Caged (28 page)

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Authors: Amber Lynn Natusch

Tags: #Fantasy

BOOK: Caged
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A long silence stretched out slowly, seemingly with no end in sight. I craved conversation, anything human at that moment, and went for a change of subject entirely.

“Where are the PC now?” I asked conversationally.

“They’re doing what they do best, cleaning up the mess.”

“Do you mean that figuratively or literally?” I asked, knowing that the answer was likely both. He turned his head and answered with a half-smile that said “silly girl, you don’t need me to answer that for you.”
Point taken.

“So what do we do now?”

“We go home,” he said matter-of-factly.

Hmm
. Unless he knew something that I didn’t, he didn’t have a home because we just annihilated it and mine was about as safe to go to as a minefield.

“And where would that be?” I asked.

“If you don’t remember where you live, dear, I think this trip is about to get more complicated than I expected,” he said with a laugh. “It figures. Why do women always have to complicate things?” Cooper asked, finally regaining some much needed focus on the road ahead.

Well that was a weighted statement if I’ve ever heard one.

I smiled my saccharin-sweet smile his way to show my vast appreciation for his last statement. He laughed harder. At least I wasn’t predictable.

“That’s my girl.”

“So how much farther do we have to go?” I asked, still not knowing where we were.

“About ten more hours, but we’re going to stop and eat first, and get you cleaned up and into some fresh clothes. I love ya girlie, but you’re really starting to funk up the car. The pine tree can only do so much,” he kidded.

Touche.

Logic like that couldn’t be argued with.

38

We made a quick stop in Erie, PA to pee, eat and procure some new threads, or in my case, any threads. I’d once again been given Coop’s shirt to cover myself up with. A sudden flash of me being carried by Cooper across the clearing wearing only my birthday suit made me turn scarlet. I was beginning to think he’d seen me naked more than dressed. Somehow, I didn’t think he minded.

He’d purchased some baby wipes in the convenience store and I scrubbed myself up as best I could before making a mad dash to the bathroom around the back. I scrubbed out my hair and put on the clothes, hoping that nobody saw my state and called the cops. I looked like in extra in a horror film.

Having not run into any problems, we continued on our way. We managed to make it all the way to Worcester, Massachusetts with only idle chat or silence, and random sing-alongs to Neil Diamond’s Greatest Hits, which neither of us would ever have admitted to if confronted. Our similarities in childhood torture were never ending.

With only two hours left in the car together, I wanted to get a few basics ironed out before we arrived.

“So where do you plan on staying?” I asked casually, as if not invested in the answer at all. That couldn’t have been further from the truth.

“With you, Roomie,” he replied in a sing-song voice. “Where else could I stay? Besides, I’m under strict orders.” His carefree demeanor sobered with his last statement. Judging by the immediate grimace on his face, he wasn’t supposed to let that last part slip. It sounded like he was ordered to hold me under some kind of house arrest. I assumed that applied only until Sean showed up. There wouldn’t be any need for it after that.

“Excellent! A chaperone in my own home. Christmas really can come twice in one year,” I said with sarcasm dripping from every word. “I must have been extra good.” My witty comeback was met with a faint shaking of his head, his face dressed with a frown.

“No comment,” was his weak response.

“No, seriously. What if I don’t want you living with me?”

“It appears that you have no choice,” he replied.

Fuck that!

“I don’t have a choice? Are you shitting me right now? Do you really want to take it there, Coop? I’ve got choices coming out of unmentionable orifices at a rate that rivals the speed of sound.”

“Such as…?” he inquired condescendingly.

“Stay or leave? Surrender or fight? Live or die? You know, the really simple things in life to answer.”

“None of those are choices you have to make, Rubes. You’re
choosing
to make them and your reasoning is ill-advised. You still know nothing about what you speak of.”

“I’m about five seconds away from putting your head through the window if you don’t start spilling the shit you know and stop speaking in riddles, Dr. Seuss.”

“But I’m not supposed to say any…”

“SPILL IT NOW!” I screamed, punching the dash for effect.

He got my point loud and clear, and sang like a songbird. His sudden compliance wasn’t really all that surprising given that he had recently seen me take out virtually an entire pack single-handedly. I wouldn’t want that coming down on me, either.

“Do you want the full thing or just the nuts and bolts of it?” he asked, sighing heavily.

“I want the whole kit and kaboodle.”

“Sean finished up doing whatever it was he was doing to you about the same time as I was, well, wrapping things up with the Alpha,” he explained. “And before you ask,
no
, I don’t know what he was doing to you and no he didn’t feel it necessary to tell me after the fact.”

He was right to clarify that last point. I was about to interrupt him when he did.

“The PC had the few survivors occupied at the time, and Sean gestured me over to him. I wasn’t entirely sure if doing what he asked was a good idea since he and his brothers were in the process of taking out my whole clan, but I complied.”

“So you
can
follow directions. Duly noted,” I said, drily. He didn’t bother with a retort.

“Anyways, he gave me explicit orders that I was to follow to the letter as my continued respiration depended on it. I was to do three things, well, four things really: be sure you had your ring, drive you to Portsmouth without stopping for anything more than gas and food, and wait for him there when we arrived.”

“That’s only three. What was the fourth?” I asked, confused.

He swallowed audibly.

“Keep you alive.”

And there went my stomach again launching directly into my airway, which technically wasn’t anatomically feasible, yet continued to occur.

“Did he say why?”

