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The Debt: The Complete Series (An Alpha Billionaire Romance)

Page 44

by Kelly Favor

“Shut up and get up,” the first man said, his hooded eyes still looking down at her with a pitiless unblinking stare.

  As she got shakily to her feet, she took in the fact that there only appeared to be two people inside the cabin with her. She also noted, with steadily growing horror, that both people were dressed in camouflage and heavy black boots, and both men had guns.

  One was holding a pistol and the youngish one had a rifle casually hoisted on his shoulder.

  “Who are you?” she said.

  “You don’t want to know,” said the younger one with the terribly erratic beard, “but you can call me Joe and this is my friend Dave.”

  Raven saw that the younger one, who called himself ‘Joe,’ was lying, and his eyes were cruel. He was teasing her so he could look tough in front of his older buddy. His eyes were hateful, while the one he’d called ‘Dave’ simply looked cold, like a walking talking barracuda.

  “Joe, please don’t hurt me,” Raven said. “I’m not going to call the police. Take whatever you want but please let me go.”

  “We can take anything we want?” Joe asked, smiling through his wispy mustache, glancing at Dave, who simply stared at her with no expression.

  Dave’s cheeks were riddled with old acne scars, and his dead eyes took in everything about her without showing any emotion.

  “Yes, anything,” she gushed frantically. “Take the clothes, food, anything. There’s even weapons. Take it all and I’ll just leave.”

  “But you said we can take anything,” Joe replied, and grabbed her arm with a tight grip that made her cry out in pain. “And we want to take you. So you start walking, and don’t make a sound or I’ll take my rifle and break your fucking nose. Got it?”

  “Pl—pl—please don’t,” she whispered.

  “Boss, she ‘aint moving,” Joe said.

  Dave turned and looked out the window and then to Raven. Slowly, emotionlessly, he raised his arm and pointed the pistol at her face. “Start walking or I’ll splatter your brains on the walls, ma’am.”

  Raven’s legs were numb and she was certain she would faint at any second, but she somehow controlled her body enough to force it to move. Her legs didn’t want to follow orders, and everything in her was protesting at full volume.

  She knew that she was going to her death, but didn’t seem to have a say in the matter.

  As they exited the cabin, Dave took hold of one of her arms and then Joe moved out front and perched the rifle on his shoulder and started to check the vicinity, swiveling to and fro, his body tense and ready to shoot.

  Raven wanted to shout out a warning, just in case Jake was somewhere nearby. But Dave must have sensed this, because just before she yelled, his cold hand wrapped itself over her mouth and squeezed like a vice, making it impossible to do anything but grunt and moan inside her throat.

  After what seemed an eternity, Joe removed the rifle from his shoulder and relaxed. He gave Raven a wink and smirked. “All clear, boss,” he said to Dave.

  Dave took away his hand from Raven’s mouth.

  She was sobbing quietly, her entire body seemingly collapsing in on itself.

  “We have to keep moving,” Dave told her stiffly. “Come on, quickly.”

  Raven looked over her shoulder and saw that Dave’s long, drawn face was incredibly serious.

  “I just want to be left alone.”

  “A little late for that,” Joe sneered.

  She didn’t move and Joe sighed. “Boss, should I break her nose and show her we mean business or what?”

  There was hesitation as Dave considered the question. “Too much blood,” Dave replied, finally, and that was what got her feet moving again.

  The way he’d responded hadn’t been with disgust at the idea of bashing her nose in for the hell of it—his only objection had been that it would be too bloody. And that made Raven realize that these two men weren’t fooling around. They were waiting for her to give them a reason to hurt her, and she didn’t want to supply it.

  Then and there, she decided to bide her time and wait. At some point, they’d screw up and make a mistake and she would find a way to escape.

  Until then, she intended to be a model prisoner.

  They kept Raven marching for a long, long time. Minutes turned slowly into hours, and the day grew hot and she struggled to keep pace.

