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    Mission_Improper

    Page 27
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      abdomen, painfully pale against the mess of blood,

      and... other. Wide bronze eyes looked up,

      startlingly vulnerable, as he settled at her side. She

      was never vulnerable. It scared the piss out of him.

      "I-I can't."

      "You're not going to bleed out." The skin was

      torn, a great, gaping wound. He didn't even know

      where to start. What to do. Reaching up, he

      pressed the comm at his ear. "Craigmore?" The

      word came out half-hysterical.

      "Sir?" Came the static-crackled reply.

      "Is Dr. Gibson out there yet?"

      "Just arrived, sir."

      "Send him up immediately. Room fourteen.

      I've got someone here who needs stitching and

      bandaging. She's bleeding badly. I don't.... Hell,

      just tell him to bring his entire kit."

      "Will do, sir."

      Byrnes shrugged out of his jacket, scrunching

      it into a pillow and pressing it behind her head as

      he laid her down. "Are you cold? Does it hurt?"

      "Hot, actually." She was starting to shake

      now, her teeth forming an indentation in that plump

      lower lip. "Byrnes—"

      "Hot?" A hand cupped to her forehead

      revealed the truth; blisteringly hot. He jerked his

      hand back in surprise before realizing. The loupe.

      A hand caught his, wet with blood. Ingrid

      gasped for breath, as if she’d been running.

      "Ingrid, can you breathe?" Panic lit through

      him like a struck match. He didn't know what to do.

      All of his medic training evaporated like smoke in

      his brain. Normal people didn't recover from

      wounds like this, but if she were a blue blood he

      wouldn't have been worried.

      Don't be a fool. She's verwulfen. Nothing

      can take verwulfen down.

      Except a vampire, came that little whisper.

      Christ, what could she survive? The color of

      her skin scared the hell out of him, and the way she

      was panting.

      "N-normal," she managed, grinding the word

      out between gritted teeth. Sweat darkened her hair.

      "Burning up... normal. B-breathing... like this. I'll

      fall asleep soon. Hard to... wake."

      That eased his fear. Normal. This was

      normal. "Can you survive this?"

      She managed to nod. I can.

      "Good." Byrnes grabbed the sheet off his

      mother's bed and wadded it, pressing down over

      her abdomen to slow the bleeding.

      Then he finally lost it.

      "Why?" It was a hoarse demand. "Why the

      hell would you have entered this bloody place,

      knowing there was a vampire on the loose?

      Knowing you were alone? Why, damn it?"

      "Your m-mother...."

      Not his mother. She had done this for him. To

      save someone he held precious. Emotion knotted

      up in his throat, burning hot and heavy. For a

      second Byrnes was afraid it would spill out of

      him, that he wouldn't be able to choke it down.

      "Don't you do this again," he snapped.

      "Promise me."

      Ingrid looked startled. "I t-thought you... didn't

      care."

      "I never said I didn't care," he snarled,

      pressing his forehead against hers so that he

      wouldn't have to look her in the eye. "Promise me

      you won't ever go off alone like this again."

      "P-promise."

      His hands were shaking too. "I could wring

      your bloody neck. You could have been killed."

      "Byrnes," she whispered, weakly stroking his

      hand. "Caleb?"

      That lump in his throat felt like a fist now.

      "I'm all right," she said, watching him with

      wide, startled eyes.

      He was shaking so violently he didn't know

      what was wrong with him. "You are not bloody all

      right—"

      "Byrnes?" A sharp rap came at the door.

      Gibson. Thank God. "Am I right to enter?"

      Byrnes yanked the door open.

      IN THE MEDIC VAN, Byrnes sat with Ingrid

      curled in his arms, wrapped in a blanket. Gibson

      had stitched her wounds closed and bandaged

      them, but Byrnes didn't have it in him to set her

      aside. Seeing Ingrid fade into a healing sleep as the

      loupe fired through her blood made every dark

      instinct within him rise.

      "My mother?" he managed to ask.

      "Garrett's got her," Gibson replied, watching

      him carefully. "He's taking her to the guild and

      making sure she's all right. He said to do what you

      need to; he's got your mother for now."

      Byrnes relaxed an inch. He hadn't even

      noticed the guild master in the chaos, but there was

      no one else he'd trust with his mother's care. She'd

      been frightened and still rocking in the corner by

      the time Gibson had managed to sew Ingrid up, but

      she hadn't been injured.

      Not like Ingrid.

      "Like that, is it, lad?" Gibson reached inside

      his coat, tugging out a flask and handing it over.

      Byrnes stared at it hollowly. "No. It's... not.

      It's—" He didn't know what it was. Or perhaps he

      had the slightest suspicion.... After all, he had run

      into a vampire-infested building after her, the very

      same idiocy that he'd accused her of. Not a moment

      of hesitation had afflicted him. All he'd known was

      that he had to get to her before something bad

      happened.

      "Take a drink, boy. She'll steady your nerves."

      "I don't have nerves," he replied flatly, though

      he took the flask.

