Blood Sport (44 page)

Read Blood Sport Online

Authors: J.D. Nixon

BOOK: Blood Sport
11.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

My musings were cut short by the sound of heavy footsteps clumping up the staircase. Judging by the noise, there was more than one of them – definitely at least two, maybe even three. I focussed my mind and tried to steady my breathing. I wasn’t feeling tip-top though and with my arm injuries and crippling headache, it was going to be an uphill battle to get through this one.

I let the first man enter the room, quickly followed by the second. Listening to them carefully, I was pretty sure there was a third man as well, but I wasn’t given the luxury of time to confirm that.

“Hey!” puzzled the first man. “The boss said there were two bitches up here to get rid of. Where’s the other one?”

I didn’t waste another second, but pushed the door half-closed, crunching the third man in the face with it, before opening it again and ramming myself past the first and second men towards the doorway. They were slow to react, taken completely by surprise.

The first man reached out to grab me, but I dodged out of his way. The second man came at me and I kicked him viciously in the knee cap, causing his leg to collapse under him. The first man reached out again, his hand grasping my upper left arm cruelly. It was where I’d been shot and I let out an involuntary cry of pain. I turned my head and bit his hand hard and then punched him in the throat while he was so close to me, leaving him gagging.

The second man came back for more and received an eye gouge for his trouble. His screams of pain echoed down the hallway, and probably down the staircase as well. I needed to get to that office fast. I pulled out my knife and waved it at the two men menacingly, managing to keep them temporarily at bay.

But there was still the third man to handle. A giant menacing brute, he wiped away a trickle of blood from his nose with the back of his hand, seething. I guess he wasn’t happy about having a door slammed in his face.

He held out his hands, palms up and beckoned me forth, an unpleasant smile cracking his ugly face. “Bring it on, little hell cat.”

Nostrils flaring and lips pressed together, I lowered my head and held my right arm up protectively, elbow out, and charged him. He laughed, bulking himself out across the hallway, completely blocking it, one arm and foot pressed up against each side of the walls. At the last second, when he was convinced I was trying to knock him over (which would have been a crazy thing to attempt given the difference in our sizes), I swerved to the right and ducked down under his arm. But for a big man, he was alarmingly swift and he twisted, extending his arm, his ham-sized fist seizing the collar of my jacket and hauling me backwards.

I landed smack bang up against his chest, my knife clattering to the floor. He wrapped two beefy arms around me, crushing my arms against my sides. I did everything I could to escape – I struggled, I bit his arms, I stomped on his feet and kicked backwards into his shins. But he merely tightened his hold until I couldn’t breathe and my ribs were in danger of cracking. Laughing at my puny efforts, he lifted me up, spun me around and marched me back into the room, carrying me the whole way.

“Look what I found,” he smiled at the other two. “A little piggy trying to escape.”

The first man, rubbing his throat, backhanded me viciously across the face. “That’s for biting me, bitch.”

The second man, one eye red and streaming, backhanded me the other direction, splitting my lip. Blood trickled down my chin and dripped off. “And that’s for my fucking eye.”

With his arms still around me, the third man took the index finger of my left hand between the iron grip of his fingers and pushed down until the bone snapped. I screamed out in pain, tears filling my eyes. “And that’s just because I hate cops. You’re lucky the boss said not to rough you up too much, otherwise we’d be beating the shit out of you right now.” He spoke to the other two. “Hurry up and give the bitch the fucking needle.”

The first man drew a syringe from a bag and filled it with a clear liquid from a tiny glass bottle. I started struggling again, kicking out at them furiously, keeping them at a distance.

“You’re an aggro little piece of pussy, aren’t you, darling?” laughed the third man. “I prefer my pussy a bit tamer than you.” And he crushed me in his arms until I was weak and limp from the lack of oxygen. The first man leapt over to push the needle into my arm and slid the syringe down until all the liquid disappeared into my body. He then moved over to Kylie, roughly shaking her.

The last thing I knew was that my bones seemed to be dissolving and I was melting into a puddle on the floor. Everything blurred, before a great darkness overwhelmed me.

