Letter #1 Ella, Youâre right, your brother outright ate those cookies. But in his defense, I waited too long to open your letter. I figure if we actually do this, we should be honest, right?
So one, Iâm not good with people. I could give you a bunch of excuses, but really, Iâm just not good with them. Chalk it up to saying the wrong thing, being blunt, or just not seeing the need for mindless chatter or any other number of things. Needless to say, Iâve never written letters toâ¦anyone, now that I think about it.
Second, I like that you write in pen. It means you donât go back and censor yourself. You donât overthink, just write what you mean. I bet youâre like that in person, tooâsaying what you think.
I donât know what to tell you about me that wouldnât get blacked out by censors, so how about this: Iâm twenty-eight as of about five minutes ago, and other than my friends here, I have zero connections to the world around me. Most of the time Iâm good with that, but tonight Iâm wondering what itâs like to be you. To have so much responsibility, and so many people depending on you. If I could ask you one question, that would be it: Whatâs it like to be the center of someoneâs universe?
V/R, Chaos â¦
I read the letter for the third time since it came this morning, my fingers running over the choppy handwriting comprised of all capital letters. When Ryan had said there was someone in his unit he was hoping Iâd take on as a pen pal, I thought heâd lost his mind.
The guys he served with were usually about as open as a locked gun safe. Our father had been the same way. Honestly, Iâd figured when weeks had passed without a reply, the guy had snubbed my offer. Part of me had been relievedâit wasnât like I didnât have enough on my plate. But there was something to be said for the possibilities of a blank piece of paper. To be able to empty my thoughts to someone I would never meet was oddly freeing.
Given his letter, I wondered if he felt the same.
How could someone make it to twenty-eight without havingâ¦someone, anyone in any capacity? Ry had said the guy was tight-lipped and had a heart as approachable as a brick wall, but Chaos just seemedâ¦lonely.
âMama, Iâm bored.â Maisie said from next to me, kicking her feet under the chair.
âWell, you know what?â I asked in a singsong voice, tucking the letter away inside my purse.
âOnly boring people are bored?â she replied, blinking up at me with the biggest blue eyes in the world. She tilted her head and screwed up her nose, making wrinkles at the top. âMaybe they wouldnât be so boring if they had stuff to do.â
I shook my head, but smiled, and offered her my iPad.
âBe careful with it, okay?â We couldnât afford to replace it, not with three of the guest cabins getting new roofs this week. Iâd already sold off twenty-five acres at the back of the property line to finance the repairs that had been long coming and mortgaged the property to the hilt to finance the expansion.
Maisie nodded, her blond ponytail bobbing as she swiped the iPad open to find her favorite apps. How the heck a five-year-old navigated the thing better than I did was a mystery. Colt was a wiz on the thing, too, just not quite as tech savvy as Maisie. Mostly because he was too busy climbing whatever he wasnât supposed to be.
My gaze darted up to the clock. Four p.m. The doc was already a half hour late for the appointment heâd asked me for. I knew Ada didnât mind watching Colt, but I hated having to ask her. She was in her sixties and, while still spry, Colt was anything but easy to keep up with. She called him âlightning in a bottle,â and she wasnât far off.
Maisie absentmindedly rubbed the spot on her hip sheâd been complaining about. The complaint had gone from a twinge, to an ache, to the ever-present hurt that never quite left her.
Just before I was about to lose my temper and head for the receptionist, the doc knocked before coming in.
âHey, Ella. How are you feeling, Margaret?â Doctor Franklin asked with a kind smile and a clipboard.
âMaisie,â she corrected him with serious eyes.
âOf course,â he agreed with a nod, shooting me a slight smile. No doubt I was still five years old in his eyes, considering Dr. Franklin had been my pediatrician, too. His hair had more gray, and there was an extra twenty pounds around his middle, but he was still the same as he was when my grandmother brought me to this office. Nothing much changed in our little town of Telluride. Sure, ski season came, the tourists flooding our streets with their Land Rovers, but the tide always receded, leaving behind the locals to resume life as usual.
âHowâs the pain today?â he asked, coming down to her level.
She shrugged and focused on the iPad.
I tugged it free of her little hands and arched an eyebrow at her disapproving face.
She sighed, the sound way older than a five-year-oldâs, but turned back to Dr. Franklin. âIt always hurts. It hasnât not hurt in forever.â
He looked over at me for clarification.
âItâs been at least six weeks.â
He nodded, then frowned as he stood, flipping the papers on the board.
âWhat?â Frustration twisted my stomach, but I bit my tongue. It wasnât going to do Maisie any good for me to lose my temper.
