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  • Fifty Shades Trilogy Bundle: Fifty Shades of Grey; Fifty Shades Darker; Fifty Shades Freed Page 147

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Page 147


  “Mrs. Grey?” Whelan sounds confused as he follows me back in.

  Sawyer could blow this whole plan. I gaze up at Whelan.

  “There’s someone out there I don’t want to see. Someone following me.”

  Whelan’s eyes widen.

  “Do you want me to call the police?”

  “No!” Holy fuck, no. What am I going to do? I glance at my watch. It’s nearly three fifteen. Jack will call at any moment. Think, Ana, think! Whelan gazes at me in growing desperation and bewilderment. He must think I’m crazy. You are crazy, my subconscious snaps.

  “I need to make a call. Could you give me some privacy, please?”

  “Certainly,” Whelan answers—grateful, I think, to leave the room. When he’s closed the door, I call Mia’s cell phone with trembling fingers.

  “Well, if it isn’t my paycheck,” Jack answers scornfully.

  I don’t have time for his bullshit. “I have a problem.”

  “I know. Your security followed you to the bank.”

  What? How the hell does he know?

  “You’ll have to lose him. I have a car waiting at the back of the bank. Black SUV, a Dodge. You have three minutes to get there.” The Dodge!

  “It may take longer than three minutes.” My heart leaps into my throat once more.

  “You’re bright for a gold-digging whore, Grey. You figure it out. And dump your cell phone once you reach the vehicle. Got it, bitch?”

  “Yes.”

  “Say it!” he snaps.

  “I’ve got it.”

  He hangs up.

  Shit! I open the door to find Whelan waiting patiently outside.

  “Mr. Whelan, I’ll need some help taking the bags to my car. It’s parked outside, at the back of the bank. Do you have an exit at the rear?”

  He frowns.

  “We do, yes. For staff.”

  “Can we leave that way? I can avoid the unwelcome attention at the door.”

  “As you wish, Mrs. Grey. I’ll have two clerks help with the bags and two security guards to supervise. If you could follow me?”

  “I have one more favor to ask you.”

  “By all means, Mrs. Grey.”

  TWO MINUTES LATER MY entourage and I are out on the street, heading over to the Dodge. Its windows are blacked out, and I can’t tell who’s at the wheel. But as we approach, the driver’s door swings open, and a woman clad in black with a black cap pulled low over her face climbs gracefully out of the car. Elizabeth from the office! What the hell. She moves to the rear of the SUV and opens the trunk. The two young bank clerks carrying the money sling the heavy bags into the back.

  “Mrs. Grey.” She has the nerve to smile as if we are off on a friendly jaunt.

  “Elizabeth.” My greeting is arctic. “Nice to see you outside work.”

  Mr. Whelan clears this throat.

  “Well, it’s been an interesting afternoon, Mrs. Grey,” he says. And I am forced to observe the social niceties of shaking his hand and thanking him while my mind reels. Elizabeth? Why is she mixed up with Jack? Whelan and his team disappear back into the bank, leaving me alone with the head of personnel at SIP, who’s involved in kidnapping, extortion, and very possibly other felonies. Why?

  Elizabeth opens the rear passenger door and ushers me in.

  “Your phone, Mrs. Grey?” she asks, watching me warily. I hand it to her, and she tosses it into a nearby trash can.

  “That will throw the dogs off the scent,” she says smugly.

  Who is this woman? Elizabeth slams my door shut and climbs into the driver’s seat. I glance anxiously behind me as she pulls out into traffic, going east. Sawyer is nowhere to be seen.

  “Elizabeth, you have the money. Call Jack. Tell him to let Mia go.”

  “I think he wants to thank you in person.”

  Shit! I glare at her stonily in the rearview mirror.

  She pales and an anxious scowl mars her otherwise lovely face.

  “Why are you doing this, Elizabeth? I thought you didn’t like Jack.”

  She glances at me again briefly in the mirror, and I see a fleeting look of pain in her eyes.

  “Ana, we’ll get along just fine if you keep your mouth shut.”

  “But you can’t do this. This is so wrong.”

  “Quiet,” she says, but I sense her unease.

