Читать книгу Treacherous Slopes - Terri Reed - Страница 10

Оглавление

ONE

“Welcome to this evening’s segment of Northwest Edition. I’m Julie Frost reporting to you live from the annual Festival of Snow in beautiful Bend, Oregon. It’s a crisp Friday night and a perfect way to start the weekend. The festival is proud to host the U.S. Aerial Freestyle National Championship. Excitement is in the air.”

Julie kept her gaze on the round, black lens of the handheld camera in front of her. The temperature had dipped below ten on this January evening. Though she’d lived in central Oregon all her life, she couldn’t remember it being this cold. Her smile felt frozen in place, like her toes. She should have worn thicker socks. Or boots made for the cold, not fashion. The station stylist had insisted the pink boots matching the pink ski suit completed the outfit. She felt like a big, pink lollipop. The price she paid to be on camera. She refrained from stomping her feet and settled for wiggling her freezing toes. It didn’t help.

“As you can see around me, quite a crowd has turned out for the festivities.”

She paused as Bob, her cameraman, panned the area, giving their viewers at home a glimpse of what they were missing. The Festival of Snow was held across the Deschutes River from the Old Mill shopping center. The mill with its three towering smoke stacks had been converted into a popular sporting-goods store and provided the anchor to the center. On this side of the footbridge, along the river path, white tents and canopies gave local vendors and artisans warm, dry places to show off their wares while local eateries tempted festivalgoers with tasty treats. A live band played in the amphitheater opposite the wooden structure erected for the skiing competition.

Every year more and more tourists traveled to the mountain oasis to attend the annual festival celebrating the best of winter in Oregon.

When the lens focused back on her, she smiled and raised her voice. She hoped the viewing audience was able to hear her over the cheers of spectators waiting for the aerial freestyle skiers to take to the ramp.

“Tonight’s competition is a precursor to the upcoming winter games. Athletes will compete for points as well as a cash purse of twenty thousand dollars. Points for each jump will be added to the skiers’ total season score. Names of the team members representing the U.S.A. at the winter Olympic games will be announced in one week. That will give the athletes two weeks to prepare before traveling to this year’s games host city, where they will represent the U.S.A. and compete for gold, silver and bronze.”

Julie’s gaze slipped to Bob. He nodded encouragingly and made a rolling motion with one hand, letting her know to keep stalling as they waited for the first skier to take his jump.

“Behind me is a specially constructed snow ramp known as a ‘kicker.’ The skiers will perform two jumps consisting of single or multiple somersaults with or without twists. Each jump must vary by one somersault or one twist. Points are awarded for takeoff, form in the air, difficulty and landing.”

Bob motioned with his hand, indicating the competition was starting.

Bubbles of excitement knocked against her ribs. Though she wasn’t daring enough to ever try aerial freestyle skiing, she certainly enjoyed watching. It took a risk-taking, adrenaline-junkie personality to pursue a sport where you launched yourself off a fourteen-foot-tall ramp, performed flips and twists fifty feet above the ground, and then landed upright on a steep incline.

Unfortunately, Julie was drawn to that exact type of man. Drawn to and burned by them. She’d had her fill of men who lived life on the edge. Her ex-fiancé had been that sort of man. Only trouble was John Mateo hadn’t limited his risky behavior to sports. Thankfully, she’d found out before she’d married him.

Never again would she allow herself to get swept into a relationship with an adrenaline junkie. Next time around—if there was a next time—she wanted stable and steady. Until then she would focus on her career.

Her first step had been convincing her boss at the television station to give her a shot at moving up from production assistant to on-camera personality. The second step had been successfully pitching the idea of a feature story on one of Bend’s local heroes, aerial freestyler Nick Walsh, to her boss. He’d said yes. Then she’d contacted Nick’s biggest sponsor, Thunderbird Ski Equipment and Apparel, figuring the best way to gain access to Nick would be through his sponsor. The head of the locally based sports company had enthusiastically embraced the idea and looked forward to the promotional aspects of the story. Now all she had to do was put together an excellent story and she’d be given the promotion she craved.

To the camera she said, “Hometown favorite Nick Walsh is taking his position.”

When the camera swung away to zoom in on the tall, broad-shouldered skier readying himself at the top of the ramp, a flare of feminine awareness made a joke of her being career-focused. And worse yet, there was so much more to Nick than his good looks.

