Snowfall at Willow Lake: Lakeshore Chronicles Book 4 (30 page)

BOOK: Snowfall at Willow Lake: Lakeshore Chronicles Book 4
9.62Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Part Six

Winter's edge

Congelation Ice

Congelation ice is frozen lake ice. It forms on cold, calm nights when the surface of the lake supercools and the ice spreads rapidly across the surface. When the light hits it just right, the secret world of ice is revealed. Individual crystals are exposed in a kaleidoscope of color and shape.

Dutch Hot Chocolate

1 1/2 cups milk, or half and half, or light cream

2 heaping teaspoons of Droste cocoa powder

1/2 cup sugar (or to taste)

1/2 cup ground dark chocolate

(use chocolate that has 60% or more cocoa content)

ground nutmeg or cinnamon to taste

Heat milk to just below boiling. Whisk in cocoa powder, sugar, ground chocolate and spices.

Twenty-Two

“N
oah was right about the puppy,” Sophie said to Charlie.

It wasn't her usual day to watch the baby. She had come because Daisy wanted to spend the afternoon with Sonnet, who was due in on the two-o'clock train.

The baby sat on a blanket in the middle of the floor, playing with a ball that had a bell inside it. He was a good listener. Sophie had taken to telling him everything about her life, from the smallest thing, like seeing a set of animal tracks across the lawn, to the big issues, like the fact that she still had nightmares about the incident in The Hague.

Charlie was simply a pleasant, benign presence, open to anything she had to say. He'd recently learned to clap his hands, and often did so at appropriate times during the conversation. Psychiatrists could learn a few things from babies, like the fact that sometimes a smattering of applause and a gummy grin did more for a person's mental health than hours of well-meaning advice.

Lately, most of her conversations had to do with Noah Shepherd.

“See, he gave me the puppy because he claimed it would be a huge incentive for Max to spend time with me. At first, I was insulted. I mean, a mother shouldn't have to use a puppy as bait, right?”

The ball rolled to the edge of the blanket, and she rolled it back. “Turns out Noah's right,” she reiterated. “He knows exactly how a twelve-year-old boy thinks. There is nothing—
nothing
—as powerful to a boy as a new puppy. Max can't stay away from Opal. She's a Max magnet.”

Charlie offered a brief, insightful laugh.

“I know. It's so obvious, when you think about it. What's more fun to a kid than a puppy, right?” By now, Opal was crate trained and housebroken. Training a dog was a lot of work, but there was something to be said for being forced to get up every hour or so, stretch your legs, wander outside and smell the cold air and feel the snowflakes on your face.

Currently, Max was out in the neighborhood with Opal, taking her for a walk. He had probably taken her to the sledding hill at Avalon Meadows golf course, where the toboggan team racing was going on.

Charlie traded the ball for a squishy teething toy, which he mouthed like an ear of corn. Then he moved on to a sort of ugly clown weighted at the bottom, so that it sprang upright every time it was knocked down. Charlie pushed it over and watched it pop back up several times, gaping in fascination.

“You can't do the same thing over and over and expect different results,” she told him.

“Bah.”

She reached over and wiped his chin. “This—whatever—with Noah is the last thing I expected to find when I came here,” she admitted, her thoughts drifting again. “Sometimes I wonder if I'm falling in love with him.” She clapped her hand over her mouth and mumbled, “I can't believe I just said that.”

Charlie imitated the gesture and laughed. Sophie swooped him up and rolled back on the blanket, holding him overhead as she savored the feeling that swept over her. Contentment. No, it was stronger than that. Happiness.
Joy.
Yes, that was it. She had nearly forgotten what it felt like.

It wasn't that she was a miserable person. And life had indeed given her moments of joy. But not like this. Never like this.

She found an oldies station on the radio and sang to Charlie as she warmed a bottle of milk for him. “Nights in White Satin” by the Moody Blues. “Mrs. Robinson” by Simon and Garfunkel. How did she know the words? She didn't remember ever studying them. Some things just stuck with you, lodging in memory through a secret door.

She fed the baby and, while he drowsed in her lap, she put the TV on low, flipping channels to see even just a flicker of international news. It was far easier to find an interview with a tattooed biker laying claim to a rich heiress's new baby than a report on national elections in Umoja. For the first time in decades, the Umojan people were going to the polls, yet here, it was a nonevent.

