Reign of Brayshaw (Brayshaw High) - Meagan Brandy Page 0,55
her coughs, and she groans. “You... you ruined... everything.”
I don’t speak.
“Still, he doesn’t get to have you.” She cocks the gun, her eyes hardening through her tears, but the tears aren’t for me, they’re for herself.
The door is kicked open, but I don’t dare look.
She does though, and it’s just long enough to distract her.
I smash my lips together and with a loud, angry grunt, I twist the blade, driving it deeper into her flesh.
She tries to swallow but chokes, her hand clawing at my arm.
Her nose turns red as her nostrils flare. Her eyes slice to mine, the first and only time I have ever seen regret or remorse from her. Her fingernails scratch across my stomach. “This is the only thing that will save you now.” Her body jolts as she fights for air. “Ha—” she croaks. “Happy birthday, daughter. I hate you.”
My nose tingles, but I bite into my cheek to hold onto myself. “Don’t worry, Mom. I know.”
A broken gasp leaves her. Her eyes squeeze one second, her body going limp in the next.
A pair of black boots come into view, and slowly I pull my gaze up.
Bass Bishop.
My mother dies in my arms.
At my hand.
What feels like an eternity later, must only be seconds as Bass is only now quietly pushing the door closed behind him. He props a chair against it to keep it from falling open since he busted the lock from the frame.
He rushes to Captain and feels for a pulse while looking me over.
“It’s not mine,” I tell him when he glares at the blood covering my shirt and lap.
He glowers harder at my head and the blood falling from it, and then pulls out his phone.
“Don’t call them.”
His eyes cut to mine as he slowly lifts his cell to his ear. He frowns. “Yeah... hi. I found a man bleeding in room 109 at Vermont, he was shot and he’s out cold.” He raises his finger to his lips, listening before he says, “There’s a woman, too.” He ends the call.
Bass stands, walking over, and crouches to his knees in front of me.
I don’t realize what he’s doing until his hand covers mine.
Mine drops at the contact.
“Let go of the knife, Raven.”
My fingers fly open, but he has to pull my hand back.
He gently reaches up and turns my head toward him. The sloshy sound of the blade being ripped from flesh fills the air and I double over, vomiting across his shoes and my right leg.
“Come on.” He grips me under my arms, pulling me up and my mom’s body falls to the floor with a thud.
Bass sets me on the bed and quickly runs into the bathroom, coming back with two wet towels. One he uses to wipe across my chin, the other he gently places around my neck.
He pulls me to my feet and rushes us toward the door, but I yank away, falling against the wall.
“What... what are you doing?” I shake my head.
“We’re leaving.”
“Like hell.”
Bass gets in my face. “Get the fuck out of this room, Raven. Now,” he growls, but worry swims in his eyes.
“I say what goes on here!” I shout, making a mockery of myself. A wetness coats my cheeks – blood or tears, I don’t fucking know. “Not you!”
“You’re right. Still, we need to leave.”
“I won’t leave him here.”
“There is a man shot and a woman dead. We have to get you out before someone comes knocking.”
“That is Captain bleeding out on the fucking floor! I leave, and he dies?!” I bark, ignoring the throbbing it creates at my temples. “Alone beside that piece of shit?! Fuck you!” I shove at him. “I’m going to the hospital with him!”
Bass curses and before I know what he’s doing he has me spun around, my back to his front, my arms and stomach smashed against the wall. He covers my mouth and plugs my nose, suffocating me.
“Stop fidgeting, it’ll hurt your wounds,” he says, tightening his hold.
I’m weak, but I claw at his arms.
His chest expands against my back. “I have to get you out of here, Raven. You are priority. Don’t worry,” he whispers softly as my body starts to sway. “They’re coming for him.”
They – he didn’t call the ambulance.
He called his brothers.
Fuck!
Everything goes black.
My eyes open, my vision blurry at first, but it only takes a second for it to clear.
Bass Bishop comes into view.
The tautness of his features tells me he’s unsure of his next move.