Destiny: The Girl in the Box #9

 

 

 

DESTINY

THE GIRL IN THE BOX

BOOK NINE

 

Robert J. Crane

DESTINY

THE GIRL IN THE BOX

BOOK NINE

 

Copyright © 2014 Reikonos Press

All Rights Reserved.

 

1st Edition

 

AUTHOR’S NOTE

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

 

The scanning, uploading and distribution of this book via the internet or any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

 

No part of this publication may be reproduced in whole or in part without the written permission of the publisher. For information regarding permission, please email
[email protected]

CONTENTS

 

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

 

Other Works by Robert J. Crane

Acknowledgments

RNS

 

 

This book is dedicated to Nicholas J. Ambrose, who was my editor, cover artist and formatter before he was my friend, and who helped me build the confidence that publishing was easy until I was in too deep to know better. Without him, my career would not be nearly so far along as it is.

 

 

Chapter 1

 

CHARLIE

 

Charlie screamed as she got cut; a long, searing slice up her belly that felt like someone squirted lighter fluid into it, lit a match and tossed it in. The slash shredded her blouse and she staggered back from her attacker, gasping.

He was big. The kind of big that would stand out on any street. Any street but this one, maybe.

Charlie turned and ran without a thought. When it came to fight or flight, her choice was always easy. The warm, dry desert air of the Las Vegas night hit her cheeks. Searing pain ran through her abdomen, and she could feel the blood running down to her jeans.

She was on the Strip, the heavy heat of day gone hours ago, disappearing after nightfall. With every step she ran, she felt the pain of the open wound. The nearby neon display of the Mirage Casino flashed at her as her feet pounded against the concrete.

Charlie tossed a look back over her shoulder. She hadn’t seen the guy coming. She’d been staggering under one of the footbridges near Caesar’s Palace, embracing the swirling feel of having a good drunk on. Her head was light from the booze some guy had bought her to get her pants off and from the feeling of his soul swimming around inside her after she’d let him think he’d get his way.

Just another mark. Just another night.

Charlie sprinted up the strip. It was the wee hours of the morning, five or so, and day was about to break over the horizon. All that sweet euphoria from the grifted alcohol and the stolen soul had evaporated when that big guy had come at her. She hadn’t even noticed him until it was too late. Hadn’t even seen the knife.

All she knew was that it hurt.

The Mirage had flown past on her left and now she was crossing in front of Treasure Island. The taste of that heavy martini was still lingering on her tongue. She could smell a Starbucks ahead, could feel the burn on her stomach. She’d gotten attacked back at the edge of the Caesar’s Palace property. She’d run far, and fast. Meta speed. Hadn’t even cared if anyone had seen her.

She slowed, looking over her shoulder. There was nothing; just the normal street wanderers, drunks and vagrants asking for weed money, beer money, or gambling money. And few enough of them at this hour. Even the bachelor parties had ended by this point, surely.

Charlie tried to catch her breath. It was coming in hard gasps, the sound blotting out everything going on around her. She ran a hand over her injury. She kept walking fast and dodged around the next footbridge before she stopped.

Charlie leaned back against the grey, two-story concrete footbridge. Escalators ran up and down, ferrying passengers to the top so they could cross the road in peace and continue spending their gambling and drinking dollars without a trip to the emergency room from getting run over by one of Vegas’s crazed taxi drivers. Charlie liked the footbridges. They were a great place to brush past people, touching them as she went.

Charlie looked down. The blood had soaked her front, had run all the way down and darkened the denim of her jeans. Her blouse had already been red; now it bore a darker stain starting just underneath her right breast. She ran a finger through the hole where it had been shredded open. Pain greeted her.

This would heal, probably before the end of the day. Her breathing started to slow. It wasn’t about the wound. This was minor. It was an inconvenience.

It was really about the fact that someone had dared to come at her. Who would do that?

Vegas was
her
town. Had been—on and off—for years. Whenever the heat got too high anywhere else, this was the place Charlie knew she could go. She’d had to dye her hair once or twice, change her look, but mostly Vegas was her safe ground.

Someone attacking her here? And worse, some human with a knife?

Charlie felt her breath turn hot. She felt a seething anger come, along with her searing pain.

Nobody did this to her. Not to her.

She slapped a bloody palm against the grey footbridge wall as she leaned against it.

The fury was growing inside her. She’d jumped at something minor. Jackrabbited when she should have grabbed the knife out of that big bastard’s hand and then showed him what happened to people who messed with her. It could have been slow, dragging. She could have teased his soul out of him for hours that would feel like an eternity.