With a shake of her head, she reminded herself what the story was as the camera came back to focus on her. “Early last year calamity struck the Walsh family when Cody Walsh, Nick’s younger brother, had a horrible accident during a practice and died.”

Her heart ached for the family. She remembered Cody as a sweet kid who worshipped his older brother.

“The Walsh brothers were taking the aerial freestyle world by storm and were poised to vie for gold against each other as well as the world’s top aerialists. Many people speculated Nick wouldn’t continue to compete when he dropped out of sight for several weeks after the tragedy.” One of the topics she planned to cover later when she interviewed him.

“However, Nick did return to compete and is leading in men’s aerials.” Recalling the phone conversation she’d had with Nick’s manager a few hours ago, she said, “According to Nick’s manager, Gordon Lewis, Nick will be performing a new trick for us tonight. One he hopes will take him all the way to gold in the biggest competition of his life!”

A roar for the hometown favorite went up from the crowd. Even as a kid, Nick’s one and only passion had been skiing. He’d had his eyes set on winning gold one day. This could be his year.

Bob pointed toward the ramp.

Julie turned to watch, stomping her feet to stay warm, her gaze riveted to the skier waiting to take off. Walsh wore the U.S. team’s bright blue-and-red ski suit. Though she couldn’t see his face, she had no trouble remembering his vivid blue eyes, thick dark hair and strong jawline.

They’d grown up together, attended the same school and church all the way through to graduation. While she’d been the geeky girl who sat in the front of class, he’d been the one everybody gravitated to at the back. The guys tried to emulate him and failed; the girls vied for his attention and failed. Including her.

She doubted he’d remember her at all.

* * *

Nick Walsh flexed his legs, readying his muscles. He took deep calming breaths. The crowd’s roar of expectation lifted on the chilly evening air. Floodlights illuminated the smooth ramp and pooled in a bright circle highlighting the landing track and outrun twenty feet below. A wiser man would resist the urge to scan the crowd for a glint of steel, the small black hole that would put him out of his misery once and for all.

But he wasn’t wise.

However, he was definitely unnerved.

This morning he’d received a menacing note—letters cut from a magazine to form three words—TIME TO DIE.

After the failed attempt on his life a few months ago, it was little wonder he was edgy.

A flash of color snagged his gaze. A woman stood slightly apart from the rest of the onlookers. Dressed from head to toe in neon pink, she looked like a highlighter except for a long blond braid draped over one shoulder. He blinked and forced himself to focus, which took all his mental prowess considering the death threat looming in the shadows like a mountain lion that roamed the Cascades waiting for an opportune moment to pounce.

Tonight was about testing out a new trick. And moving closer to achieving his goal of medaling in the upcoming games. For Cody.

Nick’s heart twisted in his chest.

He concentrated his energy into the moment, blocking out the noises of the spectators and the grief that stabbed at him with each breath. Blocking out the fact that he was back home in the place where his dreams of gold had been born. Blocking out the knowledge that his parents wouldn’t be among the audience watching the competition. They still blamed him for Cody’s death.

His jaw clenched. He blamed himself.

“Go!”

Heart pumping with adrenaline, Nick pushed off. Pointing his skis down the inrun slope, he picked up speed. He needed to reach thirty miles per hour for optimum liftoff. He approached the kicker. He had to hit it just right to get the height required to perform the quad back, double twist. Wind whipped over his helmet, whistling through the facemask. Keeping his gaze focused upward, he lifted his arms overhead to elongate his body, increasing his rotational inertia by moving more of his weight away from his hips and allowing for more flipping power.

The approach was perfect.

Wait. Something didn’t feel right. His left boot slipped slightly against the toehold.

Someone had messed with his ski and loosened the binding. Sabotage!

His stomach clenched with anticipation and dread. He forced himself to remain calm. He could pull this off.

He hit the kicker and pushed off, soaring high into the air. Momentum carried him up and backward. The blur of stars in the clear night sky appeared like a comet’s trail. He arched and gyrated his hips in a hula type move, beginning his first back twist.

His left ski detached from his boot, hitting his arm. Pain ricocheted through the bone. Shock seized his lungs.

The sensation of flying that normally brought him joy sent a shaft of terror shredding through him.

A ripple of panic snatched his breath.

“Help me, God!”

