Home > Rogue Darkness(49)

Rogue Darkness(49)
Author: Dianne Duvall

Pain suddenly exploded in the back of Nicole’s head as something hard slammed into it. Stumbling forward, she lost her balance. Pavement abraded the skin on her palms as she threw her hands out to break her fall. What the hell?

Reaching up, she touched a hand to the back of her head as a pounding ache erupted and raced through her skull. When she glanced at her fingers, the tips were red with blood.

Was that from scraping her hand when she fell or from whatever the hell had hit her?

Her heart began to slam against her ribs.

Was this it? Was this the attack they’d been waiting for? Right here? In plain view?

If so, it couldn’t be vampires. Vampires couldn’t tolerate any sunlight at all.

Nicole swiftly flipped over onto her butt. Her head swam.

“Are you fucking crazy?” a woman shouted behind her.

“It was an accident,” a man said defensively.

Nicole glanced to the side as a football rolled to a wobbly halt a few yards away.

“Accident, my ass. You did that on purpose.” The woman on the bench set her book aside, rose, and stomped toward her. “Are you okay?”

Nicole started to nod but stopped when the slight movement magnified the pounding in her head. “Yeah. What happened?”

Lips tight, expression furious, the woman bent, took Nicole’s hand in her gloved one, and pulled her up. “That asshole hit you in the head with the football. He threw it right at you. I saw the whole thing.”

A football? That’s what had hit her? It has felt much harder than that.

The asshole in question loped toward them, his friend approaching from the other direction. “It was an accident. I swear,” the taller one said.

“Bullshit,” the woman snapped before facing Nicole. “I saw the short one nod in your direction. That shit was deliberate. It was an assault, and you should file a police report and press charges.”

The shorter one had nodded at her?

Suspicion rose. Though her head ached, Nicole studied the duo.

“Assault?” the taller one blurted in disbelief.

“Police report,” the other one bleated.

She’d seen the tall one before.

Where? Here on campus during one of her runs?

No. At one of the parties she’d attended. He and another guy had hit on her. Aggressively. Had it been the shorter one?

She couldn’t remember. But the tall one…

Yeah. That was the asshole she’d had to shut down forcefully. In front of his buddies. Who had laughed their asses off.

Anger rose. Nicole bent and picked up the football. Looking over the tall one’s shoulder, she called, “Over here, officer.”

Eyes widening, both men swung around.

Nicole drew her arm back and fired off the football, putting all the muscle she’d honed training in special ops and as a Second behind it.

The ball slammed into the back of Tall Guy’s head. Stumbling forward, he barked, “Ah! What the fuck?”

The woman burst out laughing.

Tall Guy took a menacing step forward.

Nicole shifted into a fighting stance. She didn’t doubt that she could take this asshole down. And in the unlikely event that she couldn’t, all she had to do was hold him off until the special ops jogger turned around and headed back. The special ops “couple” should be up ahead, around a curve, and would come running if she sounded an alarm.

The woman pulled what looked like a small pepper spray canister out of her pocket. “Oh no, you don’t. You stay the hell back.”

Nicole’s right palm began to tingle and burn. From scraping it on the pavement?

She risked a glance down. The skin around the abrasions glistened, as did her fingers. Not with blood. With something clear.

Frowning, she rubbed them together. They were wet.

From the football?

No. North Carolina hadn’t had rain in weeks. They were going through yet another historic drought, and water restrictions forbade lawn watering and the use of sprinkler systems, so the football had to be dry.

And yet her hand was moist.

Her palm burned.

The woman took a step toward Tall Guy and started ranting about grown men having the mentality of juveniles.

Nicole had touched the woman’s glove when she’d helped her up. Had it been wet?

She couldn’t remember.

The skin all over her body abruptly flushed with heat. Her head swam as the campus tilted around her. Nicole staggered. Oh crap.

With a startled yelp, the woman hastily grabbed Nicole’s arm to steady her. “Hey, are you okay?” She sent the men another scowl. “Way to go, assholes. You probably gave her a concussion.”

The woman’s glove was definitely wet.

Nicole tried to shake off her hold as the dizziness increased.

The woman turned back to her. “It’s okay.” Swiftly raising the small canister in her free hand, she sprayed a puff of something moist in Nicole’s face.

That was not pepper spray.

“It’s okay,” she said in a soothing voice. “You’re going to take a little nap now.”

Nicole’s knees buckled.

One of the men caught her before she could hit the ground.

“Find her phone,” the woman ordered as Nicole’s eyelids grew heavy.

A large hand delved into her pocket and yanked it out.

“Put it in here so she can’t be traced.”

“Hey,” a man called from what sounded far away. “Is she okay?”

“Yeah, is she okay?” a woman seconded. “What happened?”

Though she found it hard to focus, Nicole thought it might be the special ops couple.

“She got hit in the head with the football,” Canister Lady called back, “and she’s feeling a little woozy. We’re going to take her to the hospital and have them check her out, make sure she doesn’t have a concussion.”

“You need any help?” the man asked.

“No. We’re good. Thank you.”

Oh. Right. She was supposed to let them take her.

Ignoring the deep-seated urge to fight, Nicole forced her limbs to go limp.

Her eyes closed.

These had damned well better be the people who kept trying to get their hands on Becca.

Darkness fell.

 

Sean stared at the map on his cell. A little phone icon kept him apprised of Nicole’s location.

He smiled. If she saw him, Nicole would probably think he eagerly waited for her to return with Taco Tuesday goodies, but he really just wanted to keep an eye on her. Cliff had given them the best news earlier. Aidan would take Nicole’s place as Becca tomorrow, so she would once more be safe. They just had to get through one more day and night.

Nicole’s phone jumped ahead as the app updated her progress. Then jumped ahead again.

Sean wished he could join her on her afternoon runs. He had been on his high school track team and enjoyed it. Then college and Krysta’s vampire-hunting endeavors had eaten up the spare time he would’ve usually spent running, and he’d had to give it up.

He didn’t blame Krysta or resent her for needing him to linger nearby, ready to race to her aid when she hunted. At the time, they’d thought they were the only people who knew that vampires existed. So if Krysta hadn’t killed them to keep their numbers in check, who would’ve?

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