Silver Dawn
Page 1
Silver Dawn
by G.J. Walker-Smith
Kindle Edition
© 2014 G.J. Walker-Smith
Cover by Scarlett Rugers
http://scarlettrugers.com
Other Books by G.J. Walker-Smith
Saving Wishes (Book One, The Wishes Series)
Second Hearts (Book Two, The Wishes Series)
Sand Jewels (Book 2.5, The Wishes Series)
Storm Shells (Book Three, The Wishes Series)
Secret North (Book Four, The Wishes Series)
Contact the author:
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Email
http://www.gjwalkersmith.com
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be copied or reproduced without the written consent of the author.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual events, places or people, living or dead, is coincidental.
Dedication
To Hannah, a real life, gert lush angel.
Table Of Contents
1. Black Crows
2. Baby Shower
3. Temper-mental
4. The Lost Boys
5. The Name Game
6. Silver Dawn
7. Purple Turtles
8. Winning
9. Best Laid Plans
10. Making Deals
11. Helpless
12. Disconnected
13. Rock Star Hair
14. Two Steps Back
15. Little Kitten
16. Horror Story
17. Blake Baby
18. Casual And Calm
19. Baby Brother
20. Faith
21. Poems
22. Crisis
23. Safe Places
24. Take Your Wife To Work Day
25. Token Lost Boy
26. Oh, Mickey
27. Limits
28. Walking Away
29. Sea Legs
30 Letting Go
31. Reading Ahead
32. Awareness
33. Prisoner Of War
Alex
1. BLACK CROWS
I hate black crows. There’s something about their beady eyes and jet black feathers that terrifies me. I’d rather encounter a great white shark while surfing than one black crow in the garden.
I blame Charli.
Even as a little girl she could smell fear. Once she caught on to my aversion to the beastly black birds, she started torturing me with a creepy little poem.
One crow for sorrow,
Two crows for mirth,
Three crows for a wedding,
Four crows for a birth.
She even perfected the horror movie voice and demon expression while reciting it. To this day, I find it hard to fathom how a child of mine could so closely resemble something out of The Exorcist.
The poem stuck with me for a few reasons. First, I rarely see more than one crow at a time, which is disturbing. Second, when I do see two together they bring me no happiness. There’s no mirth to be had when crows are around.
Gabrielle found the whole notion hilarious.
We stood on the veranda, looking down at the evil crow annihilating the apple tree near the driveway.
“Why does it trouble you so much?” she asked, giggling. “It’s just a harmless bird.”
I pointed at the tree but looked at her. “It’s evil, Gabrielle,” I insisted. “It’s an apple stealing, evil scavenger.”
“They’re only apples.”
“Today they’re apples,” I muttered. “What happens when apples don’t satisfy him anymore? When he storms the veranda and steals you away, I won’t save you.”
She rubbed her hand over her big belly. “I’d like to see him try,” she replied. “If he can lift me off my feet, he deserves to have me.”
My eyes drifted back to the crow and the excess of wasted fruit that was thudding to the ground. An eight-month pregnant French woman might just be his match, especially Gabrielle. She wouldn’t exactly go quietly.
“Is it the colour of them that troubles you?” she asked.
“Partly,” I muttered, still staring the crow down.
“I might paint some crows.” It almost sounded as if she was threatening me. “I shall include them on the mural wall in the nursery.”
Gabi had been talking about her mural wall for months, but it had remained blank while she waited for inspiration to hit. As far as I was concerned, black crows were not inspiration. Our kid would never sleep if he had a wall of feathered beasts staring at him.
“That’s one of the worst suggestions I’ve ever heard you make.”
She dropped her head and laughed. “I won’t make them black. It shall be my interpretation. They’ll be blue and orange and fabulous.”
I took a step to the side and draped my arm over her shoulder. “They’ll still be crows, Gabs.”
2. BABY SHOWER
Gabrielle was high maintenance lately, which meant I needed to spend more time at home. Hanging out with her was hardly a chore, but being at the café while Lily Tate was working was.
I’d wrestled with the decision to hire her for weeks before actually biting the bullet and giving her a job. Beggars can’t be choosers. A job in a small town café wasn’t exactly a sought after position and after a month of advertising, Lily was the only one who applied. That made me a beggar.
“How do you think they get the sugar into these tiny packets?” asked Lily, waving the sachet at me.
I shrugged. “They use tiny people with tiny hands. They’re called sugar loaders.”
“Oh,” she drawled. “Cool job.”
I shook my head, marvelling at the idiocy. “Lily, don’t you have something to do?”
She straightened up and dropped the sugar packet on the counter. “Yes, actually. I was wondering if I could go home early today. It’s Jasmine’s baby shower.”
I did all I could to stop myself shuddering. Jasmine’s baby announcement came just three weeks after ours. The Davis baby was already a superstar around town. Everybody knew about him, and according to Lily, he already had over a hundred Facebook friends. The stupidity was relentless.
