Not Dead Enough: Zombie Paranormal Romance (Project Rebellion: SARA Book 1) (15 page)

“No problem. Happens to us all.” He gave her a smile, which made her feel even more of a shit since she’d just stolen from him. “You okay?”

“I’m fine, thanks.”

She turned and hurried away. Pulling the wallet from her pocket, she flipped it open. A little girl smiled at her from a photo carefully tucked the window pocket inside. Obviously his daughter.

She couldn’t do it. Couldn’t take a man’s hard earned cash, not when he had a family to support. Before she could think about it, she ran after him.

“Hey! You dropped this.”

He turned, surprise on his face as she handed him his wallet. “Found it on the ground. Your daughter has your smile. Have a good one!”

She left him standing there, pulling her hood up again and disappearing into the crowd. Without money, a motel room was out of the question. She’d need to find somewhere in the back alleys, perhaps an abandoned house or derelict apartment block, to hide away out of the sun.

She swallowed, her throat sore, and ran her hand over her forehead. It came away damp with sweat. Crap, she couldn’t be ill, not now. She couldn’t go to a hospital, not like this. She’d be locked up in a lab and dissected faster than she could say it. Separating from the steady migration of workers, she slipped into one of the darker alleys.

One day’s rest and she’d be fine…she had to be, because those Bloods were going down.

If it was the last thing she did.

 

 

Chapter Twelve

 

The white mist had lasted longer this time.

Brett lay on his back as the last of his murderous rage drained away. He felt empty. Drained. Every last drop of his energy had dissipated with his anger, and every cell in his body ached as though he’d gone on a three-day bender, followed by a hundred mile route march, and then taken the mother of all beatings. While he had man flu, which was like the bubonic plague and the hangover from hell all rolled into one.

“How long was I out?” he asked with a groan, lifting his hand to rub through his hair. His arm stopped halfway, pressure around his wrist and the clank of chain warning him that all was not well.

His eyes shot open. Chains bound his wrists, rattling when he yanked on them. More chain wrapped around his body, securing him firmly to the examination bed. It listed to the side, as though damaged. It groaned and tilted dangerously when he tried to get the chains loose.

“What the fuck?” He looked up to find the guys watching him warily. His eyes widened.

Fredericks had a black eye and a split lip. Kelwood sported bruises around his neck and along his ribcage. Dom looked like a bulldog chewing a wasp as he held his wrist. Impressive, given their rapid healing rate.

“Crap.”

Red mist. Or in their case, white mist.

He’d only ever seen a Blood go under the mist once. Its eyes had turned totally red, and it had attacked everyone and everything around it, even its own reflection in a set of mirrored doors, which was just fucking dumb. It hadn’t even stopped when the shattered shards had been covered in its own black blood and there was no reflection, no door even, left to attack.

He looked past the three silent men. The makeshift medical bay was totaled. Cupboards were overturned, missing drawers and doors, their contents strewn all over the floor. The ultrasound machine lay in a heap in the corner, screen shattered. The plastic walls hung in tatters, smeared with blood. A quick breath in assured him it was SARA blood. Dead blood.

He breathed a sigh of relief. Whatever he’d done, he hadn’t hurt Julia. Just his brothers and they could take more than he could hand out. Usually. A frown creased his brow. At least he hadn’t hurt Julia, but that led to another question. Sitting up, he looked around.

“Where’s Julia?”

Kelwood and Fredericks gave him blank faces, but Dom would never make a poker player as long as he had a hole in his ass. Wariness hit hard and fast.

“Where is she?” He sat up suddenly, the chains cutting his movements short with a groan. “What have you done to her?”

No one answered. Dom looked at his feet as though they held all the answers while the other two gave him blank stares.

“I swear to god,” his voice dropped, the tones dangerous and deadly. “If one of you has hurt her, then I’ll fucking take you apart.”

Dom’s head snapped up, pain twisting his expression. “We didn’t do nothing to her, man. I promise. We wouldn’t do that.”

Brett lifted an eyebrow. He wasn’t mad; instead a calm had settled over him that was so chilling that if he’d taken a step back, it would have scared the crap out of him. But he didn’t step back. He didn’t even break eye contact with Dom. Instead, he had already worked out how much pressure he needed to apply to break the chains, and then every movement, in sequence, that would disable his former squad mates.

