With his free hand, Cain cupped her cheek, forcing her eyes to meet his. “I had no right to make that comment. Only you and Woodman know what you had together. All I know is that you made him happy. Really, really happy, Gin. You, well, dreamin’ of you made Woodman who he was—made him strong and good. He wanted to be the best-possible version of himself for you. I know that. You should know it too.”
His words only made her shoulders shake harder as more tears poured from her eyes, and she felt Cain’s hands slip under her arms and pull her up. For a moment he seemed to debate what to do, holding her limp body against his chest before sweeping her into his arms. He walked over the threshold of the little house that had held her future with Woodman, and into a dark and lonely world that felt bearable only with Cain’s arms around her.
“Where’s your car?” he asked close to her ear.
“At Gran’s,” she said, burrowing her forehead into Cain’s neck.
He jerked in a quick breath, as she would if she’d burned herself. “I’ve only got my bike. Can you hold on to me for the ride home?”
I’m so tired. So very tired.
“Yes,” she managed as he set her down on her feet beside the bike, a gentle hand on her shoulder to be sure she was steady.
“I’ll be right back.”
She watched as he ran back inside and returned a second later with his helmet, turning off the light in Woodman’s living room and closing the front door. He strode down the walkway to her, carefully to shut the white gate behind him. Then he placed the helmet on her head, buckled it under her chin, and helped her straddle the bike before swinging his leg over the saddle and turning the key.
“Hold on to me, Gin. Don’t fuckin’ let go.”
As if he didn’t quite trust her, he covered her small, cold hands with his, then zoomed off into the night toward McHuid’s.
***
When they got to her cottage, he didn’t bother helping her off the bike. He pulled her back into his arms and carried her inside the unlocked house, through the kitchen, down a dark hallway, and up the stairs to the bedroom he’d visited only once, the night he’d found her with Woodman. Once there, he placed her gently on the bed, where she sat listlessly as he pulled her coat off one arm at a time. Underneath she was wearing jeans and a soft fleece top, which seemed as comfortable as anything.
“Lie down, baby.”
As though on autopilot, she twisted her body and leaned back against the pillows, with her feet still on the floor. Cain leaned down, untied and unlaced her boots, pulled them from her feet, and lifted her legs onto the bed.
And as he worked, she stared up at the ceiling, sniffling and weeping, almost in her own world of pain and sorrow, and it just about killed him that he couldn’t take the anguish away and carry it for her.
He’d felt the dead weight of her body when he picked her up off the stairs at Woodman’s house, and the only comparison he could think of was the way a marathon runner feels when she reaches the finish line and falls into the arms of someone waiting for her. Her body was exhausted in that same way—completely spent, boneless, and limp—as though she’d run and run and run for weeks on end, only to fall into his arms in exhaustion tonight, when she had reached the end of her own emotional marathon.
Cain grieved her pain. He wished he could take the ache away from her, take it for her, but he couldn’t. The very stark difference between them was that Cain had gotten a chance to say good-bye to his cousin and a mission by which to serve him after his death. Further, Cain had not only been given permission to love Ginger but encouragement. Cain loved his cousin, and he would mourn him for the rest of his life, but Cain had peace.
Ginger, on the other hand, didn’t. Cain had no idea of the state of their relationship when Woodman died, but among Woodman’s last words were She loves you. And he’d only stayed alive to hear Cain promise to love her back. She had to be living with the weight of guilt and regret on her shoulders, and as much as Cain wanted to take that pain away for her, he couldn’t. Not without telling her that Woodman had placed her in his care before dying, which was something he wasn’t prepared to do.
The reality was that he needed to keep the secret until she believed, beyond any doubt, that Cain loved her. If he told her too soon, she’d always question whether or not he loved her only because Woodman had told him to, when the truth was that he owned the love he felt for her in the same way he owned his heart or his lungs or the blood in his veins or the thoughts in his head. Loving Ginger was as effortless as breathing, and no less fundamental. Had been since he was a kid, would be until he died.
A lump rose in his throat, and he tried to clear it away.
“Gin,” he said softly, running the backs of his fingers across her damp cheek. “You want some tea or somethin’?”
She opened her eyes, which were glassy and tired.
“Just h-hold me awhile?” she whispered, her soft, sad voice shredding his heart.
Cain gulped. He’d fucked hundreds. He’d willingly held almost none.
“I’m . . . I’m filthy, Gin. I didn’t change before I left the garage. I’ll get your bed all dirty. I could just sit on the floor beside—”