Captured by Mr. Wild: Chapter 30
Captured by Mr. Wild (The Men Series – Interconnected Standalone Romances Book 4)
âWHAT DO YOU MEAN?â Blake shouts down the phone.
âBlake! Heâs here. Mickeyâs here.â
My head spins as a wave of dizziness rushes through it. I stare at the pile of stalks, every petal torn off and scattered across the porch. A massacre of white, blowing around in the breeze.
Heâs been here.
On this doorstep.
Right where Iâm standing.
My heart hammers in my chest as a cold sweat breaks on my hairline and I suck in ragged breaths.
This canât be happening. Heâs in England. He doesnât know Iâm here. I never told him about my aunt. Itâs like my subconscious knew that I may need this place one day.
Away from him.
âDaisy? Daisy?â Blakeâs frantic voice is calling me down the phone.
âY-yes. Iâm still here,â I whisper, my eyes watching the petals as a gust of wind picks them up and swirls them about. One lands on my foot, and I kick it off with a shriek.
Heâs touched it.
Heâs been here.
âAre you okay? Heâs there? What are you talking about?â
âHeâs been here, Blake.â I grab hold of the doorframe to steady myself. âI know it sounds stupid. He doesnât even know Iâm here, but he must have found out somehow. He must have! The petalsâ¦â
Thereâs no other explanation for it. No logical reason why there would be a giant bouquet of long-stemmed daisy-like flowers laid on the doorstep, with every single petal torn off.
Itâs a warning.
My stomach heaves and I clasp my hand to my mouth.
âI believe you.â
âYou do?â I whisper.
âYouâre not crazy, Daisy. That reporter that was outside waiting for Jay and Holly⦠he got photos of us, too. Cindy told me when I went into Herbies to ask after Betsy.â
âBut thatâs just a photo, surelyââ
âShe told him who you were. That you were here from England fleeing an ex-boyfriend. Iâve not seen anything, but itâs possible the photo got posted online somewhere.â
A sudden chill hits me in the core like a shot of ice.
He always said heâd find me.
It was a joke, really. Back in the beginning. When things were good. He would tell me if I ever left, that he would track me down. Iâd laughed. I thought he was being romantic, hinting that he didnât want to be without me.
Now the jokeâs on me.
Mick knows people. Bad people. If there was a way to find me, then he, or someone he knows, would have discovered it. Iâm so stupid. I should have thought of it before. It probably wasnât even the photograph. He probably has friends who can trace my passport, or found out Maria registered me to work at the spa. Isnât that how all these organized criminal gangs operate? Favors for each other. Bribing or threatening those who can get you the information you need.
âIâve been so stupid.â My voice sounds like it belongs to someone else as I sob.
âItâs not your fault.â The sound of a truck door slamming carries down the phone.
Why would Mick come now? Has he only just found me? Or is it⦠I can feel my heartbeat pounding in my throat.
The trial.
He thought he had gotten away with it when some of the evidence got thrown out. The case was weak. But then I decided to go back. I decided to face him. Make him pay for what heâs done. He would be told the prosecution had a new eyewitness. He must have worked out who.
Me.
My eyes dart up and across the garden, down to the jetty, and over to the lake.
Nothing.
My shoulders relax slightly, but my heart continues to pound so hard I wouldnât be surprised if it burst right out of my chest.
âItâs okay, babe. Iâm coming! Iâll be there as soon as I can,â Blake says.
âPlease hurry.â The earlier unease I felt when packing my case has returned. I need him here now.
âAh, fuck!â
âWhat is it?â My eyes widen at his sudden outburst.
âMy tireâs flat. Fucking hell!â he shouts. âDaisy. Go inside, lock the door, and call the cops, okay?â
âBlake?â My hands shake as I hear the urgency in his voice.
âDo it, Daisy! Do it now!â
âOkay, okay.â I step backward into the house and shut the door, pushing it hard until it clicks so I know itâs closed properly. Then I put the safety chain on and give the handle a pull to double check it. âIâm inside. The doorâs locked.â
âOkay. Good.â Blakeâs puffing, his voice strained as though heâs running.
