“I hate to bother you but Reese is here, and there’s a problem.”

Immediately, Nita stood, her fi rst thought of Deo up on a roof in this gale. Her stomach lurched. “Is someone hurt?”

“Oh,” Tory said quickly. “No. I’m sorry. It’s something else. She’s next door in my offi ce. Come over when you can.”

“I’ll come right now,” Nita said, hurrying to join Tory.

Reese turned from the photographs she had been perusing on the wall and nodded to Nita, her expression grim. “How are you this morning, Nita?”

“I’m fi ne, Reese,” Nita said, grateful for how much practice she had in allowing her professional performance to hide her emotional chaos. She wondered what people would think if they knew she was so desperate to see and touch another woman she was practically coming apart. Knowing that her urgency stemmed from her long relationship

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with Sylvia and the uncertain, often frantic nature of their interludes, didn’t make the desperate longing any easier to tolerate. But she’d had a lot of practice living with unrequited need too. “Is there some problem with the post on the victim from last night?”

“Not that I’m aware of.” Reese gestured to the chairs in front of Tory’s desk and waited until Nita sat beside Tory, then said, “We received a bulletin about an hour ago that seriously bad weather is headed our way. In fact, there’s better than an eighty percent chance we’re going to see hurricane force winds up and down the Cape in about seventy-two hours.”

Nita started. “Here? I’ve never heard of a hurricane this far north.”

“Apparently, it happens every twenty or thirty years or so.”

Reese lifted her shoulder. “Depending upon wind patterns and ocean temperatures, hurricanes have tracked up the coast this far or even farther.”

“I’m on the disaster response committee,” Tory explained to Nita,

“and all of the emergency personnel—EMTs, fi re rescue, the Sheriff’s Department—will be on twenty-four hour alert until this is over. If you’re planning to stay—”

“Why wouldn’t I?” Nita interrupted.

“The Cape is only a mile or so wide at this point,” Reese pointed out. “We’re going to get fl ooding and the roads will probably go out.

We’ll defi nitely lose power.”

“In other words, things are going to get nasty,” Nita said, “and we’re going to be cut off from the rest of the Cape and the mainland.”

“Very possibly,” Reese replied.

Nita looked at Tory. “There are going to be injuries, not to mention the usual medical emergencies.”

“Yes,” Tory said. “And if it really gets bad, we’re not going to be able to transport people out, possibly for days.”

“I’m staying.” Nita turned to Reese. “I know you’ve already got a plan in place, but can you just run it down for me.”

“You and Tory will oversee all emergency medical management.

Make sure the clinic is well stocked, and if you can identify patients who could get into trouble without immediate access to hospital facilities, get a list to me so we can evacuate them now.”

“We’ve got a handful of patients who drive to Hyannis for dialysis

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or have home units,” Tory informed her lover. “They would be better off on the mainland just in case we’re looking at four or fi ve days without power. Even generator backup might not be enough.”

“I’m following two children with sleep apnea using positive pressure ventilators at night,” Nita pointed out. “We should advise those families.”

“Yes.” Tory grabbed a notepad and started taking notes. “Reese, when you make the general announcement, remind everyone that they should be certain to have enough medication to last ten days along with all the other necessities. Bottled water, batteries, lanterns, packaged foods—the usual disaster items.”

“I’ll call the hardware stores as soon as we’re done to let them know there’s going to be a run.” Reese dropped her hand to Tory’s shoulder as she wrote and caressed her softly. “Gladys and the Chief are working on an announcement right now and we’ll get it out on the radio within the hour.”

“Nelson? Don’t tell me he’s in the offi ce,” Tory said with a frown.

“He’s at home for the time being. He threatened to come in, so I sent Gladys over there to keep him in the loop. That’s as quiet as we’re going to be able to keep him.”

“What about the extended care facility?” Nita glanced at Tory.

Between the two of them they did site visits once or twice a week to the elderly residents of Beech Forest Manor. She could think of at least a dozen patients who were bedridden or who required intensive care around the clock.

“Reese?” Tory asked.

“Several of the offi cers are on their way there now to talk to the facilities director,” Reese informed them. “We’re hoping that most can stay with family members off Cape. As for those who can’t be relocated within the next twenty-four hours or who have nowhere to go, we’ll move them to a more central location if we have to.”