  “Does he have some kind of hold on you?” I ask. Her eyes shoot to mine and she slams on the brakes, throwing me forward so hard that I hit my face against the headrest of the front seat.

  “I said be quiet,” she snarls. “And I suggest you put on your seat belt.”

  And in that moment I know that he does. Something so awful that she’s prepared to do this for him. I wonder briefly what that could be. Theft from the company? Something from her private life? Something sexual? I shudder at the thought. Christian said that none of Jack’s PAs would talk. Perhaps it’s the same story with all of them. That’s why he wanted to fuck me, too. Bile rises in my throat with revulsion at the thought.

  Elizabeth heads away from downtown Seattle and up into the hills to the east. Before long we’re driving through residential streets. I catch sight of one of the street signs: SOUTH IRVING STREET. She takes a sharp left onto a deserted street with a dilapidated children’s playground on one side and a large concrete parking lot flanked by a row of squat, empty brick buildings on the other. Elizabeth pulls into the parking lot and stops outside the last of the brick units.

  She turns to me. “Showtime,” she murmurs.

  My scalp prickles as fear and adrenaline course through my body.

  “You don’t have to do this,” I whisper back. Her mouth flattens into a grim line, and she climbs out of the car.

  This is for Mia. This is for Mia. I quickly pray, Please let her be okay, please let her be okay.

  “Get out,” Elizabeth snaps, yanking the rear passenger door open.

  Shit. As I clamber out, my legs are shaking so hard I wonder if I can stand. The cool late afternoon breeze carries the scent of the coming fall and the chalky, dusty smell of derelict buildings.

  “Well, lookee here.” Jack emerges from a small, boarded-up doorway on the left of the building. His hair is short. He’s removed his earrings and he’s wearing a suit. A suit? He ambles toward me, oozing arrogance and hate. My heart rate spikes.

  “Where’s Mia?” I stammer, my mouth so dry I can hardly form the words.

  “First things first, bitch,” Jack sneers, coming to a halt in front of me. I can practically taste his contempt. “The money?”

  Elizabeth is checking the bags in the trunk. “There’s a hell of a lot of cash here,” she says in awe, zipping and unzipping each bag.

  “And her cell?”

  “In the trash.”

  “Good,” Jack snarls, and from nowhere he lashes out, backhanding me hard across the face. The ferocious, unprovoked blow knocks me to the ground, and my head bounces with a sickening thud off the concrete. Pain explodes in my head, my eyes fill with tears, and my vision blurs as the shock of the impact resonates, unleashing agony that pulses through my skull.

  I scream a silent cry of suffering and shocked terror. Oh no—Little Blip. Jack follows through with a swift, vicious kick to my ribs, and my breath is blasted from my lungs by the force of the blow. Scrunching my eyes tightly, I try to fight the nausea and pain, to fight for a precious breath. Little Blip, Little Blip, oh my Little Blip—

  “That’s for SIP, you fucking bitch!” Jack screams.

  I pull my legs up, huddling into a ball and anticipating the next blow. No. No. No.

  “Jack!” Elizabeth screeches. “Not here. Not in broad daylight for fuck’s sake!”

  He pauses.

  “The bitch deserves it!” he gloats to Elizabeth. And it gives me one precious second to reach around and pull the gun from the waistband of my jeans. Shakily, I aim at him, squeeze the trigger, and fire. The bullet hits him just above the knee, and he collapses in front of me, crying out in agony, clut
ching his thigh as his fingers redden with his blood.

  “Fuck!” Jack bellows. I turn to face Elizabeth, and she’s gaping at me in horror and raising her hands above her head. She blurs … darkness closes in. Shit … She’s at the end of a tunnel. Darkness consuming her. Consuming me. From far away, all hell breaks loose. Cars screeching … brakes … doors … shouting … running … footsteps. The gun drops from my hand.

  “Ana!” Christian’s voice … Christian’s voice … Christian’s agonized voice. Mia … save Mia.

  “ANA!”

  Darkness … peace.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

  * * *

  There is only pain. My head, my chest … burning pain. My side, my arm. Pain. Pain and hushed words in the gloom. Where am I? Though I try, I cannot open my eyes. The whispered words become clearer … a beacon in the darkness.

  “Her ribs are bruised, Mr. Grey, and she has a hairline fracture to her skull, but her vital signs are stable and strong.”

