For long minutes, Robbie held them off and even moved the scrum of bodies away from Tyler and Avery. The boys were inexperienced fighters. Playground rumbles hardly matched Robbie’s experience. Two boys dropped back, winded and hurt, further evening the odds.
Robbie had Cottontop’s shirt in a stranglehold. “You should’ve brought a couple of real men if you seriously expected to get me tied up, asshole.”
He tightened his hold on the boy’s collar. Cottontop pulled at Robbie’s arm with one hand. A burn radiated across his side. Robbie let go and staggered backward.
Cottontop gripped a knife in a shaking hand. Fear, not revenge, lit his eyes. The knife darted for another cut, a slice across his bicep.
The boys descended like a pack of hyenas on a wounded lion. An elbow rammed into the gash on his side. Pain shot like lightning through his nerves. Wet with blood, his shirt stuck to his torso. A wave of nausea turned his stomach and extinguished his anger.
His phone lay on the ground a few feet away, and he scooped it up. The cracked, blank screen reflected a crazy-house version of his face.
Tossing it aside, he clenched his teeth and went after the closest boy with an elbow to his neck, sending him reeling away. The rest circled out of his reach. Cottontop’s face matched his hair. As Robbie stared at the man-boy, he saw himself at the same age with the same anger, the same desperation, the same panic.
Blood dripped off his fingertips. Dizzy, he fell to his knees. A lifetime ago, he had been Cottontop, or something resembling him. A man had crumpled in front of him, begged for a mercy he wasn’t capable of bestowing. Robbie wouldn’t beg. He wasn’t hurting enough that he couldn’t appreciate the big heap of irony of his current situation.
One of the boys behind him said, “Fuck, Whitey, we were only supposed to get him tied up. You’ve killed him.”
Chapter 17
Darcy checked her phone again. No reply. Where was he? She paced the front porch. If she saw his headlights, she’d run inside. Maybe he’d been held up at the school. Maybe he’d been held up by Sheila.
She texted Logan and tried to keep worry out of her hastily typed words. When did you leave school?
Hour ago.
Did Robbie leave with you?
He was working on a lesson plan. Why?
She tapped the phone against her lips. How bat-shit crazy would she seem if she went to check on him? Stalker crazy or neighborly crazy?
Milk. She could claim a deficiency of milk. Decision made, she grabbed her keys and turned the stew off. On the short drive, she practiced nonchalance but couldn’t relax her death grip on the steering wheel.
His truck stood alone in the pavilion parking lot. She sighed. Probably he’d gotten distracted. She pulled into the lot ready to whip the little car around when her headlights caught on a gathering of men under the bleachers. She slammed the brakes, locking her seat belt.
Something was wrong. Leaving the lights on and the car running, she pushed the stick into park and leapt out. She riffled through the backseat. A tire iron would be nice, but only books slid through her hands. She grabbed the fattest of the hardbacks and took off at a run toward the group. A guttural, rebel yell burst from her chest.
The scene took on the quality of a photograph. Movement frozen in a blink of time. One man broke ranks and ran. As if a spell lifted, they scattered in different directions.
“You effing cowards! Get back here!” In that moment, she harbored no doubts she could beat the shit out of every single one of them with her book.
Only Robbie was left. He kneeled in the puddle of light from her car, his face averted from the glare. Poppy-red rivulets of blood meandered from his bicep to his fingertips.
Her mouth went dry. Swallowing became a chore. She flung the book away.
“Robbie! No, no, no …” Panic regressed her coordination to that of a toddler. She stumbled over mounds of weeds.
She collapsed in front of him on her knees and forced her wooden fingers to stay only on his shoulders, even though she wanted to hug him close.
“Were you seriously planning on beating them off with a book?” His voice was strong and flavored with amusement.
After the beat of relief rushed through her body, she tried but failed to mimic his tone, ending on a near-sob. “The pen is mightier than the sword?”
A laugh-moan erupted from his throat, and his hand pressed into his side.
“God, Robbie, how badly are you hurt? Do you need to go to the hospital?”
