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Watching Brad

If I can figure out a way to make it work, I'll finish the chapter. If, however, I decide it was a stupid idea, I'll have to come up with something else and rewrite most of the chapter. I've had this idea in mind since I decided to burn down the house after the wedding, so I hope I can make it work somehow.[/QUOTE]

Hey Neil, you could always do a Dallas plot and make it all a dream ..|..|
Ted could cum out of the shower and find brad in his bed the first night they had sex :sex: everything else was a dream, that means another 200 chapters:=D::=D:

Jeff.
 
Neil, first half was part of your quote.
Forgot to tick add quote box before sent :)
guess i was thinking of those by gone days ;)
 
Hey Neil! YOU are the author!! Anything can happen in your story, lol.
If you aren't happy with it, it can be changed!!Ok?
Just don't keep us waiting too long ... pretty please !
Hugs
Harry
 
Hey Neil! YOU are the author!! Anything can happen in your story, lol.

I suppose it can, but this story has been going along in almost 'real time' and I've been incorporating a number of real events into it. The problem I have now is that I have the benefit of 'hindsight'. Unfortunately, that would give the story (and Ted and Brad) 'foresight' and, in this case, it doesn't necessarily work.

I'm think I've found a way to make it work, though, and I've already started rewriting the chapter to see if it will.

So far so good.
 
Just returned from holidays and finally was able to catch up with the story. Wasn't disappointed. Thanks, Neil, looking forward to the next one.
H&K
Vic
 
Neil - Please don't fall over the block(the "stumbling" one.) And please don't do another catistrophic (I,know I can't spell) event; the kids have had enough. But then we have yet to get Ted back to his shrink, don't we. But he has already admitted it is a good idea so maybe he will only be screaming as opposed to kicking and screaming, like last time. On a personal note, hope all the back problems are as contained as they can be and you are able to find some relief from the pain. Oh, thanks for the added chapters to "Jason". Again thanks for the great job you are doing keeping us entertained. Andy aka "RBRCNDR"
 
Hi Neil!
I discovered this story a few weeks ago and just finished with chapter 200 today.... and... what can I say? "wow", " amazing", "brilliant", "perfect", "woderful", "phenomenal", etc... you pick one. You made me go through a rollercoaster of emotions, and I cried over a story like never before.

Also I would like to THANK YOU! (yeah with caps), because this story gave me the incentive to learn and play Eric Satie's Gymnopédie No. 1, what a enchanting piece!!! I love it!!!

I hope things are better for you now. (*8*)

Can't wait for chapter 201...

Thanks again.:wave:
Me.
 
WATCHING BRAD
Part 201​

I took Brad by his left biceps and quietly guided him into the bedroom as far away from the kids as we could get. My voice dropped to barely a whisper. I knew Lindsay was busy exploring and I could hear the cheerful giggles coming from the boys at the opposite end, but I didn't want to take any chances that they might overhear us.

"I don't think this is such a good idea, Tiger," I whispered.

Brad glanced briefly around the room. "Oh, I don't know, Pops," he whispered back. "It would just be for a few months, wouldn't it?"

I thought of those ‘few months' we would be living there and wondered if we would be able to manage it without everyone driving everyone else up the walls and getting on each others' nerves. And with autumn and winter quickly approaching. . .

"I think we could swing it," Brad continued as if to try and convince himself as well as me. "And it would certainly be in the school district."

I squeezed his arm which I hadn't realised I was still holding. My fingers dug into his skin. "Gee-sus, Murphy, Brad, take another look around," I said as my own eyes quickly scanned the room we were standing in. "We've turned down apartments that were bigger than this because they were too small."

"But this is different," Brad went on despite my objections. "It's completely furnished. We don't even have to buy so much as a drinking glass. Besides, Lindsay doesn't seem to mind it and the twins think it's going to be some sort of adventure. They've already called dibs on their bed."

As if on cue, Justin and Jeremy let out a happy round of giggles followed by a delightful series of chuckles and sniggers. Brad's head turned toward the sounds of the voices coming through the open doorway for a moment. "See?" he said, flashing me his chipped-toothed grin. "They love it here."

Not so very long ago, I would have put my food down and taken charge of the situation by proclaiming that there would be no way I would allow my family to live here for a few hours let alone a few months. Things had changed, though, and I surprised myself by standing there and discussing the situation with Brad. I surprised myself even more by actually listening to what he was saying.

