No one talks about how the first man that you choose to give yourself to holds power over you—even if it’s the slightest bit of it.
I guess that’s why you’re not supposed to give your virginity to a man you’ve just met.
Although, the problem wasn’t that I gave it to him. The problem was that it was him I gave it to.
Still, he was kind to me. Instead of up and leaving immediately after deflowering me, he stayed and held me until morning came and I sprung up from my bed when I heard my brother’s car pull into the driveway.
I gasped loudly, my hands trembling with adrenaline as I tapped on Marcel’s shoulder, anxiously calling, “Marcel! My brother’s home!”
When his eyes snapped open, he didn’t seem remotely fazed, and in that moment, I should’ve known. I should’ve known that the man who merely appeared interested in the fact that the girl sitting in his car was the sister of the town’s infamous thug, and not cautious, was someone who was far more menacing than the thug himself. After all, he did warn me that he was dangerous. I just didn’t think he could be much worse than the man I was living with.
But I was wrong.
He was worse.
He is so much worse.
My gaze lingers on the pair of men laying out the money from the duffle bag on the kitchen counter, counting it for Marcel as he eyes me. With my arms crossed beneath my breasts, I occasionally shoot him a sideways glance, attempting to swallow the dryness in my throat. While I’m sure that I have an idea of what the gravity of the situation is, I’m almost desperate to walk to the fridge and grab a cold bottle of water.
That is until I remember that there’s a half-full glass still sitting on my nightstand.
Am I allowed to move..?
My gaze falls back to Marcel as he leans back on the black stool. After releasing me from his hold, he pushed me back onto the bed and sat back down without saying a word. Well, without saying anything other than his command to his minions, telling them to count his money.
I’m just drinking water. Where the hell am I gonna go?
I swallow my cowardice and reluctantly stand up, straightening on my feet. The pair of eyes that scrutinize me make me falter, and as a shaky breath passes my lips, I reluctantly turn on my heels and cautiously move to the nightstand. Outside of my skin, you can hardly see the quiver in my hand as I reach for the glass and bring it up to my lips.
It’s puny, but the cold water kissing my tongue is a relief that briefly makes me forget that there’s a bullet in Marcel’s gun with my name on it.
It’s funny, really.
That day, I thought that there was a bullet in my brother’s gun with his name on it.
I had considered begging him to jump out the window until I remembered that my bedroom didn’t have a window and his best bet was to sneak out the backdoor while I attempted to distract Levi.
Out of my bedroom, I hurried to the front door, practically sprinting down the hall only to find that Levi was already standing in the kitchen. His hand, bruised and bloody, was wrapped around the refrigerator handle, his gaze fixed on the leftovers from the rice and honey garlic chicken I’d made the night before he left.
“Hey…” I called nervously as I looked at his swollen knuckles. “Are you okay?” My voice quavered ever-so-slightly as I furrowed my eyebrows in concern.
He arched a brow, averting his hazel green eyes to meet my own. I didn’t notice the bruise on his cheek until he turned his head to me, allowing the refrigerator door to shut before him. “I’m good,” he responded nonchalantly as he lowered his wounded hand, subtly attempting to hide it from me. “You’re up early.”
“Let me look at that,” I dismissed his acknowledgment, moving around the kitchen island and toward him.
“Mercy…”
I ignored him, taking his hand into my own. “What the hell did you do?!” My voice was louder than I intended, my eyes snapping up to his as he pulled his hand away from me.
“I’m fine,” he muttered, turning his head away from me.
“Fine?” I mused as I impulsively grabbed his square jaw, snapping his head to the side. There it was: a large purple bruise on the side of his face and a busted lip. “You don’t look fine, Levi. What the hell happened?”
He shot me a look I was all too familiar with, the one that said he wasn’t going to tell me anything but would be grateful if I helped him clean himself up.
I sighed hopelessly, motioning for the chair at the dining table. “I’ll get the First Aid kit,” I muttered in defeat, but before I could turn toward the cupboard, his hand suddenly grabbed my arm, protectively pulling me out of his way and behind him.
An audible gasp parted my lips, my head snapping to the side only to find Marcel standing just before the hallway, a few feet away from Levi and I.
“Mercy…” Levi’s voice, threateningly low, resonated with caution, warning me, “Go to my room, and don’t come out until I tell you to.”
He pointed across the kitchen, down the opposite direction from where Marcel stood with a smirk on his lips and a flash of amusement in his eyes—a look I hadn’t seen on his face before.
