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Captive Heroes

Page 14

by Springer, Jan


  Kinley spoke from somewhere above him and to his right. Pride whipped through him when she called him her male. She didn’t have to do that. She could have turned him over to them and simply walked away. She could be free of him. No longer a captive.

  He smiled. Perhaps he had been right. She could be a natural submissive. Or maybe she simply enjoyed his touches? He grinned inwardly at that last thought. Suddenly darkness enveloped him and he had no trouble slipping into it.

  * * * * *

  Kayla froze as a stick snapped somewhere behind her on the nearby shoreline of the river. She dared not look into the gloomy gray mist or gaze into the forest at every creepy crack or snap. If she looked anywhere but in front of her, she swore the goose bumps she’d been fighting all night would certainly grab hold of her and send her screaming into the dark.

  She’d waited too long for Taylor to return. He hadn’t.

  Guilt crawled through her, as it had off and on ever since she’d left. Guilt that had taken turns with anger, and then concern for his well-being.

  Overhead the sky was beginning to lighten. Thank God, she would soon be able to see the shoreline. Not seeing it in the dark had been another concern as she hoped she hadn’t passed the first meadow, let alone the second one where Taylor had said there would be a shelter.

  Getting closer and closer was the rumbling of thunder. The ominous booms were menacing and threatening, urging her to pick up speed in the water. She’d been lucky with her footing. The bottom of the river was mostly sand and the water knee-high. But the water seemed to be getting cooler and so were her feet. The wind blowing against her was cooler too.

  She thought about stopping along the shoreline and making a fire. She knew the technique of rubbing two sticks together, but that took time. And with the growling thunder, time was not on her side. With her luck she’d start the fire and it would pour.

  No, it was best to just keep moving. But she wasn’t exactly sure what Taylor meant when he’d said it would take a day to get there. Had he meant twelve hours or twenty-four?

  A soft splash in the river from somewhere behind her had her stopping again. She dared not look back. In front of her the gray mist spiraled upward like smoke and she found herself thinking about that gut-wrenching scene in the old classic movie The Ten Commandments, when Moses’ stepbrother had ordered all first-born males be killed. Screams of mothers as their babies were butchered rang through the air and so had that eerie fog, crawling along the ground just as it was doing over the river and around her. Creepy thoughts like that she could do without.

  Kayla shivered at another splash. This one closer. Crocodiles and alligators? Oh my!

  Stop it! There are no such things on Paradise. If there were, surely you would have seen one by now.

  She ignored the sound and kept moving forward. Goose bumps froze her arms and legs. Some animal was following her. Maybe one of those anaconda snakes?

  Oh shit!

  Kayla moved faster. The splashing increased, drew closer.

  Oh God! Oh God! Oh God!

  Thunder rumbled overhead, silver lightning flashed.

  She was so screwed.

  Harsh breathing closed in. No, that was her breathing. Right?

  Something hot clamped over her right shoulder, squeezing.

  She screamed, thought about fighting it off. She tried to run, but whatever had grabbed her wasn’t letting her go.

  “Get off me!” she yelled and tried to wrench free only to be pulled against a rock-hard pile of muscle.

  “Kayla, it’s me.”

  His voice. His scent. Him!

  Taylor. Sweet mercy, the guy was alive. She’d never been so happy in her life!

  He dropped his hand from her shoulder, allowing her to swing around.

  He wore an amused grin and, well, she just couldn’t stop herself. She slapped his face. Hard.

  Surprise flashed through his eyes.

  Good. How dare he sneak up and scare her like that? She made a move to slap him again and he easily caught her wrist, stopping her cold.

  “That is not the welcome I’m looking for.”

  His gaze had grown serious and reality sobered her. He really was here. He was okay.

  “Oh my God! I’m so glad to see you!” she cried and began laughing as relief poured through her entire body. She was safe again.

