ten-year-old girl is missing. She was thrown from the vehicle. It’s…it’s a kid.”
Kids were the one demographic he never turned down. Even if he wasn’t on call, if it involved a child, he went in.
I leaned forward and kissed him softly. “Then you’d better go.”
“I’m so sorry.” His eyes raked down my body. “So. So. So sorry.”
“I know. I love you. Go save someone’s little girl.” I shooed him out the door with Havoc, and five minutes later, I stood fully dressed in my bedroom.
With an empty house.
The options were endless. I could read a book. I could watch something I’d DVR’d months ago. I could even take a bath. Sweet, blissful quiet.
Instead, I chose laundry.
“I’m going to start a nudist colony,” I muttered as I grabbed Maisie’s basket and headed down the steps.
My phone rang midway, and I did the basket-to-hip shuffle to get it answered. “Hello?”
“Mrs. Gentry?”
As lovely as that sounds— I shut that thought down.
“No, I’m Ms. MacKenzie, but I do know Beckett Gentry.” I made my way to the small laundry room and tossed the load in. If we ended up living here after Maisie was cured, then the first thing on my list was to ask Beckett to install a new, bigger washer and dryer.
Holy crap, I’d just made plans not only for Maisie to live but for Beckett to still be with me. Wasn’t I just the optimist today.
“Ms. MacKenzie?”
The optimist who had completely ignored the phone for her daydream.
“I’m here. I’m so sorry, what were you saying?” I poured soap in and hit start, then got the heck out of the laundry room so I could hear the woman.
“My name is Danielle Wilson. I’m with Tri-Prime.” Her tone was all business.
“Oh, the insurance company. Of course. I’m Maisie MacKenzie’s mom. How can I help you?” Man, those dishes needed to be done, too. What the heck had the kids concocted with Ada this afternoon?
“I’m calling in reference to the letter I sent to Sergeant First Class Gentry’s commanding officer. The same one copied to you as well.” She was certainly annoyed.
I thought of the small stack of insurance envelopes on my desk that detailed the paid claims. “I’m so sorry, I actually haven’t opened those in a couple of weeks. I’m usually way better about it.” But knowing we had a couple of months off treatments made me feel all reckless about not opening cancer-related mail. I felt like Ross in that episode of Friends, telling the mail that we were on a break.
Then what she said hit home.
“His commanding officer?”
“Yes. Captain Donahue? We sent him the letter last week as well, in way of notification.”
Beckett was out. He said he was on terminal leave when he got here in April, and it was already the first week of March. I didn’t know much about the army, but I didn’t think terminal leave lasted a year. Oh God, had he lied to me?
“I’d like to schedule a time to come out for a preliminary interview. Next week is available. Say noon on Monday?”
“I’m sorry, you want to come to Telluride?”
“That would be best, yes. Does Monday work, or would Tuesday be better for you?”
She wanted to come to Telluride in two days.
“Monday is fine, but can I ask what this is about? I’ve never had an insurance company visit before.”
What she said next stunned me to silence. It kept me motionless until the kids came home with Ada. Then quiet through dinner and baths. My mind went in ten thousand different directions as I got the kids to bed…and didn’t stop for hours.
It was after ten p.m. when Beckett walked through the door, using the key I’d given him seven months ago.
He was exhausted, with streaks of dirt running down his face. He stripped off his Search and Rescue jacket, hanging it on the rack by the door, and Havoc stopped by for a little rub before she headed toward her water dish.
“Why don’t I have a key to your place?” I asked.
“What?” He stopped abruptly when he saw me sitting at the dining room table amid the open insurance papers.
“I gave you a key to my place, and you sleep here most nights now. It just seems so symbolic, you know? I let you all the way in, and you keep everything locked up so damn tight. I only get to visit when you open the door.”
He sat in the chair around the corner from mine. “Ella? What’s going on?”
“You still have