The furniture is smashed to bits, his vinyl is scattered and broken all over the floor, and his bookshelves have been ripped straight out of the wall. Books are lying in destroyed piles underneath them, torn pages floating through the air.
And in the corner, right behind his audio equipment, is another version of me. I’m dressed in my Katmere uniform, but instead of sitting on the bed (as I’ve imagined more times than I want to admit, even to myself), I’m cowering in the corner, crying and begging for someone to, “Stop! Please, please, please stop!” Someone is snarling loudly enough to be heard over the music, and when I turn to try to figure out who it is—and what’s going on—I find Hudson standing right there. His fangs are extended and dripping blood, and there’s a look in his eyes that warns me that my time has run out. There’s nowhere to go, no place to escape to. “I can’t stop, Grace.” He’s screaming at me. “I can’t stop. I can’t stop.” He reaches up and grabs handfuls of his hair in his fists. “It hurts. It hurts. I’m trying to—” He breaks off with a growl, his entire body convulsing as he fights against the urge to lunge for me. “Please, no. Please don’t make me. Please, please, please.” He seems to plead with someone I can’t see. “Don’t make me do it. I don’t want to hurt her. I don’t want—” He breaks off, another shudder running through him. And then he yells, “Run, Grace, run!” And the other Grace tries. She does. She springs into action, racing for the door, but even as she runs, I know it’s too late. He’s on her in a second, leaping the length of the room in one bound. She screams for one long moment, the sound hanging in the air as he rips her throat out and starts to drink. The moment she dies, the compulsion ends and Hudson is left, covered in her blood—in my blood—as he sinks to the ground. He cradles me to his chest as blood continues to spill out of my severed carotid artery, and though there are silent tears running down his cheeks, he doesn’t make a sound. Instead, he just holds me in his arms and rocks and rocks and rocks as my blood spills all over the both of us and onto the floor around us. His hand is on my neck, and it’s obvious he’s trying to stop the blood flow, but nothing can stop it. It keeps pouring out until we’re both drenched in it, until it coats his floor, soaks the pages of his favorite books, covers his entire room—so much more blood than my body could ever hold. But that doesn’t matter in this hellscape. Nothing does but torturing, breaking, destroying Hudson. And when he throws his head back and screams like everything inside him is shattering, I can’t help but think it’s succeeded. Then, in the space between one blink and the next, the blood is gone, and Hudson is sitting on his couch reading The Stranger by Albert Camus (of course). JP Saxe and Julia Michaels’s “If the World Was Ending” is playing as a knock sounds on his door, which breaks my heart all over again. It’s the other Grace, and she throws her arms around him as soon as he opens the door. He drops his book and picks her up. Her legs go around his waist the same way mine did that night in New York, and they’re kissing like it’s the only thing that matters in the world. Finally, she pulls her mouth from his and gasps for air. He grins and whispers, “You smell so good,” as he nuzzles his way along her throat. “Oh yeah?” The other Grace tilts her head to the side a little and whispers, “Maybe you should take a little bite. See if I taste as good as I smell.” He groans low in his throat before scraping his fangs along the sensitive column of her neck. She shivers, her hand clutching at his hair as she tries to pull him closer. “Please, Hudson,” she whispers. “I need you.” But he just shakes his head and whispers, “I can’t. If I bite you now, I won’t be able to stop. I’ll drink you all up.” That’s when it hits me. Hudson’s crime—the thing he has to atone for—is compelling everything that happened at Katmere before Jaxon killed him. Whether it was for the greater good or not, whether they were secret supremacists working with Cyrus, he took their choice from them and turned them into murderers. And now the prison is doing the same thing to him, compelling him to murder his mate again and again and again. The Hudson in the vision must realize it at the same time I do, because he sets her back on the floor and whispers, “Run,” right before his fangs explode in full force. The other Grace heeds the warning, but he’s blocking the door, so she runs deeper into the room. She trips on the corner of his rug and goes flying, though, and that’s how she ends up cowering near the audio equipment. As he walks toward her and the music switches to Lewis Capaldi’s “Grace,” I realize that this is it. This is where he kills her. And as horror registers on Hudson’s face, I can tell that he knows it, too. I also realize at the same instant that the real Hudson—the one shaking and pleading on the bed next to me—is so far gone that if he has to spend another hour killing me, even if it is only in his nightmares, it just might shatter him forever. 127