Healing (General's Daughter Book 5) (14 page)

“Gee, thanks for suffering along with us. Is Jen okay?”

“That girl’s a champ. She knows her storms. She whipped us into shape as soon as she looked at the sky. Are you guys going to be okay?”

“We still have power. I have a generator we can use, but I want to do a full shut down of systems before any outage. Do I have your permission?”

“Yes. Can you shut down engineering remotely?”

“Yes, sir. All systems down, then. Our transmitters should work if the phones go out. You can use the emergency contact unit if you need to get hold of us.”

“Shall do. Mike? One thing. This is very, very important. You are not, under any circumstance, to accept a call to go out in this weather. Am I understood?”

“Yes, sir; and what about Sam?”

“I want to say no, but we both know that she’s safer than you would be out there. Use your discretion.”

“Yes, sir. We’re starting to surge. Let me get off. Send our love to everyone.”

“Same from us, my boy. I’m putting the base on lock down; the OOD will call if he needs you. Have fun and I’ll talk to you later,” Scott said, hanging up.

Sam stopped in her tracks, staring at the tank. It was filled with dolphin calves and pinniped pups, with Ton eyeing them warily. “Since when did we become a babysitting service?” she asked Ton, stepping down onto his ramp. He swam up to her, eyeing her from the side.

“Ton, I’m sorry. You were right. I should have listened. Yes, my flukes got bitten. Real bad. The land walker. No, the orca-male did not touch me again. You think he should? Whose side are you on?”

Ton snorted, swimming away and pushing the young animals out of his way to guard the tunnel opening.

“I need to close the tunnel to prevent overflow. Is that all right? Okay, I’ll see you later,” Sam said, watching him swim off. She sighed, looking at the babies. They were all recently fed, thank goodness, but the noise was deafening.

“What is going on in here?” Rich asked as he walked in and froze mid-step.

“I guess I wasn’t the only one told to get out of the storm. Ton went back out, so we should have enough food to last them a couple of days. This is going to be work.”

“They’re cute. Cheer up, it will be fun,” Rich said, squatting on the deck to look at a young sea lion cub. It waddled to him and belched in his face. “You stink.”

“I’ll have to run the filters with all them in here to keep the tank clear. Gross. Rich, hose that off, please.” She pointed to a pile left by the cub.

“Turn on the sprayers and the lamps. That should keep them clean and warm,” he suggested.

She looked at him grimly. “Until the power blows. I hope Ton will alert us when it’s safe for them to go back out.”

“What the hell is going on here?” Michael asked, walking up onto the deck, hands on his hips.

“I had nothing to do with it. Honest,” Sam said as he looked at her.

“New game plan. This is going to take a lot of time and work. Shit, there goes the power.”

“Now what?”

Michael grumbled as he activated the generator, focusing the power to the tanks to keep the peds warm and the decks and tank clean. The babies were old enough to eat; however they required the fish to be in small chunks and handfed. To make matters more difficult, they would only feed from Sam. She was exhausted by the time they were all satisfied,

“If I didn’t know better, I would think the pod was punishing her for her behavior today,” Rich whispered to Michael who was sketching some blueprint ideas on his tablet.

“I was thinking the same thing. She gets to see how much work it takes to keep a baby safe. She’s ready to drop.”

“Add to that, you know she’s really sore. She can barely kick. I’m surprised, no complaining, though,” Rich added, leaning back to watch.

After crawling painfully out of the tank, Sam dimmed the lights, hoping the animals would go to sleep. She stretched across the deck, head in her arms.

“How are you doing?” Michael asked, squatting next to her.

She lifted her face to squint at him. “I’m so glad I can’t have kids,” she mumbled, dropping her face down again.

“How’s your bottom?” he asked quietly. She didn’t answer. Patting her shoulder, he stood up. “Let’s get you dried off and put something warm inside you. Rich? I’m going to help Sammi get cleaned up, could you heat up some water?”

“Sure thing. I can do her.”

“I’m sure you can.” Michael grinned.

Rich rolled his eyes. “I didn’t mean that. Never mind.”

“Come on, short stuff. There should be enough hot water available in the shower for you.” Michael chuckled at his friend's discomfort and then waited patiently for Sam to redress in warm, dry clothes. He stroked her face before kissing her temple. “How’s your ow?”

“It’s wearing me down, big brother. I can handle all that stuff, but add this…”

“I know. You agree you deserved it, don’t you?”

“I guess.”

“You guess?”

“Yes, I deserved it. But I don’t deserve whatever Rich is planning on top of it. You were mean enough for both.”

“I wasn’t mean; I was strict. I don’t enjoy disciplining you,” Michael said somberly.

“So you think I rate double what you gave me?”

“No, but it’s not my decision.”

“It certainly is. This whole thing fell under your command and had nothing to do with my personal life. You can stop him.”

“Do you feel I should?”

“Yes. I’m asking you for your interference. For once.”

“You’re really scared of him, aren’t you?” Michael frowned, looking at her carefully.

“Not of him, but his strength and what he can do. He’ll never harm me, but I don’t want to face what he can deal out this time.”

“I’ll talk with him, but I won’t order him. He would not take to that kindly.”

“Too bad. He can get over it.”

“You’re cranky. I want you to go grab some sleep and we’ll talk about this later,” Michael said softly.

She sighed, nodding in agreement. “You’re right. Will you tuck me in?” she asked in a tiny voice.

