When Sparrows Fall (5 page)

Read When Sparrows Fall Online

Authors: Meg Moseley

Tags: #Fiction, #Christian, #General, #Romance, #Contemporary Women

BOOK: When Sparrows Fall
13.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

About to spout off, Jack examined another family portrait on the wall. This one included the parents, when Martha was the baby of the family. Carl, a blond giant in suit and tie, looked like a paragon of respectability. That day on the porch, though, he’d been a boor.

Miranda had given the camera a shy and beguiling smile, her head down and eyes slanted upward in a pose reminiscent of early photos of Princess Diana. But Miranda’s hair was atrocious, with long bangs forced into unlikely curls and a fat braid draped over her shoulder. No woman in her right mind would have volunteered for that hairstyle. Nor would a sane woman deprive her children of fiction and God only knew what else.

“Way to go, lady,” he said under his breath. “Screw up your kids’ lives, then donate ’em to me.”

But what a gift. He wouldn’t waste the opportunity.

He’d better find the hospital and learn her prognosis. Then he would look for basic necessities. Coffee, a coffee maker, a change of clothes, and toiletries. For the kids, he would try to find a decent bookstore somewhere in the godforsaken hollow called Slades Creek, and the books themselves could do the rest.

She floundered in a black sea of pain. Heavy fog weighed her down. Waves slapped her.

Don’t make waves
, somebody scolded.

She flew to the edge of the cliffs. The wind flapped her cape like a bird’s wings. She was a starving bird, blown off course. Drifting between worlds, she floated past misty, spring green moss on rocks.

She opened her eyes to a smooth white wall. Spinning, spinning, spinning, it never went anywhere but never held still. Closing her eyes, she saw mossy rocks again and muddy tree branches flying past—and heard footsteps—

“Hey there, Miranda,” a man said.

No, I’m Randi. Let me be Randi
.

“Good Lord, girl, you took quite a tumble.”

She forced her leaden eyelids open and saw him, from the shoulders down. In a wrinkled raincoat, the man weaved back and forth, moving but not moving.

Her eyes couldn’t take it. She closed them. The inside of her eyelids rotated in a lopsided swirl.

He wasn’t Carl. Carl never wore raincoats.

Carl was long gone. She remembered now. The chastisement of God. Her fault. So stubborn.

The letters. The sugar bowl. Jezebel.

She couldn’t move. Her limbs were shackled. Her mind was heavy, clogged with pain.

“Miranda,” the stranger said.

She dared another narrow peek at the spinning world. He still stood there, making that ceaseless, side-to-side motion.

“Are you awake?” He leaned closer. Dark eyes, curly hair. “I’m Jack. I don’t know … but if you can …” His warm drawl drifted in and out, soothing her.

Jack. She knew that name. He was … who was he? She couldn’t rouse her tongue to ask.

They’d given her … pain meds, they’d called it. So innocent. But Mason said drugs were witchcraft. They would lure her into giving her soul over. Out of her control. She’d go off the rails again and—

“Why did you name me as guardian?” the man asked. “You don’t even know.…”

Guardian. Jack. Of course.

She slipped into a dream, a memory, a long-ago day. Lemonade on the porch. They were talking, laughing. Sunshine in the storm.

He was kind. Sensible. He would keep the children safe.

“Miranda.” His voice stroked her like a gentle hand on a cat in the sun, making her want to purr.

He had to stay. He was her lifeline.

“It’s all right. I’ll take care of the kids …”

But he would make waves. He would upset … somebody. She couldn’t think who.

She wanted to run. She wanted out. She wanted the sunshine.

A white car pulled into her drive. The state seal.…

Nausea rolled over her. She fought it. Consoling drowsiness curled in on her and pulled her into a soft pillow of black.

Too close to the wood stove for comfort, Jack propped himself against the smooth-planed planks of the wall and waited. He’d already given all the kids the simple and optimistic prognosis, but with the two little ones in bed, it was time to give the older four a more detailed report. He had no intentions of addressing the issue of their mother’s psyche though.

Darkness seemed to run in the veins of the Hanford men and in the veins of the women they married. Even Ava, for all her upbeat energy, had sometimes shown a streak of melancholy that had scared him half to death.

Part of his mind occupied itself with counting the tight, spiraled rows of the braided rug. The other part stayed on Miranda’s battered face and petite frame. And on the contents of the plastic tote he’d brought from the hospital. It held her ruined clothing and her trashed, mud-caked Nikon. The camera was a serious piece of equipment. Film, not digital, it had a vintage look. It must have cost a bundle when it was new, or even more as a collector’s item.

Rebekah herded Gabriel and Michael down the stairs and toward the decrepit couch. The couch was a tweedy brown that wouldn’t show dirt, which was fortunate, as the archangels had been in some kind of muddy trouble. They needed baths, pronto. All elbow jabs and jiggery pokery, they bounced their bottoms on the cushions. Their big sister, the peacemaker, squeezed between them.

Timothy came in from the kitchen but remained standing, his lean face expressionless. If he’d worn a horned helmet, he could have been a ferocious young Viking.

Knowing the smaller boys couldn’t sit still for long, Jack started right in. He’d already decided not to mention the collapsed lung; it sounded too scary.

“Okay, here are the details. Your mom has a concussion, and she broke some ribs, messed up one shoulder, and tore up her right leg. She’s lucky though. Instead of falling straight down, she must have slid from one ledge to another. She was groggy when I stopped by, but that won’t last.”

Gabriel’s forehead puckered. “What’s a concussion?”

“That’s what they call it when you bang your head so hard that you black out. She’ll have headaches and be tired and dizzy and sick to her stomach for a while, but her doctor says that’s to be expected.”

Timothy didn’t move a muscle. The other kids sat on the couch like big-eyed owls on a branch, staring.

