out again—shots fired against that jammed door.
Brendan, still holding their son, who was softly sobbing, rushed down the stairs behind her. The shots, the urgency, the danger had her trembling so uncontrollably that she slipped, her feet flying from beneath her.
She would have fallen, would have hit each metal step on the long way to the ground. But a strong hand caught her arm, holding her up while she regained her footing.
When they neared the bottom of the fire escape, the gun was back in his hand, the light from the parking lot lamps glinting off the metal.
She hadn’t lost the gun she’d carried. She hadn’t used it, either, and wasn’t even sure that she could. But then she heard a car door open and a gun cock.
And she knew that someone had a clear shot at them. So she slid off the safety and turned with the gun braced in both hands. But before she could squeeze the trigger, a shot rang out and she heard a windshield shatter.
“Come on,” Brendan urged her. “Your car’s over here. Hurry.”
“But—”
There was a shooter in the lot. Or had Brendan already shot him? The gun was in his free hand while his other hand clasped their son to his chest.
“Do you have the keys?” he asked.
She pulled them out of her purse and clicked the key fob. Lights flashed on the SUV, guiding them to it and also revealing it to the gunmen as they erupted from the lobby of the building.
This time she squeezed the trigger, shooting at the men pointing guns at her son and the man she loved. The weapon kicked back, straining her wrist.
“Get in!” Brendan yelled as he put their boy into the backseat. “Buckle him up!”
She dropped the gun into her bag and jumped into the passenger’s seat. As she leaned over the console and buckled up their son, Brendan was already careening out of the lot.
“Stay down!” he yelled at her, just as more shots rang out. Bullets pinged and tires squealed.
And their son continued to play statue, staying silent in the backseat. “You’re so brave,” she praised him, reaching back to touch his face.
His chin quivered and she felt moisture on her fingers—probably his tears. But he had his eyes squeezed tightly shut, trying not to cry. She pulled back her hand and studied what was smeared across her fingers. It wasn’t tears. It was something red and sticky. Blood.
“Brendan! He’s hurt!” she exclaimed, fear and dread clutching her heart in a tight vise. “Get to the hospital! Call the police!”
* * *
“NO,” HE CORRECTED her as blood trickled down his temple. “CJ wasn’t hit.” He’d made damn certain of that.
“Th-there’s blood on his face,” she said, her voice shaking with fear and anger.
Brendan tipped the rearview mirror and studied their son in the backseat. The little boy scrubbed at his face and held up a hand sticky with blood. “It’s not mine, Mommy. It came off...” His son didn’t know what to call him, didn’t know who he was to him.
“Your daddy,” Brendan answered the boy. “I’m your daddy.”
Josie gasped, probably at his audacity for telling their child who he was. But then she was reaching across the console and touching his head. “Where are you hit?”
“Daddy?” CJ asked.
Brendan’s head pounded. He wanted to pull off the road, wanted to explain to his son who he was, wanted to let Josie touch him. But he had to tip the mirror back up and check the road behind them. Had anyone followed them?
He’d thought he’d been vigilant on his way from the estate to the complex, that he hadn’t been followed. Had he missed a tail?
With blood trickling into his eyes, he was more likely to miss one now, so he asked Josie, “Do you see anything?”
Her fingers stroked through his hair. “No. Where were you hit?”
He shook his head, and the pain radiated, making him wince. “I wasn’t hit,” he replied, lifting his fingers to his left temple. “I was grazed. It’s just a scratch.” A scratch that stung like a son of a bitch, but he ignored the pain and focused on the road. “Is there anyone behind us?”
“What?” She must have realized what he was referring to, because she turned around and peered out the rear window. “I don’t see any other lights.”
The roads were deserted this early in the morning. He passed only a garbage truck going the other direction. No one was behind him. No one had been behind