âThe bone scan results are clean.â He leaned against the exam table and rubbed his hand over the back of his neck.
My shoulders sagged. It was the third test theyâd run on Maisie and still nothing.
âClean is good, right?â she asked.
I forced a smile for her benefit and handed the iPad back to her. âHoney, why donât you play for a sec while I sneak a word with Dr. Franklin in the hallway?â
She nodded, eagerly getting back to whatever game sheâd been in the middle of.
I met Dr. Franklin in the hall, leaving the door open just a smidge so I could keep an ear on Maisie.
âElla, I donât know what to tell you.â He folded his arms across his chest. âWeâve run X-rays, the scan, and if I thought sheâd lie still long enough for an MRI, we could try that. But in all honesty, weâre not seeing anything physically wrong with her.â
The sympathetic look he gave me grated on my last nerve.
âSheâs not making this up. Whatever pain sheâs in is very real, and something is causing it.â
âIâm not saying the pain isnât real. Iâve seen her often enough to know that something is up. Has anything changed at home? Any new stressors? I know it canât be easy on you running that place by yourself with two little kids to take care of, especially at your age.â
My chin rose a good inch, just like it did any time someone brought up my kids and my age in the same sentence.
âThe brain is a very powerfulââ
âAre you suggesting that this is psychosomatic?â I snapped. âBecause sheâs having trouble walking now. Nothing has changed in our house. Itâs the same as it has been since I brought them home from this very hospital, and sheâs not under any undue stress in kindergarten, I assure you. This is not in her head; itâs in her hip.â
âElla, thereâs nothing there,â he said softly. âWeâve looked for breaks, ligament tears, everything. It might be a really bad case of growing pains.â
âThat is not growing pains! Thereâs something youâre missing. I looked on the internetââ
âThat was your first mistake.â He sighed. âLooking on the internet will convince you that a cold is meningitis and a leg pain is a giant blood clot ready to dislodge and kill you.â
My eyes widened.
âItâs not a blood clot, Ella. We did an ultrasound. Thereâs nothing there. We canât fix a problem that we donât see.â
Maisie wasnât making it up. It wasnât in her head. It wasnât some symptom of being born to a young mom or not having a dad in the picture. She was in pain, and I couldnât help her.
I was completely and utterly powerless.
âThen I guess Iâll take her home.â
â¦
I savored the walk from the county road back to the main house. Getting the mail this time of year was always my own little way of sneaking out, and I enjoyed it even more now that I had Chaosâs letters to look forward to. I was expecting number six any day now. The late October air was brisk, but we were still a good month away from the slopes opening. Then my small moments of serenity would be swallowed by the torrent of bookings.
Thank God, because we really needed the business. Not that I didnât enjoy the slower pace of fall after the summer hikers went home, but it was our winters that kept Solitude in the black. And with our new, painful mortgage payments, the income was necessary.
But for now, this was perfect. The aspens had turned gold and were beginning to lose their leaves, which currently covered the tree-lined drive from the road to the house. It wasnât far, only a hundred yards or so, but it was just enough distance to give visitors that feeling of seclusion they were looking for.
Our main house held a few guest rooms, the professional kitchen, dining room, and game rooms, plus a separate, small residential wing where I lived with the kids. It always teemed with life when someone wanted company. But Solitude got her name, and her reputation, from the fifteen secluded cabins that dotted our two hundred acres. If someone wanted the convenience of luxury accommodations and proximity to civilization, while still getting away from it all, we were the perfect spot.
Now if only I could afford the advertising to get the cabins booked. You could build it all day long; people only came if they knew you existed.
âElla, you busy?â Larry asked from the front porch. His eyes danced under bushy gray eyebrows that seemed to curl in every direction.
âNope. Whatâs up?â I fidgeted with the mail as I walked up the steps, pausing on a board that might need to be replaced. The thing about rebranding yourself as a luxury resort was that people expected perfection.
âThereâs something waiting for you on the table.â
âWaiting?â I ignored his grinâthe man was never going to be a poker playerâand headed inside.
I kicked off my boots and slid them under one of the benches in the foyer. The newly refinished hardwood was warm under my feet as I crossed in front of the receptionistâs desk.
âGood walk?â Hailey looked up from her phone and smiled.
âJust got the mail, nothing special.â I gripped the stack of letters in my hand, prolonging the torture for a few more moments. Besides, that top envelope was a bill from Dr. Franklin, which I wasnât in a hurry to open.
It had been almost a month since Iâd taken Maisie to see him, and there was still no diagnosis for her worsening pain. This was just another bill to remind me that Iâd dropped us to the lowest insurance premiums possible to get us through this year.
