Crash into You (Pushing the Limits #3)(109)
“Your new phone. It has a GPS tracking device.” My own thoughts haunt me—too many bells, too many whistles.
Isaiah squeezes my hand. He subtly moves one shoulder in front of me, and I realize he senses danger. My eyes search for what alarms Isaiah and my mouth goes dry. A police officer strolls up to my father.
“What are you doing, Dad?”
He places his hands on his hips. “I want you to come home.”
The police officer talks into his shoulder unit and gestures to Isaiah. “Sir, we need you to step away from the young lady.”
I hold tight on to Isaiah. “Why did you bring the police?”
Dad’s lip pulls back. “He abducted you.”
Abducted? “I left with him.”
“Running away is just as bad. You created chaos and left your mother and me wondering if we’d ever see you again! How can you do this to her?” Dad turns his head to the police officer. “She’s seventeen. He either took my daughter or this is a runaway situation. I have an entire ballroom of people who can testify to that.”
“We weren’t running away!” Dad is twisting everything, and no matter what I say, no one will believe us.
“Arrest him,” Dad snaps. “Let’s go, Rachel. We’re going home before your mother sinks too low because she thinks she’s losing another daughter.”
What I feared from my brothers is now happening with my father. He’s separating me and Isaiah. “Please. We haven’t done anything wrong.”
Not true. We’ve done lots of things wrong, but for the first time in weeks, we have the chance to do something right.
“Sir,” says the police officer with more force. His hand moves to his belt and my heart trips in my chest. “Step away from the girl.”
“No,” says Isaiah in a voice so cold I shiver.
“She’s a minor,” Dad reminds Isaiah. “And has no business being here or with you.”
Noah approaches from the side with his hands in the air to show he’s peaceful. “Sir, Isaiah’s only seventeen. Officer, if you’re arresting him, I’d like to know the charge.”
The officer glances at my father. “Is that true?”
Agitation leaks into my father’s tone, and his jaw jumps. “I don’t know how old he is. He came into a party and took my daughter.”
“I left with him,” I hiss. “He didn’t kidnap me and we weren’t running away. I was coming home.”
“Let’s see some ID,” says the officer. “Then we’ll start to sort this out, but you should go home with your father.”
“Isaiah,” Noah interjects in an overly calm voice. “Show the man your ID. Now.”
“Step away from the girl first.” The officer’s hand twitches on his belt. “And slowly take out your ID. Everyone can go home if we do this right.”
Still grasping me, Isaiah slowly removes his wallet and tosses it in the direction of the police officer. “And no. I don’t have a record.”
The way they both stare at him, I know what they see: the tattoos and earrings and every worst nightmare. But Isaiah is nothing like that. He’s gentle and kind and strong... My body starts to quake and it’s not a panic attack. It’s my heart—breaking and ripping into shreds. “Isaiah.”
Isaiah’s silver eyes have turned to ice. “It’ll be okay, Rachel. Won’t it?” He nods at my father.
Dad all but sneers. If I had introduced them properly, would my father have given him a chance? “You either come with me peacefully or I have this police officer physically put you in the car. Your choice, but this entire fiasco you’ve created is done.”
“I don’t give a f**k who you are,” says Isaiah in a low tone that indicates the threat is very real. “No one touches her.”
Off to the side, Noah lets loose a string of profanities. “Go with them, Rachel. Otherwise Isaiah will give them a reason to put him in jail. We’ll work it out.”
“Not if you’re afraid of them,” Isaiah whispers. “I won’t let you go if you’re afraid of them.”
I glance at my father—years older than he was this afternoon. The way he rubs his eyes shows the worry mixed with the anger.
“I’m not scared of him.” I edge so that I stand beside Isaiah. “I’m scared of losing you.”
“Say goodbye to him.” Dad barely keeps his voice low as he glares at Isaiah. “Do not come looking for my daughter again. Contacting her in any way is out of the question.”
My arms go around Isaiah’s waist and my eyes immediately flash to his, searching for a solution. Isaiah always has a way to fix things, and too panicked to think, I’m desperate for help. “Isaiah?”
Isaiah touches my face. The same warm, loving caress he’s tenderly given me since I first met him. “We’ll be okay.”
My hand covers his. “Promise me.” Because Isaiah always keeps his word. He’ll move hell if he has to. Isaiah never breaks a promise.
“I swear it.”
The trembling turns to shaking. I can’t lose Isaiah. We just found the place where the world could be good. “I love you.”
“Don’t say it like that.” Isaiah lowers his head so that his mouth is near mine. “Don’t say it like goodbye.”
Katie McGarry's Books
- Long Way Home (Thunder Road, #3)
- Long Way Home (Thunder Road #3)
- Breaking the Rules (Pushing the Limits, #1.5)
- Chasing Impossible (Pushing the Limits, #5)
- Dare You To (Pushing the Limits, #2)
- Take Me On (Pushing the Limits #4)
- Crash into You (Pushing the Limits, #3)
- Pushing the Limits (Pushing the Limits, #1)
- Walk the Edge (Thunder Road, #2)
- Walk The Edge (Thunder Road #2)