Chapter 15

Tommaso

Marco and Silvio have coordinated all our people to search for the Caruso family, while I’ve basically ripped the city apart searching for Gina.

We still haven’t found them, but Marco discovered surveillance footage showing a different side gate door than the one Gina had a key for. It showed Caruso and Leandro dragging what looked like two bodies rolled in blankets before they were dumped into the trunk of a car.

I refuse to believe that one of those bodies is Gina’s. Not because I’m certain I’d know if she was dead, but because logic tells me there is one body unaccounted for and that the two bodies rolled up and tossed in the car like they were trash were most likely Guila and Davide.

I’ve searched everywhere. Now I’m back at the side door in the stone wall that Gina had the key for so she could come and meet me the next time. My headlights illuminate the wall and side door, and I get out of my car and confirm what I suspected.

Gina wasn’t one of the bodies carried out; there are small bloody fingerprints on both the metal and the stone. She came out this way.

Coming to find me?

I spin around, trying to think of where she’d go and where I haven’t looked. She didn’t go to see Bernard and Bianca or…

“Fuck,” I curse, remembering where else I had taken her. But I hadn’t even considered it because it’s too far to travel on foot or by bus, and I don’t know if cabs go out there. “Fuck!” I shout, then jump back into my car and race to the ruins of the Sutro Baths.

I drive like a madman. Ever since I found out she was missing and there was blood in her bathroom, I’ve fluctuated between thinking she was hurt and needed medical attention, that she was hiding from her father, and that she was running from me, hating me because she saw the article and photo before Marco could have them pulled.

But is it possible she was running to me?

She has no idea where I live or even where my office is, but if she’s hurt and disoriented, she may have tried to go where I had taken her. To where our souls had completely knitted together. I know she felt it happen that night, too.

Gravel spits and flies as I yank the wheel and turn into the parking lot. It’s empty; no sign of anyone. I jump out of my vehicle, not bothering to lock it, and race down the path to where the ruins are.

Sweat coats my skin and my breathing is erratic. I want roar in frustration when I arrive because she’s. Not. Here.

Gripping my hair, I spin in a circle, frantically searching for her one more time. Then I stop, staring with my heart in my throat.

In the dawn’s light, I see a figure up on the cliff. Way too close to the edge.

I sprint as fast as fucking possible, pumping my arms and legs to ascend the rocky incline to get up to her. I don’t know if I should shout at her. What if I startle her and she trips and tumbles? What if, for some reason I can’t fathom, she wants to jump?

Terror freezes my throat and fuels my body. She hasn’t moved from the spot when I reach the top. Her profile is to me, and she doesn’t turn toward me. She just stares out at the ocean, swaying with a jacket with some blood lying at her feet.

“Gina,” I say softly, but she doesn’t respond. I take a step toward her, now within arm’s reach if she falls. “Gina.”

She blinks slowly, then even more slowly, she turns her head to look at me. Everything inside me turns to ice as I fully see her face. The left side is bruised and swollen.

“Tommaso,” she whispers and blinks again, turning her body toward me.

Now that I see her fully, I can see the blood all over her dress. Her shoes are gone, and her feet are dirty and bleeding. Her hands are covered in blood. But it’s not dried blood; it’s wet…fresh.

Terror settles deep within me, but I force myself to have calm and controlled movements. She’s still too close to the edge of the cliff. I take her hands, gently pulling her toward me and walking us away from the edge.

Her eyes are half-lidded, and she sways. “My head…hurts… Don’t feel…good.”

“I’m going to get you to the hospital.” I gently cup one hand behind her head and feel the gaping gash, and my hand comes away bloody. “I’ll take care of you,” I force out.

She jerks back like I’ve struck her, then cries out in pain. But when I try to scoop her into my arms, she slaps me. Shock fills me, but I stay calm, knowing this is likely her head wound.

But then she hisses, and her eyes are open and clear, fully lucid, where she had been almost unconscious moments before. “Don’t touch me.”

“Gina.”

“No!” she screams, then holds her head, looking like she’s in agony. “No.” She looks at me again. “I know what you’ve done.”

My heart cleaves in my chest. She’s seen the picture. “I’ll explain everything once I get you to the hospital.”

“Fuck you.” Her movements are jerky as she tries to walk away, to get away from me. “I’ll never be your whore, Tommaso.”

I catch her as she collapses. She was just lucid, but she’s now suddenly unconscious. I know that her head wound is serious, possibly fatal.

I scoop her into my arms, racing back to my car to save the woman I can’t live without, even if she hates me.

There’s a flurry of activity as I race into the UCSF Medical Center. It’s the top hospital in the city, plus it’s the one with the best neurosurgery team if that’s what Gina needs.

Gina is pale and unmoving in my arms, and I’m reluctant to let her go. I only release her when the ER charge nurse convinces me by saying that Gina could die if I don’t.

“I want Johnathon Moretti to be with her,” I demand, referring to the doctor I trust, who has saved more than one Santoro man.

“Sir, Dr. Moretti isn’t a neuro—”

“I don’t give a fucking shit. He will be part of her medical team,” I grit through clenched teeth. “If my wife dies, you do not want to be on the end of my wrath.”

“Your wife, Tommaso?” Johnathon, the man himself, hurries into the room. “And stop threatening my colleagues, you thug.” He gives me a pointed look and turns to the nurse. “Do as Mr. Santoro asks, please.”

I didn’t ask; I commanded.

But I’m not about to split hairs because they’re jumping into action, saying things like ‘pressure is increasing’ and ‘the CT scan is ready for her’.

I stop them as they move to wheel her out. Johnathon goes to stop me, but I shrug him off.

I lean down and press my lips to Gina’s, murmuring. “You fight, il mio sole. We have many years for me to make this up to you. And we’re going to have at least three sons, and I need you here to help me love and raise them. You’re my entire reason for living, so come back to me.”

Then I straighten and watch them whisk her away.

Johnathon stands beside me.

“Why aren’t you going with them?” I grit.

“I will, but first, I need to know a few things, Tommaso.”

“Whatever it costs, and whatever the hospital needs, consider it done.”

His jaw works as he studies me. “I know you’re not the kind of man to hurt a woman, but I have to ask…are her face and head wounds because of you?”

Rage swells within me. “I didn’t hurt her.” Not physically, at least.

He nods, accepting my word. “I’m assuming you want her admitted under an alias.”

“Yes.” I have no idea what Caruso will do once he discovers she’s gone. “Either Marco, Silvio, or I will be with her at all times. No one else, except the cleared medical staff, is allowed in.”

“That will be arranged. Is she really your wife?”

“Yes,” I lie easily because there’s no way in hell that she won’t be. “Is that all?”

“You might want to call someone to bring you a fresh set of clothes.” He looks at my bloody ones, along with the blood on my hands and smeared on my neck. “I’ll have someone take you to a private room where you can get cleaned up.”

Then he’s gone, and I stagger to brace myself against a wall, feeling like my entire world balances on a blade.

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