My heart was at my throat, pounding as I pressed, “Levi? What’s going on..?”
“You’re high,” Marcel’s voice pulls me from my thoughts, my gaze averting to meet his golden-brown irises as I lower the now empty glass from my face, placing it on the back nightstand.
Not high enough…
Without a word, I walk back to the foot of the bed, and I lower myself back onto it.
“What happened to you, doll?” He almost sounds sincere, curiosity gleaming from his hard features as he retorts, “You used to be so…innocent.”
I scoff lightly, amused at the reminiscence of my naivety. There are moments that I wish that I could go back, moments that I wish that I didn’t know everything that I know now.
Oblivion is bliss.
I breathe out, unfortunately, “I grew up.”
After that day, I stopped trying to make friends because it stopped mattering that I didn’t have any. It stopped mattering that without my brother, I was utterly alone.
It was better to be alone than to make the same mistake again—or so I told myself.
I paced in Levi’s room, my heart thumping wildly against my chest, each step a painful second of waiting. When the door finally swung open, the knob nearly punched a hole in the wall, Levi storming in, his face contorted with rage as his eyes blazed like a wildfire.
“When I tell you to do something, you fucking do it!” He snarled, his voice resonating with a fury unlike anything I’d ever seen from him.
I flinched, stepping back involuntarily. “Stop it…” I whispered, my voice barely a tremble in the air. “You’re scaring me…” The room felt smaller, the walls closing in as his presence loomed over me.
It was evident that Levi knew more about Marcel than I did, and as naive as I was, he didn’t have to spell it out for me. I knew that I had fucked up.
His anger didn’t wane. If anything, it only intensified when I lowly asked, “Who was that?”
He didn’t respond immediately, his nostrils flaring as he took long, deep breaths, attempting to settle his rage. For a moment, it seemed as though he was searching my features for a hint of jest on my behalf, and when he realized that he wasn’t going to find it, he scoffed in disbelief.
“You slept with him and you don’t even know who he is?”
His words stung, a harsh reminder of how I had blindly walked into the lion’s den. While I knew that it wasn’t going to take a genius to figure out why Marcel was standing in the middle of our home, I could feel my face flush at my shame.
And if I wasn’t utterly mortified before, I was when he said, “Marcello Saldívar.”
A deafening silence filled the room, heavy and suffocating. Levi’s expression changed, his anger morphing into something darker. He paused, his gaze piercing as though he could see right through me. His jaw clenched tightly and he seethed through his teeth, “You fucked the son of the man who killed mom and dad.”
“One million, boss,” the deep voice of the bald headed man echoes as he tosses the last brick of cash into the duffle bag, pulling me out of my thoughts once more. The sound of him zipping it shut makes a string of chills shoot down my spine, fear of what Marcel plans to do next looming over me like gray skies with the promise of a storm.
I watch as Marcel rises from the stool, a thoughtful look playing on his hard features. I expect him to turn to his buddies, to give me a moment to try to calm my nerves, but he never does. Instead, he moves toward me, and before I have a chance to attempt to move away from him, he grabs me by my arms and pulls me back onto my feet.
“No!” I cry, but it’s useless. He tightens his hold on me, daring me to fight back.
“Relax, doll,” he hums, and in the next moment, he throws an arm around me, pulling me into his side. His unoccupied hand reaches into the lapel of his suit jacket, and when I think he’s going to draw his gun, I’m surprised when he draws his phone instead.
He navigates to the camera app with the pad of his thumb, waving his phone up in front of us. He turns his head toward me, pressing his lips against my cheek as he captures the distasteful moment with pride.
With this, he shoves me back onto the bed, a yelp tearing from my lungs.
“Now, let’s see how long it takes for your brother to get me the rest of my money,” he says as his thumbs tap on the screen.
I furrow my eyebrows, tears filling my eyes as I ask, “What are you doing..?”
He chuckles darkly, telling me, “I’m giving him an incentive to bring me my money.”
“But you have your money!” I argue.
He arches a brow, and this time, when his gaze lifts from his phone, it finds me once more. “No. You see, Mercy: when someone steals from me, regardless of whether the money finds its way back into my hands, they owe me twice as much plus 50% interest compounded daily for each day that it’s missing.”
What..?
With the phone in his hand, he waves it at me. “You’re smart,” he says. “Dime muñeca."
("Tell me, doll.")
"It’s been two days since he disappeared with that bag,” he nods at the duffle bag still sitting on the counter. “How much does he owe now?”
