"Barely. She asked for water and a locked door." His breathing shifts. "She flinched when I raised my hand to turn on the light, Jesse.She flinched."
I close my eyes.
Preacher King's daughter, the name that made my brother slam doors and change subjects for a year, is sitting in his guest house with someone's damage written across her body, and Knox is standing on the other side of a locked door trying to hold himself together.
"Don't push her tonight. Let her sleep. We'll figure it out tomorrow."
"I'm not leaving the porch."
"I know you're not."
He hangs up without saying goodbye. That's Knox. Every emotion hits him like a freight train, and he'd rather break his knuckles on a wall than admit any of them exist. But Delilah King just walked through a door he's spent a year pretending wasn't there, and no amount of scarred knuckles is going to close it again.
By the time I pocket the phone, Raven has curled sideways on the couch with her boots still on and her eyes closed. The firelight plays across her hair, turning it red and gold, and catches the bruise darkening along her temple.
I pull her boots off and set them by the door. She doesn't wake.
The night passes in pieces. I doze in the chair by the fire with my sidearm on the armrest, waking at intervals to check the perimeter and the woman sleeping on my couch. Old habits don't die. They just find new things to protect.
Dawn comes in gray and gold through the kitchen windows. The smell of coffee pulls Raven from the couch, and she pads into the kitchen barefoot, still wearing yesterday's blood-stained clothes with her hair falling loose around her shoulders. The gauze on her forearms needs changing. The bruise at her temple has deepened to purple. The shirt she slept in has ridden up on one side, baring a strip of skin above her hip that my hands remember the feel of, and the fact that I can see the marks Harlan left on her and still want to press her against the counter and bury my face in her neck tells me exactly how far gone I am.
She reaches past me for the coffee mug on the shelf, and her body brushes against mine, warm and sleep-soft. My hand goes to her hip before I've made a conscious decision, my thumb tracing the bare skin where her shirt has ridden up, and she leans into the touch for a beat before pulling away with the mug. The look she gives me over the rim as she takes her first sip hitsharder than it should for a woman with bruises on her face and blood still under her fingernails.
Neither of us speaks. The silence between us is warm and unhurried, the kind of quiet earned by people who don't need words to fill the space.
A truck rolls up the gravel drive around midmorning. Carmichael steps out, his shirt wrinkled and his jaw set in a way that tells me whatever he came to say has been costing him the whole drive out.
Raven meets him on the porch. I give them space and stay in the kitchen where I can hear but not intrude, because whatever Carmichael needs to say to his niece isn't mine to stand in the middle of. But I listen the way I listen to everything, cataloging tone, measuring sincerity, running the words through a filter built from a decade of watching this man operate.
His voice carries through the screen door, stripped of the operational authority I've heard from him for a decade. What's left is quieter, rougher, either genuine or the best performance of his career. With Carmichael, those two things aren't always distinguishable.
"I was terrified of losing you." The words land in the morning air like something he's been holding back for years. "When Cipher reported that Harlan had taken you, I couldn't breathe. For the first time in decades, I froze."
Raven is quiet on the other side of the screen, letting him talk.
"I sent you to Fredericksburg because I needed someone on the ground, and you were the best I had. That's the truth, and I won't insult you by pretending otherwise." The porch bench creaks as he sits down. "But I also sent you because I knew Jesse would protect you, and I used that knowledge the way I've used every asset I've ever had. Strategically. Without asking your permission."
"And Morrison?" Raven's voice is level but close to the edge of something.
"I knew he was compromised before ATF assigned him as your partner. I believed having you close to him would give us intelligence on the cartel's ATF infiltration." He goes quiet for a long moment. "I was right about the intelligence. I was wrong about the cost."
The porch goes quiet. Wind moves through the cedar break, and somewhere in the distance a hawk cries.
"I shaped your career, Raven. From the day you arrived in Virginia, I guided every step. The Academy, the field assignments, the trajectory that put you in El Paso. All of it served the operation I'd been building for years." His voice drops. "You deserved better than that. You deserved a choice."
"Yes." Raven's voice is steady. "I did."
"You have one now. Whatever you want to do next, wherever you want to go, I won't stand in your way. No more strings and no more missions. You're free."
"I was always free, Uncle Robert." Raven's voice is quiet but the steel in it carries through the screen door. "You just chose to treat me like a piece on your board instead of telling me the truth and letting me decide for myself. That's not the same thing."
The porch goes silent. When Carmichael speaks again, his voice is rough. "No. It isn't."
The screen door opens. Raven steps inside and crosses the living room without looking at me, heading for the kitchen. Through the mesh I can see Carmichael still on the porch, his hands in his pockets, staring out at the cedar break. After a moment he pulls the screen door open and stands in the entry.
His eyes meet mine across the living room, and the expression in them is something I haven't seen from him before. Not the operational mask. Not the measured authority. Something raw and tired and close to broken, the look of a manwho just heard his niece tell him the truth about what he did and couldn't argue with a word of it.
"Take care of her, Jesse."