Tย he drive from the station to my house was eleven minutes.
For the past eleven minutes, Iโd felt like Iโd forgotten something in the captainโs office.
Not just something. My badge.
Effective today, I was no longer a deputy with the Kootenai County Sheriffโs Office. And even though Iโd planned for this, eleven minutes hadnโt been long enough for this new reality to sink in.
I wasnโt a cop, not anymore.
There was a duffel bag in the back seat of my truck full of everything Iโd had stuffed in my locker at work. Even though Christmas was still a few weeks away, Alecโs wife had made me a tin of holiday cookies. They were in the passenger seat.
I hauled everything out of the truck but left it on a shelf in the garage, not having the energy to deal with it right now, then headed inside the house.
The moment I walked through the door to the laundry room, Vera came rushing around the corner. Her sock-covered feet slid like ice skates across the hardwood floor. โSo? Howโd it go? Did you quit?โ
โIt went. And yes, I quit.โ I sighed, setting my keys on top of the dryer. There used to be a hook beside the door where Iโd hang my keys. But when weโd arrived in Idaho six weeks ago, the hook had been missing along with a long list of other things that Tiff had taken when sheโd moved
out.
In the past six weeks, I hadnโt bothered to find a new hook. Or new nightstands for my bedroom. Or a coffee table in the living room.
The furniture had been mine, though apparently Tiff hadnโt cared. Vera didnโt seem to mind that there were holes where pieces of furniture should be. And I didnโt give a shit about, well . . . a lot. At least not much here in Idaho.
For the past month and a half, it had become glaringly obvious that Iโd left far, far too much of myself in Montana.
With Lyla.
โAre you okay?โ Vera asked.
โAll good,โ I lied. โYou got a haircut.โ
It was still long, the orange-red strands brushing against her heart, but it was six inches shorter than it had been when Iโd left this morning.
โIt was still scraggly.โ She plucked at a lock. โIt needed to go shorter.โ
Which was exactly what the stylist had told her the first time weโd gone to the salonโit had taken Vera nearly a month before sheโd leave the house without me, so Iโd taken her to that first haircut. And despite the stylistโs advice, Vera hadnโt wanted to lose too much length.
She liked her long hair. And I think sheโd feared that if there were too many changes, sheโd lose herself. Sheโd lose the girl whoโd spent those years in the wilderness with her father.
I was proud of her for going there today. For making another change. โIt looks really great.โ
โThanks.โ She shrugged. โI like it.โ
โThen thatโs all that matters.โ I toed off my boots, then I took off my winter coat, glad I had nowhere else to go today, because the roads around town were slick and covered in snow. โMaybe itโs time I got another haircut too.โ
The day Iโd taken Vera, Iโd had mine trimmed too, but that had been weeks ago and it was getting long again. Without Lyla around to run her fingers through it, there didnโt seem like much point in letting it grow.
โWe could walk to the salon tomorrow,โ Vera said. โOr you could practice driving.โ
She shook her head.
Vera wasnโt ready to drive again, not yet. Without any practice in the past four years, she had a lot of relearning to do. For now, wherever she needed to go, she walked. Even so, she rarely left the house.
โOn my walk back, I picked up stuff at the store to make soup. Itโs ready and I set the table. Are you hungry?โ
No.ย My stomach had been in a knot all day and would need a while to unravel. The idea of food only made the cramp worse.
But a week ago, Vera had declared that she wanted to contribute more around the house and that I needed toย let herย contribute more around the
house. Apparently Iโd been babying her. So in an effort to back off, Iโd put her in charge of dinner every night.
If sheโd made soup, then it was time to eat soup. โSoup on a cold day sounds great.โ
โOkay.โ She stood a little taller. A tiny smile graced her mouth before she whirled around and slid-shuffled across the floor toward the kitchen.
That small smile was about as much joy as Vera showed these days. It was hard to remember what she looked like when she was actually happy. There was no laughter in her. No blinding, toothy smiles.
I missed that Vera. And I wasnโt sure how to get her back. So Iโd focused on the practicalities instead.
Turns out . . . bringing a kid back to life was a clusterfuck of paperwork and skepticism.
Most people, like Alec, had needed an in-person visit to believe our story that Vera had shown up on my doorstep six weeks ago.
After Iโd called to tell him, letting him be the dry run before my meeting with the captain, Alec had rushed over and stared at Vera, speechless, for almost thirty minutes.
Other people, like my captain, had required DNA tests to prove Vera was in fact Vera.
Was it strange not to feel the weight of my badge on my belt? Yep. But fuck, I was glad Iโd never have to see that assholeโs face again.
Sorting through the mess had been a nightmare, but weโd made it through. The world now knew that Vera Gallagher was aliveโthe local papers had plastered her photo on the front page for weeks. A few national news sources had picked up the story too.
But the story weโd spun in Quincy with Lylaโs help had held up. As expected, Vera still refused to talk about that night with her mother. Since there wasnโt a damn thing people could do to make her talk, theyโd had to accept the rest of the details.
