Children In The Morning
193 pages
English

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193 pages
English

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Description

Beau Delaney is a bit of a showboat, a prominent lawyer whose exploits have become the subject of a Hollywood film. He s also the father of ten children (many adopted). Now he s charged with the murder of his wife, Peggy. It s another hard case for lawyer and bluesman Monty Collins. His client is keeping secrets; a mysterious eleventh child turns up and demands to take part in the trial; and the last words anyone heard from Peggy were the Hells Angels! Monty isn t alone in trying to save Delaney from life in prison, and save his sprawling family from breaking up. Monty s pal,

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 01 mai 2010
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781554906796
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0600€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Dedicated to the memory of my mum and dad




There are children in the morning.
They are leaning out for love,
And they will lean that way forever.
— Leonard Cohen, “Suzanne”



PART I
Oh, what did you see, my blue-eyed son?
Oh, what did you see, my darling young one?
I saw a newborn baby with wild wolves all around it.
— Bob Dylan, “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall”



Chapter 1
(Normie)
You should know right from the beginning that I am not bragging. I was brought up better than that, even though I am the child of a broken home. That’s another thing you should know. BUT — and it’s a big but — (I’m allowed to say “big but” like this but not “big butt” in a mean voice when it might be heard by a person with a big butt, and hurt their feelings) — but, about my broken home, Mummy says people don’t say that anymore. Anyway, even if they do, it doesn’t bother me. It kinda bothers my brother Tommy Douglas even though he’s a boy, and a lot of times boys pretend they’re tough. Tommy never says, but I know. We have another brother, Dominic, but he’s a little baby so he’s too young to know anything. However, the whole thing is not that bad. That’s probably because we don’t have the kind of dad who took off and didn’t care and didn’t pay us any alimony. When you’ve been around school as long as I have — I’m in grade four — you know kids who have fathers like that. But not my dad. We spend a lot of days with him, not just with my mum. And they both love us. They are in their forties but are both still spry and sharp as a tack. It’s stupid the way they don’t just move back into the same house together but, aside from that, they are great people and I love them very much.
Mum is Maura MacNeil. People say she has a tongue on her that could skin a cat. She is always very good to me and never skins me. But if I do something bad, she doesn’t have to stop and think about what to say; she has words ready to go. She teaches at the law school here in Halifax. My dad is Monty Collins. He is really sweet and he has a blues band. I always ask him to sing and play the song “Stray Cat Strut” and he always does. It’s my favourite song; I get to do the “meow.” He is also a lawyer and he makes faces about his clients. They’re bad but he has to pretend they’re good when he’s in front of the judge so the judge won’t send them down the river and throw away the key. Or the paddle, or whatever it is. It means jail.
I forgot to tell you my name. It’s Normie. What? I can hear you saying. It’s really Norma but you won’t see that word again in these pages. Well, except once more, right here, because I have to explain that it comes from an opera called Norma . Mum and Dad are opera fans and they named me after this one, then realized far too late that it was an old lady’s name (even though the N-person in the opera was not old, but never mind). So they started calling me Normie instead.
I am really good in math and English, and I know so many words that my teacher has got me working with the grade seven book called Words Are Important , which was published way back in 1955 when everybody learned harder words in school than they do these days. And I have musical talent but do not apply myself, according to my music teacher. I am really bad at social studies but that’s because I don’t care about the tundra up north, or the Family Compact, whoever they are. But it was interesting to hear that we burned down the White House when we had a war with the Americans back in 1812. Tommy says we kicked their butts (he said it, not me). You never think of Canadians acting like that.
Anyway, I must get on with my story. As I said, I’m not bragging and I don’t mean about the math and English. I mean I’m not bragging about what I can see and other people can’t. Because it’s a gift and I did nothing to earn it. And also because it’s all there for other people to see, but they are just not awake (yet) to these “experiences” or “visions.” I’m not sure what to call them. They say about me: “She has the sight.” Or: “She has second sight, just like old Morag.” Old Morag is my great-grandmother. Mum’s mother’s mother. She’s from Scotland. And she is really old; it’s not just people calling her that. She must be eighty-five or something. But there are no flies on her, everyone says. People find her spooky, but I understand her.
I am looking at my diary, which says Personal and Private! on the cover. I hide it in a box under my bed. Nobody crawls under there to spy on my stuff. The diary is where I kept all my notes, day after day, about this story. I am taking the most important parts of it and writing them down on wide-ruled paper, using a Dixon Ticonderoga 2/HB pencil, a dictionary, and a thesaurus. I am asking Mummy about ways to say (write) certain things, but I’m not telling her what I am writing. All the information you will read here is my own.