Charlie called it foreplay. Whatever other succubi called it (she’d never really talked it over with her sister—that stick in the mud—or her pathetic daughter), it was damned fun.

When she caught up with the big guy, she was going to have a hell of a lot of foreplay.

She could drag him back to her hotel room. It wasn’t that far, just a mile or so off the Strip. She liked the motels off the strip. Less security. Fewer cameras.

Less for the police to work with when a body turned up in a dumpster.

She slapped her palm against the footbridge again. This bastard was gonna pay when she caught him. Slow and fun, that’s how she’d make it.

Charlie tensed her abdomen, tested the pain. It was manageable. She gritted her teeth and breathed out again. Yeah. She could do this.

She started to push off the wall, ready to turn the corner and run back down the Strip toward Caesar’s when a hand caught her around the throat. It wore a leather glove that she could feel against the skin of her neck, and slammed her into the concrete wall of the footbridge with enough force to snap her head back.

“This is her, right?” came a voice from the shadowed face above her. Charlie’s head was swimming, and not just from the booze and soul now. A trickle of blood ran down the back of her head, tickling her neck.

“Yeah.” The answering voice was even deeper than the first. Charlie’s eyes were so blurry she couldn’t see the man who had her, let alone the one behind him that answered. “Charlene Nealon.”

“Who are you?” Charlie’s question dribbled out. She was dimly aware that something was wrong, really wrong.

“You fractured her skull,” the shadow in back said.

“I know,” the guy in front replied. “It was fun. Better than that little scratch you gave her.”

Charlie raised a hand, tried to land it on the guy’s wrist. She felt leather, warm, like a biker jacket. Her fingers kneaded the material, trying to rip through it. The pressure increased around her throat.

“Think I’ll just choke her out,” the guy in front said. He was so shadowed she couldn’t see anything other than he was clean-shaven. Charlie’s fingers probed near his hand, trying to find the gap between his glove and jacket.
If I can just …

“I wouldn’t give her the chance if I were you,” the guy in back said. He sounded … gruffer, somehow. Through blurred eyes she could see red hair framing his face.

“Right.” The man in shadow slammed her head into the concrete again and Charlie’s hand dropped. Her eyes were blurrier now. Something warm and wet was sliding down the back of her neck now. Her mouth twitched.

“Again,” Red said. This time Charlie barely felt it as her head hit the footbridge again. The sound it made was loud, though, and she felt something wet hit her cheek. “You’re taking it awfully easy on her,” Red said from behind Shadow. “Three hits and you’ve yet to splatter her brains all over the place.”

“I like to take it slow,” Shadow said. “Really make them suffer.”

“Sounds familiar,” Red said, and he didn’t sound impressed. “Just get it over with already. We’ve got business in Minneapolis.”

“Fine,” Shadow said, and his irritation was not lost even on Charlie. Her eyes could barely make out his silhouette anymore. She couldn’t breathe, but she couldn’t fight against him, either. Her body was not in her control, not anymore. “Say goodnight, Charlie.”

She wanted to laugh. It was like that old George Burns joke. She felt the corner of her mouth creep up in a smile.

Her head swayed forward one last time then was thrown back into the concrete, and everything went dark.

 

 

Chapter 2

 

SIENNA

 

I stared out my office window across the campus of the Metahuman Policing and Threat Response Task Force. It was an awkward mouthful to say all that, so like everyone else around here I’d just taken to calling it “the Agency.” The moon was rising outside my window, shedding a dull glow over the dormitory building in the distance. Beyond that, floodlights glowed around the construction site that had been our future science building. I could see figures moving around next to the concrete walls like ants swarming out of an anthill.

I wished I was one of them. Small enough to escape notice, small enough to be able to leave my office and have no one realize I was even gone. I could just follow the next ant in line in front of me and not even worry about where I was going. It would be freedom. I could disappear into the tall trees of the forest beyond, never to be seen again. Not that the other ants would notice me anyway.

My head was heavy on the leather chair back. My eyes shut themselves part way of their own accord, and the scent of leather from my furniture was in the air. This was my office. My responsibilities were as present as the smell of leather.

And silence reigned all around me.

“So …” the voice of my brother, Reed Treston, filled the air. “Is anyone gonna say anything?”

I swiveled slowly around, leaving the window and its picturesque view behind me. The office was cramped by comparison. Reed was standing by the door, but he was hardly alone. Ariadne Fraser sat in the chair in front of me, her pale face and red hair in marked contrast to each other. My mother, Sierra Nealon, waited on the wall opposite Reed nearest the door, her arms folded and her head back against the wall in much the same way I suspected my head had been against the chair only a moment earlier.

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