Rand
I grinned as Hanna stood to the side as I rumbled past in the loader, the remains of one of the Bugs I'd scavenged for her car in the jaws of the beast. I'd had to drag the car into the aisle for access to the last two good parts, so now there nothing was left of it but scrap, and it was in the way.
I didn't slow, so she waved her arms before pantomiming shoveling food into her mouth. When I returned her wave, she turned away. The swing of her ass was a powerful distraction, and I couldn't afford that while operating heavy equipment, so I forced myself to focus on the task at hand. I shoved the car into the crusher and mashed the top down with the bucket to make room for another car before I backed away and killed the engine.
Hanna was fussing in the kitchen, and since Patrick was in the washroom, and I wasn't filthy, I pulled into a kiss. "How'd you sleep last night?" I whispered.
She grinned. I'd left her sleeping this morning as I quietly slipped out of bed and started work. Her eyes flicked from mine to behind me, but she smiled. "Like the dead."
I knew Patrick was in the kitchen, but I didn't care. "No regrets?"
"None," she whispered as she pulled out of my embrace.
I quickly washed my hands then joined them in the dining room. There were five hamburgers on a plate, with sliced tomato, lettuce, pickle slices, and onion arrayed as edible garish, along with a large bowl of fries and warmed buns.
"Where did this come from?" Patrick asked as Hanna handed him a bun. "I know I didn't have any hamburger buns, or fries for that matter, and I'm suspicious of the tomato and lettuce."
Hanna beamed, clearly pleased with herself. "I went to the store this morning, by myself, in my car." Her grin spread even wider. "I even managed to not get lost while doing it."
"How was it?" I asked as I built my burger.
She giggled. "Terrifying, but I managed to get there and back without stalling even once, so I call that a win."
"Tell me how much it was, and I'll give youβ" Patrick began.
"I'll do no such thing," she said firmly. "You've done so much for me already, both of you have, this is the least I can do."
"Hanna," Patrick said softly, "you don't have toβ"
"Nope," she said, cutting him off again. "Not happening."
Patrick looked at me and I shrugged. "Okay... if you insist."
She nodded firmly. "I do." When Patrick didn't say anything, she grinned. "Now that's settled, do you have a grill? I bought some chicken breasts, and I thought I'd grill them. My mom has the most amazing recipe for grilled potato salad. Do you like green peppers?"
"Hanna," he tried again. "I wishβ"
"Patrick... please... let me do something to help. I can't do anything out there, but I can at least cook so you don't have to. Maybe I can help you with paperwork, or something, if you'll show me how. I can't just sit around and do nothing." She paused as a shadow of sadness crossed her face. "If I don't stay busy, I think too much."
Patrick held her gaze for a moment before he placed his hand on hers. "It's in the shop. I'll show you after lunch. There isn't that much paperwork that needs doing, but I'm sure I can find something for you to do."
She perked up with that. "Thank you."
"You're welcome."
"Has anyone told you that you're a really great guy?" she asked softly.
He glanced at me as his lips twitched into a small smile, and I knew what was coming. "Not since last week," he said, and I was only partially successful in hiding my grin.
-oOo-
"I've got this," she said as I stood, picking up my plate and the burger platter.
"I can at least carry it to the kitchen."
She followed me with her own plate and the empty bowl that once contained the fries. "Can I ask for a small favor?"
"Sure, what?"
"Can I borrow your phone? I should call my parents. They're probably freaking out since I haven't called them in a couple of days."
I handed her my phone as Patrick appeared with his plate, along with the plate containing the burger toppings. I saw her glance between my phone and the dining room, clearly trying to decide what to do.
"Call them," I suggested. "Patrick and I will bring the stuff in here, then you can take it from there. How's that?"
She hesitated so I took the phone from her hand, unlocked it, and handed it back to her before I turned away to retrieve the last of the dishes from the table. When I returned, she was holding the phone to her ear, her hips cocked as she waited for someone to answer.
"Mom, it's Hanna." She listened a moment as her eyes opened wider. "What are you doing here? How'd you find me?"
