canât get into too much trouble out on our quiet Vermont lake.â
Her sister was serious again. âHe should be dead, Jo. He tied a tourniquet on his leg and expected to fight until his last breath and save his men. Insteadâhe lived.â
âHe says heâs fully recovered.â
âHe probably is. Physically, at least. Heâs lucky. Youâve had advance medical training as a Secret Service agentâyou know how dangerous femoral artery injuries are. I canât imagine one in the middle of a firefight in the remote mountains of Afghanistan. Itâs a miracle he lived. An absolute miracle.â
âWas anyone else injured?â
âRose tried to pry what she could out of him and his doctors. Itâs not much. He was part of a joint special operations team that came under attack. A Navy SEAL was killed. Another was grievously wounded. Elijah spent a month in the hospital. He did rehab and supposedly got some kind of staff assignment for a while. Now heâs home.â
âPermanently?â
âWho knows? There are lots of rumors about Elijah, as you can imagine. Including that heâs not satisfied with the official explanation of his fatherâs death. Scott helped with the search.â
âTough time.â
Beth nodded. âThe worst. Itâs not Elijahâs fault his father died, but in my opinion, heâs looking to assuage his own guilt for not being here. Of course, that wasnât his fault, either.â
âMaybe he has legitimate unanswered questions.â
âAnd maybe his questions have no answers. Uh-oh. Speak of the devil.â Beth pushed back her chair and made a face. âHeâs all yours, Jo.â
Jo glanced back toward the street and saw that, in fact, Elijah had arrived at the café. She grinned at her sister. âChicken.â
âYou bet. He scares me when he comes in here and orders a scone. Can you imagine, Elijah Cameron sitting down with a scone and butter?â
âYouâre bad, Beth. Honestly.â
Her sister laughed. âScott would agree with you. Iâll have to tell him you two have common ground after all.â She got to her feet and gathered up her plate and mug. âMy hamstrings are on fire. I need at least a dayâs rest before we go for another run.â
âIt felt good, running up here instead of in the cityââ
âAnd running with your out-of-shape sister instead of all your buff Secret Service friends.â
âYouâre not that out of shape, Beth.â
âHa,â she said as she dumped her plate and mug in a dishpan on a side table and scooted out, passing Elijah on his way in. No Red Sox cap todayâthe sun caught the ends of his close-cropped tawny hair, reminding Jo, somehow, of him at nineteen. But she knew it would be a mistake to fall back on old habits.
Plus, he was obviously in some kind of cantankerous, rotten Cameron mood.
He didnât say a word to Beth, then ignored Jo, or maybe didnât notice her, and headed straight for the glass case, where Hannah Shay was unloading cookies from a big metal sheet onto an evergreen plate. She had on a frumpy skirt, and her fair hair was pulled back in a simple ponytail that emphasized the delicate bone structure of her face.
She gave Elijah a cool look. âWhat can I get you? The cookies are still warm. I have peanut butter, chocolate chipââ
âIs Devin here?â
More coolness. âNo, Elijah, heâs not.â
âWhere is he?â
âIâm sorry.â Hannah tucked the empty tray under one arm. âI donât have time to talk. I have to study.â
She set the tray on the spotless counter, peeled off her apron and walked calmly out from behind the case. Whatever was going on between her and Elijah, Hannah, Jo thought, had herself under control. She always did. She was in her late twenties but seemed older, perhaps because of the hard
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