Letter #7 Chaos, Iâm sitting in the hallway of the Childrenâs Hospital of Colorado, with a notebook propped up on my knees. I would tell you what day it is, but I honestly canât remember. Itâs been a blur since they said cancer.
Maisie has cancer.
Maybe if I write it a few more times, it will feel real instead of this hazy nightmare that I canât seem to wake up from.
Maisie has cancer.
Yeah, still doesnât feel real.
Maisie. Has. Cancer.
For the first time since Jeff walked out, I feel like Iâm not enough. Twins at nineteen? It wasnât easy, and yet it was as natural as breathing. He left. They were born. I became a mother, and it changed me in the very foundation of my soul. Colt and Maisie became my reason for everything, and even when I was overwhelmed, I knew that I could be enough for them if I gave them everything I had. So I did, and I was. I ignored the whispers, the suggestions that I give them up and go to college, everything, because I knew that there was no better place for my kids than with me.
I might have a few issues, but I always knew that I was enough.
But this? I donât know how to be enough for this.
Itâs like the doctors are speaking a foreign language, throwing around letters and numbers like Iâm supposed to understand. Labs and scans and treatment possibilities and the decisions. God, the decisions I have to make.
Iâve never felt more alone in my life.
Maisie has cancer.
And I donât know if Iâm enough to get her through it, and she has to get through it. I canât imagine a world where my daughter isnât here. How can I be everything sheâs going to need and give Colt any sense of normalcy?
And Coltâ¦when the genetics came back, they told me Colt and I had to be tested for the gene mutation. Heâs okay, thank God. We both are, and neither of us carry it. But those moments waiting to hear if losing them both was a possibility? I could barely breathe at the thought.
But I have to be enough, right? I donât have a choice. Itâs like the moment I saw those two heartbeats on the monitor. There was no option to fail. And thereâs no way Iâm going to fail now, either.
Maisie has cancer, and Iâm all she has.
So I guess itâs down the rabbit hole I go.
~ Ella â¦
I stepped onto the dock that reached into the small lake just behind my cabin, testing my weight. Yeah, this thing was going to need to be rebuilt. No wonder theyâd kept the gate locked.
The sun stretched just overhead, cutting through the brisk morning. Iâd been in Colorado for almost two weeks, and Iâd learned the key to the weather here was layers, because it might be snowing in the morning, but it was almost seventy by dinner. Mother Nature had some serious mood swings around here.
A light fog rolled off the lake, lingering around the shores of the small island that rested about a hundred yards away in the center of the lake. I knew eventually Iâd have to use the little rowboat that was tied up at the end of the dock and row myself over.
Mac was buried there.
It had nearly killed me when I wasnât allowed leave to come back and bury him, and yet there was an overwhelming relief that I wouldnât have to face Ella, to see her expression when she realized what Iâd doneâwhy I was alive and her brother wasnât.
Havoc bounded over and shook the water from her coat and dropped the Kong at my feet, ready to take off into the water for the twentieth time or so. She was restless lying around all day these last couple of weeks, and I was, too.
I dropped down to my haunches, rubbing her behind her ears in her favorite spot. âOkay, girl. What do you say we get you dried off and go find a job? Because Iâm going to go stir crazy if we stay here much longer like a pair of dead weights. And honestly, Iâm kind of expecting you to start talking back at any moment, so some human contact might be needed.â
âItâs okay that you talk to your dog,â a small voice came from behind me. âIt doesnât make you crazy or anything.â His tone suggested otherwise.
I looked over my shoulder and saw a boy standing on the other side of the gate, dressed in jeans and a Broncos tee. His hair was shorn to the scalp, or rather, had been, and was growing back in a slight sheen of blond fuzz. His full eyebrows were drawn together over crystal-blue eyes, as he gave me a thorough once-over.
Ellaâs eyes.
This was Colt. I knew it in the very marrow of my bones.
I did my best to soften my tone, well aware that I didnât know the first thing about talking to kids. I assumed not scaring him was a good place to start. âI always talk to Havoc.â
She wagged her tail as if in answer.
