They had always treated Chloe like an exotic rescue dog—something pretty to show off, to be trained, cleaned up, and brutally kicked the second it barked out of turn.
They threw her away, I thought, my knuckles turning stark white on the steering wheel. Like literal trash. At a bus stop. With her baby.
I clicked off my headlights a mile before I reached the main property line. I knew the old service road well; I used to deliver landscaping stones to this very neighborhood years ago, long before Chloe ever met Liam. I maneuvered the heavy truck expertly through the wet, high grass, parking it behind a dense line of ancient oak trees that completely obscured the vehicle from the main house.
I stepped out. The smell of wet earth and sharp pine needles was thick in the air. I reached into the passenger seat and grabbed the heavy gas can. The fuel sloshed inside, a dense, liquid promise of absolute destruction.
I walked up the manicured hill. The mansion loomed ahead, a massive white monstrosity glowing with soft, expensive amber light from within. It looked peaceful. It looked like a luxury magazine cover.
I crept silently onto the expansive back patio. Through the floor-to-ceiling French doors, I had a clear, unobstructed view into the grand living room.
Liam was there. He was sitting comfortably on the massive leather sofa, holding a heavy crystal tumbler of amber scotch. He was watching a sports game on a screen the size of a wall. He looked slightly annoyed, shifting his weight, adjusting a silk throw pillow behind his back.
He wasn’t grieving. He wasn’t pacing in a panic. He was profoundly relaxed.
I felt a dark, jagged laugh bubble up in the back of my throat. He had beaten his pregnant wife into a coma twelve hours ago, and now he was annoyed at a referee’s call on television.
I unscrewed the tight plastic cap of the gas can. The harsh fumes hit me instantly, sharp and violently chemical, stinging my eyes and burning my nostrils.
“Burn,” I whispered to the wind.
I started at the back door. I splashed the heavy gasoline over the expensive teak deck furniture. I moved methodically along the perimeter of the house, dousing the pristine white siding, the expensive silk curtains visible through a slightly open window, and the dry decorative bushes that hugged the foundation.
I moved like a phantom of vengeance. I circled the entire massive house, leaving a wet, glistening, highly flammable trail of accelerant. I saved the last full gallon for the grand front porch—the towering entrance with the Corinthian columns that Eleanor Sterling was so immensely proud of.
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