  They weren’t in apparent contact with anybody on a phone, walkie-talkie, nothing. They seemed confident, though. Dave occasionally stopped progress to take a drink from his canteen and offer her some, which she refused until she was too thirsty to keep saying no.

  He also checked a compass and a map every so often, peering at the sun in the sky, squinting like some old sea captain trying to guess the wind’s direction.

  Mostly, though, they just walked, the three of them.

  Raven wanted to ask if Club Alpha had sent them, but she figured they’d only lie to her. They had a plan, and it didn’t involve killing her immediately, which was good. But she didn’t know just how long they intended to keep her alive, either, which was bad.

  She’d initially hoped that Jake would hear them or spot them moving through the forest on his return back to the cabin, but as the hours passed and the sun first rose high above them and then began its steep descent over the treetops, Raven’s hope diminished and turned to hopelessness.

  If she was going to get out of this, she’d need to do it herself.

  Nobody’s coming to save you.

  It was a chilling thought and it matched the dip in temperature, as night began to fall once more and the daylight slipped eerily away.

  “How much longer, boss?” Joe asked, as Dave called a halt to the action, sipped from his canteen and then handed it off to Raven, who drank from it, hating the metallic taste of the warm water and knowing that Dave’s saliva was mixing in the with it.

  But she was so tired and thirsty and she was badly in need of a long rest. Her legs were weak and the muscles had begun burning. Inside her shoes, her feet were raw and she could feel blisters on her toes.

  “I think we should call it a night,” Dave said, after checking his map and the sky once more.

  “Can I start a fire?” Joe asked him.

  Dave thought about it for a long moment and then nodded once. “I’m gonna take a leak,” he said. “Watch the girl.” He walked off a few paces and unzipped his pants, his back to Raven.

  She glanced uneasily away from the sight of him and saw Joe leering at her, as he cradled the rifle in his arms. “Hey, baby. How you like it out here with a couple of mountain men? You enjoying yourself?”

  “No,” she said.

  Joe laughed, a big belly laugh. “Awww, that’s too bad. Because I’ve really enjoyed watching your ass swing when you walk, and your boobs bouncing too. You have some swag, girl.”

  She looked away from him, feeling her stomach lurch and her eyes flutter. She wanted to vomit but held it down.

  Don’t give him the satisfaction. He’d laugh and laugh if you puked right now.

  Raven managed not to vomit, a small victory, and then Dave was back, taking his canteen from her and spinning the cap back onto it. “Okay,” he said, “let’s settle in.”

  Joe was definitely not in charge. He spent the better part of an hour making a fire and then taking a few cans of beans and putting them in a tiny pot, which he used to cook the beans over the modest fire pit.

  Joe served the beans to them in the empty cans they’d come from in the first place, and as he handed Raven a small fork to use, she considered stabbing him in the eyeball with it.

  “Not even a thank you for cooking this delicious grub?” he chuckled, grinning as bean sauce dribbled down his erratic beard, leaning toward her, almost begging her to stab him.

  “Thanks,” she muttered, and then shoved the fork down and scooped up the lukewarm beans and began eating like a starved orphan.

  Joe sat down across the fire while Dave sat slightly behind Raven and ate, presumably to keep an eye on her
.

  When she was done eating, she had to pee and told Dave. “Come on,” he said, getting up stiffly. “I’ve got to keep an eye on you.”

  “I’ll do it,” Joe called out.

  Dave gave him an annoyed glare and Joe mercifully shut up. Raven didn’t feel quite as nervous with Dave nearby, as he seemed the more professional of the two, even if he was a cold fish. She walked far enough away to be out of Joe’s sight, behind some bushes, and Dave carried a flashlight. “That’s enough, you can go there,” he said.

  Raven dropped her pants and squatted, urinating with relief. “Do you have to do this to me?” she asked, as she pulled her pants up again. “Isn’t there something else? Can I pay you or something?”

  Dave held the flashlight so that the beam fell in her eyes and caused her to squint. “Shut up,” he replied tersely.

  They walked back to camp and Joe had a flask out and was sipping from it. He held the flask out to Raven and she shook her head. She could smell the alcohol from across the fire.

