Echoes of You: Chapter 30
Echoes of You (The Lost & Found Series Book 2)
Maddie handed me a travel mug, a hint of anxiety playing across her features. âAre they sure itâs a good idea for you to train again?â
I wrapped my arm around her and ghosted my lips across her temple. âLawson is keeping an eye on things. And weâre double-checking any gear we use.â
There had been no progress on finding out who had tampered with the SAR gear. Holt had changed the locks on the storage shed where things were kept and installed a camera to prevent any further issues, but it was still unsettling to think someone wanted to mess with us this way.
Maddie rolled her lip between her teeth. âDid he talk to Dan?â
I tried to keep the grimace from my face at the name.
Maddie pulled back. âWhatâs that look for?â
âWe have to tread carefully when it comes to Dan because he filed a report against me with the mayorâs office.â
Her jaw dropped. âYou have got to be kidding me.â
I ran a hand up and down her back. âI doubt heâll see the complaint through, but we need to be cautious.â
âI canât believe the mayorâs office would even take that seriously.â
âThey donât have a choice.â
Maddieâs mouth pressed into a hard line. âThatâs just another reason why Lawson needs to question him. He obviously wants to hurt you.â
I shook my head. âBut heâs also lazy. I have a hard time imagining Dan getting his act together enough to break into a storage shed and so carefully damage equipment. Youâd have to research just how to cut the ropes so people wouldnât notice at first, too. I heard he lost his job at the hardware store because he couldnât be bothered to even show up half the time.â
Maddieâs thumb swept back and forth across my stomach. The touch was so casual, as if sheâd been doing it for years. âI guess I canât really see that either.â Her ministrations paused. âWhat about Adam?â
I pulled back a fraction. âSeems like a stretch that heâd do something that could hurt anyone and not just target me.â
Her fingers twisted in my T-shirt. âYou might have a point, but he doesnât care who he hurts as long as he gets his way.â
A weight settled in my gut. âIâm sure Law will check him out, too. But heâs also talking to everyone else who didnât make the team, and the family and friends of anyone we failed to rescue.â
Her face paled. âThatâs awful.â
âGrief can twist people in weird ways.â
âI guess youâre right. Just promise me youâll be careful.â
I brushed my lips across Maddieâs. The temptation to deepen the kiss was so strong.
A playful growl sounded, forcing us apart.
âYouâre a bit of a cockblock.â I glared at the dog, who looked a lot better this morning.
Maddie smacked my chest and then dropped to a crouch. âHe is not. Heâs a total love.â The dog crossed right to her and nuzzled into her side.
It was then that I saw he had something in his mouth. âHey! Those are my damn gym shorts.â
I made to reach for them, and the dog darted away, letting loose another playful growl. I dashed forward, but he dodged me, almost sending me sprawling.
Maddie laughed. âYou know if you chase them, they just think itâs a game.â
I turned my glare in her direction. âFine, oh wise dog trainer. How are you going to get my freaking shorts before he puts a hole in the crotch?â
Maddie grinned and grabbed a stuffed beaver from the counter. She squeaked it twice and the dogâs head cocked to the side. He dropped my shorts and went loping toward Maddie.
She crouched, giving him the toy and lots of praise.
âIâll be damned,â I muttered.
Maddie scratched under his chin. âHe needs a name.â
âHow about woman stealer?â
She shook her head but grinned as she did. âI think he kind of looks like a Clyde.â
âIt fits. Heâs stealing my woman and my shorts. Pretty sure Iâm missing a shoe, too.â
Maddieâs brows pulled together in confusion.
âBonnie and Clyde? The epic robbing duo? He can be the Clyde half of that pair.â
Maddie laughed, the sound warming parts of me I hadnât even realized were cold. She turned back to the dog, rubbing his sides. âClyde, it is.â She leaned closer and dropped her voice to a stage whisper. âJust go for Nashâs shoes, not mine.â
âRude,â I huffed.
Maddie pushed to her feet. âI need to get going or Iâll be late. You sure your momâs okay with watching him today? I just donât want to leave him alone yet.â
âShe canât wait to meet her new granddogâher words, not mine.â
Maddie grinned. âYouâll win her over in no time, Clyde.â
The dog let out a happy bark.
I closed the distance between me and Maddie and brushed the hair back from her face. âYouâll call me if you see Adam at all?â
Maddieâs hand fisted in my tee. âI will, but Iâm hoping he gets the message and takes off. He wonât be able to stay long because he always has work commitments.â
I hoped she was right, but Iâd seen a determination in her ex-fiancéâs face that I hadnât liked.
