Lost and Found Pieces 2

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Lost and Found Pieces 2 Page 14

by J. M. Madden


  Raine smiled softly. That seemed like high praise from Noah. “Thank you for helping me.”

  “Did you send your mama pictures?”

  Raine blinked at the totally innocent question. It took her a moment to shake her head. “No,” she said softly. “She died a few years ago, too, on Christmas Eve.”

  Noah blinked at her, then muttered a curse. “I’m sorry. The way you talked I thought…”

  He wrapped an arm around her shoulders and squeezed her in a quick hug, and for a timeless moment Raine let herself absorb the comfort. Raine loved the feel of his arm around her and missed it as soon as it was gone. Technically she wasn’t on duty but they were at work, so, him pulling away was probably the right thing to do.

  “I understand why Christmas is so important to you now,” he murmured.

  She sighed, her eyes filling with tears. “Yeah. It’s the most important thing I shared with my mother. Her love of lights and the hope of the season. Amazing things can happen during the holidays. I don’t know how she pulled off some of the things she did because very often we had zero money. And it wasn’t that my dad didn’t work, he did. But it just wasn’t enough to keep us all afloat. And then mama got sick…” her voice trailed off. This was too perfect of a night to blemish it with hard, hurtful thoughts. “Anyway,” she said, smiling brightly, “I want this room to be about finding new joy. And reminding the men that even though they may not be with their real family, we’re happy enough to step in for now.”

  Noah grinned crookedly. “You know, that’s good enough for me,” he said softly.

  Throughout the night people wandered through. Raine loved seeing the joy break over their faces as they entered the room. It helped to beat back her own sadness. She thought that by building this room she would be able to feel closer to her mother, but it wasn’t working that way yet. Instead it was making her feel like she was that much further away and she found herself fighting tears.

  Inevitably there were stories, some from the men from the states and others from around the world as the men spied things from their culture. The two Germans shook their heads when they spied the pickles, but loved the rest of the decorations. One man cried when he found a menorah display and sat down to stare at it for a long time. His joy at being recognized made her cry as well.

  When Paul rolled into the room pushing Haven in a wheelchair, she was surprised and a little worried. If Haven went into an attack it would be difficult to control all the people in here. There were men sitting at the rec tables, some talking, some just sitting as they absorbed the wonder of the long room. Even the nurses were hanging around talking, enjoying the ambiance. Raine would like to think that the room had brought good memories and enjoyment for everyone.

  Haven’s eyes had gone wide as he rolled in, but he didn’t appear to be panicking. Raine walked over and held out her hand to him. After a short hesitation he took it, his gaze connecting with hers. “This is really something,” he whispered.

  Raine grinned. “Thank you. I’m glad you let Paul bring you down.”

  Haven stared at her, blinking. “Why aren’t you happy?”

  Tears filled her eyes again and she tried to pull away. She shouldn’t cry because a resident asked her a question. She started to turn away and brush her tears away, but she stopped. If she wanted to build trust with Haven he deserved truth. “Because it reminds me how sharply I miss my mother. She died at Christmas two years ago, and this is the first time I’ve gone all out to decorate anything. I thought it would feel like I was honoring her, but I only feel pain at her loss.”

  The tears rolled down her cheeks and she just let them. When her mama had died Raine had thought she was going to die, the pain was so devastating. It had taken her months to even feel like she was living again.

  “What would your mother say about this room?” Haven asked, cradling her hand in both of his.

  The question forced Raine to look around, and see. “She would love that it had brought people together in a way they hadn’t had a chance to before. She would love that they seem to be enjoying the work I put into it. And I think she would love that something that she had started was living on.”

  Haven smiled slightly, his deep-set eyes glinting with some emotion. Then the room dimmed and she thought someone had flicked off the lights. She looked down the length of the room and gasped. Her mother stood looking up at the tree, her eyes gone soft with the multi-color light. Without even realizing she was moving, Raine walked toward her mother, holding Haven’s hand, afraid to blink. She knew that Haven had to be creating the vision, but for the moment she didn’t care. Her mother was standing less than twenty feet in front of her, looking so real Raine thought she could reach out and touch her.

  Mama’s blond hair was piled on top of her head in one of the messy buns she used to do, and she was dressed in one of daddy’s flannel shirts she liked to wear around the house. There was a radiance to her face as she looked up at the house. Raine thought that was the memory she was seeing; one of her childhood memories before everything had changed. Even as she watched her mama looked up at the sky and the falling snowflakes, holding her palms out to catch them. Raine looked around, entranced as snowflakes began to fall around her. She held out her hand, the one Haven wasn’t holding, and let the snowflakes fall on her palm. Was she actually feeling the cold or was she merely imagining it as the flakes melted against her skin?

