Book Read Free

Price of Angels (Dartmoor Book 2)

Page 10

by Lauren Gilley


  Holly didn’t know what a person was supposed to wear on her first ever shooting lesson, but she figured her work uniform wasn’t it. Dressed in jeans, her favorite tall cowboy boots, a thick cream turtleneck sweater she’d splurged on just that morning, and her usual jacket, she leaned against the side of the Chevelle, enjoying the weak touch of the December sun on her face, breathing in cold, crisp air and waiting on Michael to show up.

  She hadn’t slept the night before, restless and nervous, dreaming, in the snatches of half-sleep, about Abraham and Dewey, and Jacob, whom no one had mentioned having seen in town yet, but who doubtless was still stuck like glue to his brother. She had ugly dark circles under her eyes, because of the nightmares, but hadn’t been able to do anything about them. Michael wouldn’t care; he didn’t want her anyway.

  The street was all decked out for Christmas, garlands and lighted holiday tokens on every lamppost: bells, reindeer, sleighs, Santas, angels. At night, they glowed with colored light; the bells even seemed to swing back and forth. All the shop windows were done up with greenery, ornaments, shoe polish murals on the glass. The air smelled like snow, that up-high sharp note of moisture. She loved the idea of a white Christmas, tucked away in her loft window, the streets too slippery for anyone to be out on the prowl, coming after her.

  When she heard the grumble of the motorcycle, she turned toward it automatically, and found herself smiling. It was a relief, if she was honest, to know that he wouldn’t take advantage. She could relax a little – with him, anyway.

  Michael rode a Harley. All the Lean Dogs did; only American made bikes for them, Matt had told her. His was black, not flashy, the handlebars and pipes the only chrome. She could feel the vibration through the pavement, moving up into the soles of her boots, up her legs, and she liked it. The same way she liked his retro black shades, the way the plain black helmet made his face look harsher, the unadorned leather jacket that framed his lean waist and wider shoulders in a classic, masculine silhouette. He wasn’t wearing his cut. He wore a beat-up Jansport backpack, dark blue, and it should have made him look ridiculous, but didn’t. Nobody with that kind of tension in his jaw could look like a dork.

  He parked in front of her car at the curb, killed the engine, pulled off his gloves. “You ready?” he greeted.

  She nodded. “Where are we going?”

  “You’ll see.”

  He swung off the bike with a fluid movement, graceful, long-practiced. He ran one hand through his hair after the helmet came off, one fast show of self-awareness. Then he reached toward her. “Where are your keys? I’ll drive.”

  She kept her arms folded, smiling at him. “Oh, because I’m a girl, and you can’t let me drive?”

  “Because you don’t know where we’re going.”

  “You could tell me.”

  He held his hand in front of her, fingers flexing in silent demand for the keys.

  Feeling bold, unable to wipe the grin off her face, she said, “You have the worst manners, you know that?”

  “Yeah? You’re the one who stripped naked in front of a total stranger.”

  She held up a finger. “One, I wasn’t naked. Two” – a second finger – “you’re not a total stranger. Strange, maybe,” she said, suppressing a giggle, “but not a stranger.”

  He sighed. “What are you doing?”

  “I’m teasing you. Isn’t that what friends do?” She felt her brows pluck together, felt the awful surge of true curiosity. The only friend she could claim was dead, murdered in the alley of this bar. “I want us to be friends,” she said, softly.

  His brows lifted over the frames of his Ray-Bans. Why?

  “Do you have any?” she asked. “Because I don’t. And maybe, if nothing else, we could be that. I think it’d be nice.” She sent him a hopeful smile.

  He stared at her, projecting bafflement, though he probably didn’t want to. “You’re weird, you know that?”

  It was her turn to lift her brows. And you’re not?

  He sighed, and shrugged. “Fine.”

  They drove out of town, at his direction, Holly shocked she was the one behind the wheel, Michael watching through the window with unruffled calm.

  “This is your car?” he asked as they turned off Main and headed out of town.

  “Yep.”

  His eyes slid over, unreadable behind the lenses of his shades. “Did you steal it?”