“Okay, so why don’t I sense her heartbeat?”

“She’s gone.” Fredericks lifted a hand to brush at his split lip. “While you were using me as a punching bag.”

“Gone? What do you mean gone?” Brett stared blankly at him as he tried to make sense of the words coming out of his mouth. But try as he might, the idea that Julia wasn’t somewhere in the shadows around them just didn’t compute.

“Gone.” Dom rolled his shoulder and winced at the movement. “As in Elvis has left the building, or warehouse in this case. She took off when you went bat-shit.”

“Didn’t you go after her?” He went to move again but couldn’t. “And will someone get these fucking things off me?”

“Go after her?” Dom stepped forward, reaching under the trolley. “You fucking kidding me? Mostly I was trying to stop you taking my head off.”

“Yeah, sorry about that.” Brett sat up as the chains loosened, rubbing at his wrists. “How long?”

“How long have you been out, you mean?” Dom pulled the rest of the chains free, coiling them neatly in big hands. He’d always had a touch of OCD. “About ten minutes since we locked you down with these. You were spitting insults until you passed out about five minutes ago. You’d been going for a half-hour before that, so your lady friend could have split any point during that.”

“Forty-five minutes. Shit, she could have covered a lot of ground in that time.”

The thought of her alone out there in the dark twisted Brett’s gut. She was only just out of conversion, and although she hadn’t shown any evidence of the blood-rage most of her kind fell prey to, she still hadn’t fed. And he’d never heard of a Blood that could resist feeding for long.

“She’ll be terrified.”

Stood in the middle of the room, he tried to pick up something, anything, in the chaos of scents in the room. He wasn’t the best tracker, not that way, but it didn’t matter. Her scent, her essence, the beat of her heart with its weird little kick on the fourth beat, was so much a part of him that he’d be able to follow her anywhere. He closed his eyes. Concentrated on the vibrations in the room around him. Everything was calm at the moment, but energy was still energy.

Even though movement had transferred from one thing to another…the crash as a cupboard hit the floor, or a large body sailed through the air to hit the wall…that energy didn’t go away. Instead, it dissipated outward at the cellular level, like ripples in a pond. They were faint, of course, but they were still there if someone knew where to look. And like a spider in its web, Brett knew exactly where to look. He turned his whole body into a sensory mechanism, reaching out to catch the tiniest vibration that would lead him to his quarry. To his woman.

Discounting the recent louder vibrations, he reached deeper, looking for the quieter ones. He searched the room methodically. Checked it section by section and discounted each when he didn’t find a trace of Julia. Then, by the door, he caught a hint. A tiny echo. The slide of a smaller foot against the floor almost overshadowed by the louder crashes and chaos of the fight overlying the rest of the room.

“She didn’t get involved.” Good girl. Never get in the middle of a fight between SARAs. It never ended well for anyone not of the undead persuasion. It tended to make them the more permanent variety of dead.

“Slipped out into the corridor.” He followed her echo out into the corridor, leaving the vibration ripples of the fight behind. “And ran.”

Fuck. She’d run fast. Halfway down the corridor, her footsteps spaced out. Hit the floor harder. Brett started to follow, only to stop when someone cleared their throat behind him. Fredericks had his arms folded.

“You’re following her then?”

Brett turned back around, arms loose at his sides. Fredericks had seemed to naturally fit the role, but they’d never taken a group vote on leadership. He had a few more years of service than the rest of them. But here and now? That didn’t mean jack-shit.

“Yeah. Quite apart from the fact she’s m…mine.” He almost said ‘my heart’ but changed it at the last minute. Couldn’t afford anything that hinted at feelings when Fredericks looked like he wanted to tear Brett’s throat out. “But she’s also the last, best hope we have at finding the Bloods. I don’t know if you caught that little gem of info, but that mad asshole McCoy got some women knocked up. Murphy’s law being what it is, my guess is it’s not going to be all sugar and spice and all things nice. How about you? You willing to take the risk that those brats don’t rip their momma’s face off for their first meal?”

*

“The trail goes cold here.”

