Assail dematerialized through the bars and picked up the sticky, copper-scented links.
Oh, Marisol, would that you had not had to be so brave.
As Assail dematerialized back out, Benloise was no longer the in-control businessman who was used to holding all the cards. Unlike the dead bodies and the blood or even the loss of his brother and the threat to his own life—all of which he had been able to mostly retain his composure around—learning Assail’s true identity sent him over the edge.
Whimpering, crying, praying, the man lost control of his bladder, urine pooling out of his shrunken cock onto the concrete floor.
Assail stalked over to the wall and reattached the chain. Fortunately, there was nothing fresh upon the stained surface. There was going to be, however.
Manhandling Benloise’s shrieking, flopping, pissed-on body off the floor, Assail bit through the duct tape tethers at the man’s wrists, and cuffed him to the wall Christ-style by shortening the lengths until his hollow torso was pulled flat.
Assail shucked his backpack and unzipped it. As he looked at the amount of explosive he had brought with him, he knew it was more than enough to blow the facility sky-high. He glanced at Benloise. The man was crying all over himself, shaking his head as if he were hoping to wake up.
“Indeed, you are truly conscious,” Assail gritted. “That shall not last, however.”
Pivoting to face the cell, he pictured his Marisol in there, terrified … and worse.
His heart thumped in his chest. If he blew this place up … Benloise would be home free, dead and gone—mayhap to Hell, but as one could not be sure of the afterlife until one got there, it seemed far more prudent to err on the side of real-time suffering.
He had intended to kill the wholesaler first. Then set the explosives and detonate them from a distance.
But that was not as equitable as it should be. Marisol had suffered—
A growl vibrated up through his chest … as though his very body were protesting at the prospect of being cheated of the death.
“No,” he told himself. “Better this way.”
Too bad only part of him believed it.
Assail rezipped his backpack and strapped the thing on again. Going to first one and then the other of the chains, he inspected them for security. Indeed, they were well and truly placed. The same was true for the cuffs upon those wrists.
Snapping out a hold, he took Benloise’s chin and forced the man’s head back.
With another hiss, he bit into the flesh by the carotid, ripping a hunk out and spitting it onto the floor. The blood tasted good in his mouth and his canines tingled in anticipation of more. Except they would be denied.
The bite was but a symbol of what as a male he was driven by instinct and custom to do in the protection of his female. And he would have torn the neck fully open if Benloise himself had not been into torture.
As his prey spoke in a rush in that foreign tongue, Assail fought the battle to leave the man alive. Cruelty was going to require self-control in this circumstance—and ordinarily that was not a problem.
Nothing involving Marisol had been ordinary, however.
Assail slapped the man into silence. Jabbing his forefinger into that face, he growled, “She was not yours to take. Do you hear me? Not yours. Mine.”
Before he lost his hold upon his temper, he stalked off to the stairs, leaving the lights on so that Benloise was fully aware of where he was: a prison of his own making with naught but the remains of one of his bodyguards to keep him company.
Mounting the steps two at a time, Assail knew there was a possibility someone could come and free the wholesaler, but it was remote. Benloise was notoriously secretive, and with Eduardo dead, the only people who would miss him were guards and staff—and given the cagey manner in which the man operated, there would be a lag before the troops marshaled up conversation and discovered that each individual was not so much out of the loop as that there had been no contact from their superior to anyone on the team.
After that? It was an open question whether any of them would actually look for their boss. People who operated in the underground world scattered when it came to complications like this—no one was going to risk getting killed or handcuffed by the human authorities just to save somebody else’s skin.
Benloise was going to slowly die, alone.
And when someone found the bodies inside the facility? This year … next … a decade from now?
The cover Benloise had constructed was going to be blown.
Upstairs, Assail performed a sweep of the open room. He found two more phones, which he turned off, removed the batteries, and slipped into his pack. He left the guns and ammo, and was careful to shut the door and test that it self-locked.
It did.
Walking around the squat little building, he found a petroleum tank in the back. Locating the gauge, he noted that it was only a quarter full. Given how cold it was at this elevation, he guessed that the supply would run out within a day or two.
