Chapter 13
Travis
I can hear the cops before I turn onto the street, sirens filling the air.
Ahead, all I can see are people everywhere, paramedics, police, and bodies just flung across the lawn.
My heart feels as though it comes to a stop in my chest. Then I see her—my life, my soul, my girl.
She’s crumpled in a pool of her own blood, and maybe someone else’s, with people just surrounding her.
I unleash a feral roar, yank open the car door and sprint, until a cop slams into me, hauling me back.
“This is a crime scene.”
“Let me go! That’s my fucking girl!”
He glances at her tiny form with paramedics surrounding her, closes his eyes, breathes deep, then loosens his grip.
I tear free and run to her, dropping to my knees.
The paramedics are talking, but I don’t hear what they’re saying.
I can only hear my own voice pleading with her to wake up.
Then, my eyes swing to Chief a few feet away, blood trickling from his mouth, his hand stretched towards her.
“Help her, goddamn it,” I bellow.
“We’re doing everything we can to get her stabilized,” a paramedic tells me.
Someone asks me to move and then they’re putting her on a gurney. Rage and despair tear through me, tears roll down my cheeks. Why didn’t I take her with me to work? Why did I leave her here? Two medics hoist Chief’s body up as they work desperately on him.
“He’s barely holding on,” one murmurs.
“Trav.” Bill’s voice cuts through the chaos. He strides over, soaked in blood that isn’t his own.
“What the hell happened here?” I rasp.
“Demon’s gang showed up. A few of us had come back for supplies we forgot. Lucky we did. We did what we could...”
“All of them showed up?”
“All of them.”
I turn to face the gurney with Violet on it. I move to her, my body numb, my shirt soaked in blood. “Don’t you die on me. Hear me? Don’t fucking die.”
Violet
I wake to beeping monitors, a heavy ache that is just filling every inch of my body. My mouth is dry, so dry it hurts to move my lips. I croak and twist, and Travis is there in a heartbeat, like he hasn’t taken his eyes off me. He grabs my face, his eyes bloodshot red.
“Oh, baby. Hey. Are you okay?”
“Trav?” I whisper.
“I’m here. Nurse!” His shout echoes.
A young nurse rushes in, checks vitals, asks how I feel. She fetches water and then tells me she will get the doctor to come and check me over. When she’s gone, Travis crushes my hand in his.
“Chief?” I croak. “Travis...”
“He’s alive,” he murmurs, voice so tired and broken.
My mother bursts in, sobbing. Travis steps back as she clutches me, pulling me gently towards her as her tears soak my cheeks.
“My baby. Oh God. I never thought I would have to feel that way again.”
“I’m okay,” I whisper. “Where is Dad?”
“He’s still in surgery.”
“Is he going to die?”
“I...don’t know.”
“He tried to protect me. Demon, he just kept coming...”
Mom squeezes my hand, her eyes so puffy it breaks my heart. “Demon’s dead. Bill coming back quite likely saved us.”
“How many did we lose?” I croak.
“Three,” Travis answers, because Mom is crying again.
Bill strides in, cutting it short. His eyes swing to me and soften. “Mischief, thank fucking God.”
“Bill,” I whisper.
“You look like hell.”
“I can imagine.” I feel every bruise, every cut. “I’ll be okay.”
Mom wipes her face and steps back, taking a few breaths.
“Who didn’t make it?” I ask, my eyes never leaving Bill.
His gaze falls. “Henry, Kurt, and Liam.”
My eyes close. Tears slip out.
Travis is standing, fists clenched, like the world is heavy on him.
In the quiet that settles, Bill pulls up a chair and sits heavy, knees spread wide so his elbows have somewhere to land. He meets my eyes, and for the first time, I see a break in him, like he’s too tired to hold his big, bearded, bulletproof self together.
“You did good,” he says.
I sniff. “Did I?”
He nods. “Demon’s crew is finished. You outlasted them. You’re alive. That’s all any of us care about right now.”
My eyes flick to Travis. I want to ask him what we do next, but I already know: we survive. Just keep breathing. Just stay upright. The rest can wait. Mom lingers, damp-eyed, smoothing stray hair off my forehead.
“I’ll go check on your dad,” she says finally. “Bill, can you come with me?”
Bill hesitates, and then nods, rising with a grunt and squeezing my shoulder before he leaves.
I watch their backs as they disappear down the corridor, my mother’s hand twisting into the back of Bill’s shirt like she’s holding herself together with it.
Travis is on me before the door latches, crawling up onto the hospital bed, ignoring the IV, the tubes, any of it.
He melts his whole body around mine, gathering me up so that I barely feel the sheets, just his warmth.
He buries his face in my neck and breathes in, slow and deep, like maybe he can fill up all the cracks in both of us by inhaling hard enough.
“Don’t ever do that again,” he mumbles, voice rough and wet. “Don’t you ever scare me like that.”
“I wasn’t planning to add another gunshot wound to my résumé, but here we are,” I whisper.
He laughs, which turns into a shudder. “Well, if you can survive this, I think we have hope for our future.”
“Yeah. I guess you’re stuck with me.”
He kisses me, slow and soft.
We lay like that awhile. I can hear the hum of the hospital all around us—the clicks and beeps, the footsteps, the urgent hush.
But for a moment, the only sound is Travis, humming some soft song into my ear.
I let myself close my eyes and drift, because if the world can collapse in the morning, maybe it can rebuild itself by afternoon.
Maybe today, that’s enough.