  “Why is she still unconscious?”

  “Mrs. Grey has had a major contusion to her head. But her brain activity is normal, and she has no cerebral swelling. She’ll wake when she’s ready. Just give her some time.”

  “And the baby?” The words are anguished, breathless.

  “The baby’s fine, Mr. Grey.”

  “Oh, thank God.” The words are a litany … a prayer. “Oh, thank God.”

  Oh my. He’s worried about the baby … the baby? … Little Blip. Of course. My Little Blip. I try in vain to move my hand to my belly. Nothing moves, nothing responds.

  “And the baby? … Oh, thank God.”

  Little Blip is safe.

  “And the baby? … Oh, thank God.”

  He cares about the baby.

  “And the baby? … Oh, thank God.”

  He wants the baby. Oh, thank God. I relax, and unconsciousness claims me once more, stealing me away from the pain.

  EVERYTHING IS HEAVY AND aching: limbs, head, eyelids, nothing will move. My eyes and mouth are resolutely shut, unwilling to open, leaving me blind and mute and aching. As I surface from the fog, consciousness hovers, a seductive siren just out of reach. Sounds become voices.

  “I’m not leaving her.”

  Christian! He’s here … I will myself to wake—his voice is strained, an agonized whisper.

  “Christian, you should sleep.”

  “No, Dad. I want to be here when she wakes up.”

  “I’ll sit with her. It’s the least I can do after she saved my daughter.”

  Mia!

  “How’s Mia?”

  “She’s groggy … scared and angry. It’ll be a few hours before the Rohypnol is completely out of her system.”

  “Christ.”

  “I know. I’m feeling seven kinds of foolish for relenting on her security. You warned me, but Mia is so stubborn. If it wasn’t for Ana here …”

  “We all thought Hyde was out of the picture. And my crazy, stupid wife—Why didn’t she tell me?” Christian’s voice is full of anguish.

  “Christian, calm down. Ana’s a remarkable young woman. She was incredibly brave.”

  “Brave and headstrong and stubborn and stupid.” His voice cracks.

  “Hey,” Carrick murmurs, “don’t be so hard on her, or yourself, son … I’d better get back to your mom. It’s after three in the morning, Christian. You really should try to sleep.”

  The fog closes in.

  THE FOG LIFTS BUT I have no sense of time.

  “If you don’t take her across your knee, I sure as hell will. What the hell was she thinking?”

  “Trust me, Ray, I just might do that.”

  Dad! He’s here. I fight the fog … fight … But I spiral down once more into oblivion. No …

  “DETECTIVE, AS YOU CAN see, my wife is in no state to answer any of your questions.” Christian is angry.

  “She’s a headstrong young woman, Mr. Grey.”

  “I wish she’d killed the fucker.”

  “That would have meant more paperwork for me, Mr. Grey …”

  “Miss Morgan is singing like the proverbial canary. Hyde’s a real twisted son of a bitch. He has a serious grudge against your father and you …”

  The fog surrounds me once more, and I’m dragged down … down. No!

  “WHAT DO YOU MEAN you weren’t talking?” It’s Grace. She sounds angry. I try to move my head, but I’m met with a resounding, listless silence from my body. “What did you do?”

  “Mom—”

  “Christian! What did you do?”

  “I was so angry.” It’s almost a sob … No.

  “Hey …”

  The world dips and blurs and I’m gone.

  I HEAR SOFT GARBLED voices.

  “You told me you’d cut all ties.” Grace is talking. Her voice is quiet, admonishing.

  “I know.” Christian sounds resigned. “But seeing her finally put it all in perspective for me. You know … with the child. For the first time I felt … What we did … it was wrong.”

  “What she did, darling … Children will do that to you. Make you look at the world in a different light.”

  “She finally got the message … and so did I … I hurt Ana,” he whispers.

  “We always hurt the ones we love, darling. You’ll have to tell her you’re sorry. And mean it and give her time.”

  “She said she was leaving me.”

  No. No. No!

  “Did you believe her?”

  “At first, yes.”

  “Darling, you always believe the worst of everyone, including yourself. You always have. Ana loves you very much, and it’s obvious you love her.”