  Holly felt her palms grow damp on the wide plastic steering wheel, but she laughed. She didn’t know why, but being alongside him today, in the sunlight pouring through the tint-free windows, had lightened her somehow. Left her feeling buoyant and happy.

  “I’m serious,” Michael said. “Did you steal it?”

  “What, you’re going to turn me in?”

  “Just wondering.” He sounded sincere.

  Holly sighed, felt herself deflate a little as they took the next turn. “It’s mine,” she said. “After…well, after everything…I think I’m at least owed a car.” Not a lie, and almost the truth. “Maybe I’m wrong, though,” she mused. “Maybe nobody ever deserves anything. It’s just about who takes what.”

  She glanced over at Michael’s hard profile. “What do you think?”

  His lips pursed. Thinking face. Dear God, he took her serious. He was actually listening to her, considering what to say.

  Delight streaked through her. For the first time in so, so many years, sheer delight.

  “ ‘Deserve’ is a tricky word,” he said, finally, sunlight striking like white fire off his face. “Like there’s somebody up there” – he pointed at the headliner, the sky beyond – “keeping track of rights and wrongs.”

  “Not a man of faith, then?”

  “Didn’t say that. Just said it’s tricky.”

  “Hmm,” she agreed. “My mom was a believer,” she said, surprised, as she said the words, that they’d come up her throat. She tried not to think too hard about her mother, because it hurt too badly, but she couldn’t talk about church in relation to her father, no matter how many bible verses he’d spewed at her. No, that wasn’t the God that Mom had talked about. How could it be? How could Lila’s gentle, loving God, of sweet forehead kisses and prayer books open in the sunshine be at all related to the God that Abraham carried on his bourbon-soaked breath, when he’d pulled the ropes from the cabinet?

  “I believe in God,” she continued. “Most of the time, anyway. I’m not sure how to put that belief in any kind of box, though.”

  “You don’t need a box.”

  “You don’t think?”

  “Nah.”

  Holly felt a dozen muscles unclenching, in her neck and arms and her midsection. His stalwart caveman assuredness was a balm to her tattered nerves. Maybe tattered wasn’t the right word. Maybe she’d been born with incomplete, split ends. How could a child born of her father’s seed be at all normal or complete or full-up with love?

  “So what’s the plan for this afternoon?” she asked, voice light and perky in her ears.

  “We’re gonna see how you take to the guns, and get you shooting straight.”

  She made a face. “I’m not sure I’ll be any good at it.”

  He shrugged. “Won’t know till you get up there. It’s not hard.”

  “I’m not very strong, though. Well, not at all, really.”

  “You don’t have to be. You’ll see – anybody can handle a gun; it’s skill, not strength.”

  “Yeah?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Are you a good teacher?” she teased.

  Taking her eyes from the road a beat too long, she searched for a reaction in him. There it was, that tiny twitch in the corner of his mouth. The Michael-smile. “No complaints.”

  “Oh,” she went on, feeling bolder, smiling, a lightness in her chest. “So you take a lot of girls shooting, huh?”

  “None of them ever talked as much as you.”

  She laughed. “I think you need more talking in your life.”

  He made a gru
nting sound that wasn’t necessarily a disagreement.

  He didn’t encourage her chattering, but didn’t discourage it either, so she kept talking, about how pretty this shade of blue was in the sky, about what kinds of guns he’d brought with him. He answered her questions. He watched the city slip away as they left Knoxville for the rural outskirts, and he also, she noticed, was as relaxed and loose-limbed as she felt. There was no tension in him. He was totally at ease, head resting against one upraised hand, body rocking gently as the old Chevy’s struts jostled them back and forth. His tiny smile made several appearances, and Holly was heartened. He was a severe man; she liked the idea that she could provide him with a distraction from that severity. She’d never been useful in this way to anyone. She could get high on the sensation, if she wasn’t careful.

  He directed her through a series of turns that led them deeper and deeper into sprawling farmland. Acres of rolling pasture, yellow, brown, and cropped low for winter, the bare trees crowding at fence lines and around cattle ponds. The sky opened up above the fields, wider and bluer and all-encompassing, hanging over the silhouettes of the Smoky Mountains.

