CHAPTER 39
ETHAN paced back and forth outside Rachel’s
hospital room. Other members of his family had gathered in the
hallway, and they all looked at him with deep concern in their
eyes.
Sam and Garrett leaned against the wall closest to
the door while Marlene and Frank stood against the opposite wall.
Marlene’s eyes were red-rimmed and swollen. Rusty stood a few feet
away, hands shoved into her pockets. She looked uncomfortable, but
her usual belligerent scowl was absent.
“How long does it take?” Ethan spit out as he
glanced at the closed door again. “Why won’t they let me
inside?”
His mom laid a hand on his arm and squeezed
reassuringly. “They need to get her settled in without all of us
looming over them. Especially you. You probably scare the nurses
half to death.”
Ethan spun around and paced back down the hall. He
was going to go crazy. After hours in the emergency room, Rachel
had finally been transported to a private room. She’d only woken up
intermittently, and she’d seemed confused and shaky the few times
she was conscious.
Her arm was set and casted, her other wounds and
scrapes tended to. The doctor assured him she’d make a full
recovery. But Ethan needed to see her. He was going to go out of
his mind.
The door opened, and they all converged on the
nurse as she left the room. She held up a hand with a pained
expression.
“She’s resting comfortably now. I gave her
something for pain. Try not to overexcite her. If you could limit
the number of visitors she has at one time, that would help.”
Ethan swallowed and nodded. He didn’t care who
beyond himself got in as long as he got to see his wife. He pushed
by the nurse and ducked into the room.
His chest tightened when he got his first look at
Rachel lying on the bed. Her casted arm was placed carefully over
her waist, and she was huddled in the sheets like she was still
trying to protect herself.
A bruise darkened her cheek, and Ethan closed his
eyes to the murderous rage that billowed over him.
As he crept closer, he noticed the dark shadows
under her eyes. Her lashes rested on her cheeks, giving her already
fragile appearance an even more delicate air. The nurse had cleaned
her hair, and now it was brushed soft over the pillow and lay
around her face in waves.
The flimsy hospital gown did little to modestly
cover her, and he vowed at the first opportunity he’d get her
something more comfortable to wear.
He reached out to touch her, but his hand shook so
badly he pulled it back in an effort to control the tide of emotion
soaring through his body.
She’d been through so much. Had he lost her? Had he
finally lost her? She’d survived insurmountable odds, not once but
twice, and yet the look in her eyes when she’d discovered the truth
about their marriage had seemed to break her when nothing else
had.
He bent down and pressed his lips to her forehead.
The baby-fine hairs at her temple felt like silk under his mouth.
Her skin was so soft, so satiny. He inhaled her scent and held it
there, just wanting to savor the fact that she was okay. She was
alive.
“I love you,” he whispered. “I need you to believe
that, baby. I need you to believe that above all else.”
“Ethan.”
Ethan glanced up to see Garrett standing a few feet
away, his expression pained. Sam was just behind him.
“Look, man, I know there’s a lot I obviously don’t
know about your situation. I’m not butting into your
business.”
Ethan stared dully at Garrett, waiting for the
hammer to fall.
“She loves you. There’s no doubt in my mind she
loves you. She’s always loved you. What happened last night . . .
it pulled the rug out from under her. But she loves you. Hold on to
that, okay? Things will be okay. You have to believe that.”
Ethan let out a long breath. “Thanks, Garrett.
After the accusations I made...”
Garrett moved closer and gripped Ethan’s shoulder.
“It’s forgotten.”
Ethan grabbed his older brother in a bear hug and
held on for all he was worth. Garrett squeezed back and then
pounded him painfully on the back.
“Okay, girls, enough,” Sam said in a quiet voice.
“Mom and Dad are outside like two mother hens. They’ll want to peek
in on Rachel, and Garrett and I need to talk to you, Ethan.”
Ethan glanced up sharply at Sam. “Talk about
what?”
“Let me call Mom in to watch over Rachel. I don’t
want her left alone.”
Ethan didn’t like the concern in Sam’s voice. It
went beyond worry over Rachel’s condition. He nodded and waited
tensely as Sam ducked out of the room.
Seconds later he returned, and then Marlene stuck
her head in the door and shot her sons a worried look. Then her
gaze rested on Rachel, and tears filled her eyes.
“My baby,” she whispered.
Frank came in behind her and placed both hands
comfortingly on her shoulders.
Marlene put a fist to her mouth. “I just had to see
her. I won’t stay, but I had to see that she was okay.”
Sam touched her arm. “She will be, Ma. She will be.
