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Bad Nights
Bad Nights Read online
Copyright © 2013 by Ruth Glick
Cover and internal design © 2013 by Sourcebooks, Inc.
Designed by Danielle Fiorella
Photography by Jon Zychowski
Cover image © Caitlin Mirra/Shutterstock
Cover image © Mikael Damkier/Shutterstock
Model: Steve Moriarty
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The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.
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Contents
Front Cover
Title Page
Copyright
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
About the Author
Back Cover
To Norman, who is always there for me.
Chapter 1
Above the muted sound of laughter coming from the television set, Morgan Rains heard a noise that made the hairs on the back of her neck prickle.
With a click of the remote, she turned off the DVD she’d been watching—of herself and Glenn in happier times—and sat very still in the darkened room, listening intently for sounds from outside.
The rustle of dry leaves came again, louder this time and closer to the little vacation retreat nestled in a hollow between two foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Morgan was sure that either a person or a large animal was out there.
In the years she had been coming to this cozy cottage, there had never been any problem with intruders, but modern life might have changed that, which was one of the reasons she was here—to start getting the place in shape to sell it. She didn’t need a vacation home, especially one where so many memories lurked.
Even when she’d told herself the house was perfectly safe, Morgan hadn’t been foolish about staying here alone. Quietly, she walked to the desk drawer and pulled out the automatic pistol she kept with her, feeling more secure with the weight of the weapon in her hand.
Not so long ago, owning anything more deadly than a water pistol would have been as foreign to her as going back for a second PhD in quantum physics. That was before her husband had been shot and killed by a burglar, and her world had shattered.
Glenn Chandler. The love of her life.
She’d dragged herself through almost a year and a half without him, throwing herself into the psychology courses she was teaching. Although the joy had gone from the work, keeping up with research in her field, preparing lectures, giving tests, and grading term papers filled her time.
Now the semester was over, and she’d come back to the little house she’d inherited from her parents to finally pack up the clothing Glenn had left here and decide which of the furnishings should go to charity shops and which she’d move to her house in Falls Church. But when she’d come across the videos they’d made during the five years of their marriage, she’d sat down to watch. Starting with their wedding day, when they’d been smiling and happy, surrounded by family and friends.
She clicked off the gun’s safety and held the weapon down by her right leg, wondering if she was going to end up like the heroine of a mystery novel who was too stupid to live.
Confronting danger was usually a bad idea, yet she didn’t see any option in her present situation. This vacation retreat was in the middle of nowhere. The closest neighbor was over a mile away, even if she knew who lived in the house on the other side of the woods. And calling 911 was hardly an option, since it would take the local cops forty minutes to get here. Too late if someone outside was getting ready to break in.
She couldn’t simply sit here and wait for an intruder to pounce. Of course, she reminded herself, there had been sightings of mountain lions in the area. If a big cat was prowling around out there, staying inside and opening the blinds so the cat could see her were the best alternatives. That would probably make it run away. But if it wasn’t an animal, that was exactly the wrong tactic.
With her heart thumping inside her chest, she settled on a compromise. Walking to the window, she eased the curtains aside with her free hand and scanned the woods beyond the house. At first she saw nothing in the fading light. Then a flash of something that wasn’t part of the natural environment made her go very still.
She was seeing flesh. Not fur. Naked flesh.
A man or a big woman. She kept her gaze trained on the figure, looking for details. It was definitely a man. He was in the woods fifty yards from the house, weaving his way through the trees on unsteady legs as though he was coming off a three-day bender.
The breath froze in her lungs. Who the hell was out there in his birthday suit? Some pervert who knew a woman was staying alone in this isolated location? A nudist who’d wandered onto the wrong property? Or an escapee from an insane asylum?
She’d seen him only briefly from the front—long enough to confirm that he was very male.
But he’d turned away from the house. Which meant that he wasn’t stalking her. Unless the maneuver was designed to make her drop her guard if she was watching.
While that paranoid thought spun in her head, he wavered on his feet. His large fingers clawed at the trunk of a tree as he made a desperate attempt to stay upright.
She watched him lose his grip on the bark and slide downward to his knees.
Again he flailed out toward the tree, but his hands slipped away, and he fell onto the ground, lying on his side in a pile of dry leaves with his knees curled toward his chest. Unmoving.
She’d thought he might be stalking the house. Now it looked like he was a man in bad trouble, unless he was still pulling an elaborate scam.
