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The Academy (The Academy Saga Book 1)

Page 14

by CJ Daly


  earlier; I’d been so repulsed. Funny . . . I didn’t feel that way now. Maybe it

  was because I was so angry there wasn’t room for any other emotion. In fact,

  I was so mad, I wasn’t even afraid anymore. If I was going down, then I was

  going down in flames!

  Straightening my back, I locked eyes with Ranger. “If you don’t unhand

  me and take me home right now, my father’s gonna hunt you down and shoot

  you between the eyes with his shotgun!” He looked more amused than fazed,

  so I continued with my false bravado threat. “And he’s ex-military . . . so his

  aim’s a little better than average.”

  A blast of laugh erupted all over my front while an amused chuckle tickled

  my back. This time my glare was evenly divided between the two abductors.

  “I wouldn’t laugh if I were y’all.”

  “Ooooh!” Ranger pantomimed a shiver of fear. “Did you hear that, Pete?

  Ex-military! . . . Maybe that’s where she learned her hand-to-hand combat

  skills?”

  “Maybe,” Pete allowed, looking at me with a cross between humor and

  respect. “If that’s the case, we should be afraid . . . very afraid.”

  I held back a childish urge to stick my tongue out at both of them. Was

  sure it wouldn’t help my case, and I needed to get home sixty-six minutes ago.

  “Well, if my father doesn’t shoot you, he certainly will me if I don’t get home soon—I’m out way past my curfew. So can you please take me back now?”

  “What if we’re not done with you yet?” The same loaded question Ranger

  used at the diner came with the same side of ice-chip eyes tonight.

  • 82 •

  A chill ran down my spine. “Well if it’s a ransom you’re after, you’re barkin’ up the wrong tree—we ain’t got nothin’ to give you!” I delivered this

  in my sassiest tone.

  Ranger appeared to X-ray me with his eyes. “I’m sure we could think of

  something.”

  I lowered my eyes back to my lap. “Can I please have my hand back?”

  “Ohhh—you’re all manners when you want something,” he mocked.

  After a brief, bruising squeeze, he released me.

  I went about quickly retying my bows, but between my haste and trembley

  fingers, it was like I had mittens on.

  “Here, allow me . . .” Pete set me between his legs, his capable fingers

  making short work of both ties. I was very conscious of his feathery touch,

  running from the nape of my neck to the bottom of my back. Something I’d

  never felt before shivered through me.

  “You alright?” Pete asked.

  Gah! Mortifying! Hopefully, he thought I was going into shock.

  I nodded and gave a little dry cough to clear my throat. “Just thirsty. Can

  I please have some water?”

  “See what I mean?” Ranger indicated me with his palm. “All manners

  when she wants something.” Pete ignored him to reach behind the seat, but

  Ranger intervened. “Allow me. You keep a hold on her—don’t want her to

  bash us over the head with a water bottle.”

  Pete shook his head but moved aside. A moment later, Ranger’s hand

  reemerged with a very solid-looking bottle in it. I could see how it could be

  used as a weapon because it was made from glass instead of plastic. I also

  noticed it had weird numbers on the label instead of a name brand.

  Should I be worried? I was so thirsty I could’ve drained the radiator.

  Besides, if they were going to kill me, I doubted poison would be the way.

  Eagerly, I held out my hands to accept the mystery liquid.

  “Thirsty?” Ranger taunted. “You know what? . . . I am, too. You made

  me run pretty far and hard tonight.” A slow twist on the cap, and a hiss and

  wisp of steam escaped. Lifting the bottle in a mock toast, he proceeded to

  greedily gulp it down until there was just a swallow or two left. He offered it

  to me. “Hope you don’t mind a little of my backwash.”

  Tears stung my eyes again. Why’s he being so mean? What exactly is my

  crime? Existing? Not wanting to give Ranger the satisfaction of a breakdown, I averted my face to the window.

  Another low hiss escaped, this one from Pete. “You’re such an ass!” He

  • 83 •

  flung the door wide, spilling us both out onto the gravel. I would’ve fallen had he not grabbed me first.

  “What’d you call me?” Ranger challenged.

  Pete stuck his head back in. “You heard me.”

  “Are you forgetting protocol already?”

  “Are you?” Pete sniped back. “I don’t think your behavior tonight could

  exactly be called protocol.”

  They continued arguing back-and-forth. I wasn’t sure what was going

  on, but this was usually the part in the movies where the heroine sneaks off

  while the villains are busy fighting amongst themselves. I thought about it,

  wondering if I would get away with it since I knew our location. But I quickly

  dismissed the idea as likely to get me into more trouble—the way my luck was

  going tonight, I’d be eaten by coyotes the first fifteen minutes.

  Finally, it appeared the two alpha males had reached a stalemate. “What?”

  Ranger threw his arms out. “I knew there was more.”

  Pete flipped up the backseat, coming away with another bottle. With a

  little pop and fizz, he unceremoniously twisted off the cap and handed it over

  to me. I snatched at the bottle and began quenching my raging thirst. Pete

  stood watching me with unreadable eyes as I gulped, gulped, gulped at the

  water gracelessly. Mmmmmm! Water had never tasted so good. About halfway

  finished, I noted to myself it was rude not to share.

