DOM: Chapter 79
DOM: Alliance Series Book Three
âDominic!â His hands let go of mine, dropping to his sides. âYou canât be sorry,â I cry. âYou canât go!â I sob. âYou need to stay with me.â I press one hand to his bleeding chest and one hand to my stomach. âYou need to stay with us!â
Domâs head lolls to the side as more blood seeps from his chest, between my fingers.
And the loss rips through my mind.
Heâs not gone.
He canât be gone.
Not today.
He canât die today, of all days.
A fresh round of gunfire blasts from up the road, where I last saw the cars.
I reach into my front pocket and pull out the black handkerchief with blue lettering and put it between my palm and his body. I donât know why I grabbed this today. I just wanted to have it with me.
Another sob breaks free.
Weâve come so far.
I press the handkerchief harder against him.
And heâs not going to make it.
Without a miracle, he wonât make it.
None of us will.
My pocket vibrates.
Iâm still practically in Domâs lap, but I reach down and pull it out. Kingâs name on the screen.
He mustâve hung up and called back.
I answer the call, but I canât stop crying.
âNine minutes,â King tells me. âVal, my men will be there in nine minutes.â
The gunfire up the road slows, one side having overwhelmed the other.
And I know what that means.
I know itâs not my side that won.
âW-we wonât last nine minutes.â I admit the awful truth.
âCan you run?â
I focus on Kingâs steady voice and look over my shoulder at the deserted airfield. âNo. Thereâs nowhere to go.â
And I canât leave Dominic.
Not while his heart still beats.
And not after it stops.
âDo you have a weapon?â
I look down at the gun next to me. âThereâs a rifle.â
âUse it,â King commands.
King taught me how to shoot two summers ago. And I was good, but I havenât practiced.
âItâs been too long,â I choke.
âYou know what youâre doing, Val. You know how to do this.â
âI donât know if I can!â
âYou have to!â This time he shouts.
And I know heâs right. This is my only chance. Our only chance.
I reach for the gun with my free hand. âIf-if I donât make itâ¦â
âVal.â
âIf I donât make it.â Tears stream down my cheeks. âI just need someone to knowââ
But I canât say it.
I canât say the words out loud.
Because if I donât make it, neither will they.
âVal,â King says, focusing me. âRight now, you aim at everything that moves.â
âOkay.â My voice is cracking. âOkay. Iâm putting the phone down now. Thank you, King.â
âThank me later. Now go kill the bastards who dare to fucking shoot at you. You are The Alliance, Val. Show them why.â
I set the phone on the ground next to Dominicâs thigh and move toward the front end of the SUV.
My eyes close for one breath.
Lean in.
I fill my lungs.
My hands lift the rifle, and I rest the stock against my shoulder.
I pull the bolt back just enough to see that thereâs a round already in the chamber.
Them or us.
Itâs them or itâs us.
I twist around the front of the vehicle.
A man crests the top of the street, his figure silhouetted with the fluffy snow fall.
I squeeze the trigger.
His face disappears.
Them or fucking us.
Movement to my right draws my barrel.
I exhale and squeeze again. Twice.
Blood sprays from his chest.
One more head.
One more bullet.
Another man down.
I roll back behind the vehicle and stay low as I rush back around, past Dominic and past the dead bad guy, until Iâm at the back doors.
A pair of men appear above me, but their attention is on the front of the SUV.
Where I was.
I squeeze the trigger.
The first man falls. Half his neck gone.
The second man drops, but not before I get off one more shot.
I run back around, not daring to stop and check on Dominic.
Heâs alive.
He has to be alive.
I peek my head around the front of the vehicle and see the pair of men too late.
Thereâs a barrage of gunfire, and I pull back, but not before a round hits the barrel of my gun, jerking it to the side and out of my grip.
It falls to the ground, past the front bumper. Out of my reach.
That last shred of hope Iâm clinging to frays.
I canât reach the rifle.
Scrambling, I crawl back to Dominic.
Itâs been one minute. Maybe two. Not nine.
Kingâs men wonât get here in time.