  “A slap to my face indicates pleasure?” He looked confused and tired and pale. He was also breathing way too hard. Alarm snapped through her. He was clutching his right side. Blood oozed from between his fingertips. More blood streaked down the outside of his right thigh.

  “It’s nothing,” he muttered as she caught his gaze. His eyes shone with pain.

  Reaching out, she grabbed his hand and forced it away from his side.

  She gasped as a wave of shock slammed into her. He had a six-inch-long gash across his side. The wound appeared an angry red and the flesh swollen.

  Fuck! Shit! Damn!

  “What happened?”

  “No time to explain. The storms are upon us. We must hurry,” he said gruffly and pressed his hand once again to his side, wincing as he did so.

  He grabbed her hand, his fingers intertwining tightly with hers. Without another word, he began hauling her along beside him in the river. By the grim expression on his face and the increasing blaze of lightning and crackling thunder overhead, Kayla knew better than to oppose him.

  * * * * *

  It had been good to see her. Too good. The instant Taylor had spied her rounding the river bend ahead of him, something warm and welcome had shifted through him.

  Although pain sliced into his side with every step, he’d pushed himself to travel faster. It had seemed like forever before he could clearly see her.

  Her tall, curvy figure had been a beacon to him. And her silky tresses, even without sunshine, had shimmered in the gray dawn. As he had watched her generous hips sway with her every step through the water, anticipation at holding her again made him smile as he’d never smiled before.

  This female made an unforgettable picture to him. Even now, as fever heated his body and pain speared his side and blackness hovered at the edges of his sight, happiness poured through him at finding her.

  When he pointed out the first clearing to the right, the rain began, the wind also. It howled until the trees on the nearby shores crashed in a dark dance of ecstasy, some limbs cracking while others snapped off and fell to the ground with deep thuds. With each crash, Kayla gripped his hand tighter.

  The rain pelted them, running over his heated body in rivulets, soaking his breechclout. It grew hard to see as rain fell into his eyes.

  Her nervous expression showed she too was worried about the weather, yet she said nothing and kept them at a good pace. If he hadn’t caught up to her, if she hadn’t been here with him, he would have given up, curling beneath a tree to wait out this storm. He most likely would have drowned in the rain or died of the fever.

  What kept him going was his need to get her to safety, and then to her brothers so they could search for the missing woman.

  When they finally came to the second clearing, he could barely lift his legs. In the haze of excruciating pain claiming his senses, he was barely aware she’d swept an arm around the good side of his waist, keeping him from falling flat on his face into the water.

  He stopped at the river’s shore, swaying, trying to blink away the rain and the blueness claiming his eyesight. His arms were too heavy to lift.

  “Footprints…need to…clear…no trail,” he managed to gasp.

  “The rain will take care of it,” she shouted above the wind. Yes, the rain. It was good for something. It would erase their footprints. Why had he not remembered that?

  “Where is the shelter?” she screamed.

  He tried to orient himself once again, blinking away the rain spilling into his eyes. It was cold but did little to cool his fever.

  “It is well hidden,” he replied. It took a great effort to lift h
is arm, but he managed, pointing straight ahead, hoping it was the right direction.

  “Three hundred…paces inward…then four hundred…paces…right,” he said. He struggled to keep his thoughts straight and hoped he had remembered correctly.

  The rain came down harder and the wind brutally pummeled them as they left the river and stumbled into the clearing. Here, without the shelter of the nearby trees, the storm increased in violence and he prayed none of the forks of lightning would strike them before they found the shelter.

  Finally, through the haze of pain and past the sheets of silver rain and flailing white birch trees, he saw it. He hadn’t realized he’d sunk to his knees until Kayla wiped the rain from his eyes and hunched down in the tall wavy grass beside him.

  She looked so beautiful with her wet, tangled hair straggled around her face. Her cheeks were red from the cold, her eyebrows thin and perfectly arched over a set of sparkling blue eyes. Eyes full of concern.

  For him?

  “We have to keep going. We have to find the shelter. You can’t rest here.”

