“Oh?”
“I guess I thought you went out and tromped around, followed the dog, drank cowboy coffee and ate trail mix.”
“That’s not far off.”
“Yeah, it is. You’ve got one purpose out there, just like the dog. Find what’s lost, and find them as quickly as possible. You follow the dog, sure, but you handle the dog, and yourself while playing detective and psychologist and tracker.”
“Hmm.”
“All while being a team player—not just with the dog, but with the rest of the unit, the other searchers, the cops or whoever’s in authority. And when you find them, you’re paramedic, priest, best friend, mom and commander.”
“We wear many hats. Want to try some on?”
He shook his head. “You’ve already got my dog. He could do this. I get that now. Thank Christ,” he added when he saw the lodge through the trees. “I want a hot shower, a hot meal, a couple vats of coffee. Does that come with the package?”
“It will here.”
Chaos came first. Relief, tears, hugs, even as actual paramedics took over. Somebody slapped his back and shoved hot coffee into his hands. Nothing had ever tasted better.
“Good work.” Chuck tossed him a doughnut every bit as good as the coffee. “Helluva job. There’s a room for you inside if you want a hot shower.”
“Only as much as I want my next breath.”
“With you there. Ugly night, huh? But a damn good morning.”
He glanced over, as Chuck did, toward Ella and Kevin as the medics loaded Ella’s stretcher into an ambulance. “How’s she doing?”
“Knee’s banged up good, and she’ll need a few stitches. But they’re both better than they ought to be. They’ll fix her up. I guarantee this is a vacation they won’t forget.”
“Me either.”
“Nothing like a find,” Chuck said, and did another quick fist pump. “Well, go get that shower. Jill made up her spaghetti and meatballs, and you haven’t lived till you’ve eaten her meatballs. We’ll debrief over lunch.”
When he went inside, some motherly woman hugged him before pressing a room key in his hand. He turned toward the stairs, ran into Lori, got caught in another hug. Before he could get to the second floor, he had his hand shaken twice, his back slapped again. A little dazed, he found the room, closed himself inside.
Quiet, he thought. Silence—or nearly since the noise from downstairs and the corridors was nicely muffled by the door.
Solitude.
He dumped his pack in a chair, dug out the spare socks, boxers, shirt Fiona had instructed him to bring, the travel toothbrush she’d supplied.
On the way to the bathroom he glanced out the window. People continued to mill around. The dogs, obviously too juiced up from the game, trotted after humans or one another.
He didn’t find Fiona. He’d lost sight of her minutes after they’d gotten back to base.
He stripped, turned the shower on full and hot. And the instant the spray hit him every cell in his body wept with gratitude.
He might not be an urbanite, Simon thought as he just braced his palms on the tile and let the hot water pound over him, but Mother of God, he worshipped indoor plumbing.
He heard the tap-tap on the bathroom door and would’ve snarled if Fiona’s voice hadn’t followed it. “It’s me. Want company or do you want to ride solo?”
“Will the company be naked?”
His lips curved as he heard her laugh.
There was solitude, he thought, and solitude. And when she opened the shower door, tall, slim, naked, he decided he much preferred her kind.
“Come on in. The water’s fine.”
“Oh God.” As he had, she closed her eyes and wallowed. “It’s not fine. It’s bliss.”
“Where’d you go?”
“Oh. I needed to feed and water Bogart, touch base with the sergeant, set up the debriefing. We’re doing it over food, glorious food.”
“I heard. I haven’t lived till I eat the meatballs.”
“Solid truth.” She dunked her head, tipped it back so the water rained on her hair. Then just stood with her eyes closed and a hmm of pleasure in her throat.
“I called Syl, told her we’d pick up the boys on our way back.”
“You’ve been busy.”
“Things that must be done.”
“I’ve got another one.” He turned her to face him.
“Everyone celebrates in their own way.”
She sighed her way into the kiss. “I like yours.”
Twenty-Two
He couldn’t argue about the meatballs. As he ate, Simon realized the meal reminded him of one of his family’s dinners back home. A lot of noise, interruptions, that situational shorthand again and a stunning amount of food.
But then, he supposed families came in all shapes, sizes and dynamics.
He suspected his pecking order was “the boyfriend”—annoying but predictable—who was still being measured and weighed, but welcomed warmly enough.
He couldn’t argue about the charged, happy mood, not when it infected him, too. Watching Kevin hobble toward them after all those hours, all those miles, had struck hard and struck deep.
More than satisfaction, Simon decided, it had been like a revival, like a shot of a really good drug that settled into a sense of pride.
Both Mai and Fiona took notes, and there was talk of documentation, logs, mission reports.
He noticed, in the playback, Fiona deleted her panic attack.
“Anything you want to add, Simon?”
He glanced over at James. “I think Fiona covered it. I was just along for the ride.”
“Maybe, but you pulled your weight. He did okay, for a rookie,” Fiona added. “He’s got endurance, a good sense of direction. He can read a map and a compass, and has a good eye. Some training? He could be ready when Jaws is.”
“You’re in if you want a shot,” Chuck told him.
Simon stabbed a meatball. “Use the dog.”
“We’d bring you in at the top pay scale.”
Amused, Simon studied Meg as he wound pasta around his fork. “That’s goose egg, right?”
“Every time.”
“Tempting.”
“Think about it,” Mai suggested. “Maybe you could bring Jaws to one of our unit practices sometime. See how it goes.”
The mood mellowed out on the trip back, with the dogs dozing in the boat. Lori and James did the same, their heads tipped together, while Mai and Tyson huddled in the stern, fingers linked.
They’d drifted from unit to couples, Simon thought, sending a sidelong glance at Fiona, who sat beside him, reading over her notes. And it looked like he was one of them.
Once they reached Orcas, there were more hugs. He’d never seen people so addicted to squeezing one another.
He took the wheel for the drive home.
“We got dinner out—sort of,” Fiona said. “I ate so much pasta I may not eat for days. Plus, as date nights go, it was unique.”
“You’re never boring, Fiona.”
“Well, thank you.”
“Too much going on, in your life, in your head, to be boring.”
She smiled, flipped open her phone when it signaled. “Fiona Bristow. Yeah, Tod. That’s good. I’m really glad to hear it. We all are. You don’t have to, we got ours when Kevin and Ella got home safe. Yes, absolutely. You take care.”
She closed the phone. “Five stitches and a knee brace for Ella. They hydrated both of them, treated the blisters, the scrapes. Short version, they’re both going to be fine, and shortly on their way back to the lodge. They wanted to thank you.”
“Me?”
“You were part of the team who found them. How does it feel?”
He said nothing for a moment. “Pretty damn good.”
“Yeah. It really does.”
“You have to buy all your own equipment. The radios, tents, blankets, first aid, the whole shot.” Not that he was thinking about joining up. “I saw you note down what we used. You have to replace it on your own nickel.”
“That’s part of it. The radio was a gift, and boy did we need it. The parents of a kid we found bought it for us. Some want to pay us, but that’s a dicey area. But if they want to pick up some blankets or supplies, we don’t say no.”