Letter #20 Chaos, I feel like all I write to you about lately is Maisieâs diagnosis. Honestly, sometimes I feel like thatâs all I think about. Iâve become one of those people with a one-track mind, and everything revolves around her.
So letâs try to snap out of that for a few minutes. Christmas is coming. Itâs one of our busiest times of the year for guests, and as usual, weâre booked solid through the first week in January, which is great for business and referrals.
I moved the kids to the last cabin we had available and took it off the books. Itâs the best way to keep Maisie safe when her levels bottom out, and so far itâs working. And there I go again, back to the cancer.
We put up a tree in the cabin, and Hailey, my receptionist, moved in with us to help at night when I have to run out. Iâm beginning to think the kids like the privacy better, too. Colt even asked for a tree house out back for Christmas, but I told him heâd have to wait for my brother to get home. Iâm pretty handy, but a tree-house maker, I am not. It would probably bust apart before he stepped foot in it. Iâm also wondering if itâs a good idea to build him a tree house when weâll hopefully be back in the main house soon-ish. Soon. Whenever. Truth is, everything feels like soon lately.
How are you guys holding up with the holidays? Do you need anything? I had Maisie and Colt send you a few pictures. They were worried that you didnât have a Christmas tree, so they drew a few for you and helped me bake this weekend.
Itâs hard to believe itâs already December and that you guys are coming home soon. I canât wait to finally see the person Iâve been talking to all this time and show you around. Donât freak out, but itâs definitely what Iâm looking forward to most in the new year.
~ Ella â¦
Problem solving was a skill I was particularly proud of. There wasnât an issue I couldnât fix, a puzzle I couldnât piece together. I was good at making the impossible a reality. But this felt like beating my head against a brick wall just to see how it felt.
I flipped through the MIBG information for the hundredth time and cross-referenced what Iâd found on my phone. What I wouldnât give for my laptop.
It was ridiculous that Ellaâs insurance didnât cover the therapy, but mine would. Then again, if there was one thing the military got right, it was health insurance, which I still had since Iâd gotten sidetracked and hadnât signed Donahueâs declination papers yet.
âI wouldnât have left the tower,â Maisie said from her bed, sitting up and bouncing slightly on the mattress. Weâd been out of the ICU since this morning, right before Ella left for Telluride.
I glanced over at the movieâTangled. Rapunzel. Got it. âYou would if your mom was an evil witch.â
âBut sheâs not, so I would have stayed.â She tugged her cap down farther over her forehead.
âBut look at that big wide world. Are you saying you really donât want to see whatâs out there?â I set everything down on the table.
She shrugged, twisting her mouth to the side and scrunching her nose.
âThereâs a lot out there.â I pushed off the floor, rolling in the chair over to the side of Maisieâs bed.
âMaybe. Doesnât mean I get to see it.â
There was no whine in her voice, just simple, accepted fact. It dawned on me how young she was, how much of her life she remembered, and how much of it had already been spent fighting. This had been a hellish seven months for Ella, but it must have seemed an eternity to Maisie.
âYou will,â I told her.
She glanced my way a few times before finally turning her head and meeting my eyes.
âYou will,â I repeated. âNot just the whole school part, either. Thatâs just the beginning.â
âI canât even graduate kindergarten,â she whispered. âPlease donât tell Mom Iâm sad. Sheâs already sad enough.â
It was like talking to a mini-Ella, already concerned about everyone else but herself. Even their eyes were the same, except Maisie hadnât learned how to guard her thoughts yet.
âI have an idea,â I said.
Forty minutes, another hospital gown, and a quick run to the nursesâ station, and we were nearly ready.
âReady?â she called from the bathroom.
âAlmost,â I tried to say, my mouth holding the tape dispenser as I wrapped the string around the frayed edge of a strip of my undershirt.
I ran the string up to the top of the hat and then taped it. Arts and crafts were not my strong suit, but this would do. I knocked on the bathroom door, and it opened far enough for Maisie to stick a hand out.
âYour highness,â I said, handing her my creation. Thank you, God, for nurses and pediatric craft stations.