  She was yelling at him and tugging his arm. Lightning flashed and thunder rocked the ground. She cringed then looked around the meadow uneasily.

  “We’re here,” he mumbled.

  “Here? There’s nothing here, Taylor. Just grass!” she cried, throwing her hands up in the air with obvious frustration.

  Did she not see it?

  Perhaps the fever raging through him was causing him to see things that he wished? Had he imagined the cluster of white birch trees? Was the shelter even still standing? Perhaps previous windstorms had blown it over?

  He and Jarod had built it as solid as possible, but they hadn’t been this way for quite some time.

  She wiped more rain from his eyes, allowing him to see again.

  “Come on. Get up! We have to keep looking.” She pulled on his arm harder, but he shook his head.

  “Look,” he muttered, hoping she would hear him.

  With great effort, he lifted his arm and pointed again toward the shelter.

  “What is it?” she asked as she gazed around.

  “Home,” he replied. The sweetest word the Hero brothers had ever taught him. “It is home, sweet home.”

  * * * * *

  The guy had to be delusional. Home, sweet home? Out here? In the middle of nowhere? There was nothing but an empty field of swaying green grass and silver forks of lightning zip-zapping through the rain around them. There was no home.

  In the area where he pointed were so many trees. Huge, towering, white birch trees. Their green leaves literally shimmered in the violent wind, waving at her and Taylor to hurry on over. Then she spied an odd shadow. Wiping at the wetness blurring her eyesight, she squinted and shielded her eyes from the rain with her hands. The shadow looked like a silhouette. It blended so perfectly with the trees she doubted she would have seen it on her own.

  The cabin had been placed behind an alcove in the clearing, unseen from the river if anyone should pass. She led Taylor closer.

  Small, maybe twelve feet by twelve feet with a gently sloping roof, the cabin had been made from birch bark. All of it. The sides, the roof, even the large awnings covering the two tiny glassless windows at the front of the building. She’d never seen anything like it.

  From this angle she could see no door—perhaps it was on the other side of the building. Gazing at Taylor, she swallowed back a shard of fear at his glassy eyes, his pale face and the fact he was shaking pretty hard.

  In the back of her mind, she’d been trying to figure out how she’d get his fever under control without the use of antibiotics, and how to stitch that gash in his side without a sterile needle and thread before he bled to death.

  First though, she needed to get him the rest of the way to the cabin and out of this downpour. He was a big guy and leaned heavily on her as she guided him over the tangled, tall grass. But they made it and, as she shoved open the door, surprise washed through her at the coziness of the dwelling.

  The entire far wall consisted of wooden shelves made from birch saplings. On the shelves were several shoebox-sized containers with lids. They had been made from strips of dry, bright-yellow grass and were decorated with braids of pale-yellow grass, porcupine quills and small blue jay feathers.

  There were two cots, one against each side wall. The cots were also made of birch bark trees and the mattresses—if she could call them that—were woven straw. Just inside the door, on each side of the two windows, were several spears with very sharp, rock-like heads pounded into the tops. A stone fireplace had been built into one corner by the shelf.

  Over the black, dead coals hung a single, heavy-looking metal pail, probably cast iron. And there was lots of wood piled nearby—dry birch bark, kindling and large branches, all broken and stacked nicely.

  They had taken great pride and thought of every basic essential—except, unfortunately, matches. The lack of what she needed was quickly forgotten when Taylor leaned more heavily against her, almost making her lose her balance.

  “Whoa, big guy,” she soothed and they stumbled to one of the cots. “Hold on while I test if it’s strong enough.” With her free hand she reached down and found the straw on the bed amazingly secure.

  Taylor half fell, half stumbled onto it, his heavy weight making the straw crackle beneath his shivering body.

  Gosh, he really was a huge man. She visually inspected the rest of him for any other injuries. Thankfully she didn’t see any. At least not on his front.