Garrett and I need to talk to Ethan. Can you and Dad stay with her
for a minute?”
“Of course,” Frank said gruffly. “You boys go do
what you need to do. Marlene and I will call you if she wakes
up.”
As Ethan headed to the door with his brothers, his
mom walked over and hugged him close. “We’ll stay as long as you
need us, son. If you need anything, you let me know, okay?”
Ethan kissed her on the cheek. “I will, Ma. Don’t
worry.”
Ethan followed Sam and Garrett into the hall and
noticed a uniformed officer standing guard by the door. He glanced
up at Sam for explanation, but Sam just motioned him farther down
the hall.
Midway down they stopped in front of a set of
windows and Sam and Garrett flanked him, almost protectively. How
like his older brothers to hover. It was like he was twelve
again.
“Rachel was right. Someone tried to run her off the
bridge,” Sam said bluntly.
Ethan nodded. It wasn’t something he hadn’t already
figured out. “What makes you say so, though? Other than the
obvious?”
“Right after you and Rachel left the house, Rio
checked in.” Sam’s eyes flickered for a moment before he plunged
ahead. “I sent him back into Colombia to do some recon. Garrett and
I were going to meet him and go in after the sons of bitches who
held Rachel prisoner. My plan was to make them talk no matter what
I had to do.”
Anger tightened Ethan’s jaw. “Why am I only just
hearing about this?”
“It’s obvious,” Garrett snapped. “Rachel needed you
here, not down getting revenge.”
Ethan controlled his temper—just barely. Now wasn’t
the place to tell Garrett what he thought about his assertion that
he shouldn’t be the one to exact vengeance for his wife.
“Rio tagged the new location of their camp, did
some recon, cut out to scout a place for Steele to come in and then
Garrett and me, but when he got back, the village had been wasted.
Same day Rachel is forced off the bridge.”
“Fuck,” Ethan whispered. He closed his eyes and
gripped the back of his neck, massaging the aching muscles. “What
the hell happened over there, Sam? She had to have seen something
she shouldn’t have. It’s the only thing that makes sense.”
“But why the hell did they keep her alive?” Garrett
asked.
It was a question they’d asked repeatedly, and they
were no closer to getting the answers they needed. Out of a team of
eight volunteers, Rachel was the only survivor. Everyone else had
perished on the plane coming back to the States. And someone had
gone to great lengths to make Ethan believe his wife had been
included.
“We need to dig deeper into the relief effort.
There has to be something we’ve missed. It was a small
organization, and the majority of their team died in the airplane
crash. They ceased operations after that. Everything we’ve looked
into has checked out. Nothing suspicious.”
Garrett nodded his agreement and looked toward Sam
for his input.
“Until we find out what the hell is going on, this
family is in lockdown,” Sam said grimly. “No one is safe. I’m going
to call in Rio and his team as well as Steele.”
The brothers looked at one another as they realized
at the same moment . . .
“Donovan. Goddamn it,” Sam said. “Son of a bitch. I
missed check-in.”
“You had a good reason,” Garrett said. “Donovan can
handle himself. He has the best. We can’t pull him out now. He’ll
be home in a day, and we can pull in P.J., Baker and Renshaw to
help out here.”
Ethan swallowed as the reality set in. War had been
declared. First on his family, and now they were fighting
back.
“We’ll do what we have to in order to keep this
family safe,” Sam said in a low voice. “I know you want in, Ethan,
but Rachel needs you, and your first priority has to be her and
patching things up between you. We’ll keep you in the loop, I swear
it.”
Ethan knew Sam was right. He wanted to go after the
bastards himself. He wanted their blood for daring to touch Rachel.
But Rachel needed him. He needed Rachel.
“Okay,” he said quietly.
Sam put his hand on Ethan’s shoulder and squeezed.
“I’m going to head over to see what Sean can tell me, if anything
yet. Then I need to try and raise Van and let him know what the
hell is going on. Garrett is going to take Mom, Dad and Rusty home,
and Sean is going to provide deputies for their protection. I don’t
want anyone in this family alone and unguarded. You go back down
with Rachel. I’ll come check in later.”
Ethan nodded, and without waiting for them to go,
he turned and hurried back down the hall. He sized up the policeman
outside Rachel’s door and then walked back in.
His mom looked up from Rachel’s bed and then
hurried over.
“Has she woken up yet?” he asked her.
Marlene shook her head. “The nurse came by to check
her vitals. They gave her pain medication before they transferred
her to her room so she’ll likely sleep for a while.”