It all started in the waiting room of my dad’s office. He came and got me from school at three thirty on the day I’m talking about, Thursday, February 13, 1992. He still had work to do, so he took me to the office. I sat there with a kids’ magazine, which was too young for me really, and the bowl of candies Darlene keeps behind the reception desk. There were two other kids there around the same age as me, a girl and a boy. They looked sad and scared about something, so I tried to cheer them up. They were staring at the candies, and I shared them. They said thanks. Since Daddy was taking such a long time, I decided to work on my poster.
I go to a choir school. It goes from grade four to grade eight. Me and my best friend, Kim, are in grade four so this is our first year at the school. Kim is taller than me and has long blond braids and no glasses. We wear a uniform that’s a dark plaid kilt, white shirt, and bright red sweater. The boys don’t wear a kilt, but they could, because there are a lot of Scottish people around here and they would think it’s normal. But the boys wear dark blue pants.
Anyway, I was making a poster for our new program to give free music lessons to kids in the afternoons when regular classes are finished. One of the teachers came up with the name “Tunes for Tots” (“tots” means little kids), but Father Burke put his foot down and said no. He said that name was too “twee.” Another teacher said we should call it “Four-Four Time,” and he went along with that. Four-Four Time is a good name because we have it four days a week, Monday to Thursday, and it starts at four o’clock. It goes for an hour and a half. So, four days at four o’clock. “Common time” in music is four beats to a measure and the quarter note has one beat; a whole bunch of songs are written in that time, and it’s called four-four time. I didn’t go to it that day, but I usually went. Anyway, about the program. The teachers at the choir school take turns staying after school for it, and we, the students at St. Bernadette’s, can go as often as we want and help the kids who come from other schools for free music lessons. We also provide healthy snacks. It is really to help poor kids, but nobody would say that to them, because it wouldn’t be polite.
I mentioned Father Burke. He runs the school, and he also runs a choir school for grown-ups, including priests and nuns; it’s called the Schola Cantorum Sancta Bernadetta. Father Burke’s first name is Brennan and he was born in Ireland, which you can tell from the way he talks. People think he is stern, aloof, and haughty. The thesaurus also says “lordly,” which would be true if it means he works for the Lord but he doesn’t think he’s the Lord himself, so I’ll leave that one out. But he’s not. Or at least, deep down, he’s not. He can seem that way to people who don’t know him. But I do, and he is very kind, especially to children.
Anyway, I got out my paper and markers, and got down on my hands and knees in Daddy’s reception room to work on the poster.
“What’s that?” the little girl asked.
“Oh, it’s a thing they started at my school. They’re giving free music lessons to kids, plus treats, books, stuff like that.”
“Can anybody come to it?”
“Yeah! You guys should come!”
“What school is it?”
“St. Bernadette’s Choir School, on Byrne Street. Do you want to come?”
“Maybe. It sounds good.”
“What’s your name?”
“I’m Jenny and that’s my brother, Laurence.”
Jenny had wavy brown hair down to her shoulders, and she had it pulled over to the side of her forehead with a white barrette shaped like a kitty-cat. Laurence had short, dark brown hair and was bigger than Jenny.
“I’ll write your names down on the back of the poster, in pencil, so I can tell Father Burke you’re coming.” I asked her how to spell their names and I printed “Jenny” and “Laurence” on the paper. “What’s your last name?”
“Delaney.”
“I know how to spell that,” I told them. “I saw that name somewhere.”
They looked at each other but didn’t say anything. I wrote it down.
Then Daddy came out, and a woman came out with him and took the kids with her.
Later on, I found out why they looked sad and scared. They had a family tragedy!
(Monty)
I was in the courtroom when they came for Beau Delaney. I was early for my own court appearance, and walked in during Delaney’s summation on behalf of his client.
“And yet again, My Lord, we witness the spectacle of the state’s jack-booted goons trampling the rights of an innocent, law-respecting, own-business-minding citizen of this province. A man to all appearances secure in his home. I’m sure Your Lordship holds dear, as do I, the dictum of the great English jurist, Sir Edward Coke, that a man’s home is his castle. That a man should be safe and secure in that castle, however humble an abode it might be. That he should not have to quiver and quake, tremble and twitch lest he hear that most fearsome of sounds, the knock on the door in

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