Outside of the Brotherhood’s downtown garage, Butch grabbed onto his dead sister’s friend’s arm to keep her from collapsing onto the dirty sidewalk. Mel McCarthy was badly beaten, in a way no woman ever should be.
“What the hell happened to you?”
Mel grabbed onto the lapels of his leather jacket with torn-up hands. “Oh, God, Butch…”
As she looked up at him, blood dropped out of her nose and landed on the bodice of her pale pink bustier, widening the bright red stain that had formed over her left breast. There was also a nasty abrasion on the side of her face that was likewise leaking, and around her throat, ligature marks were a ruddy band in her pale skin. And the injuries continued from there. A dull scratch ran from her collarbone into her cleavage, and below the waist her black skirt was off-kilter and her black fishnet stockings were ripped, more blood running down the bare skin of her thighs from cuts and scrapes.
“Come here,” he said, holding her up. “Let’s get you out of the cold.”
Opening the door into the garage, he helped her inside, holding her up as she limped on the one stiletto that still had a heel. There were a pair of stuffed armchairs off in an alcove, next to the refrigerator and the space heater, and he took her over to one of them. As she eased down onto the padded cushion, her wince told him more than he needed to know about where else she’d been hurt.
Leaning to the side to turn on the heater, he opened his mouth to say something, but struggled to put together anything coherent. Too much of him was focused on wanting to find whoever had done this so he could kill them.
Mel put her head in her hands, her tangled hair falling forward. “I am so stupid. So stupid to have been alone with that guy—”
Butch crouched down and took her palms from her face. “Hey, hey. Stop that.” He brushed a strand of her long, brown hair back behind her ear. “We need to get you to the hospital.” And to a rape kit. “And we should call the police—”
“No!” She wiped a tear off her cheek and winced. “I’m not going to do that—”
“Mel, this was a crime.”
“I don’t know his name—”
“That’s okay, we’ll give a description to the CPD, and we’ll make sure they have a DNA—”
“I’m not going to the police.”
Butch gripped her hands. “Mel. I can’t imagine what you’ve just been through. But I know for certain there are people who can help you—people who can also make sure that the piece of shit who did this to you will get what he deserves.”
Her eyes were luminous with tears that trembled on her lashes. “I can’t. I just want to forget this ever happened—”
“Caldwell has a SART program, and I can put you in touch with them. They’re really good and they—”
Mel sniffled. “What’s a SART?”
He thought of his shellan and how much he had learned from Marissa as she’d studied how humans deal with violence against females. “It’s a sexual attack response team. It’s a multidisciplinary approach that is all about the survivor. It’s medical people, law enforcement, social workers, all coming together to support you as you seek justice. I promise you, they’re good folks, and—”
Mel’s eyes went down to their linked hands. “I can’t go to the police.”
Butch frowned. “I know that it will be hard. But I swear, you’ll be taken care of—”
“You don’t understand.” Her stare came up to his own. “It’s really not an option for me.”
And that was when her meaning sunk in. As the implications became obvious Butch released her hands and sat back on the cold concrete floor.
“I don’t want you to think any less of me.” She sniffled again and cleaned her tears with the back of her arm. “But yeah… it’s not going to happen.”
“I don’t think less of you.”
“You sure about that.”
“Absolutely, I am. I just… it’s not where I expected—” Butch cut himself off. “But enough about that—”
“You didn’t think I’d end up an escort?” She held out her short skirt and moved around the hem, as if she were looking for tears in the fabric. “Neither did I.”
Getting to his feet, he got a roll of paper towels off the top of the refrigerator. After spooling free some sheets, he folded them and