Confer, Lorelei - Deadly Deception (Siren Publishing Classic) Read online

Page 3


  “Come on. Move it!” He dragged her along. “I’ll be glad to get rid of you, that’s for sure. I never had one like you give me so damn much trouble.”

  She watched his eyes leave her face looking beyond her. The corners of his disgusting mouth turned up into a smile. “Well, look here, and right on ti…” he muttered, his hold on her arm relaxing but then retightened.

  He looked away from her while his hold loosened once again. When he didn’t turn to look back at her right away, she chanced a glance. She wanted to see what made him smile without drawing his attention. Keeping her head still, she moved her eyes to the side. A sleek, shiny black limousine made its way toward them.

  “Oh, shit,” Joe mumbled as he pulled her into nearby bushes at the entrance into the park.

  She looked up in time to see a police car pulling in at the curb right behind the limo. Joe stared back and forth between the limo and the cops. He slackened his hold on her arm a little more each time his attention lapsed until he had let go of her arm completely. He started to cross the street toward the limo.

  And then it happened. Joe wasn’t even halfway to the limo when it suddenly started to move. It moved ahead and turned the corner and left, the police car following close behind, leaving Joe left standing in the middle of the street, his hands held out to the sides.

  As soon as Joe left her side, Isabella saw her window of opportunity open, and expand. And she captured it.

  No way was she going to run to the cops for help. She had to depend on herself for survival. If her father had done that, he would probably still be alive today. There were just too many dirty cops, and she couldn’t trust any of them. Not anymore.

  She took off running for some woods on her right side. She ran, trying to be as quiet as possible so no one would hear her while hoping to get a good head start. It felt great to be running again, but because she had been lying around for so many days, her lungs and leg muscles soon began to burn, to cramp. She slowed down, slouched behind a tree, and took in big gulps of air while clutching at the stitch of pain in her side. She sank to the ground, listened for and heard the sounds of trampling brush behind her.

  She heard Joe hollering to Amanda. “She went ov’r here, this way. We hafta find the bitch before she gets away. Hurry up! Boss is gonna kill us if we lose her.”

  Isabella knew she had to run and keep on running in order to get away, no matter what. She didn’t know where she was or where she was going but she wasn’t going to let them catch her, not this time. She began running in the opposite direction of the sound of their voices, crawling and jumping, scrambling over and under fallen trees, shrubs, and bushes. Her shirt caught on a bush and ripped along the side, but she kept running. She fell, tearing her pants in the knees, but she didn’t care. She scrambled up and started running. Her lungs burned, and her side felt about to split. She was unable to take a deep breath. She kept running.

  Eventually she slowed her pace and listened to the sounds behind her. The sounds were farther away, but she could still hear twigs shattering under stomping feet.

  Exhaustion began to set into her tired, burning muscles. Her mouth pursed tightly as her tongue swept her dry mouth. She could barely swallow. She felt as if she had been running for hours.

  The sun began to set, casting ominous shadows through the tall trees. She didn’t want to have to spend the night in the woods. She would have to find somewhere to hide-soon.

  She reached down deep within herself for more strength, took a cleansing breath, and began running, this time setting a slower pace.

  She glanced up from the path and thought she saw a dim light. Tired, she thought her imagination was playing tricks on her. She slowed down and, wiping the sweat running down her face on her sleeve, drew in a couple of deep breaths. Again, she looked and the light remained—like a beacon in the night—the promise of civilization. She stumbled toward it.

  As she got closer, she saw the light coming from a long, narrow, horizontal window on the end wall of a huge house located in a large clearing. She searched the side away from the woods, found a door and turned the knob. Damn! Locked.

  She poked around in the grass surrounding the concrete pad outside the door for a key or a wire, hairpin, anything she could use to jimmy the lock. She picked up a thin sharp stick, jabbed it into the key hole, and jiggled it back and forth. Nothing! She pulled the broken stick out and retried the door. It wouldn’t budge. There has to be a way through this damn door!