"I know you'd prefer something bigger, Ted, and we're probably going to get on each others' nerves every now and then over the next few months if we take it, but think about how convenient it would be. The only thing we would have to buy is bedding, bathroom linens, and food. Everything else we need is right here." For emphasis, he swept his hand behind him, indicating the rest of the place beyond the open door. "It's even got a TV, DVD player, stereo system. Everything, Ted. The kids would be able to walk to school and Mom could babysit any time we needed a sitter. You know, in case we want a night out to ourselves."

He said that last sentence with a sly smirk and a mischievous wink.

I had to admit, though, that the place had its conveniences and merits, but it also had its faults. Lots of faults. And it had one huge fault that we simply couldn't dismiss. I decided that, if I could no longer be the voice of authority, I could at least be the voice of reason.

"Okay, but what if Grant can't get us in the house by Christmas? Do you really want to spend the whole winter here?"

"Grant said he'd have the house ready for us and I believe him."

"But what if he can't, Brad?"

Brad shrugged his shoulders. "If he can't, he can't. Besides, we should know by November if the house will be ready for Christmas, and they're calling for a mild winter. We can always make other arrangements if this doesn't work out."

"But Gee-sus, Murphy, Brad," I said, "it's a. . ."

Oh, but I'm getting ahead of myself, aren't I? I haven't told you yet about how we came to be in that situation.

That Saturday in late August when our house finally came down was a sad and solemn day indeed. It had been a difficult and emotional ride for everyone since that night in England when our honeymoon hotel room telephone rang in the wee hours of the morning. For some (me), seeing the house gone was a final release of the past. We could never go back there again. For others, it was a new adventure just waiting to happen. And, for two little boys, it was a sudden realisation that the only home they could really call their very own had been smashed to kindling and that they had no idea what the future held in store for them. Once again, their lives had been turned completely upside down. This time, however, they had a huge family that loved them very much and would do everything they could to make the journey as easy and painless as possible.

That night, as we lay in bed, the whispy curtains fluttered in the cool, refreshing lake breezes and the night sounds of the country creatures came to us on the wind. Brad and I decided that we would make Sunday a ‘family day' - just the two of us and the kids. We quickly made plans and, ironically, it began in the very spot where we had stood the evening before.

It felt strange going back to the property that morning and finding nothing there except a gigantic hole in the ground where our house used to be. The hole was now surrounded by a two-rail ‘fence' of plastic yellow and black emergency ribbon. It was tied securely around a number of two-by-two posts which had been pounded into the ground encircling the excavation. I felt such an emptiness that I'd never felt before. Standing there, looking at the hole, there was a stark and frightening finality to it. At least for me.

Yet there was the sense of a new beginning as well. A chance to start all over again. As much as I had wanted to hold onto the past after the fire, there was no ‘past' left for me to hold onto. It was all gone. There was only a future to look forward to now, and it was a future that we would all face together as a new family. Not so long ago, I had felt that I was a failure for not being able to provide for my family. Throughout most of my life, I had been taking care of people and feeling that I was responsible for them, from Warren to Connie, and then to my daughter, Lindsay, and now to Brad and to my sons, Justin and Jeremy. It had been my job and my job alone. Now it was our job - mine and Brad's. I didn't have to do it all alone anymore. I didn't have to carry the entire load of responsibility. Now I had Brad to help take care of us, and that included his taking care of me as well. Except for Mom and Dad, I'd never had anyone take care of me before. That was going to take some getting used to.

We just stood there in the silence of our own thoughts for a time, staring at both our empty past and future in the same empty space before getting on with our family day and our lives.

John Hayes' backyard had become something of a storage dump for us. His shed was full of both his stuff and ours, and another pile of our salvaged stuff lay beneath a huge, blue, plastic tarpaulin near the house, fastened down by aluminum tent pegs which Brad had found in the shed. Beneath that tarp were our bicycles. They had been locked up inside the garage when the fire occurred and survived undamaged. We retrieved the bikes and walked them around the house to the van. Brad went back (with Jeremy tagging along) to get the two bicycle racks - one which attached to the back and one for the roof. Lindsay went inside the house to visit with her grandparents until we were finished installing the racks and loading the bikes but the twins sat cross-legged on the lawn and watched us.

