by Teagan Kade
“Challenge accepted,” I smile.
Winter Miracle
Teagan Kade
* * * * *
Published by Teagan Kade
Edited by Sennah Tate
Copyright © 2017 by Teagan Kade
COPYRIGHT
All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of various products referenced in this work of fiction, which have been used without permission. The publication/use of these trademarks is not authorized, associated with, or sponsored by the trademark owners.
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DEDICATION
To Matilda. May your Christmases be filled with joy (Ten hard inches of it *wink wink*).
CHAPTER ONE
HALEY
It’s cold out. I’m talking serious, nipples-turning-to-icicles cold. You wouldn’t know it given the otherwise perfect day outside, but frost is forming on the windows and I don’t have the money right now to leave the heater on, or the energy to keep the fire going. It’s hard enough putting food on the table.
Quite the pity party you’re having, Haley.
A jet screams overhead, loud enough for the frost-filled windows to rattle and Andy, my one-year-old, to take offense. He bursts into a hissy fit that would make any A-lister proud, complete with pounding fists and endless tears.
I’m cringing to myself. I know it’s the air show, but that jet was flying way too low. This is Merit, Michigan, population three-hundred-and-four. It’s not Top Gun. I can almost picture the arrogant ass of a pilot up there quietly chuckling to himself how he made us all spill our morning coffee with his giant penis of a plane.
Andy continues to cry, the shrill and penetrating sound only toddlers know how to produce. I can’t believe I’m going to hand him over to the babysitter in this state, but what choice do I have? The house, which looks like it’s been ransacked, is even more embarrassing, not to mention the bare fridge.
I close my eyes, force myself to take a moment. Breathe, I tell myself, but when I try, the anxiety simply wells up even harder.
I open my eyes. And… I’m back.
Merit—a small town with small-minded folk. Those who can, get out. Those who can’t, like myself, simply make do.
I can hear my dad in my head. He’d tell me I’m uneducated, that a high-school diploma means nothing out there in the real world. ‘What have you done?’ he would ask, going on to detail the many useless jobs I’ve worked in around town—a town that has been in decline for years now ever since the mill closed. ‘We gave you our home,’ he’d continue, to which I’d tell him that ‘yes, you did, but it also came with a mortgage that’s already forced me to refinance twice.’
Every time I think about it I want to slap myself in the head. The first time I refinanced was because I couldn’t hold down a regular job, let my stupid boyfriend at the time spend my inheritance. The second was just after Andy was born. I take a step forward and two steps back, constantly climbing a hill that gets bigger, and bigger, and bigger until it blots out the horizon and any kind of hope that lives there.
You done yet?
I’d happily wallow in my misery if I had a second of peace, but Andy’s still banging the table. I can’t be mad at him, not when he’s so perfect—the one good thing in my life.
I grab my things and lift Andy up, which seems to placate him a little. He sticks a pudgy finger into my ear as I check the doors and head out into the cold. I pick up the mail and tuck it into my handbag, stumbling awkwardly down the stairs and making my way to the house next door.
Andy’s babbling—something that sounds very close to ‘I love you.’
It’s funny then that the first thing I feel is relief when I knock on the neighbors’ door.
It pulls open.
“Hi, Miss Walker,” Nancy, my sixteen-year-old babysitter-slash-savior beams. It’s freezing, but she’s still wearing a tank top and shorts all the same.
“Hi, Nancy,” I reply, doing my best to smile.
‘Miss’ Walker—It always makes me sound so old. I’m only six years her senior.
And my, can a lot happen in six years.
I go to hand Andy over, but Nancy seems to step back into the house.
I stop. “Is everything okay?”
She looks behind herself, lowering her voice. She kicks her sneaker on the doormat, unable to make eye contact. “Mom said I had to tell you…”
I’m late as it is. “Tell me…?”
She looks up. “That you need to pay me this time.”
“Oh.”
My cheeks start to burn. “Sure,” I nod. “For sure this time. I promise”
Nancy’s smile returns and she reaches out to take Andy. “Come here, beautiful boy. We’re going to have so much fun,” she says, tickling his cheek. “Yes, we are.”
I hate letting Andy go like this, but Nancy’s good with him. As for her mother… Mrs. Ainsworth ain’t exactly my biggest fan, can’t seem to stand the sight of me. How she raised such a decent, wholesome daughter is beyond me.
“Momma!” Andy smiles, safe in Nancy’s arms.
I lean forward to kiss him on the forehead. “Be good for Nancy, little buddy. I’ll see you soon.”
I turn before I start to cry and start down the sidewalk towards town. I pull my coat tight around myself and concentrate on my breathing, the one thing I can control. ‘When life gives you lemons, make lemonade,’ my grandmother used to say.
She neglected to tell me the store was all out of sugar.
I look up and notice the day that was so perfect through the window was a farce. Dark clouds are coming together in the distance, colluding.
Against them a red and white jet soars into the air, spinning and looping over the airfield. Suddenly, it stops, seemingly falling from the sky. I freeze, waiting for it to regain control, but it continues to fall.
