“It’s like parade day,” Kelsey said, shaking her head. “But that’s in April.”
Bypassing the strangers, Kelsey hurried inside, determined to go directly to the source. Megan was behind the counter talking to Patrick and dabbing at her nose with a Kleenex.
“Please tell me that’s a happy sniffle, not a sad one.”
“I think it’s best to show you.” Megan looked pointedly at Patrick. “Patrick, you’re at the helm.”
Kelsey noticed the two had been looking at the iPad on the counter below them.
“Email, Facebook, or PayPal?” Patrick asked as Kurt and Kelsey joined them at the counter.
“Whichever you’d like,” Megan said, heading around the counter to wrap Kelsey in a hug. “Girl, you aren’t going to believe this.”
She’s smiling. Thank the Lord. It’s good news. Those are happy tears. Kelsey bit into her lower lip to keep from spouting a million questions as Patrick turned the iPad their direction after pulling up Facebook.
“We’ve had over twenty-eight thousand likes since last night. You’ve really moved people, Kelsey,” Megan said.
Kelsey grabbed Kurt’s arm in excitement, pulling him in for a better look. That many likes in one night beat the old record exponentially. “You mean the clip with Zeus and Orzo? That’s incredible! We’re going to get adoption applications for those two boys ten times over.”
“Probably,” Patrick said, “but they’ve only had a few thousand likes, and they’re riding the wave that this clip is generating.”
Patrick hit Play and opened the video clip into full screen. Kelsey was surprised to be staring at herself. The video footage had been taken yesterday afternoon. She was squatting in front of Frankie, swiping tears off her cheeks as Frankie licked one palm. Then the clip switched to her swearing to Frankie that life for him was going to be really good from here on out. Patrick had been recording when she hadn’t even realized he was there. He’d had the foresight to zoom in on Frankie’s sweet face as Kelsey made those declarations. Frankie was staring straight at her and his mouth was open in a light pant, but with his stitches, he seemed to be grinning a lopsided grin.
Even in a state of mild shock—she’d never been a fan of seeing or hearing herself on video—Kelsey could tell the clip was immensely touching. Frankie was the star, and he’d be the one people would really notice.
The clip was simple and quick, only about forty-five seconds long. When it finished, Kelsey glanced at the number of likes. Megan was right. Just over twenty-eight thousand. Her heart fluttered. “How many online adoption forms have we gotten for him?”
“Almost seventy-five, the last we counted,” Megan said, squeezing her arm.
Kurt closed his hand over her elbow. “Way to go, Kelsey. I knew it was going to be good, but I wouldn’t have predicted it’d take off like that.”
“It’s our most powerful post yet. Patrick, click over to PayPal, will you?” Megan said. “We’ve not transferred anything yet, because it keeps growing so fast.”
“What keeps growing? Donations?”
“Look here,” Patrick said, as he switched screens and logged into the shelter’s PayPal account. “We hit nineteen thousand dollars, and it’s not even ten o’clock.”
Kelsey’s knees felt weak. “So all those people in the parking lot? It’s because of this?”
Megan grinned. “Yes. The protesters arrived in bigger numbers this morning too, but they’ve been quieted by this enormous show of support. We’ve had so many calls that I can’t even keep the groups straight anymore. It’s a Kiwanis club that’s out front setting up for an afternoon barbecue, and a librarians’ group is preparing a bake sale. Can you believe it? Oh, and Channel 3 called. They’d like to do a follow-up interview whenever you guys feel ready.”
“I really can’t swallow it all,” Kelsey said. “It’s awesome.”
A bustle of commotion erupted in front of the building, catching everyone’s attention. Beside her, Kurt visibly tensed as a high-pitched scream carried through the glass. The small group made for the front window, Kurt taking the lead.
Kelsey watched two teen girls jump up and down and clap their hands as they squealed. The preteen boy beside them was frozen in place, staring toward the parking lot, his mouth agape.
Kelsey followed their stares. A glistening red Dodge Ram was idling in front of the tables. The driver’s-side door was open, and a man had stepped out. He was in jeans and a fitted white T-shirt, wearing a Red Birds cap. His grin was all charm, and he was shaking his head as he talked.
Kelsey had seen him before, countless times; she was just having trouble placing him. She stared hard, willing herself to remember. Something was off, and she couldn’t place it. He was tall, fit, and classically all-American. Poster-worthy almost.
And nearly everyone in the parking lot was gawking in his direction.
That was when it hit. She looked to Patrick for confirmation. Patrick couldn’t not know. His love of baseball nearly surpassed his love of the shelter. In the fall, like now, when it was nearing playoff season and the entire city population seemed clothed in red, she suspected sometimes it did.
Patrick’s mouth had fallen open wide enough to catch flies.
“What am I missing?” Megan asked, clearly not having figured out that Mason Redding was standing in the parking lot of the High Grove Animal Shelter. “Why is everyone staring at that guy like he just stepped off the moon? Or at least out of a boy band.”
“Tell her, Patrick,” Kelsey managed to squeak. Knowing Patrick, he probably had a Mason Redding trading card in one of the pockets of his cargo pants.
“There’s a game starting in three hours and fifteen minutes” was all that he managed.
“Oh shit,” Kurt said. “Is that Mason Redding?”
Megan had enough time to suck in a breath as the Red Birds player who might possibly be in the running for MVP this year waved off the crowd and headed toward the door. And though they were no more than six feet away, not one of their group