  She winced as her gaze strayed to the raw, gaping slice in his side. Crimson oozed slowly from the clean cut. He winced as she poked and prodded around the wound. It wasn’t hard. That was a good sign.

  During her veterinarian studies, she’d seen lots of pictures of injuries—broken bones, bites and burns. She’d worked on wounded animals as a volunteer at a clinic on weekends, so wounds in general didn’t freak her out. But seeing a wide gash like this on a human made her a bit uneasy. If she didn’t get the bleeding to stop, she might have to cauterize, but she didn’t want to think about that yet.

  Okay, first she needed to clean the wound and with that came boiling water. She looked at the bucket, listened to the rain pelting the roof.

  Good. Water angle is covered.

  Grabbing the pail, she opened the door and let it sit beneath the rain for a few moments. After swirling the water in the pail, she dumped it out then left the container outside to collect the rain.

  Fire. She needed to start a fire.

  “God, please let there be matches,” she muttered as she crossed the room and began searching the boxes on the shelf. One contained a porcupine quill and what appeared to be thread, but she doubted it was. Other boxes contained herbs, probably for tea. There were boxes of dried fruit, seemingly preserved very well.

  She shivered as a blast of cool wind wound its way through the two open windows and breathed against her flesh.

  Fire. Heat. Where the fuck are the matches?

  Man, what she wouldn’t give to be in a five-star hotel right about now. Nice marble floors—heated, of course—so her bare feet would be nice and toasty instead of bloody well cold and aching.

  A soft moan erupted from Taylor and another round of anxiety ripped through her.

  “Oh and a massage,” she mumbled, hoping her voice would soothe him. “A nice rubdown of our sore muscles, right Taylor?”

  He was shivering, his teeth chattering. His eyes remained closed, but he was hugging his body as if searching for warmth.

  “You wouldn’t happen to remember if there are any workable matches so I can start a friggin’ fire, would you, Taylor?”

  Yeah right, like he would know.

  “Over…door.”

  She looked above the door frame and located a small box on yet another single shelf. Bingo…hopefully.

  “Of course. Silly old me. Why wouldn’t they be by the door?” she joked and headed back to the fireplace.

  God, they were
so damned lucky. Matches on Paradise. Was this some sort of parallel universe or something? Or had her brothers’ presence somehow already changed how the natives did things around here?

  Urgency to help Taylor made her get her ass in gear and, within a couple of minutes, orange flames greedily licked the birch bark and kindling she’d set in the hearth.

  Moments later, she knelt down beside Taylor, who now had his eyes open and gazed at her with a glazed look of pain. Sadness tangled within her as she tried to offer him an encouraging smile.

  “Spiders,” he mumbled, and then tight lines of pain appeared at the sides of his mouth. Already delirious. God, she wanted him to smile at her. Just once. Before he… No, he couldn’t die. She wouldn’t let him.

  She touched his forehead…clammy.

  Shit!

  “Spiders,” he whispered again as her shaky fingers fiddled with the string on his loincloth. She needed to get it off as the woven ferns looked wet and uncomfortable.

  His eyes were aimed at the ceiling. She glanced up at several fat, black creatures hanging in their god-awful webs. She shivered with revulsion. She hated spiders. Yuck! She’d have to find some way of cleaning them out…later.

  First, she needed to get off his… Her eyes widened as she lifted away the covering.

  Wow. He was big. She’d forgotten how big. Elevated scars and a web of veins lashed the length of his shaft.

  She blew out a breath. Tried to ignore the flashes of memory.

  Arousal, fevered heat, need. Her bending over in the river. Taylor grabbing her by the hips, his hot fingers clenching her flesh as he thrust into her vagina, filling her with his huge cock.

  Have mercy! It was getting warm in here.

  She grabbed blankets off the shelf. They’d been knitted out of…hair? Pulling the loincloth free from Taylor’s body, she tucked the warm blankets around him as best she could, leaving his wound fully exposed. Hair falling into a wound was not a good thing.

 

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