“You’re insane…” I mutter, wearing disgust on my face like the smirk he wears on his lips.
“Wrong answer, Mercy.” My disdain only serves to satisfy him, and just when I think he can’t be any more repulsive, he urges me, taunting me condescendingly, “You can do it. Tell me, doll. How much does he owe?”
Screw you.
He arches a brow, crossing his arms as he presses, “I’m waiting.”
I clench my jaw, my nostrils flaring. I don’t want to give him the satisfaction of answering, but when he suddenly reaches back into the lapel of his jacket, taking his gun from the holster, I mutter, “Four million, five-hundred thousand.”
He raises his eyebrows excitedly, exclaiming, “Atta girl!”
It’s hard for me to believe that Levi would do this to me. It’s hard for me to imagine that he’d take the time to track me down only to break into my apartment, drop off a bag of money, and disappear without so much as a hello.
Then again, he’s done it before. Except the last time he did it was right before I left for college and it wasn’t money that didn’t belong to him nor was it anywhere near the amount sitting in that duffle bag.
What the hell did you get yourself into, Levi..?
Silence falls for a brief moment, and in the next, an audible buzz emits from his phone. My heart skips a beat, watching him reach for it. He glances at the screen, a glint of satisfaction beaming in his eyes as he sings, “Well, what do you know? Big brother’s calling.”
Levi..?
With the phone on speaker, he answers, but before he can mutter a sound, Levi’s voice roars with rage, “You stay the hell away from her! You hear me?! I’ll kill you, Marcel. I’ll fucking kill you!”
“Levi!” I cry out. “Levi, I–”
My words come short, halting in my throat as Marcel suddenly lifts his gun. He points it at me with his finger on the trigger, his eyes warning me to make another sound.
“Mercy?!” Levi’s voice yields despair, a heartbreaking plea lingering as he says, “Mercy, it’s gonna be okay. I’m gonna take care of this. I promise.”
“Pity,” Marcel suddenly says. “She wouldn’t be in this mess if you hadn’t stolen from me. I want my money, Levi.”
“I didn’t take your fucking money!” Levi snarls. “I delivered it and left it right where you fucking told me to!”
A low hum emits from the back of Marcel’s throat, his voice tinged with sarcasm as he says, “Well, that’s odd seeing as my client never received it and I found it in your sister’s closet. Now, if you didn’t take it, why did it take so long for you to return my phone calls?”
He pauses for a moment, still pointing the gun at me as he says, “Why make me come looking for your sister if you’re not a thief?”
“I didn’t take your money, Marcel,” Levi’s voice is calmer, his tone softer.
The silence that hovers over them makes my heart stop in my chest, anticipation clawing at my insides. It doesn’t last very long, and this time, when Marcel speaks, his voice darkens, telling Levi, “You have until the end of the week to deliver four and a half million or I’m putting a bullet in your sister’s head next time.”
Next time..?
He doesn’t give Levi the chance to respond, hanging up a second later. His hand never wavers, my eyes still staring down the barrel of the loaded gun as he turns to his men and says, “Call an ambulance, Frank. I don’t want her to bleed out.”
No…
Before I can mutter a sound, Marcel turns back to me, shifting his gun to point it at my shoulder. My heart drops to my stomach, tears falling from my eyes, and before the darkness draws me in, all I hear is the drum bursting pop of his firing gun.