âSheâs a dog.â His words were at odds with the yearning in his voice and the way his eyes locked onto Havoc like she was the best thing heâd ever seen.
I stood to face him, and he straightened his spine and stared me down. Kid didnât scare easily, which meant I had half a chance here.
âItâs not when you talk to them that you have to worry about insanity,â I told him. âItâs when they start answering you back.â
His lips puckered for a second, and he stepped forward, peeking over the half gate to look at Havoc. âSo are you crazy?â
âAre you?â
âNo. But you have one of our cabins for six months. No one does that. Except crazy people.â His expression flickered back and forth between judging me and coveting Havoc.
Heâd begged Ella for a dog, and sheâd nearly relentedâthen Maisieâs diagnosis came down. But I wasnât supposed to know that. Wasnât supposed to know that he wanted to play football, but Ella was too worried about concussions and pushed him toward soccer. I shouldnât have known that he was supposed to take snowboarding lessons this year, or that heâd shaved off all that hair on his birthday because his sister had lost hers.
I wasnât supposed to know him, but I did.
And it was hell to not be able to tell him that.
âActually, I rented it for seven months. And you look a little short to be judging people.â I crossed my arms.
He mirrored my pose without hesitation. âThat makes you even crazier. And I donât let crazy people around my mama or my sister.â
âAah, youâre the man of the house.â
âIâm not a man. Iâm six, but Iâll be seven soon.â
âI see.â I bit back a smile, well aware that he wouldnât be seven for another eight months. But time was all relative at that age. âWell, Iâm not crazy. At least she doesnât think Iâm crazy.â I nodded toward Havoc.
âHow do you know? Because you said if she talks to you, that means youâre nuts.â He stepped forward, resting his hands at the top of the gate, which came to about his collarbone. I needed to sand it down so he didnât get splinters.
Man, did he have some lovestruck eyes for Havoc.
âDo you want to see her?â
He startled, his gaze flying to mine at the same time he stepped back. âIâm not supposed to talk to strangers, especially guests.â
âWhich I totally respect. However, that didnât stop you from coming out here.â I glanced behind him, seeing the blue, kid-sized quad that was parked haphazardly behind my cabin. At least there was a helmet resting on the seat.
I had a feeling that wouldnât save him from Ella.
âNo oneâs ever stayed this long, and never with a dog. Not unless they work here, or theyâre family. I justâ¦â He gave a melodramatic sigh, and his head hung.
âYou wanted to see Havoc.â
He nodded without looking up.
âDo you know what she is?â I walked forward slowly, like he was a wild animal that Iâd spook if I moved too fast. Once I reached the gate, I unlatched the metal closure, letting it swing open.
âAda says sheâs a job dog. But not like a special needs dog. Thereâs a girl in my class who has one of those. Heâs cool, but we canât touch him.â His eyes slowly rose, his conflict so open and expressed in those eyes that my heart flopped over in my chest.
âIf you back up a little, Iâll bring her to see you.â
He swallowed and glanced from Havoc to me, and then nodded his head like heâd made his choice. Then he walked backward, giving us enough room to get off the dock and onto solid ground.
âSheâs a working dog. Sheâs a soldier.â
He quirked an eyebrow at me and then skeptically looked at Havoc. âI thought those had pointy ears.â
My smile slipped free. âSome do. But sheâs a Lab. Sheâs trained to sniff out people andâ¦other things. Plus, she plays a mean game of fetch.â
He stepped forward, sheer longing in his eyes, but he looked at me before getting too close. âCan I pet her?â
âI appreciate you asking. And yes, you may.â I gave Havoc a little nod, and she padded forward, tongue lolling out.
He dropped to his knees like she was something sacred and began to pet her neck. âHiya, girl. Do you like the lake? Itâs my favorite. What kind of name is Havoc?â
And boom. I was done for. The kid could have asked me to deliver him the moon and I would have found a way. He was so like Ella in expression, and like Ryan in the way he held himself. That confidence was going to serve him well as a man.