  She ran her fingers along the doorjamb but only the knob protruded out. She looked behind her, running her shaking fingers through her hair. She patted herself across her chest, her back and front pockets of her pants, searching for anything, anything at all. She felt a poke in her underarm, thinking it a stick, she absentmindedly reached to pull it out and found the underwire of her very-worn bra sticking out. Voila! For once, it paid to have large boobs.

  She quickly pulled out the wire. She put the smaller end into the lock and jiggled it up, down, and around with both her hands. She felt something move. Saying a quick prayer, she turned the door knob and pushed. She fell forward into the house onto her bruised and bleeding elbows and knees.

  Ouch!

  She jumped up, closed the door softly, and locked the deadbolt, trying not to make any noise. She turned around, with her back to the door, and sank to the floor. While taking in big gulps of air, as quietly as possible, she listened for any sounds coming from inside the house. Her heart pounding in her ears was deafening. She wiped her brow with her torn sleeve and closed her eyes as she rested her head on her bent knees and tried to catch her breath.

  She didn’t want to disturb anyone, or announce an intruder. She especially didn’t want anyone calling the police for breaking and entering, not after what happened to her father. She didn’t know who she could or couldn’t trust, and until she did, she would be on her own. Who knew? Maybe the cops were involved in this somehow. She hoped the house was empty so she could hide from everyone until she could figure out on her own what to do next.

  Free at last, at least away from her so-called friend Amanda and her cohorts. A shudder ran through her as she thought of where she had been held, shaking her head, clearing it of the past lingering thoughts, she wondered when and how she would be able to pick up the pieces of her mangled life.

  Gazing around the room, Isabella saw a child’s bedroom with two single beds, some toys between them on the floor, and a dollhouse similar to the one she had played with as a child. Below the long window and between two beds sat a dresser with a lamp on top, which spread the light leading her to this house. She immediately turned off the lamp so no one else could see it from the woods as she had.

  She fell to her knees looking around for a place to hide. Lifting up the comforter, she looked under the beds, but they were boxed all the way to the floor. She looked around the room again. There wasn’t any closet, only one other door leading into the rest of the house. What idiot would build a big house like this without a closet in a bedroom?

  No, no place to hide in this room, not under either of the beds, not in the nonexistent closet, not behind any long drapes. Nowhere!

  She needed a safer place to hide. She jumped up, desperate, thinking about what to do, where to go. Looking around again at the meager furniture, she didn’t see anything that she could use to put in front of the door to buttress it from her pursuers. She lifted up one of the center ends of the curtains to take a swift peek out the window. Oh, no!

  Amanda stood along the darkening edge of the woods, in the shadows of the trees looking directly at her.

  Leaping away from the window, Isabella hoped Amanda hadn’t seen her. She turned, sprinted for the doorway heading into the huge dining room, looking for somewhere to hide. A closet, a hutch, or a buffet. I’m little enough to fit into a small area. There was no place to hide in there.

  She ran to the next room, the kitchen. She slid to a stop on one foot to one side of the room to what looked like a close
t but turned out to be a built-in china closet, the doors covered with fabric. A table sat in front of a wide window seat facing the woods. She went around to the other side of the table, but it was also a china closet. Both too small for me. Still nowhere to hide!

  She looked around the kitchen again, this time for a weapon of some kind. At least if there was someone in the house she could protect herself. She started rustling through drawers and opening cabinet doors when she finally found a knife rack in one of the drawers. Looks like a steak knife but it will have to do.

  She began to tremble. Her heart raced. Despair flooded her. Hopeless, she turned and proceeded through a large arched doorway, and skipped on one foot to a quick stop. To her immediate right stood a wide, open staircase that curved down and on the other side, another led up. She flew to the side with the stairs going down and stopped when she reached the bottom.

  The softly lit room was well furnished with a burgundy leather L-shaped couch, a recliner, and a large wooden trunk—used as a coffee table. Can I fit inside the trunk?