The familiar sound of the incessant beeping from the vital signs monitor prompts an audible groan from the back of my throat, pulling me into consciousness. My eyelids feel heavy, and I struggle to lift them as the bright light that beams from between the opened window blinds pierces my hazy eyes. My eyebrows furrow, my lungs drawing a deep breath as the discomfort from my shoulder slowly settles. It isn’t until my vision clears that I begin to recall the events from the night prior, coming to me like flashbacks in bits and pieces. Marcel. “Mercy?” My eyes widen at the familiar voice, my head snapping to the side to find Levi standing from the chair positioned at my bedside. He straightens on his feet, swiftly moving to stand beside me. “Hey…” the tenderness in his voice is comforting until I remember that I haven’t seen him for the better part of 6 years and the man who put me in this hospital bed is the same man that’s been looking for him. “Levi..?” My voice quavers, the rippl
I wish I could say that if I’d done things differently, I wouldn’t be here. However, the unfortunate truth is that even if I had done things differently, it feels as though this was destined to happen.I guess that’s what happens when your parents leave a mess for you to clean up.My hand grips onto the balled bed sheet in my fist as though it’ll keep me grounded to my body should Marcel choose to put a bullet through my head this time like he said he would. With crippling anticipation, my gaze follows him as he moves from the doorway to stand just before the foot of the bed. Despite very notably feeling my heart pounding in my chest, it isn’t until I register the increasingly shorter pauses between each beep from the vital signs machine that I realize that the spike of my heart rates’ doubled. My hands tremble on my lap, the veins on my arm dilating as my blood pumps faster and harder.It’s okay. It’s gonna be okay.…No the fuck it’s not.The smirk dancing on Marcel’s lips shifts ev
I inhale deeply as my eyelids flutter open.There’s an odd numbness lingering in my chest as my empty eyes gaze at the coffered ceiling with gold lining. Despite the unfamiliarity, my absent mind ignores the lingering discomfort in my shoulder as my sight shifts to the illuminating, flat, round bulbs in the center of the odd geometric pattern of the decorative panel.I wasn’t ready. Although, I suppose, I probably never would have been.Levi…I didn’t get to say goodbye the first time he left, and I can’t help but wonder if maybe the reason he avoided saying goodbye at all is because he knew how I’d react. If 24-year-old me couldn’t hold it together, what hope was there for 18-year-old me to not have utterly collapsed under the heartbreak of knowingly parting ways with the only family I had left—the only family I have left.I suppose I only wish he’d stayed with me until I fell asleep.Would it have made it all better?The breath that parts my lips makes my chest slowly fall, my head
I stand at the window, my arms crossed tightly, as if holding myself together, while my gaze drifts across the vast, open fields that stretch for acres around the estate.I’ve been counting down the minutes until Levi’s time is up, and without having heard from Marcel since the last time he was here—almost a week ago—I’m left to assume that Levi, with only a few hours left until his deadline, will probably show up short-handed—just as Marcel insinuated.I kept hoping that Levi would come to my rescue, the way that he somehow always did when we were growing up—with and without parents.But he never did. Each minute of silence chips away at the little hope that I have left in me, and as guilty as it makes me feel, I mentally prepare myself for the moment that Marcel decides to walk in here to give me the inevitable news.It’s not that I don’t have faith in Levi. It’s that I know my brother, and if he did have the money to buy my freedom back, he would’ve done it the very day I was taken
As of late, it seems that I often find myself thinking about the past. Even as I sit here, in the elegant dining room, staring at the computer screen in deafening silence, I’m drawn back to the haunting memories of the choices that I made that contributed to this. It’d been a week since learning about Marcel’s identity and I was home alone, yet again, like every Saturday evening for the last two years. Levi didn’t waste his breath on telling me to stay home—he didn’t have to. I’d felt so ashamed of the vulnerability and stupidity that led to me making desperate choices that I only left my room to go to school whenever he was home. In fact, I avoided him when I could. I couldn’t bring myself to look him in the eye. The humiliation was too much. It was the middle of December, and being in South Texas, it was just a little below 60 degrees. I’d curled up on the corner of the couch, wrapped in a blanket as I leaned into my side, my elbow resting on the armrest and my head propped up as
As I stand before Marcel, behind the closed doors of the room I’ll be calling home for the next month, the tension between us weighs heavy, suffocating like that night, 6 years ago.He had scooted closer to me after I’d wiped the tears from my face, and despite knowing that it was evident—with or without crying—that something was eating away at me inside, I wouldn’t look at him.I wouldn’t dare to.I was afraid that if I did, he’d see right through and break me in half, giving himself free reign into every thought and feeling that I had.However, when the knuckle of his index finger found my chin, bringing my eyes to look into his, I didn’t feel like the world around me was collapsing or as if I was collapsing with it. Instead, I found comfort—a sense of safety.“I want a girl like you,” he said softly. I furrowed my eyebrows, confused, but before I could mutter a sound, he explained, “Quiet, smart, cute enough to be pretty but not pretty enough to be sexy. Keeps to herself, stays out
