Carmine stood and so did his men. Jack stayed where he was, allowing Carmine to feel somewhat superior by towering over him. But Carmine would have towered over Jack anyway. He was a big man, both in height and girth.
Carmine’s men headed toward the back doors of the wide warehouse. Jack had agreed to come here, to one of their warehouses, as an act of faith. The next meeting would take place on our territory, but I didn’t think it would make things any easier. This was going to be a long, drawn out process and no one was going to get what they wanted. But Jack had already stated that he was okay with losing a warehouse or two and part of the gun trade. And that was probably what it would come down to.
I was approaching Jack when gunshots suddenly rang out. And then chaos erupted. I grabbed Jack by the collar and pulled him out of the folding chair where he was sitting, dragging him to the ground.
“Who’s shooting?” he demanded. “Is it the Italians?”
“No. But I can’t…”
All I could see was bullets flying just outside the doors the Italians had just walked through. Some of Carmine’s men were still inside the warehouse, returning fire from positions of semi-protection. I couldn’t see where Carmine was, but it was clear his men were in trouble.
“Go,” Jack said.
“But what about you?”
“If they all die, the rest of their people will blame us. You have to go stop this.”
I gestured to Killian. He came over immediately and grabbed Jack, pulling him toward the back of the warehouse out of the way of stray bullets. I ran, my head down, to the doors. I gestured for some of Jack’s men to follow me and they did, without question.
“Where are they?”
The Italian on the door gestured to a building across the alley. I immediately spotted a man with a rifle on the roof. I aimed carefully and he fell.
“Where’s Carmine?”
The man pointed again as though his voice was damaged by the scene in front of him. Carmine was on the ground, bleeding from a wound in his belly. Three of his men were around him, each one hit. Two were hit in the head and clearly dead, but the other was still alive. Barely.
I started out the door, but the man grabbed my jacket and tugged me back.
“It’s suicide to go out there.”
“Then I guess I’ll meet my maker tonight.”
I jerked away and ran out the door, doing what Carmine’s men should have done, but weren’t brave enough to do. Carmine was hidden behind the front wheel of his car, crumpled like the napkin Ian threw at me just the day before. I felt the wind of bullets passing around me as I ran toward him, but if one hit me, I wasn’t aware of it.
“You alive?”
Carmine looked up at me, anger in his eyes.
“Damned right!”
“Good. I need you to get up. We need to get you out of here.”
“Where are my men?”
I gestured at a few lying on the ground. “Mostly dead. There’re are two or three in the warehouse doorway.”
“Why aren’t they here?”
I shrugged. “Because they aren’t crazy Irishmen.”
I grabbed his arm and pulled it over my shoulders. It took several attempts to get him to his feet. Each time he moved, the blood gushed from his belly. He wasn’t going to make it if we didn’t get out of here fairly quick. Once he was on his feet, however, we had to figure out how we were going to get back inside without taking several more bullets. He wouldn’t be able to move fast enough to avoid the shooters.
That’s when my Pops showed up. He and Ian came running from the other end of the alley. Thank God! Ian managed to get Carmine’s other arm over his shoulder.
“There’s another door down there.”
“Any more shooters?”
“We’ve only been able to identify four.”
“Who are they?”
Ian shrugged. “No idea. Could be a local gang, but we don’t know for sure.”
“No one knew about this meeting,” Carmine mumbled. “How could they have found us?”
“Probably the same way you found all our warehouses and managed to hit the majority of our shipments last year,” Pops said.
Carmine opened his mouth to say something, but then he simply nodded. “Probably.”
We stumbled together, Ian, Carmine, and I, dragging the big man to the back door to the warehouse. We were nearly there when one of the gunmen figured out what we were up to. He moved, taking a shot as he reached his new perch.
That one I felt.
Killian and a couple of Jack’s men came running as we appeared in the doorway. They took Carmine from us, leading him across the room to the table where the negotiations had been taking place just a few minutes before. Carmine looked even bigger splayed out on that table. And the blood pouring from that gut wound didn’t look good.
“We’ve got to get them out of here.”
Pops gestured toward the front of the warehouse. “The street’s clear as far as we can tell.”
“We need spotters. They’ll know that’s the direction we’ll go next. They’ll be prepared.”
“I know.”
“We should load them in Carmine’s SUV. If we draw attention to the front, have some of Jack’s people go that way, then sneak Carmine and Jack out the back, maybe we can get out of this without too much trouble.”
Pops slapped his hand against my shoulder. The pain was excruciating. I was pretty sure the bullet had gone straight through, but it still hurt like a son-of-a-bitch. I groaned, and Pops looked at his hand.
“Shit! You’re hit.”
“I’m fine.”
“You need to get to a hospital.”
“If we don’t save Carmine, we’re all fucked, Pops. That’s the priority right now.”
He hesitated, but he agreed with me just as I’d known he would in the end. He ran across the warehouse, calling everyone but one of Carmine’s men over and explaining the plan. They immediately went to put it into action, several of Jack’s men slipping out the front of the warehouse to draw fire that way. We waited a heartbeat, then we lifted Carmine, five of us carrying him as he was now unconscious. We were nearly to the SUV when one of the gunmen got smart and fired at us. He missed Carmine. But the bullet slammed into Jack’s chest.
