The Girl Who Dared to Endure (The Girl Who Dared #6)

“No,” I said with a firm shake of my hands. “Absolutely not. You’re not putting yourself into that monster!”

Leo cocked his head at me and then stood up. I curled my arms around myself, sensing that he was going to make a logical speech about why he should do this. But I really didn’t want to hear it. I did not like the idea of someone I cared about going into the mind of a killer.

“Liana,” he said soothingly, coming to stand before me. “You know it’s going to take some time to sift through Sadie’s files and dig out what we need. You also know that whatever their true aim is, it might not be in there. We don’t have time to waste trying to find every scrap of evidence, especially not when we have the means to find the answers within a few hours.”

“I don’t care,” I said stubbornly. “It’s weird.”

He gave me a lopsided smile. “Weirder than me inhabiting the body of your boyfriend?”

I knew he was trying to make a point, but that was different. Leo was doing that to help Grey, while Baldy was still whole—and our enemy. “Yes! It’s different! What if you can’t control him, or he somehow manages to resist you? What if you get trapped, or he finds a way to hurt you? And what about Grey? Is it safe for you to come out of him? Is he… restored?”

As soon as I asked the question, I wanted to snatch it back. One of the biggest unanswered questions between us—and there were many—was what would happen once Leo finished healing Grey. It ranked right up there with my own confused feelings toward Leo, and the slow realization that I was growing closer and closer to the AI, and not in a platonic way. Because of that, I thought, we had avoided the subject completely.

But with Leo’s revelation, and his desire to try, I had to ask. I wasn’t going to let him do it if it risked his own safety. Or Grey’s.

Leo pursed his lips, his brown eyes shuttering against showing any emotion. “I’ve moved on to recovering his teenage years, but no, he’s not fully restored. But it won’t hurt him if I go for a few hours. I’ll try to leave him sleeping, but there is a chance that he could wake up, and if so, he won’t remember you.”

That would make things a little less awkward, but it did nothing to assuage my concerns. “What about Baldy? Leo, Grey is damaged, but Baldy’s mind is intact.”

“I’m an AI, Liana, made from a human mind. I understand how to navigate it better than most, as it’s a pattern I was built from. I promise you, I will be fine, and doing this will get us information we could use. You brought him here for a reason; let’s use him to figure out what’s going on. At least get an idea who he is working with. It could give us some direction.” He paused and speared me with a pleading look. “Please, Liana. He might know where Alice and Tony are.”

I felt myself soften to the idea and knew that it was already inevitable at this point. Leo had clearly made up his mind to do this, and judging from Maddox’s face, she didn’t think the idea was half bad. If I resisted, it would only be because of my personal feelings for Leo, and not for anything remotely resembling logic. And I couldn’t let myself be ruled by my emotions. “Maddox, can you get Quess back in here?”

She gave me a surprised look but didn’t argue. “Yeah, I’ll go get him. Also, Zoe and Eric are finally on their way up and should be here in a few minutes.”

I let out a sigh of relief at that. Zoe and Eric had decided against living with us, but now that we had made a direct attack against Sadie (even if she wasn’t aware of it), I wanted everyone I cared about to be as close as possible for the next few days, until I knew we were in the clear. It was doubly imperative now, considering that we could potentially learn everything we needed from Baldy himself, and finally track down all of the legacies. It would be dangerous until we could carry it out, and we would have to be very careful about whom we trusted with the information, but if we could pull it off…

Well, there wouldn’t be a need for us to do safety sleepovers like this in the future. At least, I hoped there wouldn’t be.

“Good,” I said. “Get them up to speed on everything and see what they can help out with.”

Maddox nodded in acknowledgment. “I’ll be right back with Quess.”

Glancing over at Leo, I realized I still had doubts. “I still don’t like this idea,” I told him.

He reached out and cupped my cheek, a soft, sad smile on his lips. “I know. But it’ll be okay.”



It took us all of fifteen minutes to get everything set up, and somehow, I managed to keep the rest of my distaste for this plan closely guarded. I’d sat with Leo while Quess had extracted the net from his neck—which was eerie, because I had never before realized that Leo could make Grey just close his eyes and go to sleep—and then cleaned it and carried it to Baldy’s room.

He was sleeping when we entered, and Quess administered the same light sedative that he had given Sadie, in the form of a pneumatic injection. Together, we rolled him onto his side, and I watched, throat tight, as the net containing Leo was jammed into the wound and the opening sealed shut.

We started to flip him back over, but Baldy suddenly jerked awake and looked around, causing me to snatch my hand back with a startled sound. Quess moved in front of me protectively, forcing me back a few paces, but I refused to cower and came to stand by his side.

The man on the bed looked around for a second, and then shook his head. “So disorienting,” he muttered as he carefully maneuvered himself into a sitting position using his bound hands. The normal malice on his face was gone, leaving only a deep concentration peppered with mild distaste. “His body feels weird,” he commented, rotating his shoulders inside their sockets.

“Leo?” I breathed, and Baldy looked up at me with an expression that was pure Leo.

“Yes,” he said with a nod. “I’m sorry. I should’ve said something. Are you okay?”

No, I was not, I decided a second later. There was something distinctly uncomfortable about knowing that Leo was inside the man who had cut my throat, and it left me slightly nauseous. It wasn’t right. It wasn’t Leo.

Neither is Grey, the dark voice inside of me pointed out, and that left me feeling cold.

Quess shifted beside me, his crimson uniform creaking under his weight, and I looked up at him and realized that I had taken too long to answer. Which meant there was no lying about it now. “Not really,” I admitted.

Baldy cocked his head at me, and I looked away. It was weird—I had been able to look the man in the eye when he was tied up earlier, but now? Knowing that Leo was inside of him? I didn’t like it. How was I supposed to see Leo through the man who had hurt me? What if I couldn’t? What if I hurt his feelings by freaking out if he went to hug me or something?

I wasn’t entirely sure I was equipped to handle this, but I didn’t want to run away screaming from him, either.

There was a sigh, and then, in Baldy’s voice, Leo said, “Quess, can you give Liana and me a moment?”

“Sure,” he said. He checked his watch. “I should probably go look in on Grey, anyway.”

“And maybe get some alone time with Doxy,” I teased, trying to diffuse some of the tension in the room. She was still in the room where we’d left Grey, monitoring him in case he woke up, and I could tell Quess wanted to be with her.

“Hey, our boss is an impossible task mistress,” Quess shot back, his dark blue eyes radiating warm humor. “And she stuck me in a room with Sadie Monroe, where I was harassed for almost the entire time! That woman was like a cat in heat, and it took all of my considerable effort just to keep her off me. So yeah, I’m going to go see my girlfriend and see if she can’t make me feel better!”

I instantly felt bad. His tone had started out jokingly, but toward the end it got a little too real—enough to tell me that the interaction with Sadie had left a mark of its own. “I’m sorry,” I said, giving him a hug. “I can’t imagine how awful that was for you.”