She paused as she held my gaze, fear and shock coloring her face. I'd intended to go back to work, but something about her slightly panicked look stuck me in place.
"I'm not there anymore. I'm... staying with a friend... someone who's helping me find Garrett." She was quiet a moment. "No, I'm not telling you that." Pause. "No. I've got it handled. You and Dad need to go home." Pause. "No! I'm not telling you! You being here could ruin everything!" Pause. "Because, if Carl sees you, he may run and take Garrett with him! I know he's here, but if he runs, I may never find him again!"
She looked at me with panic in her eyes, shaking her head as she listened. I could hear the buzzing of an upset voice, but I couldn't make out the words.
"No! I know you want to help, but this isn't helping!" Pause. "If I am, then it's my mistake to make!" Pause. "Because I'm a grown woman!" Another pause, longer this time. "I know, Mom," Hanna said, her voice soft. "I want to get him back too, and that's what I'm trying to do, but
you're... not... helping.
You have to trust me on this. I'm doing what I think is right, and I'm going to keep doing it, so you and Dad need to just go home and let me deal with it." Another long pause as she slumped against the cabinet. "I'm hanging up now," she said softly before she paused. "No. I'm hanging up, but if you and Daddy really want to help me, you'll go home. I just hope that... I just need you to go home. Please." She paused one last time. "Yes. I will, and I love you too. I'll be home with Garrett as soon as I can. Tell Dad I love him. Bye."
She ended the call with a beep and allowed her hand to fall to her side. "Dammit..."
"Your parents are here?" I asked.
"Yeah. They arrived this morning."
"Did you tell them where you are?"
"No. I called them from the motel, and gave them the number to call me back. They called the motel and got the address." She sighed. "This is so fucked up."
"Do you think Carl would recognize them?"
She glared at me. "He was my husband for six years. Of course he'll recognize them."
"Do you think he'd run?"
She shook her head. "I don't know. Maybe. They could certainly spook him, especially since he has to know the cops are looking for him and Garrett."
"Are they going to go home?"
She looked at her shoes. "I honestly don't know. I know they're trying to help, but they're not. If Carl bolts... I'll have to start looking for him all over again."
"Would it help if I talked to them and explained the situation?" The way she looked at me made me smile. "I'm serious. I'm not talking about trying to intimidate them or anything like that. Do they know who Carl is, who he runs with?"
She shook her head. "No."
"Maybe they should. What difference does it make now?"
She slumped even more as she handed me my phone. "I don't know. Maybe."
-oOo-
I was using the forklift to dump tires into the shredder. It was easy work. I'd park the forklift with the forks just high enough to hold the tires, and then slide the tires on. Once both forks were full, I used the machine to lift the tires, hooked rubber donuts on the edge of the shredder, and backed up, sliding the tires off one fork at a time into the machine. I'd forgotten we had a rubber truck coming tomorrow until Patrick reminded me, so I was hustling to get a load ready.
I was shoving a tire to the back of the fork when my phone rang. I pulled it out, halfway expecting it to be Hanna's parents calling back. I hadn't liked the utter look of defeat on her face, but I didn't have the time to comfort her at the moment.
I glanced at the screen, then pressed the button to accept the call. "Rand! I need you to meet us at Doonz right now if you can!" Doug said, his words clipped and fast. "The Orcas are at OSB and we're going to pay them a visit. I'm rounding up as many brothers as I can."
I immediately started walking away from my task. "I'll be there in ten minutes," I said before tucking my phone away. Hanna was scrubbing the grill, making it ready for use as I hurried past the shop. She must have sensed my agitation because she trotted after me, still holding the brass brush she'd been using.
"What's happened?" she asked as she slowed beside me
"The Orcas are at OSB. We're going to pay them a visit."
"I'm going, too."
I stopped and turned to face her. "No. Stay here."
"No! No way in hell! I'm not staying here!"
"You
are
staying here," I said firmly. "This is club business and if things get ugly, I don't want you anywhere around."
"Carl has my son!"