Baby For The Mountain Man

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Baby For The Mountain Man Page 2

by Nicole Elliot


  I had been burned like this once before. By a woman with mesmerizing eyes and a thick gravitational pull. She wiggled her way beyond the bars of my heart and ran amok, draining me of my money and demanding so much more. She was a gold digger of the highest proportions, but I loved her still. I loved her with a flame that had warmed the deepest recesses of my mind. She had pulled me out of my hidey hole and had gotten me to explore the world. She convinced me to whisk her away to Italy so we could tour the vineyards and taste the most decadent wines the country had to offer. She begged me to take her to Germany so she could see her first-ever opera on the most prominent classical stage. She talked me into taking a three-week vacation to Bora Bora. All expenses paid with massages and spa services every day and night.

  She drained me of my money faster than I could make it.

  But still, I loved her. I loved her free spirit and her spontaneity. I loved the minx she was in bed and how I could throw her body around for my pleasure. I loved how tight she was around my cock and how she would let me wake her up with my lips between her legs.

  All fairytales have an ending, though. And mine wasn’t a Disney rendition. She burned me hotter than the melting point of steel before she left me shivering in the barren wasteland she had left behind. My heart was dripping blood by the time she was finished torturing it, and I vowed I would never allow myself to become that vulnerable again. I would never leave this mountain and I would never venture into town more than I had to. That kept things simple, kept me safe.

  But it was her eyes that started it all. Those dazzling hazel eyes that sucked me right in.

  Just like this young woman shivering by the fire I had made.

  That wasn’t going to happen again. I was going through too much now anyway to become distracted. Our family land was in peril again. A thriving Washington company, Breathline Energies, was ready to give us any offer we wanted so they could drill some dumbass gas line right through the fucking mountains. Profit was all they were after. More money to line their pockets with no matter what they had to blast out of their way. My father was trying his best to communicate that to the company, but they weren’t getting the point. They were harassing my father and sending scouts into the mountains as well as blasting our family to any media outlet that would listen.

  My brothers and I were tasked with watching out, so we could pop off warning shots if we saw anyone.

  It was why I had been more alert than usual. It was why I wasn’t so quick to write off the sound of a car. If that company was truly desperate, it was possible they would send some poor fucking soul into the mountain range in this kind of weather just to do some tracking.

  Was it possible they sent this young girl? Was it possible she was some sort of a distraction? If she was, then this company was sicker than I thought. But the more I studied her as I sat down in my chair, the more I came to terms with the fact that she wasn’t. She was just an innocent girl who had gotten lost and trapped in a storm she could’ve never predicted nor expected.

  The question was, what the fuck was I going to do with her now?

  Three

  Ava

  I laid there in front of the fire as the silence of the cabin overcame me. The rain was coming down in sheets as the wind kicked up. It howled against the windows and whistled against the top of the chimney, sending bursts of cold air down that had me shivering all over again. I closed my eyes and tried to will my body to stop shaking, but it wouldn’t. No matter how hard I tried, it continued to expand and contract at a rate that was mind-boggling.

  “Travis Benson.”

  His voice took me by surprise and I jumped. Why did that name sound so familiar to me? I turned over on the couch cushions and looked up at the man in the chair, his eyes cast down towards me. His hands rested on the arms of the chair as his legs relaxed, spread wide for all to see. I felt this warmth overcome my entire body as it slowly stopped shivering, and I decided to blame it on the flickering flames of the fire.

  Anything else made things much more complicated.

  “Are you thirsty?”

  “No, thank you,” I said. “I’m Ava Lucas.”

  The man cocked his head, almost as if he was studying me. His eyes danced along my rigid form as I laid on the couch cushions and his hands began to grip the armrests of the chair. Was something wrong? Had I said something to upset him?

  Shit, was this guy some kind of serial killer?

  He didn’t look like one. There was a kindness behind his amber eyes that denoted a sense of compassion. Psychopaths weren’t capable of that, right? I mean, I was no psychologist or anything, but I was pretty sure psychopaths weren’t capable of caring. But I had nothing to go on. I had no idea where I was, I had no idea how far away I was from California, and I had no idea when this rain was going to let up so I could get the hell out of here.

  “Where am I?” I asked.

  “Kettle, Washington. Just outside, in the mountainous terrain,” Travis said.

  “Great,” I said with a sigh.

  “Where are you wanting to be?”

  I looked up at Travis and he was still staring at me. He was relaxed in his seat and his hands were now in his lap. Every time I looked over at him, he seemed to grow in size. The flames of the fire were casting sharp shadows upon his features, making him look more intimidating by the second. His beard reflected colors of gold and red even though the hair on his head was brown and red. Like the hardwood floor I was laying on as I tried to get dry.

  “California,” I said.

  “Still a ways out from there,” Travis said.

  “Figures.”

  I couldn’t do anything right. I couldn’t even fucking run away from home right. Kettle was, what… maybe an hour outside of Seattle? I had run away for all of sixty minutes before I got lost and found myself in trouble. Maybe my father was right. Maybe I was only suited to bear children and keep a home. I couldn’t even take charge of my life correctly when given the opportunity to.