  “Would you like some?” I offered with a wobbly smile. Self-consciousness

  trembled the bottle in my hand.

  Pete regarded me for a drawn-out moment. “I’m fine, but you should

  continue drinking—you were likely on your way to dehydration.”

  “I hate to break up this special moment,” Ranger cut in from the front,

  “but I’m rather tired of the country life. And we better get Little Annie Oakley

  home before her father tries to gun us down in the street.”

  Pete grabbed my purse from the backseat and tossed it to me. “It is time

  to get you home,” he agreed. “But first, call your father and let him know

  you’re all right.”

  I clutched my mother’s purse to my chest, looking up at Pete with grateful

  eyes. “Thanks for savin’ it.”

  An exaggerated ahem sounded from the front seat. “Actually, you have me to thank for that one, Glasses.” Ranger picked up something from the console

  and dangled it between his forefinger and thumb. “But your signature glasses

  didn’t fare so well, I’m afraid. Probably for the best . . . I don’t think they

  really did much for you.”

  • 84 •

  Pete looked up from wiping a blood smear off his face with the hem of his shirt. “What the hell’s wrong with you, man?”

  “What’s wrong with me is I’m out here in the middle of Kill-Me-I’m-So-

  Bored-Nowhere with a cut lip and a throbbing shin, compliments of your

  country bimbo over there!” Ranger daggered a finger at me.

  How dare he! I was mad enough to go toe to toe with him again. I’d surely

  lose, and brutally so, but if I managed to get in a couple of shots, it’d be well

 
; worth it. I lunged forward while “I’m not a bimbo!” shrieked out of me.

  Pete grasped me around the waist.

  “If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck . . . then it’s a goddamned

  duck!” Ranger seemed unaccountably angry, capable of anything. I was

  secretly glad Pete was holding me back, because not only was Ranger huge,

  he was also deranged.

  “Can’t you just take me home? . . . I only live a ways down the road,” I

  confessed.

  “We will,” Pete said evenly, “after you’ve called home to explain you had

  car trouble tonight, and that’s the reason you’re tardy. That will buy us some

  time to get you cleaned up. If we take you home in this condition, we’ll have

  the Texas Rangers after us.”

  That actually sounded like a good plan because my father already knew

  my car wasn’t doing well. And two strange guys driving me home, scratched

  up and disheveled in this outfit, would likely get us all shot. I stiffly nodded

  my head and waited for an offered phone, but Pete didn’t volunteer his.

  Instead, he busied himself with a metal first-aid kit, rummaging through

  extracting contents as expertly as a surgical nurse.

  At the point he began unrolling medical tape and tearing it smoothly

  with the edge of his teeth, he looked up, suddenly aware I was staring dumbly

  at him and not in the process of making a phone call. I colored hotly then

  made an expression as if to convey that I was merely waiting for a proffered

  phone. In truth, I was momentarily so mesmerized by his deft movements

  and sensuous mouth that I totally forgot what the plan was for a few seconds.

  A look of annoyance crossed his face. He sighed and dropped the kit with

  a clunk to hand me my woven bag again. “Aren’t you going to call?”

  “Uhh . . .”

  Ranger gave a short, humorless laugh. “Dude, you can be so clueless. She

  doesn’t have a cell phone.”

  “Oh.” Pete looked back at my pink face, a little stunned. “I guess that

  makes sense now,” he said more to himself than anyone else.

  I was still waiting for one of these goons to whip out one of theirs, when

  • 85 •

  I noticed them exchange loaded glances. “I know . . .” I said, trying to tamp down my sarcasm. “How about I just borrow one of yours?”

  This caused two self-assured, well-spoken guys to splutter and mumble

  out two different excuses simultaneously. It would have been gratifying to

  see these two falter so spectacularly, but the news they were delivering didn’t

  exactly tickle my funny bone. According to Pete, we couldn’t use his phone

  because it was out of battery power. And from Ranger, well, he’d lost his

  during the frantic chase down the alley.

  I was feeling dubious on both accounts.

  First of all, two guys in a Hummer loaded with well-stocked coolers and

  first-aid kits weren’t likely to run out the door without their phone chargers.

  They were more prepared than Eagle Scouts on steroids. Even Ashley-Leigh

  managed to keep hers handy, and she was no Girl Scout. Secondly, I highly

  doubted Ranger’s story, because if he bothered to stoop down in the dirt to

  retrieve my broken glasses and battered handbag, then he sure as heck would

  go back for his own cell phone.

  They were selling it, but I wasn’t buying it. Plus, my gut told me they

  were both lying through their perfect pearly whites. And Mama always told

  me to trust my gut. And I always trusted my mama. I harrrrumphed a little

  under my breath, crossing my arms. I couldn’t exactly call them out on their

  lies though, could I? I was still miserably at their mercy.

  My eyes flicked back and forth between two sets of guilty eyes. “Well

  that’s inconvenient,” I said.

  Ranger narrowed his eyes at me. “Let’s see here: no cell phone, water,

  Band-Aids, or mace . . . You weren’t exactly prepared tonight, were you,

  Glasses?”

