Letter #11 Chaos, I missed Coltâs Thanksgiving play yesterday. He was the Pilgrim with the line that invited the Native Americans to the feast. He practiced his lines for weeks. Talked about it constantly.
And I missed it.
Maisie wasnât strong enough to come home after her first session of chemo. Her cell counts dropped, and they wouldnât let us leave Denver until they rose to safe levels. It happens, at least thatâs what Iâve been told by one of the other moms here. Her name is Annie, and sheâs been a godsend these last two weeks. Her little boy is here, and I guess you could say sheâs taken me under her wing. The learning curve is unforgivably steep.
Weâve been in Denver for almost two weeks now. Itâs the best Childrenâs Hospital in Colorado, and itâs where her oncologist is based, but I found out a few days after we got here that itâs also not in our insurance network. How funny that I never thought about things like that before.
Why canât I keep my thoughts straight? Even my letters are scattered now, but so is my brain.
So yeah, two weeks, and I missed Coltâs play. Ada went and taped it for me, but itâs not the same. He put on such a brave face when we FaceTimed right after, but I know I let him down. I swore when they were born Iâd never let them down, and now no matter what I do, one of them suffers for it.
How is that fair? I see the parents here who take shifts between the mom and dad, or the parents with only one child, and I feel this pang of horrid, selfish longing for what they haveâthe ability to balance.
I know, in the scheme of things, missing the play isnât a big deal. Itâs the first of many, right? Thereâs loads coming for him that I can be there for, and Maisie needs me right now. But I canât help but feel like itâs the first drop in the bucket, and Iâm so scared itâs going to eventually fill. I missed his first play when I swore Iâd never miss anything, and as the doctors are presenting me with treatment plans, I can see how much sheâll miss. How much he will.
Because I didnât just miss the first play, Maisie did, too. And instead of being on stage, she was in a hospital bed. The docs tell me her counts are on the rise, and theyâre hopeful we can go home tomorrow.
God, I hope theyâre right.
I hope you guys are getting some semblance of turkey over there, or at least a little downtime. Rest when you can.
~ Ella â¦
I rubbed Havocâs head as I turned the truck through the Solitude gate, then drove along the curved road toward my cabin, passing Ellaâs. Her SUV was gone, which meant they must have left for Denver as planned. Sheâd been here this morning when Iâd gone for a training session at my new job, and Iâd had a flash of worry that something had changed their plans.
Not that sheâd tell me.
Not that I even deserved to know.
Sheâd killed me last night, asking those questions, calling me a stranger. Iâd nearly broken right there, but our circumstances hadnât changed, and if being only Beckett let me close enough to help, then Iâd bury Chaos next to Ryan. God knew that was mostly the case already. I hadnât been far off when Iâd implied that heâd died on that mission, too.
I didnât want to lie to Ellaâeven by omissionâbut if she knew who I really was, sheâd kick me out of her life. Knowing would only lead her to asking questions I couldnât answer, and even if I did, the truth would exile me just as quickly as her discovery of the lie Iâd been living. As long as she didnât find out, and I kept my feelings in check, Iâd be the only one burdened by the ugly truth.
Once Maisie was healed, and Ella didnât need me anymore, Iâd tell her.
I made the turn into my long driveway and then hit the brakes hard enough to bring Havoc to attention.
There was a strange Jeep parked in front of my cabin.
Who the hell could it be? I crept forward slowly, until a familiar figure walked around the side of the Jeep. Tall, broad-shouldered, with dark eyes, hair, and skin; I knew him at first glance.
Captain Donahue.
What could he possibly want?
âItâs okay, girl,â I told Havoc. âJust Donahue.â I parked the truck and got out, Havoc jumping down after me.
âLoose Dog!â I called out the warning as she bounded toward him, knowing full well she wouldnât attack him.
âHa, very funny,â he said, dropping down to her level.
She came to a halt directly in front of him and sat on her back haunches as I walked up to him.
âWhat are you doing here, Donahue?â
âNice shirt,â he said, nodding at my new Telluride Mountain Rescue shirt.
âWhat are you doing here?â I repeated.
He sighed and stood up. âAlways one for words, arenât you?â He opened the Jeep door and leaned in, coming back out with a red Kong. âI brought you a present,â he told Havoc. Her ears perked up as he showed it to her, but she didnât budge when he threw it into the woods. âSeek!â he called, but she still looked at him like heâd lost his mind. âWhat? You love those things.â
I stood at her side and crossed my arms over my chest.
âSheâs really still that stubborn?â he asked, lifting his sunglasses to the top of his head.
âYep.â
She didnât even look at me, just kept her eyes trained on him.
