They looked straight into a camera. One of the reporters
and his cameraman had clearly managed to make their way
to the front after people had started leaving.
“How do you feel, now that the ordeal is over?” The
reporter was holding a microphone into their faces, looking
at each of them in turn. He was probably deciding who was
most likely to give him what he was looking for.
Jakob shrank back, clearly shocked by the man"s
sudden presence, and grabbed Magnus"s hand more tightly.
His other hand reached for Lance, who took it without
hesitation.
“We"re relieved and would like to go home so we can put
it all behind us.” Magnus forced himself to stay calm for
Jakob"s benefit.
“So what are your feelings about Jakob"s kidnappers
now?” The reporter raised his eyebrows, clearly not happy
with the first answer.
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25
“I told you that already. We"re relieved.” Magnus pulled
Jakob closer and started walking toward the door. Why
hadn"t the man listened the first time?
Lance followed his lead, providing cover from behind so
that the reporter couldn"t get close to Jakob again.
“Look, my name is Tom Waller, and I"d like to do an
exclusive interview with you for
Newsweek
. It could get you
a lot of interest.” The man was trying to hand Magnus a
business card as he followed them through the heavy
wooden doors into the corridor.
Shit, he was persistent.
“We are
not
interested.” Magnus glanced over his
shoulder, trying to communicate his exasperation with his
eyes.
“But—but, why not?” The reporter stood there, looking
like someone had poured a bucket of cold water over his
head. He probably wasn"t used to rejection.
“We want to get back to normal as soon as possible. We
feel that is best for Jakob.” Magnus frowned. “We really
couldn"t care less about interest from people we don"t know.
So, please, leave us alone.”
“You"re not interested in telling your story? In making
people understand the issues gay parents face when trying
to raise a family?” The reporter stopped moving, clearly
shocked.
“No. We do not want any additional publicity.” How
often did the man expect him to repeat himself?
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26
“And you agree with him?” Mr. Waller had addressed
Lance.
Magnus didn"t even need to turn around to know how
Lance was going to respond.
“Of course I agree with him.” Lance"s voice sounded
annoyed. “We"ve been through enough, don"t you think it"s
time to give it a rest and let us get back to normal?”
“Okay.” The reporter motioned to his cameraman to stop
filming.
Well, if that was the extent of his persistence, Magnus
was happy. He doubted that Mr. Waller would have a very
successful career as a journalist, though.
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27
Chapter Three
MAGNUS had just finished placing the last balloon
containing a clue for the birthday mystery party about to
unfold in the upstairs playroom, when he heard the doorbell
ring for what was hopefully the last time. All the other party
guests whom Jakob had invited this Saturday were already
assembled in the living room. They"d dutifully admired the
stack of presents Jakob had gotten on his birthday the
previous Wednesday. A few were trying to guess what each
had brought Jakob today.
He made his way downstairs, wanting to check how
Lance was doing with the food preparations, and to make
sure that the final guest was properly greeted. Before
Magnus could open his mouth to remind Jakob to open the
front door, the boy ran past him and threw it wide open. A
girl in a pretty red party dress stood next to her mother and
smiled.
“Happy birthday, Jakob, and thank you for inviting me
to your mystery party.” She held out a package wrapped in
blue crinkly paper.
“Hi, Joanna.” Jakob took the present. “Thank you for
coming, and please come inside. Fiona is already here, and
we"re ready to get started.”
With a last look at her mom who smiled at her, Joanna
followed Jakob into the living room. Jakob had invited her so
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28
that his friend Fiona, who just
had
to be invited but would
have been the only girl, “wouldn"t be on her own” and feel
sad.
The four boys and two girls settled into a circle, a bottle
in its midst. Whoever the bottle pointed at once Jakob had
spun it was going to give the birthday boy his or her present
to unwrap. It would keep them busy for a while.
“Pickup is at seven, right?” Joanna"s mother hesitated.
“Are you sure you don"t need any help? Six nine-year olds
can be quite a handful.”
“We"ll be fine, but thank you for offering.” Magnus
pointed at the kitchen. “There"s two of us after all, and we"ve
got quite the afternoon planned for them. They should be too
busy to be much trouble. We"ll see you at seven.”
“Okay, if you"re sure. I"ll be at the mall.” Joanna"s
mother grinned and waved as she turned to walk toward her
car.
Magnus waved back, closed the front door, and made
his way to the kitchen. It was off-limits to the children, since
Lance had wanted to keep the themed cake he"d made a
surprise, but there was no such restriction for Magnus.
“Wow, you"ve outdone yourself!” Magnus stared at the
amazing creation Lance had come up with.
He"d told Magnus that he was going to make a layered
chocolate cake, since that was Jakob"s favorite, then
decorate it to match the Sherlock Holmes motif on the
invitations. But what now sat in the middle of the kitchen
table was a true masterpiece. On top of the two-tier cake,
already covered in chocolate icing, sat a Sherlock Holmes
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29
deerstalker. It looked as if it was edible. Six calabash pipes
in frosting connected the top tier with the bottom.