  “No?” Joe laughed.

  “I told you not to start with that shit,” Dave told him.

  “Come on, we’ve been so wound up for days now,” Joe told him. “Have a victory drink with me.”

  “The mission’s not done yet,” Dave said.

  “Come on, just one swig.”

  Dave gave Raven a baleful glance and then walked around the fire and took the flask and drank from it for a long time.

  When he was done, he swiped his arm across his mouth. He glared at Joe and then Raven. He seemed angry and his eyes had turned less detached and more predatory.

  He sat down next to Joe and across from Raven, watching her as he passed the flask back and forth between he and his fellow mercenary.

  Joe grew more jovial and laughed more as they drank from the flask, while Dave seemed to get quieter and somehow meaner, without saying much.

  Raven hoped they might get drunk enough to pass out. That would make her task far easier.

  And where will you go when you run away? You don’t have a clue where you are or how to get back to the cabin. You’ll end up dying alone in the woods.

  Well, that’s the chance I’ll have to take, Raven thought, as she watched her two captors drink without being obvious that she was looking to closely at them.

  At one point, Joe cried out and fell off his backpack, and then lay on his side laughing like a maniac.

  Dave, sitting on another pack, gave him a hard kick in the ribs with his boot, and Joe got up and stared at him. “Why’d you do that?” he said, the laughter gone.

  “Because,” Dave said, watching him without emotion.

  “Because why?”

  “Because I felt like kicking you,” Dave replied.

  The mood had turned sour, and Raven had to admit, she was rather glad. If they started really fighting, she’d have her chance.

  “I should put a bullet between your eyes,” Joe muttered.

  “What?” Dave asked, sitting forward.

  “You heard me.”

  “Say it again,” Dave demanded. “Say it again and see what I do to you.”

  Joe seemed to cower, even though he was standing and Dave was sitting. The humiliation of it sunk in and they younger man’s lip curled. At that moment, for some reason, he turned his attention towards Raven.

  “I’m sick of this uppity bitch giving me that look,” Joe said. He pointed at her. “See that look?” he asked.

  Raven expected Dave to kick Joe again, as he seemed none to admiring of the younger man’s antics. But suddenly, Dave looked at her and nodded. “I see it,” he agreed.

  Raven’s stomach curdled and she was frozen in shock.

  “I think we need to show her where she is and how this works,” Joe said. “Don’t you think we should, boss?”

  Dave stared at Raven for a long, long while. Finally, he nodded slowly. “Okay.”

  Joe grabbed his rifle and walked towards her with it. “Get on your knees, right now. No playing around, bitch.”

  “Please, I just want to sleep. I’m so tired.”

  “It isn’t hard work for a girl like you. You got the mouth for it. Down on your knees.”

  Raven stared at him, her throat tightening. This was it. She was going to die right now, because there was no way she would do as he asked. He’d have to beat her to death to make her.

  And she could tell from the look in his eyes that he was quite willing and happy to oblige.

  “No,” she told him, her jaw jutting. She stared up at him.

  He didn’t seem to be able to believe his ears. “What did you just say?”

  “You heard me,” she said, smirking at him. “You don’t scare me one bit.”

  Somehow, it was true. Here she was in the middle of nowhere, the dead of night, alone with two psychopaths, and Raven wasn’t really afraid anymore.

  Faintly, she remembered Jake’s words about his time in combat.

  In the center of battle, I was the eye of the storm.

  A feeling of power ran up her spine as she thought of Jake’s bravery. She wanted to make him proud, even if he’d never know what had happened to her.

  Joe’s eyes wrinkled in surprise. He didn’t know what to do for a moment, and then he turned his head to his partner. “Boss, she’s getting smart with me. I need your help.”

  Dave stood up and dusted off his pants, and then he wandered over to her with the pistol in his hand. “We can make her do it even if she says no. If she won’t open her mouth, there’s other ways.”

  Some amount of fear came back now, as she realized what he meant. Joe began laughing as the two stood in front of her.