Maisie giggled and took it, shutting the door in my face. Man, sheâd bounced back so quickly. The antibiotics were still pumping through her IV line, and she was still hospital-bound, but it was night and day from the day of the soccer game.
I kicked myself for the hundredth time for not noticing while Iâd carried her to and from the car. There had been no fever then, no redness, nothing, but Iâd known she was off, that she was overtired.
âAre you ready?â she asked.
I checked my watch. They would be walking across their little stage any minute now. âI am if you are.â
âGive a speech,â she ordered with the door between us.
âYou know normally you wouldnât be in hiding, right?â
âYouâre not supposed to see me until you call my name.â
âThatâs for a wedding,â I told her, trying not to laugh. âThe bride and groom arenât supposed to see each other until they meet at the altar. Not this.â
The door opened, and I caught it so she could walk through, bringing her IV pole with her. She stepped around the door, and my smile flew so wide I thought it might split my face.
She wore a solid-colored hospital gown over her normal one, courtesy of the nursing staff, and on her head was my god-awful graduation cap. Those suckers were awkward to make. Her tassel, streaming from the side, was thick on the fringe, but Iâd been under a little pressure. Not my finest work, but it would do.
âPlease be seated,â I ordered, moving to stand at the far side of the room at the foot of her bed.
Head held high, she walked over and took a seat at the table.
Motion from the door drew my eye, but when I saw it was just the two nurses who had helped me hunt for supplies, I threw them a quick smile and turned back to my one-girl audience.
âSpeech,â she reminded me with a serious nod.
âRight.â I quickly grabbed the rolled-up paper that served as her makeshift diploma that Iâd scribbled on. âToday is the start of your journey.â What the hell was I supposed to say next? People werenât my strong suit, let alone kids.
She tilted her head, nearly losing the hat, and quickly righted it. âGo on.â
âOkay.â An idea popped into my head, and I ran with it. âIâve heard it said that the greatest adventure is what lies ahead. Well, I read it, but weâre going to use it.â
Maisie stifled a giggle and then nodded in all seriousness. âGo on.â
âAnd the story I read was about a fierce princess who wanted to fight for her kingdom. When all the men were called to war, she was told that as the princess, she had to stay behind and care for her people. She argued with the king that she could care for her people by fighting for them, but he ordered her to stay behindâto stay safe.â
âHe wanted her to stay in her tower,â she said, leaning forward.
âHey, at graduations, the graduates donât interact with the speakers,â I teased her.
She grinned but sat back in her chair and made the motion like she was zipping her lips.
âNow where was I? Ah, the princess. Right. So the princess, being as smart as she was, knew she was needed. So she dressed like a man and snuck into the army camp, riding out to battle with the men.â
Maisieâs eyes lit up, and her mouth dropped open slightly. âWhat happened?â
âWhat do you think? She ran into battle in full armor, swinging her giant sword, and she struck down the Nazâ¦uhâ¦dragon, slaying it in one mighty swipe and defending her kingdom. She was the leader her people needed, because she was brave enough to fight.â
Maisie nodded enthusiastically, and I almost forgot I was supposed to be giving a graduation speechâ¦for a six-year-old.
âRight. So, as you embark on this journey of your education, you must remember to be brave like the princess.â
âAnd tell all the kings theyâre wrong!â She jumped up.
Oh, this was not going the way Iâd intended.
âKind of. When youâreâ¦you know, big enough to swing a sword.â
She seemed to ponder this for a second and then nodded with all seriousness.
âSo,â I continued. âYou have to fight for what you know to be right. Stand up for the people who need your protection. Never let anyone tell you that youâre anything less than a warrior because youâre a girl. Because in my experience, girls are the strongest warriors. Maybe thatâs why all the boys try to keep them out of battle. Theyâre scared theyâll get shown up.â
âMakes sense,â Maisie agreed. âIs that it?â
âIt is. Speech over.â I tried to recall any graduation Iâd ever had and failed, because Iâd never had one. Iâd shipped out for basic the moment I finished my senior year, the day before graduation. But Iâd seen plenty in movies. I cleared my throat. âThe time has come for you to leave the childish, carefree days of kindergarten and embark on your journey in elementary school. When I call your name, please rise and accept your diploma.â
âBeckett, you know Iâm the only one here, right?â
I shushed her. âI havenât said your name yet, graduate.â
She gave me the same look Ella did when she was ready to call me on my crap, and I pressed my lips together to keep from laughing.
