“No,” she gasped. “No, no, no.”
The car tilted nose-down. Her camera bag floated past her shoulder like a ghost of the life she had spent years building. She kicked hard, bruising her shin against the console, then shoved at the driver’s door with both hands.
It didn’t move.
Outside pressure held it shut like the river itself had decided to keep her.
Water climbed to her neck.
Her breath came in broken animal sounds. She tipped her chin back, trying to steal the last inch of air.
The last thing she thought of was her mother’s voice saying, Honey, call me when you get home.
Then the water covered her mouth.
Hannah held her breath until her chest burned. She punched the glass. Once. Twice. Again. Pain shot up her arms, but the window didn’t crack.
Black spots bloomed in her vision.
Then something exploded beside her.
Glass burst inward.
A hand plunged through the dark water and locked around her wrist.
Strong.
Real.
Alive.
Hannah didn’t fight. She couldn’t. The stranger dragged her through the broken window, pulling her past jagged glass that ripped her jacket and sliced her skin. Her lungs screamed. Her ribs felt like they had shattered.
Then the world tore open above her.
Air.
Rain.
Hands under her arms.
A man’s voice, deep and rough, cut through the storm.
“I’ve got you. Don’t fight me. Just breathe.”
She coughed river water into the mud while he hauled her onto the bank. She saw only pieces of him through the rain: dark hair plastered to his forehead, blood running down his temple, a tailored coat soaked and ruined, hands torn open from glass.
“Who are you?” she rasped.
He looked toward the road where sirens wailed in the distance.
“Someone who got there in time.”
Then he draped his coat over her trembling body and disappeared into the trees before the ambulance arrived.
At the hospital, a nurse with silver hair and kind eyes told Hannah she had bruised ribs, mild hypothermia, and enough cuts to keep the ER staff busy for hours.
“You’re lucky, sweetheart,” the nurse said. “Whoever pulled you out saved your life.”
“He was here?”
“For a minute. Refused treatment. Left before police could get his name.” The nurse nodded toward the chair beside the bed. “Left that expensive coat, though.”
Hannah turned her head.
The coat hung over the chair, heavy black wool, still damp. Inside the collar, stitched in gold thread, were two initials.
C.R.
The police came later.
Two detectives. One older, one young enough to still believe paperwork could fix evil.
They asked about the rain. Her speed. Whether she had been drinking. Whether she had enemies.
“No,” Hannah said. “I’m a photographer. I shoot weddings, magazine features, charity events. I don’t have enemies.”
The older detective exchanged a look with his partner.
“What?” Hannah asked.
“Miss Collins,” he said carefully, “your brake lines were cut. Professionally. This wasn’t an accident.”
For two days, Hannah lay in that hospital bed staring at the coat and replaying the same question until it became a pulse behind her eyes.
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