MasukWendy’s POV
“Headed to Redwood Grove?” he asks at last. I nod. “Just got into town today. Tried to get to town, I guess.” I bite back the question on my tongue. Don’t suppose you’ve seen a man in his sixties with short-cropped grey hair, probably wearing a Star Trek t-shirt and white socks with sandals? But I don’t need this stranger knowing my business. Redwood Grove is supposed to be a small town, and hopefully Dad will stand out like a sore thumb anyway. “Where are you staying?” the stranger asks. “Stillwater Pines.” He frowns. “Seriously?” That was a rather ominous seriously. “Yes… why?” “That place is a dump.” I could have guessed as much from the one and two-star reviews online, but it’s not exactly like my minimum wage retail gig comes with a corporate expense account. I shrug. “It’s an affordable dump.” He draws a thumb along his jaw, an unhappy look on his face. “Well, I’m headed to town in any case. You can follow me there.” He moves to take the lantern from me, our fingers touching again. Instead of giving it up, I tighten my grip on it. We’ve drifted close enough that I catch his scent again. I want to press my body against his and inhale. His nostrils flare too. It occurs to me I probably smell like peach rings and nervous sweat. “You’re not planning to do bad things to me, are you?” I’m mostly joking. “I have a knife.” “What makes you think the bad things I want to do would hurt?” Those words, in that tone… holy shit. My mind blanks for a second. Maybe it’s just his hazardously sexy voice. Or maybe he meant to put it there, that undercurrent. The one that’s turning my mind from violence to… something else. Those tattooed, callused hands gripping my hips. His teeth sinking into my skin. Sweaty bodies tangled together. The taste of salt on my tongue. The kind of bad that makes your blood run hot. I take a deep breath of cold air, hoping to clear my head. “Doesn’t seem smart. Following a stranger down a dark forest road.” The flickering lantern casts his face in ever-shifting light and shadow. When he speaks, his voice is lower than ever, almost velvety. “Don’t have to be strangers.” The very edge of his fingertip brushes mine. Deliberately this time, I'm sure of it. Bare skin to bare skin. I feel a low swoop in my belly. “That’s exactly the kind of thing a serial killer would say,” I tell him. “I’ll take your word for it. Serial killer, though?” He raises a scarred eyebrow. “That escalated quickly.” “You seem like you’d be experienced.” That came out way more sexual than I intended. “I bet you have ropes and gloves and all kinds of implements in your truck.” That… didn’t help. “Ropes and gloves.” He tilts his head. “Sounds like you’ve given this some serious thought.” My cheeks are flaming by now, but I stand my ground. “Tell me I’m wrong. Twenty bucks says there’s duct tape and zip ties in your glovebox.” “You’re the one with the knife. I could be in real danger here.” His face betrays no expression, but there a glint in his eyes, like he’s privately laughing to himself. I take a breath. About to tell him that yes, we do have to be strangers, because I’m not ready for the intensity of whatever is going on here, that I’m only here for one day, maybe two, and I don’t do one night stands either, which means I’m basically celibate as a nun for the foreseeable future, and— A twig snaps in the trees. He steps in front of me, his posture becoming protective. He doesn’t move or speak, just stands, listening. Those bicolor eyes are so intent on whatever’s in the forest they almost seem to…glow. Just a trick of the light, I tell myself. Just this dark forest and the fog making everything seem spooky. Something rustles through the underbrush before moving away. Slowly, he turns back to me, his expression veiled. “You never know what you’ll find in the woods.” My heart is pounding in earnest now. I need to get myself under control. My pulse is speeding like I just sprinted for a mile. My mouth feels dry and my palms damp. Breathe, I tell myself. Act normal. Crack a joke. Anything to break the tension. “I’m guessing there’s a gingerbread house,” I venture, “maybe a cannibalistic witch?” I offer him an awkward smile as he continues to stare at me silently. “Not into fairytale references. Okay. That was Hansel and Gretel, for future information. Not a figment of my own twisted imagination.” I’ve got to shut up. When I get nervous, I start to run my mouth, and the last thing I need to do is blurt out something embarrassing—well, even more embarrassing—around this stranger. “I know what you meant. Can’t say I’ve come across a gingerbread house yet.” “So is that a yes on the cannibalistic witch?” I’m starting to sound a little… squeaky. “That would be the least of your problems. C’mon. Let’s get you to town.” I shiver. I’m the girl who has a heart attack when she sees a spider. I don’t want to know what else is in that forest. Reluctantly, I give the lantern back to him. I actually have to force myself to step away from his intoxicating scent. “I'll follow you,” I tell him. “Unless you care to lead the way.” “My GPS is malfunctioning.” “So that’s your excuse.” There’s that hint of mockery beneath his cool voice. Oddly, it puts me—well, not at ease, exactly. There’s a little too much of something else going on for me to feel at ease here. Something hot and charged, like electricity sparking in the air between us. Almost as if he knows exactly what