Weathering the Storm. Morgan Q O'Reilly
in Boulder?”
The conversation lasted us the entire stroll across town. All four blocks. I’d never, ever in my life, discussed clothing of any kind with anyone other than my mother. It was odd, but fun too.
Since my accident, whatever was comfortable worked. Yoga pants and tees for working out. India silk or cotton skirts worked best during hot weather, but could be layered for cooler temps. Slip-on shoes, or barefoot whenever possible. Buttons and zippers hadn’t worked well during rehab, and so far I’d accepted the pull-on style for as much of my wardrobe as possible. Why mess with easy?
The sounds of music and laughter grew louder the closer we walked. Talkeetna remained fairly untouched since I’d last been there, but Karl pointed out the changes. A few of the businesses had spiffed up their exteriors, but the Fairview and the Roadhouse remained frozen in time. Living history.
The street party wasn’t far from Bill’s B and B. Since Bill was a long-time family friend, I always made it a point to spend time with him when I was back in town. I looked for him, but the one block section of street was filled with locals, summer temp hires and a few early tourists. The tourists were easy to spot. They wore bright white walking shoes and matching sweaters or jackets. Most of them silver-haired. Nearly all carried cameras and would eventually land on a cruise ship heading south.
It looked as if the casual party was just really getting rolling. Smoke belched from a couple of large barrel grills and people dove into coolers filled with soda. A table held what looked like small kegs or party pigs of local beer on one end, condiments, buns and side dishes on the other. On the other side of the street someone played DJ with a pair of old boom-boxes and a stack of CDs.
Gentle reggae was playing at the moment. Bob Marley. I’d been cramped up in some sort of vehicle all day, so the urge to move was more than I could ignore. I pulled Maddie into the crowd with me, and we danced while Karl headed off to set down the casserole. Other dancers nodded, smiled, and saluted us with red plastic cups of beer. I didn’t recognize a single person, so I smiled back, then closed my eyes and let the music move me.
All around me, the laughter and conversations buzzed. The smells of beer and the smoke pouring off the grill mixed with thawing leaf mold. Under my shoes, gravel scraped and rolled. The air was cool, the sun high and filtering through the newborn leaves. I could smell the freshness of spring. Childhood memories rushed in and my whole being filled with peace. I’d never been hit with that sense of home some people talk about, but that moment clarified the meaning for me. I danced for the pure joy of remembered youth and a sense of belonging. The sense of belonging had been missing since my accident had barred me from my work. It was nice to know I could feel a part of someplace else. I still missed my lab. In the meantime, I could belong here for a while. The lab would be part of my life again soon enough. It had to be, or I wouldn’t know what to do with myself.
As I danced, relishing the movement of my body, the strength and agility of trained and reconditioned muscles, I also sensed something else. I couldn’t place it until I opened my eyes and met the gaze of a man through the crowd of dancers. He stood off to one side. A big man, tall, muscled–if the breadth of his flannel-clad chest meant anything. I couldn’t see his waistline, but I could tell it was lean from the drape of his shirt. Thick, dark red hair, a little on the long side, topped his head, and bright, intelligent blue eyes pierced the distance like a laser beam. He had a short beard and the air of a woodsman about him. Put a stocking cap on him, suspenders over his shoulders, an axe in his hand, and he could play Paul Bunyan.
When he smiled, I couldn’t help but smile back. It had been a long time since a man had smiled at me. I hadn’t realized it until then. A wave of heat infused me and I no longer worried about the slight chill in the air. The dancers closed in again, cutting off my view.
Maddie bumped my shoulder. “He’s new in town. I think he’s building the addition for Bill.”
“Oh?” I turned my back on him. Purely an instinctive move, as I had little experience with flirting or men. Sure, I’d had a boyfriend or two, but had been out of the game for a long time. Like a whole year before my accident. Most of my connections had been made under the influence of alcohol. Apparently it was the only way we geeks could relax enough to get physical. Otherwise we tended to debate the merits of this crystal or that chemical doping in regards to our research. We tended to talk spectrums, ohms, pump lasers and the various means of cooling the systems down. Hey, brainy worked as sexy in its own way.
Socializing was also part of the reason someone had started an outdoor recreation group at work. A way for us to get out, get exercise, build teamwork, and attempt to mingle and meet like normal people. Hiking, mountain biking, and rock climbing on the weekends kept us busy. We’d been working our way down the list of Fourteeners, all fifty-three of them. That would be the mountains in Colorado over fourteen thousand feet tall, with at least three hundred feet of topographic prominence. Easy, compared to Denali. Many could be hiked in a day, or in some cases, two days.
HR had liked it because it made us healthier, which helped reduce sick days.
Management had mixed feelings. Especially after my fall.
My accident had interrupted the contract I was deeply involved in. I wasn’t the lead on the project, not by a long shot, but my ideas had been the freshest and had redirected the research down new and promising paths. Progress had been stalled once I was out of the game. No one else had been quite able to follow my thinking, a fact the Director of Research and Development had griped about one of the times he came to see me. He’d kindly waited until after I could identify myself and count my fingers and toes again. The rants were not because he wanted to make me feel bad, but rather, I think he wanted me to know I was missed. And he wanted to me to heal fast and get back to work before he had to find someone to take my place.
I missed being there and it was my supreme goal to get back. However, that required a doctor’s approval, and until I passed a few more brain tests, they weren’t signing on the dotted line. Which was why I’d flown to Alaska in the first place. To build new paths around damaged memory cells. Part of which included new experiences, such as, maybe, wooing the opposite sex.
And Mr. Paul Bunyan looked like a viable candidate to practice on.
Chapter 2
The last time he’d attended a dinner dance, there’d been people in tuxes and gowns, chowing on lamb ribs while sucking down champagne and fine California wine.
Aiden tipped a plastic party cup of cold brew to his lips and watched the colorfully arrayed people swirl around him. While the double wedding of the twins had been fun in its own hoity toity way, this was more his style by a long shot.
Although the people of Talkeetna reminded him of pictures he’d seen of hippies from the sixties, they were as varied as the flowers beginning to bud around town.
Mid May, and the weather was fine. Mighty fine. Rumor had it that by June said flowers would be spilling from their planters in a dizzying array of color. As it was, the birch trees had new spring leaves unfurling so fast he could practically see it happening. The almost-midnight sun was shining brightly, bringing green things to life as quickly as possible, possibly to make up for the long icy winter. With the tourist season officially opening the next day, celebration filled the air around the casual street dance getting underway.
Smoke from a couple of large grills tickled his nostrils. Hamburgers, hot dogs, salmon, and reindeer sausage, a hodge podge brought by the attendees according to their tastes. Bill, the guy who’d hired him for the summer to build an addition onto his B and B, promised him there’d be a moose burger or two for him on the grill. Just as soon as the vultures had snapped up the regular fare. After a day of hauling material and setting up the tools he’d bought from Cayden’s new wife, Candy, the smell of sizzling meat teased his stomach.
The microbrew in his cup, made right here in town, went down smooth and easy. He’d developed a taste for the craft beers the two months he’d been in state so far. First Cay and Candy’s new house in Anchorage had kept him busy for a few weeks, then he’d done some modifications for his brother Brenn on the house