watched Hawk’s every move.
“How the fuck did you get out of Caz’s house?” Hawk growled. And winced. The sound of his fucked-up voice would scare any—
The kid wasn’t scared. He didn’t move or speak. Just watched Hawk.
Amusement trickled in. “Snuck out, did you?” That’d teach the doc. Caz’d always figured he was best at sneaking around. “You know, the doc’s better with kids than I am.”
“Mama said.” Aric’s mouth set in a stubborn line. And his expression conveyed that Aric’s mama had given Hawk orders, too.
“Yeah, she did. Fine.” Hawk slid open the door and let the boy in. He’d have to call Caz and let him know about his crappy kid-watching.
After Aric was asleep, it’d be time to call Zachary Grayson. Maybe the psychologist could figure out what should be done with a stray boy and a mother’s insane notion to hand her son over to a fucked-up asshole like Hawk.
A light drizzle blotted out the morning sun as Bull opened his garage door and drove in. “We’re here, sweetheart.”
Frankie’d been dozing on the way home. She was exhausted—and he was damn proud of how she’d held it together until the FBI agents were done.
As she struggled awake, he helped her out, half holding her up as they walked inside.
When they reached the living room, he heard a whuff. Gryff was pressing his nose against the sliding glass door, tail wagging ferociously.
Frankie chuckled as Bull opened the door and Gryff barreled in, spinning in excited circles between his two humans. It took a fair bit of petting to calm him down.
And then the dog helped Bull steer Frankie upstairs and into the shower. Leaving her there, he knelt in front of the pup. “You did a great job, buddy. You saved our girl. Brave dog, good dog.”
Leaning against Bull, Gryff ate up the praise as if he could understand every word.
“Your previous owner was an idiot. You’re no coward. You just didn’t have a good reason to fight before.” Bull hugged the furry dog. “You did good, my friend. Incredibly good.”
Gryff licked Bull’s chin, making him laugh.
“Okay, I’m going to go help Frankie.” Help her. Hold her. Reassure himself she was all right.
When he stepped into the shower, she was sitting on the tile under the water, head in hands. Crying.
His heart cracked in half.
“Frankie.” He knelt beside her, so small. So valiant. “Are you in pain?”
“I’m fine.”
“Bullshit.” Bull turned her face toward him. “Tell me what’s wrong.”
She was shaking despite the hot water pouring down on her. “It’s… I hit them so hard. To make them stop. I felt bones…break. And the man’s throat. I think I must have killed him, and…and…right then, I was okay with it. Wanting it. So, he—they—wouldn’t hurt me or you or anyone.”
Combat fever, eventually, came to an end and left a soldier sick right to his soul. “Yeah, I get it. It’s part of war.”
“I can still hear the screams and yelling, and it won’t stop, and I want to throw up and hide. That wasn’t me hurting those men. It wasn’t.”
He ached for her. Hell, she’d chosen aikido because it was the least aggressive of the martial arts, because she didn’t like attacking anyone. “I know.”
It’s how he felt about killing. “The aftermath still hits me hard, too. Some soldiers adapt; I never did.”
She leaned against him, taking his hand, silently offering sympathy in return.
After a minute, she took a deep breath. “I suppose we should wash up before the water turns cold.”
“Let’s do that.” He lifted her to her feet. A sweetly curved bundle of competence and courage with a temper worthy of her ancestors, and a swathe of compassion wider than the ocean. “I love you, Francesca Bocelli.”
“I love you, too,” she whispered. Turning in his arms, she pulled him down for a kiss.
Carefully, he removed the dressing on her leg. It was stitched up and no longer bleeding. Gently, he washed her, cataloging each darkening bruise and gash, then realized as she ran her hands over his back and made sympathetic sounds that she was doing the same.
Her fingers circled some damned painful places. “These are where bullets hit your vest, aren’t they?”
At the odd sound in her voice, he turned.
She’d pulled her lips in and blinked hard, obviously trying not to cry again. Because he’d been hit.
Gently, he touched the darker blotch over her ribs where a bullet had cracked her rib. “Good thing we armored up, huh?”
Her voice cracked as she whispered, “Uh-huh.”
It was time to