Read The Deepest Red Online

Authors: Miriam Bell

The Deepest Red (46 page)

“Nooooo,” I yell- the pressure of a gag tightens around my mouth.

I break out in a cold sweat as I attempt aimlessly to break from the rope around my wrist. Two soldiers carelessly pull Daniel to his feet.

He’s weak and bleeding, hardly able to see through his swollen eyes. Helpless to protect him, I watch as a young man treads intently toward him. He punches Daniel in the stomach multiple times without pause. I struggle as I’m held down by my captors. Daniel grunts in pain as a knee slams into his already bleeding face. Blood pours from his broken nose and injured chest. They release him and he falls motionless to the ground.

“Get up,” the young guy says as if he’s bored.

He bends down taking a hold of Daniel’s shirt and pulls him into a kneeling position. The shirt rips displaying the horrible gash across his smooth skin. Fear smoothers me.

“No,” I muffle out around my gag.

“Yes,” Ben’s deep voice responds, “Now you will think twice before you strike out at us.”

I want to scream at him and shout into the sky that they were the ones who attacked us first. They are the ones who seeked us out. Even if they recognized those facts, it would not matter. We were dead as soon as the soldiers arrived. There were too many of them for us to take, we were too weak where they were so strong but the comment still causes guilt to take root.  A long blade appears in the young man’s hand. I look away as Daniel struggles with what little strength he has left. The pure violence of the situation brings tears to run down my grimy cheeks.

I hear the sounds of a grappling, followed by a loud crack. Jay’s heavy body collapses to the ground with an agonized groan. He rolls trying to free himself but I know it is no use. We will witness even more horror and be defenseless against the searing memories they leave behind. I close my eyes and ignore the screaming piercing the inner walls of my head.

A sickening sound whirls through the air. There is a sick hack the moment the blade connects with flesh and I feel the hot blood splash onto my clothes. I hold in my sanity still not bearing to look. Another chopping sound and another splash of blood slams onto my skin until the soft thump of Daniel’s head hitting the ground follows. I open my eyes and scream behind my gag.

Daniel stares unseeing into the sky- blood gushing from his remaining neck. The memory of Tom’s death and lifeless eyes flash in front of me. I snap. My body flushes hot as every reasonable thought I knew flies out of my mind. Thrashing against my captors, I rip at the bindings on my wrist. The thin rope bites into my skin focusing all my anger and hate. I stomp Ben’s foot throwing my elbow sharply into his ribs. He roars in rage but is silenced when I latch my hands firmly on the sides of his head and collide my knee with his face. He lands motionless.

“Jay!” I shriek as the firm hands of strangers grabble at me, holding me down.

I kick savagely, connecting with a hard body. I break out of holds only to be grabbed by another then another. Anger seems to blind my eyes and yet fuel my body. I hear bones snap as I punch, kick, and perform every fighting technique Connor has ever taught me. Pain spikes across my face as one man punches into my cheek, then again and again until bruising fingers dig into both of my arms. I scream with a savageness I never knew I possessed. 

“Enough!” Ben roars.

I’m thrown to the ground with tears burning in my eyes. Through the pain I see Jay laying on the dirt.

“Jay?” I sob, stopping my fighting only to hold my breath.

Please God make him move.
A spot of blood dirties his golden blond hair.

“Jay?” I whisper.

I don’t want to be alone. My chest aches ignoring Daniel’s headless body lying so close. Jay’s hand flexes slightly- his fingers digging into the dirt.

“I’m okay Millie,” he rasp.

I sag in relief letting my tears fall quietly down my stinging cheeks. With a painful expression, he tries to stand on his shaky feet but a nearby soldier pushes him back onto the dirt.

“Stay down,” the man yells. 

I murmur a prayer, the first one I’ve ever uttered as Jay’s eyes land on Daniel’s body. Ben having recover from my blow draws my attention back toward him.

“Well. Well. He’s alive. Happy?” he spits, “If you move one more time though, he won’t be for long.”

I flinch at Ben’s furious voice.

Two men grab at Jay to bound him like me.

“You want to die next?” the young guy yells with blood lust into Jay’s face. 

“Hell is waiting for you,” Jay replies weakly to the young man. “Hell is waiting for all of you.”

Before I can respond, one of the men holding Jay takes out a nightstick, a weapon policemen used to carry before the bombs. I can only identify the object because my dad would allow me to flip through old pictures of the prison. Among them was a photo of two policemen in cleaned, unwrinkled uniforms- their arms around each other laughing. One gives a toothy smile while the other strikes a serious pose and points his night stick at the camera.

My heart aches at the flash of recognition then freezes as I realize what our captor intends to do. The hard wand strikes Jay in the head. His unconscious body again slams into the ground.

“Noooo,” I scream out in a panic to get to him.
“If you kill him….” My words are met with a snicker of laughter.

“If I kill him, what?” the young man laughs.

In a last ditch effort, I headbutt one of the men holding my bindings and struggle to break free. It doesn’t work. I wait for the inevitable strike of the night stick.

“If you don’t keep her under control she’s going to hurt herself or someone else,” a familiar voice says.

I stare in shock attempting to process what I don’t want to comprehend, what breaks my heart to know.

“Don’t look at me like that Millie,” he says.

My tears dry as I shake my head, baffled. I’m speechless. Turning my head away, I’m confronted with the two dead bodies on the ground, one headless and one armless. I taste a salty tear on my lips and silently beg for Jay to be alive.

“Don’t cry.”

