“I think it’s ironic that I filed a missing report in the missing persons section.”
“Shut it!” Shipley glared, his thick brows furrowed into a uni-brow. “Lombardo says you’ve been sleeping better, but I don’t believe him. Whatcha got to say about that?”
“Leo’s right. I slept like a baby last night.”
Shipley elevated a brow. “For a baby, you look like shit. You need a haircut. And a shave.” He wrinkled his nose. “Have you even showered this week?”
“I shower every day. Not that it’s any of your business. As for the length of my hair and beard, sounds like you’re crossing discrimination boundaries.”
“I’m not discriminating against you. I simply do not like you. You’re a goddamn drug addict, Taylor.”
Everyone in the center knew about Marcus’s past.
“Thanks for clarifying that, Peter.”
Shipley cringed. “All it’ll take is one more mistake. Everyone’s watching you. You mess up again and you’re out on your ass.” His shoulders relaxed and he folded back into the chair. “If it were up to me, I would’ve fired you months ago.”
“Good thing it isn’t up to you then.”
Marcus knew he was pushing the man’s buttons, but that wasn’t hard to do. Shipley was an idiot. A brown-noser who didn’t know his ass from his dick, according to Leo.
“This is your final warning,” Shipley said between his teeth. “We hold life and death in our hands. We can’t afford errors.”
“It was a misfiled report. The call was dispatched correctly and efficiently.”
“Yeah, at least you didn’t send the ambulance in the wrong direction.” A smug smile crossed Shipley’s face. “That was the stunt that got you knocked off your high horse as a paramedic. Got you fired from EMS.”
Marcus thought of a million ways to answer him. None of them were polite. He moved toward the door. “I think our little meeting is done.”
“I’m not finished,” Shipley bellowed.
“Yes you are, Pete.”
With that, Marcus strode from the office. He left Shipley’s door ajar, something he knew would tick off his supervisor even more than his insubordination.
He tried not to dwell on Shipley’s words, but the man had hit a nerve. Six years ago, Marcus had been publicly humiliated when the truth had come out about his addiction problem, and his future as a paramedic was sliced clean off the minute he drove that ambulance to the wrong side of town because he was too high to comprehend where he was going.
That’s when he’d taken some time off. From work… from Jane… from everyone. He’d headed to Cadomin to clear his mind and do some fishing. At least that’s what he’d told Jane. Meanwhile, he’d secretly packed his drug stash in the wooden box. Six days later, while in a morphine haze filled with strange images of ghostly children, he answered his cell phone. In a subdued voice, Detective John Zur revealed that Jane and Ryan had been in a car accident, not far from where Marcus was holing up.
That had been the beginning of the end for Marcus.
Now he was doing what he could to get by. It wasn’t that he couldn’t handle the career change from superstar paramedic to invisible 911 dispatcher. That wasn’t the problem. Shipley was. The guy had been gunning for him ever since Leo had brought Marcus in to fill a vacant spot left behind by a dispatcher who’d quit after a nervous breakdown.
“What did Titanic have to say?” Leo asked when Marcus veered around the cubicle.
“He doesn’t want to go down with the ship.”
“He thinks you’re the iceberg?”
Marcus gave a single nod.
“I got your back.”
Leo had connections at work. He knew the center coordinator, Nate Downey, very well. He was married to Nate’s daughter, Valerie.
“I know, Leo.”
As he settled into his desk and slipped on the headset, Marcus took a deep breath and released it evenly. The mind tricks between him and Shipley had become too frequent. They wreaked havoc on his brain and drained him.
Because Shipley never lets me forget.
The clock on the computer read: 12:20. It was going to be a very long day.
In the sleepy town of Edson, it was rare to see much excitement. The center catered to outside towns as well. Some days the phones only rang a half-dozen times. Those were the good days.
He flipped through the folders on his desk and found the protocol chart. Never hurt to do a quick refresher before his shift. It kept his mind fresh and focused.
But his thoughts meandered to the misfiled report.
Was he slipping? Was he putting people’s lives in danger? That was something he’d promised himself, and Leo, he’d never do again.
Remember Jane and Ryan.
How could he ever forget them? They’d been his life.
The phone rang and he jumped.
“911. Do you need Fire, Police or Ambulance?”
Marcus spent the next ten minutes explaining to eighty-nine-year-old Mrs. Mortimer, a frequent caller, that no one was available to rescue her cat from the neighbor’s tree.
Then he waited for a real emergency.
Chapter Two
Rebecca Kingston folded her arms across her down-filled jacket and tried not to shiver. Though May had ended with a heat wave, the temperatures had dropped the first week of June. It had rained for the first five days, and an arctic chill had swept through the city. The weatherman blamed the erratic change in weather on global warming and a cold front sweeping down from Alaska, while locals held one source responsible. Their lifelong rival—Calgary.
“Can we get an ice cream, Mommy?” four-year-old Ella said with a faint lips, the result of her recent contribution to the tooth fairy’s necklace collection.
Rebecca laughed. “It feels like winter again and you want ice cream?”
“Yes, please.”
“I guess we have time.”
They hurried across the street to the corner store.
“Strawberry this time,” Ella said, her blue eyes pleading.
Rebecca sighed. “Eat it slowly. Did you remember Puff?”
Her daughter nodded. “In my pocket.”
“Good girl.” Rebecca glanced at her watch. “It’s almost five. Let’s go.”
Her cell phone rang. It was Carter Billingsley, her lawyer.
“Mr. Billingsley,” she said. “I’m glad you got my message.”
“So you’ve decided to get away,” he said. “That’s a very good idea.”
“I need a break.” She glanced at Ella. “Things are going to get ugly, aren’t they?”
“Unfortunately, yes. Divorce is never pretty. But you’ll get through it.”
“Thanks, Mr. Billingsley.”
“Take care, Rebecca.”
Carter had once been her grandfather’s lawyer and Grandpa Bob had highly recommended him—if Rebecca ever needed someone to handle her divorce. In his late sixties, Carter filled that father-figure left void after her father’s passing.
Her thoughts raced to her twelve-year-old son. Colton’s team was up against one of the toughest junior high hockey teams from Regina. With Colton as the Edmonton team’s goalie, most of the pressure was on him. He was a brave boy.
She bit her bottom lip, wishing she were as brave.
You’re a coward, Becca.
“You’re too codependent,” her mother always said.
Rebecca figured that wasn’t actually her fault. She’d been fortunate to have strong male role models in her life. Men who ran companies with iron fists and made decisions after careful consideration. Or at least worked hard to provide for their families. Men like Grandpa Bob and her father. Men who could be trusted to make the right decisions.