  “She was mad at me.”

  “I’m sure she was. I’m pretty mad at you right now. I think you can only be truly mad at someone you really love.”

  “I thought about it, and she’s shown me over and over how much she loves me … to the point of putting her own life in danger.”

  “Yes, she has, darling.”

  “Oh, Mom, why won’t she wake up?” His voice cracks. “I nearly lost her.”

  Christian! There are muffled sobs. No …

  Oh … the darkness closes in. No—

  “IT’S TAKEN TWENTY-FOUR YEARS for you to let me hold you like this …”

  “I know, Mom … I’m glad we talked.”

  “Me too, darling. I’m always here. I can’t believe I’m going to be a grandmother.”

  Grandma!

  Sweet oblivion beckons.

  HMM. HIS STUBBLE SOFTLY scrapes the back of my hand as he squeezes my fingers.

  “Oh, baby, please come back to me. I’m sorry. Sorry for everything. Just wake up. I miss you. I love you …”

  I try. I try. I want to see him. But my body disobeys me, and I fall asleep once more.

  I HAVE A PRESSING need to pee. I open my eyes. I’m in the clean, sterile environment of a hospital room. It’s dark except for a sidelight, and all is quiet. My head and my chest ache, but more than that, my bladder is bursting. I need to pee. I test my limbs. My right arm smarts, and I notice the IV attached to it on the inside of my elbow. I shut my eyes quickly. Turning my head—I’m pleased that it responds to my will—I open my eyes again. Christian is asleep, sitting beside me and leaning on my bed with his head on his folded arms. I reach out, grateful once more that my body responds, and run my fingers through his soft hair.

  He startles awake, raising his head so suddenly that my hand falls weakly back onto the bed.

  “Hi,” I croak.

  “Oh, Ana.” His voice is choked and relieved. He grasps my hand, squeezing it tightly and holding it up against his rough, stubbled cheek.

  “I need to use the bathroom,” I whisper.

  He gapes, then frowns at me for a moment. “Okay.”

  I struggle to sit up.

  “Ana, stay still. I’ll call a nurse.” He quickly stands, alarmed, and reaches for a buzzer on the bedside.

  “Please,” I whisper. Why do I ac
he everywhere? “I need to get up.” Jeez, I feel so weak.

  “Will you do as you’re told for once?” he snaps, exasperated.

  “I really need to pee,” I rasp. My throat and mouth are so dry.

  A nurse bustles into the room. She must be in her fifties, though her hair is jet black. She wears overlarge pearl earrings.

  “Mrs. Grey, welcome back. I’ll let Dr. Bartley know you’re awake.” She makes her way to my bedside. “My name is Nora. Do you know where you are?”

  “Yes. Hospital. I need to pee.”

  “You have a catheter.”

  What? Oh, this is gross. I glance anxiously at Christian, then back to the nurse.

  “Please. I want to get up.”

  “Mrs. Grey.”

  “Please.”

  “Ana,” Christian warns. I struggle to sit up once more.

  “Let me remove your catheter. Mr. Grey, I am sure Mrs. Grey would like some privacy.” She looks pointedly at Christian, dismissing him.

  “I’m not going anywhere.” He glares back at her.

  “Christian, please,” I whisper, reaching out and grasping his hand. Briefly he squeezes my hand, then gives me an exasperated look. “Please,” I beg.

  “Fine!” he snaps and runs his hand through his hair. “You have two minutes,” he hisses at the nurse, and he leans down and kisses my forehead before turning on his heel and leaving the room.

  CHRISTIAN BURSTS BACK INTO the room two minutes later as Nurse Nora is helping me out of bed. I’m dressed in a thin hospital gown. I don’t remember being stripped.

  “Let me take her,” he says and strides toward us.

  “Mr. Grey, I can manage,” Nurse Nora scolds him.

  He gives her a hostile glare. “Damn it, she’s my wife. I’ll take her,” he says through gritted teeth as he moves the IV stand out of his way.

  “Mr. Grey!” she protests.

  He ignores her, leans down, and gently lifts me off the bed. I wrap my arms around his neck, my body complaining. Jeez, I ache everywhere. He carries me to the en suite bathroom while Nurse Nora follows us, pushing the IV stand.