Authors: Harlow Stone
“Get low!” is roared from behind me, and I dive down, taking one of the Russian fucks holding my arms with me. Shots ring out as I fight with him, wrestling for the gun. He elbows by aching ribs, and I lose my breath, which gives him the upper hand as he reaches for the gun. He then swings back, gun in hand, hitting me across the head with it. When he sits up with the gun raised, I think this is it. I’m a dead fucker. But the blood raining down on me isn’t my own.
Women scream as three men dressed in black garb and bullet-proof vests rush in. I grab the gun from the dead Russian’s hand and push him off me, desperate to find my way to Jerri. The bullet hole in the center of Yakov’s head lets me breathe a little easier as I pass him and enter Jerri’s cell. Vasily is five feet in front of me, soaked in blood from shoulder to ankle.
“Don’t fucking touch her,” I growl, aiming the gun at his head. Turning in my direction, I see the pleasure on his face. I don’t understand why until I take notice of the gun aimed straight at my unborn son.
That lump I’m familiar with rises in my throat once again, and I tell him, “You shoot, you’re fucking dead.”
He chuckles, a wet sound as the blood runs out of his mouth. “Irishman, I’m already fucking dead.”
And then he pulls the fucking trigger.
“Agghh!”
“No!” Locklin shouts. “Jerri, stay with me, Lass. Hang on.”
I try to open my eyes, but it hurts. I push through the pain. I need to see him. I need to know I’m not dreaming.
“Lock?” I whimper when I feel my body being moved.
“I’m so sorry, Jerri girl. So fucking sorry,” he cries as he holds me in his arms, rocking me back and forth.
“Lee!” he shouts, causing me to stir. “We need an ambulance, now!”
I hear them talking, but they seem muted. The blood rushes in and out of my ears as I press my face into his chest, breathing in his scent.
“Open your eyes, Lass. You can’t go back to sleep yet. Open your eyes,” he keeps saying, and I keep trying. Reaching up, I touch my eyes with my hand and feel the dried blood coating my lashes. Placing his hand on top of mine, he shushes me, and a woman says, “Here.”
I hear the sound of fabric ripping before a cool, wet cloth is rubbed gently over my eyes. The blood softens. The stickiness washes away, and thankfully my eyes start to open. The muted lighting in the cell is a blessing, and the first thing I see is Lock’s face, which is inches from mine.
Tears run down his cheeks, and he presses his lips gently to mine. “Stay with me, Jerri girl.”
I try to nod, but my head falls back on my shoulders, dizziness making me blink my eyes repeatedly. I try to clear it, the dizziness. Locklin keeps whispering in my ear as he lifts me from the floor, and a woman with a torn shirt stands there, a piece of her tattered shirt in one hand, a bottle of water in the other. She nods at me, our camaraderie among the cells now over, and hell forever behind us.
I fight the darkness as my head bobs on Locklin’s shoulder. Dead bodies litter the floor on our way out of the building, and men dressed like commandos are huddled around the small group of terrified women. Blankets and water are handed out, and the women reach for them with a liveliness you wouldn’t expect from someone who had just cowered in a cell a moment ago, petrified.
I try to wave, but it hurts.
Everything hurts.
“Lock?” I whisper.
The lights of an ambulance are visible in the distance. I focus on the flashing. “I’m tired.”
He presses his face into my neck and weeps. “Stay with me, Jerri girl, and I’ll tell you a story, okay?”
I think I nod into his chest. I’m not sure because I can barely feel anything. His arms loosen from my body, and I call his name. “Right here, Lass,” he whispers against my forehead as I’m lowered onto a stretcher and loaded into the ambulance.
His hands grip my own, his thumb moving in soothing circles as he rests his forehead against mine. I feel a prick in my arm, hear medical jargon being spouted off about my condition and the baby.
A gunshot wound.
“The baby?” I cry, eyes barely open.
“Shh, Lass. Our boy is fine right now. I was going to tell you a story, remember?” I tilt my head toward his voice and open my eyes.
“Kay.”
He smiles. God, it’s beautiful. There’s blood covering half of his face. Tears stream down his cheeks, and two days’ worth of stubble covers his square jaw.
But he’s beautiful.
I tell him so.
He laughs. “The drugs are kicking in. I guess I better hurry before you fall asleep on me again.” I give him a dopey smile. He carries on. “I once told a woman that I loved her, but I don’t think I really knew what it meant at the time. Those words are thrown out so freely, Lass. They’re overused and underworked. You can love someone, but not like them. You can love them, but not care for them.” He sighs. “I’ve cared for you, deeply, Lass, more than I have ever cared for another. And I don’t just
like
you . . . I’m practically
obsessed
with you.”
Reaching up, I place my fingers on his full lips. He kisses each finger before holding them to the side of his face. His cheeks wet from tears. “In the past twelve years, I’ve helped rescue one hundred and eighty-three women.”
His throat works. He clenches his jaw. “One hundred and eighty-three, Jerrilyn. Black, white, Asian, Russian, Irish.” He barks out a harsh, painful laugh. “Twenty-three, seventeen, thirty, ten. It didn’t matter the age. It didn’t matter their ethnicity, where they came from. It didn’t matter if one were a prostitute and the other a child entering high school.
“When that cage, container, or warehouse door opens, none of that stuff matters, Lass. And it doesn’t matter if they’ve been in that cage for five hours, five days, or five weeks—they all want the same thing. They all
beg
for the same thing: That thing is not their parents, children, or friends. It’s not even healthcare.”
Leaning close, he places his free hand on the side of my face and harshly whispers, “It’s water, Jerri girl. They beg for fucking water.”
You’re my water, Jerri girl.
Jerrilyn
“Oh my God.”