It was not yet mid-morning when we set off to the mall to replace the lost biking equipment - helmets, pads, and such - and to do ‘back to school' shopping for Lindsay and ‘first day of school' shopping for the boys. I left Brad in charge of picking out clothes for Justin and Jeremy. I stayed close to Lindsay but stood back and didn't even offer suggestions or recommendations as she picked out her own clothes. She was old enough to decide what she wanted to wear.

She picked out a number of jeans and slacks as well as shirts and T-shirts and blouses, plus a fairly healthy stack of socks and stockings for her casual days. Her gym uniforms would be purchased through the school. I thought she was finished, but she then spent several minutes going through the racks and finally picking out a pale-blue dress in what I suspected was Daniel's favourite colour.

We all met in the change rooms for ‘try ons' and Lindsay came out from her booth wearing her dress.

"How do I look, Daddy?" she asked with a hopeful smile. "Do you think Daniel would like it? In case we go to a dance at school or a movie or something?"

"Give us a spin," I told her, twirling my inverted index finger in the air.

She daintily grasped the material in her fingers, held out the dress, and did a smooth pirouette.

I stood there with my left arm crossed over my chest and my right arm bent upwards and resting at my side, my chin resting on my knuckles and my index finger tapping my cheek in deep thought. Lindsay stood there looking up at me and anxiously awaiting my opinion. I gave it to her.

"No, he wouldn't," I said seriously. Lindsay looked crestfallen. Her smile disappeared and her hands dropped sadly and defeated to her sides. And then my lips curled up into a smile. "At least not with those pink sneakers you're wearing." Her smile returned. "Come with me, Sweetheart." I held out my hand to her and she took it.

We walked hand-in-hand to the shoe department where I found a very pleasant clerk wandering the aisles there.

"Can I help you?" she asked politely.

"I hope so," I told her. "My daughter needs a pair of shoes to match this dress." I said. "My idea of fashion is wearing socks that match."

The woman smiled. "I believe I have the perfect pair," the woman said.

Not only did Lindsay get a lovely pair of slip-on shoes which went well her new dress that day, but she got a new pair of studded earrings as well.

With the clothes selected, we spent almost another hour picking out school supplies. When I was a kid, my school supplies consisted of a backpack, a pencil case, a few ballpoint pens, a few lead pencils and a sharpener, erasers which were pink on one end for pencils and blue on the other for ink, a ruler with inches on one side and centimetres on the other, a bundle looseleaf paper, a few three-ring binders and multi-coloured duotangs, and a few other things. Not so anymore. By the time we finished buying everything they needed and then everything they wanted, it was SRO in the cart for the twins. I swear, if we had another kid, they would have all been walking.

We took a break for a rather late lunch in the food court then finished the rest of our shopping. Before we loaded our purchases and ourselves into the van, we also bought some chilled plastic bottles of pop and a variety of snack cakes and drove off to our favourite bicycle path along the creek just out of the city. We took a slow, leisurely ride along the path, smelling the clean air and enjoying the nature around us. I took the lead. Lindsay rode her bike directly behind me. Justin and Jeremy followed her in a line and Brad brought up the rear of our little convoy. He carried the snacks in a canvas shopping bag which he'd strung over his handlebars.

We stopped at a quiet spot just off the path where the creek ran wide and moderately deep and sat on the grassy bank to enjoy our afternoon snack and dessert. Afterwards, the twins and Brad pulled off their shoes, socks, and shirts and went wading in the chill water in search of crayfish and minnows and any other creatures of the deep which might be lurking there. Lindsay and I stayed happily on shore and watched them. She sat between my legs and leaned her back against my chest, her arms resting on my upper legs. I wrapped my arms around her and cuddled her lightly.

"Daddy," she said suddenly, "will you take Daniel and. . ." she paused, thinking and remembering the rule before continuing, ". . . Daniel and me to the new Pirates movie?"

"The one with Johnny Depp?" I asked.

"Mm-hmm," she replied.

"Justin and Jeremy have been telling me they want to see it but I was going to wait for the DVD to come out."

"It's at the Cineplex at the mall now."

"I sure can, Sweetheart," I said. "How about next weekend? It's your last weekend before school starts."

She tilted her head back and looked at me upside down. "Do we have to sit with you or can we sit by ourselves?"

"No, Sweetheart," I smiled. "You and Daniel can sit as far away from us as you want. Just no kissing."

Lindsay gave me a shy, upside-down grin. "Daddy!" she laughed.

"I'll even buy you a big bucket of popcorn so you can share it. How's that?"

"I love you, Daddy," she said sweetly.

