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For the second time in the past ten minutes Cameron was startled by someone sneaking up on him. He spun on his heel.
Ann. He tightened his grip on his plastic cup and it snapped, a trickle of punch wound its way down the cup's side. Great.
Where should he start? Seeing her in person was different than talking on the phone. Far different. Those eyes. Captivating. He'd forgotten how beautiful she was. And she looked leaner than when he'd last seen her. Maybe hosting Adventure Northwest Adventure Northwest required more than just standing in front of the camera. required more than just standing in front of the camera.
"Hey, Ann, hi." Cameron leaned in to give her a quick hug at the same time she extended her hand, which caused her to poke him in the stomach.
She pulled her hand back. "Sorry."
"No, my fault, I wasn't sure if I should..."
Awkward. Just like the last time they'd seen each other.
"Thanks for coming down here," Cameron said.
"Sure." Ann nodded.
"I'm thinking we'll connect tomorrow late afternoon and talk about our game plan. I have some things I need to do the first half of the day."
"Good. Perfect. What time were you thinking? Three? Four?"
"Let's say four. I'll call you around three thirty and we'll pick a spot."
"Fine." Ann turned and waltzed back into the crowd, greeting fans along the way. She'd never been athletic like Jessie, but she moved with a fluid grace that was a bit mesmerizing.
He slogged back toward his hotel and stopped to look at the Three Peaks Bakery. Closed. A sign said the building was constructed in the mid-1920s. In the window were three apple fritters that looked like they needed a home.
He patted his stomach. Jessie and he used to have an apple fritter night two or three times a year where they'd gorge themselves on the treats and curse their decision the next day.
Had Jessie done the same thing with Ann when they roomed together in college? Probably. He turned and trudged on. Five days already in Three Peaks. And little to show for it.
"I'm not getting much of anywhere, Jess. You think a fritter could make me feel better?"
By the time he stepped into the lobby of the Best Western, his legs wobbled. His exhaustion was more emotional than physical, but his body still felt like he'd spent the day climbing Mount Kilimanjaro.
He fumbled in his front pants pocket for his hotel card and couldn't locate it. Where... ? Right. Back pocket. Cameron pulled it out and stared at the green stripe.
What was his room number? 304? 324? Think! Think! He popped himself in the forehead twice with his fist. He looked over at the hotel's night host who stared at him with raised eyebrows. He popped himself in the forehead twice with his fist. He looked over at the hotel's night host who stared at him with raised eyebrows.
Why couldn't he just ask the night guy behind the counter? No, he'd figure it out; he just needed to stop thinking about it for minute. He glanced around the lobby for a distraction.
A rack of brochures next to the check-in desk caught his eye. He wandered over to it and found leaflets that boasted of guided hikes that would fascinate him, a Bavarian Village fifty miles down the road that would fill him with unforgettable memories, white-water rafting that was the "trip of a lifetime" and world-cla.s.s golf courses that promised to "Take you away from it all." He was ready to be taken away from it all and checked into a new life. One with a brain that wasn't missing a spark plug or three. Where do I sign up? Where do I sign up?
After five minutes of pretending he was reading the brochures, he broke down and approached the front desk. "Hey, can you remind me what room I'm in? Too many hotels in too many weeks and all the numbers start to blend together."
"No problem, Mr. Vaux."
Eschewing the elevators, he took the stairs to the second floor, the whole way fingering the rock Susan Hillman had given him. He rolled the cool, almost cold surface of the stone around his palm and stared at its intricate pattern of red lines, each one ending at a black spot on the stone. It was comforting.
On impulse he pulled Jessie's stone out from under his s.h.i.+rt and held the two stones side by side. They looked good together. Jessie had said her stone was a key, but he had no idea what that meant. He'd shown the stone to three northwest historians just before he left Seattle, but none of them had any idea what the markings were. If it was a key to finding the book, he needed some way to locate the door.
When he reached his floor and finally his door, he stuffed his card into the lock and pulled it out. The green light flared. He pushed the door handle and trudged into his room, not bothering to turn on the light. All he wanted was for sleep to consume him.
Let me escape. Sleep come quick, okay?
