Page 100 of Make Them Beg


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I have no idea what he’s talking about, but I’m guessing Dean would know. I file the name away for later. “Let’s get outta here,” I say to Lark.

He smirks. “You won’t make it past the tree line.”

A chill skates down my spine.

He believes that.

He’s not bluffing.

“Time to go,” I say to Lark, backing toward the bedroom, gun trained on him, mind already on the bag in the closet. “Grab the go-bag. Shoes. Jackets.”

She hesitates just long enough to crack the guy’s arm with the bat again.

He screams.

“Souvenir,” she says, then bolts for the bedroom. She’s in the bedroom for half a second before rushing back out, tossing me some line to tie them up with. “Here,” she says, and rushes back into the bedroom.

I keep the gun on him until I hear her yanking drawers, the thump of the duffel hitting the floor.

“Roll to your stomach,” I tell the shooter. “Hands out. You move before I’m out that door, I ventilate your kneecaps.”

His eyes gleam mean in the firelight. “You won’t shoot me,” he sneers. “You’re the little hero. The one who leaves his monsters breathing.”

My thumb flicks the safety off. “You’re right,” I say. “Tonight, I don’t have time.”

I fire.

The bullet slams into the floor half an inch from his ear, showering his cheek with splinters.

He goes pale.

“You’ll wish I’d shot you if you get up,” I say flatly, tying him up. I rush toward the other guy on the floor and tie him up as well.

I back toward the bedroom, never fully turning, gun steady until I’m through the door.

Lark’s already lacing her boots, hair yanked into a messy knot, jacket half on. The duffel is gaping on the bed—everything we came with, the tablet, the radio, spare drives, first aid kit, extra clothes, the burner phones I hoped we’d never need.

Our whole temporary life, reduced to one bag.

“Front or back?” she asks, grabbing her mask and shoving it into the side pocket.

“Back,” I say. “Tree cover. Car’s closer that way.”

We’d parked the car in the hollow fifty yards down the slope, half-hidden behind a fallen log, just in case.

“Is he dead?” she asks.

“Not yet,” I say.

“Good,” she mutters. “I want him to tell his friends we’re not easy.”

That’s my girl.

I sling the duffel over my shoulder, tuck the gun at the back of my waistband, and grab her hand.

“Stay low,” I say. “Follow me.”

We slip out through the tiny bathroom window we’d tested on day one—the one that sticks a little at the top but opens wide enough if you hit it just right.