Shelter for Elizabeth (Badge of Honor: Texas Heroes Book 5) (6 page)

BOOK: Shelter for Elizabeth (Badge of Honor: Texas Heroes Book 5)
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Chapter 5

B
eth breathed
a sigh of relief as she locked the door behind her. Lord, she hadn’t felt this wrung out in weeks. She hated feeling helpless. She especially
hated
that Hurst, even though dead, still had the ability to freak her out.

She relaxed her hand, expecting Cade to drop hers, but was surprised when he held on and tugged her toward the kitchen.

“Come on, let’s get these things put away.”

Beth followed behind him and after he finally dropped her hand, they worked together emptying the bags. The only thing Cade thought should be chucked was the chicken. Everything else seemed to be okay.

Once everything was put away, Cade grabbed her hand again, pulled her behind him to the couch and sat. Beth looked at him curiously. He actually looked more relieved than she was to be back inside her apartment. “You gonna be all right?” she asked him in a serious voice.

He smiled at her. “Yeah. You?”

“I’m good, now that I’m safe at home, snug as a bug in a rug.”

Cade grinned hugely at her. He let go of her hand and Beth couldn’t stop the pang of regret that moved through her. It lasted only a nanosecond as he took her head in both of his hands and leaned in. She felt the puffs of air from his mouth as he spoke.

“I want to kiss you, Elizabeth Parkins.”

“You do?”

“Yeah.”

“Why?”

“Why?” Cade asked in confusion, but he didn’t pull away from her.

“Yeah, why? I just had a major freak-out. I’m still all sweaty, and I’m sure you have somewhere you need to be.”

“You are sweaty, but so am I…and I’m not afraid of a little sweat. Just wait until you see me after I get back from a call. A fire especially. Our turnout gear might look sexy, but it’s hot as fuck. I’m usually drenched by the time I get back to the station. And trust me, you do not want to smell the bunker room; it’s downright rancid sometimes. And to answer your question, I’ve got nowhere I need to be until tomorrow when my shift starts at ten.”

“And the freak-out?”

Cade sighed and pulled back a fraction so she was looking into his eyes. “You freaked out, but even knowing it was likely, you didn’t stop me from doing what I needed to do.”

“No one else was around to do it.”

“I get that, but you should know, if you’d told me you couldn’t handle it and asked me not to leave you…I wouldn’t have.”

“Cade!” Beth exclaimed in shock.

He shrugged. “It’s true. You don’t realize this yet, but all you have to do is crook that little finger of yours and I’ll come running.”

“I wouldn’t do that to you. That woman needed you more than me. I knew in my heart of hearts that I was safe in your truck. Even if my brain sometimes forgets and zones out on me, I know you and Pen wouldn’t let anyone get me.”

“Damn straight.”

“I still don’t like that you had to see me like that. I want you to see me as any other woman.”

“Too bad. I don’t see you as any other woman.”

Beth’s gaze dropped from his and she tried to pull away. He wouldn’t let her and tightened his hold.

“You could never be any other woman, Beth. You’ve taught yourself something that people typically take years of schooling to understand. You’ve helped Penelope deal with what happened to her and I know she’s doing as well as she is in part because of you. And now that I think about it, you’re probably doing stuff behind the scenes that neither of us know about when it comes to her, aren’t you?”

Beth didn’t respond, but she could feel the heat bloom in her cheeks.

“Yup, I knew it. I don’t want to know what it is, but thank you. She’s settled down a bit now that she doesn’t constantly have to fight off the tabloids and crazy stalker people who only want to get a glimpse of the Army Princess.”

“Stupid-ass nickname.”

“Agreed. As I was saying, yeah, you freaked out. But you reached down inside and pulled yourself up by your bootstraps. I liked that. If you haven’t noticed, I like
you
, Beth. Now can I kiss you? Please?”

“I don’t know much about you.”

Cade sighed in mock-exasperation. “If I tell you more about me, will you let me kiss you then?”

“Maybe.” Beth smiled to take the sting out of her words. Oh, she wanted this man’s kiss, but he was fun to tease, and she really did want to get to know him better. Locking lips with a man she’d so recently met, even if he was the brother of one of her closest friends, wasn’t something she felt comfortable with. Talking to him over the Internet was different from hearing about his life from his own two lips.

