“What letters? What are you talking about?”
She opened her purse and handed him a sheaf of papers. “Didn’t he tell you?”
Alan took them with numb fingers and thumbed through them, scanning them, photocopies of letters in Jerald’s handwriting. “No.”
“I didn’t have my head on straight. I admit it. I felt abandoned and hurt. I thought he was mad at me for you getting shot, picking you over me. I couldn’t see the truth at the time. I refused to read the letters then. I wish like hell I had.”
She twisted her hands in her lap as she started crying again. “I’m so sorry,” she whispered. “I told the marshals to tell him to stop sending them, and he did. So I figured that meant he really was done with me. I never stopped loving and missing you guys. Until I read the letters, I thought he had.”
“You came by after Christmas? While we were gone?”
“I couldn’t take it anymore. I had to see you guys. I’d hoped…” She sniffled and wiped her eyes. “The new house is beautiful. I drove by before I returned to Tampa that night. I was going to stay the whole week if you’d have me. When the woman at the old house told me you guys were gone, I couldn’t bear to stay. I didn’t have a reason to stay.”
He couldn’t focus on her and the letters at the same time, so he read. Jerald’s words, his love and pain pouring off the page. He’d known the tough guy had loved her and ached for her, but this was a side he hadn’t openly seen of his lover until just recently.
“You could have said something that day in the courthouse.”
“I tried. You ordered me out. When I saw how angry you were I…” She took a deep breath. “I didn’t want to hurt him when I saw him like that. I never wanted to hurt either of you. You made it pretty obvious you wanted me to leave.”
His shock somewhat waning, he finally addressed the obvious. “How did you know we were here?”
“I work over in town, at the travel agency your trip was booked through. I saw the paperwork come through and knew I couldn’t waste the chance to see you. I also work here a couple of days a week in the park.”
She watched him as he read the letters. She couldn’t bear to reach out to him, afraid he’d rebuff her. He looked good, his hair a little shorter and less shaggy than it had been. He must have gotten up way early that morning, because she spotted the faint shade of stubble already shadowing his cheek.
She remembered how it used to feel nuzzling against him after he came in from a day on the water. Rough sandpaper skin that tasted sweetly salty.
That thought nearly took her nerve away. She slowly inhaled, trying to fill her lungs with piney Yellowstone air to clear her head and get hold of her emotions, but she caught a whiff of his cologne, too.
He’d made no attempt to touch her, to hold her.
He really had moved on.
At least now she had her answer.
When she stood, he never looked up from the papers in his hand, made no move to stop her. She felt what little hope existed in her heart rip loose and die.
“I’m so sorry, Alan,” she whispered, struggling not to cry. “I love you, and I love him. I’m never going to stop loving either of you. There hasn’t been a single day I haven’t missed you. Once I got my head on straight and realized he did the right thing, it was too late for me to come back and make it right. If you want to tell him that for me, please do.”
She choked back a sob. “I promise I’ll leave you alone. I won’t contact you guys again. I don’t want to hurt you anymore. I never wanted to hurt you, I just wanted to love you.” She laid an envelope on the bench next to him, the letter she’d written them in case they wouldn’t talk to her at all.
She quickly headed for the parking lot. Her hands trembled so badly she almost couldn’t fit the key into her truck’s ignition. She didn’t dare look back.
* * * *
Too stunned to stand, much less follow her, Alan sat there and read the letters Jerald had written. Then he looked at the envelope she’d left. Nothing written on the outside.
He finally opened it. In her handwriting, it wasn’t very long.
I’m so sorry. Jerald, I do know, now, that you did the right thing. I’m so sorry I didn’t see it before. I was too upset and hurt to see the truth. I was stupid, yes. I know apologies don’t change the fact that I was a moron for not trusting you and your judgment. I should have known how much you loved me and how much that decision hurt you as much as it did me. I thought you were mad at me. I didn’t read the letters you wrote me until after that day in the courthouse. I never threw them away but I couldn’t bring myself to read them before then.
I didn’t know how you felt, that you still loved me and wanted me. I thought you were getting rid of me for good.
I was already a new person by then, thanks to the government. I was already in the program.
I would give it all up to have you both back. I would do anything to be with you again. I’ve never stopped loving either of you and I’m so sorry I didn’t trust you enough to understand why you did what you did. I thought you were choosing Alan over me, not that you were trying to protect me.
I wish you both nothing but happiness and love. I don’t regret loving both of you, but I know I will never again find the kind of joy in my life that I had when I was with the two of you. The peace I felt. I just wish I hadn’t fucked everything up with us. I wish I’d refused to go with the marshals in the courthouse that day and stayed and listened to you guys and talked to you and told you how I felt. I wish I’d read the letters when you first sent them to me so I knew.
I understand now why Alan acted so angry that day, and rightfully so. I know it looked bad. I didn’t know you expected me to come home once the trial was over or I never would have asked to join the program. I threw away all that time we could have had together and nothing can ever bring it back and I’m so sorry.
I’ve hurt you guys so much, and if it’s just a fraction of the pain I feel for causing it, then I know there is no way I can ever make up for it. And you both deserve so much better than that.
