Book Read Free

Old Wounds: (A Havenwood Falls Novella)

Page 3

by Susan Burdorf


  Sherry leaned forward until she bumped her head on the steering wheel and tried not to cry. Not now, she thought, biting her lip to control her frustration. She turned the key, hoping the car was just being its usual temperamental self, but not surprised when the loud click told her her worst fears had come true. The car was momentarily toast.

  “Great, just great,” she said, trying to remain calm. The sky was full dark now, adding to her unease at being alone. The road was bordered on both sides by thick forest, and she hadn’t passed, or been passed by, a single vehicle since losing sight of the Havenwood Falls bus.

  Reaching for her cell phone, she groaned when she saw there was no reception here. She couldn’t even call for a tow or a ride. She didn’t think they would have Uber out here in the sticks, but she’d never know since she couldn’t use her phone. In this age of technology crowding into every corner of the world, how could this place not have reception? Perhaps the mountains were disrupting the signal because not even a single bar was lit.

  “That figures,” she said bitterly, tears threatening to fall. She sniffed. Closing her eyes, she leaned back in her seat. Now what? I suppose I can walk to the town. It’s only around six miles. I used to do that in the city all the time. But at least in the city I had sidewalks, interesting things to look at on the way, and it’s a concrete jungle, not a forest with wild animals or worse waiting to jump out at me.

  She breathed in and out slowly a few times, gathering her thoughts and considering her options. Since the traffic was nonexistent, there was no rescue coming from that direction. Maybe if she walked a bit farther down the road, the forest would thin out, and she could find a place to make a call. That would have to do. She felt better already, having a plan in mind.

  Then she remembered the flimsy shoes she had on, and she groaned again. She would never be able to walk half a mile in those shoes, let alone six if she had to walk the whole distance to town. She thought back to what she’d packed and shook her head at her foolishness. She hadn’t packed any extra shoes at all, not even a pair of flip flops. She’d been in such a hurry, she didn’t remember even packing extra underwear.

  “Stupid, stupid,” she cursed out loud.

  After a couple minutes of swearing at herself, she took a deep breath. Trying the key in the ignition one last time, she wasn’t surprised when it didn’t work, but she hit the steering wheel anyway, ignoring the sting of pain.

  Darkness had now completely taken over, the last rays of sunlight disappearing behind the mountain peaks. She shivered in the chilly air. If she stayed where she was, waiting for a car that may or may not pass, she might freeze to death. Best to start moving and do it soon.

  Opening her car door, she stepped out and shivered again as a blast of cold air struck her through the thin blouse. She walked to the back of the car and opened the trunk.

  Reaching in, she pulled the suitcase to her and nearly jumped for joy when she found a sweatshirt, which she immediately threw on over her blouse. The only thing that would have made her happier would have been to find a better pair of shoes for walking, but unfortunately, she didn’t find a single pair.

  She debated taking the suitcase with her, but decided it would be too hard to walk and drag the case behind her even though it had wheels. Surely the town would have a store where she could purchase clothes and shoes? And she’d be back with the tow truck soon, so stay it would.

  Decision made, she zipped the case back up and closed the trunk. Slapping her hands together, she was surprised at how the sound comforted her. She hadn’t realized until just now how alone she was out here on this road. She listened to the sounds of the night around her. From the trees on either side, she heard creatures stirring in the underbrush. She shivered, wondering what creatures were going about their night hunts.

  In the distance, an owl hooted softly, followed by the sound of wings as the bird took flight. At least, she hoped it was the owl. She shook her head and grinned wryly at her overactive imagination. Honestly, what did she expect to find in the woods—a ghost, or vampires, or werewolves? She cursed those late night horror flicks she’d watched as a child for giving her the idea that creatures lurked around every corner or behind every tree.

