A quick glance from Koda lets Kirsten know her plan has been discovered, but, with a shrug of her broad shoulders, the vet signals Asi and crosses the kitchen, opening the door as the large dog bolts outside, bellowing like a calf over his sudden, and welcome, freedom.
As she puts the pot on to simmer, Kirsten’s eyes are drawn to the scene outside the small kitchen window. Asi, sides heaving with exertion, trots back to Dakota, bringing back a ‘stick’ the size of a tree branch and dropping it at her feet. He then sits, his body shaking in canine ecstasy, eyes rolling, jaws quivering, and tail wagging so rapidly that the tall grass around him all but leaps out of the way.
Kirsten can’t help but smile, hearing the delightful sound of Koda’s laughter as she picks up the slimy stick and flings it far across the lawn, farther than Kirsten could ever throw, even on her best day. Asi bolts after it as if his tail’s aflame, barking joyfully all the while. The setting sun glints sparks of red from Koda’s glossy black hair in a way that Kirsten finds extremely appealing.
As if sensing the attention, Koda turns, and their eyes lock for a timeless moment. Which is, unfortunately, broken much too soon by an insistent German Shepard and his stick. Shaking her head ruefully, Kirsten turns back to her task, taking a wooden spoon from the drawer and stirring the soup as Asi’s yaps and barks soothe the air around her.
*
Koda looks up from her book as Kirsten rounds the couch and sets down a tray holding two steaming bowls and a loaf of French bread down on the coffee table. The fire is blazing cheerfully, chasing off the evening chill, and Asi jumps up from his place beside it, sniffing with great interest. His ears and tail soon droop, however, as he is banished to Kirsten’s bedroom with a pointed look from his Mistress.
Dakota lays aside the book she’s been reading just in time to receive the warm bowl that is thrust into her hands.
Ignoring the look she’s receiving, Kirsten digs into her soup with gusto, enjoying both the warmth and the hearty flavor. A moment later, and with a sigh, Koda does the same, grudgingly admitting, if only to herself, that this simple meal does indeed hit the spot.
They are both quickly done, sopping the last of the soup with the thick, crusty bread and laying their bowls down on the table. Asi has wormed his way back into the room and lies once again next to the fire, head on his massive paws, snoring away.
Kirsten and Koda sit in companionable silence, looking into the cheery flames as if messages can be divined there. After a moment, Kirsten speaks, “It’s so quiet, you know? I mean, yeah, we’re in the middle of God’s Country and all that, but even so, I keep expecting to hear car horns and televisions and telephones and things that we all took for granted. And now….” She slumps back into the couch’s warm comfort, still staring into the flames.
“Do you miss those things?” Koda asks softly.
“Sometimes,” Kirsten answers honestly. “Technology was a big part of who I was…who I am. Sometimes I wonder how I’ll cope without it. How we’ll all cope.”
“We’ll be fine.” Dakota’s voice is filled with a certainty that Kirsten envies. “Technology, or at least bits and pieces of it, will be around for a long time to come. I just think we’ll come to rely on it a good deal less than we once did.”
“Considering the fact that technology did all this, I suppose that won’t really be a bad thing.”
The two exchange smiles.
Kirsten yawns, then blushes. “Sorry.”
“Don’t be. It’s been a long day. And an even longer one tomorrow.”
“Don’t remind me,” Kirsten groans.
Laughing softly, Koda rises from the couch and holds out a hand. Kirsten grasps it willingly and allows herself to be pulled gently to her feet. She looks toward the dirty dishes.
“Leave ‘em. I’ll take care of washing tonight. I need to go back to the clinic and check on Mama Wolf and her pup anyway.”
“But—.”
“Go to sleep.”
With a small sigh, Kirsten gives in, nodding. “Goodnight, then.”
Koda smiles. “Goodnight.”
Their eyes meet again, and this time, there is no hesitation. Both step forward. Kirsten’s chin raises and Koda’s lowers and their lips meet softly, gently. The kiss lingers, then deepens, and Kirsten can’t help the soft moan that sounds as Koda’s tongue brushes tenderly against her lips before withdrawing.
Both are breathing heavily as they part. They stand there with shining eyes and goofy grins on their faces. Reaching up, Koda trails the back of her knuckles against Kirsten’s soft cheek, then steps back, her expression one of quiet joy. “Goodnight, Kirsten.”
With that, Koda gathers up the bowls, sets them on the tray, turns, and heads for the kitchen, leaving Kirsten to, once again, stare after her, fingers to her lips and a look of absolute wonder on her face.
CHAPTER TWENTY FOUR
THE MOTORCYCLE COMES to a purring halt just outside of a well maintained house set well back in the woods. The windows facing the gravel driveway are opened to their fullest and the warm breeze causes the homely checked curtains to rustle pleasantly. Jeans-clad legs come down to rest easily on either side of the bike, balancing it comfortably as the engine is turned off.
A male voice, elderly but still strong, floats out from the house. “I suppose I should warn you that at this very moment there are seven weapons of various gauges pointed directly at you, and wired to all go off at once. If you’re an android, that might not kill you, but I believe it would make your job just a bit harder. And if you’re a human….”
Long, strong hands reach up and remove the black helmet, causing equally black hair to come cascading down in shining waves. “Nice welcome you’ve got there, Judge,” the sultry voice intones. “You have it in needlepoint hanging over your mantelpiece too?”
A moment of shocked silence. Then, “Is it time to get my prescription changed, or is that really Dakota Rivers darkening my doorstep?”
Koda laughs as she hooks her helmet over the motorcycle’s handlebar. “I dunno. Which answer won’t get me ventilated?”
“Ahh,” comes the dry reply. “Your wit, like a poor vintage, goes to vinegar with age, Ms. Rivers.”
“So do your manners, you old curmudgeon,” Dakota mutters, not-quite under her breath.
“I heard that!”
“You were meant to.”
A moment later, “Well? Don’t just stand there propping up that two-wheeled death machine! I haven’t seen a human face in a goodly number of weeks. Yours will, I suppose, be suitable enough.”
“That’s what I like about you, Judge,” Dakota replies, swinging her leg over the cycle and leaning it down on its kickstand. “You’re all charm.”
“Thank you,” comes the prim reply. “I do try.”
Striding down the neatly tended walk, Dakota grasps the doorknob and twists. The door opens easily, and she steps inside, eyeing the impressive armory of shotguns and rifles, all pointing toward the windows. “You weren’t kidding,” she remarks, whistling softly.
“Have you ever known me to kid?”
Without bothering to reply, Koda moves her gaze from the weapons in a casual sweep around the house. It’s the same as she remembered it; the domain of a single, proud man, a lifelong bachelor with only two passions in life: the law—evidenced by the rows and rows of leather-bound tomes that take up residence on the huge floor-to-ceiling bookshelves covering three of the four walls, and birds—or, more accurately, the watching, cataloguing, and photographing of them. Evidence of this passion can be seen on the remaining wall. Beautiful framed photos fill the huge space over the stone fireplace’s mantle.
Drawn to them, as always, her eyes scan the photos, appreciating their beauty, when she notices one sitting on the corner of the mantelpiece itself, and she finds herself smiling. It is a picture she knows well, especially since she is one of the main subjects of it.