Forget about keeping his body in alignment for the judges. He focused his gaze on the ground, estimating the distance. This wasn’t the first time a trick had gone wrong.

He prayed it wouldn’t be his last trick ever.

He had to land this in one piece. An injury could knock him out of the competition. He didn’t want to wait another four years for the opportunity to go for gold!

He raised his arms overhead to slow his momentum. Pain screamed down his left side from the point of impact with the ski. He elongated his frame, keeping his knees soft and braced himself for the ground.

He hit the landing track with a jarring thud. For a heartbeat, he thought he’d maintain his upright position on the one ski. Then he tumbled, head over end, landing with bruising force against the track and sliding rapidly toward the barrier of the outrun. He curled to protect himself and hit the barrier like a ball bouncing off pavement.

The air left his lungs in a gush and stars danced before his eyes.

He prayed his dreams of gold weren’t dead like his brother.

* * *

Shrieks of horror splintered the air. Nick’s unattached ski flew into the bright orange safety net. He lay in a heap, butted up against the outrun barrier. The cries of the spectators echoed through Julie, heightening her own shock. Reality TV in the flesh.

“Lord, please don’t let him be dead.”

She did not want to gain ratings by streaming live the death of one of Oregon’s—and the country’s—favorite skiers. What would this accident to do his chances of competing in February? Would an injury force him to wait four more years or take him out of the running for gold forever by ending not only his career but also his life?

Sympathy and dread knotted her stomach.

Uniformed people and other skiers rushed to Nick’s side.

Bob’s hand gripped Julie’s elbow. “Come on, get in there.”

She blinked, letting his words sink in. Right. She had a job to do. Shaking off the shock, she pushed her way through the crowd. “Excuse me. Let us through.”

She reached the barrier and flashed her press badge to the man guarding the makeshift gate. He pulled aside the wire mesh so she and Bob could move closer to where Nick lay on the ground. Even though they weren’t on the mountain, two Mt. Bachelor ski patrols wearing black snowsuits with bright white crosses on the shoulders attended to Nick. One checked Nick’s vitals and the other positioned a toboggan so they could lift him onto the sled.

Julie inched closer but was halted by a large muscled man in a black ski suit. “Stay back, ma’am.”

As she peered around the man, dread curled in her belly. She hated seeing anyone hurt, let alone someone she knew.

Nick moaned and rolled onto his back.

Julie breathed out a sigh of relief.

“Whoa! Slow down,” one of the ski patrol said.

“What happened?” Nick asked, coming up on his elbows.

“You took a nasty spill,” Julie answered. The pressure in her chest eased. He hadn’t broken his neck like his brother. Though she hadn’t witnessed Cody’s fatal accident, the stories of the event painted a harrowing tale.

Nick reached up and pulled his goggles down past his chin so they hung around his neck. “Do I know you?”

Her heart did a little leap. She smiled but was prevented from answering when the ski patrol stepped between them. “Sir, we’re going to lift you onto the toboggan and take you to the clinic tent while we wait for an ambulance.”

Nick shook his head. “I don’t need to go to the hospital.”

“Nick!” A tall man wearing a long wool coat over a double-breasted suit and wing tips shoved his way through the crowd. “Are you hurt? Oh, man, tell me you’re not hurt!”

“No, I’m good,” Nick said and sat up.

“Sir, please, let’s get you onto the toboggan,” the ski patrol insisted.

Waving off the guy, Nick said, “No way. I can go on my own two feet.” He rolled to all fours and then rose.

A cheer erupted from the crowd.

Nick wobbled. Julie reached out to steady him, along with everyone else. “Stubborn man,” she muttered.

He grinned at her. “You don’t know the half of it.”

“You need to be checked out ASAP!” the well-dressed man exclaimed, looking a little green. “You can’t have an injury this close to the games.”

“I’m fine. Relax,” Nick insisted.

“I won’t relax until the doctors say you’re fine,” the man shot back.

Two skiers, wearing ski suits matching Nick’s, positioned themselves on either side of Nick. The Thunderbird logo graced the back of Nick’s ski suit, distinguishing him from the other two. The muscled man in black fell in step behind them.

“Come on, dude,” the guy on the right said. “Let’s get you to the doctor.”

They half carried him toward the Mt. Bachelor medical clinic tent set up nearby.

