Don't Rush Me (Nora Jacobs #1)

“All right, baby,” he says, taking my hand again and rubbing his thumb over the back of it. I let him so I can get a read on his thoughts. “I can see you need some time. Go talk to Nick. If he isn’t honest with you, then bring him to me. I can cast a spell that will keep him from lying. I can get the truth from him for you. But promise me that you’ll come to me when you learn what kind of guy he is. Promise me you’ll give me a shot.”

I’m not even listening to what he’s saying, because I’m watching his plan unfold in his thoughts. He needs me alone before he can use his magic dust. He can’t risk witnesses. He plans to follow me to my car when I leave, and then he’ll drive me in my own car, since he caught a ride with Mark and he doesn’t want anyone to suspect I am missing or that something’s wrong.

He plans to knock me out and take me to the sanctuary, where he can hold me until he can perform the bonding. There’s a chance he might not be strong enough if the bond is against my will, but it will be nothing at all after the ceremony tomorrow night. Elijah wants me badly enough he’s willing to keep me locked up for a couple days, if he needs to. Once the bond is formed, he thinks it won’t matter. He thinks I’ll love him and be devoted, despite the kidnapping.

Though this is what I want, I’m still freaked out, and I definitely don’t want to go it alone. I need backup. I know they plan to jump me at my car, so I need to make some calls before I leave. “Okay, I promise I’ll call you after I talk to Nicky. But I’m supposed to meet up with some friends soon, so I should really get going.”

Elijah kisses the back of my hand before he lets go, then both he and Mark stand up to let me out of the booth. “I’ll walk you out,” Elijah says to me, with a knowing smile he can’t quite hide. “This is Detroit, after all, and a pretty thing like you shouldn’t go anywhere alone after sunset.”

Since I know it’s coming no matter what, I don’t try to fight him. He might get suspicious of me if I refuse the seemingly innocent offer. “That’s sweet of you,” I say, gathering up my laptop into its case. “Give me just a minute to use the restroom first, and then I’ll be ready.”

“Of course.”

He and Mark escort me through the restaurant to the bathrooms and then move to stand beside the door. Elijah holds his hand out to me. “Let me hold that computer for you while you go.”

“Sure.”

I hand over the laptop case, grateful that my phone is in my pocket and not in the case where Elijah probably thinks it is. I pass off the laptop, hoping I get it back eventually, because I’ll feel terrible if I lose Terrance’s gift. Then I slip inside the ladies’ room into one of the toilet stalls.

My first instinct is to call Nick, but when I try, it’s like my finger won’t follow directions. I can’t hit the button. I don’t understand what’s going on. I try to call Terrance next, and the same thing happens. It’s the same with Oliver and Parker, too. I can’t call any of them for help, and the more I try, the more I feel a weight press down in my brain.

It’s the heaviness in my head that makes me figure it out. I felt this same feeling the day Henry compelled me to find Nadine. “Shit!” I hiss.

I’m still compelled to do everything I can to find her. Elijah plans to take me to his sanctuary, where Nadine is being held. I know if I go with him, I will find her. The compulsion doesn’t seem to realize that if I get kidnapped, it won’t matter that I find her; I’ll be stuck with her. But it does realize that if I call someone for help, they’ll come and get me, and I won’t make it to the sanctuary.

Damn it, Henry! The bastard is still causing me a shitstorm of problems. “Think, Nora,” I whisper to myself. “You need backup. You need them to come get you at the sanctuary, not keep you from getting there.”

That’s it! If I can’t call for help, I can at least leave them a clue, right?

I click on my messenger and look up Oliver’s name. He’s currently offline, which is perfect. I try to type a message and sigh in relief when the compulsion allows me to do it. If he doesn’t get this message right away, he won’t come and try to stop me. But I know Oliver doesn’t go long without logging in. If he finds it in half an hour, that should be more than enough time for me to find the sanctuary. Then he can call Nick and send in the cavalry.

PsychoPsychic: Elijah and Hooptie Boy showed up and are kidnapping me. They’re taking me to their sanctuary. Track my phone like you did at the college the other day, and come get me. Call Nick and Terrance and tell them to bring lots of backup. I think it’s going to get ugly. Don’t call me. If they know I have my phone, they’ll probably take it.

After sending the message, I silence my phone and hide it down the front of my underwear. Gross, but hopefully effective. There’s a chance they’ll pat me down after they kidnap me, so the bra may not be safe. Pockets are out, and probably my socks, too. But I doubt Elijah’s going to stick his hands in my pants. At least, not before our sick little bonding ritual.

I quickly wash my hands and then head back out of the restroom. Elijah and Mark immediately meet me. Mark blows what looks like cigarette smoke in my face, but it smells tangy and tingles like magic. “What the hell?” I ask, but can’t get anything else out before I start to get woozy.

“It’s okay, baby. I’ll take care of you.” Elijah pulls my arm over his shoulder and starts walking me out the front door like I’m his girlfriend who’s had one too many drinks.

Outside, he reaches into my pockets, looking for my car key. Score one for me for moving my phone! He lifts my key from my pocket and pushes the button on the fob. He grins at me when my car’s headlights flash. “Nice ride.”

I want to tell him where he can shove that ride, but I’m afraid he’ll take that the wrong way, and he’ll end up finding my phone after all.

He gets me to the passenger seat of my car just as everything goes black.





I wake up in a cage, with a raging headache and an upset stomach. The only thing I have the energy to do is roll over and grab the bucket someone was thoughtful enough to leave beside the mattress I’m lying on. I pull it to my face just in time to yack up my entire burger, fries, and brownie sundae. It’s not the same experience coming back up as it was going down.

I puke and puke and puke until there is absolutely nothing left in my stomach, and then I roll back onto my mattress with another groan—a much weaker one. I’m sweating and shaking as if I’m coming off the worst withdrawals ever.

“Damn, girl,” a weak voice rasps from the cage next to mine. “And I thought I felt like shit.”

The lighting in here is dim and my vision’s a little blurry, but it’s enough to make out that I’m in a large warehouse and a bunch of iron cages are lined along the back wall like a row of jail cells. The girl in the cage next to me is not one I recognize. “Are you Nadine?” I ask, because the smaller woman is not the troll from my vision.

“That vampire bitch? Hell no. I’m Maya. Part of the Huron River werewolf pack out in Flat Rock.”

Oops. I give my werewolf neighbor a cringe. “Oh. Sorry. I’m Nora, by the way.”

I go to shake her hand through the bars but she holds up her arms, and I realize she’s chained at the wrists and ankles to the back wall of her cage.

“The werewolf is calling me a bitch?” a silky voice calls from somewhere down the line of cages. “Hello, pot meet kettle. How do you know my name, human?”

She said human as if it were a dirty word. “Your bastard clan master compelled me to find you.”

Nadine snorts. “Some rescue. Nice job.”

“Again, you can blame Henry. His compulsion wouldn’t let me call for help when Elijah tried to kidnap me.”

Nadine doesn’t respond to this, and things go quiet. I turn to Maya again. “Do you know if Shandra’s here?”

Maya cocks her head to the side. “The troll? Yeah. She’s here.”

The werewolf rolls her head to the side to nod at the cage on the other side of her. I squint past her but can only make out a large lump on the floor. “Is she okay?” I ask.

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