Read Wounded Beast (Gypsy Heroes Book 2) Online
Authors: Georgia Le Carre
‘Last night Dom had a nightmare. When I woke him up he thought I was dead. And then he… he … said he couldn’t continue our relationship anymore and walked out of my flat. I haven’t spoken to or seen him since. Can you tell me anything that would help me understand what’s going on, Jake? I … I’m … really … um … in love with your brother.’
An expression of pity crosses his face. He takes a gulp of whiskey and turns his face away from mine. Seconds pass in silence. He appears to be looking into a distant past. At something that saddens him very much.
He turns to me. ‘When Dom was seventeen years old, he fell in love with a girl. She was sixteen. A laughing, wild, rebellious gypsy girl. Her name was Vivien. He thought they were soul mates because they were both so crazy and so alike. They could finish each other’s sentences. He wanted to marry her straightaway, but I forced him to wait until he was eighteen.
‘“You have your whole life ahead of you. What’s the hurry?” I told him. The truth was, I disapproved of her. She was bad for him. Too wild. She took too many risks. She egged him on, dared him to new and dangerous adventures. The kind of things that could land him in prison. Together, they reminded me of Bonnie and Clyde. I hoped, I prayed it would not last.
‘But I was wrong. The love he had for her didn’t die. It just became stronger. They became inseparable. After his eighteenth birthday, very reluctantly, I started to make plans. Everything was ready. In one month they would have been married, but then she did something no one had ever dreamed she would. I don’t know how she did it, but she stowed away on a smugglers’ boat that Dom was on.
‘It was night and the sea was rough. Something happened on that boat. She fell overboard and was swept away.’
W
ith the swiftness of a gull, Vivien went over. She rushed to her fate, so near to me that I know I could have caught her if only I’d put my hand out.
Her hopeless, terror-stricken, doomed face, I saw for merely a moment, but it would be forever etched in my soul. The wide, laughing mouth had become a dark hole in her white face, and her beautiful, dancing eyes were huge with shock. Legs wheeling. Arms flailing. Desperate …. Oh God! How desperately she had looked for something to hold on to, anything, other than salty, gray air and diagonally flashing rain.
The cast iron rule was:
If you fall overboard that’s your fucking funeral.
The boat stops for NOTHING.
One look at Preston and Dallas and I knew: they had absolutely no intention of stopping. Hardly surprising since the pair were certifiable psychopaths. It was the reason Jake wouldn’t have anything to do with them. But me, I had to be the big I AM. I had to work with the most dangerous thugs in Britain to prove what a tough guy I was.
So …
They wouldn’t stop. I couldn’t overpower them—both carried guns. The choice was simple to make. I didn’t think. I didn’t hesitate. Not for one second.
In a flash I pulled out a lifejacket from under the canopy and, with it clutched in my hand, I vaulted over the side of the vessel into the roiling sea, as far away from the pull of the boat as possible.
I hit the water, and sank quickly into a pitch-black abyss full of bubbles. Using my arms to counteract the downward pull, I fought and kicked my way back up, and burst onto the surface with a great gasp. I knew when I jumped overboard that the sea was choppy and treacherous, but in the light of a three-quarter moon it looked as if I was in the middle of a mass of boiling black oil.
Fortunately, it was late July and, though the water was cold, it wasn’t paralyzing. At a guess I would say it was just over fifty degrees Fahrenheit. In that temperature a man could survive for a good few hours before hypothermia set in. That is, if he was wearing a lifejacket or had something to hold on to.
I was wearing my GPS tracker, and I knew that either Preston or Dallas would radio Jake to let him know what had happened, and he would come for me. But it could be hours. I could survive, but what about Vivien? She was small, and the shock of falling into the water would have caused her to swallow a lot of salt water. I looked around frantically.
Until you’ve been alone in the middle of an endless stretch of water, you don’t know how truly small and insignificant you are. I was like cork bobbing on an unforgiving, restless landscape that contained absolutely nothing, not one fucking thing. It had swallowed everything.
She was nowhere to be seen.
