The Night Dominic DeLuca Found What His Brother Buried Below-Cherry - Chainityai

The Night Dominic DeLuca Found What His Brother Buried Below-Cherry

The first sound Claire Bennett heard after three months underground was not someone calling her name.

It was gunfire.

The crack came from somewhere above her, clean and violent, followed by the heavy crash of a door giving way.

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Dust sifted down from the ceiling boards and settled over her hair, her shoulders, and the angry skin around the metal cuff on her ankle.

Claire did not scream.

She had screamed in the beginning.

She had screamed until her voice felt like torn paper, until the room answered her with nothing but its own damp echo, until she understood that the dark was not impressed by suffering.

After that, she saved sound for pain.

The basement smelled of wet concrete, rust, old wood, and whatever rain had found its way through the walls of the lakefront house above her.

She had never seen the front porch.

She had never stood in the kitchen.

She had never looked out the windows at the water people in Weston paid fortunes to wake up beside.

But she knew the house anyway.

She knew the rhythm of polished shoes crossing the floor overhead.

She knew the low hum of music after dinner.

She knew the smell of coffee in the morning and cigars late at night.

She knew the sound of a refrigerator door closing somewhere above her like proof that ordinary life kept happening within arm’s reach.

For three months, she had lived beneath money.

That was the fact that would stay with her longer than the hunger.

Above her, men laughed.

Above her, glasses touched.

Above her, heat moved through vents and lights came on when someone entered a room.

Below all of that, Claire Bennett curled against a pipe and learned how little space a human being could take up and still be alive.

The man who came downstairs wore a black mask.

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