gas,” Finn called. “It’s not—”
The man climbed into his car, shut and locked the door.
“The ice machine’s right over . . .” Robyn squinted to see, her eyes still streaming tears. “Over there,” she said resolutely, then took an equally resolute step before faltering against the wall.
Finn went to grab her only to realize he still had hold of her arm. He tightened his grip, helping her find her balance.
“Sorry,” she said. “Guess I’m a little off.”
Now it was his turn to laugh, a rusty rumble. “I’d say you’ve got a right to be. I’ll get the ice and water. Stay here and catch your breath.”
Finn jogged to the vending machine. He fed his bill into it while scouring the cubby for something to hold the ice. He bought a water and a Coke, then snatched up an empty chip bag, filled it with ice and put it into his pocket.
The sidewalk was empty.
Finn strode to the spot where he’d left Robyn. He looked around. Even opened the motel room door again. She was gone.
He dropped the bottles. Threw them, if he was being honest, as he started running.
How stupid had that been? He finally catches his fugitive suspect, only to leave her unattended while he trips over himself to get some water, some ice . . . Hell, she could probably use a Coke, to boost her blood sugar.
He reached the side corner to see her race around the back, remarkably agile for someone unable to take two steps a few minutes ago.
She’d played him.
He tore down that side stretch so fast he barely had his gun out before he wheeled around the back corner and—
There stood Robyn Peltier. Holding a gun on him.
HOPE
Hope raced down the fence line, Rhys’s feet pounding behind her. She rounded the corner. Still no sign of an opening. Why would there be? The motel wouldn’t encourage anyone to cut through its property.
She pressed herself against the boards and waited, her eyes half closed as she tracked the pound of Rhys’s shoes. Closer, closer . . .
He came around the corner and she pounced. She caught him in a hold, but this time he was ready and before she could flip him, he countered, throwing her onto her back.
“Hope, you have to listen to me.”
Hope hit him with a head strike, grabbing his outstretched arm and slamming her open palm under his chin. He should have flown back. But he recognized the move, countered with a wrist twist and threw her to the ground again, harder this time, wind whooshing from her lungs, head hitting a rock, fireworks of pain and light exploding. He stood over her, his lips moving, some new variation on “Let’s talk about this,” but the gong ringing in her ears drowned out his words.
The demon wended through her body like an electric eel, sparking and jolting with every twist, battering itself against Hope’s insides, fighting to escape. It had escaped before. Once Hope had even seen it in a mirror, a nightmare version of herself, wild with rage. Now it whipped through her, begging to be free.
So Hope set the terms . . . and opened the gate.
She flew at Rhys, martial-arts training forgotten, animal instinct— demon instinct—taking over, tackling him with everything she had, a dervish of nails and feet and fists. Expecting another scripted martialarts move, he staggered back. She launched herself at him. They went down.
If any low-flying plane had passed over at that moment, Hope suspected they’d have seen a scene straight out of a Tasmanian devil cartoon as she scrabbled in the dirt with Rhys, a dust cloud enveloping them.
Throughout the fight, she kept control. And it was glorious, the purest adrenaline and chaos rush imaginable. Sweeter even than surrendering to the demon. Sweeter because, for those few minutes, her halves found their whole, demon and conscience in sync. Which was not to say the demon didn’t push the boundaries, tossing out suggestions that involved the permanent destruction of body parts—eyes, ears, teeth . . . and parts no guy really deserves to lose. But she controlled the demon and she used it.
It worked fine until Rhys pulled out a whip-thin strap of plastic that Hope didn’t even notice until it was fixed around her wrist. She jerked back, thrown off enough for him to take advantage, flipping her onto her stomach and snapping the cuff around her other hand.
She rocked and writhed, trying to kick, but he stayed out of reach. He grabbed