âNow, babe. Youâre going to have to put the phone down and use the landline to call the cops, okay? Iâll stay right here on the other end. Tell me when youâve done it.â
âOkay.â I run to the kitchen and my fingers tremble as I place my cell phone down on the counter and pick up the handset for the landline.
Silence.
I hit the button on the cradle, jabbing it with my finger.
No, no, no.
âBlake, itâs not working! Thereâs no dial tone.â
A sob breaks from my lips, and the hairs on the back of my neck stand up. I dart my eyes around the kitchen. I donât know what Iâm expecting to find, but everything looks the same. Everything is exactly where it should be. A low rumble of thunder sounds outside. The sky has darkened, and the kitchen is now a gloomy gray. I know the storm is working its way down from the forest.
It must be the weather, putting the phone line out.
Unless Mick cut it.
âShit.â Blake is panting now. Thereâs no doubt heâs running. âYouâre going to have to use your cell.â
âNo!â That means hanging up on him. That means he wonât be there.
That means I will be alone.
âYou can do it. Then call me straight back, okay?â I picture him running down the road from the forest. Heâs fast, I know he is. But he still wonât even be a quarter of the way back yet.
âIâm scared,â I whimper, swiping at my eyes with the back of my hand.
âDaisy. Youâre the strongest woman I know. Now hang up the phone. Make that call. And ring me back.â
âUh-huh.â
âTell me.â His voice is solid. Dependable. Grounding. Giving me what I need.
I draw in a deep breath. âIâm going to hang up. Make the call. And then ring you back.â
âThatâs my girl,â he says.
âI love you,â I whisper, squeezing my eyes shut, tears spilling from them as I hang up before he can say it back.
Thereâs silence, and for a split second, I freeze. Unable to do anything except listen to my blood rush in my ears.
Get it together.
I fumble with my cell phone, trying to dial 9-1-1. The screen lights up as I dial, but my hands are shaking so much I drop it, and it falls to the floor, skittering along the tiles and underneath the big oak dresser.
âNo!â
I fall to my knees and press my cheek to the cold tile floor, stretching out a hand. But the gapâs so small I can barely get my fingers underneath.
âShit! Please!â
A strangled sob comes out as I spot a light through the small gap. I can see it. Itâs so close. I need something to slide underneath and scoop it out with. I pull my hand back out as an idea hits me. I can get a spatula, or a long spoon. That will fit underneath, and then I can use it to knock my phone out. Theyâre in the kitchen drawer under the cooker. Iâll grab both and see which works.
I scramble to my feet and turn.
The sight at the back door makes me stop dead, a silent scream sticking in my throat.
The blood in my veins turns to ice and the temperature in the room drops. Every nerve ending is crackling as my stomach lurches, then plummets.
I shudder as I look at his face through the glass. Dark hair, dark eyes.
Black soul.
I stand, rooted to the spot as he stares at me. His dark features and black t-shirt, coupled with the stormy sky behind him, make him look like a monster of the night. He stares me down, his eyes unblinking, burning into me like acid. He was so good at hiding himself. I never saw this side of him when we first met. Never suspected a thing. But now itâs all I can see. Darkness, cruelty, evil. Any trace of good I once thought he had, has vanished.
It died that day with Rocket.
I hold my breath, every tiny hair on my arms and neck raised to attention.
The doorknob turns slowly, like something from a horror movie.
Please be locked. Please be locked.
I let out the tiniest whisper of a breath as the door stays shut.
Thank God.
An ear-piercing sound makes me scream, and my hands fly up to the sides of my face. A mix of giant missiles and tiny glistening splinters crash all over the tile floor, shattering and spraying across the kitchen.
He reaches his hand in through the broken glass pane and calmly flicks the lock between his thumb and finger.
Click.
I watch, paralysed, as he draws back his hand, the knuckles covered in old cuts and bruises.
Punishing someone who got in his way?
Someone like me.
The door swings open, and he stands in the doorway, his tall, dark presence sucking the air from the room. My skin tingles as though Iâm being assaulted by a billion tiny needles. All wanting blood.
Just like the look in his eyes tells me he wants mine.
Mickey has come for me.
Just like he promised.
