he want with her? She didn’t trust him, not one little bit, although the reason for this was vague and just outside her ability to grasp. She shook her head to clear it, but all she got for her effort was the resurgence of a headache that had been lurking in the background, just waiting for its chance to reemerge. Putting her hand to her head, she was horrified to discover her hair felt matted and filthy. What had happened to her?
She was so confused. With a shudder, she found she easily remembered Jase and his
Her heart flipped suddenly. The memory of the man outside the door howling over a dead body came rushing back to her with chilling clarity. She had to leave this place! The man in the next room was a killer! Maybe he was even part of the gang that had kidnapped her. For all she knew, he could be their ringleader, the man they answered to. Either way, he was dangerous. She had seen with her own eyes the result of his violence. A sob caught in her throat as she thought of the poor victim, bloody and slashed apart by this vicious stranger. She could be next! Her long nightmarish ordeal was not over. Like a horror movie, it had merely changed locations and actors. She was still not safe.
Brook fought with the baggy sweat pants and managed to pull them up while sitting by lifting first one side of her rear and then the other. Her sore muscles reminded her of the strain she had endured. She tried to stand and was immediately punished with a blinding hurt that shot from the bottoms of her feet up through her thighs. She cried out.
“Hello? Are you alright?” the man called from the other side of the door.
“I’m okay,” she answered, biting her bottom lip. Her heart raced weakly, and she panted from fear and from the sheer effort required not to weep. She had no choice. She would have to play along until she found a chance to escape.
“I can’t figure out how to flush,” she said, trying for a diversion to buy time. She didn’t know what followed the incident in the forest after she saw him cradling the dead body. Try as she might, she could not recall what happened next. She simply woke up here in this man’s house.
“It’s a composting toilet.”
Silence.
“I’m coming in to get you,” he said. Hearing no protest, he opened the door. Brook stared at him like a frightened doe. “You don’t flush.” Showing her the bucket of peat moss, he explained how the composting toilet worked.
He picked her up and carried her back to the bed. Her arms were around his shoulders and she couldn’t help but to inhale his clean musky scent. She had been wrong about his hair, she thought. It was long and wild, but not dirty. The closeness made her uncomfortable and she looked away, but not before she noticed the shiner he was sporting.
“What happened to your eye?” she asked, trying for a casual tone.
“You,” he stated simply. “You socked me.”
“
“You were scared. Don’t worry about it. It’s no big deal.” Gently, he sat her on the bed and she pulled her arms away.
“Who are you?” Brook asked in a small voice.
“My name is Lance.”
“I thought your name was Gilbert,” she blurted.
His laughter made her cringe. “No, no. Gilbert’s my goat. I’m Lance.”
“Oh. Well, I heard…something…I don’t know.” Her thoughts were muddled. Then feeling an odd need for courtesy, she continued, “Thank you, Lance. My name is…”
“Brooklyn. I know,” he interrupted her. His smile was there and gone almost before she saw it. “Brooklyn from Denver. I took a peek inside your purse. I wasn’t snooping, by the way; I just wanted to find out who you are.”
“That’s okay,” she said, not sure she believed him and not really comfortable with him going through her purse. But what could she do about it? Nothing. Maybe he had been looking for the money and credit cards Jase had taken.
Her arms shook as she eased herself back against the mattress. She hated being so helpless. She hated even more the weariness that fell over her once her head hit the pillow for it left her vulnerable. “Can I have my purse back?” she asked timidly, raising her head. It became critical that she have the bag with her, a need that bordered on desperation.
“Of course,” he said. He retrieved the purse from a shelf and placed it into her hands. She clutched it to her chest like a baby. Lance pulled the blankets up over her, covering the purse also. She sighed her relief and relaxed a little.
“I want to go home,” she said as waves of drowsiness threatened to engulf her. “Please let me go.”
“I wish I could do that,” Lance said, pity softening his voice. “But we’ve got nearly a foot of snow outside and it’s still coming down. We won’t be going anywhere for a while.”
She glanced toward the windows for confirmation, but they were covered by heavy interior shutters. He was probably lying to her, trying to trick her. Confusion still fumbled around in her brain, skewing her perceptions.
“I just can’t think why I’m here,” she said sleepily. “How I got here.”
“It’s possible you have a concussion,” he replied. “It’s going to take some time to get your thoughts organized. That’s the way it is with a head injury. You’ve been badly hurt.”
“Did you hurt me?”
Shocked that she would think such a thing, the denial formed on his lips. But before he could answer her, she slipped away into slumber again. He tucked the blanket around her and pushed her dirty hair away from her forehead. He would need to wash that hair soon, he thought. For now, it was time to clean and dress her wounds again. He went to the stove to stir the stew, and then gathered his first-aid items.
Chapter 23
Brook inhaled the savory aroma of food simmering. She was warm and comfortable, her familiar aches and pains dulled to the point of disappearing. Looking down, she was surprised to see Lance at the end of the bed tying each of her legs to a sturdy wooden bedpost. The rope was scratchy and chafed against her skin. She tried to sit up but felt as if heavy weights were holding her down. She realized she was bound at the wrists, and a rope stretched across her chest pinning her to the bed. Panic struck her and she struggled against her restraints. Her body was unresponsive, her cries faraway and faint to her ears.
“What are you doing?” Her words were slurred; her mouth would not cooperate. She was drugged.
“Oh, just making sure you can’t move,” Lance said in a friendly voice. “Those feet are infected. They’re going to have to come off.” He reached down to the floor and held up an impossibly large hunting knife. It glinted from the glow of the lantern on the bedside table.
Lance ran a finger along the length of the blade, testing its sharpness. “Probably should use an ax, or a saw, but I don’t feel like going out to the shed, so I think we’ll just make do with this. It’ll take a little longer, but just bear with me. We’ll get through it.”