wouldn’t quiet down until she had answers, the right number of campers and her phone.
“And where were you this morning?” Joel asked the man in front of him.
Charlie didn’t move. “Checking on the food situation.”
From the question Hope guessed Joel wasn’t as willing to believe as easily as she was. Then again, he’d just met the group, and they were down two members.
“Let’s try it this way.” Joel shifted his weight. Not a big move. Barely perceptible but something about it made him appear taller and less willing to play games. “When did you last see Mark?”
Charlie’s gaze bounced from Joel to Cam and back again. “What’s with the weapons? Are you police?”
The look on Joel’s face, the way the corner of his mouth inched up, came close to a smile. “Pretend I am.”
Charlie didn’t share his amusement. “I don’t think I will.”
Much more of this and they’d never get to an answer. As it was, Lance and Jeff stared, watching the verbal volleys with their mouths hanging more open with each sentence.
Hope decided to act like what she was—in charge. “Charlie, help me out here. Mark wandered off and now I don’t know where Perry is.”
“I’m pretty sure Perry is in taking a second run at the chow line.”
This time the relief walloped the air right out of her lungs. “So, you’ve seen him this morning?”
Charlie nodded. “About fifteen minutes ago.”
“That’s a relief,” Lance said.
She saw Joel opening his mouth to say something and jumped in first. “But it doesn’t explain the Mark issue.”
Charlie waved her off. Even threw in a “bah” right before he started talking. “He’s just blowing off steam.”
The men kept saying it, but the explanation wasn’t good enough. “I can’t find him and I need him to check in before we do one more thing.”
Jeff swiped his thermos off the ground. “We need to go out looking for him.”
“How exactly?” Joel asked.
The question caused Jeff to go still. “What?”
Hope knew where this was going. She felt the conversation rolling downhill and couldn’t grab a two-second break to throw her body in front of it.
She couldn’t speak for Cam’s expertise, but she guessed it was off the charts. But Joel knew everything about surviving outdoors. He was the one person in the group better at outdoor activities than she was, and that was saying something.
He thrived in this environment. His father had groomed his kids to fight and shoot, readying them for the domestic civil war he insisted was coming.
Lost in paranoia and reeling from the unexpected loss of his wife, Joel’s dad believed the government had lost its way and only small pockets of freedom-loving people would save the world. He went about it by toughening up his kids, making them sleep outside and denying them an education until the state stepped in.
The upbringing was sick and wrong and it shaped Joel in ways she still hadn’t explored. He liked to joke and act as if certain things didn’t bother him, but she knew. But there were times when his gaze would wander and those dark eyes would glaze. He’d go to whatever place he built in his mind to find normalcy. And he wouldn’t let her in.
“Do you know anything about wilderness survival?” His voice stayed deceptively soft as he aimed the question at Jeff.
The other man held eye contact for a few seconds, then broke it. “We studied up before we came out here.”
“Oh, good.” Joel stared at Cam. “They studied.”
She got the point, but the conversation promised to run them right into a brick wall. “Joel, that’s enough.”
Not that he heard her. He continued to stare at Jeff.
She knew the hard truth. None of the testosterone-jousting did anything to help them locate Mark.
“Which cabin belongs to this guy?” Cam asked.
“That one.” She pointed to the building directly next to where hers sat in the middle of the makeshift line. Because she appreciated the assist, she