effect he’s having on me. As if he might be enjoying it. But then he heads to his truck and I climb in my car, and I try to dismiss that train of thought. Ridiculous. He was just being a Good Samaritan. I start the car. The engine turns over smoothly this time. Thank God. As his taillights cut through the mist, I follow, my hands gripping the wheel. The GPS is clueless as ever, but at least I have gas in the tank. My pulse picks up again as he turns off the highway. Onto a dark and winding road.Wendy’s POV“You can’t stay here,” he says. His eyes scan the lot, sharp and alert, seeming to track some danger I can't see. I’m unreasonably relieved to see him. He’s still a stranger, still very possibly dangerous, but I have the inexplicable feeling he’s on my side.I try to play it cool. Try not to come across like a totally helpless damsel in distress. “This is where I have reservations.” There’s a flicker of distaste across his harshly beautiful visage.“You seeing the same things I am?”I am. I see the dinginess of it and it just makes me feel… well, defeated. Like this is as good as it gets for me. Driving my old beater of a car to the worst motel in town. Knowing I’ll have to check my bank balance before buying a box of cereal for dinner. Wondering, for the millionth time this week, where Dad has disappeared to without any warning. He’s always been absent-minded, but this is a whole new level. I sigh. “It isn’t the Ritz, that’s for sure.”As we stand outside talking, a s
Wendy’s POVThis guy could be leading me straight to some sort of… lair. For all kinds of nefarious purposes. As much as I might fantasize otherwise, those purposes are unlikely to be giving me multiple orgasms and an engagement ring, so I need to get my head on straight. If we turn off onto any road smaller than this one, I’m turning around and going back the way I came. Hopefully there’s enough gas to get me to some outpost of civilization. But he doesn’t lead me down a smaller road. He stays on this one, wreathed as it is in fog, bordered on either side by black forest, until it finally begins to widen. Pine trees give way to cypress and low, wind-stunted oaks. Ferns spill onto the shoulder, damp from salt spray. The stranger’s truck slows, then turns right onto a well-lit stretch of coastal highway. No lair in sight. Across the road lies the ocean. Waves pummel the shore. Moonlight glimmers on dark water. The sight of it hits me all at once. There’s salt in the air and spa
Wendy’s POV“Headed to Redwood Grove?” he asks at last.I nod. “Just got into town today. Tried to get to town, I guess.”I bite back the question on my tongue. Don’t suppose you’ve seen a man in his sixties with short-cropped grey hair, probably wearing a Star Trek t-shirt and white socks with sandals?But I don’t need this stranger knowing my business. Redwood Grove is supposed to be a small town, and hopefully Dad will stand out like a sore thumb anyway. “Where are you staying?” the stranger asks.“Stillwater Pines.”He frowns. “Seriously?”That was a rather ominous seriously.“Yes… why?”“That place is a dump.”I could have guessed as much from the one and two-star reviews online, but it’s not exactly like my minimum wage retail gig comes with a corporate expense account.I shrug. “It’s an affordable dump.”He draws a thumb along his jaw, an unhappy look on his face.“Well, I’m headed to town in any case. You can follow me there.”He moves to take the lantern from me, our fingers
Wendy’s POV“Easy,” he says, holding up his hands. “Just gonna take a look. You wouldn’t be the first to run dry in the middle of the road.”This close, I see it—The scars.There’s a jagged track that goes from his hairline, down his forehead, follows the curve of his eye socket, and bisects his cheekbone all the way to his jaw. There’s another big scar across his other eye, right through his eyebrow. And yet another vertically slicing through his lips.It looks like someone took a knife to his face. It doesn’t look like the desperate, haphazard slashes like you’d get in a fight or accident. It looks like evidence of torture. He must see the shock on my face, because his own expression hardens. The energy drink churns in my stomach. “Okay,” I whisper. “You can take a look.”He nods in acknowledgement. We’re both pretending like I have some power in this situation, when the truth is, I’ve never been more vulnerable in my life.Who is this stranger? And what the hell happened to h
Wendy’s POVI’m lost. Hopelessly, scarily lost. And not just because I’m running low on peach rings and energy drinks.I stopped to refuel just south of San Francisco, thinking I’d have more than half a tank of gas by the time I got to my next, and hopefully final, motel of this road trip.The sugar and caffeine have been keeping me from succumbing to highway hypnosis. Up until now.I must have missed an exit. Or an onramp. Or the exit to the onramp. Either way, it’s been many miles and just as many hours since I’ve passed a gas station. The Low Fuel light on my car has been on for an alarming amount of time. It hits me that I’m in the middle of nowhere, with no cell service or GPS, no food besides four peach rings and half a bag of pretzels, and no supplies other than what I took to occupy me for a few days “vacation.” Something tells me my embroidery hoop and pumpkin spice chapstick is not the bedrock of a good emergency supply kit. Everything will be fine. I’ll find Dad comin