I’ll always love you. Both of you.
D.
As the shadows lengthened in the valley, people were once again gathering for the next eruption. How long had he sat there? At least ninety minutes, by his best guess. He realized he’d been crying. He stood and looked around and didn’t see her anywhere.
What had she said? She worked over in town. But Jerald had booked their trip through a local agency in New Port Richey, not here.
Fuck!
He didn’t know what town she meant, and Jerald had the reservation information.
He ran back to their cabin and rummaged through Jerald’s bag until he found the paperwork and the agency’s name and number. He tried to call them, but realized not only did he not have a cell signal, but that it was nearly eight o’clock in the evening in Florida.
Jerald heard him and woke up. “What’s wrong?”
How did he tell him? He’d been so angry that day in the courthouse, he remembered holding Jerald and ordering her out of the room. She’d been trying to talk and he didn’t want to hear anything she had to say. Especially nothing that would hurt Jerald more.
He sat on the bed and handed Jerald the note she’d left him.
It took him a moment, between his exhaustion and confusion, to realize what it meant. “Where did you get this?” Jerald hoarsely asked.
“She found me over at Old Faithful.”
“And you didn’t come get me? Where the hell is she?”
Alan shook his head. “I don’t know.”
Jerald stood, his voice rising. “She was here, and you let her fucking leave?”
He nodded.
“We’ve got to find her! Where does she live?”
“I don’t know.”
“Did she change her appearance?”
Her hair had been tucked under the ball cap. He couldn’t have sworn to the color or the length. He shook his head. “I don’t k
now.”
“Please tell me she told you her new name!”
Alan shook his head. “I was in shock.” He looked up at Jerald and showed him the letters. “Why didn’t you tell me you wrote her?”
“Because I didn’t want you to get upset that she never answered. I figured she was done with us. I blamed myself for it, that she was mad at me for sending her away.”
Alan started laughing. He laughed so hard he fell back onto the bed and his whole body shook. A moment later, Jerald realized Alan was sobbing.
He sat next to Alan and tried to soothe him. “Jesus, I fucked up!” Alan screamed. “She tried to talk to us that day and I ran her out! I was so fucking mad, and I told her to go! If I’d just let her talk, she’d be with us now.”
“We’ve got to find her.”
“How? The agency in Florida is closed for the night.”
“And I didn’t bring the info for the local agency with me. I can’t remember who or where it was. Dammit!” Jerald grabbed the itinerary from Alan and scanned it. “The fishing guide. He’ll know which local agency booked him.”
“No cell phone reception.”
“We’ll find a damn phone. It’s Yellowstone, not outer Mongolia.” He pulled on clothes. “Come on, let’s go.”
They found a pay phone in the main lodge and made calls. The guide, when they finally reached him two hours later, didn’t know either, because he worked for an outfitter company who took his bookings for him.
They were closed until the next morning.
At least it was narrowed down to one town—Cody, to the east.
Neither man could sleep. They were supposed to spend the next three days sightseeing on their own. Around three a.m. they gave up, got in their rental car, and drove to Cody. They sat in an all-night restaurant drinking coffee until six in the morning, when they left the restaurant and parked outside the outfitter’s office. They waited by the door when a young woman unlocked it at six-thirty.
The girl told them the office manager didn’t come in until eight. The office manager was the one with access to the bookkeeping system. All she did was take care of new bookings, calls for the guides, last minute snafus, those kinds of problems. She couldn’t access what company had booked a guide after the initial booking was made, only the customer and guide itinerary information.
The men sat and anxiously waited for the office manager to arrive.
The older woman suspiciously eyed them after they told her what they wanted. “Why do you want to know that?”
Alan and Jerald both tried to speak, their words tumbling over each other, until finally the woman held up her hands. “So you’re trying to find a girl who works for one of the travel agencies here in town?”
“Yes!” both men said.
“Let me see your paperwork.”
Jerald handed it over. She scanned it before walking to her desk. She sat down at her computer and a moment later, she wrote down the information and handed it to Jerald. “There’s the agency, their address, and their phone number.”
“Are they here in town?”
“Three blocks over that way.” She pointed.
The men ran for the door. Five minutes later, they stood in front of a scowling older woman who listened as Jerald told her they were looking for one of her employees.
Three other women worked in the office, none of them Daphne.
“No offense, gentlemen, but I don’t give out my employees’ personal information to two men who barge into my office.”
Jerald showed his official ID. “I’m retired, but you can call Florida and they’ll confirm who I am.”
She pursed her lips. “We don’t have anyone here by the name of Daphne anyway. You must have the wrong agency.”
Desperate, Jerald scanned the office again. One other desk, one the office manager hadn’t been sitting at, stood vacant. The nameplate read Jenny Hemingway.
That couldn’t be a coincidence. “Jenny Hemingway. Where is she? Can we talk to her?”
“She’s on vacation. And no, you may not. A moment ago you were looking for a girl named Daphne.”
“This is really important—”
“Leave now, before I call the police.”