“I like it much better when you moan my name, Lass,” he says with his mouth firmly attached at the base of my neck.
“Stop teasing me,” I groan, digging my nails into his back as he continues to thrust gently and steadily into my body.
“Patience, Jerri girl,” he says as he pushes deeper, grinding his hips before placing his mouth on my own. I push my fingers into his hair and pull none too gently. “Locklin, please!”
He sighs but doesn’t push harder. “I don’t want to hurt you.”
I growl, “You’re hurting me by denying me my orgasm.”
He clasps his hands around my shoulders, and I wrap my legs around his firm arse, pulling him deeper into me. “Christ, woman. You’re killing me.”
I nip his bottom lip and pull, forcing a groan to erupt from his chest but spurring him on enough to fuck me harder. “Yes,” I moan, falling back onto the mattress, taking all that he gives me.
Locklin, my unselfish lover who loved me all along, even though I was deaf to his words.
You can survive without love.
You can survive weeks without food.
You
cannot
survive without water.
“Eyes, Lass,” he whispers against my lips.
When my eyes connect with his, we’re joined in every sense of the word, from toes to mouths.
From skin to soul.
There’s no doubt, worry, or indecision.
There’s no fear or insecurity that he may leave.
We’re one, Locklin and I. And although it may have taken a long time for us to get here, I know, as does he, that never would either of us been in this place with someone else.
If we did, it would be settling for less.
And regardless of what has happened over the years, I get it now.
I fucking get it.
Whether it was when he rescued me in that warehouse or when he told me the reasoning behind me being his water, I’m not sure. What I do know is there’s not a soul on this planet who has loved me, and will continue to love me, like Locklin.
I used to think him selfish, and perhaps he was for a time. But until he learned, on his own terms, how to get rid of the ghosts from his past, there was no way I ever would have had one hundred percent of him.
And while there was a time in my life when I had settled for a part of him, I now know the abundance of having all of him.
Given our turbulent history, I can only call it tragically beautiful.
Much like the man—my pretty and reckless.
“Sing to me, Jerri Girl.”
I sigh. “Only if you make me come.”
His eyes crinkle around the edges as a smile takes over his handsome face. “Done.”
“There are a million of you,
But only one for me,
They may be new,
But can’t you see?
There’s only one for me.
And that one is you,
No matter what you do,
Know that I need you.
No matter what you see,
Know it’s only you for me.
No matter what you see,
Know it’s only you for eternity.”
“Beautiful, Jerri Girl. Now come.” His hands hold tight—one on my shoulder, the other on my neck—as I go to blissful heights and let out the first moan of pleasure in months.
“Locklin!” I half-moan and wail as he follows me over, squeezing my body so tightly to his that it’s hard to tell where he ends and I begin.
“Whaaa . . .”
Locklin grasps my hips and gently removes himself from my body before leaping off the bed and pulling his lounge pants on.
I sigh. “You know, it’s okay for her to cry a little, right?”
He turns and scowls at me. “It was your idea to put her in her own room.”
I fight the smile and the laugh wanting to escape my mouth. “She’s two months old, Lock. How long do you suggest we let our children sleep in the same room as us?”
He flings the bedroom door open and speaks as he walks across the hall. His voice tapers off but comes through on the monitor beside our bed.
“She doesn’t like to be by herself,” he grumbles. “Do you, Lara? Come to Da.”
Her crying wanes, as it does every time he holds her. It’s getting to the point where I think she does it on purpose just so he can come to the rescue and rock her until she falls asleep. “You don’t like being on your own in here, do you little Lass?”
I hear her gurgle sounds and the motion of the rocking chair in her bedroom. She was just fed an hour ago, so I know she’s not hungry. “I’ll stay until you fall asleep. How about a story?”
I put my nightshirt back on so that I don’t give our son an eyeful in the morning when he comes to wake me up. I snuggle down into bed and listen to my husband’s deep, soothing voice serenading our girl.
“There was once a beautiful Lass, more beautiful than any other in the land.” Lara coos as he continues. “She had the voice of an angel and the body of a goddess, but that wasn’t what caught the attention of the most stubborn man in the Kingdom. No, it was her eyes. They told a story all on their own. So much so that even after the awful villain tried to steal the light from them, they still shone bright every time the most stubborn man in the Kingdom made contact with them.
“You see, it didn’t matter how many men from the kingdom looked at her. It didn’t matter how powerful or handsome they were, because the light in the beautiful Lass’s eyes only shone for one stubborn man. You know why, Lara girl?” She doesn’t answer; she’s probably fast asleep, but he continues. “Because the stubborn man was sent to protect her, care for her, and treat her as though she were the last drop of water in the middle of a desert. He vowed once he escaped the darkness and shadows he lived in that he would treat her as best he could for the rest of his days and all eternity. And any man who had been in the desert knew that this was the highest form of assurance. Bigger than fate, bigger than love. Bigger than anything.
“So, together at last, the stubborn man gives her enough water to never know thirst. And in return, the beautiful Lass gives him enough light so that he will never be lost in the shadows of darkness again.”
I wipe a tear from my cheek, a smile engraved on my face.
“Sleep, little lass,” he whispers before returning to our bed moments later. I relax into his embrace with my head on his chest, listening to his heartbeat as I do every night before I fall asleep. Taking a deep breath, I place my lips over his heart. “I love you madly, Locklin Cavanaugh.”
I keep my lips there for a moment, thankful for him, our healthy boy, and our growing little girl in the other room. I’m grateful for this cabin and our children’s pseudo-grandparents on the other side of the property.
We made it.
It took over a decade. It took nearly dying and Locklin fighting for something I didn’t completely understand.
But we did.