Not survival.
Three-quarters of a million dollars.
I pressed my hand to my mouth, but the sound escaped anyway.
Behind me, the study door creaked.
I spun around.
Mara stood in the doorway.
The nurse’s soft expression was gone.
“You shouldn’t be in here,” she said.
I shoved the notebook behind my back. “Vivian gave me the key.”
Mara stepped inside and closed the door.
“That won’t matter.”
My skin prickled.
She held a syringe in one hand.
For one frozen second, neither of us moved.
Then I ran.
She lunged.
I threw the desk chair into her path and bolted toward the side door near the shelves. It opened into a narrow servants’ corridor. I plunged into darkness, clutching the notebook and flash drive against my chest.
Mara shouted behind me.
Footsteps thundered.
I did not know the house. I did not know where the passage led. I only knew that if Jason got what I held, Ethan would never wake again.
The corridor spilled me out near the conservatory.
Rain hammered the glass roof.
I slipped on the marble floor, caught myself, and nearly collided with Vivian.
She took one look at my face.
“What happened?”
“Mara,” I gasped. “She has a syringe.”
Vivian’s eyes hardened.
She pulled me behind her just as Mara appeared at the end of the hall.
The nurse stopped.
For a moment, the two women faced each other across the polished floor.
Then Vivian said, “You were dismissed from Columbia Presbyterian for tampering with patient medication. I wondered when Jason would make use of you.”