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Hellfire, Texas (Hellfire #1)

Page 9

by Elle James


  “Becket! Watch out!” Kinsey cried.

  Dillon swung the sharp piece of wood.

  Becket ducked, and the chair leg cracked against the doorframe. He hit Dillon with a hard punch to the gut.

  Dillon doubled over, but came at Becket with a powerhouse swing, catching him across the chin.

  Grunting, Becket jerked backward and fell out the door onto the porch.

  Dillon followed, kicking at the man sprawled on the wooden deck.

  In a flash, Becket caught Dillon’s foot and twisted, sending him crashing against a wall, out of Kinsey’s line of view.

  She had other problems. Everywhere Dillon had spread the gasoline was in full flame and burning through the couch, the carpet, and into the wooden floors beneath. She bit back a coughing fit. If she didn’t get out soon, she’d be engulfed by the flames.

  Kinsey tried pounding the chair against the floor to break it, but the old chair held solid and refused to split. Flames spread across the floor, following the trail of gasoline to the door, blocking that exit. Now, the only direction clear of flames was toward the front picture window.

  Outside the door, the men fought fiercely, grunting and banging against the outside walls. The front door slammed shut. Even if she made it through the flames, she couldn’t reach the knob.

  Kinsey braced her feet on the floor, leaned forward, and lifted the chair legs. Smoke stung her eyes, making them tear, and burned her lungs with each breath, but she wasn’t ready to die.

  She turned, aimed the legs of the chair at the window, and walked backward, picking up speed. If she didn’t hit it hard enough, she wouldn’t break the old glass. As she neared the window, she threw her entire body into the seat of the chair. The legs hit the window. Glass exploded outward, and she fell through, tucking her head to avoid the jagged edges.

  The low windowsill caught the back of her legs, and she flipped over it, landing hard on the porch. The wooden chair back, taking the brunt of the landing, split into pieces.

  Kinsey rolled across the shattered glass, the sharp edges cutting into her skin. She didn’t care. Cuts and bruises would heal—she had proof of that fact. If she didn’t get completely away from the house, her dive through the window wouldn’t have helped. Still attached to the arms and back of the chair, but with the legs broken off, she struggled to get her feet beneath her.

  On the other end of the porch, Dillon had pinned down Becket and pummeled his face.

  “Leave him alone!” Kinsey screamed.

  Dillon’s head shot up, and he glared at her. He stopped hitting Becket and staggered to his feet, blood dripping from his nose and where she’d stabbed him in the arm and thigh. One eye was swelling, and a jagged wound cut across his eyebrow. “No fucking way!” Dillon shouted. “You can’t leave.”

  The fire had spread inside the house, catching on the curtains around the broken window. A flaming ember wafted out onto the porch, igniting the gasoline Dillon had sluiced over the weathered boards.

  A breeze fanned the flame, making it shoot up as Dillon plowed through. His trousers caught on fire, the flames rising up his leg.

  Kinsey managed to get to her feet and braced herself for the pending impact.

  Before Dillon reached Kinsey, Becket grabbed him from behind, his hands hard on the football player’s shoulders.

  Dillon roared and fought to free his arms from Becket’s hold, the fire creeping up the front of his pants.

  Unable to contain the bigger man for long, Becket shoved him sideways, away from Kinsey.

  Dillon fell through the broken window into the burning house.

  Flames spread across the porch toward Kinsey.

  Becket ran for her, scooped her into his arms, chair parts and all, and leaped off the porch. When he landed, his legs buckled beneath him, and they rolled across the ground, away from the flaming house.

  Becket pushed to a sitting position and helped her up to one as well. “Are you all right?” He rested his hands on her shoulders and searched her face, his brows pulled into a frown.

  Cut, bruised, and bleeding, she found the energy to smile. “I’m alive.”

  He captured her face in his hands and gave her a quick, hard kiss on the lips, then unwound the duct tape from one of her wrists and what was left of the arms and back of the chair. When the tape reached her bare skin, he eased the adhesive loose. Once one wrist was free, he kissed her red skin. “Can you manage the rest?”