Alan grabbed a business card from the counter and scribbled their cell numbers on the back of it. “We’re not getting reception in Yellowstone, but please, give this to Jenny and have her call us. Tell her to leave a voice mail. Please tell her yes, we do want to talk to her. She’ll know who we are and what it’s about.”
The woman reluctantly took the card. “All right.”
The men left, Jerald driving. “Back to Yellowstone?” Alan asked.
“Fuck no.” He stopped at a nearby real estate agency, got a free map of town, and returned to the car a moment later.
“Where are we going?”
“City hall. I want to see if there are any tax records in her name on file. That’ll give us an address.”
“You’re a fucking genius.”
Jerald grinned. “No, I was a fucking cop.”
* * * *
She tried to sleep and couldn’t. She needed to get out and do something. Anything. Outside of Yellowstone, to avoid running into the men. She packed a lunch and at daybreak drove east toward the Big Horn Mountains. She’d wanted to explore Shell Falls, had heard enough about it.
Might as well go do it.
Ironically, she didn’t fear going anywhere alone. There was almost a relief in her anonymity. If she disappeared forever, only the U.S. Marshals and maybe her boss would miss her.
There wasn’t anyone else left.
So this is what it feels like to really be alone.
All she could do now was to try to release the men in her heart. To let them go once and for all. They’d moved on, rightly so. She wished she could have seen Jerald one more time, though.
She tried to enjoy the day even though clouds rolled into the mountains surrounding the park, and a chilly mist that threatened to turn to drizzle dampened the trail around the falls. She’d packed a rain poncho and jacket, quickly learning the weather here wasn’t at all like Florida. She always went out prepared for anything.
Shell Falls was beautiful, definitely worth the drive. The scenery through the mountains was breathtaking in a different way than Yellowstone’s rugged serenity.
She thought she might return home after lunch, but then she remembered a paperback in her truck that she hadn’t finished yet.
Peaceful, calm, and with a sheltered bench where she could sit and read and stay dry, she decided to stay.
* * * *
Jerald tried the obvious first, but found no phone number listed for Jenny Hemingway in Cody, Wyoming.
Alan watched, his stomach tight with tension, as Jerald scrolled through the computer records in the property appraiser’s office. A moment later, his face erupted in a triumphant grin as he jotted information down. “Let’s go.”
Twenty minutes later they pulled into a driveway in front of a tiny house on a small, shaded lot. The neighborhood wasn’t the best, but not a slum, either.
“Jesus, that place is a freaking shoebox,” Alan said. “Can’t be more than eight hundred square feet, if that.”
“A single woman, in a small town like this, they’re not going to put her into some huge ranch house. She’s lucky she’s not in a trailer.” They raced up the front walk and rang the doorbell.
Nothing.
They knocked and waited, then knocked again.
They circled the house and saw no signs of life.
“How do we even know this is her place?” Alan asked as they returned to the car. “We don’t know for sure she really is Jenny Hemingway.”
Jerald looked at his phone, which had picked up service again upon their arrival in Cody. He scrolled through his files and found a picture he’d snapped of her and Alan, a picture he hadn’t looked at in months but couldn’t bear to delete. With Alan following, he left the car, walked to a neighbor’s house, and knoc
ked on the front door.
An older man answered. He eyed them suspiciously. “Can I help you?”
Jerald smiled. “We’re looking for our cousin, Jenny Hemingway.” He held up the phone, displaying the picture. “We thought she said she lived next door, this is the address she gave us. We were supposed to meet up with her today, but she’s not home and not answering her cell.”
The man’s face relaxed as he looked at the picture, then at Alan’s friendly, smiling, hopeful face. “Looks like she’s coloring her hair now, huh?” He grinned. “My wife started dying hers the first time she spotted a grey hair. I don’t have the heart to tell her everyone knows it’s not her real hair color.”
Jerald forced himself to stay friendly and not beg the guy for information. “Yeah, she said we might not recognize her at first. We haven’t seen her in over a year, well before she moved out here. Do you know where she went or when she’ll be back? We came all the way from Florida. She promised to take us around the area, show us around Yellowstone since she works there part-time.”
“She loves that job. Don’t know how she finds the energy. Not a day off, she’s either at that travel agency or leaving here before dawn to drive over to the park. Probably costs her more money in gas to work there than she makes. Sorry, boys, can’t help you. You’re welcome to wait here if you want.”
“That’s all right, we appreciate it, though. We’ll just sit in our car and wait and keep trying her phone. Maybe we got our wires crossed about the time.”
“Maybe she hit the grocery store or something. I know she said she was taking a couple days off, but I don’t remember her mentioning you boys. Maybe she told my wife though.”
“We’ll keep trying her cell phone. Thanks.”
They returned to their rental and sat there for a moment. Jerald felt his whole body tremble. “It’s her,” he said before he looked at Alan. “We gonna get her back and take her home, or are we going to risk losing her again? I need to know what you want to do.”
“I want her back,” he softly said. “I want her home.”
Jerald nodded and started the car. “Okay, then we’re on the same page.” They ran through a discount store, got bottled water, snacks, and magazines to read. There was a small park across the street, so they parked where they could see her driveway and waited.
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