  “Any reason why you were scaling the mountains during a storm?” Travis asked.

  “Wasn’t intentional,” I said.

  “Wrong turn devolves into several. Sounds intentional to me,” he said.

  “Well, good thing you don’t know anything about me, then.”

  My voice was harsher than I had intended it to be and I started feeling guilty. Which was another fun little trait my mother had instilled into me. Even if someone was patronizing me, I always had to be polite. Anything less than respect for anyone who paid me the time of day was considered grounds for a day-long guilt trip festival party.

  “I didn’t mean that as harshly as it came out,” I said.

  “You did. But it’s fine,” Travis said. “And to answer your other question, I don’t know.”

  “About what?” I asked.

  “Your stuff. Your car. We can’t get out there tonight, and there’s a slim chance that we’ll have an opening tomorrow. I don’t know if your stuff is going to be okay. Do you have insurance on the car?”

  “My parents do,” I said, murmuring.

  “If things get damaged and your insurance company-”

  “I know how insurance companies work, but thank you for assuming I didn’t.”

  I turned back over onto the cushions and faced the fire again. I felt tired all of a sudden. Like someone had sucked all the energy right from my bones. I allowed my eyes to close as I peeled the blankets back from my body. They needed to dry by the heat of the fire because I sure as hell wasn’t taking them off. I had nothing to put on and I wasn’t about to wear some strange clothes some mountain man with a beard had in his closet. His knees acted like they had a restraining order against one another and there was this playful glint behind his eye.

  Like he was somehow enjoying the fact that I was flailing in a new situation.

  Shit. Was that a trait of a psychopath?

  “I’ll help you with your car in the morning, if it’s safe,” Travis said.

 
“Thanks,” I said.

  “Would you like me to help you to the guest bedroom?” he asked.

  “I’m fine here,” I said.

  “It’s got a comfortable bed.”

  “I’m sure it does, but it’s farther away from the front door in case you turn out to be crazy.”

  “Fair enough. I’m going to bed,” he said.

  “Night.”

  I heard him get up from his chair before his movements stopped. I could feel him looming over me. Watching me with those bright amber eyes. I slid a little more of the blankets back, trying to get my pants to start drying off. The lower half of my body was still soaking wet and I knew I would never get to sleep until it was dry. Travis’ body cast a shadow over me and I stayed focused on the fire, trying to make it seem like I wasn’t clocking his every move. Finally, he moved, his body making its way for the hallway as I relaxed. I listened as his footsteps trailed off into the distance before a door opened. And when it closed and muted his footsteps, I quickly got up off the cushions.

  I tiptoed over to the window to look at the rain. It was coming down so hard I could hardly see the porch. There was a miniature river running through what was supposed to be the driveway, and I groaned as I remembered the ditch I had turned my car up into. It was going to flood with water, which meant the engine was going to be ruined by the time the morning came around. And even if I was in some cabin with some burly man with sharp features and beautiful eyes, that didn’t mean he would know how to work on cars.

  Chop some fucking wood, maybe. But mechanics probably eluded him.

  Thankfully, all of my stuff had been in the trunk. So even if the ditch did flood, my things were safe, I hoped anyway. The only issue would be if the moving river of water dislodged my car and the tires sank back down to the ground. Water might get in the trunk then, or worse… wash it down the damn mountain.

  Lightning streaked across the sky and thunder cracked right after. I jumped and slapped my hand over my mouth, trying to stifle my yelp. This storm was one of the worst I’d ever seen, but with the way Travis had been acting it seemed like a regular occurrence up here. I turned from the window and studied the cabin I was in, taking in its beautiful form.

  The living room with the fireplace was illuminated by the glow of the fire. The cherry mahogany hardwood floors went seamlessly from the living room to the kitchen, which was all open and unimpeded by walls. There were bright marble countertops and state-of-the-art kitchenware, which reminded me of my parent’s home.

  Whoever the hell Travis Benson was, he had money.

  There was a hallway that split the cabin in half. I slowly walked down it, studying the gray-colored walls and the white crown molding. Everything in this cabin was decadent. Not at all like the man I had just encountered. There was a door on the right that had a light underneath it, and I paused as a shadow stood directly in front of the door.

  I held my breath as I listened out for Travis. This must’ve been his room. I could see the shadow of his stature underneath the bottom of the door, blocking out the light source as he stood there. My eyes danced along the door as I muted my breathing, hoping to the heavens he wouldn’t open the door and find me standing here.

  Then his body moved away from the door and I made my quick escape.

  On the left was another door before the hallway took a right turn. I started walking down it, finding yet another door on my right and my left. This must’ve been the guest bedroom he was talking about, which meant there was a good probability the other door was a bathroom.

  What I didn’t know, however, was what the door at the end of the hallway contained.

  I approached it slowly as the thunder continued to crack outside.

