by Rye Hart
Beckoning to the horses, they came over and I helped Delia back onto the saddle and watched her grind down into it. I grinned as I mounted my horse, watching her try to get any friction she could obtain. I’d riled her up something fierce, but she wasn’t the only one struggling.
I had to stick my hand down my pants and readjust before we started out of the woods.
We rode the rest of the perimeter of the ranch and got back with enough time to wipe down the horses. I removed the saddles and Delia took to washing them down. She even went in search of a hoof pick and began cleaning out the bottom of Pixie’s hooves. I watched her graceful movements as she bonded with her horse. Talking lightly to it and smiling as she brushed her down.
I’d let her know later that Pixie was hers from now on.
“Drake!”
My head whipped around at the frantic sound of Tammy’s voice.
“Drake! Draaaake!”
Paul came running out of the feed barn as Tammy ran down the hill. His arms caught her as she flailed, tears pouring down her face. Delia looked over at me as I rushed to her, Lightning spooked at my fast movements. He started pawing the ground as I rushed for Tammy’s frantic form.
“What is it?” I asked. “What’s wrong?”
“Elsie. She’s not in the house!” Tammy said.
“I’m sure she’s there somewhere. She in the bathroom?” I asked.
“No. And she’s not in the closet or under the bed or in the back of your truck. She’s not there, Drake. Elsie’s gone!”
I looked over at Paul as he nodded his head. Paul lunged for Lightning, mounting him bareback and setting off galloping toward the edge of the lot. Tammy was in tears, her entire body trembling as Delia came up and took her hands.
“Tammy, call the sheriff and tell him what’s going on. Get a search party out here so they can help us look around,” I said. “Delia, check the cow and horse barns. The feed barn, too. Sometimes she gets out here wantin’ to be around the animals and gets spooked. Tight, cold, dark places are what she uses to calm down.”
“Got it,” Delia said.
“Paul and I are gonna ride the perimeter and see if we can’t see her. Delia, if you don’t find her in any of those places, get back up to the house. Double-check the house and wait for the search party. Don’t you go doin’ anything you don’t need to,” I said.
“Okay. I won’t,” Delia said. “Come on, Tammy. You can help me look while you dial the sheriff.”
I ran toward Pixie and hopped onto her back. I kicked her sides, lurching her toward the other side of the property. I could hear Paul hollering for Elsie as I kept my eyes peeled. But Delia and I had just rode around this property. If Elsie had been out there, I would’ve seen her.
I pulled out my cell phone and called the last person I knew to call. I was going to need everyone’s help in tracking down what the hell had happened to my sister. My hands were shaking as I twisted my hand into Pixie’s mane, her legs running as fast as she could as my phone rang in my ear.
“Drake! How’s every—”
“I need you to call road security and get the streets blocked off,” I said.
“Drake. What’s going on?” Hank asked.
“Elsie’s missing. She’s not in the house, and the more I gallop around the ranch the more I think she’s not out here, either. Delia’s checking the barns and Tammy’s double checking the house, but she’s not here, Hank. Something’s wrong.”
“I’m calling everyone I can now. Gimme ten minutes to get people out there.”
“Make it five,” I said.
I met up with Paul in the middle of the property and we ran through the fields. Straight down the middle, not giving a shit as to what we were trampling in the process. Hank kept sending me text messages, updating me on the road security crew and when they had things blocked off. My eyes were darting around the property, looking for any sign of Elsie at all.
“She’s not out here,” Paul said. “And these horses need water.”
I could hear Pixie whinnying underneath me as her muscles began to twitch.
“She’s not out here,” Paul said again. “She’s not.”
I stopped in the middle of my two hundred acres and screamed her name. I screamed myself hoarse as the sound of sirens flooded my ears, with lights flashing in my vision back up at the house. I looked over at Paul as our horses began to grow weak, buckling underneath us as I felt them rocking on their legs.
“Come on. Let’s get them back to the barn,” I said.
