Beth smiled in spite of her tension. That was Scott: literal, no-nonsense, a man of clarity and purpose. “I talked to Rose,” she said. “Dominique’s been concealing an ex-husband and a trust fund. How long have you known?”
“Awhile.”
But he couldn’t and wouldn’t tell her. She appreciated that about him. He wouldn’t torture himself. He’d just put the information under “secret work stuff” in his mind and not go there when they were together. “Jo knows?”
“Ask her.”
Beth took that as a yes. “So how the hell rich is Dom?”
“She’s from a Midwest manufacturing family. Old money.”
“And here she is, living in a little fixer-upper in a small Vermont town and baking scones and grilling salmon for a living.”
“She just does her own thing, which you, she and Hannah all share.”
“Scott—”
“When are you coming back?”
“As soon as I can figure out how to get there.”
“Plane,” he said.
For Scott Thorne, that was a major display of humor. Beth felt tears hot in her eyes, the anger draining out of her. She tried to laugh. “I kind of miss winter.”
“No, you don’t. You miss being in the middle of things.” He paused and sucked in a breath. “I miss having you in the middle of things. Going out to the lake this morning…knowing you wouldn’t be there to help…” His voice was lower, almost tentative. “It wasn’t what I thought it’d be.”
She knew he’d said all he meant to and if she pushed for more, she’d only make him uncomfortable. If she’d learned anything in the past twenty-four hours, it was to hold her damn tongue once in a while.
“You law enforcement types don’t think Dom could be your firebug, do you?” she asked him. “Because that’d be nuts—”
“Go swimming.”
She could hear the relief in his voice. She smiled into the sun. “I love you, Scott.”
“Yeah,” he said, and it was enough.
Beth quickly shut her phone and headed back inside.
Twenty-One
Black Falls, Vermont
N ick was on Rose’s couch, welcoming the quiet and coziness of her little house after the long, tense day. She lay stretched out in front of her woodstove, with Ranger asleep, one ear flopped off the side of his bed. It was dark, the promise of warmer temperatures in the forecast for tomorrow.
He could see the white on Ranger’s undercoat. “Will you train another search dog after Ranger retires?” he asked.
“Not right away,” Rose said. “Maybe not ever. Ranger has time. Another year, I think.”
“You’re both on the road a lot.”
“Especially this past year.”
“How much was volunteer and how much was for pay?”
“My search-and-rescue work is on a volunteer basis. I’m a member of a team that responds to disaster calls around the country, but most of our work’s in New England. I’ve been doing more and more consulting in search management. That pays, but I still need to do projects at the lodge to make ends meet.”
Nick watched her run her palm over Ranger’s golden coat.
She added, “I can’t take on the intense commitment to train another dog anytime soon.”
“You and Ranger are still a team.”
“We have more work to do together. We could drop back to local wilderness searches. The disaster work’s intense and demanding for both of us.” She glanced up at Nick, the effects of the fire on the lake that morning—the needless death of a man she knew—less evident in her eyes, her mouth. “Enough about me.”
“You’re driven,” Nick said.
“This from Nick Martini,” Rose said, amused, and sat up, stretching out her legs in front of her. She’d changed into slim pants and a soft sweater and was barefoot. She seemed aware he was watching her every movement. “Sean’s driven, too, but he’s more subtle about it. Not you. Submarines, smoke jumping, making money—you dive into whatever you’re doing with absolute commitment. What’s your family like?”
He smiled slightly. “Intense but likable.”
Rose laughed. “You’re intense. ‘Likable’ remains to be seen. I know your father’s retired. For how long?”
“Five years. He misses the sea, even if he was under it most of his career. He has a number of different irons in the fire as a military consultant. My mother’s a geologist. She teaches at a local college. I have a sister, too. Diana. She’s career navy.”
“You enlisted. How’d that go over?”
He grinned. “It went over.”
“You were impatient. You still are. It can be a virtue. You didn’t hesitate today. You did well.”
Again his gaze settled on her. “So did you.”
“I’m not an adrenaline junkie,” she said, not defensively. “Maybe at first I had visions of drama and heroism and adventure, but canine search and rescue requires teamwork and a tremendous amount of dedication, training and practice, practice, practice. People who go into it for the glory usually don’t last.”
“It’s similar with smoke jumping.” Her toes almost touched his boots. “Training weeds out most of the people who are there for the wrong reasons. It weeds out those who have the right attitude, too, but just can’t do the job, for whatever reason.”
“I remember what Sean went through. It’s a grueling process.” Rose glanced at the fire blazing behind the glass doors of the woodstove. “Some firebugs are frustrated glory hogs.”
Nick didn’t respond. He knew her statement wasn’t a non sequitur.
She turned back to him. “They set fires out of an inflated sense of vanity. They like watching the fire itself, but they also like to watch the crews charge in to put it out—the feeling of power it gives them.” The fire glowed in her tawny-colored hair. “I don’t know what kind we’re dealing with. A glory hog mixed with a cold-blooded killer?”
“Not a good mix,” Nick said.
“No.”
He shifted the subject. “Ranger loves it here, doesn’t he?”
She smiled, slipping on her socks and boots. “You can tell, can’t you?”
“He’ll have a long, good retirement.”
They left him by the fire and headed out. They’d been invited to dinner at A.J. and Lauren’s house.
Summoned was more like it, Nick thought, but he understood. A.J. was worried about his sister, and not for no reason.
Rose didn’t protest when Nick suggested they take his car. He appreciated the short, easy drive to a white clapboard farmhouse on Ridge Road, just past Harper Four Corners. The driveway was crowded with cars. It had been a bad day in Black Falls, and Lauren and A.J. had also invited Dominique Belair, Myrtle Smith, the O’Rourke cousins, Zack Harper and Scott Thorne.
The little Camerons were already in bed. The house was simply decorated with a lot of bright, cheerful colors. Children’s finger paintings hung on the refrigerator. Guests were helping themselves to a simple buffet of cold meats and cheeses, salads, rolls and cookies.
The O’Rourkes and Dominique, clearly exhausted, didn’t stay long. Zack pulled Nick aside in the dining room and talked fires. The youngest Harper was a heartbreaker, but he wasn’t going anywhere. Black Falls was home. They discussed the emerging timeline of Robert Feehan and Derek Cutshaw’s actions over the past few days in particular. Zack commented that Feehan could have locked Dominique in the cabin and set the other two on fire and still have made it back to his campsite without burning up himself.
“I don’t think he meant to get killed,” Zack said. “It wasn’t suicide.”
“What was he doing at the lake?” Rose asked, sitting next to Zack at the pine table. “His tent was cozy, well hidden. Why not stay up there?”