âDonât you know itâs rude not to invite your guests in?â
âW-what are you doing here?â I take a step back and bump into the kitchen side.
A cruel smirk passes over his lips.
âShouldnât I be asking you the same question?â
He steps into the room, his wet muddy boots crunching on the broken glass and leaving a smear of brown behind them. I bring my eyes back up to his face, and his eyes roam over my body and up to my face. A bitter laugh leaves his lips.
âDecided to go back to being blonde, then.â His laugh stops abruptly, and he fixes his eyes on mine, narrowing them as he studies me. âIt makes you look cheap.â He pops the âpâ and waits for my reaction. A satisfied smile spreads over his face as I wince, his words hitting me like a fist to the face.
I know heâs only saying it to hurt me.
To get a reaction.
Iâm giving him exactly what he wants. But itâs easy to feel strong when the creator of your torment isnât standing in front of you. Larger and colder than you remember.
He walks into the room, casting his eyes around, his lip curling up in disgust.
âSo, this is where you ran away to? This is better than what I gave you in England?â
I watch, my mouth dry, as he strolls around the room, inspecting every surface. He stops when he sees a couple of jars of body butter I and Blake had left over from helping Maria. He blows a breath out of his nose as he smirks at them, tapping their lids with a long finger.
âStarted playing your little beauty shop game again, have you?â
I shuffle my feet, edging my back along the counter in the direction of the hallway. If I can make it to the front door, I could get out and run.
I could get away.
Before he has the chance to kill me.
Will he really go that far? Heâs hit me before, and I know what little regard he has for animal lives. Surely taking a human one is just another step up the twisted, evil ladder to someone like Mick. Someone I thought I knew once, but never truly did.
How could I have gotten it so wrong?
I freeze as his cold eyes lock on my face. I used to think they were a warm brown. Like hot chocolate on a cold winterâs night. But now I can see theyâre darker. Like the depths of a cave. One that once you fall in, itâs almost impossible to claw your way back out of the darkness again.
But I have.
Iâm back out in the light, and thereâs no way in hell Iâm going back.
Seeing him now, roaming around like some psychotic king, makes me more determined. He may be stronger than me. I may be terrified of what he might be about to do to me. So terrified, Iâm not sure whether Iâm more likely to faint or be sick.
But I know one thing.
Iâm not going down without a fight.
âWhat if I have?â I say, referring to his comment about making my own creams again.
Itâs something I did when we first met. He never really appreciated when I made things for him as gifts. In time, I made less and less. I always seemed to spend all my time with Mick instead, doing what he wanted.
Just how he liked it.
He turns, a light blue vein bulging in his temple as he glares at me.
âWhat the fuck you say, weed?â he hisses.
I swallow the giant lump in my throat. My confidence suddenly feeling more like gross stupidity as he strides across the room and stops, his face inches from mine. He smells like cigarettes, and I hold my breath as he lifts one hand and trails the nail of one finger slowly down the side of my face.
His dark hair falls forward over his cheekbones as he smirks at me.
âBet I still make your cunt wet, donât I? Thatâs one thing you got right, at least.â
I gasp, turning my face to the side so I donât have to look at him. My chest heaves as I suck in a breath to stop my legs from giving away underneath me.
âThought so.â He chuckles to himself, ignoring the repulsion on my screwed-up face. Even just the thought that he once touched me has bile rising in my throat.
He keeps his face close to mine, rolling his lips.
âIf you like it here so much, with your hair and your jars of shit, then tell me, Daisy. Why are you coming back to little old England?â
I swallow down the nausea. Hearing my name coming out of his mouth sounds so wrong. He could take the happiest word in existence and make it sound like a curse on your soul.
âIâm coming back for the trial.â My voice betrays me. And despite my earlier surge in confidence, I know I sound scared.
I am scared.
He smirks, and I cower back against the counter, the edge of it digging into my spine as I try to put some distance between us.