“You like it?” Lance had stepped back to check his
creation, a spoon covered in frosting still in his hand.
“I love it!” Magnus stepped close to Lance and embraced
him briefly. “You"re an artist, and I totally adore that about
you.”
Lance smiled and kissed him on the lips before he
stepped away to complete putting his utensils into the
dishwasher. He switched it on, washed his hands and joined
Magnus as they walked into the living room. Lance grabbed
the index-card sized pieces of paper that contained the first
clues on his way out of the kitchen and hid them behind his
back.
Most of the packages had been unwrapped, and Jakob
looked very happy with the additional presents he had
received. There were three of his favorite
choose your own
destiny
books he loved so much, a couple of other books,
and a new game for his Wii. He put them all next to his other
presents and returned to the circle.
“You know why you"re here, right?” Jakob"s eyes
sparkled. “There"s a mystery that needs solving, and before
we can have any of the mystery cake, we need to find the
clues and solve the murder.”
“Yay!” George was clearly ready to get started.
“Mystery cake?” Paul looked around but couldn"t find
anything. “Will we need clues to find that too?”
“No, but you won"t get any cake if you don"t solve the
mystery.” Magnus almost laughed at the shocked faces.
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“So, who"s been murdered?” Joanna had gone pale.
“Don"t look so scared, it"s just a game, silly.” Billy shook
his head.
“I know that!” Joanna defended herself. “I"m just getting
into the game. Makes it more fun if you care about the
victim, right?”
“You"re both right.” Magnus chuckled. “It is just a game,
but the more you can get into it, the more fun you"ll have.”
Joanna stuck her tongue out at Billy, who huffed and
looked away, pretending he didn"t care. The slight blush on
his cheeks told Magnus otherwise and he grinned. Joanna"s
mother had been right; these kids were going to be a
handful.
“You wanted to know who was murdered, Joanna?”
Lance looked serious. “It was Dwight, our butler.”
The children giggled. They"d all been here before and
knew there was no butler. But at least none of them made a
comment about make-believe this time, and they quickly got
serious again.
“Okay, let me explain the rules.” Magnus pointed at the
six pieces of paper Lance was holding up. “Each of you will
get a fact about the murder. You can keep it to yourself, and
try to solve the mystery alone, or you can all share what you
know and work as a team.”
“Team.” All six kids had spoken at the same time and
started laughing when they realized it.
“I"m glad you all agree on that.” Magnus smiled. “Once
you get your fact or clue, read it carefully. You"ll have
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31
enough information to find the next round of clues, which
are hidden in balloons all over the house. You"ll need to tell
us who killed Dwight, where they did it, and what the
murder weapon was.”
All six children nodded and held out their hands for the
clues. Mayhem ensued until they"d each read their own and
the others" clues. Magnus had gone through the game with
Lance a few nights earlier, so he knew it was solvable, but it
wasn"t going to be easy. Soon the children were off, chasing
more clues. Balloons popped occasionally as they figured out
which ones contained more information and added it to the
growing amount of evidence.
While the kids were busy using their gray matter, he
helped Lance set the table so they could have cake and
refreshments to refuel. It took them just over an hour to
figure it all out. They came back as a group, announcing the
solution, and were rewarded by Lance revealing the cake to
them.
It was a big success, especially when Lance added the
ice cream. Magnus was kept busy refilling drinks and barely
managed to sneak a tiny piece of the cake. It was beyond
delicious. He knew what cake he was going to ask for when
his birthday came around in a couple of months.
They spent the rest of the afternoon playing Clue,
solving riddles he had prepared, and setting up the barbecue
in the garden. Once they were fed it was almost seven, and
the five very tired guests were soon picked up by their
parents.
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32
“That was the best birthday party ever.” Jakob hugged
Magnus, then Lance, after the last kid had been picked up.
“Thank you so much.”
“I"m glad you liked it.” Lance smiled.
“I loved it.” Jakob looked over at his new books
longingly.
“Go ahead, go upstairs and do some reading once you"ve
brushed your teeth. We"ll deal with the cleanup.” Lance
grinned at Jakob"s enthusiastic yelp.
The boy chose a book and ran upstairs in no time.
“It"s amazing how quickly he made friends. We"ve only
lived here eight months, but you"d think it"s been much
longer.” Magnus started clearing the table. “I feel sorry we"re
going to uproot him again when we move to Sweden.”
“Do you think it"ll be too much for him?” Lance frowned.
“No, I think he"ll be okay. After all, we asked him, and
he was all for it, so it"s not like were forcing him.” Magnus
put the last plates into the sink for Lance to rinse before
filling the dishwasher again. “He
is
very adaptable. I mean,
his parents took him to Africa with them, then he moved to
Arizona with me after they"d died, and here last December.
That"s an awful lot of change to deal with. But he seems to
have thrived on it so far. And I think you"ve helped make him
feel secure enough to be able to deal with yet another move.”
“I think we both had a part in that.” Lance grinned as
he stepped closer for a kiss.
“Probably.” Magnus wasn"t going to start an argument.