Authors: Bishop O'Connell
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“W
hy are you and Daddy going away?” Fiona asked for the five hundredth time since being told two days ago.
“I told you, peanut,” Caitlin said, turning in the passenger seat to face her daughter. “It's like when you sleep over at Carleigh's house. Except we're going to see Daddy's friend. Do you remember Henry and Hannah?”
Fiona nodded. “He was funny. I liked him.” Then she made a face and looked at Caitlin very seriously. “Is that the only reason?”
“No,” Caitlin said. “We also just really need some time away from you.”
Caitlin sensed Edward give her a look.
“Mommy,” Fiona said very seriously. “We both know that's ridiculous.”
Caitlin stifled a laugh. “Yes, it is.”
Fiona pursed her lips. “But saying things like that can cause severe trauma for a child my age. I think that earns me another present.”
“You better stop talking,” Edward said. “Or we'll have to draft Santa to help us bring all her presents back.”
“Daddy,” Fiona said and rolled her eyes, “it's only October. Santa is still on vacation in Australia.” She spotted a Hidden Driveway sign. “It's not a very good secret if they tell everyone it's there.”
Caitlin turned back around, her guilt assuaged a little.
Fifteen minutes later, they were parked in front of Mallory and Daniel's house. Edward was retrieving Fiona's butterfly suitcase and TARDIS backpack. He was a big Dr. Who fan, and Fiona loved nothing more than sitting with him and watching it too.
“Daddy,” Fiona said when she slipped on the backpack. “You're a doctor, right?”
“I am,” Edward said.
“I think you need a TARDIS, a real one,” Fiona said. “Then you wouldn't be a doctorâyou would be The Doctor.”
“Well, I'm not a Time Lord,” Edward said earnestly. “But it would be very cool to have our own TARDIS, wouldn't it?”
“Supercool,” Fiona agreed. “But I don't want to see any Daleks. I don't like them.”
“Deal,” Edward agreed.
Caitlin wondered, briefly, if Edward might seriously try. Then she smiled as the three of them walked to the front door. Before they'd gotten ten feet away, it opened and Mallory stepped out.
Mallory knelt down. “Hello, Fiona, it's very nice toâ”
“Nana!” Fiona shouted and charged at Mallory, throwing her arms around her and hugging tight.
Mallory looked unsure for the briefest of moments, but then she smiledâactually smiledâand hugged Fiona back.
“How is her face not cracking?” Edward asked in a low whisper.
Caitlin stifled a laugh.
“Thank you very much for letting me stay with you,” Fiona said as she stepped back from the hug.
“What is all the commotion out here?” Daniel said in mock anger as he came up to the door.
“Sorry, Taid,” Fiona said. “Nana and I were just saying hello.”
There was a very brief moment of silence among the adults. Edward's father gave him a questioning look, but Edward just shook his head.
“Well,” Daniel said, his surprise gone, “I suppose the ruckus is understandable, then.”
Fiona turned to Mallory. “Nana, we're going to have to keep it down around Taid.”
“Or we can just send him to his study while we have our fun,” Mallory said conspiratorially.
“Yeah,” Fiona agreed.
“Well, let's get you unpacked,” Mallory said and held her hand out to Fiona, who took it. She led Fiona down the hall. “You'll be staying in your daddy's old room. Then we're going to the park.”
Edward looked on, dumbfounded.
“Bye, Mommy,” Fiona said as she ran back and gave Caitlin a big hug and kiss. “I love you.”
“I love you too, peanut,” Caitlin said. “Be good.”
“I love you too, Daddy,” Fiona said.
Edward bent down and hugged Fiona. “I love you.”
Then she ran back to Mallory and disappeared down a hallway.
Edward just stared after them.
Daniel patted his shoulder but looked at Caitlin. “Thank you for asking us to do this,” he said.
Caitlin smiled. “My pleasure.” She handed him a sheet of paper, which he took. “You've got our cell numbers, but just in case, here's the number for the hotel, as well as Henry and Hannah's cell numbers. If you need anything, call anytime.”
“Of course,” Daniel said. “The same goes for you. Call anytime you want to talk to her.”