âOh, right? The trial.â He nods, smacking his lips together. âYou know Iâll get off, donât you? Not enough evidence.â He laughs. âIâve got a lot of friends in high places, Daisy. More than youâll ever know.â
I look at him sideways. âYou donât deserve to be free. Not after what you did.â
âWhat I still do.â He grabs my chin, an evil glint in his eye. His fingers squeeze hard until pain lances up through my jaw, making my entire skull throb and my vision blur. âYou canât stop it. Itâs business. Weâll just move to another place. Pay some other cops to turn a blind eye. Find some other Rockets.â
A gargled sob escapes from my squashed, distorted lips.
He laughs again. âYou liked that little runt, didnât you? Too bad you started getting whiny and annoying. I might have let you keep him otherwise.â
He lets go of my jaw and I grab my throbbing face with my hand, pain coursing through it as the blood returns to my flesh.
âI thought you were seeing someone else. Thatâs why I followed you.â As I rub my face, my vision returns to normal.
He cups the side of my face in his palm. The gesture is almost tender; it makes my skin crawl.
âAww, you were jealous? Little Daisy thought I was filling another cunt instead of hers.â He tips his head to the side and gives me a condescending smile.
I close my eyes so I canât look back into his dead ones. Thatâs the only way to describe them. When you do what Mick does and donât even feel a drop of remorse, you must be dead inside.
My mind drifts to Betsy and my body tenses.
âHit a nerve, did I?â Mick grins, then takes a step back.
The extra space means I can finally draw in a proper breath without taking in his own expelled air, or his scent.
âWhat did you do to her?â I whisper.
He frowns as I turn my face toward him. If he thinks he can say nothing. Say nothing while sheâs somewhere suffering, or God knows what⦠then Iâll⦠Iâllâ¦
âWho?â
âYou know who.â I grit my teeth as my eyes meet his. âWhere is she? Whereâs Betsy?â
He purses his lips, his brow creasing as he looks at me. He seems to consider something. Then he tips back his head slowly and smiles to himself.
âThe guy with the black truck. His dog, you mean?â
âHer nameâs Betsy.â I stare at him, hatred oozing from every pore. He wonât care what her name is. Sheâs just another tool to him. Something to use for his own gain, and then to discard when heâs had enough.
Please donât let it be too late.
âAh, yes. Lovely shiny coat. I considered skinning the bitch and keeping that as a souvenir.â
I clasp a hand over my throat and heave. My stomach churns, but nothing comes up. Instead, my eyes and mouth water.
Betsy.
âYou bastard.â I squeeze my eyes shut, hoping to God heâs just making it up to torture me. After what I saw, though, anything is possible with Mickey.
He laughs then. A horrid scratching laugh that makes my body feel like someone is dragging rusty nails over my spine.
âTell you what, Daisy.â He sneers, and I feel a bead of sweat run down my chest, followed by another, then another. âYou do what I want, and Iâll make sure you get Betsy back. In one piece.â
âOne unharmed piece.â I look at him.
His jaw clenches as he looks down his nose at me.
âSure.â He shrugs.
I have no idea if heâll keep his word or if thatâs just another lie. But what choice do I have? If heâs put Betsy somewhere, I have to try.
âWhat do you want me to do?â
âI would have thought that was obvious. I want you to retract your statement.â He steps closer again, taking a clump of my hair between his fingers and holding it in front of my face.
He reaches into his pocket with his other hand and holds something down by his side.
Click.
Itâs as though every muscle in my body goes weak, on the verge of collapsing, as I realize what the sound was.
The click of a flick knife blade extending.
He brings the blade up between us, looking at me with amusement in his eyes.
âTell them you got it wrong. Tell them you made it up because you found me with another woman. I donât care what shit you make up. Just tell them you wonât be giving evidence.â
The whites of his eyes have a yellow tinge, and the corner of one is twitching. Itâs slight, so subtle itâs almost invisible. But itâs there.
Heâs worried.
My mouth drops open as I study him. He was always clean shaven. But now, the dark, wiry hair covering his chin and neck looks scruffy. That, coupled with his eyesâI bet he hasnât slept properly in weeks.
As if sensing Iâm figuring him out, Mickey pulls my hair in his hand and holds the blade up to it. The glistening metal narrowly misses the tip of my nose as he jerks his wrist and cuts right through the light strands. He slams his fist down on the kitchen counter and pulls his hand back. Leaving my hair lying there.
