Rotors spun above me in a familiar rhythm as the ground fell away. Havoc sat next to me, her ears back. She could handle helicopter rides, but she still wasnât a fan. I snapped my helmet and turned on the radio.
âOkay, weâre in. Whatâs the emergency?â Weâd been outside, running a few drills, when the call came in. I heard Wasatch trail, and that was it, and I wasnât familiar enough with every hiking trail in the county to remember which one that was.
Iâd grabbed my gear, thrown in Havocâs rappelling harness, and taken off at a dead run while they ran the helo up for launch.
âTheyâve got a kid off the grid,â Jenkins, the resident medic said through the comms.
âLost?â A chill ran down my spine. Where were the kids today? Ella had signed that permission slip, and I hadnât asked.
âYep. Thatâs all we know. Report came in about ten minutes ago, said kid went missing.â
I nodded and looked out the open doors as we passed over Bridal Veil Falls and headed up the pass. Absentmindedly, I stroked Havocâs head as we crept up the mountain.
âI think we can put down right there,â the pilot said, and I looked over to see where he was indicating.
The small clearing intersected with the trail, which looked wide and well-traveled.
âOnce weâre on the ground, you two do your thing,â Chief Nelson ordered from the bench next to Jenkins. âCounty is involved, but they know youâre coming, since their dog canât ever find shit.â
âGot it.â
A kid. My blood started pumping furiously through my veins, just like it did before every mission Iâd ever taken part in. This was that same adrenaline but a hell of a lot more scary.
âHow much time went by before the kid was reported missing?â
âThey donât know. Witness is in shock. If the kid slipped off the trail, itâs pretty densely wooded after the cliff.â
Holy shit.
âThe kid could have fallen off a cliff?â I scanned the terrain, but we were too close to landing to get the full picture.
âSounds like it. Wouldnât surprise me if this turns into a recovery effort.â
My jaw locked. Not on my watch. I wasnât losing a kid to a freaking hike in Colorado.
âWeâll wait here. Let us know what you need,â the pilot called out as we unhooked and ditched our helmets.
I gave him the thumbs-up when he looked over his shoulder, then took hold of Havocâs leash, giving her the hand signal that it was time to go. She stayed at my side as I jumped the few feet to the ground and headed toward the team from County.
âThe site is about a quarter mile up this trail,â their chief said from the center of the circle. âTeachers and some of the students are still there, so be sensitive.â
Teachers. Students.
I didnât wait for the rest of the brief, just broke into a dead run up the trail, Havoc perfectly paced with me. It was rocky and even on the path, but the drop-off to the south was anything but friendly. That was rough and rugged, but not too dramatic. Until the face became sheer. This was the cliff.
Shit, there was no way a kid was living through that kind of fall.
I increased my pace, nearly sprinting up the rest of the trail, passing a few uniforms from the sheriffâs department until I rounded the corner.
Then I stopped so fast I skidded a little on the rocks.
Mrs. Rivera stood, shaking her head as she talked to a uniform. She was trembling, tears streaming down her face.
âMrs. Rivera?â I called out, making myself move forward.
âMr. Gentry, oh God.â She covered her mouth.
âWhere are my kids?â I tried to keep my voice level, but it came out as a strangled bellow.
She glanced over her shoulder, and I bypassed her, looking for the small group of students who sat against the mountain, their lunch bags still out, all startlingly quiet. My eyes raked over the fifty or so of them untilâ
âBeckett!â Maisie cried, her little body emerging from the crowd. She ran full throttle at me, and I caught her, hugging her tight. She sobbed into my neck, her frame shaking with each cry.
One down. I gulped a breath and let myself feel her heart beat as my hand steadied her back. She was okay. She was here.
âItâs okay, Maisie-girl. Iâve got you,â I said as I looked past her, still scanning the group.
Where the hell was Colt?
I looked again, and my blood ran cold. âMaisie.â I dropped down to my knees so she could stand, and then I peeled her off my neck. âWhere is Colt?â
âI donât know, and they wonât tell us anything until the grown-ups get here.â Tears raced down her cheeks. âThereâs another group over there.â She pointed up the trail about forty feet at another assembly of students.
âOkay.â I debated sitting her down with the class for all of two seconds. Screw that. If we already had one kid over the edge, my daughter wasnât going to be next. âCome with me.â
I hefted her into my arms, bracing her on my forearm as I hiked up the trail. As soon as we were away from the first group, I looked down at Havoc and let her off the leash. If any parents freaked out, they could kiss my ass.
