Elsa had never envied anyone in her life—except Athena. Now, with nothing left to lose, she figured if she could drag Athena down with her, it would count as revenge for Kerwin. After all, Athena’s foster father was a real piece of work—one not easily dealt with.
Athena was beautiful, everyone knew that. Who could say she wouldn’t end up just like Elsa once did, locked in a basement and tormented by her own foster father?
The memories made Elsa’s face go pale. She watched the car pull away, a manic urge to laugh bubbling up inside her.
Athena, sitting in the back seat, had no idea what Elsa was plotting. She simply gazed out the window, watching the world slip by in reverse.
Elsa’s childhood home was three hours outside the city, a small county town. Athena followed the address Elsa had given her and arrived at a crumbling apartment block.
She grabbed a bowl of noodles at a nearby diner, and while eating, learned that hardly anyone lived in the building anymore. Rumor had it that, years ago, two women had died there—one had jumped from the roof, the other was murdered. The killer was never found.
Athena asked about Elsa, and the owner’s face instantly clouded over.
“Elsa? Her mother’s the one who jumped. The poor woman married three times. The last husband was a brute—used to beat her. She couldn’t take it anymore and jumped, left Elsa behind at just fourteen. That girl never came back, except for one time a few years ago, to renew her ID. Her stepdad tried to hold her there, accused her of being promiscuous and sneaking around with men. Elsa called the police, got her ID, and left in a hurry. Never saw her again after that.”
These days, you didn’t need to go back to your hometown to renew your ID, so Elsa had no reason to return.
Athena spent the whole day in the diner, keeping an eye on the apartment across the street. Late in the afternoon, she finally saw Elsa’s stepfather. He was a big, hulking man with a mean, hard face—exactly the kind you’d expect to have a history of violence.
Athena called the police first, then made her way over.
“Hi, I’m a friend of Elsa’s from school. She left something at home and asked me to pick it up for her.”
The man looked her up and down, his eyes lingering on her youthful face. A sly excitement flashed across his features.
“Oh, you’re one of Elsa’s friends? Sure, no problem. Come on, I’ll show you up. I’ll help you find whatever she forgot.”
She followed him through the battered doorway. The building was in terrible shape—mold crept across the walls, and everything reeked of damp and neglect.
Elsa’s old place was on the ground floor. Her stepfather unlocked the door.
“Come in, sweetheart. Wouldn’t want anyone to say I’m a poor host.”


Verify captcha to read the content
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Dear Ex-wife Marry Me novel (Maja)
Author, would you story about Ryan settling down and another story on Eric regaining his body and memories back from Patrick, and Eric also settling down as I find it so disheartening for him to have gone through what he went through at the research institute, and I'll like for him to get his "golden boy" life back though, not at the detriment of Ian....
When will the author update to finish Beck's story? What about Dylan and Tyler's love lives? Also, I'll like the author to write on Wilma and Elvis ending up together as she was quite persistent in pursuing him. And Shawn's story, Cornelia Sullivan and Omar Casson. Also, a little write-up on Jeff (Ian's assistant) love life, too. Thanks, author for updating....
When will get update?...
What is wrong that the author has not updated this novel in over a month or is there somewhere else that I can continue reading the novel from chapter 1951 upwards? Do tell, please. Thanks....
Is everything alright with writer?...
Author, why are there no updates after almost 2 weeks? What's going on with the updates,Author? Do update soon....
Will any update make for us?...
Is author ok...
Playing too much with my emotions. It’s been 9 days and no updates. What is going on with Fitch and Zoey?...
Is author playing with our emotions?...