Total pages in book: 58
Estimated words: 57082 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 285(@200wpm)___ 228(@250wpm)___ 190(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 57082 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 285(@200wpm)___ 228(@250wpm)___ 190(@300wpm)
I slapped his arms off of me and pulled away. I did, however, let my hand fall to his crotch and I brushed his cock while I spun away from him.
His paw was on my shoulder.
I slipped through the curtain into the next room.
The relative brightness of the emerald green walls was in stark contrast to the room I’d just left and further contributed to my disorientation. I turned in circles only realizing then that I’d been separated from Holly.
The wolf came through the curtains.
I took a few hurried steps forward. Sofas and tables were scattered about the room, partially hidden under tented veils and drapes of beads and cloth. I caught a glimpse of someone, half man half lizard, slithering over the body of a bride laid out on a table, her arms strapped to the legs of the table.
I gasped.
“See something you like?”
I spun around to see the wolf walking slowly toward me. I was less sure, now, that it was Manny. I stepped back and bumped into a table. Beads hung from the ceiling, preventing me from seeing it clearly. But I heard the sound of faint moans, so I pulled the beads to the side and dared a look inside.
A man, his head covered in a bag, lay on the table. Bunches of grapes, berries and litchi covered his body. At least three women—or men, it was hard to see clearly—feasted on the fruits that covered him.
I skirted around the table. The room opened to what might have been a dance floor, but there was no music playing. Yet, people moved together as if following a clear rhythm, rocking and swaying; women and men draped in colorful garments, their faces all hidden behind masks.
I hesitated making my way through the crowd when, to my left, I saw them: Taylor, Tristan and Travis. Their faces were hidden, but there was no mistaking them. Dressed in identical black smoking gowns with dark-green collars and cuffs, white Venetian masks, fastened to their faces with white ribbons, covered their eyes and noses.
I felt tremendous relief in seeing them. I started to run to them, but I collected myself and slowed my pace.
They made no movements as I approached. They might not have seen me; they might not have even been looking. Their mouths and chins, the only part of them not covered, remained still like statues.
“I’ve found you,” I said. And I reached out and touched one of them on the chin. I smiled, nearly laughed, for I could not tell who was who. Since I’d failed, in our first encounter, to tell them apart, since then, I’d prided myself in being able to tell at a glance, at a touch, how Travis’s earlobe dipped slightly more than his brothers’; how Taylor’s eyes were slightly rounder; how the crease in Tristan’s forehead angled a bit to the left. But as they stood in a row, dressed identically, their faces covered in masks, I was again unable to tell them apart.
I looked over my shoulder then back to the triplets. I touched them, partially to convince myself that they weren’t statues, but mostly because I longed to. “The wolf is after me,” I said.
As if on cue, they folded in around me, protecting me—so I thought.
One of the triplets took me by the arm. “Come with us,” he said.
They escorted me out of the room and down a winding staircase. Torches with dim flames were mounted along the stone wall, creating occasional splashes of light and shifting shadows.
The sound of the lashing of whips followed by muffled cries reverberated off the stone walls. As I was surrounded by the triplets, I couldn’t see much in front of or behind me. I held onto the waist of my escort in front of me.
When we reached the bottom of the stairs, the triplets led me down a dark corridor with smooth stone walls, wet like those of a cave. We veered into a gallery where hooded figures lurked in the shadows. A lone torch hung in the center of the wall. On either side of it were metal shackles.
I gasped, spun around and smacked right into the wolf. From behind the wide, toothy grin of his mask, he said, “You’ve kept us waiting. That wasn’t nice of you.”
Before I could react, two hooded figures closed in on me from the sides. They lifted me and carried me back against the far wall. I saw Taylor, Travis and Tristan disappear into the shadows. “Wait,” I said.
The hooded figures set me down. “More waiting?” said one of them. Though his voice was low and affected, I recognized it as J.P.’s, and I was relieved.
I reached out and tried to grab his hood, but he was faster. He snatched my arm and pinned it against the wall. The other hooded figure grabbed my other arm, and in a blink I was shackled to the wall.