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Kelly snickered. “I guess it’s a good thing you weren’t planning a romantic getaway with a handsome stranger.”

“Yeah, I guess.”

The thought made Rebecca sad. She missed having someone to snuggle up to at night. She missed having someone to talk to, share her day with. Sure, she had the kids, but it wasn’t the same.

“One day a handsome stranger will sweep you off your feet,” Kelly said.

Rebecca laughed. “I see you’re still living in fantasy land.”

“Always, Sis. Fantasies make the world go ’round.”

After they hung up, Rebecca stared at the small bag of snacks she’d purchased. She’d need a few more if Ella and Colton were coming with her.

On the way to her bedroom, she passed the hallway mirror. Pausing, she stared into it and thought about her sister’s words.

If a handsome stranger were going to make an appearance, she hoped to God it was on a day when she’d had time to shower and brush her hair.

Today wasn’t that day.

After a late lunch, she finished the laundry. Then she went to work on packing clothes for the trip, including a sleek black dress she hadn’t worn in over a year.

“In case I meet that handsome stranger,” she murmured.

This made her laugh. She was going to Cadomin, a town so small that if you blinked you’d drive right past it. “Yeah. What are the odds?”

Catching sight of her cell phone charger on the nightstand, she unplugged it from the wall. Suitcase or purse? With a shrug, she tossed it in the suitcase. Her phone had more than enough battery power to last the trip. Anyway, she had a car charger in the glove compartment, though she’d never used it.

She headed downstairs and spent the next half hour preparing snacks for the road. She’d have the kids pack them in their backpacks, and she’d keep a small cooler up front.

“Ah, water bottles.”

They usually kept a case of bottled water in the refrigerator in the garage, but when she opened the fridge door, she found the plastic and cardboard wrapping for the case and no water.

“Great.”

She glanced at her watch. It was time to pick up the kids. She’d stop at the store on the way home, all the while dreaming of the perfect vacation—the peace, the freedom, no stress.

By six o’clock that evening all hell had broken loose. Ella had dissolved into temper-tantrum mode because she couldn’t bring her bike on the trip, and Colton was busy in his room sulking because he had to finish all his homework before they left.

“I don’t get why I can’t do it there,” he yelled down the stairs.

Because we both know you’ll get distracted as soon as you step out of the car. “Colton, just get it done, please.”

Her patience was wearing thin. She released a sigh of frustration. This wasn’t how she wanted to start their weekend getaway.

Chapter Nine

Edson, AB – Friday, June 14, 2013 – 2:05 PM

“Looks like today’s going to be a slow one,” Marcus said.

Leo hovered over his shoulder. “Slow is always good in our line of work.”

“Yeah, it is.” Marcus sighed.

It was days like this that made him yearn for the adrenaline rush of the old days. When he was a paramedic, he never knew what to expect. Every call was different. Different people, places, conditions, traumas. As soon as the alert would sound, his entire body would speed into overdrive.

Leo handed him a mug of coffee.

“Thanks.”

“Don’t thank me yet, Marcus.”

“Why not?”

“It’s decaf.”

“You trying to kill me?”

“I was thinking that you drink too much coffee. Maybe that’s why you aren’t sleeping.”

I’m not sleeping because when I try, I see Jane and Ryan.

“I get enough.”

Leo snorted. “You don’t get enough. Of anything.”

“Please don’t start.”

Leo shrugged. “I’m worried about you, man.” He paused and shuffled his feet. “Val wants you to come to dinner on Sunday.”

“She does, does she? Who else is coming?”

Leo’s face reddened. “Who said anyone else was coming? Why can’t it simply be the three of us enjoying a good meal together? We’re all friends.”

Marcus cocked his head to one side. “Uh-huh…”

“Jesus, Marcus, you’re always so… untrusting.”

Marcus said nothing, his gaze locked on Leo’s.

Leo let out a huff. “Okay, fine. Val invited one of her girlfriends from work. Marcy. She’s smart and very attractive.”

“Leo, my good friend, you’ve gotta stop trying to hook me up.”

“It wasn’t me. It was—”

“Val?” Marcus finished. “So it’s all Val’s fault, huh?” He picked up the phone.

“What are you doing?”

“I’m calling your wife. It’s time I set her straight on my love life.”

“What love life?”

Marcus scowled. “The one I’m supposed to be in control of.”

Leo leaned forward and disconnected the call. “Okay, it was my idea. Not Val’s.” He sighed as if the whole world were on his rugged shoulders.

“I knew that.” Marcus grinned.

“Shipley’s heading your way,” Carol called out as she passed them.

“Lucky me,” Marcus muttered.

Leo ducked down behind the partition.

“Coward.”

“I doubt he’s coming to talk to me,” came Leo’s muffled reply.

Seconds later, Pete Shipley appeared. “You messed up on yesterday’s reports, Taylor.”

“Great. What did I forget this time? To dot the i’s?”

Shipley slapped the papers on Marcus’s desk. “The dates are wrong.”

Marcus glanced at the top report, taking in the dateline. It should have read June 13th. Instead it read 12th. What the hell?

He picked up the paper and held it closer. The 1 was darker than the 2 and it slanted to the right. He tended to write his numbers vertically. Someone had deliberately sabotaged the form. And there was only one person motivated to do something that vindictive.

He gave Shipley a bland look. “Wite-Out will take care of this.”

Shipley shook his head. “I’d like you to retype the forms.”

The man was looking for a fight. He’d do anything to goad Marcus into making a move that would land him in jail.

Marcus smiled. “Sure. No problem.”

Shipley’s face flickered, shifting from arrogance to confusion, then back to arrogance. “This is going in your file. Too many mistakes like this and we may think you’re not doing your job effectively enough to satisfy your rehab agreement.”

We? Had Shipley just cloned himself?

“Who else have you mentioned my mistake to, Pete?”

“The powers that be have asked me to report in to them. They take your rehabilitation very seriously.”

“As do I.”

They locked eyes again. Shipley was the first to back down.

“Get to work, Taylor.” Shipley looked at the partition. “And Leo, enough socializing with our addict here. Do what we pay you to. Work.” He marched off in the direction of his office, puffing and primping along the way.

Leo’s head appeared above the partition. “What a pompous peacock.”

Marcus chuckled. “You have a way with words, Leo.”

“Maybe that should be his nickname. Pompous Peacock.”

“Nah. Titanic suits him better. He’s heading for disaster and doesn’t even know it.”

“Yeah, and one day he’s gonna go down with his ship.”

The afternoon passed uneventfully after that. Marcus retyped the reports. When he handed them in to Shipley, he said, “I’ve decided to make copies of my reports. In case we have another issue with the dates.”