Julie blinked and forced herself to remember why she was there. She turned to face Bob and stared into the camera. “Nick Walsh, ladies and gentlemen. Undoubtedly one of the best aerial freestyle skiers in the country. Not many people could have dropped fifty feet in the air and walked away to ski again.”

She prayed that last bit was true. The country was counting on him doing the U.S. proud by medaling.

“Come on,” she said to Bob and followed Nick toward the urgent-care tent.

“Nick!” a woman in the crowd called out. “Nick, are you okay? It’s me, Kitty.”

Nick didn’t acknowledge the female’s cry.

Julie wasn’t sure which of the numerous women pressing up against the barrier had called out. A girlfriend?

“Get a shot of the crowd,” she instructed Bob.

As soon as he finished panning the crowd, she hurried around the corner of the urgent-care tent. She hustled so she was in front of Nick and his entourage.

Nick stopped, forcing his companions to do the same. “Jules, is that you?”

Surprise, closely followed by pleasure, rushed through her, heating her cheeks. “Hey, Nick.” She gave herself a mental shake. Do your job! She thrust the microphone toward him. “Do you know what went wrong?”

He gave her a lopsided grin. “That wasn’t meant to be a monoskiing trick.”

“Any idea why your ski came off?”

He tried to sidestep by her, his expression darkening. “I have ideas.”

Frustrated that he wouldn’t share, she moved into his path. “Will you be doing a second run?”

“No, I won’t tonight.” He zigged to go around her, taking his buddies with him.

Disappointed he wasn’t giving her more, she zagged.

His blue eyes flashed with annoyance, but his smile stayed in place.

“We’re glad you weren’t hurt,” she stated into the microphone.

“Me, too.” He tried again to move past her.

Knowing she’d have his attention during the interview and she wouldn’t be so easily dismissed, she acquiesced and stepped back. “I’m looking forward to interviewing you later.”

His smile faltered. “No interviews.”

“Nick Walsh. What a kidder you are!” she quipped into the microphone, trying to salvage the live shot and keep it on a positive tone.

Staring at his retreating back, Julie pressed her lips together. The interview had been arranged. She’d been assured Nick would cooperate. Obviously he hadn’t been informed yet.

Gathering her composure, she plastered on a smile and turned back to the camera. “Exciting turn of events tonight at the Festival of Snow. But thankfully Nick Walsh is unharmed. I will be interviewing him later for a special segment of Northwest Edition. Stay tuned.”

Julie made a cut motion with her hand, indicating for Bob to cut the feed, then ducked through the tent flaps. Inside the clinic tent, welcome warmth seeped through her, making her limbs tingle. There were several screens lined up to cordon off makeshift exam rooms.

A woman seated behind a table glanced up. “Can I help you?”

“Nick Walsh.”

“Excuse us!” An elderly man elbowed his way past Julie. “My wife is having trouble breathing.”

The woman jumped up and came around the table to help the man with the pale older woman. “Let’s get you settled over here.”

She glanced distractedly at Julie and pointed toward the farthest screen.

“Your husband’s behind curtain number three.”

Julie drew back. “Oh, I’m—”

The woman turned her back, cutting Julie off as she led the older couple toward an exam table.

Julie hesitated for a moment, not comfortable letting the woman believe she was Nick’s wife, but seeing no opportunity to correct her, she walked away in search of Nick.

Voices raised in argument directed the way. She stopped just inside the screen barrier.

“I didn’t pass out,” Nick said, his voice raspy with irritation. He’d removed his goggles and helmet and sat on an exam table. Though he looked older than the last time she’d seen him in person, he was still handsome, even when pale and grouchy. “I had the wind knocked from me, that’s all.”

“Doesn’t matter,” the well-dressed man insisted. “You’re going to the local hospital for a head scan. The doctor agrees. He’s arranging it now.”

“I don’t need the hospital!”

“We already know he’s not right in the head,” said one of the skiers who’d helped him from the arena. He had blond hair badly in need of a trim and a scraggly beard that was so popular with guys under thirty.

“The scan will only prove it,” the other skier, who had light brown hair and brown eyes, joked.

“What are you two still doing in here?” the well-dressed man snapped. “Get out there and do your jumps. I can’t have all three of you out of the competition!”

Slipping past Julie with curious glances, the two skiers beat a hasty retreat.

Nick shrugged out of the top layer of his ski suit. A dark purple bruise covered his left arm starting below his elbow, spreading up his biceps and disappearing beneath his Dri-FIT T-shirt. Julie gasped at sight of his injury.