      Gibson merely looked amused. "Of course

      not."

      Bloody rotting bastard. Gibson knew him too

      well. Better perhaps than he himself did, for he

      hadn't realized how he felt until this moment.

      Garrett was going to laugh himself silly. Of all the

      things to happen, falling for a stubborn verwulfen

      lass was the last thing Byrnes had expected.

      But fall he had. The truth was unexpected, but

      how could he fight it? He felt like he wanted to

      squeeze her unconscious body against his chest, as

      if afraid she'd somehow be taken from him. That

      moment... the moment he smelled her scent and

      realized that she'd gone in there, alone....

      Cold rushed through his body, as if he relived

      it. Byrnes took a swig and choked as whiskey

      burned down his throat. By the time he handed it

      back, Gibson merely looked old and tired.

      "Not much for me to do there, lad. A bloody

      shame." Gibson upended the flask himself. "So

      many bodies."

      "I thought she was going to be one of them."

      Gibson made a clicking noise in his cheek.

      "Never had much to do with her type before, but by

      the look of it, she'll heal. You can't dwell on

      'thought.' She's here now, and she'll be whole and

      hearty in no time."

      Byrnes merely grunted. When he looked

      down, he found Ingrid's face tucked against his

      chest, her cheeks flushed with red, and the fingers

      of her right hand curled in his shirt collar as if she

      hadn't wanted to let go.

      Realization was dawning upon him like a sun


      blazing over the horizon. This woman was

      precious to him. She was the strongest, toughest

      woman he'd ever met, but seeing her like this

      gouged out a piece of him inside.

      He couldn't fight the truth anymore: Her

      smiles made him smile.

      Her pain made an awful knot twist in his

      stomach.

      Her anger and fear made him feel protective.

      It was a textbook case of a blue blood

      claiming. Garrett had been just as irrational. Even

      Lynch had played the bloody fool, following

      around on Rosa's heels, and Byrnes hadn't

      understood then. He'd mocked the both of them, not

      even realizing how helpless one was against this

      emotion.

      Swiftly, he ran their past few encounters

      through his mind, trying to work out precisely

      when it had begun.

      Byrnes frowned, brushing a strand of sweat-

      slicked hair off her cheek. He couldn't think of a

      single moment that seemed to define this sudden

      momentous shift within him. Instead it had been a

      slow slide, taking him unawares, and it had begun

      the second he walked into Garrett's office a year

      ago and a pair of breathtaking bronze eyes had

      lifted to his as Garrett introduced his new partner.

      “I work better alone,” he'd promptly retorted.

      “Afraid you'll be outclassed?” came the husky

      reply, and a part of him had known then that this

      woman was unlike any other he'd ever met.

      In his arms, Ingrid gave a soft sigh and shifted

      in her sleep. And Byrnes couldn't stop himself

      from resettling her until her head rested against his

      chest where she'd hear his heart racing. What was

      he going to do? They wanted different things out of

      life, didn't they?

      An image of baby Phillip shot to mind,

      dribbling on Ingrid's shoulder, and Byrnes

      panicked. Because he wasn't that man, he'd never

      been that man, and yet he didn't know if he could

      do the right thing again and walk away from her.

      "Well and truly done in by the look of you."

      Gibson snorted.

      And for once, he couldn't for the life of him

      disagree.

      TWENTY-ONE

      TWO HOURS LATER, Byrnes found himself at the

      guild.

      A warm patient voice read some of Shelley's

      poetry in the guild master's office, and Byrnes

      eased the door open, slipping inside so as not to

      startle his mother. Garrett sat by the fire, book

      open in his lap as he read over the head of a

      sleeping infant tucked over his shoulder. His blue

      eyes flickered up and he nodded to Byrnes, then

      kept reading.

      On the sofa lay his mother, her head resting

      against a pillow and her eyes sleepy.

      "Hello," Byrnes said, kneeling by her feet and

      clasping her paper-thin hands in his. "Has Garrett

      been looking after you well?"

      His mother smiled, blue eyes watery and

      distant. "H’lo, dear."

      Dear. His chest squeezed.

      A part of him wanted to say, “It's Caleb.” But

      that wouldn't make any difference. In her mind

      Caleb was a young boy and she often worried

      about feeding him, or where he was and who was

      watching out for him. Just saying the name would

      rouse her panic as she tried to find her little boy.

      She patted his cheek and Byrnes slid onto the

      sofa beside her, trying to move quietly. Having two

      of them in the room at once would agitate her a

      little, as if she couldn't quite pay attention to the

      both of them, so he simply held her hand and

      gestured for Garrett to keep reading.

      It took almost another ten minutes for his

      mother to fall asleep, her head resting against his

      shoulder, and Byrnes stared into the flames in the

      grate until Garrett fell silent.

      "Where's Perry?" he whispered.

      "Coordinating the hunt," Garrett whispered

      back, setting the book aside and rubbing the back

      of his daughter. "I didn't want to leave your mother

      alone. She was quite settled with me sitting here,

      but when I tried to leave she grew upset again."