  Blood pounding in her ears, she nodded.

  “I’m going after Dillon.” He got up and helped her to her feet.

  Kinsey touched his arm. “Be careful.” If the fire didn’t hurt Becket, Dillon might still have enough energy to knock him out.

  Without protective clothing, Becket risked his own life going into the burning house.

  Heart lodged in her throat, she worked the tape loose with her fingers while tracking Becket’s progress.

  She prayed he’d come out of it alive. Now that she’d found him again, she wanted him to stick around long enough to make him fall in love with her. She was well on her way to being head over heels for him.

  As Kinsey shook free of the old chair, she saw Becket kick open the front door and run inside.

  With his shirt pulled up over his nostrils, Becket entered the house, running through the line of fire, dodging the hot spots. Massey had used an accelerant, gasoline from the smell of it, to ignite the building. Though he’d gone through the window, landing inside the living room, the man was nowhere to be seen.

  “Massey!” he yelled, and then coughed, smoke burning the lining of his lungs and the heat making breathing equally hard.

  Besides the roar of the fire, no other sound came to him. Throwing an arm over his head and ducking low, he ran through the burning house into the kitchen. The door leading out the back of the house stood wide open.

  Damn. He’d gone out the back. Which meant he could have rounded to the front by now.

  Kinsey.

  Becket spun, intending to take the shortest route through the house, but the fire had intensified in the living room, having spread to the ceiling. Timbers crashed down, shooting sparks into the air.

  Going back the way he’d come was no longer an option. He had to get to Kinsey. Fast.

  Bolting for the back door, he leaped off the porch. The sound of sirens rang out across the countryside as Becket ran around the side of the burning structure. When he reached the front yard, he ground to a halt and his heart stopped.

  Massey had Kinsey from behind, his arm looped around her neck in a chokehold.

  Her face was blue, turning bluer by the moment.

  “Let her go, Massey.” Pulse pounding against his eardrums, Becket inched toward them. “It’s over.”

  Kinsey scratched at Massey’s arms, fighting for breath. Fighting for her life.

  “Back off, or I’ll kill her.”

  “Yeah. You’ve already proved you’d kill her anyway.” Becket considered his options. He could charge the two. He’d hit Kinsey first, but if he could knock them both over, Massey might loosen his chokehold. If he did nothing, Massey would kill her anyway.

  Bunching his muscles, Becket raced toward Kinsey. At the same time, he saw her hand rise to Massey’s face.

  She jammed her thumb into his eye.

  Massey screamed and loosened his hold.

  Kinsey jammed her elbow into his gut.

  Dillon let go, she dropped to the ground and rolled to the side as Becket plowed into Massey, slamming him up against a tree.

  The man’s head hit with a loud crack, and he slumped to the ground.

  A fire truck rolled down the driveway as Becket helped Kinsey to her feet and held her in the curve of his arms. “I’m sorry.”

  “Why are you sorry?” she asked, her voice gravelly. “If you hadn’t come around when you did, Dillon would have killed me.”

  “If I had stayed put, I could have kept him from getting to you.”

  “You’re a good man, Becket.
You wouldn’t leave your worst enemy in that fire.” She faced him, lacing her hands in the hair at the nape of his neck. “That’s what I love about you.”

  His arms circled her waist, and he pulled her to him. “There are a lot of things I love about you. But all those scratches and bruises need to be tended to first.”

  Firefighters converged on the house, and paramedics surrounded Kinsey, Becket, and Massey.

  Massey was loaded into an ambulance and taken away.

  The paramedics treated Kinsey’s wounds and checked both her and Becket for signs of a concussion.

  A second ambulance pulled up. The paramedic opened the door and started to pull out the gurney.

  “We can walk,” Kinsey insisted.

  “Though I didn’t seen signs of concussion, you both should be checked over by a doctor, just to be safe,” the paramedic said.

  Kinsey looked to Becket. “I won’t go unless he comes with me in the ambulance.”

  “You’re not going anywhere near Massey without me.” Becket stood with hands on his hips.

  She lifted a shoulder and smiled. “Then I guess we’re both going to the hospital.”