“I’m assuming you’re not working today?” Cade asked, letting go and leaning back into the corner of the couch.

“No, I have the day off,” Beth told him, and settled herself into the other corner, curling her legs up underneath her. She was still a little shaky from everything that had happened, but surprisingly she was feeling pretty good, all things considered.

“So, what do you want to know?”

“Everything,” Beth replied immediately.

“I think that’ll take too long,” Cade laughed. “Let’s see if I can’t condense it a bit. You know Penelope is my sister, she’s two years younger than me and we’ve always been close.”

“No sibling rivalry?”

“Not really. She tagged along behind me, and because she wasn’t a pain, it was cool. She was a huge tomboy and could actually outplay a lot of my friends growing up. We were both sad when I went off to high school and she was still in middle school.”

“That’s unusual. My brother is three years older than me, and while we’re close now, he didn’t want anything to do with me when we were in school,” Beth observed.

“I know. I’m not sure why, but we pushed each other to do better,” Cade told her, relaxing against the cushions, seemingly not embarrassed at all about his close relationship with his sister. “When I joined the track team, Penelope worked extra hard to make the varsity squad right along with me when she was a freshman. Instead of feeling like she was stifling me, I felt like she had my back, and I certainly had hers.”

“I sense a story there.”

“Observant little thing, aren’t you?”

“I’m not little,” Beth protested.

“No, you’re not. You’re perfect.” Not giving her a chance to disagree, Cade continued, “There was this chick I was hot for my senior year. All she had to do was smile at me and I would’ve done anything she asked. She didn’t really notice me until I became state champion at the end of my junior year. Come that August, she was all over me, and I was thrilled. I knew I was gonna get—excuse my language here—some hot pussy, and couldn’t wait to get in there.”

Beth laughed, as Cade had meant her to. Watching her relax even more made him feel like he could scale mountains. If he could make Beth forget what had happened, even for a couple of minutes, it seemed like a huge hurdle he’d climbed.

“Well, Penelope heard this chick and her buddies gossiping in the locker room one day. Apparently, they had some sort of sick bet going about who could get pregnant first. They’d decided that they wanted babies, and getting child support from the unlucky daddies was an added bonus. They had no desire to get married, but getting all the cute baby shit from family and friends and being able to tote their adorable babies around to get attention sounded like the perfect life plan to them.”

Beth made a gagging noise in the back of her throat. “Seriously? I mean, I know I’m younger than you and all, but really? Most girls I knew in high school were doing everything they could to
keep
from getting knocked up. That sounds completely far-fetched.”

“I agree. I didn’t believe it either. Who would? It was one of the worst fights me and Penelope ever had. She told me what she’d overheard and I didn’t want to listen to her. I was too caught up in trying to get some.”

“Darn teenage hormones.”

“Exactly.”

“So, what happened? I’m assuming there’s not a teenage Cade running around in the world?”

“Hell no. I stopped to really think about it for a second. Penelope wasn’t the sort to lie to me. I continued to flirt with this chick, but eventually the fact that I wasn’t coming to heel soon enough for her made her look elsewhere. She wanted to win the bet and be the first to get pregnant, and since I was dragging my feet, she moved on to easier prey. The quarterback ended up being the lucky father. I heard she had the baby the summer after we graduated.”

“Pen obviously forgave you.”

“She made me work for it, but yeah. She still holds it over my head. I love her though. It almost killed me when she disappeared.” Cade knew he was treading on shaky ground, he didn’t want what he was going to say to bring up her own kidnapping, but wanted to make sure Beth understood his next point. “I saw news reports about some missing soldiers before the Army contacted us to let us know Penelope was one of them. They must’ve had some sort of advance warning what ISIS was going to do, because the very next day the first video was broadcast of her reading that damn manifesto.”

“What about your parents?”

“What about them?”

“I don’t remember seeing or hearing much from them while she was gone.”

Cade sighed. “Don’t get me wrong, I love my parents, but they’re more the type to sit at home and wring their hands in consternation. They did everything I asked them to do, but they aren’t the take-charge types.”

“And you are.”