  Overhead, the stars that dotted the night sky gave off a faint light. The moon, what she called a fingernail moon, was still low enough in the sky that its sliver of silver gave off little more than a glow, but clouds were gathering overhead, and she wasn’t sure how much longer she would have that limited light.

  Sherry opened the door to the passenger side, grabbed her purse, and pulled it over her shoulder. She then opened the glove box and rifled through the papers and other items until she finally found the flashlight she knew was there. She found a pack of cigarettes and a lighter shoved in the back of the glove box and frowned. Brad must have hidden them in there, although he’d told her he quit. Just one more lie to tally against him. How stupid of him to hide them in her car. While this was a small transgression on his part compared to what had driven her to this deserted stretch of road, it was still a mark in the glad-I-am-not-with-him-anymore column.

  She pulled the flashlight out, but threw the cigarettes back inside. Turning on the flashlight, she sighed in relief when its silver beam shot out. She’d been half afraid, the way her luck was running tonight, that the flashlight would be dead. On this darkened road, with who knew what kinds of creatures lurking about, she didn’t want to have to walk by starlight alone.

  “Okay, girl,” she spoke to the night air in an effort to keep herself from being afraid, “no time like the present to get moving.”

  Straightening her shoulders and shining the light in front of her, Sherry started walking, hoping the next six miles would pass quickly. Keeping her eyes on the road, she ignored the feeling of night creatures watching her. Her heels, totally inappropriate for walking, clicked loudly on the asphalt. She hunched her shoulders inside her sweatshirt and quickened her pace, trying to keep herself warm. The night air had dropped at least ten degrees since she’d left the warmth of the vehicle, and she knew it was only going to grow colder as the clouds gathered in the sky, intermittently blocking the moon and stars.

  As she walked, she tried to think what she would do once she reached the cabin, if she made it to the cabin, she corrected herself. If her luck didn’t turn, who knew if she would make it to the refuge of the cabin before the next day? Hopefully the car was repairable, and she could be on her way quickly.

  She focused on the walk, ignoring the rustling of the leaves and sigh of wind through the trees, and the sounds of soft padded footsteps.

  Wait. Footsteps?

  She whirled around, flashlight beam pointed behind and around her in a wild arc as she tried to identify the source of the sounds she’d heard. There. She pointed the flashlight in the direction of the sound and thought she caught the flash of something red in the beam.

  But the closer she walked toward the shoulder of the road that rimmed the edge of the forest, the more she thought she was just being ridiculous.

  “Come on, girl,” she chided herself as she walked slowly forward, toward the thick brush and tree line at the shoulder’s graveled edge, “don’t make trouble for yourself. There’s nothing there. Even if there were, it was probably just a raccoon or something like that. There couldn’t possibly be anything more dangerous out here. Oh Lord,” she whispered as she turned back toward the road, “if you get me out of this alive, I promise to stop making fun of those church shows on TV.”

  The only answer to her prayer was a gust that chilled her to the bones. Was that agreement? Or just the cold night air reminding her she was alone on a dark and nearly deserted road? She narrowed her eyes as her flashlight caught the glint of something silver in the brush lining the road. She pointed the beam where she’d seen the flash of silver but saw nothing else. Shivering, she tugged the sweatshirt tighter around her body as she backed away from the edge of the road.

  She straightened her shoulde
rs, turned herself in the direction the sign had indicated for Havenwood Falls, and walked into the fog that now covered the road in front of her.

  Chapter 4

  Rusty watched her go, a strange tingling singing in his blood. She wasn’t remarkably beautiful, but in the sudden patch of moonlight that had fallen on her before she turned away from where he was hiding, she’d looked ethereal. Haunting. Ghostly, almost. A woman, he knew immediately, with steel in her blood.

  A woman he wanted to know more about.

  He followed her, carefully picking his way among the underbrush as he kept hidden while paralleling her path. There was something about her that drew him. Obviously, she was human—he scented only her light flowery perfume. Jasmine, he thought. There wasn’t a hint of anything supernatural about her, and yet . . . and yet there was something drawing him to her and her to the town.