âMargaret Ruth MacKenzie.â
She stood, regal as that princess, and walked toward me with her head held high, bringing her IV pole with her. When she arrived in front of me, I crouched down to her eye level. âCongratulations on your graduation.â I handed her the diploma with one hand and shook her hand with the other.
âNow what?â she whispered.
âNow you flip your tassel to the other side.â
She did the mouth and nose scrunch thing again and moved her tassel to the opposite side.
âI now pronounce you graduated,â I said in the most official tone I could muster.
She grinned and laughed, pure joy radiating from her like sunshine. Then she launched herself into my arms as the nurses in the doorway began to clap.
I held her, careful not to squeeze too tight, but she didnât have that same issue, and hugged me to the point of near strangulation. Man, I loved this kid. Loved her strength, her tenacity, her kindness. She was one of a kind, and I hope she knew how precious she was, not just to her mom, but to the world.
As the clapping subsided, I glanced over to see no less than half a dozen nurses watching Maisieâs graduation. The girl was magneticâshe drew people to her everywhere she went, and I was no different.
âHow about a picture?â a nurse who looked to be about Ellaâs age asked.
âYes! Absolutely!â I handed my cell phone to her, and she snapped a few of Maisie and me. âThank you. Now just the graduate,â I said to Maisie, turning the camera on her as she struck a pose.
âIt was Aowyn,â the nurse said with a smile while the other nurses congratulated the graduate. âThe princess who slayed the Nazgul. It was Aowyn.â
Busted. âTolkien fan?â
âMovie fan. Kind of comes with the territory when you work in pediatrics.â
âThink she noticed?â
She shrugged. âIt was a good speech. Little girls need more warrior queens.â
âI like warrior queens,â Maisie said, coming to stand next to me. âIs it time for Moana?â As quickly as her joy came on, she sagged a little against me, and I felt the tiredness take over.
âThat sounds like a plan to me.â Putting my forearm under her, I stood, lifting her slight weight, and carried her back to bed, her IV in my other hand.
She scooted back, sitting upright, and took off her cap as the nurses left. âThank you,â she said, playing with the tassel.
âI know itâs not the sameââ
âItâs better.â She met me with a look that left no room for argument.
I sat on the edge of her bed, adjusting her IV pole so it was closer to her.
âItâs just the start, Maisie. You have so much ahead of you. The summers, the mountains, the sunrises. The choices youâll get to make when you decide which college you want to go to, the second you take off on a trip to backpack across Europe. Those are the moments when you find out who youâll be, and thatâs just a glimpse of whatâs waiting for you when youâre past this.â
âBut what if this is all there is?â she whispered.
âItâs not,â I promised.
Her face twisted, her lips pursing, and tears welled in her eyes. âAm I dying? Is that whatâs happening to me? Mom wonât tell me. Please tell me, Beckett.â
A vise gripped my heart, squeezing until I was sure it couldnât beat.
âMaisieâ¦â
âPlease. Am I going to die?â
I thought of the MIBG therapy she needed, the countless drugs, treatments, operations, transplants. Everything that was standing between her and a disease-free body.
âNot on my watch.â I didnât care what I had to do. Iâd find a way for her to get what she needed. I wasnât watching another kid die if I had the power to change her fate.
âOkay.â She relaxed against the raised bed and took my word like it was gospel. Then she grinned as she played with the strands of her tassel. âIâm glad youâre here.â
Before I lost my shit in front of her, I leaned forward, pressing my lips to her forehead in a quick kiss. When I pulled away, I forced a smile and blinked back the awkward wetness in my eyes.
