: Chapter 4
Any Means Necessary
The knocking turns into pounding as I shuffle my way through the darkness toward the bedroom door. When I open it, the light that spills in from the hallway practically blinds me. I canât help but squint up at the man standing on the other side in confusion.
âCallum?â He stares down at me, dressed and alert like it isnât the middle of the night. Thereâs no reason for someone to look so hot at this hour, itâs almost as blinding as the hall light. âWhatâs going on?â
He scans me head to toe, from my long messy braid to my pajama shorts and bare feet, before his focus moves past me. A voice sounds softly behind me. âWhoâs in here with you?â
My eyes follow his gaze, brain lagging. âOh, thatâs just the tv.â The response is sleep-addled and delayed, but itâs the truth.
âYouâre watching tv?â Those piercing hazel eyes are pinned back on me now.
âI fell asleep watching something.â Again, technically the truth. He doesnât need to know that I canât sleep without something playing, like a toddler needing a nightlight. Rubbing the sleep from my eyes, I change the subject. âDo you need something? Why are you knocking on my door at three-thirty in the morning?â
âI need you to come with me.â
No idea what I was expecting Callum to say, but thatâs not it. I blink a few more timesâonce, twiceâprocessing. He waits calmly, observing and assessing while I absorb.
âWhat?â I need more information. Itâs too damn late for this. Or is it too early?
âSomeone needs medical attention and Iâm borrowing those skilled hands of yours.â Again, not what I was expecting to hear. Someone needs medical attention? The questions are already forming.
âIs someone hurt?â I ask. His eyes roam from my face, looking pointedly at my silky powder blue pajama set. I follow his gaze, barely registering my attire before bringing my eyes back to his.
âPut on your scrubs, Doc. Weâre leaving in five.â
My brain still fighting through the fog, I leave Callum in the doorway and shuffle into the walk-in closet. Digging through my nightmare of a suitcase, the first pair of scrubs I find are pastel pink. Whatever, scrubs are scrubs. My braid is too messy to save, so a finger-brushed ponytail will have to do. Tugging on mismatched socks and shoving my feet into my ASICS, Iâm still securing my hair into an elastic when I emerge from the closet.
Callumâs large frame fills the doorway, muscled tattooed arms crossed. The sleeves of his crisp white dress shirt are rolled up to his elbows, something he seems to do often out of habit. As soon as his suit coat comes off, his sleeves are being rolled up. The intricate ink covering his muscled arms are in stark contrast to the crisp color of his shirt. I can see the shadow of where the ink continues up his skin beneath the fabric. Do his tattoos cover more than just his arms?
âPink, huh?â There he goes with those eyes of his again, taking in every single detail.
I simply shrug, looking up at him expectantly. For someone who was in such a hurry three minutes ago, he doesnât seem too rushed to move out of my room now. The look I flash him is full of expectation.
âAre we going, or did you make me get out of bed for nothing?â
He looks at me for a while longer, almost as if just to prove that he can. Finally, he steps back into the hallway and sweeps his arm out in a gesture for me to walk ahead of him.
âAfter you, Doc,â he murmurs, the nickname making me sigh in annoyance. But I relent and step out into the hallway anyway.
He walks closely behind me, almost too close. His tall frame towers over me, looming and crowding. Hyper aware of his proximity, I glance up at him in the elevator, my shoulder to his chest. Thereâs no way he means to stand so close to me, but something in his eyes when he looks down at me says he knows exactly what heâs doing. Nothing he does is by accident.
The private elevator opens up to the parking garage and I follow him to a car Iâve never seen before. This must be Callumâs car, a vintage number that looks like a classic muscle car from the 1970s. I fail to recognize the symbol on the back as he holds the passenger door open for me.
The engine rumbles, the only sound in the car as Callum navigates the city streets. This silence is giving my mind too much opportunity to form questions I donât have answers to. Finally, I canât help myself, not knowing is driving me crazy.
âWhere are we going?â I look over at him, the passing city lights flashing across his strong features. The white of his shirt catches the light, emphasizing his broad solid frame filling the seat to capacity. He stares straight ahead at the road, not sparing me a glance when he responds.
âNot far.â He gives me nothing to work with.
