Read Pucker Up (A Damsels of Distress Novel) Online
Authors: R. A. Gates
kindling? That sounds reasonable
.”
He’d have better luck with the dance.
“No. I figure if I agitate it
enough, it’ll try to scare me off by
breathing fire. Want to help?”
Her mouth gaped. “That sounds
horrible.”
“You have a better idea?” He
held out one of the dry sticks. She racked
her brain for any other solution.
Reluctantly, she snatched the branch
from his hand and started shaking it in
front of her as she crept toward the
dragon.
“Here, Sparky,” she called in a
soft, high voice. “Come light the stick on
fire. No, wait. Where’re you going?”
For the next hour, they stalked the baby
dragon around the beach. A couple times
they got a spark out of it, but nothing
ignited.
The sun hung low, right above
the horizon. Garren sat next to an
impressive pile of wood, laughing at the
other two.
“Who’s Lucy and who’s Ethel?”
he shouted out.
She did her best to ignore him as
she cornered the little creature against a
boulder. She shoved her branch in its
face. It yelped, spitting out a tiny spark.
The spark landed on a dry leaf and
smoldered. She backed away from the
agitated dragon. The ember glowed
brighter as she gently blew on it. She
pushed another leaf closer and blew a
little more. Soon, she had a flame.
“Thank you, Sparky.” She tore
her eyes away from the burning leaves to
find Thane. “I got fire,” she yelled
louder.
Thane waved his arms toward
the waiting fire pit he created earlier.
“Quick, bring it over here.”
She walked sideways toward
Thane, using her body to block the wind
coming off the water. She stopped a
couple times when the flames almost
died.
“Hurry up,” he yelled.
“I’m coming,” she muttered. She
started on her way again when the
flames suddenly burst, igniting the rest of
her branch.
Oh, gawd
. At the rate it was
burning, she might not make it to the fire
pit. She held the burning stick out like
the Olympic torch and ran, screaming
across the beach. Tiny sparks flew past
her on the wind. The heat burned her
hand and she dropped it on the pile of
dry grass and twigs in the center of the
rock circle.
Thane
got
right
to
work,
pampering the flames and building it to a
respectable campfire.
Garren had to intervene at one
point. “Unless you want to burn the
forest down, that's big enough.”
Thane sat on the nearby log and
beamed at her. The setting sun at his
back made his dark blonde hair glow.
She found something familiar in his face,
something that confirmed to her that they
were family. They both had the same
shade of hazel eyes, gold in the center
and blue at the edges. It was the first
time she truly believed they were
connected, the first time she didn't feel
totally alone in this world since her mom
died a year ago. A year of running and
hiding and never letting anybody close.
Maybe he could look beyond her past
and really accept her. Her heart ached
with longing, hoping that her loneliness
would soon be over.
She glanced over his shoulder to
the vast expanse of water. The day’s
events replayed in her mind. When she
remembered Captain Burgandy, sadness
tightened in her chest.
“Did you know the captain very
well?” she asked Thane.
His head snapped up from
staring in the fire. “Not really. He kept
to himself most of the time.”
Awkward silence hung in the air.
“He seemed nice,” she added,
not knowing what else to say. He
deserved a few nice words, no matter
how crazy he was. “At least he died
doing what he loved.”
Garren slowly raised his head,
that condescending eyebrow raised.
“What?” she asked. “Do you
have something you’d like to say about
the man?”
His gaze shifted to Thane and a
smile spread across his face. “From
what I heard, flying wasn’t his first love.
At least not with the Daisy Mae that
crashed in the ocean.”
Both guys chuckled at what she
assumed was an inside joke. Either that
or they had a lot of maturing to do.
Deciding that the conversation was
headed in a direction she didn’t want to
go, she concentrated on digging a hole in
the ground with the point of a stick.
The three of them spent what
seemed like the longest hour in tense
silence, sitting on a rotten log, Ivy in the
middle. No one could relax. Every time
a twig would snap, they’d each jump to
their feet, ready to fight. It was either the
dragon sniffing around for food or some
other forest creature. Could someone die
of adrenaline overload?
Garren spent his time shaving a
spear out of a long stick with his Swiss
Army knife. He seemed to make a point
out of deliberately
not
looking at her, as
if she was the one who humiliated him
earlier. After a while, the deliberate
silence and tension around the campfire
crawled under her skin. She needed to
do something before she went crazy.
I should be nominated for
sainthood after this.
Clearing her throat,
she broke the ice. “What do you call a
witch that lives on the beach?”
Thane looked up, waiting for the
punch line, while Garren kept staring at
the blaze as if he didn't hear her, or
didn't care. She elbowed him in the ribs
and repeated the joke.
He threw a glare her way, which
she returned, and then he gave up.
“What?”
“A sand-witch.”
Thane chuckled, more likely out
of pity, and smiled. Garren rolled his
eyes, but the corner of his mouth
twitched. She was breaking through his
wall.