      "Thank you." He knew how difficult it was

      for Garrett to let his wife coordinate a hunt for a

      dangerous vampire whilst he was forced to stay

      behind, especially now that Perry was a mother.

      But that was Garrett—he knew how to calm

      people, and listen to them, and charm them. There

      was no one else who'd have been able to keep

      Moira quiet. And Byrnes was fairly certain that

      Perry wouldn't be anywhere near the danger.

      "There’s word on the street that there’s some

      sort of monster stalking the city," Garrett

      murmured, closing the book of poetry and setting it

      aside. "My Nighthawks have been dealing with

      hysterical people ever since. I know we said to

      wait….”

      Byrnes eased the rug up over his mother's

      shoulders, then stroked his hand through her thin

      hair. "It’s time to take action. We need to start

      hunting these creatures, and Ulbricht’s mistress. It

      wouldn't hurt to have more men to help work out

      where they're holing up, if you’re willing to send

      the Nighthawks into danger?"

      “That’s our job.” Garrett sighed. "I thought

      that after the blood frenzy case I'd never have to

      deal with something like this again."

      "You hoped."

      "And how is Ingrid?"

      There was a fist lodged in his chest at the

      mere thought of her, but he wasn't about to admit

      that. "Healing. She's lucky she's verwulfen."

      Garrett considered him. "Gibson called in,

      after he'd seen to her."

      "I'll just bet he did. And what did he have to

      say?"

      "That apparently the mighty have fallen."

      Byrnes cursed under his breath. Garrett had

      been waiting years for this to happen. Byrnes had

      thought it never would. "If you say one more word

      about it, I swear I'll strangle you."

      Garrett's grin had something of the Cheshire

      cat about it. "What would I say? That Lynch owes

      me a bottle of his finest. Thank you, old friend." He

      clapped Byrnes on the shoulder as he stood.

      "Though it took you long enough."

      "Nothing's happening."

      "Are you fouling it up so badly?"

      "I'm not—" Byrnes shut his mouth. "Get me

      something to drink." He glanced down as his

      mother shifted. "And lower your voice."

      "At the risk of being told to go to hell, I'm not

      the one shouting," Garrett mock-whispered, then

      glanced at the baby on his shoulder as she stirred.

      "And I've learned the consequences of being loud.

      Here. Hold her while I get us a drink."

      Byrnes found himself with a bundle of

      blankets and baby. Christ. Garrett rolled his eyes

      and helped settle her properly in Byrnes’s arms.

      "You're a natural," Garrett said dryly.

      "Sometimes I wonder why I bother to visit

      you." He h
    eld the bundle awkwardly. "Which twin

      is this?"

      "Ivy," Garrett replied. "Grace has been

      struggling with colic, so Doyle's pushing her in the

      perambulator to try and get her to sleep."

      "Jesus." The Nighthawks had turned mad. He

      couldn't picture loud, swarthy Doyle pushing a

      perambulator. "It's probably a good thing I'm out of

      here."

      "Whether you like it or not, we're all a part of

      your life, Byrnes. And Perry's adamant you're

      going to teach the twins how to use knives."

      Garrett poured him a glass of blud-wein. He

      cleared his throat. "Is there a problem? You

      couldn't take your eyes off Ingrid and Phillip the

      other day at dinner."

      He wanted to bang his head against a wall.

      Garrett's instincts were too good. "No problem.

      Just... life is changing."

      "Some of us have been through such a thing

      before. It's not all bad. Actually, its mostly rather

      wonderful, once you get through the confusion at

      the start. There's nothing like waking up—"

      "Please. Don't." Byrnes curled up his lip.

      "Perry's like my sister."

      "Which is precisely why I allow you near

      her," Garrett replied, and a flare of possessive heat

      filled his blue eyes.

      "I seem to recall a moment where you thought

      I was a threat." That bought a touch of humor to the

      surface. "You thought there was something going on

      between us."

      "I was an idiot."

      "Well," Byrnes replied, "I'm not going to

      disagree."

      "But now the shoe is on the other foot, and I'm

      not going to pretend I'm not enjoying the hell out of

      this. May I offer you some advice?"

      "I'm fairly certain I'm going to receive it,

      regardless of whether I want it or not," Byrnes

      grumbled.

      "You're a hard man to get to know sometimes,

      Byrnes. You've been with the Nighthawks nearly as

      long as I have, and I only found out your mother

      even existed two years ago," Garrett said, setting a

      glass down beside Byrnes and sinking into his own

      chair.

      "Is there a point to this?"

      "Yes, there is." Garrett eased back in his

      chair, looking into the distance of the past. "If you

      don't let Ingrid in, then you'll lose her, and trust me

      when I say that I've come very close to losing

      Perry in the past. I don't recommend it."

      "I came very close to losing her today,"

      Byrnes admitted, and a chill rose in his chest once

      more. "I don't.... This is not my area of expertise."

      Garrett let out a snort. "Clearly."

     


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