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Authors: Chandra Ryan

BOOK: CovertDesires
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He changed his aim to the prisoner and squeezed off a couple
more blasts. The heat of the laser fire easily burned through the rope. His
wrists were still bound together but his arms were no longer tied to the stake
in the ground. The guy must have been waiting for something to tip the scales
because as soon as his arms were free he rolled over and sat up. He grabbed a
knife to his right that Jack could only imagine had been intended as an
instrument of torture and cut the rope bound his ankles. He was free. For now
at least. It was time for Jack and Rowe to get back to safety.

This time Rowe followed him easily when he led the way back
down the hill. With his visor back on he could see the terrain well enough to
be able to guide them back. Which made the body slam that seemed to come out of
nowhere and sent him to the ground that much more confusing. And judging by the
squeal Rowe made, she had been just as startled.

“Pretty good trick you did back there.”

Jack could feel the person holding him down and could hear
him clearly but he couldn’t see him. It wasn’t until his visor was removed that
he could make out the black outline that held him. “Blocking armor.” Try as he
might, Jack couldn’t keep the surprise out of his voice. He hadn’t expected
these radicals to have access to technology that advanced.

“Yeah.” The assailant snickered as he pressed his arm into
Jack’s throat. “You aren’t the only salesman who’s made his way out to these
parts.”

“Bad, bad things are happening.” Rowe’s voice was high with
terror but his captor held him too tightly for Jack to be able to look over at
her.

“You got that right, sweetheart.”

The world was starting to swim in front of Jack’s eyes. He
needed oxygen and needed it now. He took what little strength he had left and
pushed against the other man. It wasn’t much but it did allow him the chance to
take a deep breath and gave him the room to move his head.

“If I were you, I’d conserve what energy you have left. It’s
going to be a long night for the two of you.”

Rowe screamed. Not the loud cry of terror but the sharp and
heartbreaking sound of pain. Real pain. It was the worst sound he’d ever heard.

His captor jerked him up and flipped him around so he was
facing Rowe but his hands were behind his back. A binding strip was wrapped
around his wrists and tied securely. It was tight. Too tight. And should hurt.
But if it did he didn’t notice. He couldn’t process anything but what was
happening to Rowe.

Her captor held her much in the same fashion as he was being
held but the asshole holding her had such a tight grasp of her hair that her
back was bowed. Her mouth was agape and her eyes sparkled in the moonlight with
unshed tears. Every protective instinct he had reared to life at seeing her.
But there was no way he could take these men. Not with his hands tied and his
weapon out of reach. He’d have to try to reason with them. But when he got out
of this predicament, and he would get out of it, he’d make sure they paid
dearly for every second they hurt her. “You don’t have to hold her so tightly.
You’re three times her size. She can’t get away from you.”

“We know she can’t get away, you dumb fuck.” He pulled
harder on Rowe’s hair and she gasped. “But she’s so pretty when she screams.”

Rage deep and pure filled him. He had to protect her. It was
his job. Hell, it was more than his job. He had to keep her safe. He could feel
the need in his soul. He let out a guttural growl and then tried to break free
from the man holding him. But a sharp pain burst through his head and brought
him to his knees.

“You seem pretty fond of her for property.”

Jack tried to stand again but the guy behind him brought the
butt of his weapon down on his lower spine. The pain nearly made him pass out.
But he couldn’t give in to the urge. He had to stay awake to do whatever he
could for Rowe.

The man holding Rowe smiled as he stared at Jack. “Yeah.
Tonight’s going to be fun.”

Chapter Three

 

Rowe felt sick to her stomach. Every inch of her body hurt
and her heart was beating fast with fear. But her stomach was the worst of it.
It churned and cramped and rolled uncontrollably. Still she was forced to continue
walking. The man behind her pulled her by her hair savagely every time she even
slowed down. There was no way he’d let her stop. But that was what she really
needed. Everything needed to stop.

She was on a bad path. The worst path she’d ever been on.
And there were an infinite number of paths available to her. But they were all
wrong. Different shades of danger clouded them. Some were lighter than others.
At the end of the path, though, they led to a dark place.

The man holding her pushed her roughly and she felt some of
her hair tear before he finally released it. She was free but it did her little
good. She had no coordination left to fight or flee. It’d been replaced by fear
and pain. She couldn’t even stop herself as she fell to the hard concrete
floor. They were in a small shack due west of the cabin she and Jack had been
given earlier in the night. It looked mostly empty but she couldn’t be sure.
She hadn’t had much time to examine her surroundings before she was sprawled
out on the floor.

“Get up.” Thomas’ voice filled the room with the authority
of a natural leader. But she ignored both the tone and his words. She had to.

She was dazed. Her surroundings were out of focus. It took
all her energy to force herself to take steady breaths while she regrouped
instead of succumbing to the comfort of passing out. Even if she wanted to,
there was no way she could obey the man. And she didn’t particularly want to
right now.

“Are you deaf? I said, get up.”

“I heard you.” The only benefit to being captured was that
she no longer had a role to play. Now she got to be herself. And if she was
going to die, she was going to die on her terms. “I chose to ignore the
request.”