I screamed for her over the sound of the boat’s engine, but there was no reply. Telling myself that she wasn’t scared of water, she was a good swimmer, and she was young with a robust constitution, I hooked my hand through one of the armholes of the lifejacket and began to swim strongly toward the area where she’d fallen.
But the truth was I was petrified. I’d never been more afraid in my life. My body was pumping with adrenalin. The raw panic surging through me was tempered only by incredulity that
this
was actually happening to
me
.
In my head my father was saying,
Don’t thrash about, lad. Keep still. Float. And don’t fuckin’ stretch your hand out—it cools the body. Use your legs. Conserve your heat. Conserve your heat. Conserve your heat …
But my hands and legs were moving about wildly. There was no thought of conserving heat.
The sound of the boat died away and I stopped swimming. Treading water, I shouted out to her, and listened. Nothing.
Where the fuck is she?
My heart was beating so hard I felt it bang in my ears. I knew if I didn’t get to her soon, she would die.
I turned round and round, scanning the dark, restless water, hoping, praying. And then, with a surge of excitement, I saw her. She had just colored her hair—the most horrendous orange you ever saw—and I hated it, but it was glowing and floating like seaweed in the moonlight.
Jesus!
She was floating face down! Like a doll being tossed about in the waves.
Fuck me, Vivien! You were planning to go down without a word.
Kicking quickly and powerfully, I swam up to her and threw my arm in a bear hug across her lifeless body. It frightened me how totally unaware of me she was. Grabbing her biceps, I spun her around so she was facing upwards. Still holding on to her body, I swam under her and emerged on the other side of her head, so her back was lying on my chest.
Her eyes were closed, her skin was cold and bluish, and her head lolled. I squeezed her with both forearms in the way you would if someone had swallowed something that was blocking their airways. To my horror, I had crushed her so hard I heard a crack. I prayed I had not broken a rib.
A broken rib won’t matter if she
’
s dead
, a voice in my head said.
I was suddenly engulfed by the most horrendous fear.
I don’t know how I did it with the waves bashing us on all sides, and the plumes of spray that hit us in the face, but I managed to grab her tight, pinch her nose with my other hand, and blow into her mouth while pressing the heel of my hand on her diaphragm thirty times, twice a second. I kept on doing it until she coughed, vomited a load of salt water out, and started gulping summer air.
I felt a surge of fierce joy. Quickly inflating the lifejacket, I began to massage her shivering body, keeping her skin as close to mine as possible. She came back to life slowly. The first thing she did was fucking apologize.
It made me so angry. ‘Shut up, Vivien. Don’t you dare apologize. We said we’d never say sorry to each other. We’re the wild ones, remember?’
‘I can’t believe we’re going to end up as shark food,’ she said. There was no fear in her voice. Maybe she was in shock.
‘These waters are too cold for sharks,’ I replied, rubbing her arms furiously. I knew we were a long way from being saved.
‘So this is how my life ends,’ she said in a voice full of wonder.
It hit me in the chest like a kick from a horse. ‘You’re not fucking dying. Stop being so fucking dramatic.’
She turned her head slightly and looked at me sadly. ‘I feel so stupid. This is the stupidest thing I’ve done. I can’t believe I’m going to die because of my own stupidity,’ she whispered. And then the thought occurred to her. ‘Oh my God, Dom. I’ve been so selfish. You’re going to die too.’
‘Neither of us is going to die. Jake will be here soon.’
‘What if he doesn’t come? He doesn’t like me, you know,’ she said.
‘Stop talking nonsense. Why wouldn’t he like you?’
‘You’re such a fool, Dom.’
‘He’ll come.’
‘What if he doesn’t make it in time?’
‘He’ll make it in time,’ I said, a wave slapping salt water into my mouth.
‘I’m sorry, baby.’
I could feel the rage in my guts. ‘Stop apologizing. I’d do the same again given half the chance.’
‘If I die, will you marry someone else?’
‘I’ll never marry anyone else, Vivien.’
‘I couldn’t bear it if you do.’
‘Look, I fucking won’t, OK?’
‘You promise?’
‘I promise.’
