I’m sure it’s the same series of expressions that he sees passing over mine.
I’m in so much trouble.
TWENTY-NINE
River
I shift and groan, the twenty stitches keeping the wound in my thigh together tight and uncomfortable. That chunk of flying glass cut so deep into my muscle that I needed internal stitching as well. The doctors promised that this limp is only temporary, that it’ll fade within a few days, as the tissue repairs itself.
I don’t give a shit, truly. All I care about right now is knowing that Rowen will be okay.
Ma was with Aengus in his room this morning when he came to after surgery, groggy. Doctors said he should recover just fine, though with plenty more scars.
Until I get hold of him, that is. Because if Rowen doesn’t pull through, I’ll kill the bastard with my own bare hands.
My hospital room door suddenly swings open. Ivy rushes through, rare alarm in her eyes. “The gardai just arrested Amber. They’re taking her to the station.”
“What?” Any last bit of shock from the bombing vanishes instantly as panic sets in.
“I don’t know why.” She frowns. “But he knew her name.”
Fuck. I should have known. Of course Duffy himself would be coming here to question me about last night.
And Amber lied to him.
“Shit, shit, shit . . .” What the hell is going to happen to her now?
“You need to fix this, River,” Ivy insists through gritted teeth.
“I will,” I promise. But how?
A knock against the glass pulls our attention up in time to see Duffy poke his head in.
“Call the shop when you have news about Rowen,” she mutters, scurrying past him and out the door.
Duffy watches her with curiosity for a long moment, and then dismisses her, letting the door slip from his finger’s grip to shut. He adjusts his hat. “River. Glad to see you up.” He strolls forward, as if here to check on me, to see how I’m doing. As if he cares. I know that’s not the case at all. “Terrible thing that happened. I hear you got a nasty bump on the head.”
“Why did you just arrest Amber?” I blurt out.
He eyes me, flipping open his notepad. “She has some things to answer for. And I have a few questions for you, about last night.”
I know how this works. It’s a dance of information, back and forth, and he’s not going to make the first move. He’s still trying to pin the Green on me and he clearly has no evidence aside from some whispered rumors from his criminal informants. If I didn’t care about Amber, I’d tell him to fuck off. The problem is, I do care about her. More than I’ve ever cared about any girl before.
And I think he’s figured that out.
“What do you remember, exactly?”
All morning, I’ve been quietly piecing bits of memories together. “The pub was closed. Aengus showed up, pounding on the door.”
“Was he running from someone? Afraid for his life?”
“No.” I snort, recalling Aengus’s arrogant attitude. “He was right pissed. Been drinking all day.”
“So, you let him in.”
“Of course.”
“And did you lock the door behind him?”
“No.” I’ve beaten myself up about that for a while this morning, but, really, there’s no point. Beznick’s fellas would have gotten in eventually. At least there weren’t any customers.
“And then? What happened after that?”
“I poured a round of pints, because we still needed to finish up and Aengus wasn’t going anywhere. Then suddenly a man showed up, tossed the bomb, and ran out the door.”
Duffy’s pen moves quickly, scratching down notes. “Did he say anything?”
“He did.” I hesitate. “ ‘Tit-for-tat, Delaneys.’ ”
His pen stops and his gaze levels with mine. “What do you suppose that meant?”
“He didn’t care to elaborate.”
“Right.” Duffy’s jaw shifts in thought. Deciding on whether to push me on it, I assume. “Did you see his face?”
“Half of it.”
“Enough to identify him?”
“Possibly.” If I don’t kill him first. I saw a tattoo on his forearm—a giant scythe, or something like that. Between his eyes and that marking and his short stature, I might be able to pick him out of a lineup. That information would be of help to the gardai. Maybe they could lay charges. But I know that I could also pass this information on to Jimmy and guarantee that the guy is tracked down and punished, swiftly. Not because Jimmy necessarily cares what happened to me or Rowen, but because his right-hand man was nearly blown up and that’s an affront to Jimmy’s image.
“We don’t have a lot of time to find the man who did this to your family, River,” Duffy warns. The clever garda must be able to read the thoughts on my face.
“I know that.” The bomber will go to ground as soon as he finds out that we lived.
He sighs. “They’re releasing you soon, I gather?”
“Just waiting on paperwork.”
“I’d like you to come down to the station and look through some mug shots.”
“Only if you let Amber go. She’s completely innocent.”
“Innocent of what?” he asks casually, his raptor gaze watching my every tic and twitch.
I swallow, not taking the bait. “Of whatever you’re trying to drag her into.”
“She lied to a garda. That’s a serious offense.”
Fuck. “If she did, it was to protect me.”
“From what?”
I meet his question with silence. I can’t let her take the fall for this, but I need to think this through before I talk.
“You must really like this bird.” A heavy frown casts over his face. “Where do you see this going, with you unable to step foot on American soil? Hoping she’ll move here?” When I still don’t speak, he goes on. “If she’s found guilty of providing false information to an officer of the law during an investigation, she may never be allowed back in Ireland. Then where will that leave you two?” He flips his notebook shut. “Be smart, River.”
Ma plows through the door, boring holes into Garda Duffy’s back with her glare. “Not enough that ya disturb the son who’s barely conscious, now you’re here to bother another?”
I watch Duffy’s eyes glaze over as he prepares himself for Ma’s tongue-lashing.
“If you spent less time bothering us and more time chasing down Dublin’s scum, maybe our entire livelihood wouldn’t be lying in shambles now. And to think, ya knew someone was threatening me family and ya did nothing. I should bring charges to the lot of ya!”
Ma may seem the simple-minded culchie sometimes but she’s not daft. She’s already figured out this is Aengus’s doing. Yet she’ll defend her pride for her family until she’s six feet in the ground.
“I’ll be expecting you in later today, River.” With one last pointed look my way, Duffy disappears out the door.
“That bastard!” Ma exclaims, glaring at the door.
“Any update on Rowen yet?”
Her bottom lip wavers with her firm head shake. “Your da’s waiting for the doctor.”