  He had thought for just a moment that she’d spotted him. The way she’d walked toward the forest’s edge as if she sought something, perhaps him, had him holding his breath until she hesitated and moved back and then down the road.

  Her car must have been the one he’d heard earlier. He watched as she headed toward town. If she intended to walk the six miles, he would have to follow her the whole way. There were creatures in the woods tonight, creatures that she shouldn’t come across. Her disappearance might be hard to explain.

  He padded softly ahead of her, making sure nothing crossed her path. Most of the forest creatures, sensing his presence, had already gone to ground, but it wasn’t the usual beasts he worried about. It was the unusual. The kind the town might have a hard time explaining if something happened to her.

  He sent out a silent prayer that no one but him would be out tonight. He hadn’t sensed anyone, but one never knew who might decide this was a good time to go out and about in the woods on their way to a feeding or other assignation. Sometimes the high school shifter kids were brought out here for lessons on their crafts and legacies. He hadn’t seen any of the witches, vampires, other shifters, or their children out in the woods in quite a while, but that meant nothing.

  So lost in thought was he that he missed when the woman he followed stopped in the road. She was adjusting a shoe that seemed to have come loose. He grinned, noting that her shoes were definitely not the kind you wore for a long walk, and wondered why she hadn’t changed them when she’d put on her sweatshirt.

  Watching the moon’s shadow as it disappeared behind the gathering clouds, Rusty silently cursed. Lifting his nose, he whimpered slightly at the change in the smell of the wind. The storm was not far off now.

  This woman had better hurry, or she would be on the road when the bad weather hit. The wind smelled of cold air and bitter snow. This was not going to be a quick storm. He had a feeling it would hit hard when it came.

  He watched the woman shiver. Maybe she felt the storm coming, too? She looked up, and a few seconds later, she began walking again, this time a little quicker.

  Without realizing he was doing it, he quickened his steps to keep close to her and stepped on a branch. The crack of the broken twig reverberated through the woods like a gunshot, and the woman whirled around, the flashlight’s beam brushing over the top of the bush under which he had taken shelter.

  He narrowed his eyes until they were nearly closed to keep their gleam from lighting when the flashlight crossed over and around the bush. The woman did not move any closer, but he could tell she was nervous by the way she kept jabbing the beam of light here and there in a scattershot attempt to see if anything was there.

  He crouched down, barely breathing, opening his eyes just a slit to see when she moved on. As she moved away, her scent grew fainter and he found himself increasing his movements to match hers.

  After a few moments of pacing closer and then away from the forest’s edge, the woman began walking toward town again, this time faster than before. He cursed himself for his carelessness. The last thing he wanted to do was alarm her.

  He sped up to keep pace with her, bounding over fallen logs and landing soft-footed on the path. This went on for at least a mile before the woman slowed. Her exhaustion was showing. He wished he could change back, reassure her she was doing the right thing in heading into town, but if she was afraid of an invisible creature in the dark, he was certain his naked form would scare her even more, and he had no clothes hidden in this part of the woods to change into if he shifted back to his human shape.

  No, he would have to continue to watch her, at least until he could change to more suitable attire than his birthday suit to greet her.

  He observed her as she walked. She was cautious, glancing left and right as she kept up a pace that might have exhausted others, but seemed to keep her invigorated. He grinned in spite of himself. She was feisty, he would give her that.

  It was obvious she was afraid, but she wasn’t giving in to it. Other women in her situation might have cried or carried on, or made comments about their plight, but she never uttered a word. She kept moving at a pace that would require a predator to reveal themselves, in shoes that were most likely uncomfortable in the office, and on this surface, must be killing her.

  He chuckled, which in his wolf form came out more as a thin growl, as she stopped to check her shoe. She jerked her head up when a long thin howl caused her to freeze.