I saw him go down. I grabbed him, dragging him into the SUV as someone jumped behind the wheel and took off, headed toward the hospital. Pops was on the phone, arranging for someone to come clean up the mess, trying to head off the police as long as possible. It was bad enough that three of us were shot, Carmine and Jack seriously. I took off my jacket and pressed it to Jack’s chest, trying to stem the flow of blood. He was barely conscious, but enough to understand how bad the situation was.
“This goes bad, you make sure it gets cleaned up.”
“Of course.”
“And call Delaney. Tell her what’s going on. Tell her I love her.”
“I will.”
“Someone’s trying to start a war. Someone wants both of us out of the way.”
“I know.”
“You’ve got to make sure that doesn’t happen. You make sure that Carmine’s people understand that we had nothing to do with this.”
“I will.”
He studied my face for a long moment. “You’re a good boy, Kyle. I know I can trust you to do what needs doing.”
“You can.”
He patted my cheek, his fingers slick with blood. And then he closed his eyes and disappeared.
***
The hospital was already packed, the staff overwhelmed before we pulled up. Once again, it took five men to carry Carmine into the emergency room, but I followed with Jack in my arms like he weighed no more than a feather. A pretty, redheaded nurse came over and helped me set him on a gurney, quickly wheeling him into one of the trauma rooms. I stood just to the side and watched as they began to work on him.
I found myself having something of a flashback as I watched. The night my mother drank her
self to death we ended up in an ER just like this one. The ambulance ride and the actual arrival were all a blur to me. But I remembered them working on her, the way they tore her clothes away and talked to her in gentle tones, the way they pressed the paddles of the defibrillator made her body move in inhuman ways. It was horrifying. I remembered thinking that I knew she was dead…and even feeling relief that that would mean no more beatings, no more hurting. And I remember thinking that I should be sad, but I really wasn’t.
I was sad now. Jack was my mentor, almost a second father. I didn’t know who I would be without him in my life.
Pops came up behind me and pulled me back out of the room.
“They’re taking Carmine up to surgery.”
“What are the chances he’ll survive?”
Pops shook his head, a bit of sadness settling over his expression.
That wasn’t good. If Carmine died and there was no one to tell his people what had really happened, we were looking at a full-out street war. That wouldn’t end well.
I pulled out my phone and dialed Sean. Delaney needed to know her father was in the hospital.
“You should call your wife,” Pops said in a low voice. He gestured toward Killian. “Stacy already knows. I called Cassidy a few minutes ago. One of them will tell Amelia, but it’d be better if it comes from you.”
He was right. I knew he was right. But I couldn’t quite make myself disconnect the call I was already making.
I walked down the hall a little, spoke in hushed tones to Sean. He asked questions. I answered them as best as I could. But it felt like I was reading from a script that had left out all the most important things. There was something I was missing here, but I wasn’t sure what it might be.
I was lightheaded. I reached up to brush the sweat from my brow and suddenly lost my footing. I knew I was going down, but there was nothing I could do to stop it.
Amelia….
Chapter 22
Amelia
My heart was pounding in my chest as I grabbed my shoulder bag and headed for the door. Colin was there, leaning against the wall with his phone in his hand, clearly playing some sort of game.
“Do you have a car?”
He looked up almost lazily, as though I was interrupting some great moment of inspiration.
“I do. Why?”
“We have to get to the hospital. They’ve been shot!”
“Who?”
“Everyone!”
I ran for the door that opened onto the street, not even bothering to check if Colin was following. But he was. He came up behind me, grabbed my arm to keep me from barreling out onto the street by myself. He led the way to a small, nondescript, black car parked about half a block from the building the loft was in. Once we were inside, the doors locked, seatbelts in place, he focused on me.
“Who was shot?”
“Kyle and Jack. And someone named Carmine? I don’t know. Cassidy was talking quickly and I kind of stopped listening after she said Kyle was shot.”
Colin started the car and pulled quickly into traffic. He drove quickly, navigating the streets like a pro. I leaned forward as though that would make him drive faster. My heart was pounding so hard, and I couldn’t seem to catch my breath. All I could think about was Kyle lying in some hospital bed, covered in white sheets, his body as pale as the sheets. He couldn’t die. Not now. I had so much I needed to explain to him, so many things I needed to tell him.
I kept saying it to myself, whispering it under my breath: He can’t die. He can’t die. He can’t die.
The emergency room was packed when we walked in, people everywhere, blood drops on the floor. Colin held my arm and moved me through the crowd, knowing exactly where to go. And he was right. We found the Callahan family, all of them with the exception of the one I had yet to meet and Kyle, in a small waiting room down a narrow corridor at the back of the emergency room.
“Amelia!”
Cassidy rushed to my side, wrapping her arms tight around me.
I let her hold me for just a moment. Then I stepped back.
“Where is he? Is he okay?”
