Rescuing Dr Marian (Made Marian Legacy #1) Read Online Lucy Lennox

Categories Genre: Contemporary, M-M Romance Tags Authors: Series: Made Marian Legacy Series by Lucy Lennox
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Total pages in book: 98
Estimated words: 92899 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 464(@200wpm)___ 372(@250wpm)___ 310(@300wpm)
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“Wind and rain are picking up. Visibility’s down. I’m about a half mile below Devil’s Backbone, heading northwest along Elk Fork Trail. No sign of him yet.”

“There’s a cave just under the ridge on the southeast approach from your location. Be sure and check it on your way past. There’s also an abandoned hunting shack just over the saddle between Devil’s Backbone and Slingshot. He could be there waiting out the weather.”

I thanked him and assured him I’d check in again once I got to the cave.

Another fifteen minutes later, I was almost to the base of the ridge when he called in again.

“Base to Blake.”

“Go ahead, base.”

“We’ve got reports of a rockslide on the southwest side of Devil’s Backbone. Repeat: rockslide reported near your location.”

My stomach dropped, and I felt a strange kind of numbness. “A rockslide?” I asked stupidly, forgetting to click my radio first.

I glanced up in hopes of seeing any sign of what he was reporting, but visibility was way too low. Could Tommy have been caught in a rockslide? It would have explained why he’d never returned, why he hadn’t been able to get back before the weather turned.

I needed more information and scrabbled for the button on the radio. “No way to see from here. Cloud cover too low. What do we know?”

The radio crackled with static before his response came through. “Local climbers in the area almost didn’t make it out. Said half their gear was covered, and one of them reported a leg injury.”

My ears perked up. “They need medical attention?” Maybe Tommy had witnessed the incident and had made his way over there to help.

“Negative. They helped out their injured friend and headed straight to the clinic in town to get her checked out. They reported no sign of anyone else in the area.”

Damn.

“Let me know if you hear anything else,” I said.

“Foster… I know I don’t have to tell you this, but don’t do anything stupid. I know you care about him, but use your head.”

I knew the only reason he wasn’t commanding me to stand down was because he knew how much experience I had in situations like this. Threat assessment was my job. I’d just spent four weeks telling others when to take shelter and not be stupid.

“Copy that.”

After a few more minutes of slogging through the mud on the trail, there was a brief thinning of the cloud cover, enough to see the wet, rocky mess down the west side of Devil’s Backbone. I stared at it, horrified at the sight. It had shoved full-grown trees over and left others with broken branches. Rocks, mud, and other litter were strewn all over the hillside in a path leading away from town.

Fuck. Those climbers were damned lucky to have survived being anywhere near that devastation.

Please let him be okay.

The swath of destruction was wide enough that he could have easily been caught in it without the other witnesses seeing anything. Before I had a chance to catch my breath from the sight, Chickie took off like a rocket up the east side of the ridge.

“Chick!” I cried after her. “Come!”

She ignored me, leaping across downed trees and bushes, straight in the direction of the saddle between Devil’s Backbone and the main peak of Slingshot Mountain.

That area was above the tree line and would be exposed to lightning, not to mention another rockfall risk. “Chickie!” I called again, racing after her.

I slipped up the trail as fast as I could, grateful when the muddy trail ended and I caught the rocky grass under my boots instead. Cold rain pelted me from all sides, whipped up by the howling wind. The bright orange of Chick’s coat made her easier to see through the thick fog around us, but it wouldn’t take much longer for her to outrun the visibility.

“Chickie!” I continued to call before realizing there might be a very good reason for her failure to listen. The only other times she’d been this disobedient had come when she’d ignored me in favor of Tommy.

Hope threaded through me like a thin, shimmering wire. Please, please.

When I began carefully picking my way over the slick boulders and scree toward the top of the saddle, I saw a thin plume of smoke that seemed a little darker than the fog around it. I hoped it was coming from the hunter’s shack Trace had mentioned.

I quickly thumbed the radio. “Blake to base.”

“Base here.”

“Smoke coming from hunter’s lodge. Approaching now.”

“Thank fuck. Let us know when you have confirmation.”

In my excitement to get to the shack and hopefully find Tommy in it, I didn’t pay attention to where I stepped. When my boot hit the next rock at a funny angle, the giant rock shifted, sending me sideways toward the sharp edge of another boulder. I cried out in surprise as I scrambled to catch myself. The ground underneath me continued to slip as the rocks began tumbling one over the other down the side of the mountain.


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