Frank walked over and put his arm around Ethan’s
shoulders. “You okay, son?”
Ethan nodded. “Garrett is going to take you home so
you can get some rest. I’m going to stay with Rachel.”
His mom frowned. “I’ll go home long enough to get
you something to eat, but I’m not staying. I need to be here for
you and Rachel. If anyone needs rest, it’s you.”
Ethan glanced at his father. “Listen, Ma. I need
you to go home and stay there. Sean’s going to post a few deputies
for your protection. The best thing you can do for me right now is
to be safe. Until we eliminate the threat to Rachel—to this
family—no one goes anywhere. I’ll be fine, and I’ll call you with
updates. I promise.”
His mom’s lips pursed, and she was ready to argue,
but his dad put an arm around her and squeezed. “He’s right,
Marlene. The best thing we can do is go home and stay out of the
way so they have less to worry over.”
She sighed but nodded. Then she reached up and
cupped Ethan’s cheek. “You tell her we love her and that we’ll be
back to see her as soon as you’ll let us.”
Ethan smiled and dropped a kiss on her cheek.
“Thanks, Ma. I love you.”
It was with relief that Ethan closed the door
behind his departing parents. Finally he was alone. He needed the
time with Rachel. He needed to collect his scattered
thoughts.
He pulled a chair as close to Rachel’s bed as he
could go and sat down, leaning forward to watch her while she
slept. He took her hand and curled his fingers around hers. His
thumb brushed over her palm, and he contented himself with the feel
of her skin, warm on his.
How long he’d dreaded facing her when she knew the
truth. As overjoyed as he’d been to have her back, each day had
been spent on borrowed time. Now he faced the hardest task of his
life. Making her believe in them again.
She stirred restlessly, her brow furrowed. He
picked his head up, eagerly looking for any sign she was regaining
consciousness.
Gradually her distress eased and she slipped back
under, her sleep seemingly more peaceful now.
So he waited. And as he waited he replayed all
their happiest memories. He focused on those, refusing to dwell on
the bad.
He must have fallen asleep, because he woke to
someone shaking his shoulder. He looked up through bleary eyes to
see Sam standing beside him.
Ethan glanced back at Rachel, to see her still
resting peacefully, and then he looked back at his brother.
“How long has it been?” he asked groggily.
“Few hours. We just came back from seeing Sean.” He
broke off and glanced over at Rachel. “Why don’t we go down to the
nurses’ station and grab a cup of coffee. You look like you could
use a jolt of caffeine.”
Ethan hesitated for a moment then rose,
disentangling his fingers from Rachel’s. “Yeah, sure, just for a
minute. I want to be here when she wakes up.”
He followed Sam from the room and nodded at the
guard, who was still sitting right next to the door.
“I’m going to leave the door cracked. If you hear
her, holler at me, okay? I’ll be just down the hall.”
The guard gave him a short salute, and Ethan turned
to follow Sam toward the coffee room.
THE soft sound of an opening door roused Rachel to
consciousness. Through narrow slits, she saw the male nurse come in
and draw a syringe from the breast pocket of his scrubs.
Her breath caught, and she kept her eyes barely
open, not wanting him to know she was awake. Unease skittered up
her spine, but she didn’t understand why.
As he moved closer to the bed, he glanced almost
nervously behind him, and the hard line of his profile triggered a
memory of another time and place.
Castle. Senator Castle. Expected presidential
nominee for his party in the next election. Then, it had been two
years away. Now it would be one?
Panic made her mind race, and she scrambled to put
the pieces together. Castle, this man, two others. She remembered
fear of discovery. Of trying to back away. Of this man who was in
her hospital room right now turning and seeing her.
His gaze had been rock hard, and she’d seen her
death in those eyes. She’d heard Castle order her death.
But she’d been kept alive.
Why?
Her breath was swelling in her chest, threatening
to explode from her throat. It took everything she had to lie there
quietly while she gathered her courage.
Her fingers twitched ever so slightly. The man
uncapped the syringe and picked up her IV line, thumbing the port.
Whatever was in the syringe meant her death.
The needle slid into the port.
She erupted from the bed. She slammed her cast down
onto the IV line and quickly wrapped the tubing around the stiff
mold. Then she yanked as hard as she could.
The catheter jerked painfully from her hand, tape
coming free as she screamed at the top of her lungs. She rolled
away from the man, climbing frantically over the railing.
She landed hard on the floor and glanced up to see
the shock and fury in the man’s eyes. Then he turned and fled out
of the door.
