Auctioned to Him 3: Back to the Yacht

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by Charlotte Byrd


  The sound of a startled horse scares me, and I walk over to the window. I lift the window and open the shutters. I didn’t notice it last night, but there are stables to the right of me. The horse makes another piercing cry, sending shivers over my body.

  “It’s okay, Sebastian. It’s okay, guy,” Wyatt says. I can’t see him, but his voice is firm and commanding, and I really believe that it’s going to be okay.

  Suddenly, they emerge. Wyatt is dressed in jeans, a pair of brown boots, and a simple white t-shirt. He’s tan, and his sweaty body glistens in the sun. His hair looks wet, either from sweat or water. He’s riding a tall black horse with a thick black mane that flies up with each gallop. They are moving as one. I look closer, and I see that the horse is not wearing a saddle. Wyatt is riding bareback!

  The horse and the rider dance together for a few moments in a circle. The horse kicks up swirls of dust, which in the sunlight look like periwinkle. Then suddenly, the horse shifts his weight and raises his front legs in the air.

  “Oh wow,” I whisper in awe. Wyatt remains in place on his back holding on by nothing but his powerful thighs. It looks like the horse is going to land on his front legs and morph into a trot, but he doesn’t. Instead, he lands hard on his front hooves and lifts his back hooves up high in the air. Then he does it all again.

  My smile fades quickly after I realize that something’s going wrong.

  “Oh my God,” I whisper and bring my hands to my face. “No, no, no…”

  But it’s too late. The horse bucks one last time, and this time, Wyatt doesn’t hold on. I see him flying through the air. He misses the chain-link fence by less than a foot and lands flat on his back.

  “Oh my God!” I scream. My voice echoes around the room, but Wyatt doesn’t get up.

  “Get up! Please get up,” I scream, but he doesn’t.

  For a brief second, I consider running to the back of the room, down the long hallway, down the winding staircase, out of the front door, and around the entire 10,000 square foot house, but then I see a simpler way down.

  “What are you doing?” Mr. Whitewater enters my room.

  I’m already hanging out of the window, half of my body is on the roof of the patio.

  “Wyatt is hurt, call 911!”

  I climb down the post of the patio, jump into the orange grove below and run toward Wyatt.

  I finally reach him. His face is so pale that it’s the color of those white Mexican plates from dinner. All blood has drained from his face, and his lips are blue.

  “Wyatt? Wyatt?” I scream. I want to shake him and bring him back to life. But I’m afraid he has broken something in his body, and that will make it worse.

  “Wyatt? Wyatt? Please wake up. Please, please, please,” I shout cradling my arms around him.

  Mr. Whitewater runs over.

  “How is he? Oh my God. He’s unconscious.”

  I nod. I don’t know what else to do.

  “I just called 911, but they won’t be here for some time.”

  “What, why?” I demand to know.

  “Twenty minutes at the earliest,” he says and puts the receiver back to his ear. “They say that we shouldn’t move him until they get here. He might’ve broken his back.”

  The world fades to black with those words. ‘He might’ve broken his back’ is all I hear in my head over and over again. The paramedics arrive sometime later. They have to scream at me to get out of the way. I don’t move. I don’t even know if I can move. Someone pushes me out of the way, and they take Wyatt away. They strap him onto a gurney and roll him to the ambulance.

  I can’t go along. No one can. They tell me and Mr. Whitewater that we can follow along behind the ambulance if we want.

  I’m in a daze. I don’t know what to do. I follow Mr. Whitewater to his car.

  “Are you sure you want to come? I thought you wanted to leave this morning? You still can, if you want to.”

  I stare at him. All thoughts of leaving have all but dissipated. I don’t even know what he’s talking about. All I know is that I can’t leave now. I don’t know what’s wrong with him, and I can’t leave until I find out. What if he needs my help?

  Twelve hours later.

  I’ve spent the last twelve hours in the hospital looking at magazines and mindlessly reading books that I did not understand on my phone. I read the words, but they don’t make any sense. I don’t know who wrote them or for what reason. The only thing that makes sense to me is the pictures. I leaf through the celebrity magazines and pay close attention to which movie stars have lost and gained weight. Which ones were pregnant. Which ones got engaged and which ones got divorced. It’s all things that I used to find interesting, but now none of it makes any sense.

  This hospital reminds me of the one back home, where I waited for hours for my mom to get out of her various surgeries. Time stands still here. It’s as if the waiting room is some secret time travel chamber in which I can go into and not age for hours and days and months. I age, of course. I noticed it whenever I went into to the bathroom and looked at the horror that was my face, but I never felt time passing. Not even one second.

  Breathe, I say to myself. Breathe.

  I take a deep breath. And then another. And another. I feel a little better, but as soon as I look around, all of my thoughts and concerns and regrets creep back in.

  A doctor who is in charge of Wyatt and his condition comes out from behind the double doors with a smile on his face.

  “Wyatt’s awake now,” he tells Mr. Whitewater. “He’s one lucky young man. Even though both of his legs are broken.”

  Broken legs. I sigh. He is lucky.

  “Wait here,” Mr. Whitewater tells me. I have no right to go see Wyatt. I’m not really anybody to him. Barely an employee. Still, I hope that I can go in to see him.

  “And he doesn’t have any brain damage?” Mr. Whitewater asks the doctor.

  “No, not that I can tell. But it’s too soon to know for sure.”

  I wait for what seems like a century for Mr. Whitewater to come back. Now time is positively moving backward. I wonder if it’s 1993. Finally, he comes out.

  “He’d like to see you,” Mr. Whitewater says.

  “How is he?”

  “Fine. Definitely all there.”

  I smile. A wave of relief sweeps over me.

  Want to read the rest of Indebted Book 1?

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  Charlotte Byrd

  About Charlotte Byrd

  Charlotte Byrd is the #1 Amazon Best Selling author who likes steamy and dirty books with alpha heroes and the strong women who love them. She specializes in insta-love, short and hot billionaire fast-read romances .

  Some guarantees when you pick up a Charlotte Byrd book: NO cheating, lots of HOT and steamy scenes, No Cliffhangers and Happily Ever Afters!

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