âWhat kind of medical attention do they need?â I try again. The more time I have to prepare myself mentally, the better.
âYouâll see when we get there.â Itâs a non-answer, really.
âReally? Thatâs all I get?â My tone tells him just how fed up Iâm getting with all this. He seems completely unbothered by my growing annoyance.
âYour medical expertise is needed,â Callum says simply. âThatâs all you need to know.â
Yeah, thatâs not how it works. If he thinks this conversation is over, heâs dead wrong. I wish I knew what he was thinking, but I doubt itâll do any good to ask him. His lack of response almost keeps me from asking more questions. Honestly, I wouldnât be surprised if thatâs his goal.
âIf someone is sick, Iâll need specific medication. If theyâre injured, I might need to stop for supplies.â Iâm going to keep insisting until I get something out of the vault that is Callum Russo. But he doesnât even flinch, simply tilting his head to look over at me lazily. Here we are, driving through the city in the dark of the very early morning because someone needs a nurse for a mysterious reason, and heâs acting like weâre running an errand.
âYouâll have what you need,â his assurance does nothing to convince me. But instead of bombarding him with the other million questions on the tip of my tongue, I simply close my mouth instead. Thereâs no point in wasting my energy trying to get answers heâs clearly not going to give me. The only sign that Callum notices my resignation is another half glance in my direction.
He wasnât lying when he said we arenât going far, the drive takes less than twenty minutes. Out of all the places my brain imagined we would end up, a nightclub wasnât even on the list. Pulling up, the club lights are still on, but thereâs no line in front of the door. Most clubs I know close around 3 am, which explains the lack of drunk partiers stumbling around the sidewalk.
âA club?â I ask, confused. âWhy are we at a closed nightclub?â Parking right out front like a VIP, Callum shuts off the ignition and reaches for the door handle. Alarm bells ring in my head, anxiety clawing at me. Who could need medical attention in a nightclub that canât go to the hospital?
âIâm not going in,â I say, my voice dripping with anxiety.
âYes, you are.â Itâs a statement, not a question. âNothingâs going to happen to you, Doc. Itâd be too much of a waste.â
The promise does little to soothe the dread pooling in my stomach like a ball of lead. Clearly, Iâm not being taken seriously. Instead, heâs climbing out of the car and leaving me alone in the terrifying silence. He circles behind the car, popping open the trunk momentarily, before slamming it shut. The passenger door swings open, and Callum stands expectantly, a large case in his left hand.
I look up at him from my place in the seat, every instinct in my body telling me not to step out of the safety of the vehicle. I highly doubt Callum would drive me all the way to a club to kill me. And seeing as he holds the literal keys to my only escape, I donât really have a choice here.
âNo one is going to hurt you, you have my word.â The conviction in his words matches the promise in Callumâs eyes, his right hand extending to me. I stare at it for a minute, warring with my anxiety, my gaze sliding up to meet his. Iâm here now, thereâs no way around it. So I accept his hand and allow him to help me out of the car. His hand releases mine to close the door behind me with a resounding click and moves to the small of my back.
âHere you go, Doc.â The case in his left hand lands heavily on the hood of the car. I lift my eyes to his face briefly, my tongue wetting my bottom lip in apprehension as I reach for the mystery case. His brows raise in a challenge, not offering any explanation. With hesitant hands, I unclip the top of the case and pull it open slowly. My jaw drops.
Calling this a medical kit is a gross understatement. This case contains everything I could ever need to provide proper medical careâgauze, suture kits, IV bags, sterile needles, local anesthetic, antibiotics, stimulantsâitâs a damn hospital in a box. All thatâs missing is the MRI machine.
My wide eyes search for his.
âWhere did all of this come from?â Thereâs stuff in here that I canât even find at the hospital. How did this man get vials of adrenaline? Iâm at a loss here.
âI told you, youâll have everything you need.â Reaching around me, he closes the case and locks it with a snap. âThe man youâre here to see is inside.â With that, Iâm being led through the front entrance of the quiet club.
