29
'This is the place. Pull over on the shoulder.' Cadeon motioned for her to park beside a rock ridge just in front of the bridge.
Holly put it into neutral, engaged the parking brake, then surveyed the scene.
And she'd thought the Sandbar had been in the middle of nowhere.
For the last several hours, the Veyron had prowled along winding roads through fog-draped woods, ever downward to the Bloodwater basin. The area was mountainous, the roads seemingly etched through escarpments.
She and Cadeon had spoken little. He'd been quiet, lost in thought. She'd still been reeling from what they'd done. And what they might do in a hundred more miles…
He glanced at his new watch. 'Twenty till midnight. We're early.'
'Well, it's certainly atmospheric,' she said.
Mist blanketed the river, trapped between the towering cliffs that bordered the water. It was so thick, she couldn't even see across the bridge—which looked as if it led straight into nothing….
Still, she was more excited than uneasy. This could be a real-live haunted bridge.
'I don't suppose it'd do any good to ask you to stay here?' he asked.
Getting out, she said, 'None!'
'You seem in a fine mood.'
'I'm wearing new clothes, new boots, a new jacket.' She felt jauntier, younger.
'Do you really think it's the clothes that are affecting you so—or the three orgasms you enjoyed today?'
Well, there was that. Yet she tapped her chin as if pondering his question, then answered, 'No, it's definitely the clothes,' making him scowl.
They set out toward the bridge. The Laughing Lady used to be fully covered, but now parts of the wooden roof and siding had rotted in places, exposing the skeleton of trusses beneath.
That rusted iron groaned with each fog-stirring breeze.
When she spied the water, the tiny hairs on her nape rose. In the foggy moonlight, it looked exactly like blood.
After skirting the roadblock, they started across, with her avoiding the cracks between the boards. About twenty feet in, she glanced back, hesitating when she couldn't see the car.
'Stay closer, Holly.'
She caught up with him. 'Is the bridge…swaying?'
'Yeah. The deck gives a little, so it won't break. Here, hold my hand.'
She raised her brows. 'I'm getting an eighth grade vibe here. Taking the girl to the spooky place? So she'll be
He gave her a smug grin. 'After what we just did on the roof of the car, necking seems quaint, yeah? Besides, you want to hold my hand.' He took hers in his. 'Admit it.'
Arrogant demon. 'No…I
And Holly could finally admit to herself that catching him with the beautiful Imatra had…hurt. She often had to struggle not to picture them kissing.
Though Cadeon had been considerate at times, she knew that deep down he was still a cad.
'What we did changes nothing between us,' she said. 'I still have a boyfriend, and you still have your
Well, that appeared to piss him off.
'And you count yourself among
'Why wouldn't I?' She pulled away, but he held her firm. Through gritted teeth, she said, 'Let—go.'
A dangerous light glinted in his eyes. 'I'm holdin' it, or you're going back to the car.'
'Screw off. Don't talk to me like I'm a child.'
His tone derisive, he said, 'Holly Ashwin said
'You're the one who suggested that I use you to ease my curiosity, to take a couple of weeks to get all this craziness out of my system. Then when I do, you're not happy until I admit to something I don't feel.'
'You think you're just going to use me and not be affected in turn?'
'Why not? Like you've never done the same!'
'I've always done the same!' he thundered, his words echoing in the weathered enclosure.
Suddenly, eerie laughter sounded, women's laughter, from no apparent source.
Cadeon yanked Holly behind him, as they peered around in the thick mist. 'We're starting back. Now.'
'Is it the ghosts—'
His body shot up from hers into the air. As she screamed, some invisible force hurled him into one of the trusses, shaking the entire bridge with the impact. His back bent the iron girder he smashed into, one of his horns embedding into it. With a yell of pain, he wrenched his head forward to dislodge it, dropping to his feet.
More laughter sounded.
'Cadeon!' The ghosts. It had to be them. 'Oh, God, they're real.'
'Stay down!' he roared.
She crouched, but she hadn't been touched. Why hadn't she been?
When he tried to reach her, invisible hits struck him from every direction until he was flung down the entire long length of the bridge. Furious, he bolted to his feet.
Again and again, he grappled to reach her, each time propelled back. 'Get to the car! Drive off!'
When they lifted him once more, he struggled to fight back but couldn't. His foes weren't substantial.
Realization hit her. She shot to her feet, charging through the mist for him.
His eyes went wide as she neared. '
'Wait!' she cried out to the night. 'He's not hurting me.'
At length, the force dropped him to the ground.
Holly knelt beside him, helping him sit up. She sensed they were surrounded, menace seething all around them. 'He's with me!' She took Cadeon's hand and placed it against her face. He cupped her gently, as she'd known he would.
The attack abruptly stopped.
'What the hell's going on?' he grated, running his sleeve over his bleeding lip. His cheek was cut deeply, his shirt nearly ripped from him.
'I think they believed you were hurting me, or forcing me to the bridge,' she said. 'They're probably sensitive about aggressive males dragging females around out here.'
He surveyed the area warily. 'Thanks for the save, pet.' When he tried to stand, he gritted his teeth in pain, his hand clamping his ribs. 'But with that big brain of yours, you couldn't have figured this out sooner? Preferably, before they broke a slab of my ribs?'
'Oooh! I should have let the ghosts—the
An arrow lodged into the iron between them, vibrating there with a loud
'Go! Into the fog!' Within a split second, Cadeon had her hauled up and running in the other direction, putting himself between her and the enemy.
'I thought some more factions would want to breed with me!' she cried as she ran. 'Where are they, Cadeon? Huh? Because it seems like most just want to kill me!'