“Yeah, you can go,” I permitted. “I’m sure Jasmine needs you more than I do.”
“She always needs me.” She rolled her eyes. “Wade’s pretty much useless.”
I agreed. Every time he came into the café, conversation would invariably turn to babies. The last little bonding chat we had was particularly difficult.
“I just can’t see how she’s going to get that thing out,” he said making me cringe. “She’s going to squeal like a pig.”
He was probably right, but I tried not to put too much thought into it. Picturing Jasmine in that light is something I’d never fully recover from.
“You should’ve heard her scream when the twins were born,” he’d added.
The Davis twins were born about a year after Bridget, arriving to fanfare and celebration befitting a royal baby. As far as proud fathers go, Wade was the proudest. He’d taken it as some kind of massive personal achievement.
“Two at once,” he marvelled when I congratulated him. “That’s some awesome breeding right there.”
That was a matter of opinion. The boy, Lincoln, was a little terror. I thought he was shifty from the first minute I laid eyes on him. At the time, Gabrielle had scolded me for saying so. Once he became mobile and started tearing up the café every time his mother brought him in, she soon changed her tune.
The girl was a little less hardcore. Wade and Jasmine named her Cheyne, but insisted that everyone call her Cheynie.
“We don’t want people thinking she’s a boy,” Wade explained.
There
wasn’t much chance of that mistake being made. The poor little thing was constantly dolled up in an excess of pink and glitter. Every time I saw her I became just that little bit more thankful to be having a son. I’d done my time with all things pink and sparkly. I was looking forward to dirt and snails.
Gabrielle had never had anything good to say about Jasmine, and now that they had babies due around the same time relations were even more strained. Despite this, she still accepted an invitation to the Davis baby shower.
She arrived at the café just a few minutes after Lily left, looking totally miserable.
“What’s wrong, Gabs?”
“I do not want to go to the party, Alex,” she announced, frowning.
At least she was being polite about it. My Marseillaise princess had always been a tad dramatic, but nothing compared to the ramped up pregnant version I was dealing with these days. She’d even taken to swearing on occasion, usually out of context, but always with passion.
“Don’t go then,” I suggested. “You can spend the afternoon with me.”
Gabi slowly walked over to the counter, because Gabi walked slowly everywhere. “What do you have planned?”
“I’m going to the cottage to pick up Bridget’s cot,” I replied. “I think it’s time we set it up in the nursery.”
“I haven’t finished painting the wall yet,” she complained.
I reached for her hand and pulled her a step closer to me. “Babe, you haven’t started the wall yet,” I reminded. “He can do without a mural. He can’t do without a bed.”
3. TEMPER-MENTAL
Gabrielle was too polite to blow off the baby shower. Our plan was to make a five minute appearance, hand over the gift and bolt. Gabi obviously couldn’t run, but I promised to carry her if Wade gave chase.
I opened her door and helped her out of the car. “This is very bizarre, Alex,” she grumbled.
I had to agree. Hosting a baby shower at a winery seemed a little odd.
Traipsing around in stiletto heels and a tight fitting leopard print dress while heavily pregnant seemed odd too, but that’s the look Jasmine was working as she tottered across the car park with her arms outstretched.
“Ooh, you made it!” she squealed.
Gabi expertly deflected her hug by using her belly as a shield.
Jasmine took a step back and looked Gabrielle up and down. “Geez, you’re getting big, aren’t you?”
I put a protective arm around Gabi. “You’re stretching those spots out quite nicely too, Jasmine,” I noted.
The Beautiful looked down at her belly before glaring back at me. “You should go inside, Alex,” she said. “Wade will be happy to see you.”
I shook my head, trying to look apologetic. “I’m sorry, but we’re not staying,” I told her. “We just came to give you this.”
Wade seemed to appear out of nowhere, just in time to grab the gift as I tried handing it to Jasmine. He held it to his ear and rattled it. “That’s very generous of you,” he said. “We’ve cleaned up pretty good as far as gifts go. Much better than the twins’ haul – and there were two of them.”
Gabrielle let out a little groan. As far as subtly goes, that’s as good as it gets for her.
I reached for her hand. “Well, we should be going,” I told them.
“Yes,” agreed Jasmine, shooting Gabi a look of pity. “Being that big must be awful. You must get so tired.”
I opened the passenger door of the car and practically forced Gabi in. “Take your wife back inside, Wade,” I urged. “For her own good.”
He answered me with a stiff nod, hooked his arm through Jasmine’s and led her away. “Let’s go, babes,” he urged. “You know how temper-mental Gabi can be.”
Gabrielle was still ranting when I slipped into the driver’s seat. “Temper-mental?” she grumbled. “That is not English. He does not know English.”
“Put your seatbelt on, Gabs,” I said dully.
“That wasn’t English, Alex.”
“I know. Put your belt on.”
“Temper-mental is not a word.”
I pulled her seatbelt across her belly and clicked it into place. “Can we go now, please?” I asked hopefully.