âMe, too, Maisie. Me, too.â
â¦
âGentry, Iâm glad youâre here.â Mark Gutierrez met me as I parked the truck at the trailhead. He was in his early thirties, fit, with a full head of black hair and enough confidence to make him a good unit leader for our search and rescue operation, but he wasnât arrogant.
I was good with confidence, but arrogance was a deal breaker. Arrogance got men killedâ¦kids, too.
Havoc jumped to the ground behind me, already wearing her work vest. That had always signaled her that play time was over, and I was relieved that our time in Telluride hadnât changed that. Between the trips to Denver and the days Iâd spent in Montrose with Maisie, Iâd worried that sheâd fall out of rhythm. Iâd gone back to Montrose and brought Ella and Maisie home yesterday after being there for a week, and when the call came in this afternoon, Havoc had jumped right back into action.
âHey, Havoc,â Gutierrez said, moving toward her.
âNope. Sheâs in work mode.â I cut off his access. She was on alert and sensitive at the moment, and I really didnât need to file an accident report that heâd lost a finger.
âRight. Sorry, weâve never had a retired MWD.â
âNo problem. Bring me up to speed.â Havoc stayed close to my side as we moved closer to the group of men. Half were in the Telluride uniform and others in the San Miguel County. âWhy are we here if the county boys are, too?â
âTheyâve been looking for hours, and the missing hiker is a VIP up at one of the resorts, so we got called in to add some manpower.â
âGotcha.â The circle parted as Gutierrez and I joined in. Havoc was given a wide berth as she sat at my command.
The guy in the center, who was obviously in charge by the bullhorn hooked at his belt, shot us a glare as a greeting.
âAs I was saying for you latecomers, Mrs. Dupreveny went out with her hiking guide this morning with her two daughters, ages seven and twelve.â
Not a kid. Please donât be a kid. I refused to be responsible for the death of another child.
âWhen she fell, we believe breaking her leg, she sent the guide back with her daughters to call for help. Apparently they were surprised at the lack of service up on the Highline, so we can all assume the guide isnât a local.â
A snort of exasperation went through the group. I sighed in relief that it was an adult out there alone.
âGuide returned at noon and called the county. We deployed search and rescue shortly thereafter with no luck. Rain was definitely not our friend.â
I looked up at the sky. The clouds were still gray but no longer the water-heavy version known for the quick-tempered thunderstorms around here. We should be in the clear to work for a while.
âAs you can tell, the rain has ceased, and we need to find her. Quickly. Weâve got about four hours left of good sunlight. According to the guide, he left her about an hour in and marked the trail with her bandana, which is pink. We found the bandana, and itâs still there, but thereâs no Mrs. Dupreveny. Plan is to hike in as a group, then zone out search coordinates and get this woman back to her husband.â
A hand went up from one of the Telluride guys. Capshaw, if I remembered correctly. I really needed to spend more time with the other guys when I went in, not just training Havoc.
âCapshaw?â
At least I got that one right.
âWho is taking point on this?â
A mumble went through the group, and I saw it for what it was, two rival organizations working together, and hoped it wouldnât get in the way. Egos usually blew an op. I scanned the group, seeing another dog and handler on the opposite side in a county uniform. A yellow Lab who was changing his position from sitting to standing every minute or so. Restless.
Not my business.
âCounty is taking point. Telluride is here as support.â
Another mumble.
âIf you guys are done determining pecking order, can we get started?â I asked, impatience getting to me.
The guyâs eyes narrowed in my direction and then Havocâs. âYouâre the new guy, right? The soldier? And the dog?â
Heads swung in my direction. âThatâs us. Now if weâre done wasting daylight?â
He made the be-my-guest gesture toward the trailhead, and we took off. I tightened my small pack on my back and zipped the lightweight fleece across my chest. It was already cool and only going to get colder.
âDamn, gotta step on toes on day one?â Gutierrez asked, walking next to me.
âNo point talking when the mission is pretty clear.â
âPoint taken.â
We handed out radio frequencies as a group and hiked along the trail, crossing a bridge and earning a view of Telluride. It really was spectacular here, with the mountains rising on both sides of us, reaching toward the sky.