Jack was still trying to grasp the situation. “Who needs to know what happened? Family? Folks from church?”

Michael scowled at the floor. “People from church don’t come around much.”

Rebekah elbowed him. “There’s our pastor. His name’s Mason Chandler.”

Jack wasn’t eager for help from that quarter, but he tucked the name away in his memory. “What about relatives?”

Rebekah hesitated. “We don’t have any.”

Hard to believe. It might explain a few mysteries though.

“Isn’t there anybody who needs to know your mom’s in the hospital? Neighbors? Friends?”

The kids regarded him in mute puzzlement.

Jack asked more questions and learned that the children had never set foot in a school building or a McDonald’s or a mall. A trip to the grocery store was an unusual event. Miranda did most of her shopping by mail order or from a food co-op that delivered to their door.

The kids had never touched a computer. They had never been to a movie or an amusement park. They had never been allowed to browse at the library—Miranda left them at home with Timothy in charge and selected their books herself—and that high-handed censorship was the clincher.

“All right.” Jack resisted the urge to indulge in some salty language about his sister-in-law. “That’s very … interesting. I’d like to know how—”

“Michael, Gabriel, you need a bath,” Timothy said. “Go. Get the water started.”

The archangels bolted. Timothy stalked after them, muttering that they
needed supervision, although it wasn’t likely. The only bathroom was downstairs, practically in the living room.

“The clean towels are in the laundry basket,” Rebekah called.

She returned her attention to Jack. Her gaze was clear and direct, like he remembered her mother’s. That was years ago, though, and he might have modified the memory to suit himself.

“Why did Mother pick you to be our guardian?” Rebekah asked.

That question, again. “Who did you expect her to choose?”

“I never thought about it.” Rebekah frowned. “Do you even know her?”

Jack weighed how much to tell. Rebekah was an extraordinarily capable young lady for ten, but it wasn’t likely that she knew much about real life.

“Okay, here’s the story,” he said. “Your grandpa’s first wife was Celia, your dad’s mom. When your dad was a little boy, your grandpa left them. He divorced Celia and married a woman named Eleanor. My mother.” Jack took a breath and skipped his mother’s fate. “My father died when I was in my twenties. After some years passed, I wanted more family than I had, so I stopped by to meet your dad.”

“You’d never even met him?”

“Never, and I thought it was high time. He wasn’t home, but I introduced myself to your mom. We sat on the porch and talked. Timothy was about three, and you were about a year old. You thought you were queen of the world because you’d learned to walk, but you wore yourself out and fell asleep in your mom’s lap.”

Rebekah smiled toward the window that overlooked the porch. “Then what happened?”

“We swapped phone numbers and planned to get together again. It was like finding a ready-made brother and sister-in-law for me, a brother-in-law for her. When your dad came home, though, he wasn’t too pleased to meet me.”

She met his eyes again. “How could you tell?”

“Well … he said I shouldn’t come back. So that was the end of it.” Except for the letters Jack had written, for years. Wasted effort, all of them.

“That still doesn’t explain why she picked you.”

“You’re right. It doesn’t.”

“When she’s feeling better, we can ask her.”

“Yes, we can. Meanwhile, I located her attorney this afternoon, and he gave me the name of a reliable woman who can stay with y’all tomorrow while I run to Chattanooga. Mrs. Walker. Yvonne Walker. Do you know her?”

“No.”

Of course not.

One of the boys shrieked angry words. Rebekah excused herself. Jack stayed put, having no desire to involve himself in the bath melee, but he heard everything.

“Get clean all over,” Timothy ordered. “All over, Gabriel! Wash your ears.”

Timothy was wound way too tight, but he’d had a terrible day. Apparently it had started with finding his mom at the bottom of the cliffs.

How had he known to search for her, though, so early in the morning? The unanswered questions kept piling up.

Rebekah’s voice ran through her brothers’ wrangling like a calm undercurrent in a tumultuous stream. After a few minutes, water gurgled down the drain. Timothy and Rebekah returned to the living room. Her dress was sprinkled with bath water, but he’d stayed dry.

The archangels followed, wearing damp skivvies and smelling like citrusy shampoo. They hadn’t wasted much time in drying themselves, and their young limbs were shiny with water. Michael ran up the stairs while Gabriel darted to the front door and flung it open.

“I have to find my—” Cold air flooded in. Gabriel’s feet thudded across the porch and down the steps in the dark. He reversed the process and hurtled inside clutching a slingshot. “Got it!” He slammed the door so hard that Jack cringed.

“Now your feet are filthy,” Timothy said, pointing. “You need another bath.”

“No.” Rebekah slipped between them. She marched the half-naked boy
into the kitchen and knelt to wipe his feet with a kitchen towel. “There. Clean all over. Off to bed, Gabriel, and say your prayers. Good night.”

“G’night.” Slingshot in hand, he stormed through the living room and up the stairs.

Rebekah stayed on her knees like a nun at her devotions, her habit made of denim. After a moment, she rose, slinging the dirtied dish towel over her shoulder, and walked toward the bathroom.

Jack guessed what she would do. Ten years old, she would play mom to her brothers. She would wipe the wet floor, tidy the towels, pick up the shed clothing.

Dazed, he thought of the pricey Glenlivet he’d bought the week before. If he’d had it with him, once the kids were out of his hair, he would have exercised his right to unwind somewhere in peace and quiet. Except, if Miranda didn’t allow caffeine in her house, there was no hope whatsoever for a good Scotch whiskey. Demon alcohol.

Other books

That Girl by H.J. Bellus
Mercury in Retrograde by Paula Froelich
The Last Gun by Tom Diaz
Gareth and th Lost Island by Patrick Mallard
Torn by Avery Hastings
Black Orchids by Stout, Rex