But she couldn’t simply leave him there. As she looked around, her gaze fell on a striped maroon and orange afghan, one of the many her mother had crocheted on long winter evenings. Snatching it off the couch, she threw it over her arm, concealing the gun as she hurried to the front door.
Outside, on the porch, she shivered in the evening chill. Not a night to be out naked, she thought as she looked around to make sure an accomplice wasn’t lurking behind a tree. When she saw no one besides the guy on the ground, she crossed the patch of straggly weeds that had once been a lawn and stepped into the shade under the tulip poplars and maples. The man hadn’t moved since she’d seen him claw at the tree trunk and go down.
As she approached, she took in his head full of close-cropped dark hair, broad shoulders, and
narrow hips.
What in the world had happened to him? Had some disease felled him?
When she got closer, she saw well-defined muscles, and more dark hair fanned across his chest, peeking out from behind the raised knees that hid his genitals.
But that wasn’t what riveted her attention. Now that she was close to him, she gasped as she realized his condition. The side of his face she could see was dark with beard stubble that didn’t hide the bruises on his cheek and jaw. Or the dried blood around his nose and mouth.
There were more bruises on his back and shoulders and over his ribs. And something else made her draw in a quick breath—the small, angry red circles peppering his back, arms, and thighs.
A rash? She didn’t think so.
She’d seen something similar once when she’d been a teenager. She and a bunch of kids had been out in the woods smoking. Billy Anderson had dropped a cigarette on his hand, and the mark had looked like the ones on this man, only these were deeper, angrier.
He might have gotten the bruises in an auto accident or a tumble down one of the nearby mountains, but not a dozen cigarette burns on his skin.
She shivered. Much as the idea alarmed her, the only thing she could figure was that he’d been tortured by someone.
But who would do such a thing? She couldn’t ask because he was unconscious, lying out in the open with the temperature falling, his breath shallow.
Again her mind spun unwanted scenarios. There were people in these hills growing pot. Others with meth labs. Had he gotten into a dispute with one of his fellow criminals?
Her gaze landed on his hip which was covered with a particularly nasty bruise. The rational part of her mind knew that taking him into her house was dangerous. The reckless part sent a different message.
Does it matter what happens to you? You’ve been dead for over a year anyway. If he finished you off, it would be a kindness.
She made an angry sound, dismissing that last self-destructive thought as she turned to the injured man and murmured, “We have to get you inside.”
At the sound of her voice, he stirred.
“Don’t worry,” she said. “Everything’s going to be okay.”
The words were automatic. She’d said them to Glenn when he’d lain dying on the hall floor, a pool of blood spreading around his head.
Clenching her teeth, she shoved that unwanted image out of her mind. She didn’t need it now. Or any time.
“Who are you? What happened?”
He had been lying absolutely still. Now he rolled to his back. As his head moved on the bed of leaves, she saw that one of his eyes was swollen closed.
“We have to get you inside,” she repeated, knowing she couldn’t carry him. “Do you think you can walk?”
As she was about to come down beside him, his good eye flew open. It was dark and unfocused, until it lit on her. A kind of wily intelligence seeped into his face, and she knew he was going to attack.
“Don’t,” she gasped.
But it was already too late. He lunged, and she jumped back. Even in his battered condition, his reflexes were good. He closed his hand around her ankle, his grip surprisingly strong for someone who’d been unconscious a few moments ago.
She hadn’t known what to expect, but it certainly wasn’t this.
His voice was steely as he asked, “I don’t remember you around the camp. Did they send a woman to work me over this time?”
“No,” she answered automatically. “Who are they?”
He laughed. Not a pleasant sound in the gathering gloom of the forest. “What? Are you fucking Trainer? And he’s having some fun letting you play with the prisoner.”
“No. I’m trying to help you. Who are you? Who did this to you?”
“You know damn well.” Even as he said the words, a look of confusion crossed his features.
“Please, I don’t know anything about you—except that I found you in the woods outside my house. You’re hurt. You need help.”
The gun was still in her hand, but she didn’t want to shoot him, unless there was no alternative.
“What’s your name? Is there someone looking for you?”
“Looking for me? Get real.”
He’d been lying unmoving on the ground, his large hand gripping her ankle. Still holding her in place, he surged up and grabbed at the afghan. As it slipped off her arm, he fell back, but the damage was already done. His gaze riveted to the gun in her hand, and she knew that a dangerous situation had just become a whole lot more deadly.
Chapter 2
“I’m trying to help you,” Morgan protested, hearing her own voice go high and thin.
“Not likely.” The stranger’s eye stayed on the weapon, and she knew he was calculating his chances of getting it from her before she pulled the trigger.
