She stared up at him helplessly. She didn’t want to be anywhere else. Right now, she knew anywhere else would be terrifying.
She nodded slowly. She couldn’t argue with him; she didn’t want to argue with him. She wanted to go home with him, hide in his arms, and pretend this hadn’t happened until she could get a handle on the fear that sparked inside her.
“Let’s go. Cam’s downstairs with Ian and Khalid checking the security tapes. With any luck, we’ll get the bastard.”
There was no luck that day.
Kia sat on a small upholstered bench in the hallway, several other residents of the apartment building looking on curiously as uniformed officers moved from the elevator to the apartment and back, packing samples taken from it. Carl Allen stood with Chase, Cameron, Ian, and Khalid in front of her.
The security tapes were missing, Cameron reported. A full three hours’ worth of auto-saved discs were missing from the security office where the equipment was held.
“Check Drew Stanton’s whereabouts first,” Chase was telling the detective. “He’s her ex-husband and he’s one of Rutherford’s security experts. He maintains and installs all their security software for their offices and their warehouses.”
There was no point in arguing further with Chase. A small part of Kia admitted she was afraid that perhaps Drew had been angry enough to do this. She hadn’t seen it, though. Drew had a pattern to his anger, and he hadn’t shown an escalation into rage.
Detective Allen had his own electronics investigator in there now, she heard him report. And still, she couldn’t figure out why this has happened.
“Kia? Little one?” Khalid knelt in front of her as Chase and Cameron talked, only a few feet away from her. “You should let Chase take you back to the apartment. Get drunk. Get mad.”
He touched her hands where they lay folded in her lap.
“My limo is just outside,” he told her. “Fully stocked. You can drink until you get there.”
She stared into his black eyes and sniffed at the tears that began to run down her face again.
His expression creased painfully. Reaching into his suit jacket he pulled free a handkerchief and wiped her eyes gently.
“Ah, little one, I would make this all better if I could.” His eyes were filled with anger.
Kia shook her head before taking the handkerchief he pressed into her fingers.
“I’m okay.” She cleared her throat, aware of Chase watching her now, concern heavy in his face. “I’ll be okay.”
It was just an apartment. They were just things. She was okay, her parents were okay, and Chase was okay. Things could be replaced. But they were her things. Five years of memories and what little comfort she had been able to draw from them during the two years she had forced herself to withdraw from her earlier life.
“Carl, I need to get her out of here,” Chase said to the detective standing at his side. “She’s had it.”
Carl nodded. “We’re almost done here. I’ll let you know when you can get a cleaning crew in, but I want to wait and see what the lab comes up with, make sure they don’t need anything else before I release it.”
“If you need her, you know where she’ll be.” Chase nodded.
She would be in his home, in his bed. She would be safe. He was going to make damned certain of it.
As he turned back to her, Khalid rose from in front of her, shoving his hands in his slacks as he watched her straighten shakily from the bench.
She hated this. Hated feeling helpless and endangered. She had never felt endangered in her entire life. Not like this. And the feeling was threatening the last shreds of her control.
“Let’s get you home,” he said, his voice tight. “Cameron, Jaci, and Khalid will be with you for a while. I have a few things I have to take care of.”
Kia paused, knowing instinctively what those few things were, and she wasn’t having it.
“Chase.” She finally shook her head again as she fought to make sense of everything. “Drew wasn’t involved with this. If you go after him yourself, I’ll walk out of that apartment of yours so fast it will make your head spin. Do you understand me?”
His eyes narrowed on her. “I’ll take care of this, Kia.”
“Do you understand me?” She stared back at him. “If you want me to trust you, then you have to trust me as well. You’ll get proof. You won’t handle this like some Western gunslinger intent on revenge. Are we clear?”
She watched the rage move, lightning-fast, through his gaze before resignation darkened the icy-green color of his eyes.
“I’m getting damned tired of you defending him,” he burst out.
“And I’m getting damned tired of worrying about having his broken neck on your conscience,” she snapped right back. “And don’t you dare try to pretend it wouldn’t affect you, Chase. Especially if you found out he was innocent.”
“Do I look stupid?” The edge of silky danger in his voice had her shaking her head slowly.
“No, but you do look very very angry, Chase. And if you confront Drew now, you won’t be confronting him over this.” She waved her hand to the apartment across from her. “You would be confronting him over the past. And that I simply won’t have.”
He watched them leave the building. The way Falladay enclosed Kia among him, Khalid, and Khalid’s chauffeur bodyguard.
Ian Sinclair and Cameron were behind them. All moved into the limo except Sinclair. He got into Chase’s car and the two vehicles moved out together.
She was alive. He had known she was alive for the past week, and he still wasn’t certain how he felt about it. Was he glad or sad? Happy or angry that she had survived?
There were so many emotions he couldn’t make sense of and so much pain filling his soul.
He was out of control, and he knew it. He could feel it rising and ebbing, keeping him off balance as the rage obliterated all the gentleness he had once thought he possessed.
There was so much pain inside him. It was bleak and ugly, a black stain across his soul that he couldn’t wipe clean.
He had lost everything. Lost everything that ever meant anything to him, and now he was losing his wife as well. His cherished wife. How he loved her. Cherished her. And along with everything else that Falladay had taken away from him, he was losing that as well.
He had tried to hold on. Hold on to his beliefs and the control he had once possessed. Now he felt uncertain, out of control, and enraged. Chase had destroyed everything, and now he was benefiting from that destruction.
He couldn’t allow that.
It was his fault Kia was still with that bastard. If he hadn’t pulled back at the last second when he slammed the butt of his gun to her head, she would have been dead. If he had just fired the gun as he had originally intended, she would have certainly been dead.
But at the last moment, grief had overwhelmed him. Such sorrowful, pain-filled grief, that he had pulled back.
The next time, he would make certain he didn’t pull back. Chase had to realize what it was like to lose everything, to be destroyed as only a man can be destroyed. It was just so sad Kia had to pay the price for the lesson Falladay had coming
.
Sweet Kia. She should have remained faithful. If only she had just remained faithful, been the wife she should have been, and stayed away from Falladay. Everything would have been okay then. She wouldn’t have to be hurt or frightened.
How sad.
He breathed out a small, weary sigh and maneuvered his car onto the street, heading away from the direction the others had taken.
He had been watching for her, waiting for her to return home. He had wanted her to see. Wanted her to save herself by distancing herself from Falladay. But she hadn’t. She was with him, and she would remain with him.