Blane had the man in a headlock and was squeezing his neck, slowly suffocating him. The man struggled, but he was no match for Blane. A few moments later, his body went lax and his eyes rolled back in his head. Blane dropped his body to the floor and stepped over it. He crouched down next to me.
“Kat, are you all right?”
I couldn’t answer, so I just gave a jerky nod.
He reached out and carefully took the gun from my grip, ejecting the chambered round before setting it aside. He took me in his arms and pulled me onto his lap. I curled into him, my hands fisting his shirt.
I was shaking like a leaf, the fear and adrenaline leaving me an exhausted mess. It felt so good to be in Blane’s arms again, which was a bizarre thought, considering the circumstances. I inhaled, the familiar scent of him comforting in ways I didn’t examine too closely.
“Did he hurt you?” Blane asked.
“Hit me. Pulled my hair,” I said, my voice barely above a whisper.
Blane’s hand cupped my head and I felt his lips brush my brow, then he tucked me back into the crook of his neck. I sighed, my eyes slipping shut.
Blane’s arms tightened around me. “I can’t lose you,” he murmured. “Not like this.”
I didn’t have anything to say to that, so I remained silent.
“Well, this wasn’t what I was expecting.”
At Kade’s voice, my eyes shot open. He stood in the open doorway, gun in hand. His gaze took in the man on the floor and every part of me folded into Blane’s lap. If I could have made myself smaller to fit inside Blane’s pocket, I probably would have.
“Nine-one-one call on the scanner,” Kade said. “Neighbor heard shots. Cops are on their way.” His eyes locked on mine. “What happened?”
“He broke in. Told me to kill myself,” I said. “Said he’d get a bonus if it looked like a suicide.”
“Fuck.”
I agreed with Kade’s sentiment, as did Blane, judging by the way his muscles contracted around me, holding me even closer. My body felt like liquid against his.
“Why the fuck haven’t you taken care of this?” Kade exploded, shoving his gun in the back of his jeans.
I started, his anger taking me by surprise. “What—”
“Not you. Him.” He jerked his chin toward Blane. “Why is Gage still alive?”
“I don’t go running around killing people just because it suits me,” Blane ground out.
“So you’d rather that he keep sending people to kill Kathleen?” Kade’s furious outrage made me wince. “Are you out of your fucking mind?”
It seemed time to move out of the line of fire between the two of them, so I eased myself off Blane’s lap. He stood and helped me to my feet.
“She could be dead right now,” Kade continued, berating Blane. “But hey, at least you could sleep at night, right?”
Blane had Kade by the throat before I could even blink. He shoved him up against the wall and a framed photo crashed to the floor, its glass shattering.
“Where the fuck were you, Kade?” Blane accused. “What, you don’t bother protecting her if she’s not mine?”
“I didn’t think you’d be a fucking moron, again, and not take care of it,” Kade hissed.
Both of my hands covered my mouth as I watched them argue, and I backed up until I hit a wall. The two men blurred in my vision.
“This is all my fault. This is all my fault,” I kept repeating in broken whispers. My knees gave out and I slid down the wall to the floor. I stared at them as both Blane and Kade kept throwing accusations at each other. Kade had gotten free of Blane’s hold and it looked like at any moment they were going to come to blows.
But Kade’s eyes flicked to mine and he seemed to remember himself, tossing one last accusing look at Blane before crouching next to me. I looked up at him.
“It’s not your fault, princess,” Kade said gently. “None of this is. Come on, let’s get some clothes on you.”
He helped me to my feet and I blindly followed him to my bedroom. A few minutes later I had on shorts and a T-shirt over my cami. Kade slipped flip-flops onto my feet and took my hand.
“We’re leaving,” Kade told Blane once we’d returned to the living room. I couldn’t stop looking at the dead guy on the floor, his eyes staring sightlessly at the ceiling.
“Where are you going?”
“Kathleen’s coming with me,” Kade replied. “Get this shit fixed with Gage, or I’ll take care of it myself.” The threat underlying his words was obvious.
“Kat…,” Blane said.
I tore my gaze from the dead guy.
“Are you sure?” he asked. “Are you going… with him?”
I glanced at Kade but couldn’t read anything from his face. I couldn’t tell if he wanted me to say yes, no, or didn’t care one way or the other.
But I could feel his hand in mine, and it was warm and strong.
“Yeah.”
And that was the last thing I said to Blane before walking out the door with Kade.
CHAPTER FOUR
Kade led me to his car and I slid into the passenger seat when he opened the door. My mind was a blank, processing only the physical necessities of putting one foot in front of the other and breathing in and out.
Coincidentally, that hurt like a sonofabitch.
It was the middle of the night and I had no clue where Kade was taking me, not that I cared. If not for Blane, I’d be dead. He’d saved me. Again.
That rankled.
I was grateful for Blane’s extremely timely intervention. But it bothered me that I hadn’t been able to save myself. I’d almost gotten to my gun, but what was it my dad used to say? Oh yeah.
Almost only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.
It was just a few minutes later when Kade stopped the car in a parking garage.
“Where are we?” I asked, looking around.
“My place.”
Well. That explained how he’d gotten to my apartment so quickly in the middle of the night. He couldn’t live but five miles away. Of course, those five miles traversed the gap between the bad side of town and the nice side.
I got out of the car before he could open the door for me, anxious to show that I was all right. Now that I was snapping out of my panic and terror, I was embarrassed at my meltdown back at my apartment.
Kade again linked our fingers together as we walked to an elevator. Once inside, he punched the button for the top floor. A few moments later, he was unlocking the door to his apartment and I followed him in.
The space looked remarkably similar to his last apartment, prior to when it had gotten blown up. Hardwood floors, comfortable though expensive-looking furniture, all in creams, beiges, and warm ivories. Floor-to-ceiling windows took up one wall and I drifted toward them to look outside.
I heard Kade toss his keys on the countertop in the kitchen, then the more careful sound of him depositing his gun. I turned to watch him. He’d crouched down and lifted the cuffs of his jeans, removing a gun from one leg and a knife from the other.
He looked dangerous and raw. He’d gotten dressed in a hurry, it seemed, pulling on a white tank, dark jeans, and black boots. The muscles in his biceps flexed as he moved, the veins in his forearms—made prominent by pumping iron—stood out in stark relief under his skin. His black hair was tousled like he’d just rolled out of bed, which made him look even more appealing.
Kade stood, glancing my way. “You want a drink?” He took a highball glass out from a cabinet and opened his freezer, pulling out a bottle of vodka.
I shook my head. “No, thanks.” I was still turning over that new leaf.
He shrugged. “Suit yourself.” He poured a shot of the clear fluid and tossed it back in one swallow. He eyed me, one brow raised, and I suddenly realized I was staring. I flushed and looked away.