"I love you, Sweetheart," I told her, and I bent my head down to give her an upside-down kiss.

Lindsay called Daniel that night got permission from his parents to go with us for a matinée show on Labour Day Weekend. She looked delightfully chuffed.

* * * * *

Brad and I had our first and last appointment with my psychiatrist late Monday afternoon. Brian sat quietly and listened to our stories. When we finished, he told us, "You seem to have figured out the problem and found your own solutions. There really isn't much more I can do. However, I can put you in touch with a marriage counsellor in this building who specialises in gay marriages and relationships. There's always been a market for it and there's an even bigger market now since Bill C-38 passed."

We accepted Brian's offer of the name of the counsellor and I phoned her from work on Tuesday morning to set up our first appointment. I won't bore you with the details but, over the next few months, Katherine's expertise was instrumental in helping us to define and understand our roles in our marriage and to deal with the new and unfamiliar life we were facing together. Most of all, though, she taught us that we could remain individuals in our relationship whilst still being each other's equal.

Katherine taught us how to use our individual strengths to share in the care of the family and to rely upon the other to make up for our weaknesses. Not only did it bring us closer together as a couple, but it made our entire family much stronger and the children benefitted greatly by it.

* * * * *

Our general contractor, Grant, showed up at our property on Wednesday and Thursday with a surveyor. We'd already given him a copy of the new plans done up by the architect on Saturday and they began laying out marker posts and lines for the footings and foundations. The new house was shaped more like a square whereas the old house had been a rectangular bungalow. With most of the space beneath the new house being crawlspace, there would be a lot of backfilling to do. Some of it would come from the excavation which would be required to widen the hole, but most of it would come from clean fill from other excavations. What better way to get rid of soil excavated from a newly-dug basement somewhere in the city than to dump it into a hole that needed to be filled? With Grant's connections and notoriety around the city, there was little concern that he wouldn't be able to find enough dirt to fill our hole. All we would have to pay is haulage. On Thursday and Friday, Grant was there not only with the surveyor, but with a backhoe as well. The excavation on our new house began.

Our dear friend David had his own agenda and showed up at the property bright and early every day that week. He didn't do anything, really, except to suck up to Grant, but he was always there.

"I'm not taking the chance that I might miss the contractor if he shows up onsite so I can prove to him how much he needs to sponsor a guy like me."

It was a busy week and there were a number of happenings and surprises, but none were as surprising as the telephone call I received at work early Thursday afternoon shortly after lunch.

"Good afternoon," I said into the receiver. "Ted de Villiers speaking."

"Hello, Mr. de Villiers," came a vaguely familiar voice that I felt I should recognise. "This is Sam."

The name, too, was familiar but it didn't help my memory at all. "Sorry," I replied. "Do I know you?"

"You came to see my apartment a few weeks ago," he said. "You were going to call me back."

It all came back to me then. I'd forgot about our arrangement and the apartment Sam promised to hold for us. I sat upright in my chair. "Oh, right. I'm sorry. Things got a bit hectic around here these past few weeks and I totally forgot about the apartment. I'm sorry."

"Not to worry," he said, then asked, "Nothing serious, I hope?"

"No," I lied. "Nothing serious." If you can call the near-collapse of my marriage and what was almost the complete breakdown of my entire family ‘nothing serious'. "What can I do for you?"

"Well," Sam continued cheerfully, "I was wondering if you'd found another apartment yet?"

"Like I said, things came up and we haven't really had much of a chance to even look, but ‘no', we haven't found an apartment yet. Is your apartment still available?"

"Well, yes," Sam said, "but I have another option that you might want to consider."

He began telling me about his idea and, when his description drew to a close, my first thought was, "You're kidding, right?" I didn't say it out loud, though.

Sam must have read my mind. He summed up his explanation with, "Now, you're probably thinking that it's a stupid idea, but I promise you that I've lived in it myself and I can assure you that it's a lot better than it sounds. At least come and look at it before you make a decision. You might be pleasantly surprised, and the price certainly is right."

Which brings us back to where we began. We left home right after supper that night. The kids came with us. The boys loved it even before we went inside to look at it. Lindsay seemed ambivalent about it but didn't seem opposed to the idea of living there for a few months. Brad didn't seem to care as long as he was with me and the kids. It seems that I was the only one who could foresee the difficulties and problems which might arise.

