Sophia #2
I watched him do it flatly, no rage in it at all — which was somehow worse — the bicep on one side and the bleeding forearm on the other, the crook of his elbow set clean under the chin so there was no windpipe in it, only the big vessels at the sides of the neck.
Vascular, said the nurse in me, far off and clinical.
Not the airway. He knows the difference.
He means for him to come back. Ray bucked once, twice, his good hand clawing at the wet sleeve and getting nothing, his boiled face going a deeper red and then a dull, draining grey — and then he simply stopped, all of him going loose, a thing whose lights had gone out.
Counted it in his head — I watched his lips move on the count — released the arm, rolled the limp weight off him, and pressed two fingers to the side of that thick neck to feel the pulse he’d been so careful to leave there. Checking his own work. Then he let the man lie.
The corridor was filling now — Marisa’s voice, somebody calling a code, security pounding up from the far doors, all of it a wall of noise that had been a few feet and a lifetime away.
And in the middle of it, the floor went quiet and quiet and quiet, Ray’s chest rising slow, the knife winking under the lights three feet from any hand.
He came to me.
Of course he came to me. He crossed before I'd finished bracing for it, knees and then feet, and then his hands were on my face, both of them, framing it, turning it to the light and side to side, his thumbs going over my cheekbones like he was counting them.
"You okay?" Wrecked, ragged, not really a question.
"Did he hurt you, Sophia? Did he hurt you?
" His eyes dropped down me and snagged on my arm, the sleeve gone dark, and his whole face came apart at the seams. "Fuck.
I came in soon as I saw him — I couldn't find you, you weren't at reception, I went the wrong way, I—" His breath broke clean in half.
He put his forehead down on mine and held it there.
"Liam's coming. Marisa's got the cops on the way. It's over. You hear me? It's over."
He was shaking. All of him — that fine, hard shudder of a body with nothing left in it, running on the dregs. And the whole time his hands moved over my face, his own arm hung black and dripping at his side, and he never once looked at it.
So, I did the thing my hands had always known how to do. I reached between us and took the bleeding arm and turned it to the light.
"This is to the muscle." My voice came out wrong — cracked clean down the middle, nothing like the weather report. "Hold still. You stubborn—"
I didn't finish it.
Because he'd gone quiet under my hands, gone careful, and when I looked up, he wasn't checking me over anymore.
He was just looking at me, that easy face he kept for me stripped clean off, nothing left on it to hide behind, waiting to find out whether he was still allowed this close.
And I didn't pull back. I kept one hand pressed to his cut and I didn't pull back, and the wall I'd been holding up all this time gave one quiet inch.
Out in the lot, a siren swung in and cut off.
Feet were everywhere now — Marisa's voice riding over the top of it, a code being stood down, security crowding the mouth of the corridor — and none of it reached us, the two of us down in the ruin of that little room with his blood on my hands and both of us shaking — and then the doors went, hard, and it was Liam.
He came down that corridor at a dead run, jacket still on from wherever Caleb's call had pulled him out of, boots loud, his service weapon already out and dropping the second he saw Ray face-down and not moving.
"Soph—" He hit his knees beside me hard enough to bruise them, hands going where Caleb's had just been, my face, my shoulders, the dark sleeve. "Where are you cut, talk to me, where—"
"Arm. It's shallow. I'm okay, Liam, I'm okay—"
"You're not okay, there's—" His voice went to pieces on him. He pressed his forehead to my temple and just breathed, one hand gripping the back of my neck like he could hold me onto the earth by it, and over my head I heard him say it, rough and low and meant: "Thank you. Christ. Thank you, man."
"Yeah," Caleb said. Just that. The two of them didn't shake hands. Liam reached over and gripped his good shoulder, hard, once, and that was the whole of it, and somehow it was everything.
It took the cops a while to peel Ray up off the floor.
