Taken (Second Sight) (8 page)

Read Taken (Second Sight) Online

Authors: Hazel Hunter

Tags: #romance, #psychic, #sight, #Contemporary, #second

BOOK: Taken (Second Sight)
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“Drop your weapon,” Prentiss said, louder this time. And for emphasis, he put the gun to Isabelle’s temple and shoved. “Drop it or she gets a bullet!”

Isabelle moaned in response and Prentiss didn’t know if it was her or the way he was playing the scene but Mac held his gun in the air, dangling from one finger.

“Whatever you say,” Mac said. “You’re in control.”

Prentiss couldn’t help but smile though the mustache barely hung on.

“Drop the gun,” Prentiss ordered.
 

Slowly, Mac complied. He crouched lower until he could lay it on the floor and then put it down with a light clatter. Right at his feet. Then he stood.

Does he think I’m an idiot?

Prentiss glanced to his right.

“Kick it into that cell,” he ordered.

Though he took his time, Mac did as he was told. The gun skittered loudly over the concrete floor and quickly over the threshold.
 

Prentiss aimed the gun square at the man’s chest and stepped from behind Isabelle.
 

This was proving
interesting
.

• • • • •

Mac?
Isabelle thought.

The voices were
so
dim.
 

Is that you?

God, she was tired. It would be
so
easy to just sleep.

The grey haze of the reading was slow to clear but something was pushed into her temple and the pain there actually helped.

“Whatever you say,” Mac said. “You’re in control.”

She tried to shake her head but it was so heavy. Though she slowly opened her heavy lids, she could barely see her lap through the haze. Then the images from the reading began to organize themselves: Prentiss with his mother, his victims, his work in acting, more victims, his preparations, all the costumes.

“Drop the gun,” Prentiss said.

The gun
, Isabelle thought tiredly.
Something about the gun.

But what?

She tried to shake her head again.

I can’t think.

“Kick it into that cell,” Prentiss said.

But as she heard the gun scrape across the floor, she remembered.

• • • • •

If he could keep from getting shot, Mac had a chance at saving Isabelle–
if he could keep from getting shot
. Backup couldn’t be far behind.

The Chameleon was true to form. The cop uniform was impressive. So was the completely different look.
 

Mac stared hard at Isabelle. She was alive but barely moving.

“Into the cell,” the Chameleon said, waving the gun and pointing with it.

Mac glanced at it and then back at him and realized that Isabelle had moved. Slowly, she raised her head but her staring and unfocused eyes told him that she didn’t see him.
 

“Fake gun,” she breathed, before her head dropped again.

The Chameleon jerked his gaze toward her and then back to Mac. The look in his face said it all: anger, surprise, and fear.

As he raised the gun to hit Isabelle with it, Mac charged him. Adrenalin compounding fury, Mac covered the space in a heartbeat.

“Shit,” the man had started to say, just as Mac slammed into him with a flying tackle.

They smashed into the ground, the fake Glock flying down the corridor, as the air rushed out of the Chameleon in a loud grunt. Mac immediately landed his fist in the middle of the man’s face and felt a second connection reverberate when the back of his head crunched into the floor. The next blow landed on the side of the Chameleon’s head sending blood from his nose spewing out in an arc that cut Mac across the chest. As he stood, Mac grabbed the front of his uniform and hauled him to his feet. Then he planted his fist so hard in the man’s stomach that his feet left the floor. Then he did it again. And again.

As the rage poured out of him, Mac grabbed the Chameleon’s throat, and forced him against the bars. Though his eyes had already begun to roll back in his head, Mac squeezed. A gurgling choke emerged from the bloody mouth, the mustache hanging from the corner, and Mac squeezed tighter, banging him against the bars with a reverberating metal clang. But as the Chameleon’s eyes closed, Mac knew he had to stop–but not to save the man’s life. The Chameleon had to suffer, not die. Slowly, Mac released his grip and the Chameleon sagged to the floor in a heap.

Mac whirled to Isabelle and took a step but was brought up short. The handcuffs. Quickly he bent to the Chameleon’s body, shoved him onto his side, and popped open the handcuff compartment on the utility belt. The keys slid out and Mac snatched them up.