My heart starts to beat faster as I watch it drop, and drop.
“Come on,” I say aloud.
It’s too low. It’s never going to be able to pull up.
“Come on!” I shout.
Just when the jet’s about to plunge into the ground, it corrects and breaks out of its fall, shooting back into the sky, the sound following in delay.
I exhale. “You’re playing with fire, my friend,” I announce, shaking my head like the concerned citizen I am.
My father was a pilot, flew bombers in the Gulf War, but he never had time for showmanship, used to tell me such stunts were the domain of ‘hot shots, hustlers, and good-for-nothing goofballs.’ He was a practical man if nothing else.
I consider the pilot again. How very nice it must be to take a day off and do anything but work. He might be practicing, sure, but he’s still having a ball up there, free as a proverbial bird, burning up tankers of fossil fuel in the process, not a care in the world.
I’m picturing a Tom Cruise type, maybe a bit taller and not stuck in some strange cult. There’s a constant smile on this mystery man’s face, a smug expression that says ‘I own the world.’
The jet disappears from sight, lost in the gathering clouds.
“Yeah, you go,” I tell him. “Some of us have to work.”
I remember the mail, continuing to walk as I pull out the first envelope. I don’t need to open it to know it’s a bill. I tuck it away and select the next.
>
It’s no better.
My heart clenches when I see it’s from the bank.
I stop walking and hold it in my hands.
If you don’t open it, maybe whatever it says won’t exist?
It’s a foolish thought.
You’re an adult, Haley. Open the stupid letter.
All the heavy breathing in the world isn’t going to change what’s inside. I know that.
I open the letter as quickly as I can, rip it open like I’m pulling off a Band-Aid.
I skim the contents, pausing to read the last sentence twice, three times.
There’s far too much red ink for this to be anything but serious.
It’s a final notice.
Foreclosure will be on the twenty-second, days before Christmas. So much for the season of merriment and joy.
I stare down at the official-looking letter, the giant ‘FINAL NOTICE’ seeming to lift off the paper and grow bigger before me.
I knew this letter was coming, but I didn’t expect it so soon. I’ve been working so, so hard, but it’s never enough. It isn’t enough.
I’m wracked with guilt. I should be providing for my son. He should have a roof over his head. It looks like he’s about to be denied even that simple human right, and why? Because of his silly, stupid mother and her inability to do a single thing right.
I don’t stand there and shout into the heavens. I don’t stomp my feet and curse. I simply put the letter carefully back into the envelope and tuck it back into my bag.
I keep walking.
It’s all I can do.
*
Barry, the owner of the Merit Motor Inn, is waiting at the front desk, hands spanned out wide on the laminate top. “Thanks for showing up, Haley.”
“I’m so sorry, Mr. Greyson. My son…”
He puts his hand up. “Yeah, yeah, I get it, but I don’t want this to become a habit. Got it?”
I nod my head meekly. “Yes, sir.”
He prods a thumb down the hall. “Get to it. These rooms aren’t going to clean themselves.”
“Yes, Mr. Greyson.”
As far as bosses go, I’ve had worse.
There’s a guy in a bathrobe hanging out of one of the rooms as I pass, a bottle of Jack in hand. I can smell him from ten feet away.
His eyes run over my body as I pass, his bathrobe falling open to reveal stained underwear and an obvious, though unremarkable, erection. “Hey, baby,” he says, puckering his lips. “How about a kiss?”
I avoid making eye contact. “No… thank you.”
He leans into the hall to check out my behind. “There’s a fiver in it for you, maybe more if you want to party.”
And the saddest part of it all is that I actually consider it for a split second before shaking it out of my head and doubling my pace.
I come around the corner and grab a cart, rolling it to the first room to be cleaned. Mercifully, this one’s empty, even if the sheets have been strewn across the room, wet toilet paper stuck to the walls of the bathroom.
It’s not so bad. Some of the things I’ve had to clean would make a plumber gag. There’s not enough bleach in the world to do away with those memories.
I clean and think, doing my best to divert my thoughts away from the bank letter burning a hole in my handbag. I think about Andy and how he looked so peaceful lying in his cot last night, his arms above his head like he was in the world’s cutest stick-’em-up. He has his father’s looks.
I pray that’s all.
The scumbag was out of here the second I told him I was pregnant. I should have seen it coming. I should have seen a lot coming.
The sex wasn’t even that great, a complete let-down after all the articles I’d read in my mother’s Cosmopolitan collection. Just my luck to be knocked up the very first time.
But what are you going to do?
The thought is persistent, continuing to tap, tap, tap against my subconscious.
I could take on another job… if I could find one, but I barely function as it is, not to mention the babysitter money that Nancy’s mother is demanding.
I think about the jet instead, about the freedom of it. That guy isn’t thinking about foreclosure notices and how he’s going to stock the fridge. No, he probably lives in a penthouse on the coast, has a fridge full of caviar and fine French wines. He’s probably got some crazy twenty-foot waterbed for the many girls he brings home every night, quietly ushering them out in the morning while he plays Xbox.