âSeek Colt.â
She sniffed Maisie, no doubt smelling Colt on her, and then put her nose to the ground, heading toward the small grouping of kids. A pair of uniforms addressed no more than ten kids, all in some state of tears except one.
Emma. She stood off to the side, her back to me, looking up the trail.
âMr. Gentry?â Another teacher stopped talking to the kids and walked over, her lip trembling. âOh God. We just stopped for lunch, and then when we started again, the trailâ¦it justâ¦â She started sobbing. âWe. Got. Separated.â
âWhere?â I asked the uniform.
âTrailâs out around the corner, but thereâs no sign of the kid. Some of the kids think they saw him on the other side.â
I put Maisie on the ground and placed her hand in Mrs. Riveraâs, who had followed us up. âPlease keep her right here. Maisie, give me a couple minutes, okay?â
I forced a smile and stroked her cheek. Stay calm. Donât let her see the panic. I repeated it to myself as I waited for her to nod. She couldnât see this, couldnât experience it, and as much as I wanted her at my side to keep her safe, she needed the protection of distance.
Then I took off, ignoring the teacher and following Havoc to where Iâd already known she would leadâright to Emma.
The little girl stood looking up the trail, a good ten feet back from the edge of the drop-off. An officer kneeled at her level, speaking to her, but she wasnât responding. Her eyes were blank, her mouth closed but lax, and in her hands, she gripped a Telluride Search and Rescue cap that Havoc was currently alerting me to.
No. No. No.
I tried to shove the panic down the way I had countless times in battle, but this was different. This was my worst nightmare.
âSheâs not talking.â Every line of the officerâs face was tense.
âGive her some space and let me try.â
He nodded, backing away just far enough to hear but not hover.
âEmma,â I said gently as I dropped to her eye level and turned her toward me. âEmma, where did Colt go? How do you have his hat?â
Her eyes slowly shifted from the cliff to me. âI know you.â
âYeah, you do. I belong to Colt and Maisie,â I said, trying to keep my voice even and calm, knowing if she slipped into shock any further, Iâd lose any chance of getting information. âCan you tell me what happened?â
She nodded, the motions taking three times as long as normal. âWe were eating lunch, right there.â She pointed to the group. âAnd then we finished, so we walked in a line, just like weâre supposed to. We werenât even close to the edge, I promise!â Her voice broke.
The officer next to us started taking notes.
âI know. Itâs okay.â I took her hands in my own with Coltâs cap between us. âWhat happened then?â
âWe turned around to come back, because the other kids were slow eating. Then the ground just disappeared. It was gone so fast.â
âOkay, and what then?â
More uniforms gathered behind us, and I waved them off. She looked up at them and then at Coltâs hat, shutting down.
I looked over my shoulder and saw Mark. âBlanket.â
He took one from the new batch of officers and handed it to me.
âKeep them back. Sheâs in shock, and theyâre making it worse.â He nodded and started barking orders as I put the heavy material around her. âItâs just you and me, Emma. Can you tell me what happened next?â
Her eyes rose to mine. âThe ground left, and I started to fall. Colt grabbed my hand and pulled? I think? Or pushed. I was behind him, and then I was in front of him. It was so loud. Like ice cubes in a glass.â
Landslide. It had to be.
âI tried to grab him, but it was done. Then I was at the edge, and he was gone. I had this.â She lifted his hat.
My heart stopped. It ceased beating, and everything around me froze. Then my heart pounded, and the world sprung into life again, but felt twice as fast.
Colt. Oh my God, Colt.
âSome of the kids think they saw him on the other side. Is that what happened? Did you get separated?â Please, say yes. Please.
She shook her head slowly.
âEmma, did he fall?â My voice was high, strained by the giant lump in my throat.
She nodded.
For three heartbeats, I didnât think I was going to be able to get control. But I sucked air into my lungs and somehow back out.
âThank you,â I told her. Then I sprinted up the path, whistling for Havoc. She came up on my heels and then right beside me. The trail narrowed as we rounded the corner, and I skidded to a halt, grabbing Havocâs vest as she slid.
âCareful, itâs a bad drop,â one of the county guys said, leaned up against the hillside. âI donât see any sign of the kid, though, which is good. Heâs probably on the other side of the trail like the teacher thinks. Weâre just waiting for the team to come up from the other side.â
Five feet in front of us, the cliff-side portion of the trail had fallen away, and the rest looked ready to go. My heart climbed into my throat. âStay,â I croaked at Havoc.
