Read Winter's Wrath: Sacrifice (Winter's Saga #3) Online
Authors: Karen Luellen
WINTER’S WRATH
Sacrifice
Book 3 of the Winter’s Saga
By
Karen Luellen
By Karen Luellen
Published by Karen Luellen
Copyright 201
2
Karen Luellen
License Notes
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, please return
to the author
and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
Dan
Luellen,
who believed in me.
Special thanks
to my daughter Kathryn Ammon, a gifted storyteller in her own right,
for reading through my first attempt at this book and helping me come up with an even better storyline
.
I love you!
Thank you
to my fellow authors and
dear
friends who were kind enough to beta read
Winter’s Wrath: Sacrifice
.
Lynne Couvier,
Elise Marion
,
Franz McLaren, Madison Moore
and Mia Zabriskie
, you are the best!
I love you
guys
, and I owe you!
“
Envy and wrath shorten the life.”
Ecclesiasticus
30:24
October 12
Location: The Facility,
Germany
Two days after the
infamous
Retri
bution
Match between brothers,
Gavil and Creed Young.
Gavil breathed deeply, trying to calm down. It didn’t work. He had refused all pain killers, choosing instead to punish himself for the humiliation still seeping poison into his collapsed pride. His little brother, the golden child who could do no wrong, beat the crap out of him in front of everyone at their Retribution Match. Every time he thought about it, he had to stifle a groan.
Wincing with the effort and breathing through the pain, Gavil gripped the hospital’s side rails to help him gain leverage. He wanted to look out of the recovery room window. Self-loathing mingled equally with self-pity in the metasoldier, even as he forced himself into a sitting position. He breathed through the pain.
Along with dozens of cuts and bruises, Creed had broken six of his ribs and shattered his left cheek bone. One or more of the broken ribs punctured his lung. He could only take shallow
breaths and when he did, a strange crackling sound could be heard from his chest.
Gavil waited for the room to stop spinning before gingerly swinging his legs over the side of the hospital bed.
This was the first time his feet had touched the ground in two days, and he was desperate to make it happen, despite the piercing aches and shallow breaths. He yanked off the oxygen mask and used his I.V. stand to help maintain balance as he wobbled toward the window—determined to see the world outside his m
uted, mint-green h
ospital room.
The remaining leaves on the trees were crispy with autumn colors, dancing their last in the breeze. The sky was overcast—gray and heavy—matching Gavil’s mood.
A knock came at the door. Gavil didn’t even bother to turn around.
“What?” he said to his own muted reflection looking back at him from the glass window.
“Hello, Gavil. I’m Esther Haverford. Dr. Williams sent me.” A female’s voice spoke from the door way. Gavil still didn’t turn. He was too embarrassed to see anyone, but he would never admit it.
After a silent pause, Esther realized the soldier wasn’t going to speak, so she continued.
“You took off your oxygen mask,” she said with a gentle scolding tone. “And you really shouldn’t be standing without a nurse near you.”
“I don’t want anyone near me,” Gavil growled.
“Yes, I feel like that too sometimes, but we all have to do things we don’t want to do,” she said with compassion.
Gavil heard a scuffling behind him, and then with a practiced hand, the girl reached around his right shoulder and held the oxygen mask over his swollen mouth. “There, at least you’ll be less likely to keel over from oxygen depletion.” Her small hands were soft and warm as they brushed the mask’s elastic straps neatly behind his ears.
Another scraping noise behind him had him curious enough to glance. The female was dressed in the standard issue military fatigues, but her hair was down
;
it was her flaming red locks that caught his eye instantly. She was pushing a chair up behind Gavil so he could just fall backward and land safely in a seated position. When she looked up to see Gavil watching her, she smiled shyly. The green of her eyes sparkled.
“Autumn is my favorite season,” she offered. “I love the colors on the trees and the cold, crisp air.” She stood beside the soldier and gazed out the window. “There,” she said, “
t
hat’s my favorite tree in the whole courtyard. Your room has a perfect view of it.”
Gavil watched her from the corner of his eye. Her face was smooth under a sprinkling of little brown freckles splashed over a pixie nose. She crossed her arms and leaned against the window frame as she continued to gaze at her favorite tree.
Feeling strangely awkward, Gavil felt compelled to fill the silence. “Why is it your favorite?”