  The door was solid and it looked heavy. The doorknob on the door looked almost like an antique. It was odd to see something so out of place in a home that was so beautifully decorated and updated. I was curious as to what was behind the door, but as I reached out for it something stopped me. It felt like I was muddling through jello at that point. Like some force had reached out for me and wrapped around my wrist. My heart was thundering in my chest as I slowly lowered my hand, resolving myself to whatever inward command was stopping my movements.

  I turned my back on the door and scurried back down the hallway, making my way back for the cushions and the fireplace. I needed to dry off and get out of here in the morning. Escape wasn’t happening tonight and that was something I needed to come to terms with.

  But I was sleeping with one eye open. Just in case this Travis guy tried to pull anything stupid.

  Four

  Travis

  She thought she was being quiet, but she wasn’t. The moment she stood outside of my door I knew she was getting curious about the place. I was glad her body had thawed a little bit, but I wasn’t appreciative of the fact that she was snooping around last night. I would’ve been more than happy to give her a tour of the place.

  I understood her reservations. I knew what I looked like and how I came off to other people. I had no intentions of hurting her, but I also had no way to prove that to her. She was a scared young girl trapped in a storm she had no idea how to deal with, so it only made sense that she would be on high alert.

  But I did get nervous when I heard her turn down the hallway last night.

  What was behind that door was for my own personal use. It was a room that didn’t get used often, but when it did it was a way for me to lose myself. A way to escape the fights my family battled over this land. It allowed me to release the anger and the hurt I had endured at the hands of so many people, including the woman I once loved. I had added that room on as a later addition after my father had this cabin built for me, and it was under lock and key. Even if she had tried to open the door, she wouldn’t have been able to open it.

  The mere fact that she was curious, however, was why I stood and listened.

  I listened to her explore the cabin. I listened to her run her hands along the wall. I listened to the little gasps I was sure she had no idea she was making, and I listened as her footsteps walked down the damn hallway. I rolled my shoulders back and readied myself to intervene, just in case she started looking around for a way to open the door. I kept the key on the top of the doorframe. Easily accessible but hidden away in case the door needed to stay closed.

  But if she went searching for it, I was ready to step out and get her to stop.

  There was silence for a little while before her feet ran her back down the hallway. She ran past my bedroom and I heard her collapse back onto the cushions. I hated that she was so afraid. There was nothing to be scared of in my cabin. She seemed brave enough, but her emotions were getting the best of her.

  What was a young girl like her doing racing off to California by herself?

  I tossed and turned while I slept as dreams of a former life plagued me. When my eyes finally shot open, it was still dark outside. The sun hadn’t yet broken through the trees of the forest that surrounded us, but there was one sound I expected to hear that I didn’t.

  Rain.

  It was no longer raining outside.

  I got out of bed and pulled on some clothes. No use in taking a fucking shower when I was about to fix a damn car. I promised this young woman that I would help her get back on the road and that was what I intended to do. The sooner I could get her on the road the sooner I could have my fucking house to myself.

  I walked towards the front door and grabbed a coat to throw over my shoulders. The fire had dimmed to nothing but sparkling embers as Ava laid there on the couch cushions. I saw her pants hanging over the couch and something in my pelvis roared to life. There was a young woman with no pants on wrapped up in my blankets and lying in front of a fireplace.

  In another place and time, I would’ve slipped right underneath them with her and pulled her close to me.

  Shaking the thought from my head, I opened the door. I set out the same route I had walked last night, my eyes searching for her car. I walke
d a little farther than I had last night, but when I came across the car I felt the slightest bit of relief flood my body. The water had washed it down the ditch that followed the road until the ditch disappeared and became level with the trail. It was sitting on its tires on the side of the road as if nothing had ever fucking happened to it.

  Man, this young woman was lucky.

  I opened the car door and took stock of the inside. Nothing seemed to be damaged and there wasn’t any trapped water on the floorboards. I sat down in the seat and tried to crank the car, but it took me a few tries before I could get it going.

  The engine wasn’t completely waterlogged, but there were some things that would need work.

  I drove the car back up to the cabin and got to work on it. I went and rolled my toolbox out into the driveway and popped the hood of the car. There were a couple of busted pipes and a lot of the parts under the hood were still wet from the rain. I took off my jacket and removed my flannel shirt, so I could start soaking up some of this water.

  I hunched over her car as the sun began to rise above the trees and got to work. I cleaned out the engine and made sure it was still good to run. I changed out the busted pipes and cleaned down the alternator. I had to loosen up a belt in order to get it back on its track and there was a small dent in the fender I worked out with my bare hands. The car just needed some tough love to get it back in working order, and I was just about to slide into the driver’s seat and crank it up when I heard the door of the cabin open behind me.

  I looked over and saw Ava standing there in the clothes I found her in last night. My eyes scanned her body as I turned her name around in her head. The name ‘Ava Lucas’ had hit me like a ton of bricks the night before. I wondered if she had any relation to the Lucas family who was trying to scout this area for a gas line. If she was related to them, then they owned half the fucking town in the first place. A family out of Seattle that owned property scattered all over the Washington State area. Her name had thundered through my mind all through the night until dreams of my previous life surfaced, but seeing her standing on my porch renewed my sense of fear.

 

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