Caged

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Authors: Carolyn Faulkner

 

Caged

 

By

 

Carolyn Faulkner

 

 

©2015 by Blushing Books® and Carolyn Faulkner

 

 

 

 

 

All rights reserved.

 

No part of the book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

 

Published by Blushing Books®,

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The trademark Blushing Books®

is registered in the US Patent and Trademark Office.

 

Faulkner, Carolyn

Caged

 

eBook ISBN:
978-1-62750-940-4

Cover Design by ABCD Graphics & Design

 

This book is intended for
adults only
. Spanking and other sexual activities represented in this book are fantasies only, intended for adults. Nothing in this book should be interpreted as Blushing Books' or the Author's advocating any non-consensual spanking activity or the spanking of minors.

 

 

 

Chapter One

 

1885-West Texas

 

“Rufus!  Shut up!”

Why the dog was setting up such a clatter ever since she’d let him out this morning she’d never know.  He wasn’t usually like that.  Rachel had always thought he had a better, more level head on his shoulders than most of the men she’d ever met.

She set about gathering the eggs first thing, as always, finding comfort in her routine, then headed into the makeshift barn where Cleopatra the cow and Sissy—short for Sisyphus—the old, prone to lameness gelding were waiting to be fed and milked, not necessarily in that order, while Rufus stood outside the barn barking.

That should have been a warning to her, but she’d grown inured to his ruckus.

No sooner had she stepped foot into the small enclosure then she found herself flat on her back, the delicate contents of her basket cracking and rolling on the hard dirt floor.

That was far from the worst of it, however, she soon realized. She found herself in that inherently vulnerable position with someone who was most distinctly male sitting on her in such a way that his not-at-all-inconsiderable weight landed just below her ribcage, making her “Uff!” in an entirely unladylike manner for the second time since she’d landed.  He’d known what he was about, too, because not only had he knocked the wind completely out of her lungs, which prevented her from screaming—not that there was anyone within a several mile radius that was going to come riding to her defense, but the impulse was there, nonetheless—but he’d also arranged himself in the same smooth movement so that he’d trapped both of her arms to her sides, rendering her—for all intents and purposes—completely and utterly helpless.

Despite her desperate situation, her heart didn’t cease beating in fear until she felt rather than saw the barrel of a Colt 45 being pressed painfully up against her chin, and she realized that it wasn’t suffocation that was going to get her as she’d originally thought.  And when he cocked the hammer back, she was so terrified that she couldn’t even think enough for her pitiful life to flash before her eyes.

Then he bent down to press his nose to hers.  “If you want to live, little lady, you’re going to do exactly as I say, because I promise you that I won’t hesitate to kill you–” As if that threat wasn’t bad enough, a thoroughly evil smile spread across his dirty face as he added, “or worse.”

Rachel could feel her face draining of all color, as she never had before in her life.  She had some small, horrible experience of what he spoke, and she much preferred he simply use the gun and get it over with.

“I’m going to get up now and so are you, and you’re going to take me into your cabin.  If you value your life, you won’t make any sudden moves.”

He lifted himself off her, the gun moving from her chin to her side.  She got up quickly, noticing that he wasn’t anywhere near as spry.  In fact, he acted like a man who was in a tremendous amount of pain, and when they stepped out into the sun, the reason why was plainly visible.

He was wearing thin, worn, dirty pants that looked like something they’d give a prisoner, and a shirt that wasn’t in much better repair.  But it wasn’t the condition of the shirt that she noticed.  It was the way it clung to his side—the opposite side from the hand in which he was brandishing the gun at her—and sported an impressively large, fresh bloodstain.

“You’re hurt.”

“Brilliant deduction,” he commented sarcastically as he prodded at her painfully with the gun.  “You’d better not be one of those useless females who faints at the sight of blood.”

Rachel straightened her back.  “I am not.”

“Good.  You might last through the day after all.”

Every bit of her body chilled at how casually the remark fell from his lips, knowing he could—and would—kill her in the exact same vein.

