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The computer was only ten steps away, but those ten steps felt like ten thousand. In the video, Serena sat behind a heavy metal table—the same table I had seen in the picture of her on Sinclair’s touch screen. Only this time, Serena’s arms were in restraints and there was an IV stand behind her.

“Mac? What are you—” Jason sucked in a sharp, audible breath as he drew closer and realized what I was looking at.

I had seen Serena moments ago and her hair had been cut even shorter than mine. “This was shot the night we arrived.” My voice came out high and thin. “That’s the shirt Serena was wearing during the raid.”

I glanced over my shoulder. “What is this?”

The coordinator didn’t answer. Hand shaking, I grabbed the mouse and clicked play. Serena shrank back as a woman in a tan counselor’s uniform, Langley, entered the room. The counselor carried some sort of metal rod in her hands. Before I could process what was happening, she brought the bar down on Serena’s fingers.

Serena’s scream burst out of the computer’s speakers and echoed in the room. In the video, a large digital clock flickered to life on the wall behind her. Jason made a grab for the mouse as I backed away. He shut the video player and the sudden silence was deafening.

Another open video lay underneath the first. Jason dragged the cursor toward the red X that would close the file, but I shouldered past him and took control, clicking play before he could stop me.

Serena’s hair was short in this one, but unlike in the cell, it was neat and combed. A woman in a white coat stepped into the frame and faced the camera. She adjusted a pair of tortoiseshell glasses. With a jolt, I recognized her as the woman who had signaled out Serena during admissions.

“One-five-six-seven’s transformations have slowed since she began phase two. Longest delay: four-minutes-sixteen-seconds between stimulus and shift.”

Serena turned her head. “Please,” she begged, her voice so broken that things inside my chest snapped, “I can’t do it again.”

She’s talking to someone off camera. The thought hit me just as I noticed a human-shaped shadow shift slightly on the wall with the clock.

The woman with the glasses held up a syringe and approached the table. Tears coursed down Serena’s face, but she was powerless to resist as the needle pierced her arm. The clock flickered to life once more.

Jason reached for the mouse when Serena’s body began to tear itself apart. “Wait!” I clicked pause as the mystery figure crossed the room. Warden Sinclair.

Tears burned at the corners of my eyes and my throat constricted. So this was her idea of helping the wolves in her care. This was rehabilitation.

“They’re actually doing it.” Kyle’s voice was thick with a bass growl. “They’re actually working on a cure.”

“That’s not a cure,” snapped Jason. “That’s torture.”

The room blurred. “There was never any new disease.” A rush of anger filled me, and I had to clench my hands to keep from grabbing the monitor and hurling it to the ground. “They made them sick. They made them sick to keep them from shifting.”

“What did you give her?” Kyle’s voice raised the hair on the back of my neck. He tightened his grip on the program coordinator and the man’s face twisted in pain.

“If I tell you, they’ll kill me.”

Jason swore and headed for the door. He paused on the threshold and glanced back at Kyle. “We don’t have time for this. You stay with him while Mac and I get Serena.” His gaze dropped to the coordinator. In a voice that hinted at blood and pain, he said, “We’ll take him with us and get answers out of him later.”

I knew what Jason was implying, and I knew I should care—we were supposed to be the good guys—but right now I didn’t. I couldn’t. All I could do was follow him into the hall and to Serena’s cell.

“Are you okay?” he asked.

“Not even a little.”

Jason checked the paper he had pulled from the binder and punched the code into the keypad. The light flashed green and he pulled open the door. I slipped past him and into the cell.

The room was plain and white and smelled of bleach and copper. Its one yellow light cast a jaundiced glow over the tile walls. A toilet and sink occupied one corner, while the other played host to the bed.

Serena was still curled in on herself. It was like she hadn’t moved the entire time we had been in the control room. She was dressed in white clothes that hung off her small frame. Her skin—what little of it was visible—was covered in a sheen of sweat.

“Serena?” I stepped forward and she curled up even tighter, almost as though she were making herself as small a target as possible.

I glanced at Jason; he looked as lost as I felt.

I turned back to Serena and frowned. Her hands were bound. Steel manacles connected by a foot of chain encircled each wrist.

Slowly, I took a second step toward the bed and then a third. “Serena? It’s me. It’s Mac. . . .”

She lifted her head. Awareness bled into her eyes. “Mac?” Her voice was a rasp. She gave her head a small shake and squeezed her eyes shut. “Go away.”

I flinched, assuming she was blaming me for everything that had happened. “Serena . . .”

“You’re not real. You all keep coming, but none of you are ever real.” She tapped the side of her head against the tile wall. One. Two. Three. “You’re not really here.” Tap. Tap. Tap.

Each tap was a spike to my chest.

“Look at her wrists.” Jason had eased farther into the room. He touched my elbow. “Mac, look at her wrists.”

I had already looked. I had already seen the cuffs. I . . .

The realization slammed into me, and my knees threatened to buckle. Impossible. It wasn’t the cuffs that had Jason staring at Serena like she was something amazing and terrifying, it was the skin around them. It had been rubbed raw from straining against the restraints, so raw that strips of flesh seemed to half hang off her wrists. Blood trickled out in a slow but constant flow, dripping onto the bed.

Serena hadn’t struggled while we had been in the cell. Her wrists should have started to heal, but they hadn’t.

With a sick lurch, I noted bloodstains on the blankets—easy to miss because the fabric was a dark russet-brown. That’s why the room smells like copper, I thought. It’s Serena’s blood.

Jason edged closer to the bed, trying to get a better look at her hands.

Serena seemed completely oblivious to his presence, but she stopped tapping her head against the wall and uncurled herself by small fractions as he slowly advanced.

Her entire body tensed as Jason took another step.

He held up his hands, trying to convey that he wouldn’t hurt her. “Serena?”

She suddenly bolted from the bed, knocking him off balance and sending him crashing onto his butt.

“Serena!” I stepped toward her, but she shoved me away. My palms and forearms slapped the tile wall, and I just managed to keep from dashing my brains out. It hurt, but not nearly as badly as it should have.

I spun in time to see her lift her manacled hands and fling the chain around Jason’s throat.

She’s going to kill him. For a horrible second, the thought paralyzed me, then I raced forward.

“Stop it, Serena!” I screamed for Kyle as I tried to force her arms up. Her muscles were rigid with strain and her skin was scorching to the touch.

Jason managed to get his fingers under the chain and pushed against it in an effort to keep her from crushing his windpipe. When that didn’t work, he threw his weight back, trying to knock her off balance.