I tear my eyes away from the cut strands and back to his face. He smiles at me. Itâs a cold smile that doesnât reach his eyes. The smile of a bully who thinks heâs made a point. Who thinks heâs shown how much better than me he is.
Bigger. Stronger. Cleverer.
âFine. Iâll do it,â I spit, narrowing my eyes at him.
A smug smile creeps over his face. âGood. I thought youâd see sense if we had this chat in person.â
He retracts the knife blade back into the casing, but instead of putting it in his pocket, he runs the case down the side of my face. Pausing at my jaw and then continuing excruciatingly slowly across my throat. I fight the urge to swallow, or blink, or do anything that may give away the suffocating vise-like crushing thatâs taken over my chest.
Heâs warning me.
Warning me he will kill me next time.
âNow, why donât you make us a drink and we can toast our new agreement.â
All I can do is nod as I try to find a breath to fill my empty lungs.
Finally, he drops the knife case and laughs. Laughs because he thinks heâs won. Laughs because he thinks Iâm weak. Laughs because he sees the fear in my eyes.
The way he saw the fear in all those poor dogsâ eyes every time he sent another to an agonizing death.
The memory lights a fire in my core.
I turn to the kitchen counter to fix us both a drink, hating that heâs behind me and I can feel his eyes on my back. I get two glasses out of the cupboard and avoid looking at my clump of hair as I set them down on the counter and reach for a bottle of gin.
âMake it strong.â Mickâs voice makes me jump, and he laughs again.
My hand falters, hovering over the bottles on the side.
Once Iâve poured two large glasses, I turn around and hand one to him. His eyes hold mine as he takes it and knocks half back in one large gulp. I sip mine and watch as he finishes it.
âAnother.â He thrusts the glass at me, and I refill it for him. Watching as he knocks back the second one just as fast.
âDo you like it? I made part of it myself.â
He eyes me coolly over the rim of the glass before lowering it down.
âItâs all right. At least you can drink it. Better than this shit you make. Smells like old ladies.â He lifts one of the body butter jars and opens his hand, letting it fall to the floor and smash, joining the glass from the door. âOops.â
âYou said youâd tell me where Betsy is.â I ignore the stinging in my calf and warm trickle making its way down to my ankle from where the glass hit me.
âOh, yeah. I lied.â Mick shrugs.
I stare at him, hatred coursing through my veins. Heâs vile. Heâs every vile thing wrong in this world.
âWhat did you do to her?â I stare at him.
âI didnât do anything. She was gone when I came back.â
âYou were here?â Another bead of sweat runs down my chest as my throat grows tight.
âLast night.â He smirks as my eyes go round. âI saw you. And that guy. The one with the black truck. Where is he now, eh? Whereâs your Mr. Wild?â
He laughs as I grip the kitchen side to keep myself up. He knows who Blake is.
âI saw the photos of the two of you. Very cute.â Mick sneers. âBy the way, what do you think heâs teaching people to eat out there in the forest in the name of survival for a TV show?â
âH-he teaches them how to live, shows them what to do. They donât really catch anything.â
Mick chuckles. âHow stupid are you, Daisy? I bet heâs killed animals with his bare hands. Maybe he and I ought to go for a beer. Weâve got a lot in common.â
His eyes drop over my body and I cross my arms over my chest self-consciously.
âHeâs nothing like you,â I whisper.
âYou keep telling yourself that if it helps you sleep at night.â Mick sounds bored as he looks out the window at the lightning in the sky.
I can feel heat rising through my body as I fight to make sense of his words. Blake is nothing like him. He loves Betsy. He would never hurt an animal for pleasure like Mick does. I swear he doesnât trap animals on the show. Just shows people how they could if they needed to.
To survive.
Thatâs all. If he needed to survive, then maybe⦠would he? I shake my head. I canât imagine Blake doing that. Heâs not evil.
Not like Mickey.
I glare at him as his eyes come back to my face. Heâs trying to manipulate me. Just like he always does. Trying to plant seeds of doubt in my mind. First about myselfâgrinding me down, so I was almost too scared to leave himâand now about Blake.
