The Believers (The Breeders Series - Book 2)

The Believers
The Breeders Series: Book Two
KATIE FRENCH
Copyright
Text copyright © 2013 by Katie French All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission from the publisher. For information visit
www.katiefrenchbooks.com
The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarities to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.
November, 2013 Edition
Cover Design by Andrew Pavlik
Edited by Lindsey Alexander and Amy Biddle
Dedication
To my children – Dream big, my darlings.
PREVIOUSLY ON THE BREEDERS

New Mexico. Year 2092. Male to female ratio: 9 to 1.

Sixteen-year-old Riley Meemick is in hiding. Girls of reproductive age are worth a lifetime’s wages to the Breeders: the group of doctors using cruel experiments to bolster the dwindling human race. The Breeders control everything: the local warlords, the remaining factories, and the fuel. They have unchecked power in this lawless society and they're hunting for girls.

When her stepfather, Arn, never returns from a trip to town, their existence falters. Knowing she’s his only chance at survival, Riley disguises herself as a boy and drives headlong into her worst nightmare. In town she finds Arn in lock-up on a false allegation of stealing. Clay, the Sheriff’s number one man, arrives and forces the warden to release Riley and Arn. Yet, that night the Sheriff’s men attack their homestead. When daylight comes and the dust settles, she finds Arn dead and her mother and auntie gone.

Alone and starving, things look bleak for Ethan and Riley until peace offerings appear: food from Clay. When Ethan is bitten by a coyote, only Clay can get the supplies to save him. Riley lets him in and realizes he knows where they’re keeping Auntie and her mother. Hoping she can still keep her gender from him, she talks Clay into taking them back to town.

Back in town, Clay and Riley find her mother is gone, sold to the Breeders. Auntie charges her with finding her mother before the Breeders can run their terrible experiments. On the journey they are waylaid by Clay's friend Bennett, who drugs them and tries to sell them to savage natives known as the Riders. After a shootout that leaves their enemies dead, they make their way to an abandoned town. There, they find a lunatic gunman who attacks and shoots Riley.

Riley wakes in the Breeder's hospital, strapped to a bed. It appears Clay has sold her when he found out she was female. She's irate, but vows to find her mother. Betsy, the very strange and very pregnant tour guide, tells her that her mother was trapped here, but either escaped or was killed. Now Riley knows she must get out and fast. Her escape attempt leads her to the Breeder's most horrific experiment, a room full unconscious pregnant women used as human incubators. She is horrified to learn her mother is one of them. When she gets in a scuffle with a guard, they sentence her to the same fate. Just when she thinks she'll be a vegetable, Clay shows up with his father and Ethan in tow, to barter for her release.

Still suspicious of Clay, she rides with them to an abandoned house for the night. Riley tells Clay he must help her save her mother. Clay disagrees, arguing there's no way to break into the highly guarded hospital. She and Ethan go alone.

Ethan and Riley arrive at the hospital where a trap is set. Clay's mother, Dr. Nessa Vandewater, uses Riley as bait to draw her son back to the hospital so she can reconnect. Clay follows and Nessa gives him an ultimatum: stay with her and she'll allow Riley, Ethan and her mother to live. Clay refuses, knowing the deal is sour. He fights his father, the Sheriff, killing him. The final gun battle ensues. Clay dives into the fray, hoping to save Riley and her family. Riley, realizing her love for Clay, helps him fight off the guards. In the battle, they both are wounded, but they make it to the van alive.

Holed up at an abandoned church, Clay and Riley finally confess their feelings. Reunited as a group, they head back into the lawless frontier to save Auntie.

CHAPTER ONE

Five of us duck behind a boulder scorched by the day's heat as the approaching car's headlights pierce the night.

“Get down,” Clay whispers, drawing up his revolver. The steeliness of his voice sends gooseflesh galloping over my arms.

I curl up, my knees tucked into my chest, my back dug into the boulder's hard surface. Beside me, Ethan scrunches down until he's a little bit of a thing, a wiry jackrabbit of a kid with his bony arms around his knees. When I lay my hand on his shoulder, he’s trembling. Mama crouches on the other side of him, one hand wrapped around her pregnant belly, the other on Ethan’s arm. Even though we've cropped her hair short and she wears men’s clothing, it'll be easy to tell she's a woman. No man has a stomach that round unless he's got a belly full of tapeworm.

Rayburn, the Breeders' doctor who helped us escape, sits beside her, clutching one of Clay's revolvers to his chest. I roll my eyes. A gun in Rayburn’s fist is like a handsaw in the hands of a toddler: just as useless as it is dangerous. I heft the rifle. The warm stock fits snugly in my palm like it was made for me. I'm a decent shot, even in the dark, but I've got five shells left—maybe. Five precious shells. I try not to think about what will happen when the bullets are gone.

Clay shifts beside me, his thigh brushing against mine. I know this low crouch hurts his wounded leg. All night he's walked beside me without complaint, but he’s getting weaker. The speckle of sweat on his brow is unmistakable no matter how many times he wipes it away when he thinks I got my eyes on the horizon. He hasn't had time to heal, but how could he? We've been driving and starving for days. Then our truck ran out of gas yesterday. We knew it would happen. It didn't make it any less of a punch in the gut when it did.

The sound of a car motor reaches us, a wheezy, choking sound. Whatever approaches is not some new, souped-up Breeders' vehicle, but that doesn't mean they’re friendly. Everyone on this road is our enemy the way I figure.