I had to admit, though, that the place had its conveniences and merits, but it also had its faults. Lots of faults. And it had one huge fault that we simply couldn't dismiss. I decided that, if I could no longer be the voice of authority, I could at least be the voice of reason.

"Okay, but what if Grant can't get us in the house by Christmas? Do you really want to spend the whole winter here?"

"Grant said he'd have the house ready for us and I believe him."

"But what if he can't, Brad?"

Brad shrugged his shoulders. "If he can't, he can't. Besides, we should know by November if the house will be ready for Christmas, and they're calling for a mild winter. We can always make other arrangements if this doesn't work out."

"But Gee-sus, Murphy, Brad," I said, "it's a. . ."

To Be Continued
 
Another great chapter, as always, Neil. Thanks for a great read. Waiting for the next chapter and hope it wont be too long.
H&K Vic
 
Thanks Neil!! I hope this is not the beginning of another fight!!
It seems that a test of the counselling they received is coming right up!! I pray they will work things out amicably & not disrupt the family again.
Another cliffie???
Harry
 
It's a ****** **** (or a ******* if your in the uk)

Great Idea Neil. Every family should have one.x..|
 
WATCHING BRAD
Part 202​

"But Gee-sus, Murphy, Brad," I said, "it's a. . ." I looked around the small bedroom in which we were standing. It was big enough for a queen-sized bed with a small wardrobe on the left side and a night table on the right, but it didn't leave much room for dancing. "It's a bloody RV!"

"Yeah," Brad stated matter-of-factly, "but it's a Winnebago."

As if that made a difference.

"Okay," I admitted, "it's an expensive RV with emphasis on ‘recreational'. Brad, this isn't a home! It's a bloody camper!"

"Anywhere we live is home, Pops."

"Are you pulling my leg or are you seriously considering this?"

"I'm serious, Ted," Brad replied and I could see in his face that he was. "Sure, it's small, but I don't think anything could be more perfect than this for a few months. You heard Sam. His brother and Paul's family live in it all summer long."

"That's summer, Brad. What about winter? Do I have to remind you of the four seasons we get up here? Winter, winter, summer, and winter. And one of those winters will be here in a few months."

Brad laughed. "It's not that bad, Pops. Besides, like I said before, they're calling for a mild winter and Sam told us Paul had the Winnebago completely custom insulated. Besides, if it gets too cold in here, we can always go into Mom and Dad's house and sleep on the floor."

I looked around the bedroom once more and imagined the rest of the motor home in my head. Entry was on the passenger side of the vehicle directly behind the passenger door. Inside the door, just to the right of the stairwell, an arched opening led into the cab of the van. It could be closed off entirely with two sliding doors. An open, overhead storage compartment cum bedroom was built over the cab with a short wooden railing set into place along the edge to keep sleepers from tumbling out of bed. It was accessible by a small ladder which could be pulled out from the platform and swung down to lock into place on the floor. That's the bed which the twins had claimed despite my fears that they would wake up in the wee hours of the morning to go for a pee and go for a little tumble.

Against the wall opposite the doorway, beneath a thermal window with a pull-down blind, was a surprisingly comfortable sofa which pulled out into a double bed. That's where Lindsay would sleep. and I could only hope one of the twins didn't land on her if and when they took their early morning tumble. To the left of the sofa was the dinette. Two cushioned benches sat on either side of the table. That entire section, the dinette and sofa, slid out mechanically at the push of a button and added almost fifteen square metres of living space to the motor home.

Directly to the left of the entry door was the kitchenette. A sink was set into the counter near the door and the counter space stretched toward the back of the Winnebago between the sink and the propane stove and propane refrigerator. Cupboards were attached to the wall above the counter and matching cupboards and drawers were installed beneath the counter, stove, and fridge. Another window was set into the wall above the sink and counter.

A doorway in the middle of the back wall between the refrigerator and the dinette led into the bathroom area and the main bedroom where Brad and I now stood. The bathroom door, when opened, actually closed off the bathroom from the front of the camper with the toilet and sink on one side and a shower on the other. Another accordion door could be pulled to close off the bedroom from the bathroom.

At about ten metres in length and three unextended metres in width, there was just over twenty-five square metres of living space. The stretched-out version gave us forty square metres. Not much room for a family of five. Still. . . .

"I know it's small, Ted," Brad continued softly as if he'd read my mind, "and I'm not saying it's a good idea, but I can't think of a better one right now, especially with the kids starting school next Tuesday. It's small, but it's comfortable and we could park it right in Dad's front yard. We couldn't get much closer to home than that."