âFine. I was hoping with some time off, we wouldnât have to retire herâ¦or you.â He shook his head in exasperation.
âSeek.â
With one word, Havoc sprung toward the woods to find her new toy. A smile spread across my face as Donahue rolled his eyes.
âYeah, yeah. Point proven. Sheâs yours and always has been. Itâs good to see you.â
âDitto, but you havenât answered my question. Why are you here?â
âCan we sit?â
I took him to the small patio behind the cabin where a full set of furniture sat in the shade of the three p.m. sun.
âYouâre about forty-five days out,â he said as we sat in the red Adirondack chairs.
âYep,â I said, launching the Kong toward the lake. Havoc was overjoyed to run for it. Sheâd been put through her paces today in seeking work, keeping her skills honed for finding people, and she was tired but happy.
âIâm here to ask you to reconsider.â He leaned forward a little.
âNope.â
âGentry.â He sighed, rubbing the area between his eyebrows. âWeâre a team.â
âNot anymore.â My voice dropped.
He looked across the lake to the small island. âHave you been out to see him yet?â
My silence answered.
âThere was nothing you could have done for him,â he told me for the hundredth time.
âYeah, well, thatâs where we see things differently.â
Havoc returned, and I pitched the toy again, the familiar motion comforting.
âDo you think this is what heâd really want? You to leave the team? Leave your family? You and Havoc are part of us.â
âIâm doing exactly what he asked.â I pulled the letter from my back pocket and handed it to him.
He read the letter and cursed as he returned it to the envelope. âI should have read the damn thing before I gave it to you.â
âThereâs no chance Iâm leaving. As much as I appreciate what youâre doing here, I canât go back. Iâm on terminal leave, and in forty-five days, Iâll be out.â Iâd be permanently separated from the only life I knew.
âWhat if there was another option?â
âUnless that option is Mac coming back from the dead, I donât care. I canât care. What I want doesnât matter anymore.â
âI get that. And I understand what youâre doing here. Hell, I admire you for it. Itâs the ultimate sacrifice, and I have nothing but respect for you. But I know thisâ¦situation wonât go on forever. I donât want you to turn around and regret this choice.â
I shot him a look that clearly said I wasnât going to, but he kept going.
âWhat if I told you that due to the nature of our unit, I have the ability to place you on a kind of temporary disabled list?â
âIâm sorry?â
Havoc brought the Kong back, but I saw the exhaustion in her eyes and motioned for her to lie down. Sheâd fetch that thing until she dropped unless I gave her the signal, so I gave it.
âItâs not what you think. Youâre notâ¦disabled. But it was the only way the higher-ups and I could think to give you an out, here.â
âAnd the fact that nothing is wrong with me?â
âI think we both know thatâs not true,â he said, looking back across at the island. âLook, in the last ten years, youâve never taken leave.â
âAnd?â
âAnd youâre exhausted. Mentally and physically exhausted. So on that basis, the paperworkâs been done. You just have to sign it.â
âIâm not coming back.â
âNot now. But this gives you a year to think it overâlonger if you need it. We can extend up to five. Pay, benefits, and easy reentry when youâre ready.â
âI already have a job.â I motioned to my shirt.
âNot one where you make the kind of difference that you do with us. Youâre family, Gentry, and youâll always be welcome. Signing those papers to accept doesnât promise youâll come back, it simply gives you the option, which youâre about to lose when your terminal leave ends. Or you sign the declination, and this offer dies immediately.â He stood and took a few steps forward, his eyes on the island. âHe really was one of the best, wasnât he?â
âHe was the best of us.â
Donahue turned and walked by me, pausing to put his hand on my shoulder. âThe papers are at the special ops center outside of Denver. I emailed you the info for the exact office about an hour ago.â
âWhat? Didnât want to leave them here?â
âI figured if I left them here, youâd burn them before you considered what Iâm trying to offer.â
I hated that he was right.
âItâs good to see you, Gentry. Rest up. Do what you can for Macâs family, and when youâre done with his mission, come home.â He handed me Ryanâs letter and left without another word.
There was a flicker in my soulâthe restlessness that had lain dormant for a couple of weeks coming back to life. The need to focus on one mission at a time and move on. His offer was temptation, and I couldnât afford it, not when Ella needed me.
I threw together a bag for me and one for Havoc after checking my email to find the address. Best part of my current job was being on call only, not scheduled, and that didnât officially start for another week anyway. If I left within the hour, I could be in Denver by ten or so, if the six hours it had taken me to get here was the usual time. In seven hours I could sign the declination and put an end to any thought of taking Donahue up on his offer. Besides, maybe the trip would cure that little bite of restlessness that had her teeth in me.