Instantly, he was at the front of the chair.

“Isabelle?” he tried as he unlocked the cuffs that bound her ankles but there was no response. He looked up into her face, her head hung low and her eyes closed. As he stood, he gently lifted her head, moved her shoulders back, and helped her sit up to take the strain off of her arms. The pulse at her jugular was fast but weak and her breathing was shallow. He’d been about to lay her head back when her eyes slowly began to open. Her parched lips started to smile.

“I knew it,” she whispered in a dry throat, “I knew you’d come.”

But no sooner were the words out than the little smile vanished and her eyes closed again.
 

Mac eased her head back, circled behind the chair, reached for the handcuffs and paused. Her left wrist was swollen and bleeding and she wasn’t wearing gloves. The fury built in him again as he unlocked the cuffs and glanced at the Chameleon’s still body. Maybe he
wouldn’t
wait to vent his anger. But as Isabelle’s hands came loose, he let the handcuffs and keys fall to the floor. Outside, he could hear the sound of approaching sirens. Careful not to touch her hands, he moved them into her lap before scooping her up in his arms.

Cradling her limp body to him, he lifted her so that her head could rest against his chest. He lowered his face and gently pressed his cheek against hers. Then he closed his eyes to the softness of her skin.


Isabelle
,” he whispered and, for a moment, the outside world fell away. “I’ve got you,” he murmured as relief flooded through him. He took in a deep breath, hugged her a little tighter, and then slowly let that breath go. “I’ve got you,” he whispered.

CHAPTER ELEVEN

Prentiss drew closer as his mother shoved him from behind.
 

“Go on!” the woman yelled. “
Get it over with!

But Prentiss hardly needed to be prodded. Though his mouth opened and closed like he was a fish out of water, Isabelle realized he was changing. He was the priest, then the surgeon, then the cop. She tried to move her hands to push him away but she didn’t know where they were. Prentiss’s cycling face pressed in closer, took over her vision, completely surrounded her until Isabelle felt like she couldn’t breathe.

“No!” she screamed.

Abruptly, she sat up and her eyes flew open.

“It’s okay,” someone said. “You’re all right.”

Frantically, Isabelle’s eyes searched for the reason her arms wouldn’t move. Padded restraints.
 


What?
” she said.

“You were pulling out the I.V.,” Mac said. “Here, lay back.” She looked up into his face. It
was
Mac. His blue-green eyes gazed down into hers. “It was a dream,” he said quietly. “You’re all right.”

Isabelle felt the pillows behind her and sank back into them as the room began to spin. She felt Mac reach across her.

“Nurse?” he said. “We need some help in here.”

Then Isabelle felt Mac’s hand along the side of her face. The feel of it was so warm, so–
 

Her eyes popped open.

“Mac,” she said, panic rising. “My
gloves
.”

“You’re wearing them,” he said quickly.

Yes. She could feel them now.

A nurse appeared on the other side of the bed and adjusted a little switch on the I.V. tube.

A strange taste coated the back of Isabelle’s throat and, in moments, the world faded comfortably away.

• • • • •

Though Isabelle had protested that she was fine, Mac noticed she didn’t refuse his help on the way up the stairs to her apartment. With her lacerations and dehydration treated, the hospital stay had only required one night. Though the nurse had called the doctor who would sign the release form, they’d waited for thirty minutes before Mac had had enough. While Isabelle had gotten dressed, he’d tracked the surprised doctor down in the cafeteria and had the forms signed.

“Will Esme still have to testify?” Isabelle asked as he unlocked the front door.

All the way home, she’d peppered him with these types of questions. How was Esme doing? What had Ben said? Was Isabelle’s testimony going to be enough to put Prentiss Coulter away for life?

“Esme’s already said she
wants
to testify,” Mac said.
 

Ben was hoping that it might help his daughter move on, give her the closure that she so desperately needed. Now Mac found himself wanting the same thing for Isabelle. She hadn’t said a thing about her time with the Chameleon.