âNow look whoâs crazy, talking to dogs.â I clucked my tongue.
He glared at me over Havocâs back. âSheâs not talking back.â
âSure she is.â I dropped down next to him. âSee how her tail wags? Thatâs a sure sign she likes what youâre doing. And the way her head is leaning into where youâre scratching? Sheâs telling you thatâs where she wants you to scratch. Dogs talk all the time, you just have to speak their language.â
He smiled, and my heart did the flop thing again. It was like pure sunshine, a shot of unadulterated joy that I hadnât had sinceâ¦I couldnât even remember when.
âYou speak her language?â
âSure do. Iâm what they call her handler, but really, sheâs mine.â
âYou handle her?â He didnât bother looking up at me, clearly having way too much fun checking out Havoc.
âWell, I used to. Weâre both retiring, though.â
âSo youâre a soldier?â
âYeah. Well, I used to be.â I ran my hand down Havocâs back out of habit.
âAnd what are you now?â
Such an innocent question with an impossibly heavy answer. Iâd been a soldier for ten years. It had been my way out of foster care hell. Iâd been the best soldier possible because failure wasnât an option, not if it meant going back to the life Iâd come from. I promised myself Iâd never give them a reason to kick me out, and for ten years, Iâd eaten and slept the Army, the unit. Iâd earned my place.
âI donât really know,â I answered truthfully.
âYou should figure that out.â The kid threw me some serious side-eye. âGrown-ups are supposed to know those kinds of things.â
A chuckle rumbled through my chest. âYeah, Iâll get to work on that.â
âMy uncle was a soldier.â
My stomach hit the floor. What was the line here? How much were you supposed to tell a kid who wasnât yours? What would Ella want him to know?
Luckily, I didnât have to ponder long, because her SUV came tearing down the dirt drive next to my cabin. She threw on the brakes, and a dirt cloud puffed up around the tires. My heart lurched with anticipation. What the hell was I? Fifteen?
âCrap. She found me.â
âHey,â I said softly.
He met my gaze, his nose and mouth all scrunched.
âDonât swear.â
âCrapâs not a bad word,â he mumbled.
âClose enough. Thereâs always a better word to use, and I have a feeling your mom makes sure youâre educated enough to find them. Make her proud.â
His expression straightened, and he nodded solemnly.
âBesides, from the look on her face, youâre already in trouble,â I whispered.
âColton Ryan MacKenzie!â Ella shouted as she strode toward us. âWhat on Godâs green earth do you think youâre doing out here?â
I stood, and Havoc immediately backed to my side.
âYeah,â Colt agreed, standing on the other side of Havoc. âMiddle name means I get grounded,â he finished in a whisper.
Ella walked the rest of the path to the dock, fury emanating from her in waves. But on top of that fury was an ice-cold fear. I felt it as surely as if sheâd brought a snowstorm with her. Her blond hair was loosely woven into a side braid that fell just over her vest, and those jeansâ¦
I snapped my gaze back to hers, which was currently boring a hole into Colt.
âWell? What do you have to say for yourself? Taking your quad? Not telling anyone? Sitting here with a stranger? You scared me half to death!â
God, she was beautiful angry, which was about the only emotion Iâd seen from her since Iâd gotten here. Every time Iâd bumped into her, sheâd simply quirked up an eyebrow at me and said, âMr. Gentry.â At least her anger was directed elsewhere at the moment.
âI have been background checked, security clearance and all,â I told her.
She shot me a glance that snapped my mouth shut and made me almost glad Iâd never had a real mom. That look was the stuff of horror movies.
Coltâs eyes went impossibly wide, and he puckered his mouth to the side.
âColt,â Ella warned, crossing her arms.
âHe has a dog,â Colt said.
âAnd that gives you the right to not only intrude on a guestâs space but put yourself in danger? When I expressly told you not to bother Mr. Gentry?â
Ouch. Guess that explained why it had taken two weeks to meet Colt.