She clicked past a home-improvement show of a garage being transformed into a Qigong studio. Paused on a guy hawking a device that scrambled an egg right in its shell, which, inexplicably, she found herself craving. There seemed to be a hundred celebrity news stories to be watched at any given time. There was a talk-show host, apologizing for the umpteenth time for something he said. And here was the starlet du jour, radiantly showing off her new baby. And there was Ashton Kutcher, laughing off criticism that he was too young to be with Demi Moore.

In spite of herself, Sophie thought Ashton Kutcher was hot. Shaking off the lascivious thought, she changed the channel and glared at Headline News until they delivered thirty seconds of “international news,” covering a polar bear in a German zoo. Still holding Charlie, she moved into the study and surfed the Web to a video report on the Umojan elections. The newsreader began, “In their first free elections in more than two decades…”

“I did that,” Sophie whispered to Charlie. “I was on the justice team that made it happen.” She expected to feel a surge of emotion, but instead merely felt distracted. The Web site was surrounded by blinking ads for nasal drip solutions and solicitations for matchmaking sites, which gave her a headache. She went back to the radio, which was now playing a song she didn't like to consider an oldie—“Jump” by Van Halen—because it made her feel…well, old.

“And yet I'm a grandmother,” she said to Charlie. “Maybe I'm supposed to be old.”

He finished his bottle and didn't look sleepy at all. He belched, then chortled as he emitted a small fountain of milk bubbles.

“Such talent,” she said. “How did I wind up with such a talented grandchild?”

The doorbell sounded, startling her. She set the baby on his blanket and went to see who it was.

Oh,
she thought when she opened the door.
Oh, dear.
And then,
oh, shit.

“Logan,” she said, moving aside to let him in, and then closing the door quickly behind him so the baby wouldn't be chilled by the cold air.

“Mrs. Bellamy,” he said.

An awkward beat passed. Then Charlie squealed, breaking the ice.

“Hey, buddy.” Logan turned as soft and sweet as a marshmallow as he greeted his son. Charlie desperately tried to reach for him like a man dying of thirst. There was an almost primal affinity between them, a clear recognition on Charlie's tiny face that this person was important.

Watching them, Sophie remembered perfectly why Greg had married her all those years ago.

Even so, she reminded herself, this was not Greg. This was Logan O'Donnell—a boy with a troubled past. He was ridiculously handsome and surprisingly tender with the baby.

He went to the kitchen and quickly washed his hands. Nice touch, thought Sophie. She hoped he did that every time, not just to show her how responsible he was. Charlie gave a cranky squawk, straining toward the kitchen.

“Coming,” Logan called. “Hold your horses.” He hurried back to Charlie, sleeves rolled back, and scooped him up. “Did Daisy tell you I might stop by?”

“No, but it's fine, of course.” What else could she say? “I'm going to fix myself a cup of tea,” she added, mainly to give them some privacy. “Would you like anything?”

“No, thank you.” Logan was grinning at the baby and didn't look away.

Sophie took her time getting the tea. When she returned, Logan was in the upholstered swivel rocker, holding Charlie facedown across his knees, chortling as Logan spun the chair.

“Daisy tells me you're in college now,” she said, taking a seat across from him.

“Yes, ma'am. I'm studying finance.”

“That's good.” She had no idea what to say to this boy. This handsome boy, who had changed her daughter's entire life.

“It's all right,” Logan said. “You don't need to make small talk. With all due respect, we can just cut to the chase. I have a pretty good idea about what you think of me.”

“Do you?”

“You're thinking I was a dumb high-school jock. I was careless with your daughter. Not to mention an addict who went through rehab. I don't blame you or anyone for being skeptical of me.”

Sophie was not about to insult him by denying it. “And now you're trying to live down your past mistakes,” she said.

“I'm not sure what that means,” he said, then flashed her a grin. “Must be the dumb jock in me.”

She felt herself softening toward him. “It's impossible, anyway. Believe me, I've tried it.”

“All I know is that I'm preparing for the future now,” he said, “and Charlie is a part of that future.”

“Fair enough,” she said. “Can I ask you something personal?”

“Sure.”

“Is your family supportive of this?”