Then I inched forward, bracing my hand on the hillside to keep steady. Peering over the edge, I saw a dramatic fallâmaybe fifty feetâthat ended in a steep, tree-covered slope.
âSee? No sign of him. Teacher said he has on a blue fleece.â
âItâs bright blue,â I answered, scanning the terrain below. âWith the TSR logo on the back and Gentry labeled on the front.â
It was the one thing heâd begged for before he went back to school, and the only thing he had of mine with my name.
âOh, okay, then. Well, we donât see him. What does your dog say?â
I glanced back at Havoc, who was sitting perfectly still. Not alerting. Not anxious to get over the trail. She knew the same thing I did. âShe says heâs down there.â
I took one last look at the terrain, trying to commit it to memory.
âDamn. Then itâs about to be a recovery mission, because thereâs no way that kidâs alive.â
I spun, shoving my forearm into the guyâs throat as I pinned him against the mountain. âYou donât know that.â
He gurgled.
Hands pulled me back. Mark. He let me go and squeezed my shoulder.
âWhat the hell is your problem?â The uniform rubbed his throat.
âItâs his kid,â Mark answered.
The guyâs expression fell. âOh, shit. Iâm so sorry. I mean, there could be a chanceââ
I was Coltâs only chance.
Grabbing Havoc, I left, sprinting back down the trail, careful to keep my balance on the rocks. Rolling my ankle could kill Colt.
I grabbed my walkie and pressed the channel. âNelson, itâs Gentry. That helo still running?â
A static-filled moment passed as I came up on the first class. Maisie sat with Emma, holding her hand at the edge of the group.
âIt is,â Nelson answered.
âKeep it that way. Havoc and I are on the way, and we need to get down that cliff fast.â
âRoger.â
Mark caught up as I dropped down to Maisie, who had stopped crying and now looked completely blank, her arms wrapped around her stomach.
I hugged her, curving my body to surround her as much as possible. âIâm taking you down, okay? And then Mark is going to get you to the station, and weâll call your mom.â
âBeckett, you want me to leave?â Mark asked softly. âDonât you need my help?â
âI need you to get my little girl off this mountain,â I said as I stood, Maisie shifting in my arms to hold onto my neck. âHold on, Maisie-girl.â
I jogged, balancing her weight, knowing every second counted, but there was no way I was leaving her up there. Ellaâs voice filled my head as I thought about every time sheâd felt guilty having to leave one to take care of the other.
We rounded the next bend, and the helo came into view, along with a group of parents who stood behind a line of uniforms.
âBad news. Travels fast.â Markâs words came stuttered through heavy breathing.
âBeckett!â Ada called from the front of the group.
âAdaâs here,â I told Maisie. âMark, change of plans, get on the bird.â
Ada ran to the edge of the crowd, Larry not far behind her. They reached an officer who let them through after I nodded.
There was a general cacophony of shouting from the parents, no doubt wanting news, but the whir of the helicopter behind me blurred any words.
âIs everyone okay?â Ada asked. âOh God, whereâs Colt? Why didnât you bring Colt back, too?â Her voice shot high in panic, and Larry put his hand on her shoulder.
âI need you to take her,â I told Ada, but Maisie clung to my neck. âMaisie-girl, you have to let me go, okay?â
She pulled back, taking my face in her hands. âHeâs hurt. I can feel it.â She touched her belly.
âIâm going to find him right now, but I need you to go to Ada, okay?â
âOkay.â She hugged me, and I gave her a squeeze before handing her over.
âWhereâs Ella?â I asked as Maisie transferred into Adaâs arms.
âItâs Colt, isnât it?â Ada asked.
I couldnât say it. If I said it, the cellophane walls I had up would stop holding me together, and that wasnât an option.
âWhereâs Ella?â I repeated.
âSheâs in the ranger station right back there with a couple other parents.â She motioned behind the crowd. âTheyâre trying to get news from the county. Want us to get her? Someone has to tell her.â Her face crumpled.
Flashing lights came into view. Good, the ambulance was here.
âNo, just stay with her. Itâsâ¦itâs not good. Sheâs going to need you.â
Colt didnât have the time for me to wait for Ella. I looked at Larry, whose face was drawn and tight.
âWhat do you want me to tell her?â he asked.