The hazy, dimly lit interior is exactly how I expect it to be. A few stray workers are moving to clean up the leftovers of the patronâs poor decisions. The heavy aromas of sweat, alcohol, and smoke cling to the air as a reminder of the nightâs lack of inhibition. I can see the door that leads out of the main room and back towards a more private area as we get closer. A sign reading âPrivate, no public accessâ warns me that Iâm about to leave any witnesses behind.
Iâve always scoffed at the dumb blonde sorority girls in horror movies when they hear a noise in the basement and decide to venture into the darkness in their underwear with nothing but a dim flashlight yelling âwhoâs there?â Yet, here I am, allowing myself to be led into the dark with nothing but my scrubs and sarcasm to protect me. As good as a lamb to the slaughter, I might as well be wearing my underwear.
Either unaware of my reservations, or completely ignoring them, Callum presses his hand to the small of my back and propels me through the doorway. Once weâre in the open and thereâs enough space, he steps beside me and grabs my wristâhis strong fingers leading me firmly. Then weâre walking.
Moving down the long, dark hallway trimmed in blood-red LED lights, we pause at the very last door.
âBreathe,â Callum murmurs beside me.
I suck in a breath Iâm all too aware I was holding. He reaches around me to turn the knob. I havenât exactly been trying to picture whatâs behind the ominous door, but it definitely wasnât a storage room. Roscoe stands along the far wall, his aggressive stance stiff. Itâs not the shelves of liquor and extra rags that has shock settling over me.
A chair sits in the center of the shadowy room, a man secured by one of his wrists to the chairâs arm with red tape, his ankles secured to the legs. Spatters of blood spread across the plastic covering the floor beneath him, filling the air with the heavy copper scent of violence. His left hand dangles awkwardly, his pinky missing after the first knuckle. Itâs been cut off, I can spot the rest of the finger discarded on the ground next to his foot in a pool of blood.
âWhat is this?â My question comes out barely more than a whisper. Callumâs hand on my back pushes me into the room, the door closing behind us.
âDo your thing, Doc. Get to work and fix him up,â Callum says.
The injured manâs head lolls as his eyes try to look up at me. He looks so defeated, so broken.
âYouâre a doctor?â he asks, barely able to get the words out.
âIâm a nurse,â I correct again, standing and assessing the situation. Callum walks around me, moving to watch from the other side of the room facing the door. His giant stature fills the corner of the room, making the space feel so much smaller.
Judging by the amount of blood, enough time has passed between now and the injury to allow some clotting. If the finger is still bleeding too much, Iâll have to do a wet-to-dry. But hopefully, I can just stitch the wound closed and bandage it. That all depends on the instrument used and the state of the remaining finger. My eyes lock with Callumâs as my assessment fully processes. Then Iâm moving.
âHow long ago did this happen?â I ask no one in particular. I donât actually know whoâs responsible, so the answer could come from either of them.
âForty-seven minutes,â Roscoe supplies gruffly.
When I lower, I do my best to avoid the blood splatters. Iâll kneel in the gore if I have to, but not if I can avoid it.
âWhat did you use?â I ask, placing my kit on the floor. When I move to get a closer look at the wound, the bloodied man jerks nervously. I can see Roscoe enter my peripheral vision, his muscles tensed and ready as if he perceives the wounded manâs movement as a threat against me. But I donât flinch. âHow was it cut off?â
âDonât ask that,â Callum says, warning me off. âYou donât want to know the answers to any of your questions.â
He thinks Iâm just curiousâthat Iâm entertained by this display of brutality. Throwing him a look of agitation, I lift the mangled hand to inspect it.
âWhat you used to remove the finger might affect how I have to treat it,â I say, pulling out the syringe of local anesthetic. No matter what they used, whether it was a surgical scalpel or a rusty kitchen knife, I have to touch it to patch him up.
And thatâs going to hurt like hell.
âI used these,â Roscoe supplies a pair of hand-held pruning shears. Taking the tool from his hand, my eyes catch with his momentarily. Iâm struck with the sinking realization that the man of few words just used these landscaping scissors to remove someoneâs finger. But as quickly as the thought hits me, itâs gone and Iâm moving on.
âThese donât look new,â I comment, taking in the scratches and knicks on the sharp blades. Glancing at Roscoe, I can see the hesitance before he answers.
