Wendy Darling

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Wendy Darling Page 1

by Colleen Oakes




  WENDY DARLING

  Copyright © 2015 Colleen Oakes

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.

  Published by SparkPress, a BookSparks imprint,

  A division of SparkPoint Studio, LLC

  Tempe, Arizona, USA, 85281

  www.gosparkpress.com

  Published 2015

  Printed in the United States of America

  ISBN: 978-1-940716-95-4 (pbk)

  ISBN: 978-1-940716-94-7 (e-bk)

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2015940086

  Cover design © Julie Metz, Ltd./metzdesign.com

  Author photo © Colleen Oakes

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  For Maine, who is the sun and the moon and everything in between.

  “Can anything harm us, Mother, after the night-lights are lit?”

  “Nothing, precious,” she said. “They are the eyes a mother leaves behind to guard her children.”

  She went from bed to bed, and little Michael threw his arms around her. “Mother,” he cried, “I love you!” They were the last words she was to hear from him for a long time.

  —Peter Pan by J. M. Barrie

  PROLOGUE

  IT WAS COMING.

  They had called it, and now, it came. They could feel it in the thrumming quarter seconds that reverberated through the tips of their wings and down their bodies, each second playing out like a lifetime in their minds. The wind had changed as it wrapped around them; there was a funnel structure now in the way the breeze blew their wispy hair. Dust streamed down from the tips of their wings, and they could feel it leaving their veins, the power and the love, a constant pouring in and back out, power and love, power and love, more with each tiny breath.

  The ground beneath their feet shimmered, its crystalline properties shaming the diamonds the humans needlessly worshipped. Their toes were covered in the dust as they raised their arms and voices together, their many bodies pulsing and breathing as one mind as they lifted their tired sister up in song. They sang of her body cradled forever in the stars, that her wings would rest after her long journey into the great night sky. She rose above them, the years trailing from her fingertips like water off a leaf, her body spiraling and convulsing at the beauty of their pitch. Oaks and bluebells bowed their heads to the melody, and even the sky seemed to curl in on itself, so great was their song.

  It was coming, they could feel it, could feel its gentle breath, its arrival like the inky darkness that comes before slumber. The song swept through the trees, causing the souls in Neverland to let peaceful smiles drape across their faces, unsure of why, but grateful for this unexpected pinprick of contentment, their ears turning to hear this melodic song that came from their own hearts, yet from somewhere else as well. Their voices carved out the lullaby as she rose up in front of them, a life so lived, a surrender so sweet.

  So entranced were they in their song that they did not hear the soft crunch of twigs underfoot, nor did they see the eyes that watched from the trees. They did not sense the ears that turned curiously toward their heavenly dirge.

  CHAPTER ONE

  London, August 1911

  “SEE THAT STAR RIGHT THERE? Second star to the right.”

  Wendy Darling squinted her light hazel eyes, straining to see the star, the lavender flecks of her irises illuminated by the bright moon.

  “Papa, I still don’t see it.”

  Mr. Darling was practically leaning out of Wendy’s bedroom window now, his red robe flapping around his worn flannel pajamas in the cold London air. He sighed exasperatedly.

  “Here. Here, Wendy, sit here. You’re not looking right. You’re just not looking in the correct manner.” He pulled his daughter close to his side, taking her pale hand and curling it within his weathered own, pointing it to the sky. “If you squint, if you really squint, you can see it there, just over Cygnus, straight over from Lyra.”

  Wendy placed her hands on the window frame and leaned out as far as she dared, her eyes trained on the dotted stars rising out above Big Ben, just barely visible in the distance. The dark streets of London lay out before her, bedroom lights glimmering in the shadows, the streetlights rising out of a hazy evening like the masts of ships.

  “Careful . . .” her father muttered, his eyes trained on his only daughter, who had always leaned a little too far out her bedroom window. “Careful, child.”

  Wendy closed her eyes, feeling the bitter evening air ripple across her lips and chin, making its way through her thin nightgown.

  “We wouldn’t want your mother to . . .”

  “WENDY MOIRA ANGELA DARLING!” A shrill shriek filled the room, and Wendy cringed, her hands clenching. Her mother tended to enter a room in hysterics, and it seemed the older Wendy became, the more it rattled her. Her mother barreled through the nursery like a storm, picking up clothing as she walked, kicking drawers shut, throwing toys into bins, and pulling curtains. “Get away from that window right now! You’ll catch your death!”

  Sadly, Wendy pulled herself back from the sill, her father rubbing his head anxiously, as he always did when her mother was near.

  “George Darling, how dare you let our daughter run wild, hanging from windows?”

