“ ’Cuz he’s hurt real bad.” Eli’s face was red; his lower lip quivering. “He can’t die!”
“Let’s not go there,” Trace said gently.
“Miss Wallis died!”
“I know.” Boy, did he know. It had been one helluva devastating week for all of them.
“But Sarge is a fighter.”
“Dr. Eagle will do her best to fix him up,” Kacey concurred.
“He won’t die, will he?”
She squeezed his good hand. “I don’t know. We have to just wait and see.” Glancing up at Trace, she said, “Why don’t I take Eli over to Dino’s and get him a pizza or something? Then, when you’re done here, you could come over.”
Since Dino’s Italian Pizzeria was just across the street, the doctor’s idea made sense, he supposed. Until they knew the extent of Sarge’s injuries, there was just no reason for Eli to wait and worry. And if it came down to actually having to euthanize the dog, Trace wanted to handle it his own way. Better for Eli not to witness that decision. “I guess that would be okay,” he said, knowing that Eli liked the woman doctor. “What do you think?” he asked his son.
Eli looked up at Kacey, and she took his small hand in her own. “How about we pick out our ice cream even before we order the pizza?”
“Can we eat it first?” Eli asked.
“Well . . .” She looked at Trace.
“Knock yourself out. I’ll be right there,” Trace answered, and they headed out the door together.
A blast of wintry air swept into the room, and the tiny bell over the doorjamb jingled, announcing their departure.
Through the front windows Trace watched as Kacey bustled his son across the street. She glanced up and down the snowy street, then over her shoulder, her forehead wrinkling with concern.
About the nearly nonexistent traffic?
Or was there something more in her quick scan of the area?
Don’t borrow trouble. She’s just being cautious, for crying out loud.
What was important was the way she guided his boy gently onto the sidewalk. For a second Trace’s stupid heart twisted as he realized his son’s own mother had never seemed so concerned about Eli’s welfare.
Then again, Leanna hadn’t been a prize as far as mothers went.
Funny, he thought as he watched Kacey open the door to the restaurant, whose modern style was at odds with the overall Western theme of the town. The pizzeria’s storefront was all windows, now decorated for the season with painted snowmen and snowwomen skating, hoisting pizzas on their shoulders across a sea of glass. It was eerie how much Kacey reminded him of Leanna. An odd, almost sinister sensation slithered down his spine and burrowed coldly in his gut at the comparison. Hadn’t there been that same thought with Jocelyn Wallis?
Weird, he told himself, bugged at the turn of his own thoughts as the door to the back room opened and Jordan Eagle, her expression grave, returned to the reception area.
“It’s bad,” he said before she could open her mouth and say one word about Sarge’s condition.
“Well, at least not good.”
“Are we gonna lose him?”
“I don’t think so, but I’m not sure about his leg. The tendons and muscles are pretty mangled.” Her dark, honest gaze held his as she explained that she wanted to do surgery, to mend as much as she could.
“Do what you can,” Trace said. He’d grown up on a farm, seen animals suffer, others die, knew his old man had “put down” more than his share on his own, with his rifle or pistol, depending. Death was just a part of life. Trace accepted it. But he was thankful Sarge was going to pull through. He didn’t want Eli to face losing the dog. Not yet. Not when he’d already been abandoned by his mother and just learned about his teacher’s death.
“Do what you can,” he repeated to the veterinarian.
“It could get expensive.”
His jaw tightened. “Just keep me posted.”