âHe didnât mind. He told me that sheâs a job dog and she used to be a soldier. Just like him. You know, like Uncle Ryan.â
Ellaâs face fell, a veil of sadness clouding her eyes. In that moment, I saw the weariness sheâd written to me about. Sometimes it feels like the world is caving in, and Iâm the only one in the center, my arms outstretched trying to brace it. And Iâm just so tired, Chaos. I canât help but wonder how long I can hold it before weâre all crushed under the weight. Letter number seventeen. I saw the woman whoâd written the letters, who had captured me with nothing more than her words.
My fingers flexed with the need to pull her to me, to wrap my arms around her and tell her that Iâd brace the world for as long as she needed. That was the entire reason I was here, to do whatever I could to ease her.
But I couldnât say that, because while she may have let Chaos do that for her, may even have accepted his love, she wouldnât let Beckett. And if she knew why I kept that secretâ¦well, sheâd probably bury me out there next to Ryan. God knew Iâd already wished that fate upon myself a hundred times.
âAnd Iâm sure he told you that he worked with Uncle Ryan?â Ella asked, her gaze flying to mine briefly with disapproval.
Ah, that was why sheâd put me on the no-visit list.
Coltâs mouth dropped open, and he looked at me like I had some kind of superhero cape. âYou did? You knew my uncle?â
âI did. He was the closest thing I had to a brother.â It was out before I could censor myself. âAnd no, I didnât tell him, because I didnât know if youâd want him to know,â I told Ella.
Her eyes slid shut for a second, and she sighed, so similar to Coltâs earlier motion, but not nearly as dramatic.
âIâm sorry for assuming,â she said softly. âAnd for his intrusion on your space. It wonât happen again.â That last part was aimed right at Colt.
He kicked slowly at the dirt beneath his feet.
âHe didnât bother me. In fact, it was an honor to meet you, Colt. If itâs okay with your mom, youâre always welcome to come visit Havoc. She really does love to play fetch, and Iâm not sure if you noticed, but Iâm getting kind of old to be throwing for her all the time.â
He rolled his eyes. âYouâre not old.â He cocked his head to the side. âBut until you know what you are, Iâm not sure youâre a grown-up, either.â
âColt!â Ella sputtered.
I laughed, and she looked at me like I had two heads.
âItâs okay,â I assured her. âI told him, since Iâm retiring, Iâm not really a soldier, and Iâm not sure what that makes me at the moment besides a permanent vacationer.â
âIâm still surprised youâre getting out. In my experience, special ops guys serve until they kick or carry you out.â
âWell, Iâm on terminal leave, so in forty-five days it will be official.â
Her guard dropped for a moment, her shoulders softening. She looked at me like it was the first time sheâd really seen me, and it was there again, the thickening of the air between us, the connection weâd shared since our first letters.
But I knew what it was, and she didnât.
âYouâre getting out becauseâ¦â Her head tilted, so much like Coltâs.
âYou know why.â
She stepped toward me unconsciously, her eyes scanning mine, searching for something that I was desperate to hand over but couldnât. âYou said you left because your best friend died. You got out for Ryan,â she concluded.
âFor you.â The moment it was out of my mouth I wanted to suck it back in, erase the last five seconds in a do-over. âBecause of what he asked,â I tried to clarify, but the damage was done.
She retreated, her shoulders tense. Those walls came back up, cramming miles of distance in the few feet that separated us.
âI think weâve bothered you enough today. Colt, say thank you to Mr. Gentry for not being a psycho kidnapper, and letâs go.â
âThank you for not being a psycho kidnapper,â he repeated.
âAnytime, bud. Like I said, if itâs okay with your mom, youâre welcome to come see Havoc again. She likes you.â And it would probably do a little good to get him out of the house every now and then.
Hope lit up his face like Christmas morning. âPlease, Mom? Please?â
âSeriously? Youâre already grounded from your quad for this stunt, and now youâd like privileges to come spend time with a stranger?â
His gaze flickered sorrowfully to his quad, then back to Ella. âHeâs not really a stranger, though. If Uncle Ryan was his brother, heâs kinda family.â
And there went my heart for the third flop.