  Drat! Rusty thought, whipping his head around. Who is out here in the woods playing games? He didn’t recognize the howl or the one that answered it. His first duty was to the forest, but he knew, looking over at the woman who was frozen in place, that he couldn’t abandon her, either.

  Had someone seen her? Was someone going to cause her harm? Not in his woods. But where had that sound come from? He raised his head above the underbrush, instinct to protect the forest overcoming his need for secrecy, and sniffed. He moved onto the road to get a clear view of the forest and down the road, forgetting momentarily that she was also in the road and now had a clear view of him.

  Nothing. He couldn’t smell a thing out of the ordinary. The rich loam of the forest filled his nostrils, mixed with vegetation, the faint odors of animals, and the girl’s strong flowery scent.

  The scream from behind shocked him.

  He whirled around, his teeth bared, ready for battle to defend his property, when the beam of light struck him in the face. The girl screamed again and threw the flashlight in his direction, hitting him on the edge of his nose.

  He howled in pain. The most sensitive part of his body was his nose after all, and her aim had been perfect. He howled again, and she screamed, then ran for the edge of the forest and disappeared into the thick brush.

  He heard her screaming as she crashed through the vegetation at a speed not safe for the darkness of the night, and he cursed silently.

  By the Moon! He howled. Instead of running into the woods, why didn’t she keep running down the road? And why did she throw her flashlight instead of keeping it? Foolish, foolish, foolish.

  Even as he thought it, he was giving chase. Just as he rounded a large boulder, he found her on the faint path made by deer crossing the valley. The trail was barely more than a thin ribbon of dirt bordering the side of a hill, but the human girl stood in it, pointing a large stick at him. On one side of her was a rise of land that came up to her shoulders; on the other was air as the land dropped off into a small tree- and rock-lined trench. In rainy weather, there was a stream that rushed through that trench, but right now there was nothing but debris in it. He’d crossed it earlier in his nightly rounds.

  “Stay back, you beast,” she threatened, stabbing at him with the stick for emphasis. “I might be little, but I know how to use this.”

  He chuckled again at the sight of the disheveled woman standing before him, holding the stick for all the world as if it would stop him.

  She blanched at the sound of his chuckle, which to her ears must sound like a growl, and he saw the stick falter.

  He wasn’t sure what to do now. If he advanced toward her, he w
as pretty sure one of two things would happen. She would either stab him, or she would faint. Neither was an appealing prospect.

  He decided the best course of action was to slowly back away, pretend his wolf pride hadn’t been hurt by this little slip of a trembling woman with the big stick, and continue to follow her until she arrived safely in town. He could find out who the transgressing wolf was later on. His priority was her safety.

  He realized suddenly that even if the first priority wasn’t to ensure her safety, that was what he would do. The townhad wanted her here—he was certain of it. He didn’t know why, but Havenwood Falls periodically drew people in for reasons of its own.

  He started backing up, his soft brown eyes meeting her terrified blue ones, and for just an instant, he saw a reaction in them that wasn’t fear, but rather something indefinable like recognition. He felt the same flash of familiarity as if he knew her. But how could he? Where would he have met her before?

  His heart pounded being this close to her. He was overpowered by her scent masked by her fear. He felt he knew her on a level that went beyond mere sight. She was his. His paw stopped mid-step. That was it. She was his.

  This was his mate?

  This was the woman he’d been waiting for?

  A human?

  How was this possible? Yes, he’d asked the moon goddess for his mate, but . . . her?

  Overhead, a crack of thunder sounded as if to agree with his realization. Then the rain came, cold, wet, and full of the promise of thicker moisture later. The girl, startled by the sudden onslaught, slipped.

  With a delicate Oh of surprise, she disappeared over the side of the trail.

  Rusty stared in shock for just a second, then bounded to the edge she’d fallen over.

  She was nowhere to be seen.

  The storm had swallowed her.

  Chapter 5

 

‹ Prev