âIs that how you found me? The photo?â
âI already knew you were here, Daisy. Iâve known for weeks. Like I said, I know people.â
My eyes dart to the window, praying to see Blake, but also knowing he will still be too far away.
âHeâll be here soon. Any minute,â I lie.
Mick laughs. âWill he? Pretty sure slow punctures donât mend themselves. I think seeing as you live way out of town, itâll take him awhile to get here from wherever he is.â
I feel the blood drain from my face, taking the color with it. He punctured Blakeâs tire. He planned all this. He planned to come back here and get me alone. But Betsy? I let out a deep breath. From what he says, he doesnât have her. Thereâs one thing to be thankful for.
Mick picks up the second jar of body butter.
âWhy do you like making this shit, anyway?â
I donât even flinch as the glass explodes on the kitchen tiles. Iâm expecting it.
âItâs amazing what you can make with time and practice.â
Mickâs eyes turn glassy, and he shakes his head, swaying a little.
âWhat the?â He lifts one hand to his head and blinks his eyes, as though struggling to focus. âWhat the fuck?â
I seize my opportunity and spin, racing through the hallway to the front door.
âFuck! Come here!â Mick bellows behind me as I fight to pull the chain off and turn the handle.
The door flies open, and I race through it, my eyes on the lake. My head snaps back painfully as he grabs my hair.
âYou fucking bitch!â
I lift my elbow and force it back, connecting with something that causes Mick to yell out loud and let go. My heart hammers in my throat as I try to move away. This time, he grabs me around my waist and we both fall. My lip connects with the top step of the porch, and the air is knocked from my lungs as pain takes over my head and I taste warm metal, sticky on my tongue.
âWhat the fuck did you give me?â Mick slurs as he rolls me over and straddles me. His weight crushes my stomach as his hands wrap around my neck. âI said, what the fuck did you give me?â
He squeezes, and I claw at his hands with my nails. Scratching, drawing blood, fighting for air. I wriggle and push. I fight. And fight. And Fight.
But heâs stronger than me.
I want to tell him I canât breathe. But his hands are too tight. I stare at the sky rather than at his face. I donât want the last thing I see to be the eyes of the man I despise.
A flash of lightning forks across the dark gray clouds and I feel a calmness wash over me as my hands still. I can feel the rain on my cheeks. See each drop as it falls from the sky. Itâs stirring up the earth and sending the scents of my auntâs garden to me in the air. My eyelids grow heavy as I think of her.
God, I miss her.
A clap of thunder makes my eyes pop open. Now Iâm remembering something else. This time itâs Blake. Itâs Blake and Betsy in the thunderstorm. Itâs falling on my ass and Blake pulling me up into his arms. Itâs Blake kissing me, even though I was covered in mud and filthy. Itâs Blake looking at me with his deep green eyes. Wanting me.
Itâs all Blake.
It takes every ounce of my strength to lift my hands and dig my fingers into Mickâs face. I find something soft, and I push, not stopping, even as he lets out a gurgled cry. Just as I think I canât survive one more second, his hands leave my neck.
I grasp at my chest, pulling in deep, wracking breaths, my ears filled with the sound of my lungs wheezingâscreaming out at how long theyâve been starved. I turn and crawl, tumbling face first down the porch steps.
I raise my face from the ground, dragging myself along the grass with my fingers, building up the strength to get to my feet. Everything is a throbbing blur. I can barely make anything out.
A hand grabs me around the ankle. Then another on the same calf. Pulling their way up my body as I see the earth underneath my fingers sliding away.
And I know if I let him pull me back to him, then thatâs it.
This time I wonât get away.
I draw in every grain of strength in my body and turn, kicking Mick in the face with my free leg. I scream with the effort, making my lungs sting and my chest shudder.
But it works.
He lets go and grabs his face, groaning like an injured animal.
I roll back to my stomach and claw my way along the grass again.
Get up! Get up!
I ignore the pounding in my face and stagger to my feet, falling to one side as my head spins. I canât see and Iâm disorientated. But I know I need to get away. I need to hide.
I stumble forward and realize where I am.
Relief washes over me.
If Iâm going to live, then this place will help me.
Itâs my best bet.