I actually smile a little at the character I’ve created, a character who couldn’t possibly be real.
What are you going to do? My head repeats, more forcefully now to get the message through. It’s not my voice, but that of my father, my mother, everyone who has ever asked me that question over and over again—a question I still don’t have an answer for all these years later.
Because I’m Haley—simple, small town Haley.
And that’s all there is to it.
CHAPTER TWO
DANE
I keep my breathing steady as the jet climbs, the engines purring, the oxygen flowing. This is where I excel. Even the sky isn’t a limit.
Pugachev’s Cobra is a dangerous stunt made famous by a Soviet test pilot in 1989. I pull back to an absurd angle of attack, the g-force pushing me hard into the seat. I use the drag towards the tail of the plane to pitch the nose forward again, can practically hear the applause from all the way up here.
Yes, it’s dangerous, reckless even, but I don’t give a fuck. This is the Dane Carr show, baby.
Safely landed, I take off my helmet and exit the cockpit of my F22, now starting to age gracefully. She’s been through a lot, and I don’t intend to stop spanking her just yet.
The crowd is howling and cheering as I step down from the wing onto the tarmac. Kids wave, big, beaming smiles waiting. Some of the mothers are smiling even wider, and I think it’s about more than the size of my plane. I could take my fucking pick if I wanted, a small-town MILF for every day of the week. Sexual Skittles.
The adrenaline sits hot in my veins as I stand, helmet underarm. It’s a clear, cold day—perfect conditions for flying.
The applause is still going.
Show time.
I pull myself back up onto the wing and pose, take time afterwards to sign autographs on whatever is pushed my way—cards, posters… chests. I consider adding my number to the latter, but think better of it. If I want to get laid, all I have to do is look in their direction. Their panties practically peel off unaided.
The announcer calls the next part of the air show. The crowd starts to disperse.
I walk back to the hangars and, hopefully, a cold beer.
I stop by the lockers on the way in and collect my duffle bag, finding the rest of the Red Devils standing in the middle of the hangar looking in my direction.
I dump my bag down. “Who fucking died?”
No response.
I point behind me. “Come on. Did you see that shit? They fucking loved it.”
Masters, one of the older members of the team, shakes his head. “Sure, Carr. It’s a great maneuverer, a real showstopper, but it’s risky as fuck. You know that.”
I can’t believe what I’m hearing. “Am I flying with the Red Devils here or Pussy Power? You sound like my fucking mother, Masters.”
I spot the Captain approaching from the back of the hanger. He stops with his hands on his hips and bellows, “Carr! Get your ass over here. Now.”
I wink to the others. “Speaking of my mother.”
The rest of the team heads out of the hanger as I make my way to the Captain. He’s got a constant pissed-off look on his face and the moustache to match. Add the Aviators and you’d think he was looking to audition for Miami Vice.
“I guess you think that was a pretty slick move up there, right?” he says, the serious expression remaining.
“You’re damn straight,” I nod. “I gave them exactly what they want.”
The Captain e
yes me inquisitively. “And what’s that, do tell?”
“The fine line between life and death, that’s what.”
The Captain nods back, taking it in. “I see.” He pauses and I know nothing but a shit-storm of epic proportions approaches.
Here we go.
He lets it rip. “Who the fuck do you think you are, Carr?”
I start to answer, but he holds his hand up.
“It’s a rhetorical question, smartass.”
“I can handle maneuvers like that in my sleep,” I protest. “You know it, the crowd knows it, the girl I’m going to fuck tonight will know it.”
The Captain’s shaking his head, looks like he’s going to pop a vein. “All I know is that your big stunt up there has ‘liability’ written all over it. You consistently pull this shit time and time again after I tell you not to. You’re like a fucking toddler.”
“A toddler who’s the Top Gun of this team.”
That goes down like a cold cup o’ puke. “Top. Fucking. Gun!” the Captain shouts. “Are you fucking serious, Carr? I can’t even see past that fat fucking inflated head of yours.”
I manage to hold it together—just. “As I said, I can handle it. What’s the problem?”
“We can’t afford the liability. It’s as simple as that. You want our insurance pulled, the team disbanded? I can’t take that risk, not any more. I have the others, those that do fall into line, to consider. Not to mention the crowd out there. I have to keep their safety in mind too.”
I don’t like where this is going at all. “What are you saying?” I ask.
He exhales, lifting his sunglasses and locking eyes with me. “I’m saying you’re out, Carr, effective immediately.”
“I’m out?”
“Grab your shit and go.”
I can’t believe what I’m hearing. I can be a little cheeky when it comes to the maneuverers, but out of the fucking team? “Come on, Cap.”
He remains firm. “Come on, nothing. I know you think otherwise, but you’re replaceable, Dane. We don’t need some hotshot pilot to fly gigs. I can think of ten, maybe twenty guys to fill your shoes, and every one of them will fall into line and do what they’re told.” He takes out a check from his pocket and hands it over. I look down at it. He’s serious.