I stared at Brad for what seemed like a long time, then stepped to the door and opened it. I stood there and looked toward the front of the Winnebago camper. In the overhead compartment above the driver's cab, Justin and Jeremy were lying on their backs in their bed, their hands cupped behind their heads and their knees bent. Their feet were planted flat against the mattress and they chatted quietly and giggled and tittered lightly. Lindsay was busy pulling open drawers and cupboards and discovering what treasures they contained.

Brad stepped behind me, his hand coming to rest on my shoulder. "It's your decision, Ted," he said in a husky whisper, "but I'll go along with whatever you decide."

I stood there for another few moments, listening to our boys giggling and watching Lindsay trying to figure out what she would do with a lemon zester she'd found, and then I shook my head. "No, Brad. It's our decision. Not just mine." I turned to face him. "We'll talk with the kids first, then we'll talk with our parents. And then you and I will discuss it and make a final decision together. Okay?"

A smile curled Brad's lips and his hands came around my neck and my hands went to his waist. "I love you, Pops," he said with an extremely sexy whisper which sent blood rushing into my nether regions.

"I love you, too, Tiger." My voice came out as something of a groan as Brad pressed his crotch against mine. It was a warm day and it became even warmer.

And then he pulled me to him and we kissed.

* * * * *

The twins were all for living in the RV, of course. They sat on our laps as we sat on the sofa bed in the RV. Lindsay sat between us.

"We like being up high, Daddy." Justin's happy voice was full of unbridled excitement and I doubt if the smile on his face could have been erased with twenty-grit sandpaper.

Jeremy was equally excited and his grin just as big. "We're bigger than you, Daddy Brad!"

I suspect they would have been happy living under the tarpaulin in the Hayes' backyard as long as they were with me and Brad.

"What about you, Sweetheart?" I asked as I put my left arm around her shoulders and pulled her closer to me.

She glanced quickly around the room before looking up at me and answering, "I like it, Daddy, but I don't think I want to live here."

I squeezed her shoulder lightly in encouragement. This would have to be a unanimous decision. "It wouldn't be for long, Sweetheart," I told her gently. "Only for a few months until our new house gets built and we can move in."

"But it's so far away from school," she said. "And my friends."

"Oh, Sweetheart," I explained quickly. "We won't be living here. We'll talk to your Grandma and Grandpa Hayes and see if we can park there in the front yard. It will almost be like living right at home until the house is finished. If we do that, do you think you'd be happy living and sleeping in the camper?"

She looked down at the floor. For the first time in a long time, she tapped her bottom lip with her index finger and I knew she was doing some serious thinking. We waited patiently and I counted the taps on her lower lip. There were eleven of them.

Finally, she looked up at the overhead compartment which the twins had claimed as their bedroom and then at me again. She said, "If J and J snore too much, can I go sleep in Grandma's house?"

I grinned at her and hugged her even closer. "Sure you can, Sweetheart."

I already knew Brad's vote, which meant that I had been outvoted four to one. My vote ultimately made it unanimous. As long as we could work through the doubts and practicalities.

We found Sam waiting for us outside, joined now by his brother, Paul, who had been absent when we arrived. Sam introduced us to him and handshakes of greeting were shared all around. There was no doubting the family resemblance but I guessed that Paul was the elder brother.

"Sam told me about the fire," Paul said sympathetically as he shook my hand. His grip was strong yet gentle. "I'm very sorry. I can't even imagine going through anything like that."

"Thank you," I returned. "It's not something I want to go through again."

He released my hand and, with a glance, brought our attention back to the Winnebago. "So, what did you think of Winnie? Good enough for your needs?"

"Well, the kids seem to like it, but I'm a bit concerned that it might not be warm enough in winter."

"Oh, she's warm enough," Paul assured me. "Polyurethane foam insulation, and all the windows in the living quarters are double-paned thermals. She has a thirty thousand BTU propane furnace. Trust me. She'll keep you toasty enough."

I wanted to believe him, but I was still a bit skeptical. It was, after all, just a motor home, Winnebago not withstanding.

"It's warm enough, Ted," Sam interjected as if he saw the skepticism on my face. "The wife and I went camping in the Yukon with Paul and his wife in November a few tears back. There was only one night when we needed extra blankets and that's when it dropped to twenty below. Of course, you want to make sure you keep the propane tanks topped up. It would be a bu. . ." He stopped and looked at the kids, correcting himself before he said the word I knew he was going to say. "It would be a pain to run out in the middle of the night with an empty reserve tank."