 

 

 

Chapter 26

 

 

 

I couldn’t work out what on earth had possessed me to sleep in my backyard in the rain. I was drenched and freezing, lying on my back looking up at the overcast night sky through a canopy of trees, rain pouring down onto my face. I was drowsy and dopey and my brain felt as if someone had stuffed my head with marshmallows. In what seemed like slow motion, I rolled my head to the right to avoid the rain falling into my eyes. And looked straight into the huge eyeless sockets of a human skull.

Whoa
!
I scrabbled away desperately, too groggy to shriek.
What the hell had Red Bycraft left in my yard now?
Or maybe that should be
who
the hell? I’d had a few dead animals thrown onto my veranda now and then and he had murdered my poor girls, but I’d never been left a human artifact before.

I reached my hand out to touch it, sure I was having another nightmare. But the cold wet hardness of bone assured me that it was real. Someone had died or been buried here in my backyard.

I painfully raised myself to a sitting position and peered around in the darkness. Geez, I couldn’t believe how overgrown my yard had become in just a few days. I really needed to spend some serious time gardening in the near future, I lectured myself. Especially if skulls were going to suddenly start popping up out of nowhere. It took a further couple of minutes before the thought that perhaps I wasn’t actually in my backyard permeated my fuzzy brain.

Unsteadily, I rose to my feet, clutching onto the closest tree trunk for support. I was at the bottom of an incline, so I assumed I was on Mountain Road somewhere if I was still in the vicinity of Little Town. My heart thundered in my chest at that thought. Oh God, I hoped I was still in town, otherwise nobody would ever find me.

I leaned against the tree trunk and closed my eyes for a second. My face, arm and finger were hurting badly. I cast my mind back, until the memory of the evening’s events at the bikies’ retreat unfolded for me again.

Evening? Was it still the same Wednesday night that I’d set off to the bikie retreat? It couldn’t be, I reasoned with myself, because it had been daytime when I’d had that last encounter with the three men. It couldn’t be Thursday night, could it? Then I realised that it wasn’t still evening, but must be very early Friday morning because the light was gray, not black. That meant I’d been missing for well over twenty-four hours.

Everybody would be absolutely frantic. Oh boy, would I be in trouble when I finally made it home.

Kylie!
I thought suddenly, my head flicking around. Was she down here with me? I spotted something white and still, resting against a tree trunk about halfway up the incline. It was hard to tell in the rain and gloom what it was exactly, but it looked large enough to be a young girl. Maybe those three bikies had thrown the two of us off the edge of the road, down here into the bush, probably hoping we’d both die of exposure.

It was freezing, close to zero degrees, my breath misting in front of me. When I took my first few steps up the incline my legs collapsed beneath me, numb with cold and weak from being drugged. Freeing my face from the muddy, leaf strewn ground, I patted down my pockets, hoping like hell they’d overlooked my phone. All I wanted was to ring the Sarge and have him bring an army of searchers down Mountain Road looking for me. But of course my phone wasn’t there, because that would just be too easy and when had
anything
in my life ever been easy? I choked back unwanted self-pity and frustration and started up the steep and slippery incline again.

Every time I rested my left hand on the ground or against a tree, pain screamed from the tip of my broken index finger up my arm to my stab and bullet wounds. My head was woozy from whatever drug they’d given me and I had a raging thirst. The last problem I was able to solve easily at least by simply turning my face towards the heavens and opening my mouth. Which I did, greedily gulping down the icy water.

I slipped over in the mud, falling heavily on my side. I didn’t get up but laid on the ground, face pressed into the soggy earth, half-sobbing to myself. I wished this whole ordeal was over and done with, and I was tucked up in my . . . Oh, that’s right! I didn’t even have a safe bed or a safe home at the moment. God, could my life get any worse?

Okay Fuller
, I said sternly to myself.
You can either lie down and drown with the rain, feeling sorry for yourself. Or you can pick your sorry butt up and climb that hill to rescue poor little Kylie. Then you can find all those wonderful people who you know are tearing up every centimetre of this town looking for you. Your choice.