The chugging motor draws closer, the ground vibrating in anticipation. I press my back to the rock and look up at the sky, trying to slow the patter of my heart. I recognize a constellation amongst the splattered stars, but I can't remember the name. Cassiopeia? Andromeda? Six pinpricks of light in the shape of a W. My step-daddy, Arn, used to teach me stars’ names, pointing with his calloused fingers, drawing lines to connect them. Now Arn's a few months dead and my memories of him are fading. I look away and push the sadness down deep.

Then the car is upon us, headlights streaking everything into long, black shadows. We all crouch together and wait. Breathe. Pray. The car rumbles past, tires bumping down the pitted road. One red taillight glows as they continue along their way. I blow out a breath and wonder where they're headed. Hopefully to a town not far from here. We need food and a car if we're ever going to get back to Auntie.

A hand on my chest draws me out of my thoughts. Clay's tensed arm presses me back to the boulder. I open my mouth to protest, but then I hear it. The squeal of brakes. The slam of doors. They've stopped. They're getting out.

Mama's hand tightens around my arm. Rayburn looks at me through his greasy black curls, fear etched on every feature. He pushes up his glasses, the revolver wobbling in his hand. In the moonlight, I find Clay's face. Beneath his cowboy hat, his brow is folded, his lips a tight line. He's calculating. How many shots to take them out? What angle? I can see the discharge of his gun in my mind's eye. Hopefully it won't come to that. We can't waste bullets.

Footsteps head our direction, boots scraping the pavement, slow and steady. Two sets. Two men. Each step toward us makes my heart lurch. With my back to the boulder, I can't see them and it's making me crazy. There's only one reason they'd have stopped: they spotted us.

I shift and Clay's hand tightens. “Stay down,” he breathes in my ear. Then he stands.

What in God's name is he doing? I reach for him, my heart slamming in my chest. Is he trying to get himself killed?

“Ho there,” he shouts. He levels his revolver. “That's close enough.”

I rise up ever so slightly and peer over the boulder.

Two men stand in the middle of the busted two-lane highway. The first is tall and skinny with a wide-brimmed hat and a shaggy beard. His bug-eyes and long neck make him look like a lizard in a trench coat. I can't make out the rest of his features, but his clothes are worn and holey. Maybe he's a rancher or a lower-class road gang member. The man beside him is a little better dressed in patched jeans and a sleeveless leather jacket. His head is bare and the moon reflects off the bald surface. He's wearing cracked glasses that make him look owl-like.

“Whoa, friend,” owl man says, holding up his hands in a gesture of surrender. He's missing both pinkies. “That's quite a pistola you’ve got there. Give 'er a rest. We come in peace.”

Clay shakes his head, his aim never wavering. “Ain't nobody come in peace these days. Turn round and get back in yer dirt wagon.”

Lizard man chuckles behind his scraggly beard, his neck bobbing back and forth. He pushes back his hat and narrows his bug-eyes. “Well, now,” he drawls slowly, “that ain't too neighborly. We jist stepped out to take a piss. We ain't got guns.”

“You ain't got guns
showing
,” Clay says. “Doesn’t mean you ain't got guns. You can take a piss a couple miles down. Now get back in yer car or I'll stop asking nice.” He thumbs down the safety with a click that cuts through the desert.

The two men stand stock-still, hands at their sides. Lizard man tilts his head slightly, considering Clay. “Ain't nobody had bullets in these parts for months. What you so worried about us seeing behind that boulder?” He narrows his eyes and takes a step forward. “I know you ain't alone.” A smile curls on his mouth, slow and nasty.

Clay's jaw hardens. “I asked you nicely.” He takes a step forward, aiming. “This is how I ask now.”

The gun fires. The shot cracks through the night like a bomb. Mama gasps. The gunpowder spark lights up Clay's face: his eyes squinted, his jaw granite. Lizard man whirls sideways, left arm out like a sail. A spray of blood wets his partner's shirt. Lizard man staggers twice and falls to his knees, facing his friend. Bent over and clutching his wound, lizard man stares.

Then he starts howling.

“Clay,” I whisper. Will he shoot them both? We need every bullet in that gun. He says nothing, just keeps aiming.

Lizard man half-runs, half-staggers back to the car. Blood plops on the pavement with a heavy, wet sound. His partner pushes up his round, blood-splattered glasses, fear crinkling his face. “You didn't havta!” he shouts as he turns to run. “You didn't havta shoot 'im.”

Clay narrows his eyes, still aiming. “I don't havta shoot you either.”

Owl man lets out a little squeal as he runs back to the car jumps into the driver side. The car engine chugs to life and they peal out in a spray of gravel. When the taillight is a little red dot in the distance, Clay slumps down beside me.

I place my hand on his arm, smiling, but once I see his face my smile fades. Sweat sprinkles his forehead and rolls down his neck. His face is pale, yet his cheeks blaze red. The revolver clatters to the dust as his arm sags against the boulder. The calm gunslinger act has cost him.

Leaning over to him, I wipe the sweat off his brow with my sleeve. “Clay,” I whisper, “you did it. You scared 'em off.” I press my hand to his cheek tenderly. I hate seeing him like this.

His hand cups mine, his sky-blue eyes shining in the moonlight. There's no smile on his face. “This time.” Slowly, he reaches for his revolver and flicks out the chamber. Five bullets rest in their cylindrical beds. He frowns and snaps the barrel back with an awful click. Rayburn's revolver has six shells and I have five. I know what he's thinking. What happens when we run out of bullets? What happens to us?

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