Kelwood’s voice was just audible over the rush of traffic. The four men stood at the side of a busy highway, the traffic screaming by them scant feet away. Not far from the warehouse, it was obviously the linkup to the major transport routes in the area.

“My guess would be that she hitched a lift from here on out. Which way though…can’t tell.” Kelwood turned his head, looking directly at Brett. “Sorry I can’t help more, man.”

For once the darkness was gone from his eyes, and something else flickered there. Sympathy, kinship. A shared agony. They both had women missing, out there in the darkness somewhere. Alone and without protection.

For Brett, the agony was bearable. In a way. His Julia was a fighter. Not a hardened soldier like some women he’d met, but she was a survivor. The way she’d adapted to being turned had proven that. No hysterics or other histrionics. She had a core of steel that belied her delicate outer appearance. In another time or place he could easily see her as a contemporary of Boudicca, or a modern-day Joan of Arc. She had the kind of strength that came from within, that most observers missed. The kind of strength that was also missing from most.

Kelwood, though, didn’t have that reassurance. Brett had met his wife Kathy, and she was a tiny little thing, and fragile. Both physically and mentally. He’d realized that within minutes of meeting her, as well as the fact that she was crazy about Jared, and he about her. Love and affection they did have, but she was the sort of woman who’d needed to call her husband over every little detail. Every decision. Many times, Brett had been forced to sit and listen to Jared constantly reassuring her, when all he’d really wanted to do was grab the cell from the guy and tell her to grow a pair. He couldn’t see her faring well at all with the Bloods. It would be too much for her.

Still, he returned Jared’s small nod. They were a band of brothers and united in the need to find their women. No, it was more than need. It was a compulsion. One that bordered on madness. An itch that was under the skin, in his cells, that made up his very being.

“She went north.” Fredericks hadn’t spoken much since their almost-altercation in the corridor, so when he did, the rest of them turned to him in surprise. Far from seeming annoyed at his leadership being challenged, his expression was open and genuine, if a little focused, as he studied the traffic.

“How do you know that?” Brett turned back to the traffic, then winced as an articulated truck flew by. Vibration and noise surrounded him, in the air and transmitted through the asphalt under his feet. So many that they overlaid each other, merging into one continuous assault that he couldn’t pick anything out of. With no way to distinguish them, he couldn’t pick out the one heartbeat he desperately needed to hear. So how could Fredericks tell which way she’d gone? “I can’t make anything out in that lot.”

Fredericks shrugged one shoulder. “Neither can I, but this is a major transport corridor. Stands to reason she’s tracking the other Bloods, and they have pregnant women with them. McCoy’s a nasty motherfucker, but he’s clever. If he’s breeding a master race, then he isn’t going to risk the women. So he won’t travel far with them.”

Dom nodded. “Makes sense. That lab back there was a slapdash affair, pulled together quickly. They didn’t intend to stop there long, probably just long enough to check the pregnancies were viable. From the images Julia managed to pull up, they all looked that way to me.”

“So, what we have to ask is, where would a mad vampire with delusions of grandeur take his harem?” Fredericks nodded to the south. “Not much that way for a few days. Few shitty little towns, but that’s it. McCoy needs either a facility to hide the women, or somewhere they can hide in the masses. A place with plenty of food that no one’s going to miss if they go missing. Now where would he find that?”

Brett turned, watching the traffic flow north in endless streams toward the nearest city. Carlton. “The city. No one bothers about the homeless, or junkies. All sorts of places to hide and feed. Hell, if they hit a Goth club no one would know the fucking difference.”

“They could hunt without distraction, then take their prey back to the nursery from hell.” Dom moved closer to the edge of the road, totally unfazed by the heavy vehicles speeding by mere inches from his nose. The motion caught at the fabric of his shirt, making it flap wildly. “Somehow, I don’t think she hitched a lift. Not in this lot.”

Brett considered the traffic again. Although they were standing right at the end of the road to the warehouse, it wasn’t a stopping place, nor was there one as far as the eye could see. Their dark clothing meant they’d be virtually invisible to the drivers in the passing vehicles, same as Julia would have been, and the average speed of the highway meant that trying to flag anyone down was tantamount to suicide. Or at the very least, causing a collision that revealed they weren’t human.

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