âTell her Iâm going to find our son.â Before I could lose it, I ran to the helicopter, Havoc with me. I deadlifted her into the bird and climbed in. Helmet on. Seat belt latched.
âFly south,â I told the pilot. âThereâs a section of the trail thatâs fallen away. We need to be dropped right beneath it.â
âRoger.â The pilot took off, and my stomach lurched as we rose into the air.
I leaned forward and clipped the sections of Havocâs vest Iâd need to keep her safe.
âSlight problem, thereâs nowhere to land,â the pilot called back.
âCan you rappel?â I asked Mark.
âIn theory,â he answered.
âGet us to where we can rappel,â I told the pilot, then I turned to Mark. âKeep up.â
He nodded.
âI need you to be ready, Jenkins.â
âIâm steady.â He assured me from the bench. âBackboard and litter is ready.â
âYou have the new report?â
He nodded.
âWhat time did it happen?â
He scanned through the clipboard and checked his watch. âReport came in forty-five minutes ago, and they called it in about ten minutes after.â
Heâd been down almost an hour. I set the timer on my watch.
âRadio back and get as many hands down here as we can get.â
The helo steadied above the only clear ground visible. We looked to be a short distance from where the rocks would have fallen.
âWeâre ready,â the pilot said through the comms.
I removed my helmet as Jenkins secured the line. Then I clipped Havoc into the slider and kept her between my legs as we shuffled for the door. Jenkins passed me the line, and I secured the slider that let me control her rate of descent. âI know you hate this,â I told her as I made sure it was tight where it attached to the line a couple feet above her harness. âBut our Colt is down there.â
I gripped the line and her slider, gave her the knee signal she was all too used to, and we stepped out into nothing. She went completely still as I worked us down the line with her dangling between my knees.
Weâd done this hundreds of times, but Iâd never felt as urgent. Urgent caused mistakes, so I calmed my breathing and lowered us slowly, hand over hand, until we reached the ground.
Then I unhooked the slider and stuck it in Havocâs pack. Mark started down immediately.
I slipped Havoc a treat from her pack. âGood job. I know that sucks.â
âHow do you do that with a dog?â Mark asked after he reached the ground a minute later.
âA lot of experience.â I leaned down to Havoc. âSeek Colt.â
She started sniffing, and we walked in the direction of the slide. âHow long will that take her?â Mark asked.
âNot sure. He didnât walk this way, so she doesnât have a path to go on. Weâll have to get close enough for her to catch his scent in the air, or anywhere heâs touched.â
We hiked uphill, through patches of knee-high grass and then under tall pine trees. I concentrated on my breathing and my footwork as Havoc walked ahead of us, searching. The less I thought about what we would find, the better.
âColt!â I called out on the prayer he could hear usâ¦that he was capable of hearing us.
âColt!â Mark joined in. âShould we have brought Jenkins?â
âNo. He needs to stay with the helo. When the other teams show up, he needs to be available, and if heâs with us, and someone else finds Coltâ¦â
âI get the picture.â
âIâm a combat medic, which means Iâm qualified to do just about anything besides surgery. Everyone in ourâ¦everyone is where I used to work.â It was part of the training before you were selected as a tier-one operator. âColt!â I tried again.
And again.
And again.
The beep on my watch signaled that it had been an hour and a half, and still no Colt. I looked up the mountain. We were out of the tree line, right beneath the slide zone, and there were plenty of rocks around us that all looked the same. I couldnât tell what was new and what had always been here.
Weâd seen the helo drop a couple teams, and Mark had handled radio coordination, making sure we chose different grids. My grid was wherever Havoc decided to go, and they could all deal with it.
Havoc was sniffing like crazy toward the south, so we followed along the tree line.
âColt!â I saw the bright patch of blue just as Havoc took off at a dead run.
I covered the ground quickly, jumping rocks, ducking pine tree branches as I ran. Havoc sat next to him, whining.
âColt,â I called, but he didnât respond. His upper half was clear, but his lower half was obscured by fallen foliage.
âGood girl,â I told Havoc, handing her a treat from my pocket out of sheer habit before dropping to my knees next to him.
âColt, come on, bud.â His skin was pale, blood trickling from small cuts on his face. I put my fingers to his neck and waited.
Please, God. Iâll do anything. Please.
He had a pulse, but it was rapid and thready. His skin was cold.