Ahead about twenty yards, the other dog sprinted through the meadow that ran alongside of us. Havoc stayed right by my side, her footsteps and breathing steady.
âSo I saw you downtown with Ella MacKenzie,â Gutierrez said, breaking the silence Iâd been enjoying.
âProbably.â I liked Mark well enough while we were on duty and occasionally made an effort with him on the conversation front, but Ella wasnât on my list of approved topics.
âSomething going on there?â he asked in a locker-room-talk kind of way.
âBe careful,â I warned.
âHey, I know Ella. Sheâs a good girlâwoman. I used to be friends with her brother. He died. You know that, right? About six months ago.â
My heart stuttered in a beat that had nothing to do with the altitude. âYeah, I know.â
âSheâs got kids, too. Good kids.â
âYep.â What was this guy getting at?
He sighed, curving the bill on his cap in a nervous tell. This guy would be easy pickings at a poker table.
âLook, Iâm not trying to be nosy.â
âSure you are. Question is: Why?â
He looked behind us, seeing what I already knew. There were about twenty feet between us and the nearest crew members. Enough distance to talk in private. âIâm just trying to look out for her.â
âGood to know.â There wasnât a soul on the planet who cared more about Ella than I did, and while it was almost cuteâhis concernâit was absolutely unnecessary.
âIâm serious. Sheâs got a shit-ton going on, and if there was a short end of the stick to be had, Ella was given it. Between losing her parents and Jeff walking outââ
âYou know Jeff?â My footsteps would have faltered if my body hadnât been on autopilot, used to pushing on when my mind went elsewhere.
âKnew Jeff,â he corrected. âI hung out with his older brother, Blake.â
âOne preppy name after another,â I muttered.
Gutierrez laughed. âThatâs so true. They both areâpreppy assholes, that is. Trust-fund babies who never had to struggle a day in their lives. Both had their fortunes handed to them, and now their jobs.â
A stab of pure hatred coursed through me like an acidic poison burning in my veins. Of course he had everything easy while Ella worked her ass off.
âSo you know where he is?â
âSure. Heâs working for his daddyâs company in Denver. Engaged to the daughter of a politician, if his Facebook is true.â
I stored the information away, feeding the plan that had been forming since Iâd promised Maisie that she wasnât going to die.
âAnyway, you and Ella serious?â He looked at me sideways, and I glanced at his hand. Nice wide gold band. Good. I wasnât in the mood to fight off some guy for Ella. Not when I couldnât trust myself not to beat the shit out of him.
âWeâre friends,â I said in that noncommittal way. âIâm just helping her out.â
He seemed to ponder that for a minute and then nodded. âGood. Thatâs good. She needs all the help she can get right now with her kids.â
âNo,â I corrected, my eyes scanning the forest line just in case we found our hiker. âShe doesnât need help; sheâs honestly got it handled all on her own. But I need to help her. I donât want her to have to handle it solo. Thereâs a difference.â
Gutierrez nodded again, like a bobblehead, but sincere. Maybe Iâd spent too much time around soldiers. Maybe civilians chatted about their feelings on hikes in the mountains. Maybe I was the odd one for being so closed off, not him for being so inquisitive.
âSorry, man. Itâs justâ¦itâs a small town, and youâre new. And after losing Ryan, I know sheâs hurting. I mean, they wouldnât even tell her what happened.â
Of course they didnât. Because when ops went wrong, when soldiers were knocked unconscious instead of killed, then hauled out by insurgents into the desert, stripped of their uniforms, bound, gagged, tortured, and shot in the back of their heads while wearing nothing but their boxers, the military tended to hide it from their families and call it classified.
No one wanted to think of that happening to their brother.
âI mean, they wouldnât even let her see his body. Thatâs got to mess with her. For all she knows, he could still be alive somewhere, and the military is covering it up to turn him into Jason Bourne or something. Itâs messed up.â
The muscles in my jaw flexed as I clenched my teeth to keep my mouth shut. This guy didnât know anything, not what happened to Ryan, not that he was my best friend. He was just trying to watch out for Ella, to make sure I had a good, clear picture of what sheâd been through. At least thatâs what I kept telling myself as we approached the search location.