In that moment of confrontation, she knew she couldn’t shoot him point-blank.
In desperation, she tried to throw herself backward, away from him. As she fell, her finger tightened on the trigger, and the gun discharged with an ear-splitting blast. Not like on the practice range where she always wore ear protectors.
The man’s grip on her ankle loosened and he flopped heavily back against the leaves, his eyes closing again and his face ashen.
“Oh God. Oh no.”
Her heart was pounding wildly as she stared at him. For a long moment she was too shocked to move. Then she came down beside him on the leaves. After putting down the gun, she frantically began to check him over, looking for signs that the bullet had hit him. She ran her hands through his hair, touched his face, slid her fingers down his arms, across his chest, down his torso to his thighs, his knees, his feet, As far as she could tell, the bullet hadn’t touched him. Thank the Lord.
When she’d finished her physical inspection, she took a moment to catch her breath. She hadn’t hit him, but nothing had changed. He was still naked and injured, and she couldn’t leave him outside on the cold ground.
Another thought skittered through her mind. What if the sound of the gun discharging brought the people who had done this to him?
Sobbing out a breath, she stared down at the stranger who had become her problem. He’d lost consciousness again, and she figured that he must have been operating on raw nerves when he’d grabbed for the weapon. He was badly beaten. She didn’t even know if he had internal injuries, but she did know for sure that he needed help.
The wind was beginning to sway the branches of the trees above them. The temperature was dropping, and she knew a storm was coming.
If she’d thought it was safe to deal with him awake again, she would have tried to rouse him and help him walk to the house. Under the circumstances, that was much too risky. In fact, taking care of him was much too risky—because it was clear he thought that the men who had savaged him still had him in their custody.
Could she convince him otherwise?
Maybe after she got him inside.
That decision brought her up short. For all she knew, he could be a criminal, although she didn’t think so.
She repressed a hysterical laugh. Did she think he had an honest face? Black and blue and honest all over?
While she was thinking all that, he was still lying out here, naked and cold.
After clicking the gun’s safety on, she shoved the weapon into the waistband of her slacks and opened the afghan. She thought about rolling him onto it and using it to drag him to the house, but if she laid his weight on it and pulled, it would likely tear apart. Instead she spread it over him, thinking that his back was still against the cold bed of leaves.
When he moved his head and moaned, she held her breath, waiting for him to wake up and attack her again. But his eyes stayed closed.
After a silent debate, she left him where he was and ran back to the house where she found a tarp in the storage closet. Her dad had used it to cover the woodpile in winter, but she hadn’t burned anything in the fireplace since forever.
Quickly she returned to the woo
ds. When she didn’t see the injured man, panic jolted through her.
Looking wildly around, she spotted him staggering a few yards farther into the trees, the afghan clutched around his shoulders. The man was obviously tough as iron—and bullheaded as a rogue elephant. As she watched, he went down again, obviously at the limit of his endurance.
She knelt beside him, murmuring soothing reassurances as she rolled him onto the tarp and breathed a sigh of relief when he didn’t try to do her bodily harm. With him stretched out straight, she had a better view of his injuries. It looked like his body had taken an awful lot of punishment. Maybe some of his ribs were even broken, and she marveled that he’d gotten this far.
How far exactly?
She’d thought her nearest neighbor was a mile away. Was there someone closer? A cabin hidden in the woods, perhaps, where they’d been holding him and torturing him?
And they must know he’d escaped. Which meant they were looking for him now. That realization made her shudder.
Fat drops of rain were beginning to fall as she arranged the afghan over him again. Praying that she could get him to the house, she began to tug on the tarp, using it like a sledge, pulling his dead weight back the way she’d come, foot by slow foot.
Thoughts circled through her mind as she clenched her teeth and kept moving. Why was she doing this? She could just leave him out here and call an ambulance. Yet she couldn’t shake the feeling that if she followed that route, he’d be dead.
On the other hand, he’d tried to attack her. When he woke up, would he do it again?
Even as she tugged on the tarp, then stopped to catch her breath, she questioned herself. Maybe she was trying to help him because something about him reminded her of Glenn.
Not his physical appearance. Her husband had been fair-haired with blue eyes—and a sunny disposition. This man was all dark shadows and hard angles. If she had to guess what he was, she’d call him a warrior. Whatever that meant. But there was something below the surface that she was responding to.
She made a scoffing sound. Maybe she was responding because she hadn’t had a relationship with a man in more than a year.