Read Winter Rescue (I'll Be Home for Christmas) Online
Authors: Dawn Kimberly Johnson
Tags: #m/m romance, #Advent Calendar 2011, #Nap-size Dream, #Holiday, #Dawn Kimberly Johnson, #2011 Advent Calendar
Winter Rescue • Dawn Kimberly Johnson
Winter rescue
om? Ma!”
Fuck!
Curt Knutzen tossed his cell onto the seat
“M next to him and squinted out his windshield. He
frantically swiped his gloved hand through the
fog building up on the inside of the window, but it returned
faster than he could rub it off. He checked the defroster
settings on his rental, trying to find a cure for his poor
visibility. Beyond the windshield, large heavy snowflakes
alternated between drifting down and racing by sideways.
Shit!
Three years
.
Haven’t been home in three years, and
this shit happens.
The back of the car suddenly lurched to the right—
stopping Curt’s breath—but he quickly compensated and
straightened the car out. As his heart returned to a more
normal beat, he tried to relax his grip on the wheel. He rolled
and stretched his neck, trying to ease the tension building
up in his shoulders. A blast of wind slammed into the car,
and he gasped.
His hand was shaking as he turned up the radio: “
It’s
negative nineteen degrees
.
Plows are out in force, folks, so it’s
best to do as the governor said and stay off the roads. The
storm’s expected to be over before morning, then we can all
start digging out. You know the drill
.”
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Winter Rescue • Dawn Kimberly Johnson
Fucking Minnesota
, Curt thought. Three years ago he
moved away to sunnier climes. No matter how breathtaking
the state was during its more mild seasons, winter just put it
in the toilet as far as he was concerned. With his family so
unnerved by his coming out, relocating seemed like a good
idea at the time. His younger sister, Arianna, had been fine
with it—and probably had always suspected—but the rest of
the family had come unglued, his father shouting, his
mother crying and shouting, his brothers staring wide-eyed
as if they were looking at some creature from outer space
instead of their baby brother.
So he headed off to San Diego, escaping the snow and
family drama but finding plenty of sunshine, hard tanned
bodies, and his IT manager position at Spright, Middlesex,
and Blithe, a monolith of a law firm in the state. Curt
shivered. He hadn’t counted on how badly he would miss the
folks, his siblings, their big family dinners, the laughter—
though there hadn’t been much laughter after his
announcement. He carefully slowed the car and leaned
forward over the wheel to try to read a highway sign, then
sighed.
Just another hour or so, and I’ll be warm. I’ll be home
.
A mound of snow-covered
something
suddenly loomed,
filling his field of vision—tiny as it was—and Curt slammed
on his brakes, but the car didn’t stop. He hit whatever it
was, and the car bounced off, sliding backward, off the road,
and coming to rest at an odd angle, headlights pointed at the
sky.
For several heart-pounding moments, Curt sat very still,
watching in horror as the headlights gradually grew dim
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Winter Rescue • Dawn Kimberly Johnson
from the accumulating snow. The interior was dark except
for his dashboard display, but Curt unbuckled his belt and
reached for the glove box, fumbling it open. A state map,
flashlight, and a couple batteries fell out and into the
passenger seat.
He quickly loaded the batteries into the flashlight and
turned it on, finding the brighter light strangely comforting.
He looked around the interior of the car and saw the
windows were already covered. He’d never been
claustrophobic, but this situation might just cure him of that
immunity. He switched off the flashlight to save the batteries
(how long had they been in that glove box?) and tried to stop
panting.
Okay. I’m okay. But the car’s on its tail and running,
which means what… it means something….
Curt shut his
eyes to think more clearly because, for some reason, staring
into the dark was more unsettling than closing his eyes. He
thought of working in the darkroom in junior high school
and how much easier it was to process the film with his eyes
closed, doing it by touch, rather than trying to do it with
eyes wide open, but seeing nothing. It was like his eyes were
trying to drink in as much light as they could, and failing
that, he’d panic.
Then it hit him.
The exhaust might be blocked, so….
Fuck!
Curt hated the idea of shutting off the engine, but
when weighing freezing to death against carbon-monoxide
poisoning, he opted for freezing to death as that would likely
take longer. He turned off the car and the lights and was
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Winter Rescue • Dawn Kimberly Johnson
immediately enveloped in silence—but for the wind whistling
outside the car.
Curt rubbed his face in frustration. He had grown up
here. He knew better. You don’t suddenly stand on your
brakes in a snowstorm, you make sure your car has a winter
emergency kit, and you dress warmly.
One out of three is
bad
. Could three years in California have really erased all his
winter smarts?
He remembered driving west with Bobby Bianchi, years
ago. They’d driven through Eugene, Oregon, at one point on
their way to pick up another potential roommate for the tiny
San Diego apartment they’d secured. They had watched in
confusion, and then disbelief, as drivers pulled off the road
because of a dusting of snow—literally a dusting. It was the
kind of snow that settled on the ground for about three
seconds before blowing away to melt elsewhere.
Granted, his current predicament was the complete
opposite of a dusting, but Curt couldn’t help wondering if he
was one of those people now. Would his family be ashamed
of his ineptitude? Would they be amused that after only a
couple of years away from home, he was clueless about the
hazards of a Minnesota winter? Or would they simply be
thankful his body was left unaccosted by wild animals?
Curt fumbled over the passenger seat until his hand
settled on his cell. He activated it and checked for coverage.
No bars. When trying to reassure his mother earlier, their
call had dropped. She was worried about him being on the
road in the storm, wanted him to pull off and try to get a
room somewhere, then drive out to the farm tomorrow, but
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