“Town Hall?” Tory asked.

Reese nodded. “That’s what I was thinking, or the church, or both depending on how many people we have without power or whose houses sustain structural damage.”

“Should we evacuate the whole town?” Nita questioned.

“Currently, we’re recommending that people leave voluntarily,”

Reese answered. “But even if the state orders an evacuation, you know

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not everyone is willing or able to leave.”

Tory sighed. “I know.” She covered Reese’s hand with hers as she continued to make notes with the other. “Neither one of us is going to get home much until this is over. Will you call Jean and Kate and ask them to take the baby and the dog.” Tory met Reese’s gaze. “And leave today.”

Reese leaned down and kissed the top of her head. “Already done.

They’ll stop by here so you can say goodbye to Reggie, and then they’re going to drive to your sister’s.”

“That sounds great. It will make keeping in touch with everyone easier.” Tory rubbed her cheek absently against Reese’s arm. “Thank you, darling.”

Nita averted her gaze, feeling as if she were intruding on a private moment, even though there was nothing inappropriate about anything Reese and Tory said or did. Still, every gesture, every intonation, every unspoken word was so intimate, it left her aching. Totally without volition, she thought of Deo and was struck by an overwhelming urge to call her. She just wanted to connect with her before the world went crazy.

“What should we do about regular patient hours?” Nita asked, trying to maintain her focus. She couldn’t think about Deo now, even though part of her wanted nothing else.

“For today, we’ll keep them as they are,” Tory said. “I’ll have Randy call everyone who’s scheduled for the following week and bring the urgent ones in tomorrow. The rest we can reschedule if we need to.”

“Sounds like we have a plan.” Reese cupped the back of Tory’s neck and kissed her cheek. “I’ll call you. Don’t work too late.”

Tory gripped Reese’s arm and kissed her mouth. “Be careful.”

“Always,” Reese murmured. She straightened, nodded to Nita, and strode out.

Nita watched her go, appreciating why men and women would follow her into battle. She radiated not just confi dence and competence, but that supreme certainty that defi ned command presence. Nita recognized it because her father had it. So did Sylvia, except Sylvia’s confi dence was laced with cruelty. Unlike Reese, Sylvia was motivated by power, and sex was her weapon. Nita had been as enthralled by Sylvia’s power as she had been subjugated by it. Now she wondered why.

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“Please let me know what I can do,” Nita said, rising. “I’m going to get back to seeing patients.”

“Thanks.” Tory caught Nita’s hand. “And thanks for staying. If this gets as bad as Reese thinks, we’re really going to need you.”

“This is my home now. I’m not leaving.”

“I almost forgot—your house! You’d better call Deo and make sure she knows what’s coming.”

“If we get a break, I’ll run down there and talk to her,” Nita said quickly before she could think about what she was doing and change her mind.

“Go now. We can handle things here. And who knows when you may get another chance.”

“I won’t be long,” Nita said, already starting for the door. Her heart speeded up with anticipation, and she didn’t even try to pretend it wasn’t because she would soon see Deo.

“Deo!” Joey yelled up the stairwell. “You got company.”

“In a minute,” Deo called back, bracing the plywood against the new French doors with her shoulder as she rapidly drilled in four screws to hold the wood in place. She scanned Nita’s bedroom. It was as secure as they were going to get it. Putting the drill aside, she dusted off her hands on her pants and started down the stairs. She slowed as she reached the bottom. Nita was waiting for her.

“Sorry, I know you’re busy,” Nita said uneasily.

“That’s okay.” Seeing Joey’s avid stare, Deo took Nita’s arm and led her into the dining room out of earshot of her cousin and the other guys. “I thought you were at the clinic?”

“I am. I was—I…” she swept her arm to take in the rest of the house. The ground fl oor windows were already covered with plywood to protect the new glass from the expected winds. “I guess you know about the storm?”

“Contractors live and die by weather bulletins—just like fi shermen.” Deo shrugged. “Don’t worry about this place. We’ll get it buttoned up tight.”

“I’m not worried about the house.” Nita realized she had no good reason for running across town and Deo must know that. Oddly, she

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