A billion wires, a million tubes, a thousand switches…I sigh in exasperation as I gently bang my fist against my chin. In my swivel chair, I tuck my foot beneath my weight, my leg bent beneath me as I lean into my elbow, resting it on top of the table of my lab.For the past hour, I’ve been reading over not-so classified, stolen military files on the electronic tablet that’d been placed in one of the drawers in the desk positioned behind me. While I know that I shouldn’t be surprised, it’s amazing just how much information the government has on explosives. From devices as small as the palm of my hand to metal cylinders twice the size of a refrigerator, it’s all in one large file that, again, unsurprisingly, Marcel somehow has access to.He didn’t even tell me what kind of bomb he wants.…Unprofessional.…Nothing about this is professional, and you know it.It all goes back to that day: the day that Marcel returned for my answer.It was just half an hour before midnight and I was an
This. Is. Raw. I have to fight to refrain from scrunching my nose as I cut into the 6oz steak sitting on the plate in front of me. My gaze briefly flickers to glance at Marcel’s plate only to find that he’s halfway done with what I could tell was a 14oz cut. This is one of the things that Levi and I never could agree on: steak should not be bleeding after it’s cooked. “BuT iT’s NoT eVeN bLoOd.” I can hear Levi’s voice ringing in my ears like it was just yesterday that we were arguing over rare and medium well. With the smallest bite-size piece that I can stab my fork into, I reluctantly draw it into my mouth. I’m hesitant, chewing at three bites per minute until I decide to stop trying to convince myself that it’s not utterly gross and I swallow it down with a generous sip of water. Oh, no. No, no, no, no, no. I turn the plate counter-clockwise, choosing to make the mashed potatoes and asparagus the only thing on this plate that I’ll be eating this evening. As I dig into the pe
⊰ Marcel ⊱The steady beep of the vital signs monitor echoes through the sterile hospital room, a constant reminder of the fragile life hanging in the balance. I sit by Mercy’s bedside, my hand clasped tightly around hers, my eyes fixed on her pale, still face.It’s been a month. A month of watching her chest rise and fall with the help of machines, a month of praying for a miracle that never came. The doctors say there’s little to no brain activity, that the chances of her waking up are next to none.I can’t let her go.Everyone has already come to say their goodbyes. Levi, his eyes red-rimmed and his voice hoarse. Alessandra, her sobs echoing through the hallways. Even Santiago, clinging to Alessandra as she fell apart in his arms.And now, it’s my turn.With a heavy heart, I sign the papers to withdraw medical care, my hand shaking so badly I can barely hold the pen. The doctor gives me a sympathetic look, his hand resting briefly on my shoulder before he moves to remove the tube f
The cold metal of Luciano’s gun presses against the back of my head as I lead him, Fabio, and two of his other men to the parlor. My heart hammers in my chest, each step feeling like a mile, my legs threatening to give out beneath me.I can’t believe this is happening…But it is. It’s real, and it’s terrifying.In what feels like only a matter of seconds, we reach the safe, installed into the wall at the far end of the room, right behind one of Marcel’s antique paintings. With shaking fingers, I input the code, the buttons blurring through my tears.01-29-93Marcel’s birthday.As the lock clicks open, my mind drifts back to the day he told me about this safe, just a few days after our first ultrasound.I had gone to his office, wanting to see him, to be near him. The memory of our baby’s strong and steady heartbeat was still fresh in my mind, filling me with a joy I couldn’t contain.When I walked in, he looked up from his desk, concern etched on his handsome face. “Is everything okay
⊰ Marcel ⊱We take out Catalina’s men swiftly and efficiently, our synchronized movements honed by years of working together. In mere minutes, the only sound is our own controlled breathing and the distant crackle of flames where Rick set the charges.I stride into the house, my footsteps echoing on the polished hardwood, the metallic scent of blood hanging heavy in the air. Slumped bodies lay strewn in our wake, crimson pooling beneath their still forms.Catalina sits on a chair in the center of the room, flanked by Santiago and Levi, their guns trained on her. Even disheveled and terrified, her beauty is coldly arresting—high cheekbones, full lips, the slash of dark brows over glittering eyes.And still…she resembles my Mercy.I lower myself into the chair across from her, gun in hand, and studying her face. “Your face healed up nicely,” I remark casually, as if we’re old friends catching up. “Considering our last encounter, I mean.”She glares at me with pure loathing, her red lips
