The Tourist Attraction Page 53
Frustrated, she wiped them again, cleaning them enough so she could see. Even as she put them back on, her glasses were already covered with more rain. But Zoey couldn’t wait any longer. Hitting the accelerator, she took off dangerously fast, barely able to see the trail and hoping to glimpse Enzo’s taillights ahead. She never did. Through twist and turn, she tried to find her way, but in the stormy darkness, it was impossible to recognize anything.
Finally, she saw a familiar wooden marker post, but as she paused, trying to wipe the water from her glasses, Zoey couldn’t tell which way she was supposed to go. She didn’t know if the water rushing past her was because of the storm or if this was even the marker post she thought it was.
And as the storm unleashed itself, the skies opening right on top of her, Zoey knew she was screwed.
* * *
Answering a call from this particular person was the last thing Graham wanted to do. But Graham meant it when he said Lana was his friend, and when a friend called, he picked up—most of the time.
Besides, she’d called him three times in a row and seemed determined not to be ignored.
“What is it, L?” Maybe he was a teeny bit grumpy. “I’m busy being brokenhearted over here.”
“Graham, something happened.” Lana’s voice was panicked. “I need Easton’s number. He can find people, right?”
Standing up from his kitchen chair, Graham tensed. “Lana, calm down. I can get you to East, but tell me what happened first.”
“They went out on a tour, and when they came back, she was gone. They tried to find her, but she’s missing.”
“Who’s missing?”
“Zoey. Graham, she’s out in this. Someone needs to find her.”
With a curse, Graham told Lana to stay by her phone. This wasn’t the first time someone had gotten lost in these mountains. This wasn’t the first time this year someone had gotten lost in these mountains. But this wasn’t someone, it was Graham’s someone, and the storm outside raged. Graham knew far too well how much danger she was in, and his heart stayed in his stomach, twisted up in knots as he called everyone he knew to meet them at the ATV tour site.
Easton and Ash pulled up right as Graham skidded into the drive, both dressed for the weather and grim faced. Jonah, Rick, Marcus Garcia and his partner, even Frankie and Graham’s cousin…everyone who knew these mountains was there. Even Lana was there, although she was the last person Graham would send into the mountains to look for Zoey.
They all knew how bad this was.
The kid, Cory, was young and stupid enough to have taken them out. He was also brave enough to have spent the last hour trying to find Zoey, soaked to the bone and pale from cold. He told the same story to Easton and Graham, how he made sure they were all there. How he paused halfway back, thought he saw four sets of lights behind him, and kept going.
The kid was crushed, his hands shivering. “Maybe it was the last guy going over a bump? The rain was so bad. I screwed up, I screwed up. I sent them all to the resort to get help, and I went looking for her. I need to go back out there and keep searching. She’s out there because of me.”
The storm had whipped itself into a frenzy, with trees bending from the violent gusts of winds and sheets of sideways rain driving into anyone not taking cover. The skies had grown dangerously dark for anyone out in the woods. Streak after streak of lightning cutting through the darkness illuminated Easton’s features.
“Cory, you’re not going anywhere,” Easton said sternly, taking control of the group. “You’re dead on your feet, and this will turn into a double rescue instead of just her. We can’t risk anyone going out in this.”
Graham inhaled a tight breath, drawing himself up furiously, ready to fight, but Easton shot him a look. “Until it clears off, just the three of us will look. Ash, Graham, you follow the trail they were supposed to be on. You both know these woods blindfolded. Don’t let a tree fall on you, and keep those radios on. I’ll scout wider. But no one else.”
“Without a bigger search party, we might not find her.” Ash didn’t need to add the unspoken “in time.” They all knew what she was thinking.
“It’s the best we can do for now.” Easton turned to Jonah and Marcus. “As soon as the weather breaks, get dogs out here and get everyone involved.”
Taking his supplies and a gassed-up ATV, Graham looked at Ash. “We’ll find her,” she promised.
Sometimes people got lost in these mountains and never came back. But Graham wasn’t going to come back without her, weather be damned. He’d left her thinking he didn’t love her, and if that was the last conversation they had, Graham would never be able to forgive himself.
“We’ll find her.” Graham started the engine with a snarl of his own. “And then I’m never letting her go again.”
