you.”
“Okay. I’m getting out today.”
“Good.”
He clicked off his phone his attention riveted on Grace. He hung up on his past while walking towards his future. Some primitive part of him knew that Grace was what lay ahead for him. Liking the idea, he quickened his pace.
The detectives waved then left. They’d talk to him later.
Her shoulders slumped so she looked bent in half.
Without thinking, purely on instinct, he pulled her into his arms. She shuddered. But didn’t pull away.
Instead her arms wrapped around him like a vise. Any part of her body that could, was touching his. His body reacted.
“Grace.”
That one word held for him a hope for the future. More than Dolores ever had. But what could he do? His job took up so much of his time and her talk about time travel and having been here before didn’t sit well in his rational brain.
“Let’s get you home.”
She shook her head against his chest, then stepped back. Her face became a study in composure as if she hadn’t been shot at. “I’ll be fine.”
“It’s okay. I’m here.”
Her head cocked. “I’m fine.”
Her voice came from deep inside of her, sounding hollow and far away.
“Someone tried to kill you tonight. You can’t be okay.”
“Someone tried to kill Dolores.”
He took her ice cold hands in his. “You don’t know that.”
“Why would they expect me to be there? No one knew I was sleeping there.”
“They went for the guest bedroom, not where Dolores sleeps.”
She nodded. “Good point. None of this makes sense.”
“Let’s have this conversation in your apartment.”
“Where’d Mark go?”
“I don’t know. He disappeared when the cops got here.”
She frowned. “That’s not like him.”
Zach figured it was completely in his character, but maybe he had a biased opinion of the weasel. Not in his best interests to criticize Mark, he didn’t comment. “Coffee?”
“No, I don’t need the caffeine.”
Grace sat on her open sofa bed, looking out the window into the dark night. The bags under her eyes had grown to steamer trunks. He searched for a glass then filled it with water.
She took it without looking at him. Not only didn’t she acknowledge it, she didn’t drink any either.
“Grace.”
“Yeah?”
Her gaze trudged over to him. “You want to stay at my place tonight? I don’t think you should be here. The killer could come back.”
“I’m fine.”
“You’ve said that several times and you haven’t convinced me yet.”
A sigh parted her lips. “Maybe I’m not fine. I’m a little spooked. I’ve never been shot at.”
“Can you remember anything about the person?”
She put up her hand. “I don’t need another interrogation right now.”
He sat, pressing his lips together. Once a cop, always a cop. What she needed was a friend since her best one wasn’t anywhere to be found. “The detectives will need to talk to Mark.”
“Mark? Why?”
“He was here. He may have seen something or heard something.”
Her head shook. “Mark sleeps like the dead.”
An uneasy feeling swept over him. She knew some intimate details for such a platonic relationship. “Well, they need to hear that from him. Do you know where he would have gone? Does he have any friends in town?”
“None other than me that I know of.”
Her exhaustion was written on her face, but he couldn’t let it go. They had to find Mark. “Think, Grace. Would he go to a hotel? Did he have a frequent flyer card or one of those ones from a hotel chain?”
Her gaze slid away from him. “I don’t know, really. Can I just go to sleep?”
He bit his tongue. He wasn’t helping her this way. Besides it wasn’t his case despite the fact that he was taking it personally. “Pack a bag. We’re going to my place.”
She blinked at him as if not understanding. “I have a bed here.”
He jammed a hand through his hair, yanking out a lock from the band that held it back. “And you aren’t safe, here. The cops have a guy posted on the street, but he may not be able to stay here all night.”
He stood signaling that the conversation was done. At least in his mind. Opening a closet door, he discovered an empty backpack. He dropped it onto the bed next to her.
“I don’t like running.”
“Oh? I think now might be the best time to run.”
Grasping her hand, he pulled her to her feet. She gasped and tugged at her hand. “Why would the killer come back?”
“He knows he didn’t get you,” Zach said.
“If he knew I wasn’t there he wouldn’t have shot at the bed.”
Good point, but he wasn’t leaving her here. “Maybe in the dark, the covers looked like a person.”
She didn’t believe him. “No, he was making a point.”
“Which would be?”
“That he was going to get me.”
He gritted his teeth, then worked to relax his jaw muscles. He hoped his voice didn’t come out strained. She was trying his patience. “Then you should come with me.”
Her frown told him she hadn’t realized her argument was circular. She hadn’t wanted to come back and prove his point correct.
Her shoulders slumped further. “Okay,” she said, defeat tinting her words.
She stood and as if on autopilot, then threw clothes into a backpack. When she finished, she looked at him her eyes lidded. “Let’s go.”
Grace just wanted to sleep. She didn’t care if she did it leaning against a wall. Or in the front seat of Zach’s car. He’d refused to let her drive and promised to drop her back home later in the day.
Thankfully, she had the day off, but she knew she had to be back for when Dolores would come home.
Zach led her into his apartment. “Sit. I need to put some clean sheets on the bed.”
“I’ll take the couch.”
She had to catch some shut eye before the afternoon.
“No. You’ll take the bed. I don’t have any appointments this morning, but I need to get stuff done here.”
Grace nodded, the fight out of her for the moment.
She must have dozed off because Zach shook her. “Grace.”
“Huh?”
“Go get undressed. You want a bath or something?”
“No.”
He took her hand. His warmth infused into her as the usual colors dance. Today they were yellow and green, leaving her wondering what that meant. She didn’t understand anything anymore.
Right now, she couldn’t wrap her brain around any explanation, but the colors were inviting. She didn’t feel