'The men have been asking about her."
Rigg nodded. "If I see Admiral Archer again, I'll tell him."
Quinn came looking for Rigg just then. His news about the parts for their repairs was so disheartening that it drove everything else from Rigg's mind.
"Someone had a hot bath," Dean teased Lorri as soon as he let himself back into the room. She was still in the chair, her hair ^ damp, the room a little moist. "It felt nice."
"I'll bet it did. PTs are not known for their fine bathing facillities"
"I didn't know a bathroom could be that small," Lorri said, fp&nd Dean smiled at his first glimpse of the woman he once knew. "How about some breakfast?" "With coffee?" "Yes, ma'am." "Then I'm all for it."
Lorri set her grandfather's Bible aside and followed him from the room. It was early, so many officers and enlisted men were in I $ie mess hall. Lorri sat in the separate dining room for the offi
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88.
Lori Wick
1.
"h.e.l.lo, Lionel," Lorri said as she approached him where he stood by the coffee urn, greeting him with a smile.
Lionel smiled right back, pulling his hat from his head in the process.
"h.e.l.lo, Miss Lorri. You're looking well"
"Thank you. I wasn't sure if you would still be here."
"We have repairs to make."
"And then where do you go?"
Lionel grinned as he said, "Back out on patrol."
A quiver of fear raced through her, unexpected and almost confusing.
"Are you all right, Miss Lorri?"
"Yes, I just felt afraid for a moment."
"For us?"
"Yes."
"That's kind of you, Miss Lorri, but we won't go until the Storm is fully ready."
Lorri nodded, not able to explain her memory of having been aboard during an attack. She glanced around a bit, and that's when she noticed that Lionel was holding a cup of coffee.
"I should let you get to your breakfast before it gets cold."
Lionel nodded kindly, not anxious to be away, but not certain how long he should detain her.
"You take care of yourself, Miss Lorri," he put in after a few heartbeats of silence.
"You do the same," Lorri urged him as well.
She moved back to the officer's mess, finding her grandfather waiting in the doorway.
Dean knew no end of emotions as he watched her come to him. He hadn't wanted to disturb her conversation, but having
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his granddaughter talking with ease to an enlisted man was not something he ever expected to see. Clearly she was very comfortable with this sailor.
"Are you ready for breakfast?" he asked when she was close.
"Yes. Did I hold you up?"
"Not at all," he answered, giving her a smile of rea.s.surance and still trying to figure out the odd emotions moving through him.
In the midst of this he realized it didn't matter. She was safe. She was not unscathed, but she was alive, and he was going to get her home. He would deal with his own odd mix of emotions at another time.
90Ill i#ht m Harmony Hills, California Ruth Archer stood at the living room window, her eyes going from the driveway to the street and back again every few seconds. She had told herself she was ready. She had prepared as best she could, but in her heart she knew that when she saw Lorri without Josie her heart would break all over again.
For a moment she let her mind go back to the day her father-in-law's telegram arrived. Max had not heard the door. Ruth had stood still for long moments, her mind trying to grasp the words. Lorri found. Josie lost. Ruth thought they would be branded on her heart forever.
And now she waited. Not every day since, but certainly today. A second telegram had come. Dean and Lorri were on their way. They would be home this day: August 16,1945.
A car slowly trailed up the street and drove past. Ruth sighed quietly and turned from the window. It was silly to stand there for what might turn into hours. She would want her strength when Lorri finally arrived. Ruth settled into a chair in the living room,
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one that still gave her a view of the street, and began to think about the little she knew.
Neither telegram had provided her with details. The ranch had reported what they'd known: Lorri and Josie had left Carson Point in a plane on June 1. The plane was piloted by Clarence Fuller, and the three of them never arrived at their destination. In her mind the miles of ocean had stretched forever. The chances of survival were slim. And yet she hoped. That was the type of person she was. She was not going to decide it was bad news but wait for word. There was no point in crying over imagined events. And when worry came, she confessed it and reminded herself that the Lord Jesus Christ was in control.
Nevertheless, seeing those words- Josie lost -had plunged her into a place she'd never visited. She didn't know why it was different from burying a mother and a spouse, but she knew firsthand that it was. In sudden pain, her breath caught in her throat, her heart realized she wasn't even able to bury her daughter. She had been lost at sea.
"Mother?" Max's voice sounded from the stairway just before she entered the room.
"Yes, Max."
"I shut Jo's door. Was that all right?"
Ruth looked at her youngest child-no longer a child but a young woman-and tried not to hold on too tight. At the moment she wanted to tell Max that she was never leaving home.
Ruth gave a small shake of her head.
"It's not all right?" Max questioned.
"It's fine, honey. My mind wandered for a moment"
Max sat down and stared at her mother. Ruth stared back Max was the first to speak.
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[ill 'i"I don't want to cry when I see Raine."
j
"Why not?"
j
"I don't want that to be her first memory, me being a big baby."
ij"So you don't think she'll cry; you don't think I will?"
Max sighed. "I guess we all will-maybe even Grandpa." "He just might."
"I just wish I knew what happened." This was not the first time Max had voiced this, and even though they had spoken of it, Ruth warned her again. I,'if I"Don't let your curiosity overrule your good sense, Maxine.
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Whatever happened, it must have been awful. Lorri will tell us f Iwhen she's ready. We're not going to pepper her with questions- not today, and not ever."
. IMax nodded, her face composed, but the questions still
JI Ipestered her. Was Raine really all right? How could Jo die but not l' trRaine? Where in the world had she been all this time?
Ir
jlFor a moment a shudder ran over her. At times when she ' -thought about her oldest sister never coming home, she ached with pain. The news was still so new that Max was quite numb inside, but every so often pain washed over her, pain so acute that it took I!her breath away.
Watching her, Ruth saw her daughter's anguish but opted not to question her. She believed she knew the answers. And if they spoke of it just now, they might be in tears before Lorri and Dean ifl'IUarrived.
W"Ruth's eyes went to the window. She hoped it would be soon.
II.
Gasoline rationing was over. Stories on vegetables, canned fruit, and fuel oil-all released from restriction-filled the newspapers.
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Nearly every article concerned the winding down of the war or life after the fact. Nearly four weeks after being united at the base in Australia, Dean and Lorri now waited at the U.S. Naval Base outside Harmony Hills, California, for their ride home. They shared a newspaper, heads bent as they devoured the words.
Thankfully it was not a long wait. After just a bit of detail work, a sailor appeared and told them the car was ready and waiting.
The newspaper had been a diversion. Lorri was so anxious to be home, she couldn't stop the pounding of her heart. She was on her feet and headed to the waiting car before the man finished speaking.