âHeâs bleeding somewhere,â I told Mark as he dropped to Coltâs other side. âWe need to get these branches off him, but only the lighter ones. If itâs heavy, wait for me.â
Mark nodded and started pulling the smaller branches off Colt. âRescue 9, this is Gutierrez and Gentry. Weâve found the male. Pulse is present but thready. Please send in medics ASAP.â
Static came through Markâs radio as I unzipped Coltâs fleece.
âShit. Gentry.â
I looked back to Coltâs lower half, and bile rose in my throat, but I looked up at the sky and forced it back down. Coltâs right thigh was pinned under a large, jagged rock roughly half the size of a car engine.
âCut his pants around it. I need to see the skin.â Not good.
âGutierrez, this is Rescue 9. Please note we are midrefuel. On our way immediately.â
Shit. Shit. Shit.
âColt, you in there, bud?â I asked, stroking his face. âCan you wake up for me?â
His eyelashes fluttered. âBeckett?â
The sweetest sound Iâd ever heard was Coltâs voice at that moment. He was alive and able to speak. Thank you, God.
âHey!â I hovered over his face, locking his head in place as his eyes opened. His right pupil was slightly larger than his left. Concussion. âHey, donât move, okay? Iâm here.â
âWhere am I?â he asked, his eyes scanning from left to right.
âYou had a really bad fall, so you canât move, okay? You might have hurt your neck. Mark is here with me, and the doc is on his way. Just donât move your head.â
âOkay.â He winced. âI hurt.â
âI bet you do. Can you tell me where?â
His eyes shifted. âEverywhere.â
âGotcha.â I looked down to where he was pinned. âColt, can you wiggle your toes? Just your toes?â
âYeah,â he said.
I looked up at Mark, who shook his head with a pursed mouth.
Donât panic.
âGood job, bud. Can you do it again?â I hoped I sounded way calmer than I felt, because I was about to crawl out of my own skin.
âSee? Toes are fine. They donât even hurt,â Colt said with a little smile.
Mark shook his head again, and my soul crumpled into a little ball.
âYour legs donât hurt?â I asked.
âNo, just everything else.â His eyes started to drift shut.
âColt. Colt!â I gripped his face. âYou have to stay with me, okay? Wiggle your fingers.â
All ten wiggled. I can work with that.
âIâm tired. Is Emma okay?â
âShe sure is, but sheâs worried about you. You did great, Colt. You saved her.â I took his pulse again. Shit, it was faster and lighter.
âWe protect smaller people,â he said with a weak smile. âIâm cold, Beckett. Is it cold?â
âLook under that rock. Is there blood?â I ordered Mark. I stripped out of my fleece jacket and draped it across Coltâs chest. âBetter?â
Mark crouched down. âI canât see. I bet we could get it off him.â
âWe need to tourniquet it first. Thereâs every chance heâs got a crush injury. Itâs been almost two hours, we canât just lift it off him. Thereâs one in Havocâs pack.â
âShit, Beckett,â Mark said softly. âBlood.â
I grabbed the tourniquet and knelt next to Mark. Dark red blood oozed out from beneath the rock. âWhere the hell is the helo? Tell them to get the basket here.â
âRescue 9, this is Gutierrez and Gentry. Whatâs the status on getting that basket?â
âGutierrez, this is Rescue 9. Weâre inbound with a five-minute ETA.â
âFuck,â I muttered. There was no better word in this moment.
I dug just beneath Coltâs thigh, enough to slip the tourniquet through, and then yanked it tight, securing it right above where the rock had him pinned.
âDonât move it,â I warned Mark.
Then I knelt at Coltâs other side. His lips were blue, his skin pale, clammy, and cold. His pulse was fast and weak.
âHey, bud, I got your bleeding stopped. You just gotta hold on for the helicopter, okay?â
He gave me a small smile. âI get to ride in a helicopter? Cool.â
âYou do. Plus youâre kind of a hero. Everyoneâs going to think youâre cool, but Iâll still think youâre the coolest,â I promised. âAnywhere else hurt?â
âNo, nothing hurts.â
I froze. Shock. Bleeding out. Weâd stopped the bleeding in his leg, but there had to be a secondary bleed, if not a dozen of them after that fall.
Heâs hurt. I can feel it.
Twins. Just like heâd woken up when she had the infected PICC line.
âOkay, just keep talking to me, buddy.â I took my fleece off him and lifted his shirt. Deep purple bruising discolored the entire left side of his chest. His belly was swollen.
I sat back on my heels and put my head in my hands.
Ryan. You gotta help me here. Please.
