Hollow Men (13 page)

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Authors: Sommer Marsden

Tags: #Sci-fi Erotic Romance/Futuristic

BOOK: Hollow Men
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The sound I made clued him in. He let me go down on him for just a few more seconds before he found my elbows and lifted me. “Come on, El. I need you.”

I swallowed hard and looked away even though he couldn’t see my eyes. Those words did something to me. Something strange.

“You’re on watch,” I reminded him. But when he touched my waistband, pulling me toward him, I shimmied forward, letting him kiss my belly, run his fingers over the plump split of my pussy. The soft fabric of my pajama pants rode that cleft, making the moment all the more unbearable.

Evan hooked his fingers in the waistband and pushed my pants down. He buried his face between my legs, tongue finding me, licking me, making me wetter.

“Come on. You face me. I’ll watch out the window, and you watch behind me. Where the partition ends. In case they sneak up on us.”

His voice was dark and gruff. I wasn’t fooled. At this point, neither of us cared if Sally or Taylor woke up. This was what we needed to do, and we were doing it.

The night was dark, uncertain and full of people who would not hesitate to fuck up your life forever. Both infected and uninfected. We needed this moment of sanity. Of togetherness.

I kicked my pants off, and he opened his fly all the way. Evan’s shotgun sat propped near us, an odd third party to our stolen moment.

He helped me straddle him, his big hand guiding my thigh as I moved. Evan pushed a hand to my chest, settling it between my breasts, pressing my tee to my thickly pounding heart.

“Stay right here a second. Don’t move.” He swept the head of his cock back and forth along my slit. Over and over until my thighs were trembling. “Now,” Evan said.

I sank down, slowly, relishing the tension and the penetration. Lingering to feel every shake and shiver of my thighs. Every struggling gulp of air. He moved up swiftly to meet me, thrusting in short brutal motions as his hands captured my face and he kissed me. His mouth insistent and hot.

“Are you watching, are you watching?” I murmured when I realized my eyes were closed and I was, in fact, not watching.

“I am…sort of.”

“Evan—”

“The world can wait one minute, Eleanor Salt,” he said. His voice wasn’t teasing. He wasn’t smiling. He was dead serious.

“I—”

“Shut up, and kiss me,” he said. His hands settled—solid and comforting—on my hips, and he held me steady as he fucked me.

I kissed him as commanded, but then his mouth drifted away, his teeth skating over my neck, down to my clavicle. He bit me hard enough to make me jerk in his arms, and when he drove into me, I came from the sensation of teeth on my skin, cock buried deep.

“Shh, be quiet.”

“It feels good,” I said, lips pressed to his ear.

“I know. But feel good more quietly.” Now he was smiling.

“You know I’m not a quiet girl,” I said.

He found my nipple through my top and pinched. He repeated the assault on the other one, and I squeezed my pussy tight around him. “Cheater,” he said.

I rocked back and forth, back and forth, grinding my clit against him as he remained buried in me. I found his chest and smoothed my hands over it. Streaking headlights lit us up before traveling on and leaving us buried in shadows. I pinched his nipples through his tee.

“El!”

“How do you like it?” I teased.

He grabbed my ass and hauled me against him, shoving up into me even deeper. “I sorta do,” he laughed and captured my mouth with his.

The talking and teasing and banter ceased, and we were just two bodies in motion, seeking pleasure and release. “El,” he said, and I knew what that meant. In that tone.

I held on tight as he drove up and I sank down, our bodies in tandem, getting more frenzied—closer and closer to coming.

When my body couldn’t grow any tighter around him, warmth rolled through me, pulling streaks of pleasure along with it. “Evan,” I said, still moving, riding out the spasms.

“Sweetheart,” he sighed and held me even tighter, even closer. I hadn’t thought it possible, but there it was. And he covered my mouth with his as he came. Him keeping me quiet and me doing the same for him.

His cries slipped over my lips, and I found myself clutching at him to feel the pleasure course through him as electricity skittering across water.

We sat there in the silence, Sally and Taylor snoring lightly as background noise. Echoes of my orgasm sounded in my cunt, and I realized I wasn’t quite ready to move. Not quite ready to let him go.

“Brace yourself,” he said in the near dark.

I planted my hands on his shoulders and let my forehead press to his. I knew what was coming, and I was just going to let it be. I wasn’t going to twist myself up by fighting it.

