Seasoned Dark Lifers, though, had decades, even centuries of experience and continued to elude the DD Team. They were cunning and dangerous. Their forceful touch could drain victims of their energy and leave them empty.
Dyce was definitely not a newbie. I should have guessed he wasn’t a regular guy from his formal way of speaking and how he quoted famous dead people. For all I knew, he could be one of those famous dead people. His name probably wasn’t even Dyce; that was just the body he currently inhabited. Did Dark Lifers use their own names or assume the role of their victims? Doing some quick math, I guessed that he would have been in three different bodies since Sharayah struggled with Gabe. He could have been posing as a college student, a professor or even one of the girls living in Sharayah’s dorm. Ooh. Gross.
But kidnapping me was extreme to avenge a friend — unless Dyce was more than a friend to Gabe. And that’s when I finally realized what was going on here.
Dyce wasn’t just a friend of Gabe’s.
Dyce was Gabe.
* * *
The bad news: I was trapped with a Dark Lifer who thought I’d left him for dead and would most likely toss me into the ocean for shark food once we were far out at sea.
The good news: None.
I was doomed.
But despite having no ideas for escape, I had too much stubborn determination to give up. There had to be a way out of this.
So I racked my brain for every piece of information from every self-help book I’d ever read. The only thing I could come up with was from Adversaries are Allies. The advice was meant for business situations, like when your boss hates you. It was all about turning adversaries (people who hate you) into allies (loyal friends). One strategy involved creating two columns: one for your strengths and the other for your adversary’s weakness. Then use your strengths to strike his weaknesses.
Hmmm, being tied up with duct tape didn’t leave me with any strengths. But I was strong in knowledge, I realized. I knew he was a Dark Lifer, but he didn’t know I was a Temp Lifer. He knew Sharayah had changed, but he had no idea how drastically. There had to be some advantage in knowing this … but what? And how could I do anything with my hands and legs taped together?
The GEM!
If I could just push it out of my pocket and open the pages, I could literally call for help. Grandma was only a page-turn away and she’d send in the DD Team. They’d kick Dyce-Gabe’s arrogant ass out of his stolen body and back to the other side where he belonged.
Leaning back against the bench cushion, with my taped hands on my lap, I fumbled for the pocket in my skirt. When I felt the book beneath my taped wrists, I pushed it up. I leaned sideways to get the right angle, groaning as my legs, also taped together, twisted painfully. My hair flew in my face, swinging into my mouth. I spit it out, all the while working on the book. A corner of it poked out from the pocket. But to get it any farther out I’d have to be a contortionist, and I’d always hated exercise.
I’d just managed to twist almost completely upside down — my bound feet were wiggling above my head and my hands were a finger-touch away from the GEM — when the door to the cabin opened.
“Miss me?” Dyce called out cheerfully. “Hey, why are you upside down?”
I jerked upright, tossing my feet back to the ground and popping up in the seat like nothing unusual had happened.
“Trying to get circulation back into my feet,” I said, breathing hard. “You wrapped them so tight.”
“I’ll unwrap them when we’re on our way.”
My pulse jumped. So we were going out to sea? Doomed, I thought again. I had to get out of here before we left the dock.
“Could you loosen my legs now?” I asked in a more cajoling tone. “It’s not like there’s anywhere I can run.”
“True.” He rubbed his chin thoughtfully. “But you’re like a wire stretched tight, ready to snap. Are you up to something?”
“Nothing,” I said, breathing fast.
He stepped closer, studying me suspiciously. “I don’t believe you.”
“What can I do with my hands and legs taped?”
“That’s what I’m trying to figure out.”
“Don’t you ever believe anyone?”
“No. Why are you acting so nervous?”
“Um … let me think. What do I have to be nervous about? Oh, yeah. I’ve just been kidnapped and have no idea what you plan to do to me.” I listened for the telltale sound of the boat’s motor, but all was silent. At least we hadn’t left the dock … yet.
“You don’t sound afraid. You sound like you’re hiding something,” he said, idly reaching up to adjust his cap as he studied me.
I really should have been terrified, but now that I was just a whisper away from using my GEM, I grew braver. “Sure, I have a semi-automatic weapon hidden in my hands.”
He started for my hands, then realized I was mocking him and drew back with an expression I could only describe as embarrassment. “You’re not in a position to make jokes.”
“I’m not in a position to do much of anything.”
“So why the sarcasm when you should be begging for mercy?” He pursed his lips tight. “Don’t you realize what could happen to you?”
“Stuff happens. Like this book advised: The rock that rolls with the flow reaches its goal quickly. So why get all stressed out over something I have no control over?”
“That’s very odd advice. What sort of book is that from?”
“Bottom Feeders Rise to Stardom.”
“That’s an actual book?” He knelt down close to me. “Or are you joking again?”
“It’s a book, but it’s sort of dumb, more comedy than commonsense. I can’t recite poetry like you, but I do know my self-help books.”
“I thought you only read romance novels and poetry,” he said in a puzzled tone.
“People change.”
“But not this much. You look the same, but you move and talk like a different person.”
“Like I care?” I snapped, hoping to irritate him so much he’d leave. “If you aren’t going to let me go, get your ugly face out of here.”
Instead of getting mad, he laughed. “So you think I’m ugly?”
“Hideous. I can’t stand looking at you, so why don’t you leave?”
He ignored my request, moving to check his reflection in a mirror mounted on a cabinet, turning his head right, then left, quizzically. “This is a pleasant face. Nice eyes, straight nose and good bone structure. I doubt other girls would complain.”
“So kidnap another girl and let me go.”
He laughed again. “Did you think Gabe was ugly, too?”
“Not at first, but lies and duct tape are real turn-offs.”
Dyce turned from the table, studying me with a shiver-worthy intensity. “There’s something unusual about you that I can’t figure out. It’s tempting to change my plans and keep you longer.”
Keep me alive longer? Is that what he meant? I was all for staying alive, but running out of patience with this egotistical control freak and his obsessive talk about plans. What motivated him to hijack random bodies? Was he afraid of the unknown, a wacko psychopath, or did he just hate women? I was guessing number three because of his sick love-them-and-duct-tape-them routine.
“A penny for your thoughts, Sharayah,” he said softly.
“You wouldn’t like them.”
“Still, I’d like to know.”