Family was a word I didnât use and didnât have. Family meant commitment, people whom you depended onâwho could depend on you. Family was an utterly foreign concept, even with the unique brotherhood within our unit.
âWeâll talk about this later, Colt,â Ella said, rubbing the soft skin between her eyes.
âLater youâre leaving!â
Well, if that didnât abruptly change the mood.
âIâm not leaving until the day after tomorrow. Now, get in the car, Colt. Weâllââ
âOkay!â He gave Havoc another pat and then stomped off toward the truck.
âHe seems a lot older than six.â
âYeah. Until this year, the twins were only really ever around adults. A few kids here and there with guests, but theyâre both basically six going on sixteen. I probably shouldnât have sheltered them so much, butâ¦â She shrugged.
Iâm ridiculously overprotective of them, but I recognize it. Letter number one.
âThey definitely give their teacher a run for her money. Iâm sorry you had to see that.â She stared off at the island. âItâs been a rough few monthsâ¦losing Ryan, and everything with Maisieâ¦â
âHow are her treatments?â I asked, stepping my toe into waters I had no right to.
Her head snapped toward me. âYou know.â
âRyan.â Mac and I had talked about it at length, so it wasnât exactly a lie.
She shook her head in exasperation and started walking back to the truck.
âElla,â I called after her, quickly catching up. After almost two weeks of running six miles in the morning, I was finally adjusted to the altitude. Not that we hadnât been dropped into similar elevations in Afghanistan, but Iâd been at sea level for two months before getting out here.
âYou know what?â she fired back, spinning to face me.
âWhoa!â I gripped her shoulders to keep from smacking into her, then abruptly dropped my hands. That was twice Iâd touched her since Iâd been here, and the contact was too much and not enough.
âI hate that you know things about me. I hate that you probably knew Colt was my son, that you know about Maisieâs diagnosis. Youâre a stranger who is privy to intimate details about my life because of my brother, and thatâs not fair.â
âI canât change that. Iâm not sure I would even if I could, because thatâs the reason Iâm here.â
âThe reason youâre here is buried out on that island!â
In so many ways.
âWe can go round and round. But Iâm not leaving. So I will make you this offer. You can ask me any questions you wantââI held up my finger when she opened her mouth, knowing sheâd ask about Macâs death againââthat Iâm allowed to answer, and Iâll tell you anything I can about me. Youâre right. Itâs not fair that I know so much. Itâs incredibly creepy for me to know about your kids, your lifeâ¦you. But Mac loved you, and he talked about you all the time. You, them, this place was the home he so badly wanted to come back to, and when he talked about you, it was like he had this tiny moment of reprieve from the hell we were living. So, Iâm incredibly sorry that your privacy has been violated. You have no clue how sorry I am, but I canât go back in time and ask him not to overshare, and if I had that magical time button, Iâd use it for something far better, like saving his life. Because he should be here. Not me. But Iâm the one he sent, and Iâm staying.â I clenched my jaw. What was it about this woman that killed whatever semblance of a filter I had? Whether it was reading her letters, or staring into her eyes, she had a power over me that was worse than a bottle of tequila for loosening my tongue. She made me want to tell her everything, and that was dangerous to both of us.
âIf Ryan wanted so badly to be here, he could have gotten out when he was up for reenlistment. But he didnât. Because guys like Ryanâlike youâdonât stay home, donât put down roots, donât stay, period. I can accept that Iâm yourâ¦mission, or whatever, for the time being, but donât act like youâre not temporary.â
I fought every instinct in my body that screamed to declare differently, but I knew she wouldnât believe me, and Iâm not sure I would have, either. It was only a matter of time before she realized who I really was and what Iâd done. And my feelings for her wouldnât buffer that fallout. A nuclear shelter couldnât.
âIâm sorry,â she said quietly after a few moments of silence passed between us. âI canât imagine what youâve gone through, if you were really that close to Ryan. And you must have been to uproot your entire life to come here.â
âI thought I didnât have roots,â I teased.
