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Operation Soldier Next Door
Operation Soldier Next Door
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Operation Soldier Next Door

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“So what does that mean?” he asked.

“It’s early yet, but if I had to guess...”

“Please guess. I won’t hold you to it.”

“The tank that blew is pretty scorched on the bottom.”

Tate got there quickly. “So you think the lower tank valve got opened somehow, the leak got ignited somehow and the extreme heat from that fire blew the tank stacked on top of it?”

“That’s the theory, yes. There’s some additional recovered material we have yet to identify, but right now...”

That was a lot of somehows, Tate thought. But he said only, “So...a freak accident?”

“Sorry, I can’t say. That determination hasn’t been made yet. I’m only calling now because Brett Dunbar asked me to let you know something ASAP.”

It took him a moment to place the name. And after the call had ended he shook his head at the oddity of having a man he’d never met intercede for him at the request of a neighbor he’d met less than a day and half ago.

Yes, there was a lot to be said for this small-town stuff. And people—and dogs—named Foxworth.

Maybe even girls next door.

Chapter 7 (#uc2168f76-7182-5e51-bd47-473b1730e57c)

It was the dog again.

Tate scowled. Counting the first night, this was the fifth time in the last two days the dog had shown up. It was as if the dog made rounds, and he’d added Tate to the list. And each time he was followed by his people, one or the other or sometimes both. They seemed remarkably unperturbed at having to retrieve their pet so often.

But this time he’d made it into the house, through the patio sliding door that Tate had left open while he carried out debris he’d found thrown into other areas of the house. Even more irritating, he was in the kitchen. Sitting in that same alert way Tate had seen before.

At first he thought the dog was expecting a dog biscuit or some kind of treat. But then he realized the dog wasn’t just sitting, he was staring. As Sunny had, when something was wrong with the familiar landscape around her. Intent, undistractable, until something was done about the offending intrusion. Once it had been a visiting general, who landed high on the “don’t like this” scale. Once it had been a new video game with lots of loud car noises that somebody had brought into the mess tent. The last time he’d seen it had been a celebrity visitor she had pointedly turned her back on.

Tate shook off the memories, telling himself to focus on how he was going to get this dog out of here. It didn’t seem wise to grab a sizable dog he barely knew and try to drag him out. Something had him fascinated, and—

The pot.

He realized suddenly that the dog was staring at Lacy Steele’s cooking pot. Or whatever it was. That kind of big, tall pot had a name; his grandmother’d had one, but he couldn’t remember what she’d called it. He’d finished the stew last night—and it had been as good as it had smelled—and had thoroughly washed the pot when he’d finished. And there on the counter it had been ever since, because he couldn’t quite work himself up to taking it back to her.

“It’s empty, dog,” he said sourly.

Cutter glanced at him then, and Tate had the strangest feeling that had he been human, it would have been the equivalent of “Well, duh.” Maybe it was because obviously the dog’s nose would have told him that.

But he went back to staring at the pot, anyway. Only now he started glancing at Tate every few seconds, expectantly.

“What is it you want?” he asked after the third time through the cycle. “You know it’s empty. And you can’t possibly know it doesn’t belong here.”

Or maybe he did know, Tate thought suddenly. And almost on the thought, the person to ask knocked on his front door.

“Morning, Tate. I’m assuming my errant dog is here again?” Hayley Foxworth asked cheerfully as he opened the door. She was in running clothes, with her hair tucked up into a Seahawks cap. Her green eyes were bright, as if reflecting her mood. Or maybe the green on the cap.

“Leash?” he suggested wryly, then regretted it; he wanted to ask her something, not make her mad. At least her husband wasn’t with her to give him that warning look again if he didn’t like the way Tate spoke to his wife. And the man was impressive enough that Tate knew a fight would be a real one. Quinn Foxworth wasn’t someone to trifle with. He was the kind of man you wanted on your side, and the kind you dreaded to come up against.

“Wouldn’t do any good,” Hayley said, her cheerful tone unchanged. “He’s on a mission, and he’ll find a way.”

“A mission?” Tate repeated, diverted for the moment. “What mission?”

“You,” the woman answered simply.

Tate blinked. “Me?”

“Whatever your problem is.”

“My problem,” he said, speaking carefully, “is a dog who keeps showing up and interrupting what I’m trying to get done.”

“Maybe you should put him to work.”

“What?”

She smiled, and it matched her tone. Quinn Foxworth, Tate thought, was a lucky guy.

“He knows a hammer from a screwdriver from a wrench, and he’s happy to fetch and carry.”

He blinked. Again. “You’re saying if I tell him to bring me a hammer out of a pile of tools—”

“He will. Helpful if you need to nail something you can’t let go of.” As if she hadn’t just boggled him she went on in that same jovial tone. “So where is the lad?”

“In the kitchen. Staring at a pot. An empty pot,” he added, to explain how odd it was.

“Hmm” was all she said.

“He must hear you out here,” Tate said, truly puzzled now. “Why hasn’t he come out?”

“Told you. Dog on a mission.”

“So you said. But I don’t have a problem. At least, not one he can fix.”

She laughed. “You might be surprised. But I’ll go get him, if it’s all right?”

Smothering a sigh, he nodded. When she hesitated and he realized she didn’t know, he pointed toward the kitchen and remembered what he’d wanted to ask in the first place.

“Has he been here before?” he asked as he followed her into the room where the dog’s tail wagged happily, but he didn’t move from his selected spot. “Before the explosion, I mean.”

“Not that I know of.”

“So he didn’t...know my grandfather?”

“I don’t think so,” Hayley said, an understanding look dawning on her face. “Nope, it’s all you.”