CHAPTER 36
Delia
The clock said it was night time, but it sure as hell didn’t feel like it. Drake’s entire yard was lit up with floodlights. The cops were setting up grids to do a formal search after Hank’s troops couldn’t find Elsie at the back of the property. I went inside to comfort Tammy.
One minute she was crying and the next minute she was catatonic, staring out the window at all the lights and police officers directing people on what to do. Everyone was in the house, looking at pictures of Elsie as dogs sniffed around for her scent. Drake kept handing off articles of clothing to the K-9 units, hoping they could pick up on some sort of scent trail.
“They’re gonna find her. I promise,” I said.
I rubbed Tammy’s back as silent tears poured down her face. Paul and Drake were still galloping around the property, just in case Elsie came out of some makeshift hiding place. I could feel Tammy trembling underneath my ministrations. I had to try and keep her calm. I had to try and keep her from falling apart. Because when we found Elsie, she was going to need Tammy’s comfort. No matter how scared we were, Elsie was ten times more scared.
And she would need her rock when we found her.
Outside of comforting Tammy, I didn’t know what to do. So, I defaulted to the one thing my mother used to do when people would come over. I kept the drinks and food flowing. The coffee pot was constantly brewing coffee and I had hot water for those who wanted tea. I set out honey and creamer and sugar and kept chopping up fruits and vegetables for people to eat. I found things to bake a couple of casseroles and heated up some leftover pizza. Anything I could put on the kitchen table and on the porch to keep everyone refueled and ready for action.
Because no one was leaving here until Elsie was found.
I placed my hand on my stomach as the twelfth pot of coffee started to brew. Tammy was sitting next to me on the porch, mindlessly sipping her tea. She was out of it again.
The hours rolled by and Elsie was nowhere to be found. She wasn’t at the creek, she wasn’t in the woods, and she hadn’t surfaced on the property. Night time blended into the morning as the sun just started breaking over the trees, taunting us with the time that had passed without Elsie’s presence.
And it was the sunrise that caused Tammy to begin crying again.
Reaching out for her hand, I took it within mine. I could feel her trembling as her tea mug clattered to the ground. It shattered against the porch, ricocheting glistening ceramic everywhere as I stood to my feet. I pulled her into me, holding her close as her hands dug into my back.
Then, I heard it.
I heard Drake shouting from across the road.
“I found her! I’ve got Elsie!”
Tammy and I whipped our heads up as Drake came barreling up the driveway. I broke away from Tammy’s grasp as I started running for the ambulance. I yelled for the paramedics, waking them up and sending them running toward Drake. Elsie was limp in his arms, barely breathing, and as pale as freshly-churned butter.
“Where was she?” the paramedic asked.
“On the other side of the fence in the gully. The water washed her into the drain pipe,” Drake said.
“She’s barely breathing. Get her in the ambulance. We can clean her up on the way to the hospital.”
“Elsie!”
Tammy was shrieking as she ran toward the ambulance.
“Elsie! Wake up!”
“Tammy. Tammy. Look at me,” I said.
The panicked woman turned her gaze toward me as I grabbed her upper arms.
“Get in the ambulance and go with her. Drake, you too. They gotta get her out of here now. Now go. Come on. Get on with it.”
I helped her onto the ambulance as Drake’s arm wrapped around me. The paramedics were working on Elsie, hooking her up to I.V.’s and getting an oxygen mask on her. Tammy was a mess of tears and snot as she held the girl’s hand, her skin covered in mud and soaked to the bone. I turned around in Drake’s arms, taking stock of how muddy and cold he was himself as his eyes stayed hooked on his sister.
“Drake, look at me,” I said.
His worried stare dropped down to mine as I lifted my hand to cup his cheek.
“Go,” I said. “I’ll make sure everyone gets off your property before you guys are back.”
“Stay here,” Drake said. “Be here when I get back. Please.”
He dropped his lips to mine and he held me tightly against him.
