“They saw you,” Pig grunts to the three drug dealers who have
just joined us at the wall. “Grab Blondie and we’ll take them down to
the cellar.”
Pig spins me around and covers my mouth with one hand. “You’re
gonna walk to the cellar doors over there, nice and slow. You mess with
me and I’ll cut off your air. You understand?”
I nod. Then I ram my foot into his instep and bite his hand.
“Fuck.” Pig jerks his hand away and staggers back.
I scream as loud as I can and run at the guy holding Amanda. Just
as my fingers touch his jacket, something hits my head and the world
goes black.
Chapter 24
Everyone Not Tied To A Chair Jumps Up
I open my eyes and for a second I think I am dreaming. I am in a huge,
dimly lit room filled with boxes, barrels, and crates. Three guys—one
redhead, one blonde, and the other with curly black hair are huddled
over a table in the far corner, all dressed in cheap printed T-shirts, flip-
flops, and torn jeans. A naked bulb swings from the ceiling. The air is
fragrant with the rich scent of earth and the fusty aroma of dried herbs.
It is almost surreal.
However, Amanda, tied to a chair in front of me, the burn of ropes
around my wrists, and the pounding in my head are very real. So real,
I groan.
“Mac,” she whispers. “Mac. Are you okay?”
“Aside from the fact I am tied to a chair and probably concussed,
I’m fine,” I moan. “What happened?”
“The big guy hit you over the head with something. We’re in the
cellar under the Geek Club. He’s gone to get the boss.”
I struggle on my hands and feet, but they are
secure. As is the room. Aside from the tiny windows along the edges, the
only way out is up the steps.
The door creaks open and Pig comes down the stairs followed by a
giant. A familiar giant.
Misery.
My heart pounds in my chest. He seems even bigger in the enclosed
space than he did at Redemption, his head just clearing the ceiling. He
storms over to the men at the table. “What the fuck were you doing
taking the stuff out of the club? You are all fucking idiots.”
He looks Amanda up and down, and then his gaze falls on me. His
eyes narrow. “I know you.” He leans down and grabs the guy with the
curly black hair by the collar. “Who is she? Why do I know her?”
Curly wilts. “She’s Torment’s girl.”
“Fuck.” Pig spits on the ground, as pigs do. “I thought I recog-
nized her.”
“Who’s Torment?” the blond asks.
Curly swallows. “He works the underground circuit. One of the
top fighters. Used to be a professional boxer. Mean. Nasty. Hard as
nails. He’s crazy. I’ve seen him take down three men here at the club
without breaking a sweat.”
The blond whistles. “What were they packing?”
“Hard-drive casings, keyboards, laptops, external drives, a couple of
flat-screen monitors, and a whole roll of HDMI cable.”
Red whistles. “Serious fight. HDMI cable isn’t cheap.”
“Geeks.” Pig rolls his eyes, making no effort to hide his derision.
“I heard Torment once shoved a hard drive down a guy’s throat,”
Red interjects.
Curly’s eyebrows wiggle like two dancing caterpillars. “What capacity?”
“Four terabytes.”
“No way. That must have just been in the last few months. They
haven’t rolled the fours out to the public yet.”
“Shut the fuck up.” Misery shakes Curly like a rag doll, and tosses
him to the floor. Curly’s phone skitters across the concrete. The sleek,
silver design is familiar.
“Amanda,” I whisper. “I have an idea.”
“I’m so sorry I got you into this,” she sobs. “I don’t know what I
was thinking. I went a bit crazy.”
I give her a half smile. “That’s why I came. I couldn’t let you be
crazy alone. Now give me a distraction before we both start sobbing.
Something to get them near us.”
Amanda nods.
“If we let them go, Torment will come here on a tear.” Pig’s voice
wavers. And well it should. Max could eat him for supper.
Misery responds with a sharp bark of laughter. “I’m not fucking
afraid of Torment. He ran out on our last fight.” He looks me over
again. “Maybe we should send him a message to keep his bitch in line.
Draw him out to finish the fight.”
I look Misery straight in the eye. “I’m not his bit…girl anymore.
We broke up.”
Misery gives me a cold smile. “Even better. I can enjoy you without
having him show up on my doorstep.”
“Nice one, Mac,” Amanda spits out. “You just threw away your only
bargaining chip. You had value as his girl. Now we’re going to die because
of your self-pity.” She gives me a wink. Operation Distraction has begun.
“What?” My voice rises. “We wouldn’t even be here if it wasn’t
for you mooning after your guy like a lost puppy. You screwed up with
him. Get over it.”
We banter back and forth, drawing the attention of everyone in the
room. No man can resist a cat fight. Too bad we didn’t have a couple
of bikinis and a mud pit. They edge closer to us, and I spot my purse
under the table.
When they are all as far away from the phone as they will ever be, I
suck in a breath and scream, “CALL 911.”
Everyone freezes. No sound emanates from my purse. Is the leather
too thick? Is it broken after being smashed against the wall? I take
another breath, just as Curly’s phone starts dialing.
