Authors: Joey W. Hill
to go…” She was fast
losing the ability to talk, and the
policeman seemed to
realize it, because he curled a strong
arm around her,
rubbing her back in easy, firm
strokes.
“You’re going to come with me, calm
down and then we’l
talk and see what you want to do,
miss. For right now, you
take it easy.” He threw a glower at
Cyrus. “You tel Natasha
to keep her floor show inside from
now on. She damn wel
better have an acceptable vetting
process at her door by
tomorrow night, or I’l find every
possible freaking code
violation in this cesspool. I suppose
if someone’s
grandmother had pul ed up asking for
directions, you’d
have mauled her as wel ?”
“Fuck, she was dressed for it, Kel er.
Maybe not as
blatantly as—”
Rachel had her forehead pressed into
Officer Kel er’s
lapel, so she felt a hardening of
impressive chest muscles
that matched the sudden, deadly tone
in the cop’s voice.
“Trust me, Cyrus. Don’t go down the
‘she was asking for
it because of the way she was
dressed’ road. I’l run your
ass over.”
He didn’t wait for a response, not
that she ever heard
Cyrus give one. Though her teeth
were chattering, she was
cognizant of Cyrus thankful y
retreating to the door,
muttering. The officer helped her to
her feet, keeping a
supportive arm around her.
“Here we go.” He was directing her
toward her car.
“Ma’am, my name is Sergeant Leland
Kel er. I don’t have a
vehicle here because I just got off
shift. We’re near my
place, and I was picking up dinner at
that corner deli over
there. But I tel you what we’re going
to do. We’re going to
take your car to our precinct and I’m
going to get a cup of
coffee into you. We’l let you clean
yourself up and then we’l
talk, al right? And if you want a
female officer, we have
plenty of those.”
She shook her head. “Want to go h-
home.”
“Wel , you’re not doing that until I’m
sure you’re okay, so
there’s not going to be any arguing on
that point, al right?”
With that unrelenting assertion, he
took her keys from her,
stil somehow clenched in her fist, so
tight the metal had left
impressions in her palm. Opening the
passenger side, he
folded her into the seat, secured her
seatbelt around her
and then closed the door. As he
maneuvered his long
frame into the driver’s side, sliding
back the seat to
accommodate him in the little
compact, he gave her a
penetrating glance. “Besides, I don’t
think you want to go
home to your husband looking like
that.”
“Husband?” She fol owed his look to
her left hand, the
pale band of pigment that stood out
so starkly there. She
hadn’t put the ring back on once Jon
had taken it off, a
significant statement of its own.
However, at the sergeant’s
assumption, a hard spike of sobs
tried to choke her breath
again. “I’m not…married. Long
story…but not married. No
one. I have no one.”
It sounded so pathetic, said like that,
but she laid her
head back against the seat, too tired
to say anything else.
She didn’t want anything now except
numbness.
Mission accomplished, right? In
spades.
As Sergeant Kel er put the car into
drive, she stared into
the side mirror at the retreating club.
It looked like a demon
crouched underneath a moonless sky,
satisfied that it had
devoured another soul.
* * * * *
The police precinct was as cheerless
as she expected.
Dingy tile, fluorescent lighting.
Sidelong glances from jaded
eyes that had seen it al . Sergeant Kel
er continued to be
kind and attentive, however. Rather
than fishing through the
lost-and-found, he brought her a
clean T-shirt from his own
locker and a washcloth to use in the
bathroom. Once there,
she took one look at her face in the
mirror under the harsh
lighting—blood on her mouth, tear
tracks, smeared
mascara. Al of it accentuated the
crow’s feet at her eyes
and stress lines around her taut
mouth. She didn’t look
again, except to steal quick glances to
ensure she’d wiped
al of it away that she could.
She’d been so rattled she’d left her
purse at Leland
Kel er’s desk, but it didn’t matter.
Any touch-up would look
like clown makeup. Milo apparently
had a hand the size of a
tennis racket, for her cheek, eye and
lip on the right side
were swel ing. The blouse had been
stained with blood
from the split lip.
The cotton T-shirt fel to her knees,
almost hiding the rip
in her slacks. Because one of her
heels had broken in the
parking lot and the other had been left
behind, they’d also
given her a pair of sneakers from the
lost-and-found that
were only about one size too big. She
stuffed the broken
shoe in the trash along with the
blouse and came back out,
fol owing an officer’s direction to
Sergeant Kel er’s area.
He rose at the sight of her, gestured
her to his guest
chair. “You look better. Hot
compresses and a good bath
should help, a few aspirin.” He
touched her face, tilting it
away from him, and his jaw
hardened. The way he touched
her, so easy and confident, made her
go stil . Desperately,
she told herself it was a police thing,
the female perception
of safety, protection. Believing
anything else meant that she
was going to have to tear out her
mind, because it seemed
the only way to stop it from going
down this path over and
over again.
While she believed in Fate, karma
and the forces that
drove destiny, she couldn’t possibly
believe that suddenly
Doms were everywhere, like a damn
convention was in
town. She’d gone years without
meeting a single one
outside of the Internet, after al . It
was far more likely she
was starting to hal ucinate, like a
crack addict snorting up
everything from salt to talcum
powder, or ground glass.