âJust hang on,â I whisper to my handsome husband as I shove my hands into his pockets. âJust hang on, okay?â
Except the only clips I can find are for the rifle, and his weapon is out of ammo.
I reach around to Domâs back and find the handgun tucked into his holster.
It wonât win against the men coming toward us with assault rifles.
But it might buy us a few more seconds.
A few more seconds together.
I reach up and put just the barrel of the gun over the top of the vehicle and squeeze the trigger.
I space them out, angling the gun a little between each shot. Just enough to keep their heads down, even as they return fire.
But then my gun clicks empty.
And all the gunfire stops.
Because Iâm out.
And they know it.
I sink down onto my knees.
I failed us.
The falling snow suddenly thickens, and the blanket of silence is overwhelming.
I shuffle to Dominicâs side.
I want to sit in his lap, want to hug him and turn my back on everything. But I canât do that to him.
Iâm going to face this.
Heâs dying because he was protecting me.
Itâs my turn now.
Picking up the last item from his pocket, I thread my fingers through the heavy metal.
Squeezing my right hand into a fist, I kneel next to my husband and press my left palm against the hole in his chest. And I wait.
Three things I see.
The lowering sun glittering through the snowfall.
Dominicâs blood on my hands.
The empty rifle lying in the snow.
Three things I hear.
Ringing in my ears.
Kingâs voice shouting through the phone, somewhere on the ground.
Approaching footsteps.
Three body parts.
My heart cracking in my chest.
My baby, barely formed, in my belly.
And my soul, in the center of my being, wailing over our lost chance at happiness.
âIâm sorry, too, Dominic,â I whisper. âIâm so sorry I couldnât save us.â I bend to the side and press a soft kiss to his cheek. âAnd Iâm sorry I never told you how much I love you.â
A man rounds the front of the bullet-riddled vehicle.
And I straighten, still touching Dominic, still gripping the brass knuckles.
The manâs mouth pulls up on the side as he lifts the barrel of his gun.
Our lives are about to end, and he thinks itâs amusing.
I lean against Dom.
Together.
And then chaos erupts around me.
More gunfire than before.
The sound is deafening.
So many weapons unloading all at once.
The man in front of me vanishes, his body ripping apart before my eyes.
The noise is so loud.
Itâs so incredibly loud.
I brace.
Waiting for the pain.
But nothing hits me.
Nothing hits Dom.
I turn my head, craning to see where the shots are coming from.
And I see it.
I see them.
A row of people. A whole fucking row of people, walking shoulder to shoulder out of the snow with their weapons raised, aimed over my head.
They keep walking.
Keep walking and keep shooting. And I donât know where they came from.
They materialized from the field, dressed in all-white tactical gear.
Andâ¦
I notice the formfitting snow suits. Notice the curves.
Theyâre women.
My mouth drops open.
There are like twenty fucking women raining down hell on the people attacking us.
Maybe more than that.
Their thick knitted face masks hide their facial features. But theyâre women.
I know they are.
They keep walking nearer.
And they keep shooting.
Reloading as they move.
I canât even tell if anyone is even shooting back at them.
The line moves closer until theyâre near enough for me to see their eyes through their masks. Then their line parts, and they walk around us and our downed vehicle, never sparing me a look.
But then one person breaks off from the line. And they move toward me. Toward us. Their gun lowered toward the ground.
My shaking fist drops.
As they stop before me, the person pulls their face mask off.
And this one is not a woman. I was too awed to notice how large his build is in comparison to the rest of them.
His dark eyes are kind and calm, so when he tips his head toward Dom, I nod, and he crouches down on the other side of my husbandâs outstretched legs.
The man pulls a clear bag out of his jacket pocket, and I recognize it as a collection of first aid supplies.
I stay at Dominicâs side, keeping my hand in place as I give the man room.
âLet me see.â The man finally breaks the silence, and I pull my hand away from Domâs chest. Hesitant to stop pressing on the wound, but more hesitant not to take the help.
The stranger reaches forward and rips Dominicâs shirt open, then dumps the contents of the bag onto Dominicâs lap.