He hugged her warmly. “Of course. I set up your cot in your office for you. Come on.” He held her hand and escorted her through the dark hall to the room, holding the lantern high enough to cast an eerie light on the walls.

She carefully climbed onto the cot and under the wool blankets. “I used to love camping. Now it’s just creepy. These blankets itch.”

“Yes, I know they aren’t the Egyptian cotton sheets and down comforter you have at home. But they are clean, warm and dry. Go sleepies.” He kissed her cheek, tucking the blankets gently around her. “Night, baby doll.”

“Night, Michael. I’m sorry about today.”

“It’s over. Rich will want to come in, is that okay?”

“Of course.”

Several minutes later, Rich knelt by her cot, stroking her hair lovingly. “I love you, sweetheart. You know that, right?”

“Yes. I love you too. I’m sorry I was such a brat this morning.”

“I don’t care when you brat, it’s when you overstep yourself. You did that.”

“I know. Michael made sure that I acknowledged every stupid thing I did.”

“He really laid it on hard, didn’t he?”

“Yeah. I deserved it. Rich, I—”

“Don’t worry. I’m not going to do anything. I’m fair and reasonable. I don’t want you to ever be afraid of me.”

“You do scare me sometimes.”

“I know I do. It’s the vibe thing. You trust me, don’t you?”

“Absolutely.”

“Good. Now go to sleep. I’ll stay with the babies. If there are any problems I can’t handle, I’ll get you, okay?”

“Thanks. Night.” Sam yawned, snuggling her cheek in the cup of his hand. Rich kissed her gently, then stood to leave. She was asleep before he closed the door.

The power returned at 0620 the following morning. Awakened by the sound of the equipment coming back to life, and the bright lights snapping on overhead, Sam winced painfully as she abruptly sat up. With a groan, she glanced sleepily at the clock, and then plopped her head back down. Her door opened quietly.

“Hey, Sunshine, your children are hungry,” Michael said, looking in.

She hid her face. “Five more minutes.”

“Sorry, but the babies are in there screaming and they won’t feed from either Rich or me. Suit up, you have work to do.”

“I can’t move,” she whined. Michael shook his head and started to pull off her cammies as she lay on the bed, covering her face with the pillow she grabbed off her chair. He chuckled as she kicked his hands away while he tried to dress her.

“Rich! Some help here,” Michael called. It took the two of them nearly twenty minutes to suit up the uncooperative girl. They both sat in chairs, slightly winded from the struggle, and stared, as she still lay unmoving on her cot.

“That wasn’t fun,” Rich remarked.

“I used to have to deal with this almost every day when she was younger. Same thing. She just got bigger and stronger; it’s not as easy.”

“You should have let her go out naked then,” Rich tsked, shaking the girl’s leg. She kicked at him.

“That was the problem, she would have, in a heartbeat. Up you go,” he announced, pulling her off the cot and into his arms.

“Put me down! I don’t wanna— Go swimming.” She spat the cold, salty water from her mouth as she came up from being tossed into the tank. Grumbling, she began the tedious feeding process, careful of her hands as the hungry, sharp teeth grabbed at the fish pieces. It took her over an hour before all the pups and calves were finally satisfied.

“How’s the weather? Can they leave yet?” she groaned, holding the edge of the tank as they played happily around her legs, nipping her occasionally.

“Still bad, but the warning has passed. Once the waves drop to six feet, we can reopen. Hungry?” Michael asked.

Sam looked at him wearily. “I want real food. How about crab for breakfast?”

“Where will you get that?” Rich said.

Sam smiled, pointing to the tunnel entrance. “Let me out, I’ll gather some. I’ll stay under so I’ll be safe. Come on, it’s better than Top Ramen or MREs.”

“It does sound good. We could cook them over the camp stove.” Rich elbowed Michael.

“I don’t know. We’re still on base-wide shut down.”

“I’ll try to grab some scallops too.”

“Oh, all right. But be back in half an hour.”

“I didn't think you would put up too much of a fight over this.” Sam smiled. Rich handed her a mesh bag and, with a wave, she squeezed out the small portals in the tunnel gate.

“You didn’t really want her out there, did you?” Rich asked.

“No, but it will improve her mood which will make it better for us. Plus crab for breakfast? Come on, would you refuse?”

“No way. Plus we can rub it in Scott's face. You know how he is about fresh seafood.” Rich snickered

Sam returned quickly with a haul of ten large Dungeness crab, a small octopus and a dozen scallops. They were wrapped in kelp and soon steaming in the crew pot over the large camp stove. Sam hummed to herself as she sprinkled Old Bay seasoning over the crustaceans.

“Where did you find that?” Rich asked, sniffing eagerly.

“Staple supply with us. We go nowhere without it. Mmm, smells delicious,” Michael said.

“This was fun, but I’m ready to go home.” Sam yawned, watching as the babies were taken away by their cows. Ton entered the tank, snorting loudly. He wanted to know how his calf handled her mothering responsibilities.

“You SOB. You set this up, didn’t you?” she scolded, pushing him away from her. He spit water at her, and then turned to eye her. She sat on the tank edge. “I get it. It’s a lot of work to take care of calves. I’ll listen for now on, I promise.”

He was satisfied. With a flip on his tail, he zoomed out of the tank.

Other books

The Heat of Betrayal by Douglas Kennedy
The Strangler by William Landay
Burned by Hope, Amity
The Pirate Captain by Kerry Lynne
Bet On Love by Witek, Barbara
McKettricks of Texas: Austin by Linda Lael Miller
The Blob by David Bischoff