by Jaycee Clark
She didn’t want him closer.
"Lieutenant, she needs to rest," Dr. Ripley said coming up behind her. "Chris, do you want me to call you a cab?"
Christian nodded.
"No, I’ll take her," Gabe said.
Dr. Ripley looked at her for her decision.
She darted a look at Gabe, but didn’t hold it long enough, she didn’t want to see the look in his eyes. "I just want to go to the hotel," she whispered.
"How ’bout Seneca?" he asked softly.
Seneca. Home. The Kinncaids. Oh, God.
Tears pricked her eyes, but Christian shook her head. Cleared her throat. "No. No, the hotel. I want a shower. I have to take a shower. And some clothes."
A moment passed, noises shuffled around them and she felt like she was part of some movie, invisible while the world moved slowly around her.
Finally, he answered, "Fine."
His phone rang. Jerking it out, he walked away from them.
"Luv," Drayson said reaching out to her.
She backed away.
Someone cleared their throat. "Honey, if you need anything, anything at all, just give us a call, all right?"
Geoffery asked.
All she could do was nod.
She heard them walk away.
Dr. Ripley placed a hand on her arm. "I need to know where to call. I’d really prefer you stay the night."
She shook her head no.
"Okay, then I’ll ask you to come in, in a couple of days, but I’ll call you. Check on you tonight. All right?
You should also follow up with your own gynecologist."
Christian hated this place, words and sounds sharpened and droned on. "I-I don’t know where I’ll be.
Probably the hotel."
Dr. Ripley only raised a brow. "Don’t go through this alone."
Alone ... alone ... alone....
She had to be. Just like before. He hurt her friends and those closest to her.
...Say anything and the Kinncaids will die ... will die ... will die...
Gabe walked up to them. "You ready?"
She jumped and nodded. He offered his jacket, but she didn’t take it.
Her bones felt brittle. If only she could get warm.
Dr. Ripley wrapped a blanket around her. "It’s cold outside."
"Come on," Detective Laurence said.
She followed them out the door and into the unforgiving, bitter cold.
* * * *
Brayden slammed to a stop in front of the ER. Nausea rolled in his stomach.
He should have gotten here sooner. But the damn wreck on the interstate had traffic backed up for over an hour.
When they’d finally reached Christian’s condo it was to find the place swarming with cops and all they’d been told was the resident of Nineteen was at Sibly Memorial. Some sort of attack.
What the hell had happened?
He ran through the double doors, hearing the faint swoosh behind him as they closed.
At the nurse’s station, he thumped the counter with his fist. "Christian Bills?"
The nurse looked at him and tapped some keys and shook her head. "No, sorry. I just came on about two minutes ago and she’s not listed."
Brayden slowly counted to five. "Will you check again please? We were told she was here."
"Brayden? Aiden? What are you doing here?"
Brayden turned and saw a doctor he’d met with his mother several times.
She smiled. "Dr. Ripley. You just missed Christian."
"What happened?" he asked.
Her look darted away, then down at the chart she was holding. Ice skittered through him. Finally, they rose back to him. "You know I can’t discuss patients."
"Is she okay?" She must be if she left. "You said ‘missed her’. Where is she?"
Dr. Ripley sighed and motioned them to the side.
"Yes, she was here. Fine? Well, that depends on your point of view I suppose."
"What the hell does that mean?" Brayden snapped. Where was she? This was like before. Cops, hospitals and no one telling him a damn thing.
"Dr. Ripley," Aiden said, "is there anything you can tell us?"
"I heard her mention the hotel. Detectives Morris and Laurence gave her a ride."
Brayden barely heard the last of it; he was already hurrying to the door, dodging a gurney and the persons pushing it.
By the time they reached the car, Aiden was on his phone talking to Quinlan who was still at the hotel overseeing the setup for a large convention.
"Quin, just keep your eyes open for them. I don’t know. We don’t know. Yeah, we’ll be there in a few minutes."
Brayden felt sick. He should have stayed. He should have stayed. He knew it, knew it! Dammit!
He slapped the steering wheel with the palm of his hand.
Taking every shortcut he knew, he raced through the traffic. Aiden never said a word, not that he would have noticed.
He had to get to Christian.
* * * *
In the elevator, she braved, "Did you call him?"
One long moment passed before Gabe cleared his throat. "I tried to, he wasn’t there and I didn’t leave a message."
Christian closed her eyes, relief trickling through the fear, yet she wished he were here. Part of her wished for the safety she felt with Brayden, even if it was only an illusion.
But even if he were here, she wouldn’t know what to say or do. She didn’t want him to see her like this.
She didn’t want anyone to see her like this.
Weak, frail, beaten.
She was strong. She survived before, she would again.
She would again.
The doors slid open and she stepped out into the quiet, dimmed hallway. The plush rugs, laid out in the entry, swallowed her footfalls. At apartment 3B, she stopped. Her key. Her key was in her purse and....
"I picked this up at the condo. I figured you’d need it." Detective Laurence held out her purse.
Christian started to reach for it, but stopped. The locket. The locket had been in her purse. He’d been in her purse.