“Oh yes, Ruby, he explained himself at length. He was extremely compliant and forthcoming. He gave me his life story while he was at it, if you’re interested in a recap of that as well.”

“Fine. Did he say anything else?” I asked.

“Yes, but it wasn’t said for or about you,” he said, gripping the wheel tighter.

“Soooo? What was it?” I prodded.

He pursed his lips so tightly that they disappeared from his profile entirely.

“You could say that he made it very clear that you were his and that he wasn’t especially fond or trusting of me.”


Why
would he say that? Do you two have history or something?” I asked, searching his face for an answer.

“Not exactly, Rubes, but he’s legendary. All weres know and fear him; his presence is never a good sign. He keeps the line between the mortal world and the not-so-mortal world intact and if he pays you a visit, it’s because you’ve done something to endanger that and will be disposed of accordingly. All the brothers do this. I’ve never heard of so many of them being in one place at the same time. It’s totally unprecedented! Talk about the shit hitting the fan.

My chest tightened a bit, and since my stomach hadn’t returned to its place of origin, breathing was out of the question. Sean had the PC on a hunt for me, the last of the RB, the most lethal of all weres. Sometimes setting records is not such a favorable thing.

I realized then what Sean’s message had meant. He would finish cleaning up the mess in Utah, then come back with his boys to where I was effectively being held hostage by the numbnuts driving the car, and then kill me. Easy as pie.

While all these horrible images of my death swam through my mind, a random question popped in and then flew out of my mouth without time for me to filter it.

“Why did he tell you to make sure my ring was on?”

Cooper turned to look at me slowly, which I
really
hated because we were surrounded by Massachusetts drivers who were not known for their prowess behind the wheel. His look smacked of frustration from trying to figure that very thing out himself.

“I haven’t a clue.”

40

I spent the last hour of the trip battling my anxiety while it increased with every rotation of the odometer. I needed answers, but more than that, I needed a way out. Maybe I was way out of line about Sean and his plan to kill me, but I just couldn’t see any other explanation. As much as I liked Cooper, I was not going to sit around and play good little hostage for him while I waited for Sean and whatever fate he had in store for me. However, I liked Cooper enough not to hand his ass over to Sean on a silver platter. I needed a way to escape that would get me long gone, and Cooper off the hook for never having been able to see my escape coming. At best I figured we had maybe a four hour lead on them, so I wasn’t working with a whole lot of wiggle room. Luckily for me, Cooper seemed oblivious to the fact that escaping was even on the menu for me. I found that extremely ironic.

Since Sean was working under the assumption that I knew nothing of his plan to return, he would be caught off guard by my break-out. In hindsight he would realize that Cooper was many things, but tight-lipped was not one of them. It would so work in my favor.

So with Cooper clueless, and Sean ignorant, all I needed to do was invent a window of opportunity or diversion to occupy Coop long enough for me to duck out and be long gone before he even noticed. I racked my brain for innocuous events that could lead to opportunity. For at least thirty minutes I came up with nothing, but then it hit me. We hadn’t eaten since Erie and we were both clearly starving; the gurgling noises coming from both of our bellies was testament to that.

I realized that pizza delivery would be my deliverance. It was so simple it was genius. I would let Cooper order so he knew it was legit, lulling him into the perfect sense of false security, then I would run down to the main door to pay. Cooper would be in a lack-of-food haze, so his judgment would be impaired enough to let me go down there unescorted. From there I could sprint to the Audi, having already stashed the key in my pocket when we first arrived at the apartment.

Like taking candy from a baby.

I smiled outwardly while going over and over the logistics of my plan until I realized I had an audience and quickly wiped it from my face.

“Inside joke? Care to share?” he asked, mocking my favorite interrogation phrase.

“I’m an only child, Coop. I don’t do sharing,” I retorted.

“If I’d had one like you first, it’d be an only child too.”

“You’re an ass.”

“You’re a grump.”

The way we bickered back and forth made me start to wonder if he wasn’t auditioning to fill the absent sibling position himself.

 

We pulled up to my building around five pm that evening, after what I was told was a thirty-eight hour road trip with breaks included. Coop thought it best given our appearances to not break the speed limit at any point in time, though I was more convinced that it was because his getaway car wasn’t exactly rented per se, but more so ”acquired” in the most dubious sense of the word. However, I was so glad to be home that I couldn’t have cared less how we got there and that included the legalities of our transportation.

I saw the window of my shop and got teary eyed. I missed my home. I had no idea how long I’d been gone; yet another question off of the long list that had no answers to date. I had to remind myself that it wasn’t back to business as usual, anyways. I wasn’t staying long.

He handed me my keys, which Sean procured from his little trip to Boston, no doubt. I unlocked the main door to the upstairs apartments, let Cooper in and then followed him up.

Always good to keep them where you can see them…

“Which floor?” he asked.

“Second. Third floor is my dance studio.”

“You own the whole building?” he asked, sounding surprised.

“Yes. I didn’t want tenants so I converted it over when I first moved in. It suits me just fine.”

He shrugged in the way that means everything and nothing and continued up to the door. I unlocked that as well and pushed it open with ease, but hesitated to enter, afraid of the normalcy it implied. Life had been so crazy for what seemed to be so long - I wasn’t sure that I was ready for the mundane, however short a stop it may be.

Cooper, seeming to sense my unease, stepped in first and flipped on the wall switch, lighting the living room. He did the proverbial three-sixty turn to take the place in, which seemed comical given that it wasn’t really all that big.

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