Every Time We Say Goodbye - BestLightNovel.com
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"Grandpa's awake. Grandma's making b.u.t.ter tarts," he said. "Laura's there and Geraldine's on her way."
Dan lifted his head out of the water. "Are you guys coming in or what?"
Dawn shook her head, but Jimmy said, "I will." He pulled off his s.h.i.+rt and waded in, sinking down beside Dan. "Come on, Dawn," he said.
She gathered her skirt close and followed him in. The water was silty and soft. They lounged and talked until they heard two car doors slam in the driveway. "Geraldine and Amy," Jimmy announced.
"We should go up," Dawn said, but she was reluctant to leave the cool green water. She arched her back and floated, feeling her hair fan out behind her. Now that they had done it once, it seemed like they had been swimming in the creek all their lives. Jimmy began scooping armfuls of water at her. She splashed him back, and then they both doused Dan. Above them, another car door slammed. Jimmy stopped mid-splash. "Who's that, now?"
"Your father, probably," Dan said, standing up and slos.h.i.+ng towards the rock.
Dawn and Jimmy looked at each other. "Why do you say that?" Dawn asked.
"I talked to him last night," Dan said. "He borrowed a car and was leaving at five this morning."
For a moment, they were afraid to move. "What if it's not him?" Dawn asked.
Through the trees they could hear a medley of voices. "What if they fight?"
"What if Grandma doesn't let him in the house?"
Dan hopped on one leg, yanking socks onto his wet feet. He said, "Of course she'll let him in the house. He's her son. Go!"
Dawn and Jimmy raced up the bank, water streaming off them, yelling, "Dad! Dad!" In the driveway, a car was parked awkwardly between Geraldine's dented Honda and Laura's new Ford. The trunk was wide open, and the engine ticked as it cooled. The screen door was open too, but the front porch was empty. Everyone had already gone inside.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.
Thank you to.
My parents, Jim and Judy, for allowing me to snip pieces out of their stories and sew them into this novel (or at least for not protesting too much when I got out the scissors) My agent, Anne McDermid, for her (more than ten years of) patience and invaluable advice Diane Martin and the team at Knopf Canada, especially Deirdre Molina-for their dedication to this book, and for being such a pleasure to work with The eagle-eyed Sue Sumeraj.
The Canada Council for the Arts.
Dan Wilson, for encouragement, playlists, and (especially) the t.i.tle.
Maureen Lennon, for reading, and for reminding me to write Dr. Peter Steele, for his very generous help when I needed it most.
All the mothers who took the time to speak with me about this novel My brother Jason and my sister Eva, and Pema Dorji, for making me laugh.
JAMIE ZEPPA is the author of Beyond the Sky and the Earth: A Journey into Bhutan, which won the Banff Mountain Book Festival Award for Adventure Travel Writing. She won the CBC Canadian Literary Award for Memoir and her essays have appeared in AWOL: Tales for Travel-Inspired Minds, My Wedding Dress: True-Life Tales of Lace, Laughter, Tears and Tulle and Between Interruptions: 30 Women Tell the Truth about Motherhood. She has written articles and reviews for Chatelaine, The Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star, the Literary Review of Canada and Ascent, as well as several UK newspapers. Jamie has a teenage son, and she teaches English at Seneca College in Toronto. This is her first novel.
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