“Here’s the part where I remind you I love you, Eleanor,” he whispered. His warm breath tickled my ear.

“I—”

He clamped a hand down over my mouth and stifled me. He shook his head. “Don’t say anything. Go back there and get some sleep.”

I cocked my head, and when he moved his hand I said, “You don’t know what I was going to say.”

“I don’t want to know,” Evan said. “Not yet. Now go on…” He helped me untangle myself from him. When I leaned in to kiss him, he whispered, “Get some sleep. I’m watching out.”

He was watching out for us. Watching over us. It had been a long time since someone had my back, and I marveled at how fast I was adjusting to it. It had terrified me at first. Now it seemed almost normal. Being with Evan constantly, being with him physically, too—nearly normal.

I yawned big and wide and realized I would sleep after all.

“Two a.m.” I reminded him softly. “Wake me, and I’ll take my turn. You need sleep too. So you don’t crash us into an overpass.”

“Aye-aye, captain,” he chuckled.

“You know it.” I crawled into the bed and was almost instantly asleep.

 

Chapter Fourteen

 

 

 

“I’m surprised you have any teeth,” Evan growled.

I snorted and nearly choked, and Sally giggled. I took another nibble of my pecan nougat egg and made sure do add an: “Mmm.”

That made Sally laugh harder. Even Taylor smiled.

“Eating candy for breakfast,” Evan growled, easing the bus into the left lane. We passed a state trooper, and Evan gave him a friendly wave.

“Is this any less appropriate for breakfast than reconstituted shrimp or kimchi noodles?” I asked. “To me a big butt-load of sugar makes more sense than tiny, freeze-dried shellfish.”

He cracked and smiled.

“There are protein bars back there. Dried fruit. Even those disgusting crumbly breakfast pastry things.”

“Breakfast of champions,” I said.

“Eleanor,” he sighed.

I was about to say something else to make him roll his eyes when the bus gave a lurch and a sputter.

The candy turned to dust in my mouth.

“Ev?” I moved toward the partition.

His face had gone white, and he held up a silencing hand. He grabbed the steering wheel roughly as the bus veered. His hands were white-knuckled as he tried to hold it steady.

Another lurch and a shudder.

“Sit down,” he said, his voice tightly controlled. So controlled it scared me. “Everyone stay seated, you hear me?” He called.

Sally, no longer laughing, and Taylor, white-lipped with concern, both called out affirmations they’d stay seated.

He began to pilot the behemoth of a vehicle to the right lane. The breakdown lane.

The breakdown lane.

My mouth was dry, but my upper lip had broken out in a sweat.

“What is it? Do you know?”

The bus lurched, groaned, seemed to stutter. But it kept rolling.

“I think it’s the alternator. I think. I’m going to get it as close to that off ramp as I can before it goes,” Evan said. His face was a mask of tension. His neck taut from clenching his jaw.

Fear blossomed—bright and deadly—in the middle of my stomach, and I forced myself to take a big breath. To be calm. This was okay. We’d figure it out.

The cloying sweetness of candy flooded my mouth, and I felt sick.

I glanced at Sally who was silently crying. I was grateful she was keeping herself together enough to be quiet. Taylor leaned over and said something in her ear. She smiled, but it didn’t touch her eyes.

The bus rolled forward as if it were a thing that would not die, but it staggered a bit more, the very feel of it uncoordinated and jerky. I gripped the bar of the partition at the front of the bus. I was opposite Evan in the front seat. Outside the window, I saw nothing but typical side-of-the-freeway landscape. Dead grass. Some overgrowth. A ditch. An incline lead up, up, up to a sound barrier to keep the constant noise of the traffic from invading homes that were no doubt built on the other side.

“What are we going to do?” I said, keeping my voice low, hoping that the two in the back couldn’t quite hear me.

“I don’t know. We’re going to wait until it literally will not go another inch, and then we’re going to get out and see what the problem is.”

“And then?”

“And then we hope it’s something I can identify, then fix.”

I nodded as if I were totally calm and said, “Got it.”

My mind raced. If he went without me, we were split up. If we went together, we were leaving our bus—basically our rolling home—in the hands of strangers. I’d grown to like Sally and even Taylor, but I didn’t want to leave them in our bus. Alone.