She shook her head. "No. No. I don’t want it. I’ll call down and get another one."
"I can get it," Gabe volunteered.
"No!" she yelled. "He--he touched it. I don’t want it." The shaking wouldn’t stop. She hurt, hurt all over.
She just wanted inside, inside where it was safe. Away from him. With nothing he’d ever had his hands on.
"He was in your purse?" Laurence asked.
She nodded, reached up and felt the side of her neck, where the chain had bitten the flesh as he’d ripped it off.
"The locket."
"What locket?" Gabe asked.
"The one-the one I called you about today." She looked to the door in front of her. "He got it out, put it on me when-when-when...." She took a deep breath and closed her eyes.
The ping-swish of the elevator doors startled her. Her heartbeat speeded up, but she didn’t turn around.
"Thank God."
Brayden.
No. Oh, no. Not like this. Not like this. Please.
Christian pulled the blanket tighter, stared at the closed door and kept the bruised side of her face away.
She had no idea what it looked like, she hadn’t wanted to see, but she could imagine.
Footsteps neared. More than one.
"Mr. Kinncaid. Mr. Kinncaid. And another one I presume? If you don’t mind, we’d like a moment of your time," Laurence tried. Christian felt the cop move to stand between her and them.
"I do mind." Then he was there, pulling her against him. "God, I’ve been worried sick. When I couldn’t get hold of you. When I couldn’t ... I kept thinking about.... What happened? All they said was that you were at Sibly. Are you okay?"
She could feel him trembling, or maybe it was her.
It didn’t matter. She was dirty. Dirty. She pushed him away, brought the blanket up with her hands to shield her face.
Out of the
corner of her eye, she saw him raise his hand, and she stepped away.
His hand hovered there. "Christian?"
Silence settled around them. She was so cold, she couldn’t stop shaking.
"Let’s go inside," Gabe said.
Brayden didn’t care about going inside. He wanted to know what the hell was going on. When he’d seen her standing there between the cops, relief had rushed through him. She was okay. She was fine.
But as he’d gotten closer, he noticed the posture of the cops--guarding, hers--tightened. The changed hair color, a burnished blonde-brown color. And the relief slid away into worry.
She stood there, trembling before him, her head bowed in the blanket.
"Christian?"
Still she didn’t lower the blanket and Brayden didn’t move.
Slowly, he reached up to the bunched material hiding her from him.
Her head shook back and forth, but she didn’t jerk away.
"Don’t look at me. Don’t look at me," she whispered. If he weren’t standing so close, he wouldn’t have heard her.
"Christian." Carefully, he pulled her hands down.
Her head was still bowed. He saw the white butterfly bandage on her forehead, the dark bruise contrasting around it, the large knot bumping under the contused skin.
With one hand, he crooked a finger under her chin, noticed her stiffen, pull into herself. What had happened?
"Look at me."
She shook her head.
"Baby, look at me."
Her eyes slowly rose to his and he felt his world tilt, quake and shatter.
"Jesus." The entire right side of her face was bruised, swollen and red. Dark purple marks colored her jaw line. Gently, he moved her chin to the side. Her lip was swollen and split.
He heard Aiden’s indrawn breath, Quinlan’s curse.
"What the hell happened?"
The hands, hidden beneath the blanket, held in one of his, started to shake. The trembles shook her entire frame, until she quaked violently.
"Bray, let’s go inside. Get her inside and sit her down," Aiden said.
Her eyes wouldn’t meet his and she ducked her head. He shifted out of the way as Aiden unlocked the door, wrapping one arm around her.
Still holding her hands, in one of his, he pulled her closer and walked her into their apartment.
He cupped her arm with one hand to steer her to the couch, but at her grimace he let go.
She stopped and stepped away from him, looking at the floor. "I’m going to take a shower."
A shower? He reached out to her, but she stepped further away.
"D-don’t. I’m dirty. Please don’t-don’t touch me."
The words sank home, the possible meaning behind them. No. No. God, no.
Christian turned to walk to her bedroom and stopped. She stood in front of the hallway mirror. He saw her reflection, the shock on her face. Her trembling hand rose to her hair.
"Look," she whispered. "Look."
He was and his stomach pitched at the bruises on her face, her swollen eye. An accident?
I’m dirty ... don’t touch me.
Brayden swallowed.
The bandage around her wrist flashed at him. White against white skin. Her other hand came up and the blanket dropped.
Holy Mother of God.
Her neck was scratched and scraped. A bandage wrapped around both wrists and her upper arm.
"Look at my hair," her voice trembled. Tears trickled over her cheeks.
"Honey, it’s okay. It’s fine," Aiden said calmly from behind him.
Brayden didn’t give a damn about her hair, it was the rest of her, abraded and bruised that shook him, made him fist his hands at his side.
Her eyes rose to his, then locked on Aiden. "It’s not fine."
Brayden saw the fear, the anger in the gray depths.
"It’s not fine!" Her fingers ran through her discolored hair. "He-he did this." Her eyes looked back to the mirror, to herself. "He-he-he... Oh, God." She swayed.
Brayden moved and caught her before she crumpled to the floor.