“Fuck,” Misery shouts. “She’s trying to set off your damn phone.
Shut it off.”
Curly scrambles over the floor, grabs his phone, and shuts it off
with a loud sigh.
I glare at my purse. I have to give it one last try. Maybe it didn’t
recognize the numbers. “CALL MAX CELL,” I scream. My phone
starts dialing.
“She’s got one, too. Find it, you idiots.” Misery storms across the
cellar and hits me across the face. “Shut it off.”
My head snaps to the side and blood trickles down my lip. Fire
screams across my cheek. “No.”
He hits me again. This time, his palm connects with bone. The
pain brings on the darkness, whispers of memories, someone yelling my
name. A whimper.
No. Not now. I fight away the nightmare and snap back to reality
and a whole lot of pain.
“SHUT IT OFF!” Misery yells.
“No.”
His third hit almost knocks me out of the chair. Amanda screams
for him to stop. Something trickles down my cheek. I can’t tell if it is
blood or tears.
“Makayla, baby?”
Tears spring to my eyes when Max’s voice, deep and low, echoes in
the room. Red crawls under the table and grabs my purse.
I take a deep breath and scream, “MAX. HELP. MISERY HAS ME
AND AMANDA IN THE CELLAR OF—”
Thwack. Misery hits me again. The sharp, bitter taste of blood fills
my mouth. My vision blurs. Red triumphantly holds up my
phone and
then smashes it on the floor. This time, it does not survive.
Misery gives a satisfied grunt. “Even better. He knows I have you,
but not where. Looks like I’ll get to send him a message after all.”
I slump against the chair. Amanda sobs. Misery pulls out his phone
and makes a call. He orders a couple of pizzas—no anchovies—and a
side of wings. I guess message time will be delayed.
An hour has passed. The pizzas have been eaten. Misery and Pig debate
what to do with us. Pig wants to kill us. Misery thinks this is a bad plan.
Body disposal is not easy, and he just had his Jeep cleaned. He also has
a slipped disc. My wrists and ankles are raw from trying to get out of
the ropes. My head aches. My jaw throbs. I wish I could have seen my
parents one last time. I wish I could have given Max one last kiss. I wish
Misery would have given us some pizza. I’m starving.
The cellar door creaks and everyone looks up. Misery sends Curly
to check it out. Curly doesn’t return. Red goes next. We wait. No Red.
As if we were in a bad horror film, Misery decides to send the blond.
The blond doesn’t want to go. He knows the score. Dark night plus
disappearing friends usually equals axe in the head. I suggest he put on
some sexy lingerie and run out screaming like a co-ed. Misery tells me to
shut my mouth or he’ll shut if for me with something so big, I’ll never
be able to talk again. I hope it’s a big slice of pizza.
Brave Pig goes up the stairs. He returns head first. No axe. All body
parts intact. He is followed down the stairs by Max, Jake, Rampage, and
Homicide. Yay!
Everyone not tied to a chair jumps up. For a moment, the room
is still and quiet. Relief wells up in my chest and explodes in a sob.
Max’s head jerks around and his eyes rake over my swollen, bleeding
face and then travel over the ropes on my hands and feet. His nostrils
flare and his lips pull back, baring his teeth. The air around him ripples
and changes. His body tenses and swells; his muscles and veins strain
against his skin. I almost expect him to change form—maybe a were-
wolf or werebeast. I have seen his anger and it scared me. This is not
anger. This is rage.
Max explodes into motion. He barrels toward Misery, tossing chairs
and crates and the blond out of his way. One of them hits the wall with
a sickening crunch—a chair, not the blond.
Jake throws a punch at a recovered Pig. He squeals, as pigs do.
Rampage and Homicide untie Amanda and me and usher us into the
corner. They tell us there are more men fighting outside and we are
safer in a small, confined space with four raging, out-of-control giants
attacking each other. I disagree. I am outvoted.
Max attacks Misery with the kind of vigor only reserved for really
dirty ovens. Fists fly. Bones crunch. He does not hold back. My stomach
clenches tighter and tighter. This is nothing like the club. This is real.
Forget the werebeast; Max is violence with a capital V.
Misery pulls out a knife. Not just a knife. A dagger.
“Oh God. Max is going to be killed.”
Rampage laughs. He cups his hands around his mouth and yells.
“Yo. Torment. Misery’s the one who beat on your girl.”
Max stills, and for a heartbeat, I imagine fear flickers across Misery’s
face, or maybe it was just a muscle twitch. In a blur of motion, Max
closes the distance between them and lets loose. My body convulses and
I grab the wastepaper basket, retching over and over again. Amanda
holds my hair and rubs my back. Rampage hands me a bottle of water.
By the time I can sit up again, the fight is over. Misery is down and
groaning on the floor.
Max surveys the room. His eyes skim over me, pausing briefly on
the basket. Then he stalks across the room, grabs my hand, and yanks
me up the stairs.