Twenty minutes later I walked into the main house, Havoc at my side.
âMr. Gentry!â Hailey said, perking up as I walked toward her. She batted her lashes and leaned forward. âWhat can I do for you?â
She was exactly the kind of girl Mac would have gone for. Funny, gregarious, pretty, and interested.
But I was only Ellaâsâeven if she didnât know it.
Be nice. Be civil. Use a softer tone. I repeated the reminders in my head, determined to make an effort with the people who mattered to Ella.
âIâm headed to Denver for a few days and just wanted to make sure you knew before I took off.â
âOh, of courseââ The phone rang, and she answered, holding up her finger at me. âSolitude, this is Hailey. Oh, hey, Ella. What?â
Now it was me leaning on the counter.
âWell, do you have to have it? Of course, I realize that. I just meant I could overnight itâ¦â
âWhat is it?â I asked.
âShe left Maisieâs big binder in the office,â she whispered, covering the receiver.
âHer medical one?â That was one thing Ella had at every appointment. It kept every record of her treatments, every written lab resultâ¦everything.
Hailey nodded. âI know, Ella, just let me see what I can doâ¦â
I snatched the phone out of Haileyâs hand. âIâll bring it to you. Have Hailey text me your room number at the hospital.â Before she could argue, I handed the phone back to Hailey. Turning toward the door, I saw Ada coming from the office with the binder in her outstretched hands.
âI heard. Sheâd just stopped in for a second this morning and left it behind.â
âIâll take care of it,â I told her.
âI know you will,â she said. âDo you want us to keep Havoc for you?â
My first impulse was a hearty âhell no.â But then Coltâs head popped out of the dining area.
âHavoc!â He raced forward and dropped to his knees to hug her, and she laid her head on his shoulder. âPlease? Can we? She can sleep in my bed and everything. Iâll throw her toy and feed her, I promise!â
âShe goes where I go,â I said to Ada.
âNot to the hospital. I know sheâs a working dog, but theyâll let only service dogs in.â Her eyes echoed her plea. âMr. Gentry, Ella wouldnât let me go with her. Or Larry. And I know aboutâ¦Ryanâs letter and all.â She glanced at Colt and back to me. âAnd I wouldnât want Havoc cooped up in a hotel if you were toâ¦say, stay for the duration of the surgery tomorrow.â
She was calling me out, no doubt. But she had no clue how badly I wanted to be there for Ella, or how hard it would be to leave Havoc.
A litany of swear words ran through my head, none of them adequate to express my conflicted feelings. Havoc would be safe here and cared for. It wasnât like we hadnât spent a weekend apart before. When we werenât deployed she was kenneled with all the other working dogs as per regulation, but sheâd been with me every deployment and every moment since Mac had died.
But Ada was right, and Ella was going to be alone.
I took a deep breath and dropped down to look Colt in the eyes. âYou have school tomorrow?â
He shook his head slowly. âTeacher day or something.â
âTeacher work day,â Ada corrected.
I nodded and rubbed my hand across his spiky hair growth. âOkay. Then you are in charge of her. Okay? Her bag is in the truck, and it has her food and favorite stuff.â The more I explained how to care for her, the brighter his eyes became, until the kid was pretty much a Care Bear for all the joy he was emanating.
Sheâd be in good hands.
I got her bag and took it back to Colt, then dropped to my knees in front of Havoc, took her face in my hands, and looked into her eyes. âStay with Colt. Be nice.â I added that little extra order so she knew I meant only stay and not protect. Teeth came out otherwise. But this was her choice, and if she showed any hesitation, she couldnât stayâsheâd have to leave with me. It was the very reason we were retiring together.
Her head swiveled to look at Colt, indicating she understood not only the command but who he was.
âIâll be back in a few days. Stay. With. Colt. Be. Nice.â
I let her head go, and she immediately trotted over to the boy.
âGood girl.â Equal parts of relief and worry hit me right in the gut.
âIt wouldnât be a good idea to separate them,â I warned Ada.
âWill she bite?â she whispered.
âNo. Not unless someone messes with him. If that happens, God help the person, because sheâll only release a bite at my command. You still sure you want to keep her?â
âAbsolutely.â She wiped her hands across her crisp, spotless apron.
âLetâs go, Havoc!â Colt said, racing out the side door of the house, her Kong in his little hands. She trotted with him, tail wagging.
Ada tilted her head. âItâs funnyâ¦â
âWhat?â
âShe looks like such a docile little thing. Youâd never guess sheâd be capable of ripping someone apart.â
âSheâs like any other woman in that regard, maâam.â
Five minutes later I was driving toward Ella and Maisie, finally able to do the one thing Iâd been sent here to do: help.