Charlene Gay folded the last plain white shirt.
She pressed her palms flat against the cheap cotton fabric. Her hands shook. They trembled so violently that her knuckles rattled against the thin mattress. It was the medication. The heavy, forced doses of antidepressants they pumped into her veins every morning in this Swiss private sanitarium.
She shoved the shirt into the faded canvas duffel bag.
Her fingers felt thick and clumsy. She grabbed the metal zipper and pulled. It stuck halfway. She gritted her teeth, her breath coming in short, shallow gasps, and yanked it closed.
The sound of hard heels clicked against the pristine linoleum floor in the hallway.
The footsteps stopped right outside her door.
Charlene froze. Her stomach dropped, twisting into a tight, painful knot.
Nurse Sharon Pinter leaned against the doorframe. She chewed a piece of gum, her eyes lazy and full of malice.
Sharon held a metal clipboard against her chest. She tapped her pen against the metal clip.
"Miss Gay, please hurry your packing," Sharon said. Her voice was dripping with a sickly sweet, professional politeness that poorly masked her utter contempt. "We have actual, paying patients who require our immediate attention." To punctuate her point, Sharon deliberately let the metal clipboard slip from her fingers. It clattered loudly onto the pristine floor, scattering the discharge papers right at Charlene's bare feet. "Oops. Pick those up, won't you?"
Charlene's spine snapped straight. The muscles in her back locked up.
She turned around slowly. Her bare feet made no sound on the floor.
She forced her facial muscles to go completely slack. No emotion. No reaction. That was the rule here. If you reacted, they strapped you down.
A sudden image flashed behind her eyes. Isabela. Standing in the middle of the New York penthouse, fake tears streaming down her perfect face.
Then came the memory of the security guards. Their heavy hands grabbing Charlene's arms, dragging her across the marble floor, throwing her out the front door like garbage.
Charlene inhaled a sharp breath. The air in the room smelled like bleach and rubbing alcohol. She swallowed hard, pushing the rising panic back down her throat.
She forced her heavy legs to move. One step. Then another.
She walked up to Sharon and slowly crouched down, her knees popping in the quiet room. She picked up the metal clipboard from the floor and reached out her pale, trembling hand.
Sharon held out the plastic pen.
Charlene grabbed it. Her sweaty fingers slipped against the smooth plastic.
She adjusted her grip. She squeezed the pen so hard her knuckles turned a stark, bone-white.
She pressed the pen tip to the bottom line of the discharge papers. She signed her name. Her signature was shaky, barely legible.
She shoved the metal clipboard back into Sharon's chest.
Sharon rolled her eyes, her lips curling in disgust. She stepped sideways, leaving a narrow gap in the doorway.
Charlene turned back to the bed. She bent down and grabbed the handles of the heavy canvas bag.
She lifted it. The weight pulled at her weakened shoulder muscles.
She walked out of the room and stepped into the sterile white hallway.
The fluorescent lights overhead buzzed. It was a low, constant electric hum that made the inside of her skull itch.
From the far end of the long corridor, a new sound echoed.
The sharp, authoritative click of expensive leather dress shoes hitting the marble floor.
Charlene stopped walking. She slowly lifted her head.
Columbus Gay stood at the end of the hallway.
He wore a custom-tailored dark navy suit. The fabric fell perfectly over his broad shoulders.
He was looking down at his left wrist. He adjusted the band of his Patek Philippe watch.
Then, he looked up.
His dark eyes locked onto her face. His gaze was precise, calculating, and completely devoid of warmth.
A violent shiver ripped down Charlene's spine. The cold seeped into her bones. Her fingers tightened around the handles of her duffel bag until her nails dug painfully into her own palms.