‘I’ll come back and haunt you if you do.’
‘You’re not going to fucking die, so this is a stupid discussion.’
‘But if I do. Don’t fall in love with anyone else.’
‘You won’t,’ I said through clenched teeth.
She didn’t speak anymore, and for more than an hour both of us were mostly silent. We spoke only to check that we were both still alive. I kept glancing at my watch every few minutes. Time had never moved so slowly. After what seemed like interminable hours my legs felt like dead weights and I was struggling to move them.
By then, Vivien was also no longer shivering. There was a strange lethargy about her. I knew that at that rate she was not going to last. I turned her over so her chest was pressed to mine. It was harder work for me, but I didn’t know what else to do to warm her up.
‘Don’t move unless you have to. Don’t even kick your legs. Stay still and conserve your energy,’ I told her.
‘I’m afraid, Dom. I’m afraid I’ll die.’ Her voice was quivering with emotion.
‘No, you fucking won’t. I won’t allow it.’
‘My wedding dress. You’ll never see me in my wedding dress,’ she moaned into my neck.
The dank taste of the ocean was in my mouth. ‘I’ll fucking see you in your wedding dress if I have to bury you in it,’ I growled.
She giggled. It was a weak, lazy sound. She was slipping away. I could feel it as strongly as I knew my hands had become so numb I could no longer feel them.
‘It doesn’t hurt like I thought it would. I’m not scared anymore. It’s almost peaceful, actually. Just like falling into something soft and dark.’
I held her tighter still. ‘Vivien, you have to fight it. Stay with me.’
‘Hey, baby! Look at those lights. They’re beauuuuuutiful.’
‘What lights?’
‘Can you not see them?’
‘No.’
‘Oh, I pity you. They are sooooo beautiful.’
I gazed down at her face. It was animated in a way it had not been since I
’d
found her floating face down. I became terrified.
‘Vivien, look at me,’ I shouted, but she was so entranced by the vision in front of her that she refused to turn in my direction. I grabbed her chin and turned her face toward me. Her eyes were glassy and empty. They seemed unable to focus on me. She made a small, incoherent sound of displeasure or irritation.
‘The lights. I want to see the lights,’ she mumbled pleadingly.
I released her chin and she turned away immediately to gaze with fascination at the lights only she could see. I looked around desperately at the empty blackness stretching out in all directions around us. And I prayed. And I prayed.
It felt like we had been in the water forever.
My legs were getting tired of treading water, and I could see that she had given up the desire to fight the cold. Not even the lights could interest her anymore. Her eyes were closing. Her body, having imposed increasingly drastic measures to keep functioning, was finally starting to shut down. Her heartbeat was becoming weaker and weaker. If I didn’t do something soon it would stop completely. Then only her brain would be alive. And then even that would die. I
had
to pull her out of her slump.
I shook her and she opened her eyes weakly.
‘Listen,’ I said with fake excitement. ‘Jake
’
s coming. I can hear the engine of his boat.
’
She seemed to listen. ‘I don’t hear it,’ she mumbled groggily.
‘There
’
s too much water in your ears,’ I lied.
She smiled weakly, only half-conscious. ‘I’m so happy. He can take me back to my mother,’ she said, and I smiled back, but my smile became a grimace of horror when her heart stopped and she died from the sheer relief of thinking that she had been rescued.
I couldn
’
t believe it.
I
’
d heard of people dying from the relief of thinking they
’
d been rescued, but I had never thought that it would happen to her. I held her body tightly against mine. It was impossible that she was gone. I couldn
’
t comprehend that something as alive as she could ever succumb to something as ordinary as death. Or that as fierce and possessive as my love was, I couldn
’
t keep her. I had held on so tightly, with every ounce of my being, and yet she had slipped away, like sand from a clenched fist.
So I shook her limp body. I rubbed her arms and legs. I gave her mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, but Vivien was gone. The pain and horror of losing her was unbearable. Words couldn’t enter into my pain. I began to scream. I screamed and screamed like a madman. I cursed, I swore, I sobbed until no sounds would come out of my mouth.