Read New Species 02 Slade Online
Authors: Laurann Dohner
she was grateful for how baggy it fell since her bra had
been destroyed.
Slade searched through the men’s supplies and
packed their acquired things inside a backpack that one
of the men had brought with them. He took a sleeping
bag, food, and he kept the men’s weapons. They also
took water and soft drinks. Very quickly, Slade was
ready to go. Trisha studied him.
“I’m not playing around with them anymore.” Slade
wore a determined expression on his face. “You got hurt.
I’m not going to be the hunted anymore, Doc. I’m going
to find you a safe place to hole up and then I’m going to
take the rest of these bastards out.”
Trisha just studied him. She knew he could be
dangerous and had the ability to kill. She’d seen it
firsthand when he’d saved her from being raped. She
nodded.
“All right.”
The sun hung low in the sky when Slade glanced
back at Trisha. He’d found a dugout area of earth inside
the side of the hill. A large boulder had once taken up
the space but time and gravity had caused the large rock
to roll down the hillside into the ravine below. It had
been really hard to reach the area. It was so steep that
Trisha had nearly fallen three times, and if not for Slade,
she would have. He’d climbed behind her, one hand on
her, and had caught her each time she’d lost her footing.
“You are safe here.” Slade crouched down in front of
her and his hand brushed her uninjured cheek. “You will
hear anyone coming from below and it’s too unstable
above for them to use their ropes to try to climb down to
this place.”
“Okay.”
“I want you to wait here where my people will find
you if I don’t come back. It might take a few days but
some of the males they send were trained with me from
before we were freed. They know how I think and they
will realize what kind of hiding place I would look for to
stash you. Don’t shoot them when they do, Doc.” He
gave her a tight smile. “It is considered rude to injure or
kill someone attempting to rescue you.”
Trisha didn’t smile back, knowing he tried to use
humor to defuse the stress, but she was too worried
about him. “Come back to me.”
His smile faded. “I can’t guarantee that, Doc. I won’t
make promises I can’t keep.”
“Then stay with me where we’re safe. Please? We
could just wait right here together.”
Slade hesitated. “I didn’t realize there would be so
many of them hunting us, Doc. Those men I killed are
not the same men who followed us down from the road
when we crashed. They obviously have different teams
out there searching for us. You know this from hearing
them. That puts you in extreme danger and there’s only
one way to handle this situation. I need to hunt the
hunters and turn it around on them.” He paused again,
staring intently at her.
“But—”
“They won’t expect that from me and their numbers
need to be thinned out. It could take some time for my
people to reach us and I need to help us survive. It will
confuse those assholes when they find themselves under
attack. Some of them will flee when people start dying. It
will weed out the cowards from the truly deadly ones.
Those are the ones who need to die. It’s the only way to
protect you, Doc.”
“But this is a really good hiding place. Just wait it
out here with me, Slade. Please? I’ll beg you if I have to.
I’m terrified they will hurt you or worse. You’re just one
man and there are too many of them out there. Those are
your words.”
Slade’s head slightly tilted and his mouth tightened
into a grim line. “I’m not just a man, Doc. I’m something
far worse with the advantage, whether they know it or
not.” He hesitated. “This is what I am. I’m a New Species
and I have something important to me to protect. But this
isn’t just about you and I don’t want you to feel guilty if
something happens to me. My people will be coming
and I don’t want them walking into a trap of any kind,
which is a possibility. I need to take out as many of these
assholes as I’m able to. I’m a predator beneath my
humanity. I may try to hide it but it’s still there. I’m also
a survivor who has had to kill in the past to remain
breathing. Mercile trained me to fight to show off their
drugs and it’s one lesson I’m grateful for at this
moment.”
“You don’t have to fight them. You aren’t locked
inside a cell anymore and we can hide. From what I
understand, you were never really meant to be placed
into a real battle zone, which makes that training not
count. They just taught you enough to show what you
could do but this is real, Slade. I don’t want you to die.”
He took a deep breath. “It was always real. Not all of
my people survived their cruel tests or the shows they
forced us to participate in to demonstrate the results of
their drugs. I am dangerous, even though it’s never what
I wanted to become. Whether you accept it or not, that’s
the truth. They trained us too well and made us less than
completely human. It wasn’t their intention to ever see us
free but we are. I’m New Species. You’re a doctor but just
because you aren’t inside a hospital doesn’t mean you
stop being what you are. You’d help any injured person
if you could regardless of being on the clock or off,
wouldn’t you?”
Trisha hated his logic. “Yes, but I don’t want you to
go. Stay with me. Chances are, when your people arrive,
it will scare those assholes off. I’m sure they never
planned to have to search for us.”
“Don’t tempt me, Doc. Holing up with you inside
this small space for a day or so… ” He winked. “I would
enjoy the hell out of keeping us from growing bored.”
“Stay with me.” Hope soared inside Trisha. She just
wanted him safe, with her.
