Authors: Amy Love
CHAPTER THREE
Nearly twenty hours after she left Houston, Chelsea pulled the Sporty into a hotel parking lot near the California border and shut the bike down. She had to rest. The hotel was a hole-in-the wall in the middle of nowhere. She had to take a risk some time, and this was as far as she could go. Even her fear couldn't keep her eyes open any longer.
She paid for the room in cash, took the saddle bags off the bike, and got inside. She showered, lied down on the bed without dressing, and passed out.
When Chelsea woke she had no idea where she was at first. Then she realized she was lying naked on a bed in a hotel room. She recognized the place, and terror rippled through her body. This was the hotel where the man who wanted her to call him
Papi
came. The one who hung her from the ceiling, and whipped her before he fucked her. This was where Papi came to visit. After Papi used her, his men could have her, and they always came in at the same time, laughing when she was air-tight.
She trembled as she heard a car door close outside the room. Papi was coming. She could hear his men laughing with him outside. She couldn't do this again. She just couldn't. It would kill her. She looked up, and there was the eyehook in the ceiling, the one he would hang her from. The one where she had screamed from so many times before.
"No, no, no, no, this can't be happening, no," she murmured. She looked over to the side of the bed and saw the cash she was supposed to deliver back to Tomas.
"No, no, no, no, please god, please no," she continued. Then she spotted the hotel phone.
"Elias," she breathed. "Elias will come get me. He'll stop Papi."
Trembling, listening to the Mexican voices outside, she picked up the phone and dialed Elias' number, praying that he wouldn't be angry that she went back to Tomas. That he would come get her.
"Please Elias, pick up, please. I need you. Oh god, Papi is coming. Please pick up," she cried.
"Chelsea?" Elias' voice came through the speaker, "Is that you, baby?"
"He's coming for me Elias," she cried, "Papi is right outside. Please come get me. I'm sorry. I'm so sorry. I can't do this again. Please!"
"Baby, where are you?"
"I can't do this Elias! I can't! I'll die!"
"Baby, are you in a hotel?"
"Yes, I'm here. He's outside with his men. I can hear them. They’re going to— oh god, I can't do this," she bawled into the phone.
"Baby, what's the name of the hotel? I'm coming, just tell me the name," Elias begged softly.
She looked at the phone, and taped to the side of it was the name of the hotel. She told him the name, "Please! I'm so sorry. I love you, Elias. I'll do anything for you. Please, anything. Anything you want you can have. Please come get me!"
The door of the hotel room opened, and there was Papi, and she could see his men smiling at her from behind him. Papi came into the room, with a smirk on his face, rope and a cat-tails flog in his hand, looking over her naked body with pure lust, but not at her. He never looked at her, just her body. He liked to see her hanging, and writhing. He liked to hear her scream. He liked her to call him Papi.
"Oh Elias, he's here. He's here. I can't do anything. He's going to... "
"My hair. I can't get the smell out of my hair," she murmured in a near child-like voice, as she pulled at the sweat-drenched strands and trembled.
CHAPTER FOUR
"Desert Inn," Fred said, answering the hotel phone.
"You the manager?" Elias asked.
"I'm the owner. Name's Fred; what can I do for you?"
"My name is Elias, Elias Neal. You have a young woman in your hotel, came in on a Harley Sportster."
"Mind telling me what this is about?" Fred asked.
"She's very sick. Do you know what PTSD is?"
"I was in 'Nam, son, you don't need to lecture me about post-trauma."
"Good, because she has it in spades, and she's melting down in your hotel right now. I need you to keep an eye on her, and make sure she doesn't try to leave. It's worth twenty-grand to you if you can make that happen."
"What's your number?" Fred asked.
"Why?"
"Because she wouldn't be the first woman trying to get away from a sicko that has shown up in my hotel, son. I'm going to go see her. If what you say pans true, well then, we'll take it from there," Fred told him plainly.
Elias gave him his number, and Fred hung up on him without further comment.
Fred was ex-airborne, and plenty of good men in his history had fallen to the terrors of post-war. Most of them ate bullets for a dinner in some lonely place and were gone now. He wasn't sure how a woman might be afflicted like that, but they were on the lines now, so it was possible.
He picked up his keys, locked up his office, and casually strolled down the length of his building until he came to number seven, with the bike parked outside. He knocked. Nothing happened, so he knocked again, and called out.
No answer came.
Putting his key into the lock he opened the door a little, and called inside. He could hear someone in there, a voice, but she wasn't answering him. He opened the door further and stepped inside warily. If she was shell-shocked, there was no telling what she might do, and he didn't want to get shot. Not at this stage of the game. Shit hurt like hell.
