Eli loomed over him, leaning his weight on the blade. Victor’s arms trembled from the effort, but little by little, he lost ground until the tip of the knife parted the skin of his throat.
* * *
EVERY end may be a new beginning, but every beginning had to end.
Eli Ever understood that, leaning over his old friend.
Victor Vale, weary, bleeding, broken, belonged in the ground.
It was a mercy to put him there.
“My time will come,” he said, as the knifepoint sliced Victor’s skin. “But yours is now. And this time,” he said, “I’ll make sure you—”
A sound tore through the steel room, sudden and deafening.
Eli’s grip faltered as pain, molten hot, tore through his back—through skin and muscle and something deeper.
Victor still lay beneath him, gasping, but alive, and Eli went to finish what he’d started, but the knife hung from his fingers. He couldn’t feel it. Couldn’t feel anything but the pain in his chest.
He looked down, and saw a broad red stain blossoming across his skin.
His breath hitched, copper filling his mouth, and then he was back on the floor of a darkened apartment at Lockland, sitting in a pool of blood, carving lines into his arms and asking God to tell him why, to take the power when he didn’t need it anymore.
Now, as he looked up from the hole in his chest, he saw the girl, her white-blond hair and ice blue eyes, so familiar, beyond the barrel of the gun.
Serena?
But then Eli was falling—
He never hit the ground.