“It’s too big a risk if I were to stay with you and do
nothing. There’s too many of them and they can spread
out to search a lot of places. If we’re found they could
surround us.” He glanced around the cave and then back
to her. “You could be struck by a bullet if there’s a
shootout. There’s too many rocks buried into the walls
that something could ricochet off and strike you. I won’t
allow that to happen. We also don’t have enough bullets
to hold them off. They could also start a brushfire and
smoke us out. It’s better if I go after them than risk them
trapping us here. I’ll make certain that anyone who
comes close to you is no longer breathing.”
She bit her lip, forgetting her injury, and winced from
the instant pain. Slade brushed his finger over her
mouth, staring at it.
“You will need to stay low, no standing or moving
around much. That blonde hair of yours can draw
attention and doesn’t blend well with the hillside.
Remember to stay out of sight. I’m leaving you all the
guns from the camp just in case some of them get past
me or they take me out. This handgun is all I need. You
only fire when they are close enough not to miss and you
have no other choice. The noise will carry far if you shoot
and bring more of them this way. That would be bad.”
Trisha stared into his eyes when he met her gaze. She
did what she really wanted to do most. She leaned
forward, gripped Slade’s face, and watched surprise
cross his features a second before her mouth brushed his.
She tested the soft texture of his full lips, heard the
sound Slade made deep inside his throat, and then he
took control of the kiss.
He deepened it, his tongue meeting hers. She
ignored the pain of her cut lip, even the taste of her
blood mingling with Slade’s taste, just wanting, needing
to get lost in that kiss. Her arms wound around his neck
and he lifted her weight when his arms slid around her
waist, gripping her hips to pull her close, pressing them
chest to chest. Slade suddenly growled and tore his
mouth from hers, breathing harder.
“Trisha,” he groaned. “You’re making this difficult
for me and if you sat on my lap, you’d know how hard
you actually are making it. I have to leave now. Please
don’t make this worse. This needs done and I have to go
while I have enough daylight to move quickly. My night
vision is not as good as normal sight during the day.”
She knew she’d lost the argument and he had his
mind set to hunt down those men. He planned to go out
there and risk his life trying to save hers. Hot tears
threatened her eyes but she blinked rapidly to hold them
back.
“Okay. Just come back to me, Slade.”
A smile suddenly twisted his lips. “What are you
going to give me when I return, Doc?”
“Anything you want.”
His eyebrow arched and the smile widened.
“Anything?”
“Anything,” she repeated firmly. “Just don’t get
killed.”
Slade nodded. “Stay low, be quiet, and keep those
guns ready. Use them only if you have to and hold them
off as long as you can. I’ll hear if you have to fire at
anyone and I’ll be coming. No more provoking jerks
trying to get them to kill you. Remember to just survive
and I’ll have something to save. You promised me that,
sweet thing. I’m holding you to it.”
“I remember and promise. Swear to me that you
won’t take too many risks. Survive, Slade.”
Slade nodded again, studied her intently as if trying
to memorize her face, and then he backed away,
releasing her completely. He forced his gaze from hers
before he quickly took some items and shoved them into
his pockets. He gave her one quick glance and then
started to climb down from her hiding spot. He was gone
in seconds. Trisha had to bite back the plea to beg him to
come back, certain that regardless of what she said, he
wouldn’t change his mind.
She unrolled the sleeping bag on the hard,
unforgiving earth to keep busy. The dirt floor was
embedded heavily with tiny rocks and hard clumps of
dirt. Even with the sleeping bag she could still feel the
uncomfortable ground beneath the thick material when
she sat to assess what items she had.
Slade had acquired two sets of binoculars and he’d
left one behind inside the backpack. She found them and
inched to the opening. She used them and it didn’t take
long for her to spot Slade. He moved amazingly fast
without her.
She turned the binoculars, scoping out the area, but
didn’t spot anyone else. She could see for a long ways
with the help of the powerful glasses. She turned her
focus back to Slade, knew when he had reached the
bottom of the ravine to her left. He turned and examined
the area where she hid and then started to jog away.
Trisha kept her focus trained on him.
Darkness crept up too quickly for Trisha’s liking. She
had lost sight of Slade through trees but sometimes she’d
spotted him through the dense foliage. He moved fast,
showed no signs of slowing, and he seemed to be
heading in one direction. She wondered if he’d caught
someone’s scent with his amazing nose.
She scooted back into the dark hole and had to feel
her way to the backpack and unzipped it. She’d watched
Slade take all the beef jerky but he’d left her the breakfast
bars they’d found. She ate two and drank a soda before
crawling back toward the opening. She glanced at the
darkness below her and then gasped. In the distance she
spotted a tiny sparkle of flame that came from the same
direction Slade had been heading.
Trisha could see what had to be a camp. Flames
showed through thick trees, not more than distant flames
even with the binoculars. She had a sinking feeling that’s
where Slade headed.
Trisha sat up and dragged the sleeping bag to the
edge where she got comfortable, grateful she at least had
somewhere to try to catch a glimpse of Slade. He was out
there somewhere and she worried.
If Slade could smell their fire and he planned to
attack, that’s where it would happen. Forever seemed to
pass to her but no distant sounds of a fight reached her
ears. She got more comfortable by stretching out on her