Read Experiment in Terror 05 On Demon Wings Online
Authors: Karina Halle
Tags: #Fantasy, #Horror, #Romance, #Adult, #Mystery, #Suspense, #Goodreads 2012 Horror
She doesn’t seem to sweat at al . Alexa might be a
cyborg (if Joe’s a robot, then it’s completely possible).
She’s tal but not as tal as I am (I’m 6’2”, so that’s a good
thing), and slender thanks to daily sessions on something
that looks like a torture chamber (Pilates, I’m told) but stil
has the nicest set of breasts I’ve ever been privileged
enough to get a hold of and a round bottom, which she cal s
the bane of her existence yet I love very dearly. She’s also
stunning. Dark complexion, black lashes, mahogany eyes
and matching hair that runs down to the smal of her back in
one straight sheet. She’s the sexiest banker you’ve ever
seen.
She’s also so put together that being seen next to her
makes me feel like I did something right in my life. I’m fairly
confident that I did when I snagged her two years ago. But
then again, she does glare at me more than a happy
person should.
She looks away from me and up at the tal , rusting ferry
we are about to board. The terminal is packed with chaos
and people, both things that already have me on edge, but
Alexa seems more concerned about the ship.
“Is this seriously the ferry?” she asks? Her voice is
smooth and clear, al owing the nuances of her annoyance
to slip out.
“This be the ship, says I,” I growl in my best pirate’s
impression.
She raises her brow at me. Apparently, it’s not a very
good impression. “It’s nothing more than a glorified bathtub.
The Nazis probably built this thing.”
“I’m sure Morocco has advanced since then, Alexa.”
“Advanced backward,” she mumbles. I almost tel her
she’s not making sense but I think better of it. I know she’s
tired, too, since we had to wake up so early and to go from
a chil y, damp London morning to a sweltering hot (and loud
and colorful and foreign) Tangier afternoon is a big leap. I
don’t want to rock the boat with Alexa, pun not intended.
A little while later and Alexa and I are sitting near the
front of the ferry as the vessel pul s away from the dock and
starts making its slow way toward the distant, hazy
shoreline that is Gibraltar and the continent of Europe. It’s
actual y quite a remarkable journey when you think about it,
having two continents, giant landmasses of opposing
cultures and civilizations, separated only by a narrow and
boisterous straight. Only I can’t real y think about it because
Alexa is sitting next to me, clicking her fingernails across
the front of an unread magazine. I know that sound al too
wel . It means I shouldn’t make any sudden movements.
I slowly reach down into my laptop bag…easy…easy…
and bring out my laptop, hoping to lose myself in some
work (not bloody likely) or look busy (more likely).
My finger is poised to hit the power button when Alexa
lets out a long sigh. Enough with the sighs, why can’t the
people in my life actual y say the things they want to say
instead of making me ask WHAT?
“What?” I ask, my finger paused in mid air. A drop of
sweat rol s out from under my sleeve, down my finger and
onto the computer. I wince.
“Why are you so spineless?” she asks in a tone so
simple that I feel I’ve misheard her. Did she just cal me
spineless?
“Uh, I’m sorry. What?”
She doesn’t look at me but the nails keep tapping away.
“You knew that when I said I wanted to go on holiday,
that I wanted to holiday somewhere nice.”
“But Morocco is-” I begin.
“And I wanted to go on a real holiday, not some work
assignment to interview some American woman.” She
adds special biting emphasis to the word “woman,” as if
she were jealous. I’d be thril ed at that, honestly, but I know
Alexa doesn’t get jealous.
I want to tug at my col ar again. Did it just get hotter in
here?
“I just thought-”
“No,” she spits out and final y looks at me, raising her
sunnies to her forehead. She does look tired; no wonder
she’s wearing them inside. “You didn’t think, Chris. That’s
your problem. You
never
think.”
She turns away from me with pursed lips, flips open the
magazine and becomes magical y engrossed in the pages.
I watch her for a few beats, trying to suss out the situation.
Alexa is always cool and calm. Often eerily so. Like the
time I almost burned down the flat trying to make French
toast. She just strol ed in the kitchen with the fire
extinguisher, as if she stores it in her back pocket, and
sprayed the drapes like some special ops agent.
So, an outburst like this isn’t normal. But her job is
stressful and her father is overbearing and it is hot in here
and she seems real y tired so…perhaps it’s nothing.
Yes. I decide it’s nothing.
I resume pressing the on button on the laptop and soon
I’m happily typing away questions to ask Ms. Cooper
tomorrow. Maybe not “happily” but I look happy, making
sure my eyes are bright in case Alexa shoots me another
glare.
Even though I already know what I’m going to ask the
travel writer and there’s no real need to write it down (I have
a memory that borders on being photographic), I keep
myself busy, maintaining the feeling that this trip is doomed.