I stepped back from Drake, breaking the kiss before I swatted at him.
“Get on the ambulance. Go. I’ve got all this back here,” I said.
CHAPTER 37
Drake
Elsie’s temperature had dropped drastically, and she’d swallowed a lot of muddy water. Antibiotics and fluids were being run through her body as the doctors tried to get her temperature to come up. I was scared. The needles she was being poked with threw her into a fit and the random people surrounding her were raising her heart rate to dangerous levels. Against my insistence, they had to sedate her just to run the tests they needed to run.
When Elsie came to, waking from the drugs they used to knock her out, I tried to make the room better for her. I turned the sound down on all the machines, turned them away from her, and shut the lights off in the room. I tucked her in with blankets to try and warm her and made sure there were no wrinkles in the fuzzy socks I’d bought to slip on her feet. Tammy was smoothing her hair back, trying to get her to focus as tears poured down her cheeks.
“Elsie, honey. Why in the world did you wander off?” Tammy asked.
“The birds outside wouldn’t stop chirping. I went onto the porch to shoo them off,” Elsie said.
“Then how did you end up getting all the way across the yard?” Tammy asked.
“There were people standing at the edge of the fence asking about Drake. I figured I could answer their questions,” Elsie said.
“There were what?” I asked.
“People. At the fence. They kept asking about you,” Elsie said.
“Elsie, how many times have I told you stay away from the people who gather at the damn fence?” I asked.
“Drake, now’s not the time,” Tammy said.
“Then when the hell’s it gonna be time? Elsie, we’ve had this conversation over and over again. The people at the fence aren’t our friends. They’re tourists wanting to take pictures of our house,” I said.
“They were asking if you were okay after rehab. I thought they were friends of yours,” Elsie said.
“That doesn’t explain how you ended up in the gully,” Tammy said.
“I tripped. They left before I could get to the fence and I tripped and fell into it. I don’t remember much else about it,” Elsie said.
“The creek’s runnin’ high,” I said. “Water probably washed her into the cement drain.”
The doctors wanted to keep Elsie overnight, so I stayed. Tammy wanted to stay in the room, so I camped out in the waiting area. I called Hank, bitching to him about placing whatever call he had to in order to get my fucking house off the tour guide’s list. I wasn’t doing this bullshit anymore.
Elsie was able to come home the next day, but she was not happy with me. I kept reprimanding her for what she did, I couldn’t help myself. It wasn’t smart, and it wasn’t my best form, but I didn’t know what else to do. Just because Elsie had autism didn’t mean she was an idiot. She knew she had no business walking to the edge of the fucking property alone.
From the porch to the road was a little over half a mile of land.
Elsie knew she was being scolded and she was just as angry with me as I was with her, but I knew both our anger was just covering up how scared we were. Elsie and I were similar in that regard and we’d gotten that trait from our momma. When she was frightened, she was one fucking pissed off woman.
“The two of you are staying here for a few days,” I said.
“I wanna go home,” Elsie said.
“You’re staying at my house, and that’s that,” I said.
“You can’t keep her prisoner. If she wants to go home, I’ll be there with her,” Tammy said.
“Like you were with her a few days ago?” I asked.
“Stop it!” Elsie said. “Just stop, Drake!”
“Elsie, you were barely breathing when I found you. Covered in mud, shivering from the cold. Your lips were blue, damn it,” I said.
I clenched my jaw as tears rose to my eyes.
“Just—let me watch over you for a few days. Give Tammy a break. She’s just as tired as you are, and both of you could use the rest,” I said.
“I’m sorry, Mr. Blackthorn,” Tammy said.
“It’s over. I just—we should all get inside and get some sleep, we’re all thrashed,” I said.
We finally pulled up to the house. I carried Elsie inside, her legs still aching from yesterday’s ordeal. I carried her up the stairs and bedded her down in the guestroom while Tammy tried to settle herself down. We all needed a break. Every one of us. I needed to get some rest and calm down my anger, Elsie needed to rest and find her strength, and Tammy needed to rest and relax.