âUh-huh. Youâre not looking for a letter, are you?â Her brown eyes were wide with mock innocence.
âI shouldnât have told you about him.â She was never going to let me hear the end of it, but I honestly didnât mind. Those letters were the one thing I had just for me. The one place where I could be open and honest without judgment or expectation.
âHey, itâs better than you living vicariously through my love life.â
âYour love life gives me whiplash. Besides, weâre just writing. Thereâs nothing romantic. Ryan needed a favor. Thatâs all.â
âRyan. When is he coming home again?â She sighed that dreamy sigh most of the local girls let out whenever my brother was mentioned.
âShould be a little after Christmas, and seriously, you were what? Twelve when he left to join up?â
Hailey was only two years younger than me, but I felt infinitely older. Maybe Iâd aged ten years per kid, or running Solitude had prematurely shoved me into middle age, but whatever it was, there was a lifetime between us.
âStop dawdling!â Larry urged, nearly jumping up and down.
âWhatâs the big deal?â
âElla, get in here!â Ada called from the dining room.
âBoth of you are after me now?â I shook my head at Larry but followed him into the dining room.
âTa-da!â Ada said, waving her arms in a flourish toward the dark farmhouse-style table.
I followed her motions, finding the magazine Iâd been waiting for sitting there, its bright-blue cover standing out against the wood.
âWhen did it get here?â My voice dropped.
âThis morning,â Ada answered.
âButâ¦â I held up the stack of mail.
âOh, I just left all that in there. I wasnât going to deprive you of your favorite time of day.â
A few quiet, tense moments passed while I stared at the magazine. Mountain Vacations: Coloradoâs Best of 2019. Winter edition.
âItâs not going to bite,â Ada said, scooting the magazine toward me.
âNo, but it could make or break us.â
âRead it, Ella. Lord knows I already did,â she said, pushing her glasses back up her nose.
I snatched the magazine off the table, dropping the pile of mail in its place, and thumbed through it.
âPage eighty-nine,â Ada urged.
My heart pounded, and my fingers seemed to stick on every page, but I made it to page eighty-nine.
âNumber eight, Solitude, Telluride, Colorado!â My hands shook as I took in the glossy photographs of my property. I knew theyâd sent someone to review us but hadnât known when.
âWeâve never been in the top twenty, and you just landed in the top ten!â Ada pulled me into a hug, her larger frame dwarfing mine. âYour grandmother would be so very proud. All the renovations youâve done, everything youâve sacrificed. Heck, Iâm proud of you, Ella.â She pulled back, thumbing the tears from her eyes. âWell, donât just stand there blubbering, read!â
âSheâs not the one blubbering, woman,â Larry said, coming around to hug his wife. These two were just as much Solitude as I was. Theyâd been with my grandmother since sheâd opened, and I knew theyâd stay with me as long as they could.
ââSolitude is a hidden gem. Nestled in the San Juan Mountains, the unique resort boasts not only a family feel in the main house, but over a dozen newly refurbished luxury cabins for those unwilling to trade privacy for proximity to the slopes. Only a ten-minute drive to some of the best skiing Colorado has to offer, Solitude offers you just thatâa haven from the tourist-heavy Mountain Village. This B&B feels more like a resort and is perfect for those seeking the best of both worlds: impeccable service and the feeling of being alone in the mountains. It is the pure Colorado experience.ââ
They loved us! We were a top ten Colorado B&B! I clutched the magazine to my chest and let joy wash through me. Moments like this didnât come every day, or even every decade, it seemed, and this one was mine.
âThe pure Colorado experience is what exists when the tourists go home,â Larry muttered but grinned.
The phone rang, and I heard Hailey answering it in the background.
âI bet the reservations are about to book solid!â Ada sang as Larry danced her around the perimeter of the table.
With a review like that, it was a sure bet. We were going to be slammed, and soon. Weâd be able to pay the mortgage and the construction loan for the planned cabins on the south side.
âElla, the schoolâs on the phone,â Hailey called out.
I dropped the magazine with the other mail and headed for the phone.
âThis is Ella MacKenzie,â I said, prepping to hear whatever Colt had done to aggravate his teacher.
âMrs. MacKenzie, good. This is Nurse Roman at the elementary school.â There was more than a tone of worry in her voice, so I didnât bother to correct her on my marital status.
âEverything okay?â
âIâm afraid that Maisie is here. She collapsed on the playground, and her temperature is at 104.5.â
Collapsed. Temperature. A deep, nauseating feeling that could only be described as foreboding gripped my belly. Dr. Franklin had missed something.
âIâll be right there.â