It wasn’t too far to the cabin, but even with that short distance, as they walked he began to fall against her. He always seemed to catch himself just before he got to the point of no return. Until the last time, when his legs gave out beneath him and he fell on top of her for the second time in less than ten minutes.

Rachel wasn’t sure exactly what she should do, except that she knew she needed to get out from under him in order to breathe.  He was the size of a mountain and she was definitely little more than a molehill, if that.  More like an ant mound, in comparison to him.  It took her several tries to extricate herself from beneath him; he was considerably heavier unconscious than he had been conscious.

When she was finally able to stand over him, looking down at him, she decided that the next thing she needed to do was to disarm him, so she stepped over him to lean down and grasp the gun.  But when she pulled, she suddenly found it lodged threateningly against her again, this time into her stomach.

“Get me into your cabin.  Now.  And if you ever touch my gun again, you’re dead.”

Her entire body trembling almost to the point of uselessness, she bent down and tried to hug him from behind, putting her arms beneath his but he was so big she couldn’t clasp them together over his chest. Her fear was making her so weak that he tended to simply slip right out of them. It was slow, arduous going, even though she knew that he was trying to help her as much as he could; but he also was too weak to really do much.

But he kept a tight hold on that gun; that was for sure. His other arm was tucked tightly against his side, as if he was trying to protect his wound somehow.

Luckily, it was a small, one room cabin.  Once she got him inside, she closed the door.

“Bar it,” he ordered gruffly.

“But–”

The muzzle of the gun was leveled right at her head from where he lay on the floor.  His arm should have been trembling at least as badly as hers were, but she noticed it was distinctly not.  Through some tremendous act of will, he was holding rock steady while aimed at her.  Not a twitch or a shudder or even just a case of bad aim.

No, she thought fleetingly, if he was the kind of man she thought he probably was—some sort of desperado outlaw—he wouldn’t have lived very long with bad aim.

Rachel put the bar through the brackets, effectively trapping herself inside with him.

“Help me into the bed.”

She resumed her previous position behind him in order to continue dragging him, but by now time she was almost as feeble and useless as he was.

“C’mon. Put your back into it, woman!”

When she felt the backs of her calves hitting the edge of the wood and rope bed, she couldn’t help but flop down onto it, making him slide down her skirted legs and onto the floor between them with a tortured groan.

“I said
on
the bed, not on the floor beside it.  Do it!”

Rachel took a deep breath and leaned down. Hitching her arms beneath his again, she gave one last Herculean tug—and then dropped him down onto the hard dirt floor again, almost but not quite happy with his grunt of pain.

“Jesus Chris, woman!  You’re more worthless than tits on a bull!”

Unbidden tears filled her eyes.  She’d been tired before, but trying to lift this who-knew-how-many-pound man onto her bed—after she’d already had to drag him across the yard and while she feared for her life—had her absolutely exhausted.  But she bit them back.  No matter what he did to her, no matter what happened, she refused to let him see her cry.

She’d already done more than enough of that for a lifetime, and if her life ended here and now, so be it.  It was much preferable to the other fates that she now knew could befall her at the hands of an unscrupulous man.

“Stand up.  You’ll get better leverage.”

It was the first thing he’d said to her that hadn’t been either rude or delivered at the top of his impressive lungs—or both.

Coming to her feet and grabbing him once again, Rachel immediately felt the difference.  And she had no small amount of help in that he used his legs as best he could to aid her in her goal.  A few long seconds later, she had succeeded, except that she now found herself pinned beneath him, his broad back to her front.

For a moment she felt that sickeningly familiar panic set in, wanting nothing more than to flail and scream and beg him to get off her like the hysterical woman he would probably think of her as.

But, as with the tears, she refused to succumb to it.

“Are you just going to lie there like a whore, making me do all the work?  Get the fuck up!”

She’d never heard such language in her life—well, she’d heard it, but certainly never aimed at herself.  Her father would have killed any man who spoke to her in such a manner.

Those days were long gone, though, and this was life—such as it was—on her own.  Niceties, manners, decorum, and apparently basic human decency were things of the past.

