Chapter Thirty
 
 Ariella
 
 I should have been grateful the collar and bracelet were removed. While Sergio may have stolen me for himself, he didn’t have any intention of sending pulse-pounding electricity through my neck.
 
 Maybe he wasn’t a sadist?
 
 I still didn’t trust him.
 
 He’d locked me in the backseat of his black SUV, shoved a bag over my head, and drove us all of about twenty minutes.
 
 The terrain had been rough. The ride was quite bumpy. I didn’t feel like we’d stayed on any main roads.
 
 I doubted that Sergio was concerned about being seen.
 
 He must have lived off the beaten path. It wasn’t quite off-grid per se. I suspected there was electricity and all the finer things that money could buy.
 
 I wasn’t wrong.
 
 “Let’s go,” Sergio said, his voice rough and thick. His words slurred just a bit as he grabbed me by the arm and thrust me out of the backseat.
 
 “I can’t see anything,” I said, reminding him I had a bag over my head. It was difficult not to trip over the rocky terrain. He didn’t have a paved driveway, or if he did, he’d opted not to use it.
 
 “That’s the point,” he said.
 
 Grass and stones grazed my bare feet.
 
 I missed my leather boots even more, not to mention my cell phone that had been tucked away. I loved those shoes and had even splurged on them because I thought they looked fantastic with a pair of jeans.
 
 I doubted I’d ever get them back, and wearing a new pair in was hell on my feet.
 
 How would Jaxson ever find me?
 
 “Step up,” Sergio instructed.
 
 I took a careful step up to feel warm wood under my toes.
 
 Was it a porch?
 
 It didn’t creak, but it probably wasn’t old or rickety either. Sergio was a mobster and was probably rolling in dough. At least that’s how I imagined it, especially after running the auction. He was clearly in charge, or else someone would have intervened when he’d decided to take me home.
 
 I could hear the jingle of keys and the clank of metal as he shoved the key into the lock.
 
 We would be heading inside soon.
 
 What if I took off on foot? My hands weren’t bound behind my back. I could toss off the bag over my head and run.
 
 How far would I get?
 
 Did he have his gun handy? I was sure he had a weapon, and he’d probably shoot me the first opportunity that he had, especially since I didn’t cost him a cent.
 
 The door squeaked on its hinge as he opened the front entrance. Well, I assumed it was the front entrance.
 
 My heart pounded like a boat that smashed against rocks in a storm. Sweat covered me, but I knew it wasn’t hot outside.
 
 My stomach somersaulted.
 
 At that moment, I had to act. And so I ran.