He found her in the bathroom, and his heart broke looking at her. Cleaned up, she was probably pretty, and would look a little like his granddaughter.
He didn't try to touch her, or comfort her. She was gone. Completely gone. Her eyes looked through him, not even knowing he was there. Her body shook like she was freezing to death.
Taking his cell phone out, and the paper with Elias' number on it, he made the call.
"Hello?" Elias said.
"I found her. She's alive, and breathing, but gone," Fred told him.
"I have her doctor ready to call you," Elias to him.
"Hope he's a psych, and a good one," Fred said.
"She is. Both."
"Then take down my cell number. Can't call the rooms directly, and I don't think I should leave her like this," Fred said, and gave him his number.
"I also have a man a few hours out. I'm saddling to ride there right now with four others."
"Why all the men?" Fred asked.
"The man that did this to her is looking for her, and he means to finish what he started. He wants her dead," Elias to him.
"How do I know you aren't this man?" Fred asked.
Elias paused, and then said, "You don't. What do you suggest?"
"Why don't you have her doctor call me, and I'll do what she suggests, if it sounds reasonable," Fred told him.
"What about my man? Will you let him guard her? She's in some serious danger."
"He can guard, but he can't take her—how's that?"
"That's fine. That will be just fine. His name is Dave, and he rides a Heritage. Red. He's about three hours from you."
"Alright. Dave it is then—and son, I really think this girl needs to be in a hospital soon after this Dave fella gets here. Local Sheriff is a good man, and honest as they come. I play poker with him."
Elias took in a deep breath. "The man after her is a cop, a detective. Houston."
"What's she to you?"
"I love her," Elias told him.
"Then why aren't you here with her?"
"She got scared, didn't want me hurt, and took off. She called me from the room. You can check your logs. She asked me to come get her, and sir, I appreciate your caution, but I intend to do exactly that."
"Well, come on then. Houston is a long way off, and it will give me time to think this through. You have my cell. Call as you like to check up on things. I'm guessing, though, you'll be meeting her at the hospital, not here. Just wouldn't be right to keep her here like this," Fred told him.
"I'll keep in touch then. Doc will be driving out as well, so she can help with treatment and with getting her back home," Elias told him.
"Alright. Have her doctor call me, and we'll take it from there. My gut tells me you are on the up and up, but, like I said, I was in 'Nam and I didn't get through that just relying on my gut. Got to use brains as well."
"Agreed," Elias told him. "I'm on my way."
A few minutes later a woman who claimed to be Dr. Mary Maynard called his phone and asked if he knew how to take vitals.
"Yep, sure do. She's at fifty beats a minute, eyes unresponsive, and her skin is clammy. She's pulling at her hair, and talking about the smell, and that's all she's doing. I don't even think she knows I'm in the bathroom with her."
"Alright," Doc said. "Is there a hospital nearby? Some place that knows something besides horses?"
"Not close, but I can get her there, to the one in Yuma," Fred said. "Should I wait for this Dave fella to show up first?"
"Definitely. She's in serious danger, and so are you right now."
"How serious?" he asked.
"You sound like a medic," she said.
"Airborne, cross-trained," he said.
"Then you'll understand when I tell you:
very
serious trouble."
"Ah, alright. I'll get my gun then. What color is this Dave fella's bike, again?"
"Red; it's a Heritage Harley. Do you know what that is?"
"Yes ma'am I do," Fred assured her. "Is he licensed to carry? Is he legal?"
"Yes he is," Doc told him. "I'll be trying to get a hold of him, and give him your number."
"That's a good idea. Why don't you give me his as well?"
"Why?" she asked.
"So I can call him when he's in front of me and see if he picks up before I shoot him."
Doc gave her Dave's phone number. "I like your kind of caution Fred," she told him. "I'll be seeing you soon."
It was less than two hours later when a large Harley pulled into the lot right up to Chelsea's Sporty. The man that got off Fred would describe as
professional, and serious.
Fred leveled his gun on the man, and dialed the number Doc gave him from his cell phone.
Dave noticed the gun just as his phone rang loudly in his jacket pocket.
"You must be Fred," Dave said.
"You are more than likely known as Dave," Fred answered.
"She inside?"
"Yep, but we're on the move. I'll call an ambulance."
"I'll keep an eye out, then. Make your call. Let's take care of that girl. She's got a lot of people back home missing her," Dave told him.
"A lot, huh?" Fred asked.
"Over fifty that know her, some eighty more that don't, but still care about her," Dave said, then added, "The kind of care that your little gun isn't going to keep back for very long. So let's put that away, alright?"
Fred looked at his .45 and shrugged, then put it in his holster. Then he called the emergency line and asked for an ambulance.