“I'm going to hold you to that promise,” Caitlin said. “From the looks of it, I'm going to miss her more than she's going to miss me.”
“I'm sure that's not true,” Daniel said. “But we'll do our best to keep her occupied and spoil her rotten before we give her back to you.”
Caitlin laughed and hugged him. She was surprised, pleasantly so, when he hugged her back. “Thank you, Daniel.”
“Go on, you two,” he said, breaking the hug. “Get out of here so I can enjoy some time with my granddaughter. Have a good time.”
“We will,” Caitlin said.
Daniel closed the door, leaving Edward still bewildered.
“I think I better drive,” Caitlin said through a laugh, taking the keys from Edward.
“There must be some mistake,” Edward said, still staring at the house as he walked to the passenger side of the car.
“What are you talking about?” Caitlin asked as she got in and buckled up.
“Those were not my parents,” Edward said and shut his door. “They must've been replaced by aliens or something.”
Caitlin started the car and headed to the airport. “A wizard has nothing on the power of a little girl,” she said. “Besides, don't be too hard on them. Either because of them or in spite of them, that childhood is the reason you are who you are. And I love that person very much.”
Edward took her hand and kissed it, then smiled. “You are so getting a foot rub tonight.”
“Just tonight?” Caitlin asked. “Oh, no. There will be weeks of foot rubs.”
“W
e made it safe,” Caitlin said into her cell phone. “No, Mallory, Edward is driving.”
Edward chuckled a little as he navigated I-10, occasionally glancing at the rental car's GPS. He was glad something of the woman he'd known as his mother was intact. He was still surprised by Fiona calling his father “Taid.” It was what he'd called his grandfatherâthe Welsh word for itâbut he didn't remember using it much around Fiona or explaining what it meant. He knew Fiona was smart, but he was continually surprised by how observant she was.
“Hi, sweetheart,” Caitlin said. “Are you having fun with Nana?”
“Hi, Fiona,” Edward said.
“Yes, that was Daddy saying hi.”
Edward exited the highway and started maneuvering through surface streets as Caitlin continued her conversation.
“Okay, I'll call you tonight before bedtime,” Caitlin said. “I love you. Bye-bye, honey.”
They wove their way into the French Quarter and pulled into the driveway for the hotel.
“Checking in today, sir?” a uniformed man asked as he opened Edward's door. Caitlin was receiving similar treatment.
Edward popped the trunk and handed the keys to the valet. “Yes, Huntington.”
“We're delighted to have you.”
“Let me get those for you, ma'am,” another valet said, taking the suitcases from the trunk and loading them onto a cart. “They'll be waiting in your room for you.”
“Oh,” Caitlin said. “Well, thank you.”
Edward handed the valet a five-dollar bill, then took Caitlin's hand, and they headed into the lobby. It was massive, with crystal chandeliers and marble floors.
“You did good,” Caitlin said, looking around.
“The hotel isn't bad either,” Edward said.
“Smooth.”
“Reservation for Huntington,” Edward said to the well-coiffed woman at the check-in desk.
“Yes, of course,” the woman said, her smile turning up. “We've been expecting you. The honeymoon suite is all prepared for you.” She handed him the key cards. “Elevator's to your left, top floor.”
“Thank you,” Edward said.
“This place is incredible,” Caitlin said as they walked to the elevator. “I don't think I've ever stayed anywhere nicer than a Holiday Inn before this.”
Edward smiled. “We can afford it; it's our honeymoon, and you deserve it.”
“You are so getting lucky tonight.”
Edward blushed as the couple who exited the elevator sniggered and smiled.
As they rode the elevator up, Caitlin squeezed his hand and pressed close.
When they reached their room, he opened the door to their suite and led Caitlin inside.
“Holy shit,” she said and stared slack-jawed at the room.
Edward laughed.
Together they stepped from the entryway and into the first room. It was the living room of the suite. He had to admit, saying it was lavish was an understatement. Lavish would've been without the fireplace and authentic eighteenth-century billiards table.
“Oh my God,” Caitlin said when she saw the huge bouquet of roses on the table, the plate of chocolates, and the champagne chilling.
