Keep Me Safe(44)
“Do you know where she is?” Detective Briggs demanded. “Were you able to locate her?”
“Don’t cry, Ramie,” Caleb whispered. “Please don’t cry. I’ve got you. You’re safe.”
“She’s dead,” Ramie choked out. “He killed her as soon as I established the link. It’s what he was waiting for.”
Detective Ramirez swore. Eliza knelt down beside Ramie and Caleb, her face drawn in sympathy.
“Where, Ramie? Can you tell us where she is? Don’t let her die in vain. If you can tell us where to find her, they may catch him.”
Dully, Ramie gave the location in a monotone, all the life sucked out as surely as the victim’s life had been.
Beau’s gaze flickered over Ramie, something that resembled remorse in his eyes. Quinn wrapped an arm around Tori, who was shaking, crying, as was Ramie, silently. The two women locked gazes, a moment of kinship before Tori glanced away, distress radiating from her. She ran from the room and Quinn swore violently.
“How could you have done this to her?” he said, raising his voice to Caleb. “The very last thing Tori needs is this, in her home.”
Ramie dropped her head, looking away from Caleb’s brothers. Exhaustion took hold and she drifted, uncaring, into the black void. There was peace in the silence. She reached for it, allowing it to suck her into its firm embrace. She was tired and there was too much pain for her in the present.
So she simply let go and let it swallow her whole.
Caleb felt Ramie go completely limp against him. Fear seized him, made him irrational.
“She deserves better from you,” Caleb hissed. “No matter what you think she’s done, she doesn’t deserve your judgment. I sent her to hell to save Tori. That will always be between us. And now she’s gone back because she’s the only person who can stop a cold-blooded monster. What is wrong with you that you would treat a woman this poorly? What the hell has she done but try to survive with her sanity intact?”
Quinn’s eyes widened at Caleb’s vehemence. Beau frowned, guilt tugging at his implacable features.
“Is she . . . alive?” Beau asked uneasily.
The two detectives looked alarmed and immediately started toward Ramie. Caleb wrapped his arms around her, shielding her from everyone.
“What the hell happened in here?” Detective Briggs demanded.
“I damn near lost her. That’s what happened,” Caleb said fiercely. “Go. Find the victim. Call it in. Find him so she’s safe. Don’t let her have suffered this for nothing.”
Detective Ramirez was already on his phone, barking out orders to dispatch.
“Let me look at her, Caleb,” Dane said grimly. “Is she breathing?”
Caleb’s hand twisted in her hair. He pressed his lips to her temple so he could feel the reassuring puff of her breath against his neck.
“She’s alive,” Caleb said tersely. “I’m taking her upstairs.”
Caleb slowly got to his feet, mindful of jostling his precious burden. He scooped her into his arms and strode for the stairs, her pale face still buried against his chest. His heart thumped rapidly, fear still a living, breathing entity inside him.
He’d lived without fear for most of his life. Only in the last year had he been made vulnerable, realizing what it truly meant to be afraid every minute of every day. He hated fear. It was a paralyzing quality that he had no use for. And yet with allowing himself to care about someone came the knowledge that he’d live with fear the rest of his life because there were simply some things out of his control.
He carried Ramie into his bedroom, easing her down onto his mattress. Her hands and feet were blocks of ice, her skin so chilled she seemed tinged with blue. He pulled the covers back and then crawled into bed with her, pulling her body into his, offering his warmth to her.
She never even stirred, her breathing so light that he continually sought reassurance that she was breathing at all.
What the hell was he going to do? He’d never felt so goddamn helpless in his life. There was no amount of money he could throw at this problem to make it go away. Money had long since lost any intrinsic value to him. It was simply a tool like any other that made life more comfortable. It certainly didn’t solve all of life’s problems and it didn’t make him immune to hardship and pain.
He inhaled the scent of her hair, closed his eyes and wondered what the hell he was going to do to make her pain go away.
She murmured something unintelligible and burrowed more firmly into his embrace. The small gesture gave him a measure of comfort. He relaxed, allowing the brief spurt of pleasure at having her molded against his body to surge hotly through his veins.