“Yes, yes, he’s fine. They’re sewing him up in one of the trauma rooms.”
“But he’s okay.”
“He’s going to be fine,” Brian said, coming up alongside his wife, slipping his hand around her waist. “He was hit in the shoulder, but the doctor said it was a through and through. He’ll have to stick around awhile because he lost a lot of blood, but barring an infection, he should be good as new in a week or so.”
I nodded, surprised and a little embarrassed by the tears that suddenly began to flow. Cassidy hugged me again.
“It’s okay. Relief can be as painful as fear sometimes.”
Brian drew us both into the waiting room, explaining that I’d have to wait to see Kyle until they were done sewing the wounds. I sat on the edge of a chair and listened as Ian explained to Colin what had happened.
“We were basically ambushed by an unknown group trying to make it look like we attacked the Italians. Someone wants to start a street war, but they weren’t planning on Kyle being clever enough to first save Carmine and then pull both Carmine and Jack out the back.”
“Did someone call Sean and Delaney?” Brianna wanted to know. “I’m sure Delaney would want to know what’s happening.”
“I’m sure Kyle did,” Killian said, glancing at his father.
Brian nodded. “He did. They’re taking the first plane out from Italy.”
This all seemed a little surreal to me. A week ago I was serving drinks, and today I was in the middle of some sort of street war, waiting to find out how badly hurt my husband was. I was still getting used to the idea of having a husband.
I think they stopped paying attention to me the moment my tears dried up. I slipped away without anyone noticing. They were debating the subject of who could have been behind the gunmen and why, a subject I didn’t care the least about. I wanted to know where Kyle was. I wouldn’t believe he was okay until I saw it for myself.
I wandered through the halls, peeking in on patients waiting to be seen for everything from an earache to a missing digit. It wasn’t until I’d almost made a full circle through the emergency ward that I finally found him, sitting alone on the edge of a gurney, an IV in his arm and a thick, white bandage on his shoulder.
I busted through the door, rushing to him, not thinking of the logistics of throwing my arms around him. He groaned, but he didn’t push me away as my arm slammed against his shoulder.
“What are you doing here?” he asked softly.
“They said you’d been shot, and I had all these images in my head of you lying dead somewhere. I was so frightened!”
“Why?”
I pulled back, suddenly feeling an icy chill rush over me. “Because you’re my husband.”
“So you felt obliged because of some shady ceremony back in Vegas?”
I stepped back, more frightened by the blank stare he was offering me than I had been by the news of his injury. I crossed my arms over my chest, focusing on the bandage on his shoulder, telling myself that the injury was the reason he was acting like this. He was hurt and he was scared, so he was striking out. That was all this was.
“I know you didn’t marry me because you wanted me, Amelia. You married me because you thought you were getting some sort of revenge on me and my family, right?”
“Kyle—”
“I’ve known since the beginning that the whole thing had to be some sort of set up. I just couldn’t figure out why you would be a part of it and what this person had to offer you. But when you told me who your father was—”
“That’s not it.”
“Isn’t it?”
His voice was so cold. I wanted to cry. I wanted to shrink away and disappear into the walls. I wanted to leave, go back to Vegas, and pretend this had never happened.
But the idea of leaving Kyle hurt more than anything I’d ever felt before.
“
I thought Brian Callahan was the reason my parents divorced. And the divorce caused my father to create that pyramid scheme, caused him to get sick, caused him to ruin everything. I thought…” I shook my head. “I thought he was the cause of it all.”
“So someone approached you, told you they’d help you get revenge on Brian Callahan if you married his near-do-well son?”
“Sort of. Yeah.”
Kyle laughed, but again it was the coldest thing I’d ever heard.
“It was actually a pretty good scheme. If I insisted on a divorce right away, then someone would slip to the news outlets that you were Robert Clark Wallace’s daughter and that my father was an investor in his scheme. My reputation, my father’s reputation, my entire family’s reputation would have taken a serious black eye on that one.”
He reached up and touched his shoulder tenderly. “But if I kept you with me, played along with the marriage, then he had someone on the inside who he could manipulate. Someone who would give him information about the family, about the business, that she didn’t even know she was giving him.”
“I didn’t—”
“You wouldn’t have to do it yourself. He could have planted a bug on you. Done something with your phone. There’s a dozen ways he could have used you without you knowing about it.”
He was right. I knew he was right.
“This,” he said, his dark expression falling on me again, pouring ice cubes over my head, “is probably your doing. You, or I, somehow managed to convey to him what was going on tonight. I said something or you did something. It’s the only explanation for how someone on the outside of the either organization could have spilled the information about the meeting.”
“You never said anything to me.”
“I told you there was going to be a meeting.”
“Yeah, but how could he—?”
“With that information, all he’d have to do is sit back and watch. Then we were there a good two hours. He could have had his men in position in less than half that time.”
“Why me? Why not Brianna or Cassidy or one of the other wives? Why me?”
“He might have them wired, too. But Pops isn’t stupid enough to talk about this stuff with Cassidy or Brianna.”
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