Though all the agencies had been anxious to debrief Isabelle, Mac had put his foot down. Prentiss Coulter wasn’t going anywhere. Even in the prison’s infirmary, he was completely locked down with an armed guard present at all times.

Mac took Isabelle’s purse from her and set it on the small table next to the door and then he closed and locked it. Though it was only early afternoon, he could see that Isabelle was exhausted. For that matter, he was tired too. The sleepless days that led up to Isabelle’s rescue didn’t seem to help him sleep in the hospital. Isabelle had woken up four times, screaming.

As he turned to her, he could see she was staring at the bedroom at the end of the hall. She wrung her hands in front of her and didn’t move.

“Do you want me to change the sheets?” he asked quietly, when she didn’t budge. It would only make sense that she’d want to be comfortable–truly rest–after what she’d been through. “Those are
our
sheets but it’d only take me a minute to–”

“No,” she said. “
God, no
. I don’t want to be alone.”

Instantly, Mac had his arms around her.

It was the first time they’d embraced since he’d found her. But as he pulled her closer, her arms didn’t go around his waist. Though she laid her face quickly on his chest, her hands were still between them. He waited for her to move them, thinking they’d simply been caught there, but after a few moments passed, he realized she wasn’t going to move them. He kissed the top of her head and stroked her hair even as his chest tightened.
 

Something has changed.
 

Whatever had happened to Isabelle, whatever that freak had done, she was different.

Mac clenched his jaw.

It was too soon to tell
, he told himself. After everything she’d been through, it was too damn soon to tell. But the sinking feeling in his stomach said otherwise.

“All right,” he said quietly. “Let’s get you to bed.”

• • • • •

Isabelle woke with a start but managed not to scream. Even so, she pressed her hands down over her mouth to make sure. Laying on her side, turned away from Mac, her open eyes stared into the darkness. This time she hadn’t dreamed of Prentiss, she’d dreamed of his victims.
 

They’d stood in a line, walking slowly from left to right, limping past her, the solemn group led by his mother wearing a dirty, pink, house robe. Though Isabelle tried to talk with them, get their attention, no one would look at her. The blinding white room without walls showed everything. Their tired eyes, the cracked and peeling lips, the awful wounds in their knees that made them all lurch.

As the end of the line had approached, Isabelle had seen herself. At that point the dream had abruptly ended. Now she squeezed her eyes shut.

A victim, like the others. I could have died. Maybe I should have.

No longer able to fight back the emotion, Isabelle quietly cried.

• • • • •

Mac had woken when Isabelle had but she’d lain so still that he’d hoped she’d gone back to sleep. One after another the nightmares had woken her. But maybe now the dark was more soothing. She hadn’t screamed.

Though he lay on his back, he silently turned his head to look at her. Even though she was turned away, he saw the subtle tremble of her body and, when she tried to quietly suck in a breath, he realized she was crying.

Without a word, he turned to her, wrapped an arm around her midsection, and brought his knees up behind hers. The bare skin of her back was cold against his chest and her entire body shook with the silent tears. Though he gently grasped her, he didn’t say a thing. He’d already said that he was here, that she was safe, that she was okay, but clearly she wasn’t. She
needed
to cry and he simply let her.
 

Suddenly, a racking sob was torn from her throat and she covered her hands with her face. The pitiable sound lanced into his chest, wrenched his gut, and yet he knew there was nothing he could do but hold her.
 

“I read him,” she blurted out. “Oh god, I read him.”

Mac froze.


What?
” he couldn’t help but say.

And then it all came tumbling out. How she’d been taken, how he’d tortured her, how she’d tried to stall for time, all the readings–
everything
. Though Isabelle had broken down into sobs at several points, Mac didn’t dare try to stop her. But when the long gush of words finally ended, he realized she was gripping his arm fiercely.
 

“We’re going to get through this,” he said quietly, just behind her ear. She nodded but didn’t say anything, still crying. He couldn’t take it any longer. Gently, he rolled her to her back, then toward him, and completely enveloped her in his embrace. She buried her face in his chest but still she didn’t hold him. “I know it’s hard,” he whispered into her hair, as he stroked her back. “But I promise you, we’ll make it through this–
together
.”

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