The path was lined with aspens, which cut our field of vision to a minimum, but there it was, tied to the stumpâa pink bandana. We gathered in another circle as bullhorn guy took center stage.
It was time to go to work.
â¦
âThatâs quite a dog you have there,â Gutierrez told me about an hour later, when our hiker had been airlifted out and we were headed back down the trail.
âSheâs one of a kind,â I agreed.
He then let me walk the rest of the way in silence, for which I was grateful. It had taken me months to let Ryan in, and years to become his best friend. Ella was the only person Iâd ever had an instant connection with, and I smiled when I realized Maisie and Colt were on that list now, too.
We made it down to the trail base, and I opened the truck door for Havoc to jump in. She settled in the passenger seat, happy and a little tired.
âYou did great today,â Gutierrez said as he stripped off his own pack, loading it into the car parked next to mine.
âThanks. It felt good to be useful.â
âYeah, I get that.â He took off his hat and rubbed his head. âLook, about the stuff I said about Ellaââ
âDonât. Itâs okay.â My grip tightened on my doorframe.
âSmall town,â he said with a weak shrug.
It really was. Maybe not the village with the ski resorts, but the old town. Especially when the tourists werenât around and it was mostly locals. They were all connected here, and I might not understand it, but I could do my best to respect it.
âRyan hasnât been dead six months.â
Gutierrezâs head snapped up.
âHeâs been dead for five months and seven days, give or take a few hours. A few very long hours. I know, because he was my best friend. I served with him for the better part of a decade.â
âOh man, Iâm so sorry.â His whole posture slumped.
âDonât be. Never be sorry for looking out for Ella. I told you only so youâd know that thereâs nothing I wouldnât do to keep her safe, to take care of her and the kids. Nothing. Theyâre the whole reason Iâm here.â
He swallowed and finally looked at me, taking a deep breath. âOkay. Thank you for telling me. If you need anything, or if she does, just let me know, or ask for my wife, Tess. Ella wonât ever ask.â
âYeah, sheâs pretty stubborn like that.â
A ghost of a smile crossed his face. âSomething tells me you are, too.â
âGuilty.â
I drove home with a tired body, a content dog, and a mind that wouldnât quit running circles. Iâd meant what Iâd said: there wasnât anything I wouldnât do to keep Ella and the kids safe.
Or was there?
I hit the brakes as I passed Ellaâs cabin.
Her insurance wouldnât pay for the treatments that could save Maisieâs life.
But Iâd read over every scrap of information online about that hospital, and my insurance would.
I threw the truck into reverse and then turned down Ellaâs drive. I was out of the truck before the engine died, taking her steps two at a time and pounding on her door before my brain kicked in with every reason sheâd say no, knowing Iâd have to convince her to say yes.
âBeckett?â Ella asked as she opened the front door. She was in jeans and a long-sleeve tee, her hair in a thick side braid that made me want to grab ahold of it while I kissed her. âEverything okay?â
âYeah. Sorry for the drop-by. Do you have a second?â
âSure, come on in.â
âNot where the kids can hear,â I said softly, tucking my thumbs into my pockets.
Her eyebrows raised in surprise, but she stepped out onto the porch, shutting the door behind her. âOkay, whatâs up?â
âYour insurance wonât pay for the MIBG therapy, or the hospital she needs, or the stem cell transplant.â
âThatâs right.â She folded her arms under her breasts and looked up at me, those blue eyes inquisitive but trusting.
âShe has to have it, right? Or sheâll die?â
âBeckett, what is this about?â
âWill she die without it?â I repeated, my words a little sharper than Iâd ever used with Ella.
âYes,â she whispered.
I nodded to myself, turning around and pacing the length of the porch while Ella followed.
âBeckett!â she snapped.
I turned around and took a deep breath to steady my nerves. âYour insurance wonât pay for itââ
âRight, we already covered that.â
âBut mine will.â
âOkay?â She blinked at me, her forehead puckering.
âElla, marry me.â