“What is a vampire's favorite
fruit?” She asked with a little laugh as
she nudged Garren.
He allowed himself to smile,
although small, and played along. “I
don't know. What is it?”
“A neck-tarine.”
“That has to be the stupidest joke
I've ever heard.” Garren tried to keep a
straight face but failed miserably.
Soon, they sat around the
campfire, telling the worst jokes they
could think of as stars dotted the night
sky like glitter spilled over a black
tabletop. They still jumped at every
noise, not wanting to be caught off guard,
but they were having fun. Her sides were
aching from laughing so hard. After a
while, a yawn escaped her lips and
visited the others in turn.
Thane
rose,
retrieved
his
backpack, and tossed it on the ground to
use as a pillow. Garren shifted to do the
same, but she stopped him with her hand
on his. He looked down at the contact
and then met her eyes with a smirk on his
face. She immediately yanked her hand
back.
Not going there again.
“You get
first watch,” she said.
His brow furrowed as the
firelight danced across his face. “Why
me?”
“Because your hair is darker.”
She stood up and put her jacket on to
keep warm through the night.
“That doesn't make any sense.”
The weight of his stare bore
down on her as she lay down on the sand
next to the fire. “Of course it does. Just
think about it.” She rolled up one of her
sweatshirts and tucked it under her head.
She shifted around, trying in vain to get
comfortable. The ground was hard and
small rocks dug into her hip. It was
going to be a long night.
“Fine. Get some sleep while you
can because I'm waking you up next.” He
got up and grabbed the stick he’d been
whittling to a sharp point all evening.
Setting it next to him on the log, he began
the first shift.
She made sure her dagger was
safely tucked away next to her before
falling asleep.
*****
her up hours later. She kept her eyes
closed as she tried to calculate how far
away they were and what they were
talking about. They were just far enough
away that she couldn't make out any
specific words.
Where the hell is Garren?
The
low timbre of his laugh coming from the
same direction as the voices answered
that question.
She was about to open her eyes
and take a look around when footsteps to
her right halted her. Shuffling sounds
came closer and she hoped it was the
dragon searching for any signs of food.
The scent of beer and cheap cologne
drifted on the breeze and assaulted her
nose. Unless Sparky is really a lounge
lizard, their camp was being invaded.
Her whole body tensed with fear. But
she wasn’t going to be an easy target.
She was a fighter; a good one.
As carefully as she could, she
wrapped her hand around the hilt of the
dagger lying next to her and waited. The
sound of heavy breathing was practically
on top of her. She held her breath in
order to concentrate on exactly where
the intruder was, when something
touched her wrist. Instincts kicked in and
she immediately elbowed whoever was
kneeling over her, right in the head.
“Son of a bitch!” Some guy in a
dark hooded sweatshirt fell back, his
hand pressing on his right eye.
She jumped up, dagger in hand,
and surveyed the area quickly for any
other threats. Thane frantically searched
for something in his pack but no one else
was close by. The guy she hit stood up
and charged her.
Big mistake
.
She dodged his body and spun
around to kick him in the back of his
knee, successfully knocking him down.
Grabbing his left arm, she pulled it
behind his back and shoved him into the
dirt, face first. “Who the hell are you?”
He lifted his head to speak. “I am
Batman,” he said.
She pushed his arm farther up his
back, causing him to cry out in pain. She
sat on his butt, her feet hooked onto his
thighs to keep him from thrashing around
and knocking her off.
“Okay, okay,” he said. “We were
just looking for some beer and thought
you might have some.” He dropped his
head back to the sand, his breathing
labored from his struggles.
“Jeff!” a female voice screamed
in the distance. She forgot about the girls
flirting with Garren.
Man, I’m losing my edge
.
“Garren, tie them up,” she yelled.
“Thane, go help him. I've got this one
under control.”
Thane grabbed his bag and ran
toward Garren and the girls. She needed
to get the truth from this guy, and if her
instincts were right, she didn't want the
others knowing yet.
“Jeff, huh? I think I like Batman
better.” She eased off his arm a bit.
“What are you really looking for? And if
you give me any crap about alcohol or
drugs, I'll break your arm.”
Grunting, he turned his head to
look at her over his shoulder. “Some
dudes offered us a hundred bucks to hike
up here to see if there was a curly
headed girl with a tattoo on her wrist.”
Anxiety pooled in her belly.
“Did they have this mark, too?” She
snapped the leather band off and shoved
her wrist in his face.
He nodded.
Damn it!
She peered into the
dark forest, searching for any sign of
waiting Eradicators. It was too dark to
see anything, but her gut was telling her
danger lurked beyond the light. “Why
didn't they come themselves?”
He shrugged. “Hell if I know.
So,” he shifted a bit to get comfortable.
“Who are you?”
“Wonder Woman.”