As heâs bent over, tearing open a package, I notice the man has long hair. Itâs pulled back into a bun, the golden strands partially covered by the collar of his white jacket.
âWho are you?â I whisper.
The man doesnât look up. âLater.â
I hear my name, muffled, coming from somewhere, and I realize that all the gunfire has stopped, so I can hear King shouting from Domâs phone again.
Glancing around, I find it next to me on the ground.
One final shot rips through the air.
Okay, now itâs over.
The man wipes a little cloth over Domâs bullet wound, then follows it with some kind of gauze bandage.
I expect him to press it against the bullet hole, but then he starts jamming it into the bullet hole.
âWhat are you doing?!â I half shriek.
âThis is how itâs done.â He doesnât spare time explaining to me. And I have to trust him.
What other choice do I have?
He shoves more of the gauze into the hole, then wads up the rest of it and presses it against the wound.
âHold it here.â
I do as he says and press down with both hands. The oversized brass knuckles still around the fingers of my right hand.
Kingâs voice sounds from the ground again, and the man reaches across Domâs body and picks up the phone.
He reads the screen before hanging up the call.
But I donât care about the phone call.
Because under my palms, Domâs chest moves.
Heâs alive.
New tears stream from my eyes.
I want to fall forward onto Dominic.
I want to hug him as hard as I can.
But I donât want to hurt him. And I have a job to do.
The man drops the phone back onto the ground. âWas Dom hit anywhere else?â
âH-his back, I think.â I donât know who this stranger is. And I donât care that he knows who Dominic is. I just care that heâs helping.
âKeep your hands where they are,â he says, then pulls Domâs shoulders forward.
I brace Domâs weight as he leans unconsciously into me, his head hanging down.
The man pulls something out of his pocket and flicks his wrist, flipping open an angry-looking blade.
In seconds, heâs sliced through Domâs suit coat and shirt so he can find the entry wound on Domâs back.
Split down the front and back, Domâs destroyed clothing slides down his arms, pooling around his hands.
I hate that his bare skin is exposed to the snow. I donât want him to be cold.
The man grabs another packet of gauze, and I canât see what heâs doing, but I think itâs the same thing he did to his front, something to stop the bleeding.
I look down, and Domâs slumped body is blocking my view of his chest, but I know whatâs there.
Too much blood.
Even if his heart is still beating⦠heâs lost too much blood.
The man eases Dom back against the car just as the faint sound of sirens filters through the air.
âWe took the liberty of calling an ambulance.â His voice is somehow soft and gravelly at the same time.
That tiny, frayed strand of hope twists around itself, making it stronger.
âThank you.â I hold the strangerâs gaze. âI can never repay you for this.â
The man stands to his full tall height. âJust remember me. Thatâs all I ask.â
I donât understand what he means, but I answer with the truth. âIâll never forget you. Weâre in your debt.â
He almost smiles, but then he pulls the white mask back down over his face and jogs around the back of the SUV just as the ambulance lights appear in my vision.
And then heâs gone.
And weâre the only ones left alive.
âHelp is here,â I tell Dominic. âWeâre going to be okay.â
But the ambulance stops down at the end of the road, on the far side of the cars. And I realize they canât see us. And there is so much carnage, they wonât know where to look.
And Dominic is so pale.
I lean in and press my forehead to his. âYou need to lie down, okay?â
Even with the strangerâs help, we donât have time.
And I need to get the medicsâ attention.
Taking my hand off the bundle of gauze, I grip Dominicâs shoulders and pull him, tugging, until I get him turned enough so I can lay him on his back. I donât know if this is the right call, but my instincts tell me to do it.
âIâll be right back.â I push off the ground, my legs half-numb underneath me. âIâll be right back.â
Then, hoping all the bad guys are truly dead, I run away from Dominic. I run away from the cover, out into the open.
Waving my hands in the air, I scream.
I scream for help.
Beg them to see me.
And then they do.
And when two men get out of the ambulance and start to run across the distance, stepping around bodies strewn on the road, I turn and run back to Dominic.
And when they reach us, when the road fills with more menâKingâs menâI break.
I collapse on the ground next to my husband and break.