I sit at the dining table, my hands flat on the polished wood, just as Luciano ordered. The surface is cool beneath my palms, but I can feel the sleek layer of cold sweat beneath them, a result from the fear that burns hot in my veins. Around me, Eboni, Alessandra, Juanita, Salma, and Maria are in the same position, their faces pale, their eyes wide and glassy with unshed tears.We’re surrounded by five of Luciano’s men, their guns trained on us, the metal glinting coldly in the light. The rest of them are still searching the house, their footsteps echoing like a drum of doom.We’re going to die…Luciano stands at the foot of the table, across from me, his dark eyes glittering with malice and triumph. He looks like a king presiding over his court, but there’s something twisted and wrong about him, something that makes my skin crawl and my stomach churn.“Marcello thinks he’s a king, bombing my merchandise, vandalizing my homes,” he scoffs, his voice dripping with venom and contempt. “
As I stand in the foyer, watching Marcel command his men with a sense of effortless authority, I can’t help but feel a mix of pride and apprehension. There’s an intensity in his eyes, a focus determination that I’ve never seen before. His voice is low and authoritative, each word carefully chosen, each instruction precise and unyielding. He’s in his element here, every inch the powerful mafia boss.This is what he was born to do.The thought hits me suddenly, unexpectedly. For as long as I’ve known him, Marcel has been a leader, a protector, a man who commands respect and loyalty from those around him. But seeing him like this, effortlessly taking control, the way every man in the room hangs on his every word, I can’t help but wonder…What will life be like when this is all over?Will he be able to leave this world behind, to adapt to a life of boardrooms and business deals? I can picture it so clearly in my mind—Marcel in a tailored suit, sitting at the head of a conference table, hi
⊰ Marcel ⊱The first rays of morning light filter through the curtains, casting a soft glow over Mercy’s sleeping form. I stand by the bed, buttoning my shirt, my gaze lingering on her peaceful face. She looks so innocent, so pure, her dark lashes fanning out against her cheeks, her lips slightly parted in slumber.Why is she so fucking beautiful?It’s no wonder Ben fell for her. Hell, I can’t blame him. From the moment I met her, I knew she was special, a bright little light in the darkness of my world. But that doesn’t excuse what he did. The thought of his lips on hers, his hands touching her…it makes my blood boil, the anger I’ve been trying to suppress for Mercy’s sake simmering beneath my skin.I knew it. All along, I fucking knew it.…I should’ve confronted him a long time ago…before he tried anything.I played it off last night, tried to reassure her that everything would be okay. But the truth is, I wanted to kill him. I wanted to wrap my hands around his throat and squeeze
As I sit in my study, I can’t help but feel a sense of déjà vu. It’s Tuesday evening, and once again, I find myself across from Katherine, our usual therapy session underway.“I don’t know what to do,” I confess, my voice barely above a whisper. “Ben…” he kissed me last night. And I’m terrified that if Marcel finds out, it’ll ruin everything we’ve been working towards.”Katherine leans back in her seat, her legs crossed in front of her, her gaze steady and free of judgment. “Mercy,” she says softly, her voice filled with gentle understanding. “We’ve talked about this before. Secrets and lies, they’ve only ever harmed your mental health in the past. They create barriers, breed mistrust. If you want to build a strong, healthy relationship with Marcel, honesty is key.”I nod, swallowing past the lump in my throat. I know she’s right. I know that keeping this from Marcel will only eat away at me and create more distance between us. But the thought of telling him, of seeing the hurt and an
As I step into the lab, a sense of finality settles over me. This is it, the last time I’ll be working with Ben and Pablo on the drone project. A part of me feels a twinge of sadness at the thought of saying goodbye to this little haven of science and innovation, but I know it’s for the best. Marcel and I are finally in a good place, and I don’t want anything to jeopardize that.Just one more month. One more month and this will all be over…right?While I’m now more hopeful of where Marcel and I stand, there’s the lingering thought, the creeping fear of time running out. I have no idea how close they are to finding Luciano, let alone what the plan is to get rid of him.Trust him. Trust Marcel. He said he’ll get it done. It’ll get done.“Hey guys,” I greet Ben and Pablo, forcing a cheerful note into my voice as I make my way to the lab table. “I just wanted to stop by and check on the calculations for the new drone model…for old time’s sake.”Ben glances up from his computer, his green
⊰ Marcel ⊱The silence of Mercy’s study envelops me as I step inside, the soft click of the door closing behind me barely registering over the tumultuous thoughts swirling in my mind. My eyes sweep over the familiar surroundings, taking in every detail as if for the first time.The plush couch and chaise beckon invitingly. Towering bookshelves line one of the walls, their shelves laden with countless books, the titles a mix of familiar classics and obscure texts that only Mercy could appreciate. The soft glow of the lamp on her desk casts a warm light, the delicate glass shade casting intricate patterns on the polished wood surface.It’s a sanctuary, a place where Mercy can lose herself in her studies, in the world of knowledge and discovery she loves so much. But as I lower myself onto the sofa, I can’t shake the feeling of unease, of the distance that’s been growing between us, threatening to destroy us.Where did I go wrong?The thought echoes in my mind, a taunting refrain that re