Home>>read CAPTURED: 9 Alpha Bad-Boys free online

CAPTURED: 9 Alpha Bad-Boys(157)

By:Opal Carew


Mr. Hawk reclined, his thumb drawing small circles on my upper thigh.  "It all began with one man, who you'll find out about in a little bit.  He had children, gracing them all with the Weaver name. Now, from that  day on, the power of the family name travelled with the firstborn girl.  No matter if she married, divorced, or suddenly wanted to change her  name to something whimsical, she wasn't permitted. Whoever she married,  it was a condition that the man change his name so that their offspring  always bore the Weaver name and continued the line of succession of the  debt."

Why did they do it? Why keep a name that only brought misery? My mind hurt trying to understand the Hawk's power.

"You, I believe, are the seventh woman to be taken. And the claiming can  happen anywhere between the ages of eighteen and twenty-six."

"You have rules on ruining someone's life?"

His forehead furrowed. "What do you think we're doing, Nila? Everything  we're doing is following a strict set of rules-laid out in utmost  simplicity and must be followed."

"If you're following rules, then follow the rules of today's society.  You think I accept what you're telling me? That all of this is legal?" I  spat the last word. "You think its common place to threaten my family,  steal me away, and imprison me with a collar of diamonds that won't come  off until I die? You're completely insane. And wrong. And-"

"No one-especially a Weaver-has the right to speak to me like that." Mr.  Hawk's fingernails bit into my thigh. "What part are you not  understanding, girl? We haven't threatened your family-they are under  observeillance to ensure their best behaviour. We didn't steal you  away-you came voluntarily, remember? And as for the collar-you should be  proud to wear it. It's the most treasured piece in the Hawks  antiquities."

I bit my lip as his fingernails pierced harder.

His voice dropped the scholarly softness, sliding into strictness. "I  see you need more concrete evidence. Fine. The diamonds you wear are  worth millions. The diamonds we've sourced have been used to trade, buy  services, bribe officials, own prime ministers, even control diplomats  and royalty. No one is above the allure of a flawless diamond, Ms.  Weaver. Everyone has a price. Lucky for us, we can afford any price."

His tone sharpened. "Does that answer your rude question?"

What response could I give? There was nothing I could say or do to  ignore my entire situation. They might have some misplaced belief that  they were in the right-but that didn't matter. Because they owned the  very people I would need to save me.

My shoulders dipped; I sighed.

Mr. Hawk grinned. "Glad you're coming to your senses, girl. Don't under  estimate us, Nila Weaver. We've had the law on our side for hundreds of  years. We still have the law on our side and that won't change. You are  nothing more than a single woman who left the world's spotlight because  she fell in love. You are already consumed and forgotten."

His fingernails stopped slicing my leg; he patted me gently. "I  apologise that my son didn't inform you of this. It's his job to be  implicitly open with you. To ensure you accept your new standing  quickly." He threw a glare at Jethro behind us.

Jethro locked his jaw, his eyes unreadable.

Mr. Hawk bounced me on his knee. "Now, no more questions. Serve my Diamond brothers and earn your right to more information."

My heart shot up my throat. "Serve them how?"

Mr. Hawk shook his head. "Ah, I just told you, no more questions. I have  no doubt Jethro would've been rather firm on that instruction. Silence  is the key to pleasing us." He pinched my lips together. "Don't say a  word until we permit it, and you'll be rewarded."

I'm to be a blow-up doll with no voice or soul?

Looking down, I fought against the urge to tear my face from his grip.

He didn't let me go. And I couldn't keep fighting the urge. So I did the  only thing I could. Slowly, I nodded, losing another battle against the  trickling tears cascading silently down my cheeks. They continued their  unhindered sad journey down my neck, through the collar, to my naked  nipples below.

The sun glinted through the window, blinding me for a second on the  diamond pin in Jethro's shirt. His eyes were tight and narrowed, glaring  at the room of leather-jacketed men; his face resolute and frozen.

Freeing me, Mr. Hawk ordered, "Lean forward, and retrieve the first bit of parchment."

I sat unmoving. I didn't want to wriggle on his lap. I didn't want to give any reason for things to grow or hands to grope.