I keep at it, keep at it, keep at it…
“Do you have to do that now?” Alexa snarls.
I look around to make sure she’s indeed speaking to
me. The only people nearby are a young blonde woman
with Cousin It hair and a wrinkled old Germans in knee-high
socks. And I thought
I
was inappropriately dressed.
I slowly meet Alexa’s eyes. Something has changed in
them. They are annoyed, most definitely, but there is a
current of something I rarely see in them. A current of pain. I
do not like this at al .
“I’m sorry,” I say, tilting the computer toward her. “Did
you want to write something?”
She doesn’t laugh at my wit. “You don’t get it, do you?”
No. I obviously do not get it. I open my mouth to say
something, I don’t know what, when my computer makes a
strange gurgling noise and then shuts itself off.
“Bloody hel !” I exclaim, smacking it lightly.
I peer at it closely and press the on button again.
Nothing. No sign of life. It just…died on me. Alexa’s phone
goes off and I hope it distracts her from whatever she was
about to bombard me with. She pul s it out of her purse and
holds it in her hands before lowering it.
Yet her phone keeps ringing. I eye the buzzing
contraption on her lap. She stares down at it, at the flashing
image of her father’s face on the screen.
“You know you’re supposed to answer it when it makes
that sound,” I say gently.
It rings again. As if she’s in slow motion, her head turns
toward me. Her eyes are sad and tired. Dead eyes. I feel it
in my heart. That current of pain wil reveal itself and I wil
feel it too.
“It’s over,” she says in a quiet but calm voice.
She takes the phone, stil ringing, and plunks it in her
purse. “I can’t do this anymore.”
I blink hard at her, and I ask the things I already know.
“Do what? What’s over?”
“This. Us. I can’t put up with…this anymore. We’re over,
Chris. This has been over for a long time.”
She gets out of her seat and stands in front of me,
hovering like some Goliath. I feel just like David. And not
David Tennant. Dr. Who wouldn’t be dumped on a ferry to
Gibraltar.
“I don’t get it.” Though I do, I just don’t get why she’s
trying to break up with me at the start of our holiday. I find
myself focusing on the logistics of that.
“I know you don’t,” she says with a smal smile and
places her hand on the side of my face. Her palm is warm
and slightly damp. She smel s familiar, like home, which
makes my heart throb violently. The whole thing is al too
surreal.
She takes her hand back and exhales. “Maybe it’s not
over. Maybe I just need a break…”
“A break from what?”
She throws her hands up in the air, the fire returning.
“From us, Chris! God! Look, whether you realize it or not I
have been doing nothing but giving you second chances.”
My vision starts to throb along with my heart. My
peripheral vision begins to blur and I find myself focusing on
random items on the ferry. The sticky, old linoleum floor.
The chair in front of me, which has stuffing spil ing out of it
like furry guts. The blonde girl across the way who is
looking straight into my eyes with a brusque clarity. I hold
her gaze, seeing her and her faded Pink Floyd shirt, her
sparkling light eyes and the pencil she’s holding in her left
hand. She holds it like she’s about to stab someone with it.
I see al of this but I don’t
really
see it. Because al I can
think about is that the love of my life, the gorgeous
Alexandra DeWinter, is breaking up with me on our
romantic holiday. My entire life has come undone in the last
few minutes and I have no idea what to do or say to put it
back on track.
Luckily, Alexa knows what to do. She continues to yel at
me.
“You wouldn’t even be working on our holiday if you had
the guts to stand up to your boss…or even your mother.
You’re just not going anywhere, Chris. You’l be fifty and stil
trying to please everyone. Stil stuck at the paper, if you’re
lucky, stil underachieving, stil just…a puppet.”
Puppet
. Her father has cal ed me that on more than one
occasion. The word brings me out of my stupor and I find
myself starting to hate her just a little bit. It feels good.
“That’s your father talking,” I shoot back.
She shakes her head and snatches up her purse. I reach
over and grip her wrist firmly, wanting her to stay, to not just
fire her rounds and leave.
“I’ve been talking like this for a long time. You just
haven’t been listening!”
She rips her hand out of my grasp, turns on her heel and
storms down the aisle. I could swear there’s almost a smile
on her face.
I can’t believe what just happened. But I sure as hel can’t
let her walk out of my life like this. We’re on a bloody ferry!
Where the hel is she going to go?
I leap to my feet, quickly ram my dead laptop into its bag,
and take off down the ferry, avoiding the looks from the
fel ow passengers. I can feel my face burning a deep red,
know that the flush is reaching up into the reaches of my
sandy hair, that the sweat is starting to form again.
I begin my search for my girlfriend. Ex-girlfriend.
Whatever she is.
5
JAMIE
th
June 19
Dude. I’m on the ferry to Gibraltar and I just saw this
poor sap get dumped by his girlfriend. In public. Even I’m
not that cruel. Relationships; man, why bother?