  Newspapers were strewn all over the couch. After a closer look, she saw bare feet sticking out from the bottom of a pair of jeans under the newspapers.

  Oh shit!

  She shook uncontrollably, her teeth chattered, and her palms grew sweaty as her heartbeat pounded loudly in her ears.

  The form lying under the papers moved. She choked, and started coughing.

  Chapter 5

  Wyatt had dozed off while reading the newspaper in the downstairs family room, exhausted from his last trip. When he heard the outside door to the playroom upstairs open, he became instantly alert.

  Kerthump! Thump. “Ouch, damn it!”

  What the hell? That door’s always locked!

  He wished he’d have turned on the alarm system he rarely used when he was home. Since he was so isolated by the three sides of the park, no one ventured out this way. If he’d had it on he might have missed this interruption from his afternoon nap.

  The hair on the back of his neck bristled as he concentrated on more sounds coming from upstairs. On first reflex, he reached for his gun usually strapped under his arm but found nothing. Then he remembered he had put it on the coffee table/trunk and reached out for it, feeling much more secure now.

  With his sense of hearing heightened, he lifted up the newspaper a fraction and peered out as he heard heavy breathing and footsteps running down the stairs.

  The intruder came to a quick stop in front of him. The petite young woman, with a heart-shaped face like an angel, had a body made for sin. The image of her in her dirty, tattered blue jeans and ripped shirt posed a ridiculous backdrop as she stood before him with a knife in her hand. The threatening pose failed when her body trembled. She froze in mid-breath when he moved the papers aside and sat up.

  He looked into her beautiful, liquid green eyes. Mystified, he felt like he could drown in them. She appeared real to him, but looked so nymph-like that he began to think he might be having a hallucination. He knew exhaustion could play tricks on the mind but...

  “Please, please help me!” she whispered. ‘They’re coming after me. They’re going to kill me. Help me, please. Please hide me.”

  Her voice jolted him back to reality. She was real. She could talk. He knew then she couldn’t be a figment of his imagination. He threw the paper aside and stood up. He observed her forlorn and frantic state, the desperate fear in her eyes and the knife she held. He immediately grasped reality.

  As if on cue, he heard shouting followed by loud banging on the front door.

  “What the hell?” he asked to no one in particular as he retrieved a remote control from on top of the trunk and entered some numbers.

  “Please, you have to hide me,” she pleaded as the banging on the door grew louder. “If they find me, they’ll kill me. Please, I’m begging you.”

  Each looked back and forth between the direction of the noise and each other, then glanced around the room, searching. Earlier in the day, Wyatt had opened the large glass sliding door on one wall to allow the warm fresh spring air into the room but had closed and locked the screen door. It would be their only protection for now.

  “I just activated the alarm system so if anyone enters any door or window the police will be here immediately,” Wyatt said to her in a calm voice.

  His professional training took over, and keeping them both safe became his main concern. He grabbed her arm, took the knife away in one swift movement and tossed it across the room onto his desk.

  He wanted to keep her out of sight in case anyone ventured to look in the large glass sliding door—he didn’t want her recognized until he could find out more about her. He wanted to protect her, to take care of her but he wasn’t sure why.

  He took her arms and began pushing her across the room into the corner behind the blinds. She protested at first, wriggling, trying to get away, and screaming, “Let me go,” but he quickly subdued her when he put a hand over her mouth and pushed his gun in the middle of her back.

  “I’ll remove my hand from your mouth if you swear you’ll be quiet.” Wyatt whispered close to her ear. “Don’t say a word. Just stay behind me. I’m trying to protect you.”

  He could smell her scent, feel her warmth, and hear her quick breathing. She nodded, and he removed his hand.

  “Now, stand close behind me and don’t make a sound. Not one sound,” he said as he held his fingers up in front of his mouth. “They’re coming along the side of the house.”