“It’ll be okay,” he said to me. It didn’t sound as if he believed it, but he said it to me and it warmed my heart he was trying to comfort me.

The bus moaned and shuddered, and, finally, he steered the behemoth into the breakdown lane with difficulty. Everything seemed to stop. Then just the sound of four people breathing hard and the rush and whoosh of traffic. All those cars and vans and buses rushing to get to their destination, too busy and frantic to even notice us, most likely.

“Okay,” I said. I dropped the rest of my candy egg on the seat next to me. My hand was sticky and sore from clenching it my fist so hard. “Now we can…”

Evan stood and looked to the back. “Taylor, anything back there that could help me get up closer with the engine if I need to? Might be able to just climb on the bumper, but…might not.”

“There are some milk crates full of stuff back here,” he called. “I’d have to empty them.”

“Do it,” Evan said. Even his voice was tense.

I got up close. “Why are you taking him?”

“I’m not sold on them. I figure he’s the threat, so if he’s with me, I’ll feel a bit better. Don’t worry. We’re just trying to figure out what the fuck happened. We can’t be here come dark. Hell, El, we can’t be here past rush hour.”

I nodded. “Got it. I’ll be in here…babysitting, I guess.” I hated that I sounded so bitter and childish. He was leaving me out. I was being pissy.

“Well, you go ahead and babysit, but make sure you’re watching those windows for us.”

He was right. I took a deep breath and kissed his cheek. “Sorry.”

He grabbed the end of my hair and yanked lightly. “For what?”

“Giving you shit where there’s enough going on.”

“Sweetheart,” he said, pressing his lips to my ear so that I shivered. “I wouldn’t know what to do if you weren’t giving me shit.”

Despite the worry and the fear, I laughed.

* * * *

“Do you think we’ll be okay?” Sally was worrying a slight hole in her jeans so frantically it made me feel anxious.

“We’ll be fine,” I soothed. If Evan could do it for me, I could do it for a young, scared pregnant woman.

She gave me a tired smile. “You don’t know that.”

“I believe it,” I said. Trying too hard to mean it, I clenched my teeth.

“What if it’s something we can’t fix?”

“We’ll figure it out. We can flag down a passing patrol car…”

Maybe
.

“Or fix the part.”

Maybe.

“Or find a new part and scavenge it.”

Also maybe.

Cell phone service was spotty, and we really had no idea who to call from where we were. Cell phones, computers, grocery deliveries and utilities in the home were iffy at best most days. I glanced at my phone as subtly as I could and saw no bars. None.

My stomach cramped with worry, but I smiled at her. “Evan’s a smart guy, and I’m no dummy. We’ll figure it out.”

She nodded, rubbed her huge stomach and sighed. “I wanted so much for this baby. Not this life. Not this constant scrabbling fear. And worry. And panic.”

I nodded, feeling for her. This was a fucking horrible world to bring a kid into. Who knew when it would be our world again. If ever.

“To think that monsters are real,” she said. “Monsters are real, and they might…” A small sob escaped her. “
Eat
my child.”

I bit my lip. We’d all heard stories of hollows carrying off babies, small children, dogs and small farm animals. I couldn’t tell her that wouldn’t happen because it happened every day. They were more vulnerable. Easy picking. And if a hollow saw a chance, its instinct—its only instinct—was to eat.

“Sally—”

“I told Taylor we need to get as much stuff as we could. To be safe. To hunker down. But he wanted to go to his family. And I do to. But this baby’s coming soon, and God, Eleanor…I feel so insecure. I’m scared.”

I patted her leg. “I know.”

She looked around. “Look at you two. So prepared and smart. We were in a small van with the little bit of shit we could scramble, and that broke down, and we were exposed, and walking and—” Another sob, and she simply shook her head and looked down.

“I promise you, Sally. We’ll figure this out. We will.”

“It’s a belt,” Evan yelled, stomping onto the bus. “Something easy. No big deal. I could fix it. If we had one.”

I patted Sally’s leg, then hurried up to him. “I have no service. You?”

“None. Already checked. We’ll have to walk or wait for a trooper. We have a small chance of one pulling over. But if they don’t, and we get stuck here alone…”

Sally sobbed again, and Taylor rushed to her. I felt a stab of annoyance at her then guilt. I couldn’t imagine being in a vulnerable physical way right now. You didn’t get much more vulnerable than pregnant.

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