The big man in black, who had his back to her, swiveled and blocked her path.

Nick’s eyes widened. “No, it’s okay. Let Jules through.” Then a slow smile curved his mouth. “I never turn away a beautiful woman. Especially one in head-to-toe pink.”

Heat crept into her cheeks, but she refused to respond to his comment.

The well-dressed man moved closer to inspect Nick’s bruised skin. “Is your arm broken? Please tell me it’s not broken. You can’t compete with a broken arm!”

“No, it’s not broken,” Nick said, bending his arm on a wince. His gaze zeroed on his manager. “Gordon, you need to find the ski—” Nick flicked a quick glance at Julie. He seemed to hesitate a moment before saying, “Check the binding.”

“Is that what caused the ski to fall off, a faulty binding?” she asked.

Gordon stared at her for a moment as if just noticing her. “How did you get back here?”

“It’s been a long time, Jules,” Nick said, drawing her attention. He held his injured arm close to his body and looked as if he were about to topple over.

Concerned, she moved to sit next him so she could grab him if he pitched sideways. “Yes. Yes, it has.”

“You two know each other?” Gordon asked, his gaze bouncing between them.

“Yep. Grew up together.” Nick grinned.

She held out her hand to Gordon. “Julie Frost, Northwest Edition.”

Dawning realization widened Gordon’s hazel eyes. “Right.” He shook her hand. “Gordon Lewis, Nick’s manager. We spoke earlier.”

“Nice to meet you.”

“Northwest Edition?” Nick asked. “As in the TV show?”

“I’ve been working there since college,” she said, which was technically true. She didn’t mention her official job title was production assistant. If all went well with the story on Nick, she’d be hosting her own segment by the end of the month.

“So Jules, how did you get back here?”

She grimaced guiltily as she answered Nick’s question. “The woman manning the table out there thought I was your wife.”

His eyebrows twitched. “Not that I wouldn’t mind, but you’re a reporter. I’d never date, let alone marry, a reporter.”

Bristling, she stared at him. “Excuse me?”

A doctor wearing a white lab coat over ski pants entered with a wheelchair. “Mr. Walsh, a transport will be here shortly to take you to St. Charles Memorial Medical Center.” He moved to inspect Nick’s arm. “Let’s get an X-ray of your arm,” the doctor said. “In the chair, please.”

Julie stepped back as Gordon and the doctor helped Nick into the wheelchair. The doctor rolled him out of the exam room, the big guy in black following closely behind. Julie figured he must be event security.

She turned to Gordon. “What will happen if there is a break in his arm or the CT scan shows a brain injury?”

“There would be no possibility of competing in the upcoming winter games.” Gordon ran a hand through his hair, clearly freaked out by Nick’s close call. “I can’t believe this is happening. We’re so close.”

“It’s been a hard year for Nick,” Julie stated quietly.

His weary gaze met hers. “For us all, Ms. Frost.”

“If Nick is knocked out of the running for a spot on the U.S. ski team, who do you think the committee would choose?”

Gordon shrugged. “There are thirteen skiers from the B and C teams ready and willing to step into his place on the A team, including the two skiers who were just here. And more behind them that would jump at the chance to be invited to join the U.S. ski team.”

Julie ached for Nick. She could only imagine how devastated he’d be if an injury this close to the games took him out of the competition.

“I take it you didn’t tell him about the interview,” she said, still smarting by Nick’s comment that he wouldn’t date or marry a reporter. Not that she wanted to date him—or marry him—but still...

Gordon winced. “I didn’t have time. But I will, once we know he’s okay.”

She let out a dry scoff. “I get the distinct impression he won’t be pleased.”

“Probably not, but he’ll do it. I’ll make sure of it.”

“What does he have against reporters?”

Gordon sighed. “After the way the media smeared Cody’s reputation with nasty accusations about drugs and alcohol usage causing his death, Nick’s not too trusting of the press.”

A twinge of unease twisted her tummy.

She hadn’t believed the reports of drug use leading to the accident that took Cody’s life and had thought the media storm had been unfair to a man who wasn’t there to defend himself.

It was important she convince Nick not to paint her with the same brush. Her promotion, her career, rode on his cooperation.

But did she have the skills necessary to succeed?

Treacherous Slopes

Подняться наверх