  Wyatt heard a man’s voice as if in a tunnel. “Where the hell is she?” He heard footsteps in the grass and stones outside the open sliding glass door. He held his breath, intent on listening to every sound, every noise, and every reverberation.

  “We have to find her—she’s worth too much money to let her go now.” The man’s voice had turned into a loud yell.

  As the sounds of sirens blasted in the distance, Wyatt turned his head to see two people running across the backyard. Wyatt watched them, as they wasted no time, scampering across the yard, into the woods and into the darkening night.

  He closed and locked the sliding door, put his gun in his desk drawer, and made a quick phone call. He turned to her, realizing she hadn’t moved an inch from where he had put her. “You’re safe now,” he said as he walked closer to her. “It’s okay. I’ll protect you.”

  He saw her trembling as he reached out to her and pulled her up against his body to help her feel safe. Desire surged through him. Raw. Direct. He smiled and winked at her. Both could scarcely breathe as time stood still. The only sound was the beating of their hearts, their labored breathing.

  Her short dark hair feathered against her fair skin, which made her eyes appear even larger. Dried blood from the bruise at the corner of her mouth riled him to his guts. He left her alone for a moment; returned with a warm, wet washcloth; and handed it to her. “Here, hold this on your mouth. It will help.”

  He looked into her bright, terror-stricken eyes, at her soft lips. He thought about how much he wanted to kiss away her pain. Something about this woman brought out his protective instincts.

  He sat down a short distance from her on one end of the couch, watching as she held the warm, wet cloth against her lip, softening the dried blood. He almost relaxed until he saw her body shaking, tears streaming down her cheeks. When her eyes darted around the room, first toward one doorway, and then to the stairway, then back again, looking for a way out, he tensed. He had seen the same look many times during his years of interrogation experience. She was going to bolt.

  Chapter 6

  Another few minutes passed before the man broke the strained silence. “Why don’t you sit down, take a couple deep breaths, and get your bearings? The alarm system’s activated now, so you’re completely safe with me. And when you’re ready to talk, I’m ready to listen. I just might be able to help you.” Exasperating minutes passed by before his deep voice disrupted the silence again. “My name’s Wyatt. Wyatt Bowman. What’s yours?”


  Isabella tried to control her trembling lips, and slow down her breathing to normal. Confusion joined the fear and anxiety from her flight through the woods. Snared again, but this time with a stranger whom she had some kind of attraction to and no idea if he was friend or foe. She looked toward the doorway wondering if she could escape his reach and make it out the door before he caught her.

  Where would she go if she did get away? Joe or Amanda could be waiting right outside the locked door for her. Joe would kill her. She had no reason to doubt his threats, especially now, after she had defied him. She didn’t know whom to trust.

  She remembered Wyatt’s gun and the familiar way he handled it. Was he a cop? The mere thought sent a shiver through her.

  Drained of physical endurance, her brain fatigued from the mental challenges facing her, she couldn’t afford to be stupid now.

  She took a couple small steps backward until her legs were touching the couch and sat down on the end far away from him, all the while watching him. His sharp, don’t-miss-anything eyes drilled into her the entire time. She didn’t have to tell him everything or even anything at all.

  He leaned forward, resting his arms on his knees with his hands clenched together between them.

  She moved farther away from him.

  “Well, tell me what’s going on so I can help you.”

  He looked at her, brows raised, as if waiting for an answer. She glanced down at her fingers, her shoulders sank, her head dropped forward as wave after wave of sobs tore through her from the deluge of memories, turbulence, and apprehension.

  She looked at him, trying to form words, her mouth moving but no words coming out. When she met his eyes, she lost all her thoughts. Her lips quivered, she started breathing rapidly, and her heart pounded. She was afraid to trust him, afraid she couldn’t handle the consequences.

  Chapter 7

  Wyatt waited for a response with patience, one of the things he did best. “Just take a minute and collect yourself. I’m sure whoever’s after you is long gone by now. They probably have warrants out on them, so they aren’t going to stick around.”