She gasped as she was pulled off the ground by her hair.

“That wasn’t a request, bitch.”

The room swam around her as she fought to remain conscious.

“Get your fucking hands off her.” Jack’s voice sounded
rough. As if he were struggling as much as she. It wasn’t a comfortable
admission for her to make. But she wasn’t going to be able to come up with a
plan if she wasn’t honest with herself.

“Or what?” Thomas pulled her close enough that she could
feel the heat radiating off his body and smell the alcohol on his breath. When
Jack was silent, he laughed softly. “That’s what I thought.” He turned her
around so she was facing Jack. His face looked swollen and his lip was split
but his body was tensed as if he were waiting for the right moment to pounce.
“You ain’t going to do shit to me. I’m holding all the cards.”

“Those are pretty big words for a man with such little rank.
Don’t you have to check in before you make threats?” Jack sneered and his tone
was full of scorn. He was baiting Thomas. She’d seen him do it to enough people
to recognize the move.

“See, if she was a prophet, you would’ve known you was
talking to the boss earlier. And you most certainly would’ve seen this coming.”
He nodded and the man behind Jack brought the butt of his weapon into the back
of Jack’s head. He collapsed like a rag doll under the force of the hit and he
didn’t move again.

Her heart stopped and her breath caught in her lungs as the
world blurred around her. Her body no longer hurt and she couldn’t feel the
tight grasp Thomas had on her hair. She was completely focused on Jack. When
his chest rose with a breath, her heart began to beat again.

“You’re wrong. I am a prophet.”

Thomas laughed loudly. “And I’m the prime minister.” He
stopped laughing and pulled her tightly to him. “You’re with Special
Investigations. I know a rat when I see one. I’m not an idiot, bitch.”

But he was. He’d proven his folly in her past. Or in his
future. She shook her head as she tried to straighten out the timeline. In the
end it didn’t make any difference. Whichever it was, he failed. There was an
escape here. Some path that got her and Jack out of here and led to Thomas’
downfall. She only had to find it. Now was the time to test her theory. She had
to try to focus on that one path and forget the others.

She closed her eyes and took a deep breath. The fuzzy image
of a nail flashed through her mind. It poked out of the wall as nothing more
than a glint of metal in an otherwise dark room. Such a small thing. It was so
insignificant her captors probably didn’t even realize it was there. But that
one tiny glimmer of metal would save them both. She just had to find the track
that would put her next to it.

She opened her eyes and shoved against Thomas as she brought
one of her heels down on his foot. She didn’t weigh much but she hoped the
element of surprise would work in her favor. Since she’d done little to fight
back up to this point, Thomas had no reason to anticipate it now.

He cursed as her heel made contact and then stumbled as she
continued to push as hard as she could against him. Her hands were still
trapped behind her back but her shoulder provided a large enough surface for
her to have an impact. Soon she was free of his grasp. Spinning, she ran for
the nail.

A sharp pain erupted at the base of her skull and stopped
her from reaching it, however. Her knees gave out from under her and her cheek
hit the cold concrete floor. The air rushed out of her lungs and for one second
she forgot how to breathe.

“Shit. You hit her too hard.”

Warm fingers brushed against her neck but she made herself
stay perfectly still. They must have hit her with the weapon just as they had
Jack. If he’d passed out from the blow it would only make sense she would’ve as
well.

“She’s still alive.” The other man’s voice came from
directly above her. He was so close she could smell the alcohol on his breath.

“You’re lucky. He would have your balls if you killed her,”
Thomas said.

“Well I didn’t. So what should we do now,
boss
?”

The man’s mocking tone told her they’d been right. Thomas
wasn’t the man in charge. But she guessed it was only fair that he’d pretended
to be. After all, they were all playing a game right now. He needed his role
just as much as she and Jack needed theirs.

“Post two guards outside the door. I’m going to go get the
tools. When they wake up, I’ll get the answers we need.”

She waited until she heard them leave before sitting up. The
room swam around her at the abrupt position change but she was able to steady
herself. After she got her bearings she crawled over to the wall she needed.

She lay down on her side with her back to the nail and
started to run the sharp point over the plastic band that imprisoned her
wrists. She couldn’t see what she was doing though. As she worked the nail over
the bindings she slipped a couple of times and embedded the tip of the nail in
her skin. It was amazing how ineffectual the metal was against the plastic
considering the damage it did to her.

After a few minutes her hands and wrists were slick with her
own blood. But with each pass she was that much closer to being free. Jack had
just moaned softly when the binding finally gave. She brought her hands in
front of her and gagged from the smell of her blood. She’d really made a mess
of her arms. But it was a mess that would have to wait. She had more important
things to take care of first.

She crawled over to Jack and pulled on his shirt. “Wake up.”

After a couple of tugs he sat up and then grabbed his head.
“Fuck me. I feel like I’ve been hit by a transport vessel.”

“It’s going to get worse if we hang around much longer.” She
stood carefully and unbound his wrists before holding a hand out to him. He
grabbed it but then immediately let go.