“You can sleep in my bed,” I said. “It’s just across the hall.”
“Actually, I think I’m gonna sleep in here,” Tammy said.
“You need to rest now, not to be watching over her. You’ll never get quality sleep that way. I’ve got it for a little while. Tammy, you haven’t even taken any vacation since I hired you full-time to take care of my sister.”
“Your sister doesn’t get to take vacation from her autism.”
“Where the hell are you gonna sleep?” I asked.
“In the chair in the corner, just like I did last night. I’ll grab a blanket, prop my feet up, and I’ll be good to go.”
“I’ve got a blanket downstairs. Come on, I’ll get it for ya.”
The two of us headed downstairs and I found the pot of coffee still sitting on the kitchen table. The coffee was cold, but I could feel it calling to me. I reached for someone’s dirty mug and poured me a glass, chugging the liquid down as it filled my veins with life.
I guzzled a second one before my eyes dropped to the note on the table.
“What’s that?” Tammy asked.
I picked up the note as my eyes scanned the words.
Off work at five. See you at 5:30. Delia
“Shit,” I said.
She wasn’t here when I got home, but the truth was I hadn’t thought about her up until that point. I had been so immersed with what was going on with my sister that I hadn’t even called her last night to tell her I was staying over at the hospital. I sighed as I set my mug down, then shuffled into the living room to get Tammy a pillow and a blanket from the couch.
“You’d be stupid not to marry that girl,” she said.
I whipped my head over and saw Tammy standing in the doorway. Her arms were crossed over her chest and she was playfully grinning in my direction. I straightened up and held out the pillow and blanket to her, watching her take them as she held them close to her body.
“She’s not here, but she’s coming back. She puts up with your shit. Supports you when you need it. Ain’t afraid to call you out on something. She’s marriage material. And if you can’t see it, someone else will.”
My gaze held Tammy’s hotly as she turned and walked back up the steps.
Marriage? Was she serious? I'd never considered getting married again, not after losing my first wife. It almost did
n't seem right. Like I was betraying Shannon somehow. Besides, I’d only known her for three or so months, and we hadn’t even interacted for the whole of them. Yeah, she was pregnant. And yeah, we were trying to make that work. But that didn’t mean we were gonna get married. That required so much more than just a baby. That required commitment. Respect. Trust.
Love.
Did I love her?
I looked up through the window and saw my reflection as the sun streamed through the glass. I looked myself dead in the eye and gave myself time to really answer that question. Did I love Delia? Was I in love with her? Or was I simply protective of the woman carrying my child?
I thought back to all the times I’d had her in my arms. Against my body. In this house rattling on about fuck-knew-what. I smiled at her ferocity and the way she was so damn stubborn. How graceful she looked on the back of Pixie and how entranced she had been by the simplicity of the lake.
It warmed my chest simply to think about her. And that was when I understood.
Yes. I did love Delia.
But was that enough? Was it enough for a recovering alcoholic that reminded her of her father to love her and want the best for her? Maybe she was looking for something more. Something different. Fuck. I hadn’t considered the idea that we might only be co-parents. That this whole relationship thing might not work out between the two of us.
I was lost in my thoughts for so long that I didn’t come to until Delia was coming through the front door.
“Brought dinner,” she said, with a grin on her face. “Is Elsie back from the hospital?”
I looked over at her, taking her in as she walked into the living room. She bent over to kiss me, her plump lips warm against my skin. They lingered a little longer than usual, and when she pulled away she nuzzled her nose against my jawline. I could smell the burgers and fries she had brought in from that wonderful place downtown.
I looked up into her eyes, taking her in as I leaned into the couch.
She came back.
“Yes,” I said. “Elsie’s back. Tammy, too. They’re upstairs sleeping.”
“Good. Come on. I’ll divvy up the food and you can pour the sweet tea,” she said.