Page 42 of Betrothal Blitz


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She took off at a dead sprint. Out the side door. Down the steps. Across the sidewalk and into the parking lot. Her sensible shoes slipped on the ice-slicked pavement.

Behind her, Paul’s father shouted something—but Birdy didn’t hear it.

All she could see was Beverly’s terrified face—and the baby’s tiny arms reaching out.

And the feeling—bone-deep, all-consuming—that if she didn't catch them, she was going to lose everything.

CHAPTERTWENTY-SIX

Phones rang off desks. A police radio crackled. The loud hum of voices filled the big open lobby as the wedding party and half the town’s emergency volunteers scrambled to coordinate the search. Paul moved through the chaos of City Hall like a man on a mission, his gaze laser-focused on Birdy, who sat at a small round table by the window.

For the first time that he'd known her, she was still. Silent. A porcelain cup was clutched between her hands like a lifeline.

Paul crossed to her, weaving past volunteers, ignoring the worried glances being thrown his way. When he reached her side, he saw the cup was empty. She was just holding it, not even realizing.

He knelt down in front of her. Gently, he pried the empty cup from her fingers. He set it on the table and replaced it with a fresh, steaming one from a passing volunteer. When his fingers brushed hers, he found them cold and trembling.

Birdy lifted her head to find his gaze. Her eyes were too wide, too bright, full of emotions she wasn’t letting fall. She clasped his fingers, desperate and vulnerable, and he didn’t hesitate. Paul sank fully onto one knee, his hands enclosing hers.

“I'm here,” he said quietly. “We're going to get through this. We're going to find them.”

For a long, suspended heartbeat, she just looked at him. Then she nodded, a tiny, broken motion. Then she did something that Paul would have never expected.

Birdy Chou bent her head and burrowed into his chest like she could hide there. Paul wrapped his arms around her tightly, fiercely, feeling the delicate trembling that ran through her body. She smelled of honey and mint and… strangely, a little like his dad.

She was still in her dress. He was still in his suit. The lace of her wedding dress crinkled under his palms. His tie felt strangling around his throat.

This wasn’t how this day was supposed to end.

Paul pressed a kiss to the crown of Birdy's hair and let himself dream for half a second. He dreamed of standing with her in front of the town clerk, of slipping a ring onto her finger, of signing the papers that made her his, not by necessity but by choice.

He wondered how late City Hall stayed open. They had a big mission to complete: finding Beverly and the baby. Paul didn't doubt for a second that they would. The kids couldn't have gotten that far. One thing he didn't want to let slip through his fingers was ending this day without making Birdy Chou his wife.

“It’s okay,” he murmured as she shuddered in his arms. Paul tightened his hold. “I've got you. I'm here. I’m strong enough for both of us.”

Birdy shifted, pulling back just far enough to look up at him, her eyes searching his. “Because you have to?”

Paul brushed a stray hair that dared defy her bun. “Because I have to what?”

That stray wasn't alone. Other wisps of hair had escaped her bun to frame her face. They softened her features, making her looking both vulnerable and lovely.

“You said once that the strong don’t show up to be heroes. They show up because someone has to.”

“I did say that.”

“You showed up. Even after I pushed you away.”

Paul cupped her face, his thumb brushing the soft curve of her cheek. “I’m not here because I have to be, Birdy. I’m here because I want to be. I want to be with you.”

Birdy sucked in a trembling breath. Her shoulders relaxed. A few more tendrils of her hair fell from the loosening hold of her bun.

In that moment, Paul felt like he had all the time in the world. Closing hours in City Hall could come and go. Birdy Chou had just granted him forever.

“Love isn’t protecting someone from challenges,” he said. “It’s standing beside them in the fight.”

She leaned her forehead against his, breath warm and mingling with his. That closeness, the tender brush of skin, the way her eyes fluttered shut, it stole every last thought from Paul’s head exceptkiss her.

“I’m a really good fighter,” Birdy whispered.