Page 19 of Torch


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I take the phone away from my face and look at the caller ID.Nope, not my mom.I clear my throat.

“Hey, what’s up?”I ask, sounding as casual as I possibly can.

“You know anyone named Trout?”he asks.

I narrow my eyes and look toward the window.

“You have Trout?”

“Yup.I’ll keep her if you don’t want her anymore,” he says, and I think he’s laughing.

“She’s a terror,” I say.“I’ll be over in a second.”

The guys waveme into the backyard instead of the house, and sure enough, there’s Trout, basking in the attention from half a dozen firemen.

Shirtless firemen.Trout’s a lucky girl.

“Hey, I’m sorry about her,” I call.

“Aww, she’s no problem,” says her current human.“You’re not a problem, are you girl?”

Trout blinks at me, tongue lolling, like she agrees that she’s not a problem.

The fireman tosses a stick across the yard and she bolts after it.

“I’m Silas,” he says, and holds out one hand.I shake it.

“Clementine,” I say.

Yes, he’s hot.Notquiteas hot as Hunter, but I’d take it.

“You presented the plaque the other night,” he says, smiling.“I remember.”

I laugh and tuck my hair behind my ear, a nervous tic because I’m not really sure what to say when a cute fireman says he remembers me.

“Thanks,” I say.

Trout comes back with the stick, briefly saving me.

“Okay, Houdini,” I say to her.“Ready to go home?”

“We’re just hanging out back here, drinking some beers,” Silas says.“You’re welcome to stay.”

Just as I reach down to take the stick out of Trout’s mouth, the back door opens and Hunter walks out.Wearing a shirt.

Maybe it’s my imagination, but I think he pauses for half a second in the doorway, looking from me to Silas and back, but then he keeps walking.Trout drops the stick before I can grab it, then trots over to Hunter.

“Traitor,” I mutter, and Silas smiles.

“Watch out, I might steal her,” Hunter calls.He roughs her up for a few moments before she leaves and walks over to the firemen playing baggo at the end of the yard, and he walks over to us.

“Want a beer?”he asks.

Iwasgoing to do laundry and make chili for next week before I went back to work, but standing between two hot firemen, suddenly those things don’t seem like much of a priority.

“Come on,” Silas adds.“It’s Friday.”

“We’ve got a whole case of Pabst,” Hunter says, like that’ll entice me.“Or, if you’re gonna be discerning, Fat Tire.”