She looked so damn forlorn that it discomfited him. Hell, he dealt with women in various forms of distress all the time through his job. He arrested them, gave them bad news, took reports from the abused, but he didn’t know any of them.
She stared ahead, biting her lower lip as if she couldn’t decide what she should do.
“Come on, honey,” he said a little more forcefully. “Let’s go talk about it and then I’ll get you home.”
She turned her gaze to him and her eyes filled with tears again. “I can’t go home, Sean.”
Hell. What was he supposed to say to that? And where the hell was Ethan?
He lifted her arm, hoping she wouldn’t fight him. He reached down to unclasp her seat belt and urged her from her seat. She stumbled as she got out, and he wrapped an arm around her waist to support her as they walked toward his squad car.
“No, not in the back,” he said when she went in that direction.
He walked around to the front passenger seat and ushered her inside. Then he hurried around to the driver’s side and slid in next to her.
He tapped his thumbs on the steering wheel for a moment and then broached the subject head-on.
“Why on earth do you think I should take you to jail?”
She raised a trembling hand to her forehead and closed her eyes. He could see the deep pain grooved on her forehead.
“God, Sean. Do you know what I almost did? I came out of the therapist’s office.” She broke off and laughed, a harsh, brittle sound. “I ran out of the office more like. All I could think was what a mess my life is and how I wanted the needle more than I wanted to live. I looked over and saw this kid riding his skateboard in the parking lot of the grocery store. A kid, Sean. And I wondered if he’d know how to score a hit. I got out of the truck before I even realized what I was doing.”
She wilted in the seat, all the fight completely gone. There was such despair in her eyes that it made him want to cry like a damn baby.
“Ah shit, Rachel. You should have called me. Or Ethan. Or anyone else.”
She jerked her head around, her eyes red-rimmed, exhaustion and self-recrimination stark in her features.
“What was I supposed to say? That I’m the world’s biggest screwup? That I’m trying my best to mess up my life as soon as I get it back? Do you have any idea how much I hate myself?”
Sean pulled her into his arms and stroked her hair. “Give yourself a break. You didn’t do it. Do you hear me? You didn’t do it. You may have wanted to but nothing you could ever say will convince me that you would have gone through with it. And I sure as hell can’t arrest someone for wanting to commit a crime for God’s sake. If that was the case, the whole damn world would be in jail, including yours truly.”
Her muffled laughter sounded pitiful, but at least she’d stopped crying.
“I’m about to go out of my mind,” she said against his shirt.
He could feel the light shudders of her body and knew she was suffering. How she’d endured this far was a mystery to him.
“I’m not sure I have a mind left,” she added.
He held her for a minute and absently ran his hand through her hair.
“You’re doing fine. You probably insisted on going alone this morning when you should have been willing to ask for help. You’re surrounded by people who’d drop things at a moment’s notice if you needed them. You need to be willing to use that. We’re your family. That’s what families do. It’s what you used to do for everyone else. Now it’s our turn to repay that. Do you understand that? You don’t have to make it on your own. It doesn’t make you weak to need help. You don’t remember, but when I first came on the job, I was shot because I did a really stupid thing. I was a rookie. Second week on the job and I thought I knew it all. Went into a situation without backup because I was confident I didn’t need anyone’s help. I’m lucky I didn’t get killed.
“During my recovery you and Marlene took turns cooking for me. You cleaned my house. Did my grocery shopping. Made sure all my bills were paid. And