  Mama looked at her and Raine swallowed, her throat threatening to close off completely. Her mother had been so beautiful, her skin weather-worn, smile lines around her mouth and cheeks. She and daddy had been in love like teenagers and though they’d been poor, they’d made the most of everything they could.

  “I love you, mama,” she whispered. “And I miss you so bad.”

  “I love you, baby girl,” her mother responded, before she gently faded away and the rec room returned.

  Raine clapped a hand over her mouth to contain sobs and she was vaguely aware of strong hands on her shoulders guiding her into a chair. As tears rolled down her cheeks she looked up at Noah. “That was my mama.”

  He nodded, kneeling down in front of her and she realized his eyes were swimming with tears too, though he wasn’t crying like she was. “I saw my grandmother, by the nativity.”

  She looked around the room, suddenly aware that she wasn’t the only one distraught. Others were crying, mostly the female nurses but some of the male patients, as well. One man had passed out on the floor and Paul had moved to make sure he was okay. One man had his hand stretched out toward the nativity scene, saying Pépé over and over again. She thought it meant grandfather in French. Had all of these people seen something like she had? Turning, she looked at Haven.

  The man appeared to have shrunk down in his wheelchair, the circles around his eyes even deeper. “Did you do this?” she whispered. “Did you give me that glimpse of my mother again?”

  He didn’t say anything, just closed his eyes. Raine reached out, her eyes filling with even more tears as she realized what Haven had done for her. What he’d done for them all. “You are amazing,” she breathed. “Thank you. She looked beautiful.”

  “It was your most clear memory of her,” Haven whispered. “You’d remembered it several times over the past couple of days so you were almost broadcasting it. I just gave it a little spark.”

  Raine heaved a breath, looking around the room again. Those that had been affected by the visions were coming back to themselves and the man on the floor sat up, looking dazed.

  Noah rested his hand on her knee. “Are you okay?”

  Raine nodded, feeling…ephemeral. Lighter in her skin. “He gave us all a vision of our lost loved ones.”

  Noah nodded, still rubbing her knee. “I like those visions a lot better than the ones trying to kill me.”

  Haven seemed to have wilted in his chair. With a pat on his hand, she moved away from Noah and to the resident. “Are you okay?”

  “I think I might have done too
much.” He blinked up at her. “I feel like I’m going to crash, Nurse Raine.”

  “Okay, I’ll get you back to your room.” She moved around behind him and turned the wheelchair to leave the room. She caught Paul’s gaze and he nodded, acknowledging what she was doing. Then she pushed Haven back down to his room, Noah trailing along behind. Within just a minute she was maneuvering Haven down his hallway and into his room. He barely had the energy to stand so Noah helped him to the bed. It spoke to how wrung-out he was that he didn’t protest being in the bed itself, rather than on the floor where he normally stayed.

  “Can I give you a cover?” she asked quietly.

  “Yes,” he whispered.

  She pulled the light blanket up over his shoulders, draping it over him carefully, then she rested her hand on his shoulder. “Tomorrow I’ll get you all the Coke you want, buddy. Thank you for what you did tonight.”

  Raine wasn’t sure if he heard her or not. His breathing had already deepened. She watched him for a moment, looking for anything medically wrong, but he just seemed to be super tired.

  Making sure the light was on in the bathroom, she left Haven’s room. Noah was leaning against the opposite wall. He gave her a long look, his golden eyes probing. “You okay?”

  Raine nodded. “Just… thankful, I guess. She looked so real, standing there. Strong, before the sickness took her.”

  Noah rocked his head. “My grandmother, as well. She was looking down into the nativity crib, checking to see if we’d stolen Jesus again.”

  Raine snorted and started down the hall, hands in her scrubs pockets. “I have a feeling when we talk to everyone else they’ll report similar scenes.” She glanced at her watch. “I think I’d better call Elizabeth and update her on what just happened.”

  Noah laughed lightly. “You can tell her she missed the Christmas miracle.”

  Blinking at him, she shook her head. “Yeah, I guess you’re right. And for the first time, I don’t know if he recognized it or not, but Haven manifested something other than doom and gloom. Deliberately.”