Geez, I was so hard on myself sometimes. I struggled to my feet and began to climb the slippery slope again. I clung onto any branch, trunk or vine I could find in the murk as I made my way towards that indistinct white shape. It took a while to advance with the sheer steepness of the hill. Not paying proper attention one time, I mis-stepped and slid all the way back down to the bottom, almost giving up at that point. It was only the constant sight of that still white shape that kept me climbing back up that hill again.

When I reached the shape, I could see a thin arm and leg, flung carelessly around the trunk, as if cuddling up to some battered and much-loved stuffed toy from childhood. The trunk had stopped her from tumbling any further.

Poor Kylie. She remained unconscious and I hoped to God she was also still alive. I moved around her abused little body to feel her pulse. Thankfully, amazingly, there was still a strong beat. She probably had suffered every indignity possible to inflict on a woman, had been shockingly mistreated and drugged to an almost fatal level, but her life beat remained strong. She was one tough little cookie. She was one of life’s survivors. And because of that I wanted,
I
needed
, her to survive. I would do everything I could to ensure that. We shared a sisterhood.

I slid my injured left arm around her ribcage and started to haul her upwards, using my good arm to help drag us up the steep hill. It was slow-going and painful. I wasn’t strong enough to throw her over my shoulder and carry her while upright, so I had to drag her across the ground on my knees, her tender, pale skin suffering even more abuse in the process.

I thought about my upcoming weekend with Jake the whole time I climbed. I imagined the surprised happiness on his face when I gave him the expensive watch I’d bought him. I also tried to guess what the menu would be at the nice restaurant we were dining at, knowing it wouldn’t be as gourmet as that recently enjoyed by the Sarge at Cybele. Then when I flagged unbearably, verging on the point of giving up again, I forced myself to fantasise about our night together after dinner. Jake and me in a luxury hotel room with a spa bath, a king-sized bed and nobody else around. It would be amazing! Those thoughts were in danger of becoming XXX-rated when I realised that I’d reached the top. The distractive power of lust had helped me through!
Hallelujah!

I carefully eased Kylie onto the soggy ground and rested my aching muscles. After a quick scan of the environment, I decided with relief that it was definitely Mountain Road. But I couldn’t tell how far down we were and it was a long steep winding road, heading up to Mount Big and Lake Big. My guess was that the bikies had probably been instructed to dump us far up the road, near the base of Mount Big. But hopefully those three guys had decided to cut corners, worried about being left behind by their companions to carry the can, and had dumped and scooted as soon as possible. So it was entirely plausible that we were not too far from the main intersection of Mountain Road with the Coastal Range Highway.
If only I still had my phone with me
, I thought regretfully. I patted my pockets with futile optimism once more, but there was nothing. The bikies had even taken the station’s digital camera from me.

I could sit down on the road and wait until someone came for me. Mountain Road was not a thoroughfare, although at certain times of the year it could become quite busy. But unfortunately, not during winter. The highway though was a different matter. It was nowhere near gridlocked according to city standards, but there was a steady stream of traffic on it, day and night. I could surely wave down a motorist or a truckie if I could just make it to that intersection. Someone could give us a lift to the station or even to the nearest phone. If only I could get there.

Looking down at poor Kylie’s nakedness, I slipped off my waterproof jacket, (which hadn’t really lived up to its promise) and gently dressed her in it. It left the one tiny part of me not yet drenched immediately open to the freezing elements, but what else could I do for her? She was so petite compared to me that the jacket managed to cover her naked body and hopefully provided her with some warmth on this freezing winter morning.

“Kylie!” I said to her, shaking her shoulder. “Kylie! Wake up, sweetheart. I need you to wake up for me.”

Other books

The Bound Bride by Anne Lawrence
What Could Go Wrong? by Willo Davis Roberts
The Alignment by Camden, Kay
Dizzy Spells by Morgana Best
Stripping It Down by Alden, Jami
Shadow Princess by Indu Sundaresan
The Book of the Heathen by Robert Edric