He seemed sincere and I felt that he wasn't lying to me. He seemed to be genuine in his desire to help us out.

"What about the holding tank? Is it insulated, too?"

"Oh, yes," Paul replied. "And there's a built-in heater that will thaw them out in case they freeze."

"Them?" Brad asked quizzically.

"Grey and black," Paul said and, when seeing the look of confusion on Brad's face, added, "Grey is for grey water - sinks and the shower. Black is for the toilet. Depending on how much you use them, you might have to dump them every few weeks or so. The toilet is low-volume flush, but I wouldn't recommend flushing it after every pee. Of course, if you don't mind driving to the Durham Water Treatment plant to dump the tanks every few days, then you can flush all you want. I'll give you directions to it."

"I know where it is," I told him. I didn't really know precisely where it was, but I had a pretty good idea. It wouldn't be that hard to find it on my own. "How much is the dumping fee?"

"Free," Paul replied. "But you can only dump during normal working hours. There's no dumping in the off hours."

"That shouldn't be a problem," I told him.

I asked a number of other questions until I was satisfied that, despite being a bit cramped, it would be safe and warm enough for the kids and wouldn't be much worse than living in a small apartment. On the bright side, we wouldn't even have to move. The home would come to us.

"Well," I said finally, "is it okay with you if we think about it overnight before we decide?"

"Take all the time you need," Paul replied with a pleasant grin. "Winnie isn't going anywhere. She's done her duty for us this year. She'll be right here if and when you decide she can help you out."

It was only a matter of formality getting permission from John and Bernice to use their front yard as a parking lot for a few months. We knew they'd let us. We stopped there on the way home and stayed only long enough for us to have a homemade butter-pecan tart and a glass of milk. Brad and I drank coffee. Bernice, without saying as much, seemed particularly pleased that we might be moving back sooner than later. She missed baking for the children and was anxious for them to visit whenever they wanted again.

Later, back home, when the kids were bathed and tucked into bed, Brad and I sat with Mom and Dad, discussing the Winnebago and having evening tea and coffee. Dad brought up something which I hadn't even considered - the water supply. Odd that I had thought about disposing of the water but hadn't even thought about how to get it into the RV in the first place. I seem to recall Paul mentioning a white water storage tank with a direct-line hookup.

"I can install a temporary supply line," Dad said, "from John's house to the caravan."

"Do we have to bury it?" I asked.

"No," Dad said, shaking his head.

"Won't it freeze if the temperature drops below zero?" I asked.

Again, Dad shook his head ‘no'. "I will wrap it with a low-voltage heater sock and a foam insulation tube which is very similar to your pool noodles. Between the two of them, the pipe will not freeze."

"Please be very certain about this, Teddy," Mom said. "It won't be easy all of you living in a caravan, no matter how short the interval."

"People do it all the time, Mom," I told her. "I've seen it lots of times on those reno shows on television. If they can do it, why can't we?"

"In many of those cases," Mom said, "those people had little choice."

"Well, our choices are getting less and less every day."

"But you still have choices, Dear. Remember that."

"I know, Mom, but the kids like the idea of living in the RV."

"It is a novelty for them," Dad said bluntly. "The novelty may wear off rather swiftly and you may regret your decision when you have to start looking for other accommodation."

"If it does," I told him, "we'll deal with it when it happens. At the moment, though, it would be so convenient for us, especially when we're working on the house at night. The kids would be right there with Bernice and we would be right there, too, in case we're needed."

"And we wouldn't have to drive anywhere after we're finished at the house," Brad added. "We just walk across the lawn and we're home."

"Don't worry, Dad," I continued. "We're not going to make any harsh decisions. Brad and I will talk about it over the next day or so before we decide."

"Indeed," Dad nodded. "Then I shall bring home the necessary supplies tomorrow in the event that you decide to engage the caravan."

Brad and I discussed it that Thursday night before going to sleep, then again the next evening. We had more or less made our decision but, to be certain, we arranged another viewing of both the RV and the apartment with Sam and Paul for Saturday morning. We took the kids to see both. The boys were still more keen on living in the camper and Lindsay was concerned about living in the apartment and being so far away from the school and her friends. She said she'd rather live in the camper than have to be driven too and from school each day.

