The Tempest A.J. Scudiere (books to read in a lifetime .TXT) š
- Author: A.J. Scudiere
Book online Ā«The Tempest A.J. Scudiere (books to read in a lifetime .TXT) šĀ». Author A.J. Scudiere
Heād been smaller then. And heād agreed. Although the urge to laugh at them had been overwhelmingāwhat else was there for them to threaten? But heād held it together even though he smelled like a brewery and felt like the mouse in the vat. Then heād gone to the bar to look drunk while he planned. He cashed out his account about five minutes before he drove his car off a bridge and disappeared. Looking back, it had been a pretty amateur job heād done of ākillingā himself.
He was much better at these things now.
Which was why it was such a shock to look up and find out heād run into her. With eyebrows raised, she was standing right in front of him in the dark back alley. Heād spent too much effort thinking and not enough acting.
The houses here were too far apart, trees had been planted along these back roads offering plenty of cover that would only be broken if a car came through with headlights blazing.
The girl was glaring daggers at him and, having seen her work, he wondered if actual metal just might come out of her eyes.
Lee took a moment to look her over. Heād been so startled the last time heād seen her that he hadnāt really seen. She was slim and dressed in her leather shadows again. Her skin was slightly olive and her eyes dark. Even God had made her for blending into the night. He might have called her pretty, but she was much too young. She was actually ācuteā. And that alone was scarier than any demons he could think up.
She was also about six inches shorter than him, which he guessed put her at five-six, five-seven. And she had her little hands clenched on her hips, her body rigid. āDid you kill him?ā
Lee let himself look a little taken aback at the demand. āYes, honey, I did.ā
āI am not your honey.ā
He hmphed. āMaybe not, but you owe me one.ā
She shrugged back into a blue quilted jacket, and slung a red standard high school backpack over her shoulder. āI donāt owe you shit.ā She turned to walk away, but Lee hadnāt heard enough.
The Heckler came out from his back and he shot a silenced round into the tree next to her.
She stopped even as the bark still flew, then slowly turned. He had to hand it too her, she didnāt look intimidated. Even people with guns were often intimidated by him. He was big, brawny, and bad ass. And he didnāt care what anyone did to him. Heād just keep coming ātil he was dead. But this girl looked almost bored with him.
āWhat the hell do you want? You ruined my evening.ā The light from the moon filtered through the trees and barely bounced off her. He might have looked past her if he hadnāt almost run smack into her.
āYour name.ā He held the gun trained only a few lethal inches from her.
āSin.ā
He laughed. That was perfect for her.
Laughing was a mistake.
She was near enough to take advantage of his momentary change of focus. With swift movements, she grabbed his hand in both of hers so softly that he didnāt even realize what she was doing. But she put pressure on the pulse point at his wrist and against the back of his hand, easily turning the gun away from her and almost around to him.
He felt himself jerk with surprise, and in that moment she yanked the Heckler from his grasp.
A quick bite to his tongue was all that kept him from yelling out āShit!ā
With the haughty air of a sheriff punishing a delinquent, she slipped the ammo from the gun, tucking the clip into her pocket before handing the gun back to him with a look that said she thought he ought to be a little more careful with it in the future.
Two could play at that.
With a sigh, he moved his hand along the front of his belt and pulled another clip loose. He casually slid it into the gun and re-aimed it at her.
She should have at least kept the gun, he had three more on him and had been reaching for another even as she had popped the clip out of the one sheād taken. At least then it would have been a fair fight.
She flung her hands out to the side. āFine then, shoot me already.ā
She wasnāt afraid. Not of him, or his gun, or the fact that the two together could easily remove her from this life.
She looked like a high-schoolerāwith her backpack and her hair hanging down in French braids this time. There was every possibility that she didnāt just look like a school-girl but was one.
She was also an artist. Sheād gotten in his face, although a good part of that was his own fault. But sheād gotten his gun off him, which had never happened before.
The first thing heād learned about guns was that you never aimed at anything you didnāt intend to kill. So Lee lowered the gun.
He couldnāt shoot Sin.
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About the Author
A.J.ās world is strange place where patterns jump out and catch the eye, little is missed, and most of it can be recalled with a deep breath. In this world, the smell of Florida takes three weeks to fully leave the senses and the air in Dallas is so thick that the planes āsinkā to the runways rather than actually landing.
For A.J., reality is always a little bit off from the norm and something usually lurks right under the surface. As a storyteller, A.J. loves irony, the unexpected, and a puzzle where all the pieces fit and make sense. Originally a
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