  Noah lifted his dark brows and gave her a nod. “We’ll all be thinking about and analyzing this night for a while,” he said thoughtfully.

  Yes, they definitely would.

  Noah walked her back to the nurse station, but everyone appeared to still be down in the rec room. Even as she thought it she saw Paul walking a couple of the residents back to their rooms. Raine wondered what he had seen.

  Tiredness suddenly dragged at her eyelids.

  “I think you need to take some time off, Nurse Walters, and get some real sleep. You’ve been running hard to get the room done. You need to take some time for yourself, now.”

  She nodded. “Yeah,” she sighed. “I think you’re right.”

  Paul agreed with Noah’s assessment when he walked up. “Go to bed, my friend. We’ll talk tomorrow. Everyone is okay. Get some rest.”

  Noah guided her down the hallway to the elevator and punched the button for their floor. Raine held onto the siderail. “That was amazing,” she said softly.

  “It was,” he agreed.

  When the elevator stopped he held a hand out for her to step off ahead of him, then he followed her down the hallway. Raine stopped in front of her door and keyed in the code, swinging the door open. Then she turned back to Noah. “I want to thank you for helping me out with everything today and yesterday. It wouldn’t have been as cool without your help.”

  Then, before she could think better of it, she stepped forward, went up on tiptoe and kissed him on his lean cheek, one hand braced on his muscular chest. Noah went completely still, and she thought he might have been holding his breath, too. She was about to pull away when he suddenly cupped her head in his hands and brushed his lips against hers, ever so gently. Raine gasped, shocked at the sudden bolt of heat through her body. All her tiredness disappeared as she tasted him for the first time and she cupped his neck, stroking his jaw with her other hand. Noah tasted of danger and temptation, and she wasn’t sure she was ready for the kind of storm he would be.

  Reluctantly, she drew back. “Good night, Noah.”

  His steady golden eyes watched her as she let herself into the apartment. “Good night, Raine.”

  Closing the door behind herself, she watched until her vision was obscured, then she turned and leaned against the panel, feeling like she’d just brushed against the tail end of a comet.

  “I’ll see you tomorrow,” he called through the door, and she took it as a promise.

  Watch for Raine and Noah in the next Dogs of War book, Catalyst, coming in April. It’s up for preorder now!

  Also by J.M. Madden

  If you love dogs and would like to read about a concierge service helping military personnel out of difficult spots, check out:

  Healing Home

  Wicked Healing

  Healing Hope (Coming Soon!)

  If you like a paranormal twist to your military, check out the Dogs of War! (If you love Christine Feehan’s Ghost Walkers you should enjoy this series!)

  Genesis-Free

  Chaos

  Destruction

  Retribution

  Noah’s book Catalyst will be out in April. If you would like to preorder, click here!

  If you would like to read a Navy SEAL book with more mature characters, check out

  SEAL Hard

  Flat Line

  If you would like to read about the ‘combat modified’ veterans of the Lost and Found Investigative Service, check out these books:

  The Embattled Road

  Duncan, John and Chad

  Embattled Hearts-Book 1

  John and Shannon

  Embattled Minds-Book 2

  Zeke and Ember

  Embattled Home-Book 3

  Chad and Lora

  Embattled SEAL- Book 4

  Harper and Cat

  Embattled Ever After- Book 5

  Duncan and Alex

  Her Forever Hero- Grif

  Grif and Kendall

  SEAL’s Lost Dream-Flynn

  Flynn and Willow

  SEAL’s Christmas Dream

  Flynn and Willow

  Unbreakable SEAL- Max

  Max and Lacey

  Embattled Christmas

  Reclaiming The Seal

  Gabe and Julie

  Loving Lilly

  Diego and Lilly

  Her Secret Wish

  Rachel and Dean

  Wish Upon a SEAL (Kindle World)

  Drake and Izzy

  Mistletoe Mischief

  Cass and Roger

  Lost and Found Pieces

  The Lowells of Honeywell, Texas

  Forget Me Not

  Untying his Not

  Naughty by Nature

  Trying the Knot

  Other books by J.M. Madden

  A Touch of Fae

  Second Time Around

  A Needful Heart

  Wet Dream

  Love on the Line

  The Billionaire’s Secret Obsession

  If you’d like to connect with me on social media and keep updated on my releases, try these links:

  http://www.jmmadden.com/newsletter.htm

  www.jmmadden.com

  FB-Authorjmmadden

  Twitter- @authorjmmadden

  And of course you can always email me at [email protected]

 

 

 


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