âNot new, but they were clean,â he says.
Thereâs no rust, which is a good sign, but theyâre not sterile. Iâll need to make sure the laceration is cleaned thoroughly so thereâs no infection.
They cut the pinky off at a slight angle, so thereâs enough skin to fold over and close the wound. Just barely, and there will be lots of scarred tissue, but it will work.
âHeâs going to need stitches. But itâs going to be tricky,â I announce, sifting through the kit for the supplies to properly clean the wound.
âCan you do that, Doc?â The look of annoyance I throw at Callum just feeds the manâs ego.
âIâm a nurse,â I say, for what feels like the millionth time. âSo I shouldnât be able to, not for something like this. But luckily for you, my best friend is a trauma surgeon and Iâve perfected my sutures on bananas over a couple glasses of wine.â
Organizing the supplies Iâll need and laying them out on the lid of the kit, Iâm ready to get to work. Pulling the cap off the sterile needle, I flick the air bubbles out and give it a tiny squirt. Eyeing me warily, the man pulls at his restraints.
âNo, what is that? Get that away from me,â he rasps, yanking at his hand thatâs now bleeding profusely. Roscoe takes a threatening step forward, but I raise my hand to stop him. Instead, I look the imprisoned man straight in the eye.
âI know you think you donât want me to touch you with this needle but, trust me, you want whatâs in this syringe,â I inform him calmly. Beaten captive tied to a chair or not, heâs still just another patient who needs to be treated properly. âIf you refuse, Iâll have to clean you up without numbing it. Itâs your choice.â I stare at him expectantly. It only takes three seconds for him to realize my syringe is his friend, and he nods his consent.
After numbing the area, I set to cleaning it thoroughly. The next step is trying to stop the bleeding enough to get a good grip for the sutures. It takes some time, and a lot of gauze, but Iâm able to get the skin where I need it to stitch it together. Once the wound is finally closed, I disinfect the area again and cover it with a sterile bandage.
âThere.â Finally sitting back on my heels, I realize how long Iâve been kneeling on the floor. Just like when Iâm at the hospital, my focus kept me from feeling the discomfort in my knees. Not to mention the fact that I really have to pee. My legs complain when I move to stand and I struggle. Callum is at my side in an instant, lifting me off the floor. Damn, I definitely wasnât this tired a few seconds ago.
âYouâre finished?â Callumâs question is said deeply at my side. I look up at him, my mind racing as I look at the man I clearly donât know at all. Pulling my eyes away, I simply nod.
âHeâs going to need to follow up with a doctor as soon as possible, and thereâs an enormous risk of infection. But he should be fine.â I glance at Roscoe briefly before looking back at the man. If he didnât blink at me with half-lidded eyes, I would think he was unconscious or deadâremaining limp in the chair. What else did they do to him? Thereâs no missing the black eye forming and his swollen lip. âAre there any other injuries I need to look at?â
âNo,â Callum says firmly. âIâll take you home.â
The exhaustion and shock from the events of the night allow Callum to pack up the medical kit and tote me back to the car without complaint. He practically buckles me into the passenger seat, stowing the medical case back in the trunk before climbing behind the wheel. My eyes canât seem to look at anything else but the terrifying man next to me.
Gazing at his profile, the distinct nose, sharp cheekbones, immaculate beard. When heâs in a suit, he looks as distinguished as any high-power businessman roaming this city. But as soon as the suit coat comes off and the shirt sleeves are rolled up, you catch a glimpse at what he really is. A man with an edge that you donât mess with. Iâd felt it, even that first time meeting himâthe danger just below the surface. But I never thought it was anything like this. Who is he? Am I in danger right now?
âAre you just gonna keep staring, or are you gonna ask me the question you want to ask me?â Coming to a complete stop at a red light, Callum meets my stare straight on. I refuse to avert my gaze. After what I just witnessed, I deserve to stare a hole right through his head if I want to.
âWhy did Roscoe cut off that manâs finger?â Iâve wrestled between asking and deciding Iâm better off not knowing. But Iâd be stupid not to ask just because Iâm scared of what the answer might be.