“No, Alex.” Gabi folded her arms as best she could. “Go back in there and tell him that temper-mental is not a word.”
I leaned across and planted a kiss on her cheek. “I love you. You drive me insane, but I love you.”
“Even though I’m fat?” she asked.
I turned the key in the ignition. “Especially because you’re fat and temper-mental.”
Her wonderful laugh filled the car and I knew that for now, the drama had passed. I understood Gabrielle’s epic mood swings perfectly. Being in control was important to her, and none of the changes going on in her body at that point were controllable. That meant she was constantly wound tighter than an eight day clock.
The baby wasn’t playing by her carefully set rules, which didn’t surprise me in the least. My children are rule breakers, even before they’re born.
Her organic diet plan went out the window in the second month when a relentless addiction to instant custard kicked in. Not even Gabi could see any benefit in eating organic vegetables when her main source of sustenance came from a box of custard powder. Her fitness regime fell apart too. Walking further than the letterbox was a major coup lately.
The one plan that did remain was her plans for the big day. I thought the whole notion of a written birth plan was ridiculous, but Gabrielle was insistent.
“No drugs,” she declared.
Reasoning with her was impossible, but I tried. “Gabs, you don’t know what you’re going to want when you’re doubled over in pain.”
She made a few adjustments to her written birth plan after that. As well as her ‘no drugs’ rule, ‘no pain’ was also added to the list.
4. THE LOST BOYS
Spending time at the cottage wasn’t something I enjoyed these days.
It was a harsh reminder that Charli, Adam and Bridget were gone. I still expected the little girl with the mop of blonde hair and gumboots to come running at me every time I opened the door.
Six months was too long between visits. Charli had made a vague promise to try and come home for Christmas, but I never pushed the issue. They were settled in New York, and I was happy for them.
I unlocked the door and ushered Gabi in ahead of me. “Can you smell that?” she asked, wandering to the centre of the lounge room.
“No. What?”
She screwed up her pretty face. “Dust. It smells dusty in here.”
I laughed. “You can smell dust now?”
“I have all sorts of super powers lately, Alex.”
I sidled up to her, slipped my arms around her middle and whispered in her ear. “I haven’t seen you leap any buildings in a single bound for a while, Gabs.”
“I do it all the time,” she replied. “Usually while you’re sleeping.”
It was almost plausible. Gabrielle had been keeping superhero hours for months, somehow functioning on just a couple of hours sleep a night.
She had no clue why, but I had a theory. Gabrielle had been waiting over five years to meet our son. He was nearly here, and she was excited. And no one sleeps when they’re excited.
She wriggled free of my hold. “Where is the crib?”
“Stored in the shed, I think,” I replied.
“Maybe we should buy a new one.” Gabi frowned. “It might have spiders on it.”
I was almost positive there would be spiders on it, but it was a perfectly good cot that could be cleaned. Bridget used it for less than two years. I saw no sense in buying a new one. “Let’s go and check it out.” I reached for her hand. “If you’re not happy with it, we’ll buy a new one.”
***
We didn’t make it as far as the shed. Gabrielle pulled us to a stop at the edge of the veranda. She stood completely still, staring out at the garden.
“What’s wrong?” I
asked.
“We are not alone,” she mumbled after a long pause.
I turned my head, scanned the garden, and saw nothing.
“Mason, Sean and Tyler,” she called. “I see you.”
She must’ve really had pregnant lady superpowers. I didn’t see a thing until three little heads popped up from their hiding spots in the garden.
“How did you see us?” asked Tyler. “We’re commandos.”
Intercepting small soldiers in the garden wasn’t out of the ordinary these days. When Flynn found his dream girl a few years ago, he gained an instant family. Hannah was a midwife from Hobart. She moved to the Cove after they married, bringing her raucous boys with her.
Charli jokingly referred to them as the Lost Boys. They were mischievous and borderline naughty, but no match for my kid. Charli’s ability to shut them down at every turn impressed them no end.
“You need more training, fellas,” I told them.
The boys abandoned their positions and made their way over to us. “We’ll have it right before Charli gets back,” boasted Tyler. “Are they coming back soon?”
I shook my head, telling him no. The kid tried hard to shrug off the disappointment, but it was obvious. The crush he harboured for Charli was pretty hardcore for a ten-year-old. He’d even told Adam of his plans to steal her away.
“You’d bring her back in a week,” replied Adam. “She’s hard work.”
Tyler wasn’t perturbed in the slightest.
His younger brothers weren’t quite as extreme, but I was still glad we didn’t live at the cottage. Seeing them a couple of times a week was more than enough.
“We have weapons,” announced Sean, waving a slingshot at me.
“Were you planning to shoot me?” asked Gabrielle, aghast.
I wrestled the slingshot from Sean’s grasp and took a better look at it. “It probably wouldn’t do much damage anyway.” I pulled the rubber band taut. “The strap is too long.”
“No it’s not,” insisted Tyler, pushing past his brother to get closer to me. “We got Wade a beauty in the arse with a gumnut at close range.”