“What the hell happened to you?”

“It was a necessary evil. Come on.”

He stood this time but did so without touching her. “Here.”
He pulled his shirt off in one smooth movement and then started tearing it into
strips. “Use these on your arms.”

“Now’s not the time for that.” She would live without
bandages. But they needed to get out of here. She walked over to the back of
the building and started to press against the boards. It was a shoddily made
building. One put up in haste. There was a chance that some of the boards might
be loose.

“Over here.” Jack seemed to have the same idea. Only he had
started on a different wall. And either he’d had better luck or he’d used more
muscle when testing the boards as he’d already pushed one out of the way and
was working on a second one. “Hurry. Somebody had to hear that,” he said as the
board gave way. It was true. The boards might have given out but they did so
with loud protest. He stood back and let her pass before he followed her out.

The gently rolling hills didn’t offer them any more
protection now than they had earlier in the evening. And now they didn’t have
the night vision to help. But she had something better. She faced each
direction for a split second before grabbing his hand and setting off in a
sprint in the direction that made her feel the best.

By the time they crested the third hill she was starting to
feel more comfortable. Except for the lightheadedness. That was troublesome.
“Blood loss.”

She stopped to gasp for air and wait for the sensation to
pass. “Is now a good time to bandage your arms?” He’d redressed in the remnants
of his shirt but the hem was noticeably too short and the arms missing below
the elbows.

“It’s the right time.” She held her arms out to him and he
quickly began wrapping the scraps of cotton around the wounds.

“It’s not good. You need water and disinfectant.”

“Not to mention three booster shots,” she teased.

“At least. What were you thinking?”

“I was thinking of how much you’d owe me if I saved you.”
She winked and then looked over his shoulder. “Speaking of which, we’re not
done yet.”

He nodded and they started running again. They ran until
they reached the edge of a forest. Once inside the relative shelter of the trees,
though, they had to slow down to accommodate the shrubs and roots. The timing
couldn’t be worse. She could hear dogs barking in the distance. No doubt they
were on her and Jack’s trail.

She turned east and ran until she stumbled over something.
It could’ve been a low-lying branch except it squished. “A deer?”

“Or a wolf.” Jack helped her get up. “Either way, it might
distract the dogs long enough for us to get over the compound fence.”

The closest segment of the fence was to the south. She
changed directions and started leading him that way. By the time they reached
it the sound of the dogs was far off in the distance. But the corpse wouldn’t
keep them busy forever.

“Would you look at that? You brought us right to an access
panel.” He broke the lock and started to fiddle with the circuits in the small
box.

She took a couple of deep breaths. “Gut.”

“You’d be dangerous if you could actually remember these
visions of yours.”

“I’m working on it.”

He glanced up at her but then went back to the panel.

“Thomas isn’t the boss. I heard them talking when they
thought I was out.”

“They thought you were out?”

“Not the time.” She handed him one of her earrings and then
took two steps back.

“Thanks.” He put her earring in the panel and a shower of
sparks flew out. “Stand back.” He looked back at her and smiled. “Never mind.”
The grid of lasers flickered a couple times before going out. “My turn to
lead.” They darted through the gap as he pulled his digital reader out of his
pocket.

In a few minutes there were helicopters circling overhead.

“The cavalry has arrived.”

Thankfully they dropped a basket and not a rope ladder. She
didn’t think she could climb anything in her current condition. But with the
basket it only took a few moments and she and Jack were safely in the bird and
being flown off to a secure base. She wanted to feel elated that they’d
escaped. But she was more disappointed they hadn’t found out who was the head
of the militia than anything else. She’d gotten them out safe and sound but
she’d failed the mission.

As soon as the helicopter touched down a circus of medical
personnel and men in suits surrounded them. Thankfully the suits seemed content
to allow the doctors to work first. Now that the adrenaline was starting to
fade she could feel each cut and every bruised rib.

When she was finally in a sterile room, the doctor unwrapped
the strips of cloth that were around her arms to reveal the mess that lay under
them. “You must have tapped out your reserves, young lady. You should’ve
already started healing.”

“High-stress situation. It slows down the regeneration
process.” Or at least that was what she’d been told.

“Must hurt like a bitch.”

She smiled. “Better than the alternative.”

“I guess I see your point. Here.” He handed her two pills.
“These sedatives should help you stay comfortable until the healing process
kicks in.”

“Don’t they need to debrief me?”

“They’re talking to your partner right now. They won’t be
ready for you for a while. You’ve got time.”

Her arms were starting to itch and her head hurt from the
weapon strike. But there was one thing she wanted to know before she fell
asleep. “Did they find anyone else? They were torturing someone. He was injured
but he got away. I think.”

“They haven’t brought anyone else in for treatment. Your
boss will probably know more though.”

“Okay.”

“Take the sedatives. Rest. You’ll feel better.”

The pills went down smoothly. And thankfully they took
effect quickly. Within a few minutes she started to nod off. It felt good to
relax as her aches and pains drifted with the artificial ebb and flow of the
medication.

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