Tate wasn’t sure how to feel about that. Or the knowledge that his theory that the dog kept showing up here because he was looking for Gramps had just been shot down.

“So, that’s the pot?” she asked, looking at it where it sat innocently on the counter.

“Yes.”

“Doesn’t fit with the rest,” she said with a glance at the overhead rack his grandmother had so loved, but that he was seriously considering taking out now that he’d banged his head on the low-flying skillet once too often.

“No.” She just looked at him, waiting. You and your dog, he thought, his mouth quirking. Finally he gave in. “It belongs next door.”

“Ah. Your charming neighbor.”

When she wasn’t sniping at him for his bad manners, Tate thought. Rightfully so, his conscience nudged.

“He probably wants you to take it back to her, then.”

For a third time Tate blinked, this time long and slow, and with a shake of his head.

“Dog,” he said—unnecessarily, he thought.

“Yes,” Hayley agreed. “And I would have thought you, of all people, would realize some dogs are different than your run-of-the-mill house pet.”

She had him there. And, judging by her expression, she knew it.

He was saved from trying to answer by yet another knock on the door. He stifled a grimace.

“Grand Central Station here this morning, huh?” Hayley said with a grin.

“Seems like,” he muttered, and wasn’t really surprised when he opened the door and found his charming neighbor on the porch.

“Sorry to bother you,” she began.

“That ship already sailed this morning,” he said, gesturing at the dog, who had suddenly abandoned his obsession and had come trotting happily out to greet the clearly very welcome Lacy Steele. As if the dog lived here, and not him, Tate thought wryly.

“Well, hello there, furry one,” Lacy said, reaching to pet the dog then scratch behind his ears. Cutter sighed happily and leaned in as Lacy looked up and smiled at Tate. He was still taken aback at the jolt that had given him when she looked past him and said, “And you, too,” telling him Hayley had followed her dog out of the kitchen.

“Good morning,” Hayley said. “I’m here to retrieve my dog. Again. Before Tate’s patience runs out.”

“Might be a bit late on that,” Lacy said, without looking at him.

“I got that feeling,” Hayley agreed.

“He’ll get over it. Nobody could stay mad at this sweetie.”

“Unless they’re really mad at something else.”

“Standing right here,” Tate pointed out, feeling a bit aggrieved.

“So you are,” Lacy said. She sounded as cheerful as Hayley had. None of them—including the dog—had any qualms about intruding or interrupting, obviously. “And speaking of retrieving, I need to retrieve my stockpot, if you’re done with it.”

“Stockpot,” he repeated, the memory coming back now.

“The pot the stew was in?” she explained.

“I know, I just couldn’t remember what it was called. I don’t cook much.”

“Well, I do, and I need it for spaghetti sauce tonight. My tomatoes aren’t ready yet so I had to buy some, but I’ve got some other veggies I need to use up.”

“That garden looks like you’d have enough to feed my entire squad.”

“Invite ’em over,” she said.

She was kidding, of course, but as he looked at her serene expression he had the oddest feeling that if he did just that, she would welcome them. And deal with the influx graciously and feed them well.

“I’ll leave you two to it, then.” Hayley glanced at her dog, who had inexplicably given up his fascination with the stockpot and was at the front door, clearly ready to leave, and added, “Since it appears his work here is done for the moment.”

Tate’s brow furrowed. What was that supposed to mean? But before he could ask, both woman and dog were out the door and headed home at a steady run.

“Seems you’re making friends in the neighborhood whether you like it or not,” Lacy said when they’d gone out of sight.

That stung, although not as much as her manners comment. “Why wouldn’t I like it?”

“Just saying you don’t go out of your way to be welcoming.”

“Doesn’t seem like I have to, with everybody showing up, anyway.” What was it about this woman that had him snapping like this? Maybe he wasn’t an easy charmer like Cav, but he’d never turned into a grouch at the sight of a beautiful woman. And Lacy Steele was certainly that, as his body kept reminding him. He sucked in a breath, willing himself to speak evenly. “Look, I only meant I thought it would be...slower here. Small-town slow. And I thought I’d left stuff like middle-of-the-night explosions behind for good.”

“I’m sorry,” she said immediately. “Of course, you’re right. And you have every right.”

Her instant contriteness, so obviously sincere, made him feel even worse. As if he’d somehow traded on his service to get out of a situation his own rusty social skills had gotten him into.

“I’ll get the pot,” he said, turning to go to the kitchen before he could make things any worse. When he brought it back, feeling he had to say something, he handed it over with what he thought should be safe enough—a sincere, “The stew was great. Really. Thank you.”

The smile she gave him then made him forget the awkwardness, and all the irritation he’d been feeling over his disrupted morning. It did nothing, however, to remove that uncomfortable awareness that had him so edgy.

“You’re more than welcome. And if you like, I’ll save some spaghetti sauce for you. I always make a ton so I can freeze some for later.”

“I...”

“Just say ‘yes, thank you.’ It’s easier.”

He lowered his gaze and let out a rueful chuckle before echoing her suggestion. “Yes, thank you.”

Her smile widened. “All right then.” She looked around, her nose wrinkling. “That smoke smell is still pretty strong.” He nodded as she pointed out the obvious odor of burned materials. “It would give me a headache.”

It had, in fact, given him a headache the one time he’d tried to sleep in the house. Not to mention nightmares. “That’s why I’ve been sleeping out in the shop.”

She nodded in understanding. “Fresh paint’ll fix that when you get there.” She grinned at him, as if he were the friendliest guy in town. “Whole different kind of headache.”

He smiled back. He couldn’t seem to help it. It even lasted a second or two. It seemed enough for her, because she turned to go, stockpot in hand. Then she turned back.

“Anything more on your explosion?”