Total pages in book: 113
Estimated words: 108044 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 540(@200wpm)___ 432(@250wpm)___ 360(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 108044 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 540(@200wpm)___ 432(@250wpm)___ 360(@300wpm)
As he guided her toward the curb, he scanned the traffic, scowling menacingly at a teenager who revved his engine and poked his head out the driver’s window to get a good look at Laila’s backside. The minute the little bastard caught sight of Trees’s threatening expression, he piped down and rolled up his window, proving he had at least two brain cells to rub together.
Laila looked as if she might say more but didn’t as they reached the RV, which still sat where he’d abandoned it, hogging two pumps at the gas station.
As they approached the door, she suddenly grabbed him and stumbled, as if her legs had stopped supporting her. There was her adrenaline crash. He’d barely gotten his hands around her shoulders when she doubled over and retched a thin stream of clear liquid. Fuck, she’d had nothing to throw up. She was dehydrated, starved, and exhausted.
Finally, she heaved a heavy sigh and went limp.
Trees lifted her in his arms. Laila protested, but he ignored her, carrying her inside and locking the door behind them. The fact she let him proved she had no more fight, at least not tonight.
He set her in the passenger’s seat and crouched in front of her. “Are you all right, little one?”
“Fine.” She turned away, as if embarrassed. “It has happened before.”
Because Victor had terrified the hell out of her? That pissed him off. He managed to tamp down his anger—for now. She needed hydration, sustenance, and sleep. They could also use a less recognizable vehicle. But they needed to get on the road more, so waiting around until morning for the rental company to open wasn’t an option.
Never taking his eyes off her, he dug through their grocery sacks, coming up with a bottle of water, a protein bar, and the burner phone he’d bought for her. He handed her the first two. “Slowly, okay?”
Laila looked at them longingly but shook her head. “I do not need that.”
The hell she didn’t. “Your body has to restore itself. When was the last time you ate?”
“I am not hungry or thirsty. I simply want to call my sister.” She gestured to the phone still in its package.
She was full of shit, and he couldn’t fathom why she would lie about something so obvious. Thankfully, BDSM had taught him how to deal with a stubborn female in his care. If she wouldn’t take care of herself, he would do it for her.
Trees dropped his voice. “You want to talk to Valeria? Eat half that bar and drink half the water, and I’ll give you five minutes with her. Eat and drink all of both, and you’ll get ten.”
If she exerted herself more than that, she was likely to keel over.
“Of course there’s a price.” Her smile was all cynical sneer. “What else do you want?”
What the hell else did she expect him to demand? “Nothing.”
Suspiciously, she held out her hands. He gave her the bar and the plastic bottle, watching as she inspected both carefully as if she suspected he had tampered with them.
She shot him one last wary stare before she opened the bar and took a cautious bite. As she chewed, she opened the bottle and took a slow sip, swishing it around her mouth before finally swallowing.
“Why would I poison you when I’m trying to save you?” After everything she had endured in the last twenty-four hours, Trees wasn’t surprised logic had taken a back seat to emotion.
Laila shot him a stare. It wasn’t a warning. It wasn’t even a rebuke. Instead, her face was carefully blank, as if she didn’t want to give him anything, even her anger. Fuck.
“Keep eating and I’ll get this phone up and running.”
“I will eat more when the device is ready.”
She didn’t trust him at all—not even to uphold his end of the bargain. Hadn’t he just saved her from being attacked and dragged back to hell?
How does she know you’re not like those assholes?
She didn’t. She was in a dark place, and she needed a safe space, along with guidance and boundaries that would benefit her. In short, she needed security. That’s where he came in.
The question was, what would it take to shine light into the shadowy corners of her heart?
“All right.” He ripped the phone from the plastic and had it set up to send and receive both calls and texts within three minutes. “Done. Your turn.”
“How do I know it truly works?”
Trees sighed and dialed his own device. He pulled it from his pocket to show that it, in fact, rang. “There you go. Now eat.”
She did so silently, but all hint of caution was gone. She scarfed down the protein bar even faster than she guzzled the water.
“Want more?”
She shook her head. “I want to talk to my sister.”
He handed her the device.