  “It’s beautiful out here,” Holly said, delighted by the gravel drives and the hail-dented tin mailboxes. The cows slept in the sun, chewing their cud. Starlings swept from the treetops in spiraling clouds of black wings.

  “Hmm,” Michael said. “Turn right at the next driveway.”

  There was no box, no sign, just a crushed-gravel path she might have missed for the tangle of honeysuckle-choked hickory trees.

  She braked to a halt in the road. “Here?”

  “Yeah.”

  The Chevelle bucked as they left the pavement, steel frame creaking as the tires bit into the uneven gravel footing.

  Through the close-reaching branches of the trees, they started up a gentle slope, driveway crowded with limbs, and came upon a closed gate, a Warning Private Property sign. Wood and wire fence fed off from either side, disappearing into the trees.

  “I’ll get it,” Michael said, climbing from the car.

  A heavy new length of chain held the gate to the post, secured with a combination lock that Michael spun and unfastened with a few quick moves. He opened the gate and waved her through. In the rearview mirror, she watched him lock it behind them.

  She felt a tightening in her stomach. This was a guarded, private place that he’d brought her inside. Up this unnoticed driveway, behind a locked gate, any number of horrible things could happen to her.

  She felt the film of sweat slick across her chest, the back of her neck, as she remembered breaking the rusted lock and chain during her escape. The way her damp palms had slipped on the shovel handle. The frightened pattering of her own breath as she listened to the awful clatter of the chain sliding loose.

  That was then, and this is now, she told herself, but the sound of the chain links tapping against the gate sent her spinning back. The strike of metal against metal quickened her pulse, and tightened her hands on the wheel.

  “You had to lock us in?” she asked as Michael climbed back inside and shut the door.

  “It always stays locked,” he said, and she could detect no tension in his voice or posture. “It’s private property.”

  “Yours?”

  “The club’s.” He glanced over at her. She could just see the shadow of his lashes flickering as he blinked behind his shades. “Well go on. We don’t have all day.”

  “Right.” She took a deep breath, and put her boot on the accelerator.

  The gravel drive began a steady climb through a dense patch of forest, and then leveled out, swinging through big, gradual turns. Though it was afternoon, there were still edgings of frost on some of the shriveled limbs, and the blanketing pine needles, here in the tree-created shadows.

  “How much farther is it?” Holly asked, and hoped her voice didn’t sound too choked.

  “A little ways,” Michael said, unconcerned. He looked relaxed, even more so than earlier. Wherever they were, he liked this place. It brought him peace.

  Maybe that meant he wasn’t planning on killing her when they finally stopped.

  The drive climbed again, this time through a series of fast, switchback turns, the path carved into a hillside that just didn’t seem to end.

  And then, suddenly, the trees fell away and they were in the open, and the brilliant sun was pouring over them, and Holly gasped a little.

  Ahead of them lay a dilapidated farmhouse of white clapboard, porch spindles missing, tin roof eaten by rust. It looked like something from a horror movie. All around it was open pastureland, dotted with trees, fields bisected by little lines of oak and sweet gum and hickory and pine.

  “Take a right,” Michael said, and his voice startled her. When she’d seen the house, all thought had left her, and fear had flooded her system. “Head up to the barn.”

  The Chevelle rolled to a slow halt.

  She had to wet her lips to speak. “The-the barn?”

  “Up there.” He tapped at the window with a fingertip. Then, voice becoming serious: “Hey.” He pushed his shades up onto his forehead and she saw the seriousness in his hazel eyes. “Take a right, go to the barn, and we’ll shoot. Okay?”

  She took a deep breath, and then another. The inside of the car felt too small, suddenly. Under the leather cuffs at her wrists, she felt the old familiar burn of the ropes.

  It was the house. That awful, once-white house, so much like the house behind the rusted lock and chain, the one she’d broken with a shovel. She looked at that house, and she felt her arms and legs pulling. Felt the greasy sheets beneath her bare back.

  So don’t look at the house. Look at Michael.

