrete.
There’s one light on and it’s hanging low, swinging slightly from the draft every ti soone opens the outer door.
He’s already tied to the chair when I walk in, with his wrist bound behind him and ankles secured to the legs, head hanging forward. Blood on his lip from where Thomas had to "convince" him to cooperate earlier.
He looks smaller than I imagined.
They always do.
I stand there for a mont and just look at him.
This is the man.... The is the one who thought she was prey.
Thomas steps back toward the wall when I enter. He doesn’t speak, he knows better than to.
The man lifts his head slowly when he hears my boots against concrete.
His eyes are swollen from crying.... He doesn’t recognize yet.
"Please," he says imdiately.
They always start with that. Always.
I stop two feet in front of him.
"Look at ."
His eyes flicker up.
Confusion..... then fear.
He doesn’t know why he’s here.. Not yet.
"Do you know who I am?" I ask.
He shakes his head quickly.
"I swear, I don’t know what this is about. I didn’t do anything. I don’t...."
I punch him before he can complete that statent.
Not hard enough to knock him out just hard enough to split his lip and make him bleed again.
"I asked you a fucking question."
He starts crying.
"I don’t know you.... I don’t know"
"But You know my wife Elaine ."
He freezes.
Ahhhh there it is. Recognition... not of but of her.
He swallows.
"I don’t know h...."
Anger courses through so I punch him again.
This ti his head snaps to the side and he groans.
"Don’t fucking lie to my face." I wait for a while pacing infront of him so I don’t loose my cool and punch his face again.
"You drugged her." I say after a while
His breathing becos shallow.
"You cornered her."
His chest rises faster.
"You thought she wouldn’t rember or that you’d escape it."
Sweat breaks out across his forehead.
"I don’t know what you’re talking about," he whispers.
I grab his jaw and force his head up.
"Say her na."
Silence.
"Say!. Her!. Na!."
He hesitates, so I punch him again and again.
I let go and step back.
"You rember," I say quietly.
His eyes dart toward the door like he thinks soone is coming to save him or he can escape .
No one is and he can’t.
"You left her bleeding," I continue. "You left her alone, hurt and vulnerable and you walked away."
His breathing turns ragged.
"She didn’t fight," he says suddenly. "She couldn’t..." anger courses through again
I hit him so hard the chair scrapes against the concrete.
Thomas shifts behind but doesn’t interfere.
"What’s your defense?" I ask.
"She was drunk," he stamrs. "She was flirting. I thought..."
"You thought what."
"That she wanted it."
I stare at him.
"Did she say yes?."
He doesn’t answer.
So I step closer
"Did she say yes? And I’ll have you know I don’t like repeating myself. "
"No," he mutters.
"Did she say no? Did she cry and scream and struggle."
He closes his eyes.
"Yes."
I nod once.
"Thank you."
He looks confused by that.
"You think this is about revenge?" I ask him.
He doesn’t respond.
"I’ve killed before," I continue. "I don’t enjoy it and I don’t seek it out."
That’s true.
"But I do believe in balance."
He starts crying harder knowing where I’m going.
"I’ll pay you," he says. "Whatever you want. I have money and I have connections. I can do anything at all whatev....."
"You thought she was alone."
His voice cracks. "I didn’t know she was married."
"And that would have made it better? Easier?."
"No, I.... I an....."
"You thought no one would co looking."
I crouch down so we’re eye level.
"That was your first mistake."
His face is pale now. Eyes wide and his breath shaking.
"She still wakes up from it," I tell him. "She still flinches sotis, she still thinks it was her fault that you couldn’t hear and understand the loud no she was screaming."
"I’m sorry, really I am." he sobs.
"You’re sorry you got caught."
"I’m sorry," he repeats.
I search his face.
There’s fear, desperation but there is no remorse.
"You ever done it before haven’t you ?" I ask quietly.
He shakes his head imdiately.
I look at Thomas, he doesn’t say anything.
But he doesn’t need to, we already did our research.
"Yes," I say. "You have."
The man starts hyperventilating.
"I was drunk," he says. "I didn’t think....."
"That’s the problem."
I stand slowly.
"When my sister died," I say, my voice even, "I thought maybe I was broken for wanting the man who did it dead."
He looks confused.
"I thought maybe sothing was wrong with ."
I step behind him now.
"But I realized sothing."
He twists in the chair, trying to follow .
"n like you only exist because you think you’ll get away with it."
I step back into his line of sight.
"You won’t."
He starts shaking his head violently.
"No, no, please, I have a daughter and I have wife I ca...."
"So did soone else."
His mouth opens and closes.
"I swear I’ll leave," he says. "I’ll go anywhere, I’ll disappear you won’t ever see again."
"You don’t disappear," I say calmly. "You don’t get to walk away and do this again sowhere else."
"I won’t!"
"You will."
I believe that... I don’t need him to confess to ten more cris.
I know his type.
"I need you to understand sothing," I say.
He’s crying openly now.
"When you touched her, you signed your own death certificate."
His face drains of color.
"You don’t get to rewrite what happened," I continue. "You don’t get to fra it as a misunderstanding."
I pull my gun from my jacket.
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