Over lunch, we all made the decision. We decided to go with Winnie. We made arrangements with Paul and gave him the address, then went to Brad's parents to wait. Paul arrived about an hour or so later after having stopped off to refill the propane tanks for us. He expertly parked the Winnebago on the Hayes' front lawn and needed only a single piece of two-by-six the driver's front wheel to level the vehicle.

Brad decided to take charge of changing and filling the propane tanks and dumping the holding tanks and paid close attention, with Jeremy watching with equal fascination and interest, as Paul went through the procedures step-by-step. The instructions were posted there, both textual and pictorial, so all Brad really needed to do was to understand them.

I took charge of writing the rent cheque which, I might add, was performed with exquisite finesse. I didn't mind writing it, though. My insurance company would write me a cheque to replace it.

The twins accompanied Brad and I on a final walk through the camper with Paul. Lindsay stayed inside the house with her grandparents. Paul's best piece of advice for us? "If it's yellow, let it mellow. If it's brown, flush it down."

It was fun explaining that one to the kids. The twins thought it was enormously funny and giggled and clapped their hands in delight.

Sunday morning, Dad and Mom followed us into the city so Dad could hook up the plumbing. Lindsay stayed inside with her grandmothers whilst John and Brad helped Dad with the piping and insulation. They also hooked up the heavy-duty extension cord supplied with Winnie to connect her up to the grid - i.e. an electrical socket in John's single-car garage. I and the twins observed from the sidelines.

After cranking up the propane refrigerator to begin cooling off, Brad and I left Lindsay with her grandparents and took the twins with us as we went grocery shopping. We got only the essentials for the small refrigerator but we stocked up on enough canned and packaged goods and cereals and snacks and such to fill the cupboards quite adequately.

By the time we finished unpacking the groceries and putting them away in Winnie, Mom and Bernice had an evening meal ready for everyone. We had something of a picnic in the livingroom with our parents sitting on the sofa and chairs whilst the rest of us parked ourselves on a blanket spread out on the carpet.

We slept our last night at Mom and Dad's place on Sunday night and spent much of Labour Day packing the belongings we would take with us to our new home and boxing up the belongings which would remain behind until our new house was built.

That night, after bathing the kids in the main house, we sat together on the sofa in Winnie with the twins in our laps and Lindsay sitting between us. We munched microwave popcorn from a large, plastic bowl set atop Lindsay's lap and watched television. At eight o'clock, Brad made up the beds for the twins as Justin and Jeremy stood at the bottom of the ladder and waited impatiently. They were excited. Of that there was no doubt. Only a few days earlier, they had been anxious and excited about their first day of school. Now they were anxious and excited about sleeping in their new bed for the first time. I was hoping the excitement of both events wouldn't keep them awake all night long.

Lindsay was in bed by nine o'clock, but the twins were still awake and whispering loudly between themselves despite our best efforts to get them to settle down. Most of the lights were turned out and Brad and I sat in the booth facing the kids and cuddled each other in silence as we waited for sleep to overtake them. It seemed to take forever, but it was a pleasant forever spent holding Brad close and feeling him and smelling him so close to me.

By ten-thirty, all three kids were asleep and Brad and I adjourned to our own bedroom. Tomorrow would be a big day for us all, but especially for the boys. It would be their first ever day of school.

I'm pretty sure Brad didn't get much sleep that night.

I know I didn't.

To Be Continued
 
I've been reading this story from very early on and the characters have come to be very real to me. In fact, I was watching an episode of one of my favorite shows on Animal Planet the other night. There is a new version of Animal Cops from South Africa. While they were explaining about the treatment for the animals that had been abused, they was a woman named de Villiers who is, I think, a behavior specialist. I found myself thinking, "I wonder if she is related to Ted's family."

Not only that, I've noticed that many of the people interviewed and such speak what I can only assume is Aafrikans. It helps make the story that much more believable.

Thanks Neil for making Ted, Brad and their families so real. You truly are THE MASTER.

Scott
 
Thanks again, Neil. I'm glad that Brad and Ted seem to be getting together now for the family decisions. Keep writing. Looking forward to the next chapter.
H&K
Vic
 
Thank you Neil, another great chapter.
There will come a time when the Winnie will feel too cramped .... thank goodness the kids, & Ted & Brad, can go to Gandma's house for some space!!
Look forward to the boys first day at school.
Hugs
Harry
 
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