Cormac had taken Vera. Theyโd been living off the grid for four years.
And finally, sheโd left. Sheโd come home to a family friend.ย Uncle Vance.
The FBI had rushed to Idaho in hopes of finding Cormac, but also as expected, they hadnโt found him. And just like before, theyโd move on to other cases. Now that I wasnโt searching for Cormac, the world would likely forget he even existed.
The media attention had dwindled, though not fast enough for my liking. Not only had they drudged up the details from that night years ago, but since I was linked to Cormac, the gas station shooting had made a resurgence too.
Thankfully, that investigation was over.
Iโd been cleared of any wrongdoing, thank fuck. But the damage had already been done. The captain wanted me to keep a low profile, so heโd put me on desk work. The rumors about the family suing the department had fadedโprobably because theyโd realized their chances of winning were slim to none. Still, he hadnโt wanted to take any chances. Hadnโt wanted to broadcast my face to the public.
Apparently, the attention I was getting with Vera was already too much.
So for the past six weeks, Iโd been doing paperwork. A lot of fucking paperwork. It had just about sent me over the edge. But Iโd stuck it out. For Vera.
Iโd wanted to be at the station, in the department with a few resources at my disposal, until she was a full-fledged member of society.
She had her social security card reinstated. She had a driverโs license.
She had a checking account and a credit card.
And since the FBI seemed to have run out of questions for her, well . . . I was thinking we were out of the woods. So today, Iโd called it quits.
โDo you want milk or water?โ Vera asked from the kitchen.
โWater, please,โ I answered, walking through the house as a shiver rolled over my shoulders. โIs it chilly in here?โ
โNot really.โ
โHuh.โ Maybe it was just this house.
Had it always been this cold and sterile?ย Yes. Even when Tiff had lived here and I hadnโt been missing furniture, this place hadnโt had much of a personality. The walls were a dull gray that seemed to suck up the light. My lack of home dรฉcor skills meant there was no artwork to bring color into the space. No toss pillows or throw blankets or house plants.
It was nothing like the warm, inviting farmhouse on the outskirts of Quincy, Montana.
Goddamn it, I missed Lyla.
I should have made her promises, even when sheโd asked me not to.
All I wanted was to pick up the phone and hear her voice. Every day, I fought the urge to drive to Montana for a glimpse of her beautiful face. It killed me to think of her moving on.
But I wouldnโt tell her I was coming back, not until I knew it was true. I wouldnโt call her, drag her along, and make promises that I might not manage to keep.
Was she okay? Did she miss me a fraction of how much I missed her? โBig spoon or little spoon?โ Vera asked.
โBig. Iโll get napkins.โ
With them in hand, I went to the table and took my usual seat.
Vera carried over a bowl of soup made with golden broth, carrots, noodles and chicken.
โLooks delicious.โ
โIโve never made chicken noodle soup before.โ
I stirred it for a minute, letting it cool, then took that first, steaming bite. Salt filled my mouth. It was like swallowing a gulp of ocean water, but I fought a grimace and choked it down. โYum.โ
Vera took her own bite. And immediately spit it back into the bowl. โOh my God. Itโs awful.โ
โItโs not.โ I took another bite. Fuck, it was awful.
โI tasted it and it wasnโt salty enough, so I added some but . . .โ She set her spoon aside as the corners of her mouth turned down. โSorry.โ
โDonโt apologize. Youโre a good cook. One salty soup isnโt the end of the world.โ
Her chin began to tremble.
โVera.โ I covered her hand with mine as tears filled her eyes. โItโs just soup.โ
โItโs not even about the soup.โ She sniffled, wiping at her lashes. โThe cashier at the store today asked me if I was that girl from the paper.โ
Shit. โWhat happened?โ โI lied and told her no.โ
Because otherwise, Vera would get bombarded with questions. People had no qualms about stepping past boundaries if it meant satisfying their curiosity. People were the worst.
โIโm tired of lying, Uncle Vance. Iโm tired of being recognized everywhere I go.โ She caught another tear. โAnd I miss my dad.โ
โI know you do, kiddo.โ
โI thought . . . I thought it would feel different being here. I thought it would feel more like home. I thought . . .โ Vera trailed off and dropped her gaze to the salty soup.
โThought what?โ
โThought I would feel them.โ Hadley and Elsie.
Maybe, if we could have visited the spot where Iโd scattered their ashes, Vera would have felt that connection. But the snow was here to stay. If she wanted to visit, it would have to be this spring.
โWhat are we doing here?โ She sniffled, drying both eyes. โYou miss Lyla.โ
I missed her so much it was hard to breathe.
If Vera wanted to go back to Quincy, Iโd start packing tonight. But I also needed her to say the words. To choose that path for herself.
The only reason I was in Idaho was for Vera. To give her whatever life she wanted. But if we went back to Montana, that was it. There wasnโt a fucking chance Iโd leave Lyla again.
โWhat are you saying, Vera?โ
โIโm saying . . . I think we made a mistake. I think we should go back to Montana.โ