“No,” he said bluntly. “They haven't seen him. Not once.”

Sophie never expected to like this boy. To empathize with his situation. She had never expected to regard him as anything more than a bad decision her daughter had once made, and the source of Charlie's red hair. Yet now, with his pained admission, Logan O'Donnell became someone to her. Someone whose parents took issue with the choices he'd made. And she finally understood why Daisy had liked him in the first place, and why she let him visit Charlie so often.

“I'm sorry to hear that,” she said. “Perhaps they'll come around. In the meantime, giving yourself to Charlie is something you'll never regret.” She stood abruptly. “Why don't you stay with him while I check my e-mail?” She gestured toward the small workroom where Daisy's computer was set up.

“Thanks, Mrs. Bellamy.” His smile bore a remarkable resemblance to Charlie's. “I appreciate it.”

“You can call me Sophie,” she said. “That way I won't feel so old.”

“You're not old, believe me,” he said with flattering assurance. “I'll take care of the little guy.”

While her e-mail loaded, she checked her PDA for the to-do list and upcoming appointments. In the past, the list had been endless, and even with a personal staff, she'd never been able to accomplish everything. That never kept her from trying, though, or from feeling the stress of her endeavor.

These days, the list revolved around her children and Charlie. She had signed up to volunteer for lunch duty at Max's school one day a week, and the hours spent in the overheated, oniony-smelling school cafeteria, listening in on the boys' fart jokes and girls' cliques offered an unvarnished glimpse at the workings of real kids' lives. She was fascinated by the range of humanity she observed, from acts of cold-blooded cruelty to heartrending kindness. She watched students being cut out of a group with the precision of a surgeon's scalpel, and others having their emotional wounds tended with unschooled compassion. She understood Max so much better now. She understood his need to be liked and admired and approved of—because those on the wrong side of their peers suffered the tortures of the damned.

Then there were the hockey practices and games. She enjoyed seeing Max play, but was no fan of the other moms in attendance. The mom squad. With Nina's older sister Maria as team mother, Sophie was not their favorite person. She refused to let herself care about that. She simply would not let it matter. During lunch duty, she'd observed that the outcast students who responded to their tormentors with cool dignity were most likely to be left alone, if they could survive that long.

Sophie knew she could outlast the women who regarded her with judgmental disapproval. It was a gift, this ability she had to make something fail to hurt her. Over the years, she'd built a shell of armor around her heart. It was simple survival. If she kept herself open, she was vulnerable. If she closed up and protected herself, she was a rock. But after the hostage situation, her protective armor had cracked open and she was vulnerable to the things she feared most—being hurt. Disappointing people. Failing to connect on the deepest, most important level to her own children.

Looking around the small, cluttered room, she studied the postcards pinned to a corkboard, probably from Daisy's friends who were now in college or traveling abroad. Sticky notes with lists seemed to be pasted everywhere; most were embellished with doodles or curlicue writing that reminded Sophie of how young Daisy was. A somewhat ominous quote she'd jotted down: “It is a fearful thing to love what death can touch.” And another message from Rocky Horror—“Don't dream it, be it.” An appointment card for the dentist. To Sophie's knowledge, Daisy had never voluntarily gone to the dentist in her life.

Her photographs were catalogued and labeled as though by a trained archivist. On one shelf, a grouping of fat albums caught Sophie's eye, particularly one labeled
Family, until 2006.
The year of the divorce.

Sophie opened the album to find a chronicle of their life as a family. She viewed the pages with a painful combination of sorrow, accomplishment, regret and nostalgia. They had been like any family, their lives filled with genuinely happy moments—birthday celebrations and holidays, vacations and adventures. Many of the pictures brought on smiles and memories. Daisy had always loved climbing on the larger-than-life bronze Alice in Wonderland statue in Central Park. There were shots of her, and then of her and Max together, swarming over the well-worn structure amid the other children. There was page after page of holidays, school functions, trips and birthdays.

Other books

Hallowed Circle by Linda Robertson
The Elephant Girl (Choc Lit) by Gyland, Henriette
Halfway Perfect by Julie Cross
Lestat el vampiro by Anne Rice
Hunter by S.J. Bryant
The Flesh Cartel #2: Auction by Rachel Haimowitz and Heidi Belleau
The Terrorizers by Donald Hamilton