There was also a girl in jeans, a sweater, and boots on her ass in the corner, one of the boys ineffectually attempting to hide her with his body. She was on her ass in the corner, knees up, curled into herself, face shoved into her legs, sobbing.
And there was another girl that another boy scrambled off of when Priest and I forced our way in (well, Priest did, I tumbled in).
She was the one on the couch, clearly unconscious, her clothing askew, the sweater that was pushed up was pushed high and I could see her bra.
Pressure built in my head and was about to blow but it didn’t because I would find in that instant I had a much bigger problem on my hands.
That problem being Priest.
“You hurt her?”
His voice came low, deep, quiet, and deadly.
“My parents bought us the booze,” the kid replied, not answering his question, his chin up, his body held alert, his eyes scared.
“Did you…hurt her?” Priest repeated and I twisted my neck to look up at him.
Oh yes.
I had a much bigger problem on my hands.
“They know we’re here. They’re cool with all this,” the boy answered.
Suddenly, I was not held against Priest.
Suddenly, I was standing on my own two feet, Priest was across the room, the kid pinned to the wall by Priest holding himself two inches away, his chin dipped, his face nose to nose, the kid not moving, I guessed, due to the sheer force of Priest’s terrifying presence.
He slashed an arm behind him indicating the girl still on her ass and sobbing.
“Did you…fucking…hurt her?” he growled.
“The pot was laced with something,” the kid answered quickly, eyes enormous, body wired, fear wafting off him in waves. “We didn’t know. She smoked it and went weird so none of us had any. No one touched her. She’s been crying for, like, an hour or something.”
“The girl on the couch,” Priest bit out.
“She…she…” the boy started and trailed off, likely so he could concentrate on not messing himself, which was what his face was sharing he was doing, or close to it.
At this, I decided to let Priest do his thing, however scary that might be, but I had to prioritize. So I rushed to the girl on the couch, pulled her sweater down, and grabbed the throw I left for customers to cuddle up with in front of their TVs or out on their porches and threw it over her.
She moaned and shifted and then went slack.
She was fully clothed, even had her shoes on, which I took as a good sign.
“You leave this cabin, I break your legs before I break your neck.”
That came from Priest and my eyes shot to him to see he was still nose to nose with the kid so he wasn’t talking to him. Therefore I looked to the door to see the kid who’d been on top of the girl on the couch was trying to make his escape.
At Priest’s words, the kid stopped and stood completely still, his Adam’s apple bobbing, his gaze glued to Priest’s back.
And this was indication badasses had eyes in the back of their heads and high school punks weren’t completely stupid because I couldn’t be sure, but I had an inkling Priest’s threat wasn’t entirely empty.
“Do you want cops?”
This also came from Priest and no one answered, primarily because the boys obviously didn’t want cops and I didn’t know why he was giving them the choice.
His head turned and he pinned me with a scowl.
“Cassidy,” he prompted on an infuriated rumble.
I opened my mouth but didn’t get a word out before a girl’s broken voice cried, “We’ll get in trouble! We’ll get in trouble! You can’t phone the cops! I’ll lose my scholarship and Peyton’s parents will totally freak!”
I was looking at her so when she stopped, I called gently, “Did they hurt you, honey?”
She shook her head vehemently. “No. No. We were just partying.”
“Did they hurt Peyton?” I asked, waving my hand to indicate the girl on the couch.
She shook her head. “No. I was…was…before you got here, I was getting him off her. He didn’t get very far.”
“You sure?” I asked.
She nodded her head, bobbing it up and down quickly.
I moved to her and crouched close, her eyes following me the whole way.
I kept hold of them as I said quietly, “You do her no favors, not telling me the truth right now.”
She shook her head again. “I was gonna get us out of here. I was. I promise. Swear. I wouldn’t let that happen. The…the…the stuff I smoked was wearing off. And Peyton has a boyfriend back at home. Something happened, he’d lose it and break up with her and she’d never get over it.”
“Promise me,” I whispered.
“He was…he was…he’s a jerk,” she whispered back, her eyes darting beyond me to where the boy who was on Peyton was standing. “But he didn’t get very far.”
“You weren’t helping her when we came in.”
“’Cause you weren’t letting him close the door on you and I knew they were caught. You’d get in. You’d help her and then the door flew open and I got out of the way.”
I searched the features of a young, high, drunk, terrified girl I did not know to try to ascertain if the worst that could happen happened in my cabin.