âBecause I told him to.â Said so calmly, the answer is deliberately cagey, his eyes daring me to ask the next question heâs leading me to. And I need to know more, need to know what kind of man Iâm living with. So I bite.
âWhy did you tell him to?â
âKellan took something that didnât belong to him. Now his debt is paid.â Heâs watching me, taking in every blink and breath, reading me like a book. Heâs a lot harder to read, making my anxiety spike despite my best efforts.
âSo, youâre an enforcer?â Iâve pieced together a few things, like the fact that his âbusinessâ doesnât discriminate between crooked politicians or career criminals. But there are still some pretty huge gaps I need to fill in here. Because, after tonight, those gaps are starting to seem more like a black hole thatâll devour me before anyone can stop itâand no one will ever hear my screams.
âI fix problems.â Again, his response leaves me with nothing but more questions.
âWhat kinds of problems?â I ask. Callum leans back in his seat, flexing his shoulders to get more comfortable as we wait for the light to turn green. His eyes donât leave mine; observing, analyzing, calculating.
âThat depends on whoâs asking.â His focus momentarily moves from my face to roam down my body; taking in my messy blonde ponytail, wrinkled pink scrubs, and supportive footwear. Any sleepiness had fled the moment I walked into that back room. For better or for worse, Iâm the picture of messy practicality tied up in a crumpled pink bow.
âIâm asking.â
Iâm not letting this go, not when I can get answers from him. The silence in the car stretches, making seconds feel like hours, the only sound coming from the engine. The light flashes green, but Callum takes his time pressing the accelerator. Heâs in no hurry to get home.
âLetâs just say I fix problems that powerful people pay lots of money for me not to talk about.â This bit of information is a step in the right direction but it still doesnât tell me what I need to know.
âFix them how?â I press, my voice shaking slightly. His grip shifts on the wheel to take a more casual hold with one hand.
âBy any means necessary.â
That tells me a lot and nothing at all. That could mean he skirts around the law by doing deals under the table, or he could be a psychotic serial killer. Thereâs so much room for interpretation, which is probably exactly how he likes it. The black hole is slowly morphing into an endless gray area.
âAm I in danger?â The question leaves my mouth before I can think better of it.
âNot from me.â Itâs a plain statement. Even with his nonchalance, I believe him. Maybe that makes me an idiot, but I do.
âSo I donât need to be afraid of you?â Itâs a reach for clarification and, maybe if Iâm being honest with myself, a little comfort. But I donât get it.
âI never said that.â His eyes slide over to find mine again. âAre you scared of me, Lexie?â
A knot forms in my stomach, heat spreading through me under his gaze.
âAfter tonight I would be stupid not to be,â I shoot back. âIâm not stupid.â
The car turns and weâre entering the parking garage that belongs to the penthouse. Pulling smoothly into one of the private spots, Callum cuts the engine.
âYouâre a lot of things, but you certainly arenât stupid,â he says. âAnd I know youâre smart enough to realize that telling anyone about what you witnessed tonight is a very bad idea.â
âI wonât say anything,â I assure him. I have enough self-preservation to keep my damn mouth shut. Besides, I donât even know what happened. Not really.
âGood. Because if you are stupid enough to tell someone, that might put you in danger. And Iâll always know.â
âIâm just gonna go shower and pretend like tonight never happened.â When did my life turn into a suspense movie? I prefer my drama petty and through a tv screen.
âThatâs a good idea, Doc.â Stepping into the elevator, heâs watching me again. This time feels more intentionalâlike heâs looking for something. Iâll bet heâs waiting for a meltdown or psychotic break with tears and trembling. Like the events of tonight might somehow break me. But he can wait all he wants, the breakdown isnât coming.
The demons Iâm currently fighting off are much more traumatizing than giving some creep a few stitches in a dark room. Tonight, as weird and confusing as it was, is just a drop in the bucket. Iâm already keeping my head above water while much darker forces try to drag me under.
I donât wait for him when the elevator doors open, instead walking straight into the penthouse. Callumâs only a step or two behind me.
âGood night, Callum,â I say over my shoulder, not hesitating before walking through the kitchen towards the hallway that leads to my shower. And my bed.
âSweet dreams, Doc,â Callumâs deep voice sounds behind me.
I wish.