He pulled his hand away, and they both looked. Her panic expanded at the sight of the four-inch gash in his side, the skin peeled apart. The smell and sight churned her stomach and spun her head. She gulped air through her mouth.
“I’ll need stitches.”
“Let me pull the car closer—”
He grabbed her wrist, leaving a red bracelet of blood. “I’m not in danger of dying, and I’ll ruin your car. Better call an ambulance. Avery needs a vet, and Tyler needs to be cut loose. He might need medical attention too.”
Avery lay a few feet away, his stomach distended and his pants labored. Banging and grunting emerged from the darkened underside of the bleachers. She barely made out Tyler’s shadow. She looked in the direction the boys had run and let out a string of curses that would have had half the ladies in town clutching their pearls in horror.
She fumbled the phone out of her pocket and bobbled it to the ground. Her trembles were from equal amounts of fear and fury. It took three tries for her shaking, bloodstained finger to tap in the three simple numbers. A voice, distant and bored sounded in her ear, “What’s your emergency?”
An image flashed of a woman smacking gum and filing her nails. Darcy wanted to punch her. Once Darcy ensured the woman understood the immediacy of the situation, she disconnected and engaged the flashlight app on her phone.
Tyler squeezed his eyes shut and tried to hide his face at the first touch of light. Her heart, which was already galloping, skipped beats entirely. Someone had garishly painted his face with lipstick and electric blue eye shadow. Tears streaked the blue down his cheeks. His jeans were around his knees, but his underwear was in place.
The circuits of her brain fired around her initial confusion. She went to work on the gag. The knot wouldn’t give, but she loosened it enough to pull it down to his neck. His head fell forward, and his childlike sobs stilled her questions. With the sound of the ambulance siren barreling closer, she unknotted the coarse rope around his wrists.
He grabbed at his pants, yanking them up and holding them closed.
“Tyler, are you okay?” She reached for his arm, but he jerked away and ran past the field house. His stumbling shadow was quickly lost in the darkness.
Robbie had crumpled over, supporting himself on his knees and right hand, his left hovering at his injured side. Lines etched his face, and the smell of blood hung in the humid air. He jerked his head toward Avery in an unspoken request.
She fell to her knees at Avery’s side. The dog’s glassy eyes and slow pants grew her worry. Injured animals were dangerous ones. Her tentative, trembling fingers landed softly on Avery’s neck. He whined, but his tongue flicked against her hand. The skin over his belly and ribs was drawn taut.
The ambulance backed over the low curb and bounced over the scrub, the beep cutting through the night. The back doors swung open.
“Damn, girl. We’ve got to stop meeting like this.” Wolf hopped down, favoring his good leg, and pulled the gurney out.
“Wolf! Thank the sweet Lord. It’s Robbie. He’s got a knife wound to his left side and arm. He doesn’t think it’s serious, but”—she rubbed at her red wrist—“there’s a lot of blood. And Avery’s hurt too. His side is distended.”
Wolf spared a glance toward Avery. “Come on, Coach. Let’s get you wrapped up, and then I’ll check out your dog.”
“Jon, that isn’t procedure,” the female EMT said tartly. Her brownish hair was pulled back into a tight ponytail.
�
�Screw procedure.” Wolf sent Darcy a wink. How the man maintained such calm and humor amazed Darcy, but his attitude settled her down. Maybe that was his aim.
Robbie got up with help from Wolf, then walked to the gurney on his own. His wince and clenched jaw didn’t escape her notice as he lay back. Wolf gave both Robbie’s wounds a cursory examination.
“Get Dalt patched up, Karen,” Wolf said before heading toward Avery. The woman narrowed her eyes at his back but focused her attention to the task of cutting away Robbie’s shirt.
With a glance over her shoulder at Robbie, Darcy knelt next to Wolf as he probed Avery. The dog whined but didn’t snap or growl. Darcy rubbed his neck and ears.
“Is he going to be okay?” she whispered.
“Internal bleeding … couple of broken ribs … at a guess, lacerated liver. Needs surgery.”
