âThereâs another one out there!â they shouted.
Glass shattered, and Joan ran , bursting out of the colonnade into the South Garden. It was incongruously cheerful. The trees were lit with fairy lights, and the hydrangeas were in full bloom, in ice-cream shades of pink and white.
Joan had run the wrong way, she realized, terrified. She should have gone north. To the south there was only open lawn and the hedge maze.
The fastest way out was across the lawn and then down the path to the southwest gate. But thereâd be nowhere to hide. She would be out in the open for at least five minutes, even if she ran as hard as she could.
That left the maze.
Someone shouted behind her and Joan hurled herself across the garden, crushing hydrangeas as she ran. The perfume of them rose, fresh and sweet. There were bodies lying among the flowers. Joan glimpsed a man with a mermaid tattoo curled delicately around his wrist. A woman with long red hair.
Joan risked a glance back. A figure in black appeared from around the corner of the house. Joan threw herself into the mouth of the maze. Had they seen her going in? She had to assume they had.
She ran, stumbling into the hedge walls in her haste to turn corners. And then she just ran and ran until she had to stop, hands on her knees, sucking in air and trying to quiet herself. Her own wheezing breaths sounded like Granâs last gasps. LikeRuthâs agonized grunt. She was still shoeless, she realized then, and still clutching the heavy candlestick like a runnerâs baton. Her dress was torn from where it had caught on the window ledge.
Joan wanted to lie down and cry. Her family. Oh God, her family . She wanted to pretend this wasnât happening. She imagined what Gran would say to her now. Her incredulous expression. Joan, youâre running for your life, girl. So bloody run!
Joan stumbled forward.
She wasnât sure when she began to hear the other sounds. At first they could have been hedge leaves rustling in the wind. But soon the thud of steps was unmistakable. There was someone else in the maze with her, running too.
And someone was in pursuit of them, perhaps no more than a turn behind.
Every now and then, the maze brought them close enough for Joan to hear them clearlyâthe broken gasp of someone whoâd been running too fast for too long; the steady breaths of someone whoâd been trained to chase.
Joan peered into the thick press of the hedge, but the night was too dark. There was no way to tell how far away the runner and chaser were. The other side of the hedge wall could be miles of twisting paths away, or a single turn.
Then the sounds of running stopped abruptly. âOh God. Please donât. Please donât.â A boyâs voice.
Joan caught herself before she gasped out loud. It sounded as though the boy were right next to her.
Joan walked forward carefully and then hesitated. She had no idea where she was in the maze. Everywhere she looked, the view was the same: dense hedge walls and dirt path.
âPlease,â the boy said, hoarse. âPlease.â
Joan crept around the corner. And there they wereâAaron Oliver, trapped in a dead end, facing one of Nickâs men.
In the moonlight, Aaronâs golden hair looked almost white. There was a tattoo on the back of his pursuerâs neckâa snarling wolf. The manâs posture was relaxed and confident as he walked toward Aaron. He drew a long knife from his belt.
Aaron saw Joan and froze. Joan knew exactly what he was thinking. Heâd left her to die back at the house.
Two steps , Joan thought. Two steps back the way sheâd come, and sheâd be safe again. Two steps, and sheâd be out of sight.
Joan took two steps. Aaronâs eyes widened. She slammed the heavy candlestick into the back of the manâs head.
The man rocked on his feet. He seemed shocked but unhurt. He grabbed Joanâs hair and jerked her head back, knife