Holt grinned at me as I crossed the parking lot at the ranger station on the outskirts of town. It wasnât a normal smile. This one made him look like the Joker.
âWhatâs wrong with your face?â
Holtâs grin only widened. âIâm happy. Is there something wrong with that?â
I studied him carefully. âYou look like a rabid clown.â
He slapped me on the back. âI canât be overjoyed that my brother finally got his shit together and made a move on the woman heâs always loved?â
I let out a low growl. I shouldâve known Lawson couldnât keep his trap shut. âLaw is a gossip whoâs going to get shanked one of these days.â
Holt barked out a laugh. âWhat would you do without your interfering siblings?â
âLive a peaceful, relaxing life.â
Holt only laughed harder. âIâm happy for you, man. Truly.â
âHappy about what?â Caden asked, walking up.
I sent Holt a look that told him to bite his tongue upon penalty of death.
Of course, he didnât heed that warning. âJust reveling in the news that Nash finally pulled his head out of his ass. It mightâve taken him over two decades, but he got the girl in the end.â
Cadenâs eyes widened. âNo shit?â
I shuffled my feet, needing some sort of movement. I was getting twitchy. âWhy are you two suddenly so interested in my dating life?â
âOh, I donât know. Maybe because weâve had to watch you pretend not to be in love with Maddie for two decades,â Lawson answered helpfully as he strode up.
Grae bounded behind him, her gaze seesawing between the two of us. âYou and Maddie finally got together?â
I glared at Lawson. âYou have a big mouth.â
He gave me his best innocent smile. âWas this supposed to be a secret or something?â
Grae scowled at me. âYouâd better not be keeping Maddie a secret.â
âIâm not keeping anyone a secret. But I also donât think I need to put an announcement in the town paper.â
Caden chuckled. âOh, you wonât need that. Gigi will take care of that for you in no time.â
Graeâs scowl turned a few shades colder as she glanced in Cadenâs direction. âWhatâs doing here?â
âCome on. I know you missed me, Gigi. You donât have to pretend.â
I swore Caden used that childhood nickname just to piss my sister off more.
âI missed you like Iâd miss a bad case of hemorrhoids,â she shot back.
Lawson choked on a laugh. âDidnât you hear, G? Caden moved back and is requalifying for SAR.â
Graeâs face paled, and something niggled at me. This wasnât the kind of reaction you had to a surrogate older brother who annoyed you. This was something more. My gaze narrowed on my sisterâs face. But as quickly as the panic had appeared in her expression, it was gone.
She straightened her spine and turned to Holt. âJust do me a favor and donât pair me with that moron. Iâd prefer not to get dead because he tries to pull some Superman stunt.â
Cadenâs jaw hardened, a muscle along it fluttering like crazy. But he didnât say a word.
Holt looked between the two of them. âIs this going to be an issue?â
Grae launched into all the reasons she and Caden shouldnât be on the same team, but I was distracted by a figure hovering just on the outskirts of our group. I turned to face Roan. Something about the image of him on the outside made an ache take root in my chest.
It wasnât because we didnât invite him in. It was because he seemed more comfortable there. But every now and then, I got the feeling that maybe a piece of him longed to be a part of things.
I gave him a chin lift. âHey.â
Roan simply nodded.
I waited, wondering if anything else would follow.
His hands clenched at his sides as if he were struggling for words. âYou and Maddie. Itâs good. Iâm glad for you.â
It was possibly the most my brother had said to me in months, but I fought to keep the shock from my face. âThanks. How are things with you?â
He looked at me as if Iâd asked the question in a foreign language. âGood. Busy.â
Because Roan threw himself into his job with Fish and Wildlife. And when he wasnât on the clock, he was tracking the animals near his cabin way in the middle of nowhere.
I knew I shouldnât push my luck, but I did it anyway. âYou should come over to Maddieâs for dinner.â
Roan swallowed. âMaybe.â
That was a but I just nodded. âYou just let me know if you get a free night.â
He nodded, but then his gaze hardened at something in the distance. âIsnât thatâ¦?â
I turned, and everything in me stilled. Ice slid through my veins, so cold it left behind third-degree burns. The man across the street stared straight at me, a deadness in his eyes. Iâd have recognized him anywhere. Jimmy Byrne. Maddieâs father.