Rage pounded through him. Disbelief warred with the bruised and battered woman in his arms. Her body shook so badly, so deeply he wondered that her bones didn’t snap.
"Who?" He held her, gentled his voice even though he wanted to yell.
She stiffened, pushed away from him. "Don’t-don’t touch me. Don’t. I’m dirty."
He reached out, but dropped his hands back when she shook her head and stepped away. All he could do was watch helplessly as she took small steps to the door of her rooms. He fisted his hands at his side until they shook, bit down till his teeth hurt.
At her door, she stopped. Without turning, she asked, "Could-could you get me-get me some clothes?"
Brayden could see her trembling from here. "Anything. Anything you want."
She nodded. "Clothes. I need some clothes. He-he.... I need some."
With that, she shut her door and he heard the lock slide home, click back open, then slide home again.
Brayden stood staring at the door refusing to see the picture her voiced and unspoken words painted.
He moved his jaw back and forth, grinding his teeth. Taking a deep breath, he turned to see the cops standing in his foyer. Aiden paced by the couch. Quinlan stood by a chair.
He asked Morris, "What the hell happened?"
Morris rolled his head on his neck, his jaw moving side to side as he walked toward Brayden. His eyes narrowed. With no warning, Morris threw a punch, catching him right on the jaw.
Brayden shook his head, the pain not registering.
"Morris? Are you insane?" the female officer asked.
"That’s what I’d like to know," Aiden added. "Do you wish to have a brutality suit filed against you?"
Brayden’s gaze locked on Morris’ dark one.
"You don’t deserve her. Damn you. Why the hell did you leave her alone?" Morris bit out.
"Gabe. Calm down." Stepping between them, the short woman held her hand out. "I’m Detective Laurence."
Brayden barely spared her a look, but when he did, he asked, "I want to know what the hell happened and I want to know now."
* * * *
The scalding water filled the bathroom with so much steam, she couldn’t see herself in the mirror. Just as well. She didn’t want to see. Didn’t want to see the bruises, the cuts, the marks he left on her.
She didn’t want to see Josephine staring back at her.
The skin on her arms was pink, almost raw from the pumice stone she’d used, and the entire bar of soap.
And still she scrubbed. The water heated her already reddened skin.
She’d taken off the wet gauze from her wrists. The spray bit into the raw skin, stinging at first, until it grew numb.
Water ran off her hair, down her face. She stared at the cream tiles, the steam so thick on them, water trailed down.
What was she going to do?
...first will be Brayden, and his little girl...
Oh, God. What did she do?
A sob choked her, tore out of her throat.
She leaned back, slid down the wet wall. With her knees to her chest, she bowed her head and tried to stop the tears that washed away her shame as uselessly as the hot water beating unmercifully down on her.
CHAPTER EIGHT
Brayden paced outside her door, down the hallway and back.
He looked up and regarded the other men in the room. Aiden stared out the window, Quinlan poured another drink at the bar. The cops were on the couches.
A heavy silence cloaked everyone.
This couldn’t be happening. Not to her, not to Christian.
Morris filled them in. Aggravated attempted rape, from preliminary tests, with a deadly weapon. Then there were the drugs in her system. They’d have to wait on lab results to verify, but apparently Gabe had showed up before the bastard had ... had....
Brayden stopped, shoved the heels of his hands into his eyes. But
the black images danced behind his eyelids.
Tied to the damn bed, like a fucking animal.
Rage and fury roared through him, beating him into a red haze. Blindly, he swung out and punched the wall. The sheetrock gave with a satisfying thud against his knuckles.
He bit down on his clawing temper and leaned his forehead against the wall.
He’d failed her. Him and his stupid twisted pride, his questioning sense of what was between them. He should have stayed in town. Should have driven by and picked her up. Should have made certain she was okay. While she was beaten and terrorized, he’d been playing with his daughter.
"Bray."
He opened his eyes, straightened and turned. Aiden had come away from the window, and stood not far away.
His gaze locked onto his brother’s. As if to no one in particular, he bit out, "I want this bastard found."
The message passed between them, unspoken yet heard. He saw Aiden’s barely discernible nod.
"Brayden," Aiden said, "he will be. I’m sure the police are doing everything they can."
The police. He looked over to the couch and nodded curtly to Morris.
"Bray, she needs you right now. She needs all of us, but you more than anyone. Don’t let your anger at this bastard scare her into a corner," Quinlan told him.
Why was it, the youngest was the most levelheaded? And Quin was right, but the anger and fury roared within Brayden. It wasn’t often he lost his temper. He’d learned early on that large males and tempers often gave the wrong impression. But, right now he wanted to rip something apart with his bare hands.
Preferably the man who had done this.
Sighing, he rubbed his hands over his face.
"You saw no one, Lieutenant?" Aiden asked Morris.
Morris, to give the man credit, seemed to care more than was professionally necessary. And thank God for that. If he hadn’t....
"Do you think I would be sitting here wanting to talk to her, make her go through it all again, if we had something to go on?" Morris answered, his voice steeled on the edge of anger.
Brayden looked at her door, then at his watch--over an hour. She’d been in there over an hour.