Back to Eden. Melinda Curtis

Back to Eden - Melinda  Curtis


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doom swirled in Rachel’s gut. She couldn’t leave Jenna and Matt like this. The corner of their picture peeked out from behind pine needles.

      “Fuel?” Rachel shouted as they shot out over the ridge and a new crop of trees waiting to shish kebab them.

      Danny tugged frantically at the wood covering the thrusters. “Fuel’s fine, but we need more power. I’ll try restarting the engines.”

      “We’re losing altitude,” she said, unsure if Danny heard her.

      Danny released a string of curses and dug for the controls Rachel was sure wouldn’t work, her eye momentarily caught again by a corner of the photo still visible on the dash.

      What had Rachel done?

      Now Cole would never know the truth.

      CHAPTER TWO

      “DID YOU HEAR THAT?” Cole craned his neck to look up into the smoke-strewn sky.

      “It’s just a plane,” Logan answered, busy packing his bags.

      Cole shook his head. “It was a crack or a boom or something.”

      A small two-seater plane was circling low over a point to the northeast.

      “Look at that.” Jackson pointed at the Incident Command tents pitched on the rise above them. “Something’s happening.”

      Sure enough, members of the IC team were running out of their individual tents that served as mini-offices tracking fire behavior, weather, personnel and the like, and were heading for the main tent. Just as a pair were about to yank open the door to the IC tent, the camp helicopter pilot burst out and ran toward the makeshift chopper pad at the end of the parking lot.

      Something cold and unpleasant gripped Cole, momentarily freezing him in place. He didn’t need to possess Jackson’s near-psychic abilities to guess what had happened. The observation plane, which coordinated air attacks, was circling, flying too low. A plane had gone down.

      “Come on.” With one hand, Cole dragged Doc to his feet. The kid had finished medical school in the spring and was about to start his internship. “You and I are getting on that chopper.” They’d be asking for volunteers to go on the rescue, crew members with medical training or rappelling experience, not that Cole had a lot of either.

      Hearing Doc’s protests, Jackson moved closer. “Cole, what are you doing?”

      “You’ll need your medical kit, Doc.” Cole swung the red bag emblazoned with a big white cross from the ground into Doc’s chest and started towing the slighter man in the direction of the chopper.

      “Cole?” Jackson trotted beside him. “Where are you going?”

      “A plane went down.” Cole didn’t slow up. He was getting on that bird.

      The helicopter pilot was hurrying around the chopper, checking out rotors or flaps or whatever pilots did before they took off. A younger man in coveralls ran to the helicopter. The two men exchanged words and then the younger man hopped into the cockpit. Cole assumed he was the copilot. They wouldn’t allow the rescue team in the cockpit.

      Jackson wasn’t giving up. “You think the plane that went down was Missy’s sister’s?”

      Cole didn’t think; he knew. Yet it sounded stupid to say it out loud.

      “Let me find out what’s going on first.” Jackson had spent the past few days of the fire working with the IC team. “There may not have been a crash. It might not be Missy’s sister.”

      “No. By the time you do that, this bird will be gone.”

      Jackson ran a few steps ahead and stopped in Cole’s path. “Don’t go running off based on a feeling.”

      “Why not? You do it all the time.” Cole gave Jackson his fiercest glare.

      Jackson shook his head.

      “Look, I wasn’t there for Missy when she died. I’ll be damned if I’m not there for Rachel when she needs me,” Cole said through gritted teeth. “Now, step aside. Me and Doc are getting on that chopper.”

      Jackson swore and did step aside. “Let me talk to the pilot. I know him.”

      “Just get me on that chopper.”

      “THERE!” Cole shouted above the whine of the helicopter rotors. The fuselage of the plane rested precariously on a canopy of trees fifty feet above the ground to their left.

      “Holy crap. Will you look at that,” Doc said beside him. “What lucky SOBs.”

      Cole could only hope Rachel had been lucky. The nose of the plane was smashed in and the windshield shattered. From this angle, he couldn’t see inside the cockpit. Branches thrust through the windshield. No one flagged them down as they approached.

      Not dead. Rachel couldn’t be dead.

      The copilot came back to the area where Cole and Doc sat. He snapped a hook attached to his harness to a safety line, then opened the side door.

      Wind and the smell of smoke—both wood and fuel—rushed into the cabin as the copilot began prepping the equipment needed to drop someone out of the airplane.

      Cole unbuckled his seat belt and stood, grabbing a hand loop for balance and stepping toward the door.

      “Sit down,” the copilot commanded with a stern look, yelling over the din.

      “I’m going down there.” There was no way anybody was going to keep him from being a part of Rachel’s rescue.

      “Of course, you are,” the copilot agreed, still shouting. “But you’ll fall out if you aren’t strapped in. The air up here is choppy. Ever see a man fall eighty feet to the ground?”

      Doc looked up at Cole and swore.

      “Now, sit back down so you’ll get your chance at being a hero.”

      As if emphasizing his point, the helicopter pitched Cole in the direction of the open door.

      “I think I’m gonna puke,” Doc moaned as he yanked Cole back.

      The copilot laughed. “I always knew you Hot Shots were a bunch of wusses.”

      Buckling in next to Doc, Cole glared at his friend. “Hang in there. I need you.”

      “You could have taken the camp medic.” Doc closed his eyes. His skin had become a sickly shade of white.

      “I chose a doctor instead. Now, quit your griping.”

      “Have you rappelled out of a helicopter before?” The copilot shouted at Cole. Who didn’t even blink as he nodded.

      Despite his nausea, Doc managed to raise his eyebrows at Cole.

      Cole scowled back at him. So what if he’d only rappelled once? So what if he’d rappelled onto solid ground? Rachel was down there hurt, perhaps dying.

      Cole recoiled at the thought, leaning back into his seat. The little girl he’d once rescued from a flash flood couldn’t die. She was too stubborn, too full of life.

      “Get into this.” The copilot tossed a four-point body harness at Cole’s feet.

      When Cole had the harness strapped on tight around him, the copilot hooked a nylon rope to it, fit him with a helmet containing a built-in headset and positioned Cole near the door.

      “I’m going to let you down slowly until you get to the wreck. Try not to put your weight on the plane because we don’t know how stable it is. You will not be going inside, copy?”

      Cole nodded.

      “Once you’re there, let us know if the pilots are salvageable or not.”

      “Salvageable?” Damn him. “There will be survivors,” Cole growled.

      The


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