  Okay, now, it’s time to fight. Fight and fight no matter what.

  But just as she readied herself to attack Joe with everything in her power—to bite and kick and claw—Raven stopped.

  There was a slight ripple of shadow in the trees a few yards behind the two men, right in her eye-line. They had their backs to it.

  At first, she thought it was her imagination. Certainly, she was scared enough and had enough adrenaline flowing to be hallucinating.

  But then, her eyes seemed to adjust and the ripple became a form, and she could make out Jake, standing amidst the trees where he was ensconced, waiting as still as a statue with his gun extended, aimed directly at the two kidnappers.

  Somehow, some way, he’d found her and now he was waiting for his opportunity. Joe was holding his rifle pointed at her, and Dave was loosely pointing his gun at her too. Obviously, Jake didn’t want to shoot either man when they could reflexively shoot her in response.

  And then Raven realized what she needed to do.

  Her entire demeanor changed, and she pretended to give in, as she looked down momentarily. “Okay, okay, please. Don’t. Don’t hurt me. I’ll do what you want.”

  “What’ll you do?” Joe demanded, pushing the tip of the rifle under her chin.

  “Get on my knees,” she said, her eyes appearing to look into his, but really she looked past him.

  Jake was training his gun more precisely now, and he appeared to give her a nod, almost as though approving her decision.

  “I think she’s full of it,” Dave said, but his eyes were hungry, he wanted to believe.

  Raven quickly scrambled to her knees, praying Jake could be fast and accurate and do whatever he needed to end it.

  One part of her mind was so happy and joyous and wondering how he’d found her, and then the other part of her was so scared because now she was almost free.

  What if it didn’t work? What if they killed Jake before he could stop them?

  “Me first,” Joe said, putting his rifle down on the ground and unzipping his fly.

  “No, me first,” Dave replied, handing Joe his pistol and quickly undoing his pants and dropping them to his ankles, while Joe was forced to place his rifle on the ground.

  “What the hell am I supposed to do with this?” Joe said, as the exchange was made.

 
; Just then, a piercing shot rang out, crackling through the air with immense power and vibrating Raven’s eardrums.

  Joe shrieked as his shoulder exploded in a cloud of blood and he fell to the ground screaming like a wounded animal, kicking and writhing.

  Raven fell backwards as Dave scrambled for the rifle.

  “Step back or I’ll kill you,” Jake commanded, his voice booming from the darkness as he crossed the few yards between the trees he’d been hiding near and the campfire. “Step back from that weapon, now.”

  Dave looked over at Jake and then glanced to the rifle, as if trying to judge his odds of grabbing it and firing a shot in time, and weather Jake was close enough to take him out for certain.

  “One last warning and then I do what I want to do. My finger’s itching,” Jake said.

  Dave’s pants were down around his ankles and he knew he didn’t have the time, and he relented, holding his hands up gloomily as his partner in crime screamed and writhed on the ground nearby.

  Jake was approaching cautiously, his gun raised and pointed, still ready to fire. He kept his eyes on target but spoke to Raven.

  “Are you okay?” he asked her.

  “I’m all right—they didn’t get a chance to do anything,” she said, her heart about to break with happiness and gratitude.

  Jake closed in on Dave. He looked at Dave’s pants, which were still around his ankles. “What are you waiting for?” Jake asked him. “Pull your fucking pants up, soldier.”

  Dave slowly bent down and grabbed his trousers. As he was bent over, Jake kicked him hard in the face, causing the man’s head to snap back so hard that he went unconscious. He was out cold for a few seconds, his pants still down, his body contorted in a strange position. A moment later, Dave woke up sputtering and coughing and holding his nose as he tried to sit up. Blood poured between his fingers.

  “I think you broke his nose,” Raven said, walking closer to Jake, the beautiful man who’d saved her against all odds.

  Jake glanced at her and smiled. “Good,” he said, and then walked over and rummaged through one of their packs, found a pair of handcuffs and went to Dave, who was groaning and rolling from side to side as the blood continued to pour from his nose.

 

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