A firm hand tilts my chin up as a tear escapes down my cheek. Bryan’s warm eyes bore into mine.

“Everything is going to be okay. Trust me,” he says, lifting off my beret.

My hair tumbles down my back as a mind numbing pain explodes in the back of my head. I’m not surprised when the numbness of the darkness welcomes me.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter Twenty-Five
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I wake to the noise of rain pounding the top of a tent. My head throbs painfully while my sight remains blurry. I’ve no clue where I am or how long I’ve been out. The room is dark with a poor amount of light shining through the plastic tent windows. Panic beats within my chest but I take a deep breath and wait for my clearing eyes to adjust. The tent encasing me is large and erected on freshly cut grass. The ground is speckled with the remains of a damaged strip of concrete.
Sidewalk?
A long wooden bench lines one of the walls with an iron end table sitting empty beside it.

When I shift my arms, I feel the tight grip of my restraints but instead of rope, its metal.
Handcuffs?
I’m dizzy but I strive to stay awake. There were always plenty of handcuffs at the prison but we never used them for anything. Most of them were boxed away in the furnace room until we could figure out a more productive use for them. I wish I had taken the time to learn how to pick one.

A rustling noise catches my attention. When I straighten and glance behind, I discover the soft blond of Jay’s hair.

“Jay?” I ask with urgency but he doesn’t answer.

He sits slumped forward barely breathing. A peculiar metal contraption is the only thing separating us. The object, a strange metal pole that swerves horizontally across the ground and into a concrete base buried in the dirt, is immovable. I’ve never seen anything like it before.

“Jay,” I whisper a little louder.

His leg bends inward but he doesn’t turn.

“Are you okay? Jay!” I try adjusting myself so I can see his profile better.

Dry blood tangles the smoothness of his hair and reminds me of the sudden strike of pain into my skull. I utter a slight sob at all the dark blood crusting my skin and clothing. With a deep shudder, I lock all memories of Carter and Daniel out of my thoughts.
We need to escape. We need to warn the others.

The front flap of the tent opens and I pretend as if I’m still asleep.

“Don’t bother, girlie. I’ve already seen you’re awake,” Ben says with a hint of smugness.

I continue my act as he lands in a big heap on a small bench. He breaths an overly exaggerated sigh.

“You just won’t make things easy, will you?” he remarks.

The statement stirs the desire to laugh but I continue to play unconscious.

“Guess who had to carry you all the way here? Yeah, me. Guess who has waited for you to wake up? Again, me.” I hear a clicking noise. “I’m not playing games with you. You talk to me now or I’ll march over to your little friend and kick him in the groin. Been awhile since I’ve had the pleasure of performing such a treat.” 

I meet his gaze.

“You’re an ass. You know that?”

A sneer appears on his bruised face.
I broke his nose.
I take a small satisfaction in the knowledge.

“I’ve been called worse but never twice from the same person,” he replies.

I continue to glare at him as his flashlight illuminates the room.

“Nice nose,” I say with a sly grin.

His sneer disappears. It’s almost humorous to see his large body fitting tightly onto the small bench. My grin grows wider. Ben stands with his fists clenched.

“You’re lucky I got orders not to harm you,” he sneers.

I laugh, the sound coming out a bit crazy.

“I’m pretty sure the knot on my head where you hit me disagrees.” I pause, “In other words you failed,” I say and struggle with the handcuffs.

Before he can respond the flap of the tent opens again and reveals a small skinny man. He rushes in, stops dead in his tracks, and stares.

“She’s awake,” he comments rapidly, blinking his eyelids. “Sir?” he then questions Ben.

“She just woke up. I haven't had time to send a message,” Ben replies appearing annoyed. The skinny man nods and then quickly leaves the tent.

“Well. That’s that.” He waves his hand at the closing flap. “We should get plenty of company soon.” Ben sits down hard on the bench rubbing at his eyes.

“You don’t look so hot,” I say, hankering to aggravate him.

“I’m sure I don’t. It’s been a long day,” he replies, removing his hand from his eyes and studying me.

“You don’t seem like a kind of man who wants to cleanse the world.” The words leave my mouth before I can put a halt to them. He lets out a snort.

“You figured that out quick,” Ben says, stretching out his legs.

“Why do it? Why march around killing innocent people? Why not settle down somewhere and figure out a way to live peacefully?” I ask, generally curious.

“Sweetie, to survive you go where the people are.” I purse my lips, confused. He takes a deep breath. “The world is a cold hard place. If you aren't living in numbers then you aren’t living long. I find an opportunity, I take it.”

“We’ve lived, the four of us, for years until we met Bryan and later were attacked by you,” I say.

Ben gives a disbelieving grunt.

“It isn’t nice to lie, girlie.”

I roll my eyes.

“Oh please. You know nothing,” I mock in my most condescending tone.

“I know all about your prison community, your supplies hidden away at the plane-” he stops short and narrows his eyes allowing his mouth to gape open. “You’re a smart one,” he snaps and leans forward toward me, still sitting on the bench. “You’re also very lucky-” The entrance of the tent opening interrupts Ben’s last sentence. 

The skinny man re-enters holding back the wet flap. He bounces on the balls of his feet impatiently as Ben stands again. A freshly clean soldier enters through the opening followed by two cloaked figures. I instantly recognize  both of the masked men, one by the deep blue cloak he wears, the other by the many visits he has made to my nightmares. The stark white crow mask stares down at me, burning fear into my soul. The once large tent is now too small to contain us both. Panic rises as I focus on my breathing, striving hard not to pass out.
Breath in. Breath out.

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