Chapter 2
“Pull over, I haven’t eaten since five and I’m craving a monster burger like a motherfucker. Don’t give me your look.”
“We’re not supposed to. You know we could get written up,” a voice replied, seasoned with age and cigars.
“Fuckin’ A, it’s not like she’s got some place to be.” I heard a tongue click. “Live a little.”
Fine, but you’re paying, and I want extra fries.”
Brakes in need of repair squealed as the vehicle rolled to a stop. Two doors slammed and I waited until the voices grew distant.
Darkness enveloped me; I was covered in some kind of smooth plastic. Straps secured me in three places and my fingers explored the material. A bag?
Before I went into full-blown panic, I pulled my right arm up near my face to feel for a way out. It was hot and stuffy, and while I was never claustrophobic before, it was a sensation that was rearing its ugly head. Two words came to mind when I pieced together the last few hours: body bag.
I sat up so fast that I almost fainted. White cabinets, a long bench, medical equipment—I was inside of an ambulance. Sickness rolled in my stomach and tightened like a hard fist.
I shuffled out of the bag and stumbled to the rear door so I could look out of the dirty glass window.
There wasn’t a single car in the parking lot except a beat up VW that I guessed belonged to someone working inside. Straight ahead, two men stood in line at the counter of a twenty-four hour burger joint. The older one with the gunmetal grey hair and potbelly arched his stiff back.
These weren’t familiar surroundings, and I wasn’t planning on hanging around in the back of an ambulance to ask questions. Drawing in a deep breath, I lifted the handle and the door swung wide. The second my bare feet touched the ground, all the tension sprang out like a released coil and everything that tethered me to the world dissipated.
I ran so fast that it felt as if someone were chasing me. My throat ached for water, my lips were cracked and I struggled for air with each leap I took. Every time my bare foot came down on a rock or stick, I winced—but kept going.
I’m not sure what kept me moving—fear, anger, an absence of clarity?
The woods thinned out and my feet hit hard pavement, still warm from the afternoon sun. I was fast approaching a figure up ahead. A man with a slow and steady gait, but no trench coat, so I knew it wasn’t the man who attacked me.
I shot right past him like a streak of lightening.
“Hey!” the voice called out from behind.
I cut across an open field when I heard his quickened footsteps from behind. My knees finally buckled and I collapsed on the dry, brittle grass.
Who was he and why did he do this? I drove my hands into the ground, so pissed off at myself for not having fought him hard enough. I let out a primal scream, but that didn’t make me feel any better. Something else was wrong.
The energy within me was reversing itself like a black hole and I wrapped my arms tightly around my body. It wanted to leave…it wanted to escape. It was fire burning in my veins, life throbbing at my fingertips, and power. I felt it just as sure as I felt a tiny ant crawling on my ankle—that man did something to me—changed me.
The footsteps slid right up behind me.
“Are you alright? You shouldn’t be out in this part of the woods, are you lost?” an out of breath voice questioned.
“Stay away,” my voice cracked.
But he didn’t. The demanding tone softened. “I won’t hurt you, do you need help? Look, I don’t have a phone but my house is up the road.”
My knuckles must have been white from the tight little fists I made as I turned to face him.
“Je-sus Christ,” he exhaled.
A beacon of light from a flashlight stung my eyes and I flinched.
“Take that off of me,” I croaked. With each hard breath my throat burned, so I tried to swallow.
“You need help, you need a doctor—” he started, but never finished.
The flashlight tumbled to the ground as he surged forward to collect me in his arms when my body gave out.
I looked at him with fading eyes. “Just leave me here, I don’t need you, I don’t need anyone.”
“I’m not leaving you here,” he glowered. “Who did this to you?”
He asked because I was covered in blood.
“I don’t know.”
Images spiraled out of control and my head lost gravity. The last words that fell from my lips were, “You need a shave.”
***
Adam was about fifteen minutes from hitting the front door and turning in for the night. But those fifteen minutes changed his life.
He pulled out his pocket flashlight and looked at his watch—just a couple hours left before dawn. Occasionally when he got a little lonely, he paid a visit to Nina. She was single, independent and always willing to let Adam into her bed. Not one of those girls who wanted him to stay the night either. They worked out a quiet arrangement and neither one of them had ever mentioned taking it any further than the bedroom, or the kitchen counter for that matter. Adam wasn’t a complete bastard, but Nina wasn’t the girl he saw himself settling with.
A rock tumbled into the darkness and he slapped a mosquito on his arm. It took only seconds to realize that someone was coming up fast and hard behind him. Twisting his back, he saw a woman running as if she were a gale force wind.
At least, he thought it was a woman. The figure was cloaked in blood with torn scraps of clothing fluttering behind her. But what made him uneasy as she flew right by him was the panic in those eyes. He looked on but saw no one chasing her.
Before he knew it, that fierce compulsion to protect overtook him and his legs were pumping right behind her, and closing in fast.
She stumbled in the grass and even from behind he could almost smell death and fear on her—a scent he knew too well. Nothing ever happened in this small town, that’s why Adam came here—to get away from all that. Except for a few local kids shooting off fireworks and setting the grass on fire, it was a quiet place to live.
Adam stared at the young woman in his arms just after she fell unconscious, now able to see the full extent of her condition. Her shirt was cut open all the way down the front, blood was smeared across her neck, and her hair was matted with it.
His brow furrowed when he brushed her hair aside. Blood everywhere, but no cuts or puncture wounds. Was this the face of a killer or a victim?
She moaned and Adam went still as he looked at her face again.
A lovely face. His pulse raced.
Light freckles were splashed over her cheekbones, and her lips had a pronounced cupids bow. She wasn’t the kind of beauty splashed all over fashion magazines, but the kind of girl that could have made a man blush with a compliment because if she said it…she would mean it.
Intelligence carved her features, not at all dolled up with jewelry and expensive makeup.
Poor girl, what kind of sick motherfucker would do something like this? But then, Adam had seen everything.
I should call the cops, he thought.
He glanced over his shoulder; if someone was after her then they weren’t safe out here. He couldn’t shake the imploring look in her eyes before she fainted, the ones that searched for meaning.
Adam wiped his brow with his bicep and knelt on one knee. This wasn’t the kind of attention he wanted to draw to himself, not the kind of trouble he needed. She would be better off if he called the cops and left her here.
He scratched his chin and watched her face—worried brows pinched together and left a tiny little line in the center.
She looked scared.
That triggered something hardwired and primal in him—he needed to protect her. Didn’t know who she was, where she came from or what kind of trouble she was in.
Adam pulled the fragile body into his arms, into his life and walked into the unknown.
Fuck it.