  Inside the ambulance, Kinsey and Becket sat beside each other on the gurney. The paramedic insisted they both wear oxygen masks during the drive, which precluded talking.

  Kinsey slipped her hand in his and rode all the way to the trauma center in Hellfire.

  The doctor checked them out and cleared them to go home.

  “What about Dillon?” Kinsey asked.

  The doctor’s brows dipped. “Are you a relative?”

  Kinsey shook her head.

  “I’m sorry, I can’t share that information.”

  On the way out of the examination room, Becket could see into the next room. Nurses and a doctor worked over Massey.

  Nash, dressed in his sheriff’s deputy uniform, met them in the reception area. “Are you two going to live?”

  Becket hugged Kinsey to him, careful not to touch her bandages and bruises. “We will. As long as Massey isn’t let loose on the street.”

  “We have so many charges compiled against him, he’s not going anywhere but the state penitentiary.”

  Kinsey pressed into Becket’s side. “Good.”

  “I’ll see you two back at the house. Chance and Rider are finishing up at the old Phillips’ place. There won’t be anything to salvage.” He touched Kinsey’s arm. “I’m sorry.”

  Becket ran his hand up and down her arm, knowing what she must be feeling.

  She nodded, her eyes awash with tears.

  Nash turned to Becket. “Lily’s waiting outside.”

  “What about the barn at our ranch?” Becket queried, although he wasn’t holding out much hope.

  Nash shook his head. “Gone. Thankfully, all other buildings are intact. Even though the barn burned to the ground, keep in mind, buildings can be replaced. People can’t. I’m glad you and Kinsey are okay.”

  Becket hugged his brother. “Me, too.”

  Nash turned to Kinsey and hugged her.

  “Thanks.” Kinsey hugged him back. “You’re right. I’d rather lose the house and barn than you, Becket, or any of your siblings.”

  Nash nodded and stepped past them to speak with the doctor.

  “Come on.” Becket turned with her in the circle of his arm and walked toward the exit. “Let’s go home.”

  She snuggled against him, her arm around his middle. “I promise to get a place of my own as soon as I can get a job and save up the necessary deposits.”

  “You have a place to live for as long as you like,” Becket said, his voice gruffer than he’d intended. “Forever, if things work out.”

  She slowed to a stop and faced him. “How’s that?”

  Maybe he was pushing things too fast, but he’d almost lost her that day. “None of us know how long we have on this earth.”

  Her brows twisted. “I’m not following.”

  “I’m just saying, I don’t want to waste time.” He held both of her hands and squeezed. “After you have a chance to recover, you and I are going out on a date. A real date.”

  “I’d like that.”

  “We could take it slow,” he continued, running a thumb over her knuckles. “Just dinner. Maybe a movie, and end it with a kiss, if you want.”

  She eased from his grip, and a hand settled on his chest. “What if I don’t?”

  His heart stuttered, and he captured her hand in his. God, if she walked away from him now, he didn’t know what he’d do. This woman had the potential to be the one to restore his faith in women. To remind him what love was all about, and the sacrifices he’d willingly make to keep her safe and happy.

  Becket raised her hand to his lips, pressing a kiss into her palm. “Kinsey, you’re free to choose who you want to be with. I will never force you to do anything you don’t want to do.”

  “I know.” She cupped his cheek. “What I meant is: what if I don’t want just a kiss?” Leaning up on her toes, she brushed her lips across his, and then whispered in his ear, “What if I want more? What if I want to ride out in a pasture on a four-wheeler with you?”

  His heart exploded with joy, and he wrapped her in his arms, rubbing his cheek against her hair. “Sweetheart, if you asked me to ride you to the moon and back, I’d be happy to take you. You name it. I’m there.”

  “Take me home, cowboy. I think doing it in a bed this time would be nice.”

  “Are you sure?” He stared down at her, his gaze taking in the myriad bandages covering her arms and legs. “You’re a mess.”

  “I’ve never been more certain in my entire life. And you’re pretty beat up yourself.” She touched her fingertip to the black eye he’d earned in his fight with Massey. “I’m sorry you had to get involved in my screwed-up life.”