Sirens sound in the distance, drawing near. Someone must have
called the police.
“How did you find me?”
“Tracking device in your phone.”
Max drags me across the lawn to a garden shed surrounded by
trees. With one kick, he breaks down the door and pulls me inside. He
slams the door closed and my eyes adjust to the dark. Thin, wavering
filaments of light from houses and streetlights find their way through
cracks in the wood. Enough to see the fury in Max’s face. His eyes are
wide, the pupils almost black. His neck is corded with tension. His face
is all hard planes and angles, dark with shadows. I barely recognize him.
“You promised you would never come here.” His body shakes so
violently, I am afraid to touch him. He is barely in control, and a shiver
of fear winds its way up my spine.
“I couldn’t let Amanda come here alone.”
“You promised you would never put yourself in danger.”
“I had no choice. She’s my best friend.”
His nostrils flare, and he folds his arms across his chest. “Take off
your clothes.”
My heart pounds frantically against my ribs. I’ve never been claus-
trophobic, but in this tiny, dark shed smelling of gasoline and grass clip-
pings, and with Max looming large in front of me, I can barely breathe.
“I don’t want to be here.”
“Take off your clothes.” He forces every word through clenched
teeth as if speaking is an effort.
“Why?” My voice is thin and high, almost a whine.
“Goddamn it, Makayla. For once, just do what I say. Take. Off.
Your. Clothes.”
I step backward until I hit the safety of the wall. My eyes flick to the
door behind him. He catches the direction of my gaze.
“You aren’t leaving until you take off your clothes.”
I wrap my arms around myself in an effort to stop trembling. “No.”
“Fuck.” He closes the distance between us in two long strides, and
grabs my shoulders. He slants his mouth over mine and kisses me hard,
crushing my lips, banging my teeth. Fierce kiss. Frightening kiss. The
smell of his rage fills my nostrils, thick and suffocating like wood smoke.
The world tilts. He grabs my top and yanks it over my head. Cold air
blasts against my skin. Fear and confusion freeze my brain.
“Max,” I whisper. “Please. No.” Instinct screams for me to run. He
is out of control. But part of me still believes he won’t hurt me.
His hands drop to my waist, and he jerks my yoga pants over my
hips and shoves them down to my ankles. He steps back, and his eyes
rake over my body, cold and detached. Not the look of a lover, but of
a stranger.
Although I am still wearing my bra and panties, I instinctively try
to cover up. I wrap one arm around my breasts and the other over my
hip. My hand fans over the juncture of my thighs.
“Don’t cover yourself from me.” He enunciates each word, shoot-
ing them at me like arrows.
A sob wells up in my throat. I drop my arms and look away. I
cannot bear to look at him or to see this stranger looking at me through
Max’s eyes.
Max grasps my shoulders and pulls me away from the wall. His
hands slide ov
er my body, his touch rough, perfunctory, and imperson-
al. His hands linger over my belly. I bite my lip and tears trickle down
my cheeks. He spins me around, and his cold assessment continues over
my back, my buttocks, and my legs. By the time he is finished, I am
sobbing out loud. A black hole has formed inside me. I have never felt
so alone, or disconcertingly, so ashamed.
He steps away and his hands fall to his belt. He undoes the buckle
and yanks the belt off his jeans with a loud crack. He motions me toward
him with an abrupt wave of his fingers. “Come here.”
I back away.
“Come here now.” The undercurrent of barely controlled anger in
his voice sends me scrambling back into a shelf. I stumble over my yoga
pants, and fall to the floor. Flower pots and water cans tumble to the
ground around me. Max strides across the shed. I hold my hands up and
turn away. “Please, Max. I’m sorry. Please don’t hurt me.”
He stops short and looks at me aghast. “Is that what you think?”
I look from him to the belt and back to him. Tears stream down my
cheeks. “I don’t know what to think anymore.”
With a roar, he throws his belt across the room, and then sweeps
the workbench clean with his hand. Tools clatter over the concrete
floor. “What can I do, Makayla?” he shouts. “What can I do to get you
to trust me?”
“Not this.”
He pushes open the door. Pausing, he looks back over his shoulder,
and breathes slowly, in and out, as if trying to calm himself. “When I
got your call, I thought…then I saw you in the cellar…tied up…your
face—” His voice breaks and he scrubs his hand over his face. “It was
too much. I couldn’t think…talk.” He takes another deep breath and
grips the frame of the door so hard, his knuckles whiten. “I needed to
see if you were hurt anywhere else. I needed to hold you. But when I
saw the bruises on your stomach and your back, I took off the belt so the
buckle wouldn’t hurt you.”
He steps out into the night, and the door slams behind him. I col-
lapse, sobbing, in a heap on the cold, stone floor.
For the next few hours, the Geek Club bustles with activity. Geeks
scatter far and wide. Amanda and I sit on the front porch of the house,
and give our statements to the police. Pig and the drug dealers are hauled
Against the Ropes Page 34