ETHAN quickly poured a cup of coffee and offered
it to Sam and then poured another for himself. He was impatient to
hear what if anything Sam had learned from Sean, but he was also in
a hurry to get back down to Rachel.
“Let’s head back down the hall. You can fill me in
on the way,” Ethan said.
Sam nodded. “Then you need to get some sleep,
Ethan. You’re not going to be worth a damn to Rachel in your
current condition. Garrett and I can take turns staying with Rachel
while you catch a few winks.”
Ethan made a rude noise of disagreement and sucked
down a mouthful of the hot coffee.
They stepped out of the small family room where
refreshments were stored and headed down the long hallway toward
Rachel’s room.
They’d only taken a few steps when a shrill scream
split the air. Ethan dropped his coffee and broke into a run.
The guard posted outside Rachel’s door leapt to his
feet just as a man dressed in hospital scrubs bolted from Rachel’s
room and ran straight into the policeman.
They both went down and rolled. The assailant
landed a punch and scrambled up just as Ethan hit him hard, sending
them both to the floor.
“I got this,” Sam said harshly as he pried Ethan
away. “You see to Rachel.”
Only the fear of what had happened to her kept
Ethan from killing the man right there in the hallway. He backed
away and ran into the room.
Her bed was empty, and he glanced wildly from side
to side until he located her on the floor, huddled in a corner
holding her casted arm to her chest.
Her hair was tangled, her eyes wild with a heavy
glaze of fear. He wasn’t sure she had any idea where she was.
“Rachel,” he said softly.
He knelt on the floor beside her and carefully
gathered her in his arms. She let out a shudder and started
trembling violently.
“Baby, are you okay? Did he hurt you? I need you to
tell me what happened.”
He never got an answer. The door flew open and a
flood of medical personnel rushed into the room.
She went rigid in his arms, and as soon as the
nurses got close, she all but crawled behind him.
He held up a hand to ward them all off and shot
them his most menacing glare.
“No one touches her until you’ve been cleared,” he
snarled.
Sam strode into the door, his gaze going to the
floor where Ethan sat with Rachel.
“He’s in custody. Sean’s on his way. Is Rachel
okay?”
“Clear the room,” Ethan ordered. “No one comes near
her until we know what the hell is going on here.”
“Sir, we need to examine her. We need to reattach
her IV,” one of the nurses protested.
Ethan opened his mouth, but Sam stepped between him
and the nurse and put a hand up.
“One of your nurses just tried to kill Rachel. No
one is going to touch her until they’ve cleared security.
Our security.”
The nurse blanched and backed away.
“The IV,” Rachel said in a faint voice.
Ethan looked down and touched her cheek. “What
about it, baby?”
“The syringe. It’s still sticking in the port. He
tried to inject something into the line.”
Sam stalked over to the line dangling from the pole
and picked up the tubing. A syringe dangled from the port, the
needle inserted, the plunger still all the way back.
He and Ethan exchanged horrified glances. Whatever
was in that needle had come awfully damn close to being in Rachel’s
vein.
“You got a glove?” Sam demanded.
The nurse who’d confronted Ethan gestured toward a
box on the wall. Sam yanked one down and then gestured for the
nurses to leave. As they headed toward the door, the police officer
who’d been on guard duty came in.
“Hospital security is crawling all over the
hallway. I told them to stay out, but they aren’t happy. Sean’s got
an ETA of five minutes.”
Sam nodded. “Keep them out until he gets here. He
can deal with them.”
Sam slipped on the glove and carefully withdrew the
needle from the port.
“Somehow I don’t think I want to stick myself with
this,” he murmured.
Rachel shuddered against Ethan’s chest, and her
fingers curled tightly into his shirt.
“I don’t want to stay here.”
“I know, baby. I’ll take you home.”
He waited for her to refuse, to tell him she wanted
someone else to take her away, but she remained quiet and still
against him.
He looked up at Sam, who still stood staring at the
syringe.
“I’m going to take her to Mom and Dad’s. I’ll have
Mom call Doc Campbell to see if he can come over to see about
Rachel. I don’t want her here until we know who the hell we can
trust.”
“I’ll stay here until Sean shows. He’ll want to
come out later to get the story from Rachel. I’ll turn this over to
him so they can have the lab run it. The assholes are piling up
around here.”
“Castle,” Rachel murmured. “It’s Castle.”
Ethan looked down in confusion. “What’s that,
baby?”
“Senator Castle,” she said in a clearer voice. She
pushed away from Ethan and stared at him with wide, scared eyes.
“He’ll never let me live knowing what I know.”