What We Find

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Authors: Robyn Carr
off.” She shrugged. “I guess I should get over it by now. Huh?”
    He gave her shoulders another squeeze. “Some things stay with us a long time,” he said. “No one knows that better than me, the boy raised on the road by Jed ‘Looney Tunes’ Jones.”
    * * *
     
    Maggie had a new friend. The days around the store and grounds were busy but in the evenings, when things were quiet, she wandered down to the lakefront or over to Cal’s campsite. One night she invited him to meet her on her front porch at the house. They talked about their lives, even though she wasn’t sure how much of his was true.
    “Did I mention I’m being sued?” she said.
    “No. No wonder you don’t want to go back to work!”
    “Oh, I’ve been sued before. It might settle or just go away but if it doesn’t it could drag on. There was no malpractice. We did everything humanly possible. It really took its toll on me—it was a hard one. A terrible accident involving teenagers. We all did what we could, but were so helpless. I’ve lost patients before—in my business it happens too often. It was awful.”
    “I’m so sorry. Are you worried about the lawsuit?” he asked.
    “I worry about everything,” she admitted. “But when I’m in the moment, in surgery, I’m not worrying, I’m performing and thinking hard. Before and after, I worry too much.”
    * * *
     
    On the weekend, the park began to fill up with campers. The weather was outstanding—sunny and warm spring weather. Tom and his oldest son, Jackson, came to the property to help Maggie finish putting in the garden. She had several flats of flowers and vegetable starters. Cal dug in and helped while Beau did his job chasing the rabbits into the woods, and Sully watched over everyone, giving plenty of advice.
    “Like I’ve never put in a garden before,” Tom said.
    “What haven’t you done, Tom?” Maggie asked.
    “Never did surgery,” he said. “Yet.”
    Tom Canaday was a big, happy guy whose wife divorced him years ago. At first she wanted to take the girls, Nikki and Brenda, to her new home in Aurora, but that didn’t last long. The girls were miserable away from the home and school they knew and Tom convinced his ex-wife to give them back to him, that he was in a better position to take care of them and see they were doing well in school. Nikki was now seventeen and Brenda, fourteen. His ex visited from time to time and, as far as Maggie knew from the gossip, they were amicable and got along better divorced than they had as a married couple.
    Tom had indeed had a million jobs and on top of that was a volunteer on the search-and-rescue team.
    The campground welcomed a lot of what Maggie referred to as weekend warriors. They began to pull in on Thursday and Friday afternoons. A few planned to stay a few days but most would pack up on Sunday night. During school breaks, whole families or large groups of young people would stay through two weekends. And school breaks came at various times all over the country.
    “We’re going to do some hiring for the spring and summer. Interested, Jackson?” Maggie asked.
    “Doing what?” he asked.
    “Everything,” she said. “From spring till August this place will be busy. I’m still trying to hold Sully down. Do you have any time?”
    “I can take on a little work,” Jackson said, smiling handsomely. “This is not a bad place to be in summer. Girls everywhere.”
    “Thanks, Maggie. As if college isn’t hard enough on my nerves,” Tom said, staking the tomato plants.
    “I have an idea. Why don’t you ask Nikki if she wants a summer job, too. Maybe they can spy on each other and tattle?”
    “Oh, much better, Maggie,” Tom said, one knee in the dirt. He looked up at her and shook his head. “You’re just looking for ways to make my life easier, aren’t you? Now I have to worry about two of them. Schoolwork is a priority.”
    “Well.” Maggie rubbed her hands together. “Until school is out for summer, if you

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