Katie sighed. “There’s no more room in the house,” she repeated. Her eyes filled with sorrow. The Coven had found Katie when they had begun hunting Brethren priests. She had been a housekeeper for one at his parish. He’d beaten her, abused her too, but she had stayed regardless. She had stayed to care for the boy she had discovered in the priest’s basement.
When the Coven had retrieved the boy, they had freed her too. But then the sisters had only found more and more victims. So Noa had started to steal from the Brethren’s secret benefactors, and they had secured Katie a house in the middle of nowhere. From that day on, her home became a safe place for the discovered Brethren-abused boys. But that had been a few years ago, and now, too many victims later, she was stretched too thin.
Katie sighed and rubbed her forehead. “I love all my boys. You know I do.” It was true. She was the most maternal person Noa had ever met, and the boys loved her too—in their own unique ways. “But there’s so many of them now, I’m struggling to cope with this alone.” She frowned. “And some of them are different. They like pain and …” Katie breathed deeply. “I’m not scared of them, but with some of the things they do, the dark things they say … I’m scared for them.” Sadness engulfed her face. “I think what has been done to them by those men has changed them, made them have preferences for the darker side of life.”
Noa looked back at the man in the van. She thought of the way he had killed the priest, how violently. How savagely he had knocked out Dinah, and how Noa had seen death in his blue eyes as he smiled and squeezed her throat.
Then her mind drifted to thoughts of Priscilla, the Coven’s seventh sister. Something sinister lived in her soul. Some kind of darkness that Noa knew she had inside herself too. But where Noa had fought to turn from it, to keep it locked away, Priscilla relished in it, bathed in its heaviness.
Noa recalled Katie’s words: I think what has been done to them by those men has changed them, made them have preferences for the darker side of life … That was Priscilla. That perfectly described her wayward sister.
“We’ll think of something,” Dinah said, pulling Noa from her chaotic thoughts, and hugged Katie. “I promise. We’ll save these boys. You know we will. We’ll never let those sadistic bastards win. We’ll find a way to help you all.”
Chapter 6
Noa sat opposite the cage on a wooden chair. Her hair, damp from her shower, hung down her back, and she was dressed in an oversized white button-down shirt and leggings. She stared at the man in the cage. The low sizzle from the collar around his neck filled the cave that housed the cage built by the War of Independence soldiers years ago for their prisoners.
Noa handled the remote in her hand, feeling nothing but guilt about the now-live collar around the man’s neck. When they’d arrived back at the tunnels, Noa had gotten Jo to take a look at it. Her sister, being a genius with anything mechanical and technical, had quickly fashioned Noa a makeshift remote of sorts. Naomi, their healer, had taken one look at the scars around the man’s neck, underneath his collar, and found clear evidence of past trauma. She explained that the redness came from excessive low-grade electrocution.
The collar controlled the man somehow. As Noa thought back to him killing the priest and attacking her and Dinah, she didn’t have to wonder too hard about why his collar was necessary. So, Jo had made her a remote that could temporarily control the collar. And then Noa waited. She had been waiting for him to sleep off the drug she had injected him with and wake up for quite some time.
An hour later, a shift of his fingers was the first indication that the man was waking. Noa held her breath when his hand moved. A low groan slipped from between his teeth, and his jean-clad legs shifted on the damp cave floor.
Seconds felt like hours as he moved his head and began lifting his torso, bracing his large body on his hands. Then he lifted his head. Blue eyes roved their gaze around the cave, finally landing on Noa.
It was like witnessing the flick of a switch. A mere second for his lethargic body to spring into action and charge at the cage bars like a man possessed. His body slammed into the side of the cage, his shoulder immediately reddening as he flung his body against the iron bars to try and break them down. The collar around his neck crackled, then, with a vicious roar, he dropped to the ground, lips thinned and jaw tensed as the collar sent electricity bolting through his body.