A tiny smile ghosted across her face, but it was sad. âLike I said, Iâm sorry. But imagine if I showed up inâ¦wherever it was you guys were, and I knew everything about you, and you didnât know the first thing about me. Unsettling, right?â
A raw, grating pain scraped across me, because she did know everything about me. In a way. Iâd left out the physical details of my life while I basically pulled my soul out of my body and put it on paper for her. She might not have known what I was, but she knew who I was, more than anyone else on the planet. Iâd let her in and then shut myself out, and I missed her with a ferocity that was terrifying.
âYeah, I can see how that would be a ten on the weird scale.â
âThank you. And really, itâs an eleven.â She headed back up the path to her Tahoe, where Colt had the back hatch open and was waiting with his quad.
This apparently wasnât the first time heâd been grounded from it if he was that aware of the routine.
âI got it, Colt,â I told him. Then I lifted it into the back of the SUV, thankful there was a rubber lining in the back. When I turned around, Ella was staring at me, her mouth slightly agape. Well, staring at my arms. I made a mental note to get a gym membership. I liked that look.
âAnything else?â I asked, shutting the hatch.
She shook her head quickly. âNope. Nothing. Thanks forâ¦you knowâ¦â
âNot being a psycho kidnapper?â
âSomething like that.â A blush stole across her cheeks.
âI was serious about the background check. If you would feel more comfortableââ
âNo, of course not. I donât make a habit of background checking my guests, and Iâm not going to start now.â
âYou should,â I muttered. If I had been a psycho kidnapper, Colt would be dead. Actually, these woods were secluded enough that she could harbor a serial killer and never know.
She rolled her eyes at me and climbed up into the driverâs seat.
âHey, Mr. Gentry?â Colt called from the back seat.
Ella rolled down the window, and I leaned in to see him strapped into a tall, thin car seat that sat beside an empty one.
âWhatâs up?â
âIâve decided that, since youâre Uncle Ryanâs brother, that makes you family.â He said it with the seriousness of an adult.
âHave you?â My voice softened. The kid didnât know what he was offering, or how much it meant to me, because heâd always had a family. It was simply a given. âWell, thank you.â
I met Ellaâs eyes in the rearview mirror, and she let out a small sigh of defeat.
âAnd youâre not crazy,â he added. âSo I guess you can stay.â
I smiled so wide my cheeks hurt. This kid was amazing. âThank you for your approval, Colt.â
âYouâre welcome,â he said with a shrug.
I stepped back, and Ella closed her door, then leaned out her open window. âDonât forget that there are meals in the main house. Ada said that she hasnât seen you there, and she gets nosy.â
âNoted. I didnât want to bring Havoc in with Maisie there, too.â I wasnât an expert on kids with cancer, but I knew enough that she didnât need me bringing extra dander in.
âOh, thatâsâ¦really thoughtful of you. But youâre okay. After she went neutropenic the first timeâthatâs whenââ
âHer white cells drop to where sheâs susceptible to every infection known to man?â I finished.
âYeah. How did you know that?â
âI read about neuroblastoma. A lot.â
âFor Ryan?â
For you.
âYeah, something like that.â
She ripped her gaze away from mine, like she felt our connection, too. But where I embraced the intensity, she apparently did not. âRight. Well, after that, I moved the kids out of the residence wing and into a cabin that we could keepââ
âWrapped up like a bubble,â Colt called out from the back seat.
âPretty much,â Ella admitted with a shrug. âWeâre actually your neighbors. If you walk about two hundred yards that way, youâll find us.â
âThen I guess Iâll see you around.â
âThen I guess you will.â
They drove up the wide path next to my cabin. There must have been a small boat launch here or something to have a path like that cleared.
Havoc sat back on her haunches and cocked her head at me.
âI think that went better, donât you?â I asked. Her tail thumped in agreement. âYeah. Now letâs go find a job before Colt takes away our grown-up card.â
Three hours later I was officially the newest part-time member of Telluride Mountain Rescue. Scratch that. Havoc was. She was all the talent, anyway.