Consolation Prize (Forbidden Men #9)

Julianna’s father sniffed before shaking his head. “Shaun’s not like that. He’s a good kid. He—”

“He slapped her,” Sasha said, speaking up and surprising me because I hadn’t known she and Tyla and Chad had joined our conversation. “That’s why she really divorced him. Because he slapped her. And he cheated on her, too.”

Brandt eased in closer to me, asking from the side of his mouth, “Did she just say divorced?” When I nodded, he turned to me fully, his mouth falling open. “When the hell was she married?”

“Don’t worry. That was way before you,” I answered, gaining the curious attention of both Sasha and Tyla as they took in the very Brandt Gamble they’d heard so much about before I’d come along.

As I wiped my face, Juli’s father thundered, “Shaun slapped my little girl? Why the hell am I just now hearing about this?”

No one had an answer. Fed up with this entire conversation, I said, “I’m going to go find Juli,” just as Sasha gasped and grabbed Chad’s arm.

“There’s Shaun.”

We all looked over at the same moment to see two uniformed officers escorting Julianna’s ex into the police station. I started for him, my jaw set, only for my two brothers to grab me back.

“Easy,” Noel said into my ear.

“I just want to find out where Juli is,” I demanded.

But I needn’t have bothered, I guess. Her father stormed toward him, grabbing him by the front of his shirt.

“Did you take my little girl?” he boomed.

The pansy-ass shrank away from him, shaking his head and looking completely lost. “W—what?” There was no way he was acting; the dude seriously had no idea what was going on.

“Fuck,” I uttered, my stomach pitching with utter fear. “He doesn’t know where she is either.”

I’d kind of been counting on him having her, so we could beat her whereabouts out of him. But her ex didn’t know where she was either. And if he didn’t have her, then who did?

I glanced around me blindly, suddenly very helpless and vulnerable.





Two days later, I’d probably gotten a total of four hours of sleep altogether. And Julianna was still gone. That was the point when I finally broke down and cried.





JULIANNA’S CHAPTER | 33





Sitting on the damp floor with my back to a crumbling wall, I tugged off one of my gloves with my teeth, then picked open a scab on the tip of my finger. I’d spent all day yesterday trying to claw my way out of this concrete tomb that seemed to be some kind of small underground storm shelter. The only thing I’d managed to accomplish, though, was to give myself two hands full of broken fingernails, ground down to tattered bloody stubs.

When fresh blood welled through the dirty flesh, I stuck my thumb into my mouth, sucking greedily so I could at least wet my tongue.

There’d been a small puddle in the corner just under the air vent in the ceiling where water had probably leaked in when it had rained. But I’d already drank that dry, knowing it’d probably make me sick but needing it anyway.

I almost wished for an insect to crawl by so I could eat it. I was literally starving to death down here. I’d screamed myself hoarse on day one, but even if I hadn’t, my throat had dried up too much to make much sound by now, anyway.

So I sat here in my ten-by-ten-foot prison, drinking blood from my own fingertips to hydrate myself and trying not to freeze to death in the process. I guess the only consolation was that I’d been taken while wearing my winter coat, where by some quirk of fate I’d had some gloves and a knit cap stuffed in my pockets. But no matter how much I bundled up, the cold crept in and settled straight against my bones.

Weak, tired, cold, starving, stiff and sore, I bent my knees up to my chest and hugged as much body heat back into myself as I could.

I didn’t know who’d taken me. One moment, I’d been trudging to my car through the crisp morning air, eager to get to campus so I could see Colton again; the next, a splitting pain seared through the back of my head as someone hit me with something. And after that, nothing. I’d woken up here, freaking the fuck out.

What’s worse, no one had come to visit once. I had no idea who had taken me, or why.