Chapter Summary: #Chapter 96: Trapped – My Hockey Alpha by Eve Above Story
In #Chapter 96: Trapped, a key moment in the Werewolf novel My Hockey Alpha, Eve Above Story delivers powerful storytelling, emotional shifts, and critical plot development. This chapter deepens the reader’s connection to the characters and sets the stage for upcoming revelations.
Nina
I woke up in a dimly lit room that smelled oddly of lemon cleaning solution. My throat felt raw and sore, and it took longer than usual after opening my eyes for my vision to come back into focus. Finally, when it did, I realized that it seemed as though I was in some sort of brightly lit prison cell. It almost felt like something out of a science fiction movie, like I had been abducted by aliens. There were no windows.
“H-Hello?” I croaked. I tried to sit up, only to realize that my wrists and ankles were being held in place by leather straps that were attached to the bed. “Hello? Let me out!” I shouted, struggling against the restraints.
No one came.
I wasn’t sure how long I thrashed against the restraints as I tried desperately to get free, screaming and practically foaming at the mouth. Eventually, I tired myself out. I knew, now, that no one was coming for me.
Where was I? It appeared to be some sort of strange prison-like room, but… Where was I? And why was I here? I couldn’t remember anything past seeing Edward’s cold, glowing eyes fixed on me. That was it: he must’ve hypnotized me and had me locked up somewhere.
Maybe Enzo would come for me. Surely, being one of my closest friends, he would know that something was wrong and he would come straight for me. But as I remembered what had happened at the party… Would he even care to come and look for me? Had whatever Ronan did to me on the night of the party broken any trust that Enzo had left in me?
I wanted to hope that Enzo would come for me, but at the same time, I couldn’t know for sure. What if I was trapped somewhere far away, somewhere that he would never find me even if he tried?
There was no way I could just lay here and pray that someone would come for me. I would have to get out on my own.
I started by looking around the room for something, anything, that could eventually help me to escape. At the same time, I started memorizing everything that could be even remotely important for the future, just in case I did somehow get out and would have to give a report to the police: the number of ceiling tiles, the number of fluorescent lightbulbs on the ceiling, the sound of water dripping from a pipe…
Suddenly, I heard footsteps approaching. I quickly shut my eyes and pretended to be asleep. I heard the door to my containment cell slide open in an oddly mechanical manner, then heard the footsteps approach the side of my bed.
“Wake up. I know you’re faking it.”
Edward.
I opened my eyes wide and began to scream, but he only sighed, rolled his eyes, and stuffed something in my mouth to muffle my screams. I watched then in horror as he pulled a small, metal rolling table up to the side of my bed and retrieved a syringe from a drawer, which he filled with some sort of yellowish solution.
“What is that?” I murmured through the cloth in my mouth, struggling against the restraints again as he flicked the syringe.
He didn’t answer. Edward bent down over me, avoiding eye contact, and gripped the skin of my upper arm. I thrashed harder and managed to spit the cloth out of my mouth.
“Get away from me!”
Edward merely sighed and looked into my eyes.
“Calm down. This will only take a second.”
“This’ll hurt a bit,” he said, reaching for something out of my view. “Just try to relax. Struggling won’t help you any.”
I felt something cold and wet touch on either side of my temple. A scream erupted from the depths of my throat as I began to thrash, but all of the straps holding me down kept me from moving.
Then… Agony. It felt as though my body was being relentlessly electrocuted from the inside. I couldn’t move, couldn’t react; I could only tremble, feeling as though my eyeballs were vibrating in their sockets.
The pain stopped momentarily.
“I think I’ll turn it up another notch,” I heard Edward say, as though he was simply having a casual conversation with me.
I felt a bit of drool run down my cheek and drip into my ear. The pain began again, but this time, it felt as though I somehow managed to escape from my body. It was like I was looking down at myself, watching everything that was happening to me, completely detached from my pain.
I had always been told that electroshock therapy had been outlawed for decades. What sort of hell had Edward imprisoned me in?
“I think that’s enough for now,” Edward said after a few more agonizingly long minutes as he turned off the machine. “Come on now, Nina. Let’s get you back to your room, and get you some more medicine.”
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