As they retraced the trail Cory had taken, the visibility was nearly nonexistent. Graham bellowed himself hoarse calling Zoey’s name, knowing Ash was doing the same just behind him. And still he could barely hear her. Rain and wind beat at them from all directions, and the storm had brought down tree limbs into their path. They rounded a corner and found a huge evergreen had downed across the trail, impossible to get around.
“What do you want to do?” Ash leaned into his shoulder, yelling into his ear to be heard. “Do you want to keep going?”
“I’m not leaving her out here!”
Pink hair plastered to her face, Ash nodded. “I’ll radio East and let him know we’re going ahead on foot.”
The fallen tree was massive, and Graham was still trying to find a good place to go over it when Ash came back, waving her radio in her hand.
“It’s Easton! He found her!”
“Is she okay?”
“I don’t know. I could barely hear him. But he says come back in.”
* * *
Zoey stood in the center of the angry mass of people in the hotel lobby, holding a blanket Easton had found her wrapped tight around her shoulders. He hadn’t left her side since returning to the resort, standing so close her shoulder brushed his arm.
She just couldn’t get warm, no matter how much body heat Easton gave off.
“You need to sit,” Easton rumbled, his gravelly voice like a slow rockslide. “You’re pale as a sheet.”
“I’m fine. Just cold.”
Which was mostly true. Zoey was physically fine, if more than a little shaken up. She didn’t know how long she’d been lost, trying to find her way back to the trail, but she’d hit deep mud and gotten stuck. Faced with staying on the ATV and in the path of rising water or backtracking on foot, she’d chosen to go it on foot. Terrified and half-drowned, Zoey had turned a bend and there he’d been, a massive, bearded man in the woods. Even if her rescuer had looked like Sasquatch on an ATV, she had nearly cried in relief, desperately grateful to not be alone.
Zoey hadn’t even realized until they were in front of the lights of his ATV that Easton Lockett was the one who’d found her.
Once, Graham had told her Easton knew these woods better than anyone, and now Zoey believed it. Arms around his waist, she’d simply held on as he took trail after trail, cut across a field she only vaguely recognized from her horseback-riding trip, and ended up at the barn Mugs had rejected her in. Grateful to be out of the rain, Zoey waited as Easton radioed that she had been found.
Assuring her that no one would mind, Easton borrowed one of the stable’s work trucks, driving her back to the resort. He could have left her there, his work done, but the storm had knocked out the hotel’s power, and the hotel had descended into chaos as the computer systems went down. Everyone’s keycards were no longer working, and no one could get in their rooms. Hundreds of more important—or at least angrier—people than Zoey were screaming at the overwhelmed staff.
Lana was in the midst of it, fighting for their place in line, determined that Zoey was going to get her hot shower before she died from pneumonia. A hot shower or some time in the sauna followed by a change of clothes would be awesome, but Zoey doubted that would happen anytime soon.
She should sit, but Zoey was rattled enough that she couldn’t. Besides, there wasn’t anywhere to sit but the floor, and she wasn’t sure she could find a corner where she wouldn’t accidentally get trampled.
Easton moved closer, his heavy hand coming down on her shoulder. Zoey was too exhausted and emotionally ravaged to feel intimidated by his presence. This was Graham’s friend, and in this moment, he was her friend too. So she leaned into his hand, thinking she was dangerously close to becoming a pile of muddy Mickey Mouse sweatshirt and muddier jeans on the floor.
“Screw this,” Easton suddenly growled. “I’m taking you back to Graham’s place.”
“I can’t. He doesn’t want me there.”
The mountain at her side snorted. “If he doesn’t want you there, he’s doing a terrible job of acting like it. Come on.”
The hand on her shoulder became a heavy arm around her shoulders as Easton steered her toward the hotel entrance. She was too exhausted to fight him and too overwhelmed by the other resort guests to want to stay in the lobby any longer.
“Okay, but I need to tell Lana.”
There were so many people in between her and the desk that there was no way Zoey could even start to find her friend.
“Zoey.”
A bellman almost lost a limb when one of the entry doors slammed open with far too much force. When Graham’s familiar voice roared her name over the angry yelling all around her, Zoey’s heart leapt in her chest.
Easton was head and shoulders above everyone else, but Graham was tall and strong and pissed, wearing almost as much mud as she was.
She hadn’t realized how much she needed him until his eyes locked onto her from across the lobby. Graham didn’t part the crowd as he strode toward her…he walked right over them. Ignoring more than one offended look and harsh word, he bulldozed his way to her. He crushed her into his body, arms wrapping around her shoulders.