  Loathe as I was to admit it, he had a point. Having no comeback, I

  relegated myself to glaring at him. Pete intervened again before our glaring

  contest escalated into all out war. He swiftly scooped me up and set me down

  on the seat facing the open door. His beautiful, battered face was all I could

  see now as he got to work.

  “Actually,” he said, applying a thin layer of cream to my knee, “we should

  drive back to town to call anyway. I need to hit a pharmacy to get some Arnica

  for the swelling on my face.” I suddenly had trouble swallowing. “And you can

  use the bathroom to clean up. I’m also quite sure you can use the phone there.”

  “Sounds like a plan.” Ranger started up the Hummer with an abrupt roar.

  “Fine.” I snatched the tape from Pete’s hand to finish dressing my own

  wound.

  “See? She’s back to being feisty when she doesn’t get her way,” Ranger said.

  • 86 •

  Pete just shook his head like he was put out with both of us. While I scrambled into the backseat, he took his rightful place in front. Then, cracking

  a plastic bag back and forth with quick precise movements, he laid it over

  his eye. After a jolting plunge into a ditch to turn around, Pete removed the

  icepack long enough to address me while I went sliding around the backseat.

  “Better buckle up,” he advised.

  I felt terrible about his face but stubbornly refused to apologize. Instead,

  I complied quietly, and we headed back to town, speeding along faster than

  was healthy on blind country roads. Nobody seemed to be in the mood to

  talk again. Gravel pinging the bumper and some clanging going on in the

  back were the only sounds. Ranger turned on the radio, and I half expected

  to hear an Amber alert put out on me already.

  A long, weary sigh escaped me. I would’ve been home by now if it hadn’t

  been for these two accosting me and dragging me off against my wil . Then

  another voice came unbidden to say , I might not be here at all if it wasn’t for these two.

  Confused and exhausted I slumped in the backseat, eyes half closed. A

  blinking red light coming from the console caught my attention. Cel phone?

  If the light was still blinking, then surely it had enough battery power to make

  one little phone call. I was just leaning forward to snatch the phone when a

  ninja hand clamped down on mine, forcing me to drop it. Stunned, I looked

  up to see Pete staring me down from behind his icepack.

  “I told you—the battery’s dead.”

  I didn’t respond because we both knew he was lying.

  “She’s stubborn and stupid—a deadly combination in a female if I’ve ever

  seen one,” Ranger commented mildly.

  I glared at Ranger and scowled at Pete before sinking back into my seat.

  I noted the contours of his cell didn’t fit with the typical models, and there

  was a long antenna attached to the end like walkie-talkies had. Weird. And

  w hat’s with all that equipment banging around in the back? I turned around in my seat to poke around. Metal detectors?

  “Searchin’ for treasure?” I probed.

  The two cohorts exchanged looks again. Pete turned around long enough

  to quirk his lips at me. Fascinating. His mouth was a marvel.

  “You could say that,” he replied shortly, facing forward again.r />
  “Well, good luck with that—you’re not likely gonna find anything out

  here but a bunch of cowpatties and some tumbleweeds.”

  This elicited edgy laughter from the driver’s seat. “You just said a mouthful,

  Glasses.”

  • 87 •

  I leaned forward again. “So what are y’all lookin’ for?”

  Pete sighed and turned back around. “We’re interested in finding Indian

  arrowheads. Heard there were still a few out here in this area.”

  “Indian arrowheads?” The boys had a few of those lying around. “Why?

  Are they valuable?” And why is he lying?

  Ranger’s eyes cut to mine in the rearview mirror. “As a matter of fact, we

  heard the Indian artifacts out here can be quite valuable.” He said this in a weird, cryptic way.

  “Are y’all like doin’ this for a college class or somethin’?”

  Crickets.

  “Something like that,” Pete finally answered.

  “Then I’m sure y’all are both aware that Indian arrowheads are made out

  of stone . . . so therefore, metal detectors can’t detect them.”

  Ranger huffed out some kind of weird, aggravated noise.

  Pete re-removed the icepack. “But they can detect flint.”

  “Flint is stone,” I countered.

  He pursed his lips at me. Looked like he was about to shovel more bull-

  hockey down my throat when Ranger intervened.

  “Pipe down back there!” He turned the radio up over my next question.

  “I need to concentrate, so I don’t get sucked into one of these potholes you all

  have littering the roads like landmines.”

  I huffed out my own aggravation. I still needed answers, but they weren’t

  talking. So I would wait, biding my time and biting my tongue for now.

  • 88 •

  9

  LEFT BEHIND

  When we screeched to a halt outside a twenty-four hour pharmacy,

  I was relieved for a lot of reasons. For one, I was freezing. It felt

  like the temperature had dramatically dropped by thirty degrees.

  And not just because the air conditioner was blasting through my non-shirt.

  No. The whole atmosphere in the car had changed. Ranger’s previous heat

  had dissipated. In its place was an icy indifference made plain to me by the

  way his eyes went glacier cold when he so much as glanced my way in the

  rearview mirror. And there was a new coolness coming from Pete that wasn’t

 

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