Total pages in book: 188
Estimated words: 179794 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 899(@200wpm)___ 719(@250wpm)___ 599(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 179794 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 899(@200wpm)___ 719(@250wpm)___ 599(@300wpm)
The man was a deranged lunatic flaunting his power.
“I seriously doubt that. Even if that were to come true, it won’t be for the good you pretend to accomplish.” Her nails bit into the palm of her hands at his smug smile.
“How will anyone find out? It certainly won’t be from you. Your little escape plan has failed, and shortly, you will be reunited with your husband. Neither of you will be in any condition to tarnish my legacy.”
Fear for Gavin tried to sideline her, anchoring her thoughts on the man in front of her and not on the man she loved. Gavin was her gladiator; he had survived much worse odds than he encountered today. He would survive, and she would too. Bravely, Ginny squared her shoulders at him, determined to show Allerton she wasn’t afraid of his threats.
“Sooner or later, one of your little minions will expose you,” Ginny contradicted him.
“Not without exposing their own secrets. The secrets I hold in my care aren’t easily explained away.”
“Unlike your own?”
“I find myself having to repeat myself. Like I said,” his voice condescending, “my hands are clean.”
“No … they … are … not.” Ginny gave him a withering stare. “I saw you kill Gyi with your own hands.”
Slowly, he capped the syringe.
“Finally … finally!” Satisfaction poured out of Allerton as if he had run a mouse into a corner and was about to beat it to death. “My dear, that was what I waiting for.”
Ginny fiddled with her bracelet, as if he was beneath her notice. “What? For me to admit that I saw you kill Gyi, and willingly watched Manny being beaten by your men to what I assume was his death? You should have just asked. I would have told you that first day you sent for me to come to your office.” Ginny said carelessly, dropping the secret she had harbored for so long and downplaying the admission to deliberately rile him even further. It was everything she could do to set aside her hatred and disgust of the man to appear unaffected.
Her plan worked.
Angered by her indifference to what he believed to be his victory at getting the admission from her, Allerton reached out, ripped the bracelet from her wrist, and flung it across the room. The metal clinked on the glass table.
“That was very rude.”
His veneer of sophistication cracked, exposing the monster within. His hands encircled her throat as he began strangling her, shaking her like a rag doll.
Forcing herself not to panic, she grabbed his wrists, fighting dizziness as she used her nails to rip into his flesh. At the same time, she brought her knee up … hard. Allerton released her with a howl of pain, as he went to his knees.
She would have kneed him in the face, but two guards caught her by the arms and dragged her back. The guard who’d brought the polygraph machine took out a baton from his holster, pulling his arm back, preparing to bring it down on her head.
“Stop,” Allerton ordered, using the edge of his desk to help himself to his feet. Holding onto the desk, he slowly limped around it to sit down on his chair. Then, flinging the syringe onto the desk, he opened a side drawer to take out a golden handle.
Ginny frowned at the object, not understanding what it went to.
As Allerton rose from the desk, she watched his eyes go to the computer screen while simultaneously pressing a button on the golden handle. With a click, the handle lengthened into a long cane.
Straightening to his full height, Allerton started to move away from his desk when something must have caught his eye because he turned back to the computer.
“Riz, Desmond is by door six. Go see why he is loitering there.”
Ginny wanted to rub her arm when the guard released her, but the second guard secured her other arm. The three additional guards in the room closed in on her.
“You’re such a coward. You have to pay other men because you’re too much of a wimp to take on one woman by yourself.”
Coming out from behind the desk, Allerton slid his hand down from the golden handle to the middle of the cane to twirl it between his fingers. Then, as he drew closer to her, he let the cane slip through his fingers until he held the handle once again. Raising the cane higher in the air, he moved it around and she heard it create a whizzing sound.
“What happened to the islanders on Clindale?” Ginny asked before he could strike her.
An evil smile played on his cruel lips. “I’ve been waiting for you to ask me that question. What do you think happened to them?”
“I think you killed the strongest ones and sold the weaker ones.”
“You’re too astute for your own good. Move away from her, Nino.”