The case is wrapped. Ben Conrad, the man that they had pinned down as their suspect, is dead and on his way to the morgue. Beckett sends her detail home for the second time with every intention of luxuriating after the stress of the week in a long, hot shower. Underneath the warming spray, she can vaguely make out the sound of her own phone, but
(
Read more... )
Someone across the street screams and for a second, Castle thinks it's her; thinks that, somehow, the blast threw her out the window and onto the pavement and now he's going to have to look at the remains of grit and stone and glass and see Beckett -- see his partner -- crumpled in the gutter. No. The scream doesn't fit. It's a women, a pack of leashed dogs at her feet, who's doing the screaming instead. Castle sucks his voice up from the bottom of his chest: "Call an ambulance!" The dog walker doesn't seem to hear him. Her canine ( ... )
Reply
Reply
"Are you alright?"
Kind of a stupid question.
Reply
"The door showed up just as I - I dove through just in time," Beckett explains.
"How did you get here so fast?"
Reply
"I was outside," he explains, at her side to help her if she needs it. "Conrad wasn't our guy. I figured it out and then got over here as fast as I could, just before things --" he searches for the correct word "-- got hot." Well, close enough. "Can you walk?"
Reply
"I mean, you called, right? Just before - " Beckett waves a hand to indicate the apartment as they start limping through the rubble, doing her best to avoid anything that could still be hot to trod over, placing the weight on Castle rather than her banged-up knee. Her fingers make contact with the sleeve of his coat and she tugs on it, looking up to him with requesting eyes.
"I don't have anything else on besides this," she explains, blush hidden by the ash on her face.
Reply
Reply
"This has got to be killing you right now, right?" she says, half-breathlessly, gazing up at him through the strands of hair in her face.
"Waiting this long to tell me how you busted down the door."
Reply
Firemen are already on the stairs. Castle can hear the heavy tramp of their boots and the low hiss of oxygen being processed through their masks. One of them breaks from the pack to approach: "Jesus," he says, "this your apartment?" His voice sounds hollow, echo-y. "There's a med team downstairs. Be sure to get yourself checked out ( ... )
Reply
Reply
"So, before we were interrupted," he says by way of a segue, "I was gonna' tell you that Ben Conrad wasn't our guy. CSU swept the scene -- remember the photos they took of Conrad? The gun was in the wrong hand. Somebody was with Conrad right before he died. Maybe playing with him all along; he knew we'd close the case when we had a body count." A sidelong look. "Then he'd perform his magnum opus on you and your apartment."
Reply
"The gun was in Conrad's right hand when you found him, but when we saw him in the window, he had the gun in his left hand," Beckett muses out loud. "And he stepped out of the window before we could actually see the shot go off."
She shakes her head, gnawing on the inside of her cheek.
"Son of a bitch," she mutters.
Reply
His hands settle in his pockets. "Crime scene guys'll pull what they can out of your apartment. Whatever kind of explosives this guy used, we'll be able to track them back to him, right now --" he raises his shoulders as if he's coming to the point of a very long argument "-- you need to regroup and get into some clean clothes. You smell like a Mongolian barbecue."
Reply
Castle's words stir something up inside her - her mother's necklace, her father's watch: they're still in the apartment, hopefully intact, and she doesn't want them to get neglected in the sorting through of the rubble. "I can go up," she insists, pushing off the ambulance step and casting a glance up at the charred brick and blown-out windows. "I'll shower at the precinct later or something."
Reply
He feints a glance back to the ruined face of the building: the fire's under control, but the brickwork is charred and sooty, an upsweep of black. Crews are starting to come down, dragging hoses out behind them. Castle sees one guy come out of the building with an axe slung over his shoulder. Talk about surreal.
"That was an offer I worked in back there, by the way," he says. "And before you stonewall, I won't take 'no' for an answer. Mi townhouse es su townhouse, for as long as you need it."
Reply
"For the record," she murmurs, fingers reaching up to clutch a necklace and a ring that no longer dangles from her neck, "there's only a couple things up there that I care about saving."
She's never been good at accepting offers of hospitality, and in this situation, all she'd like to do is say something along the lines of thanks, but no thanks. But she knows Castle won't be having any of that, and so she finally nods again.
"Thank you," she murmurs quietly.
Reply
Leave a comment