“I love you,” Edward said as he came up behind her and wrapped his arms around her.
“Yes, you do,” she said. She bent down and took a bite of a chocolate. “That's good.” She fed the rest of it to Edward.
“Come on, let's see the rest of the place.”
They went through the formal dining room, the bathroomâwhich Caitlin decided needed to come back to New Hampshire with themâthe large deck with a spacious view of the city, and finally the bedroom.
“I love the bed,” Caitlin said as she leapt onto the plush mattress of the canopy bed. She smiled and let out a long sigh. “I feel like a princess.”
“You're so much more than that,” Edward said, then went to the bags and started to unpack.
“I think I'm going to have some champagne,” Caitlin said and headed out of the room. “Want some?”
“Absolutely,” Edward said and began putting their things away.
“The roses are incredible,” Caitlin said from the other room. “They smell amazing.”
When the clothes were away, he put the suitcases in the closet just as Caitlin returned with two flute glasses. Edward took one, and she stepped close.
“To our honeymoon,” Caitlin said.
“Cheers,” Edward said. They tapped glasses and drank. He had to admit, it was really good champagne.
“I can't get over this view,” Caitlin said as she walked to the window and looked over the city.
Edward took another drink of champagne, then set the glass down before walking over to join Caitlin at the window. “Are you hungry? Want to go check out the Quarter and maybe get something to eat?”
Caitlin set her glass down and turned around. “Sure,” she said.
Then she tackled him onto the bed, kissed him deep, and began pulling his clothes off.
W
raith walked along Royal Street eating a hot dog, glad it wasn't quite the display Bourbon Street had been. She'd known what to expect, or thought she had, but it had still surprised her. All things considered, she felt a little silly being worried her pixie-cut hair, now sky blue, would make her stand out. As it turned out, she was much further on the conservative side of the scale than she was used to being. After all, she showed almost no skin, and no amount of promised beads was going to change that.
Glancing in windows of the high-end shops, she admired the collections of antiques and oddities for sale. It occurred to her that for the first time, she could actually buy some of those things. She wouldn't, of course. Her moneyâwell, the money Brigid had given herâwas better spent on other things.
Her wanderings took her to Saint Louis Cathedral. Just before the large church, at the corner of Royal and Pirate's Alleyâa name that made her smileâshe came upon some musicians busking for the crowd. Even in her limited time in New Orleans, only a couple of hours, she'd figured out this was hardly a rarity. There were street performers and musicians everywhere, most of whom were really good. These musicians were really, really, really good. And the crowd around them was a testament to it. A girl in a long, loose sundress was playing a mandolin like she'd invented the instrument. She kept smiling at the guy playing a small drum kit. Another two were playing guitar, but it was the singer, one of the guitarists, who really impressed Wraith. His long dreadlocks swayed, and sweat rolled down his skin as his fingers slid up and down the neck of the guitar. The motions were like the intimate caress of a lover, but his voice was clear and sweet as he sang about loss and pain.
Wraith stood there mesmerized, and quite unbidden, she thought of Ovation. Maybe it was strange to think so often of someone she'd known so briefly, but he'd shown her kindness when she needed it most. And what had that kindness gotten him?
She closed her eyes and saw it again, the Order slitting Ovation's throat and his lifeless body falling to the stone floor. And all for nothing more than the crime of knowing her.
“I'm sorry, Ovation,” she whispered to herself, for possibly the millionth time.
When she opened her eyes and wiped the tears away, the singer's dark green eyes met hers and held them as he sang. It was like he didn't just see her pain, he knew it and was singing as much for her as for himself.
She could only stare as his music and her emotions threatened to overwhelm her.
When the song ended, the bystanders broke into uproarious applause, and the hat on the ground began to fill with singles and fives. Wraith joined the clapping, if a few seconds after the fact. When the crowd began to disperse, the singer smiled at her.
“All right, chere?” the singer said with a drawl that Wraith could only guess was local.
Wraith wiped at her eyes again, feeling incredibly self-conscious. “Yeah, I'm okay.” She drew one of the twenties Brigid had given her and dropped it in the hat.