“I am,” Cade agreed.

Beth’s eyes were wide in her face, but she didn’t comment further.

He continued, “I would move heaven and earth to protect my sister. I emailed and called anyone and everyone in the media and government I could find contact information for, I plastered social media with her plight. She wasn’t some pretty woman on TV to me. She was my
sister
. My flesh and blood. My parents did what they could, but I wouldn’t stop until the President himself did something to try to get her back.”

“And you did it. They went in to get her.”

“They did. It wasn’t easy. I spent a lot of sleepless nights wondering where she was and what she was going through, but honestly, I was lucky.”

“Lucky?”

“Yeah. There are so many people out there who never know what happened to their loved one. Kids disappear. Teenagers run away and are never heard from again. Adults disappear off the face of the Earth and are never found. Bones might be discovered, but never identified. I’m lucky. I got Penelope back.”

“But she’s not the same.” Beth’s words were whispered now.

“No, she’s not. But you know what? I don’t give a shit. She’s still my sister and I love her as much today as I ever have. Everything in this life changes us. Every experience we have, has the ability to fundamentally alter our path in life. It’s how you deal with those changes that’s important.”

“What if you can’t deal?”

“I sure as hell hope you aren’t talking about yourself, sweetheart. Because from where I’m sitting, you’re dealing exceptionally well.”

“I’m not.”

“You
are
. Shit, Beth. You’re working full time. You taught yourself some seriously tough computer code. You don’t sit in here wallowing in self-pity or huddled into a ball. Yeah, you have a hard time going outside, but you don’t hide from it. You grab hold of my sister, and now me, and do it with your teeth clenched. That takes guts. Guts a lot of people don’t have. You have no idea how strong you are. Don’t overlook how far you’ve come.”

Ignoring his words about her, Beth commented, “Pen’s lucky to have you.”

“I’m the one lucky to have
her
,” Cade countered. “Seriously, she’s worked her butt off. She followed me into the fire service, then wanted to make more of a difference in the world, so she joined the Army Reserves. She loved it, but in the last few years, it was getting old being sent overseas. She was already planning on leaving, but the whole ISIS thing solidified it for her.”

“I can imagine. You never wanted to do anything else?”

“No. I love what I do. No two days on the job are the same. We might have a grass fire, automobile accident and a heart attack on the same day. The next day we might have to help deliver a baby. I love helping people. It’s what I do.”

“It’s dangerous,” Beth observed.

Cade shrugged. “Not really. I mean, yeah, there are times when a building is on fire and there’s a missing person we have to go in and rescue. But for the most part it’s more about the human side of things. Holding someone’s hand as they’re lying on the ground bleeding. Comforting a husband as his wife is having a seizure. I just like feeling what I do helps others in some small way.” Realizing his words might be making Beth feel bad, he quickly tried to lighten up the conversation. “So…what’s your favorite color?”

“What?”

“Your favorite color? We’ve talked a lot about heavy shit…how about if we get to the nitty-gritty. I don’t think I can date someone who favors the color black over everything else.”

“I didn’t realize we were dating,” Beth said a bit snarkily.

“Oh, we’re dating, sweetheart. You don’t think I get to the dugout with just any girl, do you?”

“Get to the dugout? What are you talking about?”

Cade chuckled. “Holding hands…the dugout. I tried to kiss you tonight, but you weren’t having it. So we aren’t at first base yet…we’re just in the dugout.”

Beth rolled her eyes at Cade. He was hysterical, but she didn’t think egging him on was in her best interest. She steered the conversation back to her favorite color. “I’m tempted to say black just to throw you off, but I’d be lying. Blue. You?”

“Blue. And I’m not just saying that to suck up to you. Food?”

“Pasta. Preferably ramen noodles. I love those things.”

“The cheap ones in the rectangle package? You know they’re bad for you, right?”

“Don’t care. Being cheap is just an added bonus.”

“Hummm, okay, pasta. I can live with that. I like a good steak.”

“Medium rare?”

Cade smiled, loving their banter. “Is there any other way to cook it?”

“Nope. Okay, let’s see…music?”

“Country.”

“Ugh, I knew there had to be something about you I didn’t like,” Beth told him, keeping a straight face.

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