He'd come around by then, groggy and grey, and they sat him up against the wall and cuffed him and read him his rights, and the second he had air enough he started up again — slurred, swollen-faced, spitting it out around a split lip.
"This isn't done. You hear me? You think this is done?
I got people. She walks around, she works nights, I'll always know where—"
"Keep talking, man." Liam didn't even look up from me. Dead calm. "Six witnesses, a duress log, and a camera over that door. Every word out of your mouth's another year. So please," a flat little smile, "keep talking."
Ray kept talking. The cops walked him out into the dark with his threats trailing behind him, getting fainter, and then the doors swallowed them, and it was just the noise of the floor again, ordinary and enormous.
Liam let out a breath that seemed to take a year with it. "Fuck." He turned and pulled me into him, all of me, my face mashed into his shoulder, his hand spread wide and hard between my shoulder blades. "C'mere. Come here."
For a second I let him hold me like he'd been wanting to for a week. Then, because the alternative was crying in a corridor, I said into his chest, muffled: "I stabbed him in the leg, you know."
He went rigid. "You what?"
"With my shears." I pulled back enough to see his face. "Trauma shears. Drove them right into his thigh. Marisa's going to be furious, those are the good ones." I heard how my voice wobbled and I rode straight over it. "I was extremely badass, Liam, you missed it."
A sound came out of him that wasn't quite a laugh and wasn't quite the other thing — and then it tipped over into a laugh, helpless and wet, his head going back. "You — shears." He dragged a hand down his face. "You stabbed Ray Drennan with your shears."
"Center mass on the thigh. Textbook."
"Oh my God."
And Caleb laughed. Quiet, cracked, his uninjured shoulder shaking with it, blood still dripping off the other hand onto the floor, and the three of us knelt there in the mess of that corridor and laughed like a pack of lunatics while the adrenaline came down, because the only other thing to do with it was break, and none of us were ready for that yet.
Liam got an arm around my shoulders and hauled me into his side and pressed his mouth to the top of my head, still huffing. "Force of fucking nature," he said. "Every day of your life."
The laughter ran itself down to nothing, and the corridor went back to being a hospital around us — a uniform crouching to take Liam's statement, Marisa's hand sliding under my good elbow, let’s get that arm seen to, girly, the floor closing back over the night like water.
And across all of it, Caleb hadn't moved.
He was still down on one knee where he'd let Ray lie, his forearm bound up in somebody's cast-off gauze, watching me be gathered up and carried back into the bright ordinary — and not reaching, not once, not even now.
Just looking. Asking the only thing he'd let himself ask, with his whole stripped-bare face, and leaving the answer to me.
Marisa drew me one way. Two feet became four. I let myself stop, with her hand on my arm and the chaos of the corridor between us, and I held his eyes across it.
Everything I had to say to him was too big for a hallway, and most of it I wasn't ready to say at all. So, I gave him the one true thing that would fit through the gap.
"Caleb." Steadier than I'd earned. "Thank you. For my life."
Something went through him — relief, or grief, or the two of them wearing the same face. "Don't," he said, low and torn. "Don't thank me for that." Like a world where he hadn't reached me in time was a thing he couldn't even imagine.
And there he was, whole, in three words. I looked at him a moment longer than was wise, and then Marisa's hand was firmer at my elbow and the floor took me back, and I let it.
The fury I'd run on for all those days burned down, somewhere in being walked away from him, to something quieter and harder to hold.
He'd hurt me. He loved me. For two weeks, the two most important men in my life had been tearing at each other; somewhere in that corridor they'd stopped, and sat down side by side, and let me carry them both at once.
I could see now why he'd done it — a man so afraid of losing me, he'd taken my choices rather than gamble on the loss.
Forgiving him was a long way off. Telling him so was further still.
But the understanding had come in quiet, into the place the anger used to keep, and it stayed.
Ray Drennan was going to live. The danger was over.
It was the smallest thing wrong with my life.