He released her at last, gave her a
nod. “Yeah, you’l be
al right. That would be Milo’s
handiwork there. They’re a
hardcore pain club, miss. They dish it
out without causing
ER visits or police reports, mostly,
but they sure as hel
don’t observe enough of the rules for
the things they do. It
results in what you experienced
tonight, among other
things. I know you were pretty upset
when I found you. Were
you checking out the club…or were
you lost and seeking
directions?”
He asked it with a careful y straight
face, giving her the
out for her dignity, but she thought
lying to a cop would be
far more humiliating. “I was checking
it out. I thought…” As
her voice quavered, he pushed a hot
cup of coffee into her
hands. She clasped the warmth to her,
inhaling the familiar
scent of coffee beans. Something
normal. “I made a
mistake, is al .”
“That’s as may be, but a mistake
shouldn’t lead to this.”
He gestured to her face and general
state. “I wasn’t just
trying to spook Cyrus, miss. You
have every right to file
assault charges. They didn’t ask you
for your consent, did
they? Didn’t have you sign anything
coming in the door or
go over any safety restrictions, health
issues?”
She shook her head. “He asked for
twenty dol ars. I gave
it to him. I guess a court would say
that was consent. It
doesn’t matter anyway. The fact I
sought out a club like that
would tel a judge or jury everything
they’d want to hear. I’m
not stupid, despite the fact I did
something very stupid
tonight.”
“Now, miss—”
“I overheard two of the female police
officers talking
about me when I went into the
bathroom.” She made herself
say it aloud. She needed to hear it,
needed to write it on
every mirror in her house, to remind
her of the way it had
felt, the way it al felt. “‘Stupid bitch
wanted a man to beat
her like a dog, and then chickened
out. I’d have left her
there.’”
Drawing a breath, she straightened in
the chair, though
every bone in her body wanted to
slump in defeated
dejection. But she managed to sound
calm, meet his gaze.
“I have no desire to expose my life to
public ridicule, and
this is the kind of story that court
reporters love to stumble
upon, don’t they?”
Leland’s eyes had flashed, his glance
snapping toward
the exact two female cops, alarming
her. But registering her
tension, he spoke mildly, his
shoulders easing a fraction.
“They shouldn’t have said that. It’s
just that a lot of people
don’t understand what it is you’re
seeking.”
She nodded wearily and rose,
fumbling for her purse. “I’m
one of them.” Drawing her pride
around her as best she
could, she extended a hand. “Thank
you for your help,
Sergeant Kel er. I don’t care to file
charges, and you won’t
need to rescue me from such a place
again. I can promise
you that.”
He rose as wel , clasping her hand
rather than shaking it.
He had golden-brown hair to go with
those golden-brown
eyes. He reminded her of a bear. A
handsome, appealing
bear, capable of impressive ferocity
but also tenderness,
like his touch now.
“I’ve tucked my card in your purse. If
you need anything,
or reconsider, you give me a cal .”
She nodded again, but she was
already pul ing away.
The need to get to her haven, to close
the door on the
whole world, was a steady cord
reeling her toward home.
She’d take a couple days off, have
her backups fil in for her
appointments and classes. She’d give
herself forty-eight
hours under the covers, with the
drone of daytime TV and
the stifled sound of her own sobs,
and she’d pul it together
again.
Then she’d renew her personal vow
to herself. She’d
never, ever go down this road again.
She’d known better
from the beginning.
* * * * *
After the pretty blonde left, Leland
sat back down at his
desk. It wasn’t exactly protocol to go
through a victim’s
purse, but when he’d tucked his card
into the side pocket,
he’d seen another card. He’d been
bothered by her broken
admission that there was no one else
in her life, and so
he’d sneaked a glance. After tonight’s
events, it was the
last name he would have expected to
see there. When he
dialed the number, Jon picked up
before the second ring
finished.
“Leland. What the hel ? You know
it’s one in the morning,
right?”
“Don’t hand me that shit. You’re in
that mad scientist
home laboratory of yours, breaking al
sorts of hazardous
material laws to figure out how to
turn the universe inside
out. Or tuning up a device to give a
woman so many
orgasms in one go you’l never lack
for pussy again.”
“Been there, done that.”
“Oh yeah? Which one?”
“Both, of course. What’s your excuse
for being at work so
late? Shouldn’t you be in that dump
apartment of yours,
drinking your once-a-night beer and
eating your
convenience store nacho package
before you go to sleep
to ESPN recaps? Can’t imagine why
some woman hasn’t
snapped your exciting ass right up.”
“Blow me. No, I’m up because I just
pul ed a woman out
of a tricky situation. A woman
carrying your card in her
purse. Rachel Madison?”
Jon’s tone went from lazy insult to
sharp attention, a knife
striking stone. “Is she al right? Where
is she?”
“She’s fine. Gone home and wil
likely sleep it off.” After a
considering pause, Leland gave him
the immediate details.
There was the code he observed as a
cop, and the code