Wolf pulled a cell phone out of his belt holder. Within two minutes, Dr. Martin, the local vet, would be expecting an emergency patient. He scooped Avery up. “We’ll drop Avery off with Dr. Martin on our way.”
Karen sputtered protests that Wolf cut off with a pointed look.
After Robbie and Avery were loaded, Wolf turned to her. “Are you okay to drive?”
Was she? She had to be. “Of course, I am.”
Wolf patted her shoulder and swung into the driver’s seat.
Behind the wheel of her car, Darcy clutched the steering wheel with shaking, bloodstained hands. The ambulance lights led her in a lurching, rough ride to the vet’s office.
Dr. Martin waited with his own gurney. His professional white coat reassured her, as did his gentle hands and soft crooning. Avery seemed familiar with the man, licking his arm before laying his head down with a soft woof.
The vet, his brown hair rumpled and his khakis wrinkled, called to Robbie with confidence as he pushed Avery away, “I’ll take care of him, Dalt.”
Darcy looked back and forth between Robbie and Avery.
“Stay with him, Darcy.” Pain or maybe emotion roughened his voice. “In case the worst happens, I want someone there. I don’t want him to be alone.”
“Of course, I’ll stay. I’ll call Logan to come check on you, okay?”
“I’ll be fine. I don’t need anyone.” His gaze skittered away.
She didn’t believe him. Not for a minute. “I’m calling Logan anyway.”
He nodded, their gazes meeting for an instant before Karen closed the door.
The diminishing red lights held her immobile. The fact Wolf hadn’t turned on the siren reassured her. Only after the lights faded into nothingness did she tread into the office.
Somewhere in the back, Dr. Martin worked on Avery. She pushed open the door to the restroom, and fluorescent lights blinked on automatically. Wild hair surrounded her pale, drawn face. Flipping the faucet on, she watched pinkened water run off her hands and swirl in the white sink.
In the quiet, tears came. The panic and anger that had held them at bay faded into worry. She washed her hands clean of Robbie’s blood and her face clean of her own tears.
Pacing in the waiting room, she called Logan and Kat. Their support was a net below the tightrope she walked. Who would she call if something like this happened in Atlanta? Who cared enough to drop everything to come to her aid?
Not a single person came to mind. Her relationships there had been blurry imitations of true friendship. The ties that bound her to her old life seemed airy and dissolvable.
Logan texted her with updates from the hospital. Robbie’s wounds had required forty stitches all told, most in his side. No major organs had been in danger, and there had been no need for a transfusion. Logan was waiting for the doctor to let him in and would text again once he laid eyes on “their man.” Her man. One shuddery exhale followed another.
She loved him. Loved him so much she could feel the echo of his worry and pain. Her pacing turned frantic. If Avery died, Robbie would be devastated, which in turn would devastate her.
Dr. Martin pushed through the surgery door, drying his hands on a generic brown paper towel. Tired lines fanned out from the soulful hazel eyes behind his black-rimmed glasses, but a smile lifted one corner of his mouth and revealed a deep dimple.
“He’ll be fine. As Wolf suspected, a lacerated liver and two broken ribs.”
“Is he awake?”
“He’ll be coming around any minute. You want to see him?”
At her nod, he led her through a white-tiled exam room stinking of disinfectant from the surgery, dominated by a stainless steel table. Avery looked fragile on the big table, half-covered by a white sheet. He’d never been so still and silent. Was he actually dead?
She leaned close enough to smell his doggy breath. Nope, still very much alive. She waited. Finally, his one front leg twitched, and a shudder rolled through his body. His eyes blinked open, still dazed, the pupils dilated.
She rubbed him around the ears like she’d seen Robbie do countless times, and he seemed to take comfort in her touch. His eyes fell to half-mast. She whispered, “Robbie’s fine. He’s worried about you though, boy.”
Avery licked her cheek with a wet flick of his tongue before drifting back to sleep. Tentatively, she lifted the sheet. The mangy-looking fur had been shaved, revealing the new stitched cut, but also all the scars from his war wound. She skimmed fingers over his flank, careful not to press too hard, but his belly no longer protruded unnaturally. She kissed the soft fur on his head and rubbed her cheek along the delicate tissue of his ear.