As soon as he plopped onto the russet bedspread, he jerked back up and rubbed his neck. A sharp corner of something had poked him. He fumbled for the light on the nightstand and snapped it on. A square dark maroon envelope held a thick red card inside. As he slid the card free, he couldn't help but think of Ann. She'd worn a maroon polo s.h.i.+rt at Jason's gathering. A great color on her.
My dearest Mr. Cameron,I hope you have enjoyed our hospitality during your short visit to our town. If you don't leave within the next day, and instead choose to prolong your unwarranted escapade here, the consequences will be, shall we say, disagreeable.Regards,A friend
Cameron crumpled the note in his hand, his eyes darting around the room as his smile turned into laughter. Excellent. He was on the right track. And he had a pretty good idea who that trail would lead to.
CHAPTER 15.
Midmorning on Sat.u.r.day, Cameron unclipped another nut from his rack, jammed it into the crack and clipped in with a carabineer. He wedged his chalk covered fingers into the crack and adjusted his foot so he could stick the hold.
He was seventy-five feet above the forest floor and trying to keep his fear in check. Another hundred feet or so and he'd crest the ridge of the cliff and have a look at the amber and green valley below without a cascade of adrenaline pumping through his veins.
Right now the adrenaline was a torrent because the fear he'd confronted when he and Jessie learned to climb together had never left him. Could he manage it? Yes. Conquer it? Not even close. Even looking out a window from more than three stories up filled his stomach with stampeding b.u.t.terflies. But the price was worth it. When he climbed, he felt Jessie and nothing else. Every other extraneous thought vanished as his concentration narrowed. And he didn't have to remember anything except how to stay alive.
His next move was a micro hold about two feet above his head. With a shove off the edge with his foot, he should be able to reach it with his fingertips. He stiffened his left hand in the crack, bending his fingers to create a human anchor, then released the wall with his right hand. Cameron plunged his hand into his chalk bag then returned to his hold; trying to ignore the burn in his arms and calves.
He took a breath and focused on the wall a quarter-inch in front of his nose.
The climb was listed as a 5.9 in Spectacular Northwest Climbs, Spectacular Northwest Climbs, but it seemed closer to a 5.10. The difficulty of finding decent holds increased the higher he got. Always have three points of contact; it was a fundamental of beginning rock climbing, but this route wasn't for beginners. And while Cameron wasn't a beginner, no one would describe him as advanced. but it seemed closer to a 5.10. The difficulty of finding decent holds increased the higher he got. Always have three points of contact; it was a fundamental of beginning rock climbing, but this route wasn't for beginners. And while Cameron wasn't a beginner, no one would describe him as advanced.
Squinting into the sun he saw his next hold and stretched out for it. Short by at least five inches. He reached the crux. The hardest part of the climb; the spot where the 5.9 rating came from. The only way to reach it was to shove off with his foot. His anchors would hold.
He was taking too long deliberating the next move. Momentum. Climb with momentum, few pauses. Just go!
Cold sweat broke out on his forehead.
Should he descend? No. He was almost halfway up and down-climbing would be harder than moving up. As his options pinged through his mind, Cameron looked down. A tactical error. Sweat seeped through the white chalk on his palms and fingers. Not good.
To think people free climbed this route without ropes. Insane. His right leg started bouncing, the panic inside pus.h.i.+ng its way out.
Closing his eyes he sucked in a deep breath, then let it out slow. He laid his cheek against the cliff face and took another breath. Then another.
You want to live without me? You want to live with your memories vanis.h.i.+ng? You want to try to live without a mind?
The thoughts flashed through him like they were spoken.
"Jessie?" Her name escaped his lips before he could stop it.
Join me. It would be simple.
Yes. It would be so easy. He could unknot himself from the rope-his toes the only thing keeping him on the cliff-then slowly lean back till the wind whistled past his ears, faster, faster, eyes closed, not knowing the moment of impact until...
Progress on finding the book was moving like a glacier, and he still had no gut feeling one way or another if it would turn out to be the answer to all his hopes or an illusion that would leave his soul even emptier than it felt right now.
He couldn't live with his mind slowly melting away like early winter snow.