  “I wouldn’t have it any other way.” Becket grinned. “A few bumps and bruises, I can live with. So, if you’re sure…I’m sure.”

  She laughed and swept an arm toward the exit. “Home, it is.”

  As they left the trauma clinic, Becket swept Kinsey off her feet and carried her toward Lily’s waiting truck.

  She laughed, wrapped her arms around his neck, and nuzzled his ear. “I think I could fall in love with you.”

  He stopped and smiled down into her happy face. “Sweetheart, I’m well on my way there, myself.” Then he kissed her soundly, ignoring the stares of his sister and the people who had to step around him to enter the building.

  Love didn’t take a week, a month, or a year to develop. Sometimes love took a minute, an hour, a day, or a look. He’d give her the space she needed to recover. But the fire in his heart would burn eternal for this woman and, if she let him, he would spend a lifetime proving it.

  The End

  About the Author

  ELLE JAMES also writing as MYLA JACKSON is a New York Times and USA Today Bestselling author of books including cowboys, intrigues and paranormal adventures that keep her readers on the edges of their seats. With over eighty works in a variety of sub-genres and lengths she has published with Harlequin, Samhain, Elloras’ Cave, Kensington, Cleis Press, and Avon. When she’s not at her computer, she’s traveling, snow-skiing, boating, or riding her ATV, dreaming up new stories. Learn more about Elle James at www.ellejames.com.

  Website | Blog | Facebook | Twitter | GoodReads | Newsletter

  Or visit her alter-ego Myla Jackson at mylajackson.com.

  Website | Blog | Facebook | Twitter | Newsletter

  Other Titles by Elle James

  Take No Prisoners Series

  SEAL’s Honor (#1)

  SEAL’s Desire (#2)

  SEAL’s Embrace (#3)

  SEAL’s Obsession (#4)

  SEAL’s Proposal (#5)

  SEAL’s Seduction (#6)

  SEAL’s Defiance (#7)

  HOT SEALS Kindle World: SEAL’s Ultimate Challenge

  Billionaire Online Dating Series

  The Billionaire Husband Test (#1)
/>   The Billionaire Cinderella Test (#2)

  Covert Cowboys Inc Series

  Triggered (#1)

  Taking Aim (#2)

  Bodyguard Under Fire (#3)

  Cowboy Resurrected (#4)

  Navy SEAL Justice (#5)

  Navy SEAL Newlywed (#6)

  Thunder Horse Series

  Hostage to Thunder Horse (#1)

  Thunder Horse Heritage (#2)

  Thunder Horse Redemption (#3)

  Christmas at Thunder Horse Ranch (#4)

  Devil’s Shroud or Deadly Series

  Deadly Reckoning (#1)

  Deadly Engagement (#2)

  Deadly Liaisons (#3)

  Deadly Allure (#4)

  Lords of the Underworld

  Witch’s Initiation (#1)

  Witch’s Seduction (#2)

  The Witch’s Desire (#3)

  Possessing the Witch (#4)

  Demon Series

  Hot Demon Nights (#1)

  Demon’s Embrace (#2)

  Tempting the Demon (#3)

  Protecting the Colton Bride

  Heir to Murder

  Secret Service Rescue

  Tarzan & Janine

  Haunted

  Wild at Heart

  Engaged with the Boss

  Cowboy Brigade

  Time Raiders: The Whisper

  Bundle of Trouble

  Killer Body

  Operation XOXO

  An Unexpected Clue

  Baby Bling

  Nick of Time

  Under Suspicion, With Child

  Texas-Sized Secrets

  Alaskan Fantasy

  Blown Away

  Cowboy Sanctuary

  Lakota Baby

  Dakota Meltdown

  Beneath the Texas Moon

  SEAL’s Honor

  Take No Prisoners Series

  Elle James

  Chapter One

  Reed Tucker, Tuck to his buddies, tugged at the tie on his U.S. Navy service dress blue uniform, and his gut knotted as he entered the rehabilitation center of the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland.

 

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