“It has a handsome shape, with a curious trunk and intricate branches, but that’s not why it’s my favorite. Look closely,” she nodded to the tree, her face inches from the window pane. “Do you see the nest? It’s a squirrel’s nest, near the center, toward the top. Do you see the cluster of leaves and twigs? That’s where the little fellow lives.” Her warm breath on the cold window left small white puffs. Gavil resisted the urge to run a finger through the condensation.
“I see it.” Gavil’s sharp blue eyes saw the messy nest right away, but it was the girl he wanted to watch.
She sighed and turned to look up at Gavil, the green of her eyes demanding attention. He couldn’t help but wonder who she really was and what she really wanted from him.
“Can I help you walk around a bit, or are you ready to rest?” Her gentle mannerisms were obvious. Gavil wasn’t accustomed to trusting anyone.
Clenching his jaw momentarily beneath the mask, he narrowed his eyes and asked, “Why did Williams send you?”
“Oh, he wanted me to tell you he’s looking forward to speaking with you as soon as you feel up to it,” she shrugged.
“That’s it?”
“That was the message,” Esther’s green eyes were large with innocence. “So, walk or rest?” she prodded.
Afraid he was too weak to walk around with this girl watching, probably waiting for him to make fool of himself, he turned and motioned for the bed. Esther nodded discreetly and grabbed the oxygen tank to help him back to bed.
Gavil, not ordinarily self-conscious, was worried about what he must look like to this red-headed beauty. He must look weak with his black eyes, cuts, bruises and stitches, all wrapped in a dumb ass hospital gown wrapper. At least he had managed to put on a pair of loose boxers this morning so he wasn’t mooning her when leaned over the bed to steady his wobbly legs.
Once
he was
seated, Esther carefully adjusted Gavil’s pillows until she believed them to be just right, and then draped a warm blanket over his legs. All the while she made small talk about the weather, the hospital food and even the squirrel in the tree outside. Her hands kept busy, straightening small items around the room at first. Then she filled a glass with ice water
,
slipped a straw into the cup and thoughtfully held it still at his lips so he could sip.
Gavil was mesmerized by her graceful movements, so different from his own gruff ways. Her voice was soothing, her words cheerful and light-hearted. Everything about her was the exact opposite of himself. His crystal blue eyes watched her wearily as she flitted from one task to another, afraid to say anything in case it came out wrong and scared her away.
“Do you know about me?” he finally blurted.
Esther stopped talking, turned and looked curiously at the battered metasoldier staring back at her.
“I know your name and meta number, and that you were in a Retribution Match recently.” She smiled coyly, “I also know of your injuries because I glanced over your medical chart before coming to your room.”
“Were you there? At the match?” Gavil’s pride flinched
as he
wait
ed
for her response.
“No, I don’t usually leave my assignment. Dr. Williams asked me to step away from it for awhile just now so he could tend to business, but usually I’m there.”
“What is your assignment?” Gavil couldn’t imagine a duty that would occupy so much of one soldier’s time.
The girl glanced down at her hands, showing uncertainty for the first time since she walked into Gavil’s recovery room. “It’s not something I’m supposed to discuss.”
Esther didn’t miss the frown forming in the handsome, though bruised, face of the soldier.
“Oh, don’t look so worried,” she soothed. “I just take care of someone.”
“Are you a nurse?”
“I am trained to be a nurse, yes, but that’s not my only duty in this assignment.”
“You said you take care of someone—only one person?”
“Yes.”
“Here at the compound?”
“Yes.”
“Who?”
“I can’t say.”
“Do you know anything about the Match I fought?”
“No, should I?”
“No.”
Esther nodded, absolutely accepting Gavil’s words without further question. He watched as she walked back to the chair she’d moved to the window and brought it back to his bedside. She sat gracefully in it, folding her hands in her lap.
“Why have I never seen you before?”
“I live with my assignment, take my meals there and exercise there…like I said, I don’t leave my assignment very often at all. To be honest, I was surprised Dr. Williams asked me to step away today, but—” Esther’s slender legs moved to cross, slipping comfortably into position, as though she sat like this often.
“Am I allowed to ask where your assignment is located?”
Esther thought for a moment before answering in a whisper, “I’m here. In the basement of this building.”