He looked down again and his stomach knotted tighter, then reached toward his harness to undo the rope.
No one would ever know. It would be declared an accident, case opened and closed before sunset. Brandon could find another partner.
Cameron blinked rapidly and waited for his panic to settle, for the voice that couldn't be Jessie's to stop whispering at him-for the rational part of himself to grow strong again. But it didn't. He tried to swallow, but his mouth was too dry and a cough rasped out.
He should join her. Why not? Before all memory of her vanished.
Join her.
He reached toward his harness to undo his rope. He watched his fingers, as if detached from them, start to undo the knot. His toe slipped and he instinctively reached up to grip the wall. Wait, what was that?
Cameron started as he spied a figure on top of the cliff looking down at him. He or she was silhouetted by the blazing sun behind her, the outline of a rope around her shoulders. Female? Looked like it. The figure turned and he caught the outline of shoulder-length hair and a slender, athletic figure. Definitely a woman.
A witness.
Thank you.
Whoever it was had just restored a spot of sanity to his brain. What was he thinking?
Cameron sucked in a breath, shoved himself upward, and snagged the next hold with his fingertips.
"I hope I'll see you again someday Jessie, but not yet. Not yet."
An hour later he reached the top and slumped to the rocky ground breathing hard. After catching his breath, he glanced around for his lone spectator.
No one.
He slid out of his climbing gear, settled down on a boulder, and grabbed his water bottle. After five gulps he dumped the rest on his head and studied the drops of water as they fell from the ends of his dark hair.
They trickled onto the ground, sending up little puffs of dust. He couldn't keep his legs from shaking. Not from fatigue-from the fear of his near embrace with death.
"Cameron?"
He twisted to see who it was.
Unbelievable. Ann. Maybe there was a G.o.d. And Cameron was the ant under the magnifying gla.s.s. Thanks for the torture, Book of Days Author. Book of Days Author.
He shook his head. "You never wanted anything to do with climbing. I never imagined you would get into it."
"That makes two of us." She walked toward him, auburn hair bouncing on her shoulders.
"But you did."
"I hated it at first. I think I still do. But it's a way to be close to Jessie. You know what I mean?"
Cameron nodded. He knew.
"I didn't know you were climbing again."
The fear from the climb still hung on him like a concrete robe; she had to see it in his eyes and notice his leg bouncing like a jackhammer. But if she did, Ann didn't let on.
"I only stopped for about six months." He s.h.i.+fted, stretching his legs out in front of him. "What about you?"
Ann folded her arms and tapped her foot. "I started a year and a half ago. I still have a ton to learn."
"Hey, I'm a.s.suming you just scaled this peak solo since no one else is up here, and if you did, you've got a pretty fast download going."
"That climb was a bit outside my comfort zone. Actually a lot outside." Ann paced, five yards away. "It's interesting to see you up here."
Interesting? What, she didn't think he could handle the climb? "You too." Cameron gazed out over the valley spread out below them like a golden-brown silk river, splotches of green spread randomly throughout. She was probably waiting for him to say something, but what? The only noise was a light wind straining to get through the pine trees dotting the ridge just behind them.
"I watched you catch your breath for a few minutes about a third of the way up. How long did it take you to get up here?"
Cameron's face flushed. If she only knew. He rubbed his forehead and coughed. "About an hour."
"I wish I could climb with that speed. I've focused on the sport intensely for the past eighteen months, but I feel like I've plateaued." She pulled her hair into a ponytail and secured it. "I've heard of climbers with natural talent. I am not one of those fortunate souls."
Ann offered him a bottle of Powerade from her climbing pack and he accepted. After a few moments of silence, she got up, eased over to the edge of the cliff, and sat with her legs hanging over it.
After a few seconds' hesitation, he got up and joined her.
Ann peered at him out of the corner of her eye. "So, will we be able to get along for the next week or so?"
"You tell me, Banister. Our relations.h.i.+p has never been bathed in a great deal of warmth."
She shrugged. "I think we'll be fine."
"I hope so."
"I should let you know, I'm not here just to help you find out more about your dad's and Jessie's book."
"Really."