Connor’s brows furrow and then he says, “What happened next?”
He went ballistic and was swinging the poker around trying to hit her. I tried to grab him and pull him off, but he shoved me. He turned and swung at me, and I fell trying to dodge it. He raised the poker above me, and I was scrambling to get away, but he fell . . . right on top of me. McKenzie had hit him over the head with a wrench, and his head was gushing blood everywhere. I shoved him off of me and got to my feet; I was a wreck. He was lying there, bleeding out, gasping like a fish out of water.
McKenzie and I stood on either side of him, facing one another, the wrench still in her hand, hanging limply at her side. “I was eleven when he raped me,” she said, calmly. “Told me never to tell anyone or he’d kill you and my parents.”
My gaze shot to hers, my heart in my stomach. “Mary-Anne snuck over here while I was in the shower. When I came downstairs, your front door was open, and I knew exactly where she went. I came to get her. She was eating a damn candy bar while he had his hand up her dress.”
I collapsed to the ground right beside him. This man had violated both of these young girls on my watch. I trusted him. I thought he was a good man. I even scolded McKenzie for being so rude to him.
“I swear, Demi,” she cried, a sob breaking loose from her chest. “I’m not lying.”
Tears trickle down my face as I speak, my voice raspy with emotion. “He hurt them, and it’s all my fault.”
“No, it isn’t,” Connor speaks softly, rolling to his side and wiping my wet cheeks with the bed sheet. “These fucking creeps are good; they’re sociopaths. They know how to act and make everyone think they’re trustworthy. The feeble old man act was probably part of it. How could anyone think a man who can barely walk be capable of abusing a child like that?”
“I should have known, though.”
Demi,” he whispers. “This wasn’t your fault. Tell me what happened next.”
“Wipe that wrench off,” I instructed her, my calmness surprising even me.
“I’m going to go to jail, aren’t I?” she cried as she wiped at her nose.
“That’s not going to happen,” I told her. “Wipe that down good and go.”
“What are you going to do?” she asked, panicked.
“Go, McKenzie,” I ordered.
She finished wiping down the wrench and put it back on the table. She looked down at him one last time, then to me. “Should I—”
“Go.”
When she left, I was still kneeling beside him, his mouth still moving as if he was trying to call for help. If I had just left him, he probably would have died from his head injury, but I wasn’t taking any chances.
My gaze meets Connor’s, and his expression is stoic. “I pinched his nose and covered his mouth with my hand.”
I remember feeling something snap inside of me as I suffocated Mr. Jenson; the realization that I was taking a life, killing a man. It changed me, rightfully so. Before I was me, Demi Stevens, regular everyday person. At that moment, I was a soon-to-be murderer. But right now, reliving it, sharing the play by play with Connor, I feel no regret.
“And that’s when I came in,” Connor says.
Mr. Jenson, even with his head injury in his subdued state, began to struggle as he fought for oxygen. I laid half of my body over him in an attempt to hold him down but holding his mouth and nose were difficult in my position. After a few minutes, he stopped struggling and stilled. Collapsing against him, my head thunked against his chest, exhausted by the task. When I managed to look up, his mouth hung open, and his eyes were fixed on the ceiling.
He was dead.
I had killed him.