It took another bout of struggling to work herself out from under him, but the feat was finally achieved, and before she lost her momentum she reached down and brought his filthily booted feet up onto the bed while he railed at her to do it faster when she didn’t want to do it at all.  This was her best coverlet, not to mention her only set of sheets, and now they were both probably a total loss.

There were those tears again, prickling at the back of her eyes, but she ruthlessly reminded herself that they were just possessions; they didn’t mean anything.  She’d certainly grown up with much better, but these meant so much more to her because she’d had to work hard to get them.  The coverlet had been a plain, light quilted white summer weight that she had thoroughly enjoyed embellishing—as she could afford it—with embroidered blue ribbons and pink flowers in a pretty pattern that had helped her while away the hours spent alone and cold during the winter. She’d even splurged a bit on some extra material that matched the blue ribbons the last time she’d gone into town and made a matching bed skirt of a fashion and pillow shams, as well.

And now there was manure and Lord knew what all else staining it as well as the rough cotton sheet beneath, she was sure.

She suddenly noticed that his steady stream of profanity and invectives had ceased, and wondered why, venturing a quick look at his face to find his eyes closed.  Was he asleep?  Dare she hope he was unconscious?

As much as Rachel desperately wanted to make a grab for his gun, she recognized the fact that she was a lily livered coward, who, despite her protestations to the contrary, apparently wasn’t brave enough to face possible death rather than the untold tortures she knew he could visit upon her person if he took the notion to.

Hopefully, he was too sick and tired to do so.

Well, there was no hope for it.  He was here. He had a gun, and she would just have to keep her wits about her.  She was so remote that even escaping wasn’t much of a plan—there was nowhere to escape to.

So she set about doing that which was practical for her to do.  He hadn’t so much as moved since she had gotten out from under him. His chest was rising and falling evenly.  She needed to go back out to the barn—Cleo wanted milking and both animals needed to be fed.  She wanted to see what, if any, of the eggs she’d dropped were still usable, and they could stand to have some water on hand. 

But what would happen if he awoke and she wasn’t there?

She decided that the rewards were worth the risk.  She’d explain to him why she’d done it, and it wasn’t as if she didn’t intend to come back—there was nowhere else for her to go within many more miles than she could get to on foot or even taking Sissy, who she knew would go lame within less than a mile.

Her chores were accomplished in record time, and she slipped back into the cabin, noting with a grateful sigh that her captor/patient was still asleep or unconscious.  He never even needed to know that she was gone.

But now she couldn’t put off doing what she knew she had to. He needed to be seen to; it was the Christian thing to do.

She’d refilled the water she kept in a pail by the door, into which she dunked a rag that wasn’t quite clean, but was much more so than he was and set about washing him as best she could.  It wasn’t a proper bath by any means, but then she didn’t own any semblance of a tub anyway—she washed herself in the stream.  She didn’t even remove or even try to just move his clothing out of the way, but, with shamefully trembling hands, she did dampen his hair and wash his face as well as the hand that
wasn’t
holding the gun. 

He was an impressively large man.  If he hadn’t been such a bastard, if circumstances had been different between the two of them, she would have felt very safe with him just because of his size.  His shoulders were almost as broad as her bed. His arms were heavily muscled such that they strained against the flimsy material of his shirt, which was so large she was sure it would have come to her knees on her—not that she would ever have the absurd need to wear it.  His thighs were the same way, huge and heavy and imposing.  Everything about him was that way, although she had to admit that he had a pleasant—if ruddy—sun baked face with more about a ten o’clock shadow on it, the color of which reflected his full head of black hair.

Rachel shook herself out of her reverie about him.  She could see that his wound was seeping blood—also onto her prized quilt—and she bit her lip.  She didn’t know much about doctoring, but she knew the wound would need to be cleaned to avoid infection, so she found a better rag and procured more water, setting the rag in the bowl and the bowl on what functioned as a crude nightstand.  Then she took a deep breath and moved his hand, the one with the gun, to his side so that she could get at the buttons of his shirt. She made short work of them and laid open just the side necessary to get to the affected area.

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