Chapter Four #3
The garage fell silent. The buzzing fluorescent lights seemed suddenly louder in the absence of Lily’s cries, casting harsh shadows across the concrete pillars and floor.
The smell of exhaust lingered in the air, mixing with the garage’s permanent odor of oil and dust. Eliza stood frozen, staring at the empty space where the car had been.
I should have blocked them with my bike.
The only reason I didn’t was because me getting arrested wouldn’t help Lily or Eliza.
For a long moment, I stood there next to Eliza.
I didn’t know what to say. Nothing in my life had prepared me for this kind of sanctioned cruelty.
I got it. Ms. Winters’ job was to protect the city’s children.
If she had to take them out of a home to keep them safe, she had to be the bad guy.
But what the hell would five Goddamned minutes have hurt?
“She’s gone,” Eliza whispered, her voice so faint I barely heard it. “They took her. She’s hurt and scared and I don’t know what to do!”
The shock keeping her upright suddenly seemed to drain from her body.
Her knees buckled, and she began to fall.
I moved without thinking, closing the distance between us in a lunge to catch her before she hit the concrete.
Her body collapsed against mine, surprisingly small and fragile in my arms. For a heartbeat she was rigid, and then something broke inside her.
The first sob tore from her throat with such force it seemed to physically shake her. Then another, and another, until she was crying with her entire body. Her hands clutched blindly at my cut, fingers digging into the leather as if she might anchor herself against the storm of her grief.
I stood awkwardly, my arms going around her automatically, completely out of my depth.
I’d comforted crying women before, but this was different.
This wasn’t sadness or disappointment. This was raw, primal anguish.
It resonated in some deep inside when I remembered my own mother’s tears, my own separation.
My arms tightened around her instinctively.
“She needs me. She’ll be so scared.” Her words broke through the sobs muffled against my chest.
“You won’t lose her,” I said, the words coming before I’d fully thought them through. “We’ll get her back.”
Eliza pulled back slightly, looking up at me with red-rimmed eyes swimming with tears.
Her face was blotchy, her breath coming in hiccupping gasps.
“How?” she asked, the word broken and desperate.
“They’ve already decided I’m guilty. They think I hurt her.
” Another sob shook her. “My baby. They took my baby.”
My calloused hand moved awkwardly to her back, patting gently in what I hoped was a comforting rhythm. I had no practice at this, no script to follow. But something about her desperation, about Lily’s frightened face pressed against the car window, solidified into certainty inside me.
“I’ll help you get her back,” I said, my voice rough with emotion I hadn’t expected to feel. “Lana will fight this legally. The club has connections. And the specialist at Vanderbilt will find what’s really going on with Lily.”
I surprised myself with the fierceness of my tone, with the certainty I would do whatever it took to reunite this woman with her daughter.
It wasn’t just about helping anymore, or about doing Lana a favor.
Somewhere in the past two days, without my noticing, I’d become invested in their story, in their pain.
Eliza stared up at me, her breathing still uneven but the sobs subsiding slightly. “Why?” she whispered. “Why do you want to help us?”
I didn’t have a good answer, at least not one I could articulate. Something about Lily’s trust in me, about Eliza’s fierce protection of her daughter, about the unfairness of it all had gotten under my skin in a way I hadn’t experienced in years.
“Because Lily likes my singing.”
Her eyes widened in surprise. I knew she hadn’t expected my answer, but I honestly didn’t have one for her.
I mean, I knew Lana’s reasons for taking on assholes, but I’m the one who started the process.
Some of the wild desperation in Eliza’s eyes faded into something quieter but no less painful.
Her fingers slowly released their death grip on my cut, though she didn’t move away.
“Lana will be here soon,” I said, glancing toward the entrance ramp. “She must have run into traffic or something. We’ll figure out next steps. Haven is ready for you, with a room set up. You won’t have to face this alone.”
As I stood there, her tears soaking into my shirt, I knew I wouldn’t back away from my promise.
Something about Lily’s small face, about Eliza’s desperate fight to protect her daughter, had awakened parts of me I thought had died years ago when I went to prison, or maybe even earlier in the foster homes I bounced between after my mother died.
The sound of tires screeching on the concrete ramp announced another vehicle’s arrival. Lana’s sleek sedan appeared, pulling into a spot near us. As she emerged from the car, her expression determined, I knew the fight ahead would be mine as much as hers.