The vet’s throat rumbled behind her. “How’s Dalt?”
“Lots of stitches, but according to Logan, he’s fine. I need …” Her eyes darted between vet and dog.
“Avery will be drugged tonight. No need for you to stay. I’m sure Dalt wants an update. Tell him if everything goes well, he can pick Avery up later tomorrow.”
With one last glance at Avery, she bolted through the swinging doors, heading to the hospital, needing to substantiate with her eyes that Robbie was alive and whole.
The hospital lobby was cold and sterile in every way, fraying her nerves further. A pretty, blonde receptionist opened a sliding window and greeted her in a chipper, out-of-place voice, “Are you Miss Wilde?”
“I … yes, I am,” she said with a startled nod.
“Logan and Dalt are in cube 4B. I’ll buzz you in.”
She heard the click and launched herself through the security doors. Counting down, she ripped the curtain aside. A shirtless Robbie sat on a paper-covered table. His head popped up, and she wrapped her arms around him, taking care not to brush the two rows of black stitches, one on his arm and one along his side.
She pressed her face into his warm neck. His pulse beat strong and steady against her lips. Although he was the one who was hurt, the arm he wrapped around her shoulders, and the cheek he laid on the top of her head, lent her strength.
“Is … is he dead?” His words slurred together.
Her breath hitched. “No, of course not. Avery’s going to be fine.” His deep sigh collapsed his torso, and his weight settled over her.
“Thank you, Lord,” he whispered.
“Dr. Martin said he could come home tomorrow. He even licked my cheek.”
“Who? Dr. Martin?” Sniggering vibrated his shoulders.
She pulled back but stayed in the semicircle of his arm, her hands on his bare shoulders. Unfocused, heavy-lidded eyes bounced over her face.
“You look upset,” he whispered. He brushed her hair back and tucked it behind her ears.
“I’ve been worried about you.”
“Don’t worry darlin’, your favorite part is in working order.” His teasing smile made her huff in both surprise and amusement.
“What kind of drugs did they give you?”
He ignored the question and nuzzled his lips against her temple. “Do I get a sympathy lay out of this?”
“That clause only kicks in with a bullet wound.” Her weak attempt at levity garnered a laugh.
His
change of topic was sudden, his tone wiped clean of amusement. “You maybe saved my life, and I don’t want to think about what they planned on doing to Tyler.”
“They had put makeup on his face and his pants …” She had already drawn the wrong conclusion where Robbie was concerned, yet …
“He’s gay. He tried to tell me a couple of times, but I was an idiot.”
The truth pulled on her heart like an anchor. “Poor Tyler. Such a big secret for a kid to carry. Especially being a football star.”
“Everyone’s got secrets.”
“Even you?”
“’Specially me.”
His slurred words reverberated in the hollowness of her chest. If it weren’t for the drugs, the semi-confession would never have escaped. He protected himself so diligently.
“You can trust me. I won’t hurt you.”
“Won’t hurt me? You’re going to drive off one day and rip me in two. Sound painful enough?”
Her breath caught in her throat. He had been the one to suggest keeping their time together casual. Did he want more? After tonight, the thought of leaving Falcon, leaving Robbie, made her ache.
His forehead came to rest on her shoulder, and his weight compressed her spine. If he passed out, they would topple in a heap on the floor.
“Well, well, well …” the self-satisfied voice from the entrance roused Robbie upright.
“If it isn’t Rick the Dick,” Robbie said with a taunting half-smile and drug-loosened tongue. “What can I do for you, sir?”
Tension wound through the room. Rick’s smile had vanished, and his tone turned brisk. “Can you tell me what transpired tonight? I have to file a mandatory police report.”
“Got jumped. Was outnumbered. One of them had a knife. I didn’t. Pretty straightforward.” The two men stared each other down.
Rick tapped the point of his pencil against a pad of paper and turned to Darcy. “You scared them away. What did you see?”
She closed her eyes and summoned the scene. “There were six or seven men—maybe closer to boys—eighteen, nineteen. One had blond—almost white—hair.”
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