âWhere are we?â Colt asked, his voice soft.
I stood quickly and grabbed onto Markâs arm. âHeâs bleeding out internally. My guess is spleen, which means minutes. Run to the nearest place you can see the sky and pop smoke.â
He was the very picture of anguish as he looked at Colt, but he turned and ran.
I hit my knees beside Colt, and then I lay down next to him, curling my body around him. âI love you so much.â
He turned his head, and I didnât yell at him about neck injuries. There was no point. âI love you, too, Beckett.â He opened his eyes, and I rested my forehead against his.
âI was thinking maybe weâd add that zip line to the tree house. What do you say?â I ran my fingers through his hair.
âYeah. I think you should make it go into the lake. That would be cool, and Mom wouldnât worry about falling so much.â
This was one fall we hadnât seen coming.
Havoc whined, curling up next to Coltâs other side. She knew.
âYouâre absolutely right.â I checked his pulse. So damn weak.
âI think Iâm dying,â he whispered.
âYouâre really hurt,â I said, my voice choking on the last word. I didnât want to lie to him, but I didnât want his last minutes to be spent in terror. There was nothing we could do at this point. I was going to lose him.
Ella. God, she needed to be here.
âItâs okay. Donât be sad. Tell Mom and Maisie not to be sad, either.â He took several labored breaths. âI get to see Uncle Ryan.â
I couldnât breathe. My chest only rose and fell with his, my heart syncing to his frail rhythm.
âJust hold on, bud. Thereâs so much you havenât done yet. Thereâs so much to do.â
He looked at me, love shining out of his eyes. âI got to have you. Just like a dad.â
Tears fell from my eyes, running down the side of my face to the earth below. âOh, Colt. We were going to tell you. We were just waiting for Maisie to be okay, but I adopted you last year. Youâve had a dad for a while. One who loves you more than the moon and stars.â
His breaths came slower and slower, each one a Herculean effort, but he still managed a smile. âYouâre my dad.â
âIâm your dad.â
âSo this is what it feels like.â He reached over, his hand cold as he laid it against my cheek. âI love having a dad.â
âI love being your dad, Colt. You are the best little boy I could have ever been given. Iâm so proud of you.â The words barely came out.
His eyes closed as another breath shuddered through him.
I heard the sound of rotors in the background.
âIâm a Gentry,â Colt said, managing to pry his eyes open again.
âYou are. A Gentry and a MacKenzie. Always.â
âAlways?â he asked.
âAlways. I will always be your dad. No matter what. Nothing will change that.â Even death. My love for him would cross however far God took him.
âColton Ryan MacKenzie-Gentry. I got everything I ever wanted.â His eyes closed, and his chest rose only half as high. CPR wouldnât help, not when he didnât have any blood to circulate.
âMe, too,â I told him, kissing his forehead.
âTell Mom and Maisie I love them.â His words were slower, punctuated by partial breaths.
âI will. They love you so much. You have a mom, and a dad, and a sister who would do anything for you.â
âI love you, Dad,â he whispered.
âI love you, Colt.â
His chest rattled once more, and then his hand fell from my face as he faded.
âColt?â I felt for the pulse that wasnât there. âColt! No!â I slid under him and sat up, cradling him in front of me, my arms wrapped around him as his head rolled back against my chest.
A primal scream ripped from my throat. Then another, until my body shook with sobs. Beside me, Havoc sat up and started to howl, the sound low and keening.
Take care of him, Ryan.
âBeckett,â Mark said softly. When I looked up, he was kneeling next to me, his eyes full of unshed tears. My eyes rhythmically blurred, then cleared.
âHeâs gone.â My arms tightened around his little body.
âI know. You did everything you could.â
âI made him pinwheels this morning,â I said, running my hand over his soft hair. âHe wanted extra cheese, and I gave it to him. I made him pinwheels.â
That was hours ago.
Hours.
And now he was gone.
âWhat do you want to do?â Mark asked.
I realized there were half a dozen guys standing around us. Jenkins kneeled down and did the same checks I had, only to press his mouth in a tight line and stand again.
Want? What did I want to do? I wanted to scream again, to rip everything in this forest to shreds. I wanted to pound the mountain down to rubble with my fists. I wanted to look at my little boy and hear him laugh, see him run on the deck of his tree house. I wanted him to grow up, wanted to meet the man he was supposed to become. But he was beyond my reach.
Want didnât matter when nothing was in your control.
âI need to take him to his mother.â