  His eyes were very large, in the shade of the car, without the usual, purposeful narrowing. Pretty, animal eyes, she reminded herself. She loved his eyes. They were full of intelligence and cunning. And now, they were boring into her.

  “Okay?” he repeated.

  It was a reassurance. He wasn’t going to pet her head and tell her it would be alright, but in his own way, he was reassuring her.

  Realizing that eased the knot in her stomach. Allowed her to breathe.

  “Shooting,” she said. “Right.”

  “Right.” He tapped the window again. “Out behind the barn. Drive us up there.”

  She nodded, and some of the feeling came back into her hands and wrists. “Okay. I can do that.” And with a few more shaky deep breaths, she could, accelerating again, turning the car up the hill, toward the hulking shell of an old barn.

  It was old fashioned, as far as barns went: weathered gray planks for siding, high, steep roof that peaked in the center and fell down to level above two separate wings of inside space, with a wide center aisle. There were open sliding windows above the yawning mouth of the main door: had to be a hay loft. At the end of a wooden arm, a rusted pulley dangled above the loft windows, catching in the breeze.

  Holly parked in front of it, in the ghostly tire tracks packed into the dirt. Evidence of many others before them.

  And Michael, in what felt like a show of true kindness, began talking. Soothing her, in his own indirect way.

  “There’s a nice level spot around the other side, and the plants will give a little cover for the sound.”

  “Is there anyone around to even hear us?”

  “Nah, not really. And if they do, nobody cares. There’s all kinds of shooting that goes on around here.”

  “How reassuring,” she said, dryly.

  “It should be. We’ve got absolute privacy.” And he leaned into the backseat for the backpack he’d left there earlier.

  Tangled grass grew right up to the edge of the barn on the other side, the unmown stalks dead and brown and matted to together like the coat of an old unloved dog. But the ground was fairly level, once you got down the gently graded slope against the wall, and moved down into a little hollow nestled among the eleagnus. Birds shot from the brush at their approach, doves fluttering hard to esc
ape their path. Two rabbits darted for cover, brown coats gleaming in the bright winter sun.

  Holly smiled, and slowly, slowly, her pulse began to settle, and her nerves to firm up.

  “What a pretty old farm,” she murmured. “Why’s it abandoned?”

  Michael shrugged. “My boss inherited it when his old man died. I think it had bad memories, or something.”

  “Hmm. I can understand that.”

  “Yeah?” He cast her a fast, unobtrusive look that she met with silence, then shrugged again. “Wait here, and I’ll get everything set up.”

  With his backpack and his leather jacket and his perfect-fitting jeans, he walked about fifteen yards straight out from the place they stood, to a place where three sheets of plywood were set up between two rickety sawhorses. The plywood was full of little holes where daylight shone through – they weren’t the first two people to use this spot for target practice.

  Michael let the bag fall to the ground, and crouched to pull things out of it: paper targets, tape, a few old beer bottles. Behind her sunglasses, Holly watched not what he withdrew from the bag, but the man himself, soaking in all the little details she wasn’t afforded in the dark of Bell Bar every night. The way the leather stretched tight across his back, highlighting the exact shape of his shoulder blades, and the sleek muscles around them. The way his jeans gapped a little in back and she could see the white waistband of his…yeah, boxer-briefs, if she had to guess, dark gray, contrast stitching. All over his body, his muscles were compact and close to his body; a wealth of strength without all the extra bulk. She loved the proportions of him. The way at six feet, he was taller than the other men in her life had been, but the height never made her feel any smaller. It was never really size that made a person feel little, after all, but words. Deeds. Evil intent.

  But the time he’d finished setting up a line of targets and beer bottles for her to shoot, and was walking back, Holly had realized something. She wanted him. She’d never thought she’d feel that way, not after all that had happened. Sex was an awful, filthy thing for her. But she wanted this man. And even though the idea of actually being with him scared her witless, she couldn’t deny the acuteness of her fascination, the deep physical ache inside her. It didn’t even have to be sex; she craved something small, some tiny gesture of affection and intimacy.

 

‹ Prev