The bodies would be stored in a rather cool environment. Good to keep down the smell, not that there was going to be much of that getting out, given the small windows upstairs, all of which were closed.
He was about to take off when he noticed a car parked off to the side.
Heading over, he lifted its camouflage cover and tested one of the doors. Locked.
If he blew it up, the fireball would attract attention, and that was not desirable. He let the tarp fall back into place.
Closing his eyes in preparation to dematerialize, he saw his Marisol coming out of that door. And it was as he shuddered that he became one with the night air, casting his molecules to the south, to a rest area approximately twenty miles down the Northway.
Re-forming, he got out his cell and dialed Ehric.
One ring. Two. Three.
“She is just fine,” his cousin said by way of greeting. “She has eaten and had some water. And she is anxious to see you.”
Assail sagged in his own skin. “Well done. I am where we agreed.”
“Did you accomplish all and sundry?”
“Indeed. Is there anyone upon you?”
“Neither in front nor behind, and we are but two miles from you.”
“I shall wait here.”
Hanging up, he stared at his cellular device. His first instinct was to get her to his home, but she was going to require medical attention—and she would want to be cleaned up and clothed before her grandmother saw her.
Assail’s next call was to his own home, and when the heavily accented female voice answered, he found himself blinking away tears.
“Madam,” he said roughly. “She—”
“Not dead,” the old woman moaned. “Meu Deus, tell me she—”
“She is alive. I have her.”
“What? You say again, please.”
“Alive.” Although he wasn’t sure about any kind of “well” part. “She is alive and within my care.”
Frantic speech now, in the mother tongue. And though Assail knew none of the words, the meaning was not only clear, but something he agreed with.
Thank you, Scribe Virgin, he thought, even though he was not religious.
“We are far from Caldwell,” he told her. “We may not make it before dawn, in which case we shall be home after sunfall.”
“Speak to her? May I?”
“Of course, madam.” Up ahead, a pair of headlights mounted a rise on the highway and came down toward him, paring off on the exit ramp. “I need but a moment, and I shall put her on.”
The Range Rover piloted directly over to him, taillights flaring as Ehric slowed.
“Here she is, madam,” he said as he opened the rear door.
Marisol was wrapped in that sleeping bag, and her color was better—at least until she looked at him and what little blush she retained in her cheeks immediately disappeared.
As Assail felt confusion, Ehric twisted around, glanced at him—and recoiled. With a quick circle, he indicated his own face.
Oh, shit. Assail must have blood all over his mouth.
“Your grandmother,” he blurted, shoving the phone at Marisol.
Sure enough, that did the trick to redirect his female’s attention—and as she reached out like he was offering her a lifeline, he reshut the door.
Wheeling around, he headed to the public facility behind him at a dead run, located the men’s room portion and entered the lineup of urinals and toilet stalls.
Over at one of the sinks, he looked into the flat panel of stainless steel that served as a mirror.
“Fuck.”
Not what any female wanted to see, especially after she had been subjected to a capture: His face was indeed covered with blood, his jaw and lips marked with the stain—and his fangs … the tips of his fangs showed.
Hopefully the gore of his visage had been what she’d reacted to.
Bending down, he attempted to turn on the water and cup his hands, but the faucets were the kind one had to hold in place to make operational. The process took him too long, filling a single palm and bringing it to his face over and over again. And then there was nothing to dry himself off with.
Sloughing his hand down his features, he assessed his hair, which thanks to Paul Mitchell had retained some semblance of attractiveness—
Was he honestly trying to better his looks in this situation? How ridiculous.
As he strode back to the Range Rover, he knew he was going to have to make a third phone call when his Marisol was done with her grandmother: his female was going to need medical treatment.
Where to go, though? In the Old Country, there had been no physicians of the race available for him and his cousins. Fortunately, however, he and his relations had been able to rely on a human or two who would come after hours and ask no questions.
He did not have such arrangements in the New World.
Accordingly, there was only one person he could contact—and hopefully there would be a solution that was up to his standards.
Marisol deserved the best. And he would settle for nothing less.