Jethro lashed out from behind, catching me by surprise. He didn't hit  me, but grabbed my diamond collar and snapped a leash to the back.  Tugging the restraint, he muttered, "Lesson one. You'll do as your told  the second you're told it. Otherwise, you'll choke until you do."

He moved to the back of the chair, leaving my line of sight. The moment  he was gone, the pressure on the collar increased, digging into my  larynx, cutting off my air supply.

Just let him strangle you.

It would be easier.

But as my body crushed against Mr. Hawk from the pressure, and the  natural instinct to fight took over, I knew I couldn't be so weak. There  was no point in being stupid. If I was plane-wrecked in a jungle, I  would obey the law of the wild-doing absolutely anything to survive.         

     



 

Wasn't this the same thing?

I was in a den of beasts and they were trying to help me by teaching me  their law. If I obeyed, I would live. Entirely simple. Stupidly simple.

No sound, Nila. Not one word. Switch off. Retreat into that spot inside and get through this.

I could do it by adapting, by learning. I refused to be hurt for punishments I could avoid.

Jethro sensed my acquiescence at the same time as his father. I didn't  know what gave me away-the slouching of my shoulders, the soft puff of  sadness? Regardless, they knew I wouldn't fight. They'd won.

Jethro released the pressure on my throat, removing the leash and  dangling it over the back of the chair as he moved back to his position.  Mr. Hawk angled my face, pressing a wet kiss on my cheek. "Good girl.  You're learning."

I didn't even flinch. I was as cold as his son.

Embrace it.

Locking eyes with Jethro, I kept myself anchored while his father's hand slipped inside the stupid pinafore and found my breast.

Jethro gritted his teeth, but never stopped glaring into my blank gaze.

I tensed, willing every molecule to stay frigid and unattached. There  was freedom in drifting-as I'd learned in the kennel-and I let my mind  go.

I would be Jethro and remain stone cold on the outside. But inside I  would be Kite and cut the strings of my soul-soaring where they'd never  touch me.

No matter what they did.

My head bowed as Mr. Hawk pressed up, grinding a hard cock against my naked arse. "Read the parchment."

My hair fell in a thick black curtain, obscuring half of the men who  watched with eager eyes. They weren't panting, but they reminded me of  hungry dogs just waiting for permission to attack and kill.

My hands didn't shake as I reached for the parchment. I lowered my eyes  to read. I was silently amazed at how collected and aloof I seemed.  Shocked that I'd so easily turned off. What did that say about me? I'd  just learned about my mother. Spent the night with a pack of dogs. Am I  really that adaptable? Or was shock to blame?

The parchment used to be whole-it was age-stained, blood-marked, and  torn. Glancing upright, I noticed the remaining pieces scattered around  the table. A treasure hunt to read what would be my sentence.

Not every man had a piece, but at a quick count, I guessed four to five  shards of secret-tarnished paper were out there, waiting for me to read.

Looking back to the parchment in my hands, my eyes landed on the crest  I'd grown fast to recognise of hawks, women, and diamonds. It took pride  of place at the top of the letter with intricate calligraphy and  penmanship.

Taking a deep breath, I read.

On this date, the eighteenth day, of the eighth month, of the year of  our Lord sixteen-seventy-two, we hereby convene to settle the unsightly  claims and forthwith family disruptions between Percy Weaver and Bennett  Hawk.

We call upon the royal sovereignty to grace this binding agreement upon  the two houses, to put aside flagitious slander, and immoral actions,  and settle this as gentlemen.

As esquire over this binding estate, I have mention Percy Weaver and  family, including church-sanctified marriage to Mary Weaver, and his  thrice offspring of two boys and one girl are also governed by the  degree found today, or they shall hang by the neck until dead for  heinous crimes found unjustifiable by the court of England so help me  God.

It ended.

I stopped reading but didn't move. Not a breath. Not a fidget. It was  true then. My family had done something to justify all of this.

But what could be so awful to earn a contract spanning generations of repayments?

Mr. Hawk bounced me again, tweaking my nipple. "Finished?"

My heart neither fluttered nor sank. I was flying free-escaped from this unfolding nightmare.