  “She was hardly hanging, Mary. We were simply looking for . . .”

  “I know, the star. No one minds it, George. It’s simply a figment of your imagination.” She pushed past her husband and pulled the window shut with a huff, her ample chest bouncing with the effort. Once the window was shut, she straightened the beds before turning back to her daughter and husband. Wendy curled to the floor with disappointment and folded her arms.

  “He was just showing me, Mother. I wasn’t leaning over.”

  George, always the peacemaker, reached for his wife, who always seemed to be in a tizzy. “Mary, we were just looking. Poor Mary, always working. My darling, I love you. Have you taken anything for your nerves today?”

  Mary Darling looked at her husband for a long time before pressing her pillowy body against his. Even though Wendy’s father was a bit aloof and her mother a bit of a nag, the love shared between them had always felt sincere, and Wendy couldn’t help but smile as they wrapped their arms around each other. Her father ran his hands through her mother’s hair. Aside from the lustrous light brown and honeyed locks that fell on either side of her face, there was nothing terribly beautiful about Mary Darling . . . except for the fact that she had very beautiful children. Wendy considered this now as she stared up at her mother.

  “Mother, I wasn’t leaning. I was looking. And I believe in Papa’s star. He said he saw it last year as well.”

  “Yes, yes, we all saw it the year before.”

  Her mother was lying, and Wendy had a sneaking feeling that perhaps as she grew older, lying about her father’s star would become harder. But she had seen it last year—hadn’t she? Tucked against her husband, Mary Darling continued warning him about the dangers of windows. Wendy looked over at him as her mother railed on, seeing his shaking hands and the slight quiver in his step. Feeling protective, Wendy pushed herself off the floor and wrapped her arms around her mother’s waist, hoping to be a distraction.

  “Mother, I’m sorry I was leaning out the window. You were right; I was leaning out too far.” Mary Darling dropped her lips to her daughter’s head, and Wendy smelled the lye and lemon soap on her mother’s skin.

  “Thank you, my dear. I’m glad someone has some semblance of sense in this room.” With a hard look at her husband, Mary kissed Wendy’s head again before
retreating. “I’ll have Liza put on the tea downstairs, and she’ll be up in a few minutes. It’s time for bed, Wendy. The boys will be up in a moment, and your father has work to do tonight. He doesn’t have time to play.” She gave George the look, clarifying, “Work that doesn’t have to do with stars.”

  Wendy resisted the strong urge to stick her tongue out at her mother, and she gave a submissive nod, always the good daughter. “And you. You are sixteen years old. You should be focusing on your studies and etiquette so that we may find you an appropriate match when the time comes. Your head should be in your books, not the stars.”

  With that, Wendy’s mother stomped out of the bedroom, and they could hear her steps echo down the stairs to the kitchen below. Wendy’s hazel eyes found her father’s blue ones, already sparkling with mischief.

  “We really shouldn’t . . .”

  “No, we shouldn’t.”

  Without another word, they both scampered back to the window, flinging open the wide panels, each pane ribbed with decorative iron swirls. This time Wendy was more mindful of the steep drop down to their small garden below, a drop that could easily kill a child, impaling her on the fence posts encircling the yard. Wendy shook her head as a blush rose up her cheeks. What a terrible thought! Her father took her hand and pointed it back at the dark sky.

  “Okay, Wendy. Now really look. There’s Cygnus. Look over half an inch, and then an inch upward and then again to the right. You see the first star and then . . .”

  “I SEE IT, PAPA!” Her mother’s words completely forgotten, Wendy was leaning out the window again, her father loosely holding onto the ribbons around her waist. “I SEE IT!” Past her trembling finger, she could see something. A glimmer, a moving shadow of light. It winked at her and then was gone, a sleight of the magician’s hand. She had seen it, hadn’t she? There was certainly something in the void there, in that dark corner where no stars lingered night after night. It was the same thing that she had seen last year, and she had spent a year wondering if she had actually seen it. Now it was gone again.

  “But . . . how? I saw it. I know I did . . .”

  George Darling stroked his long chin. “I’m not sure, but I’ve documented it once every year for the past three years, as long as I’ve been studying it. This star, Wendy, it reveals itself for only a few days every year, and never for very long. The clouds have to be just right. It can’t be explained in any of the astrological books I’ve read, or any of the maps I’ve consulted. I’m preparing a paper for Reid, my colleague at Oxford.” He sighed and rubbed his head. “Well, at least I should begin preparing it. In any case, it’s an astrological phenomenon, and I am determined to stake my scientific career on it.”

  “But what about the firm?” she asked quizzically. Her father wasn’t a scientist, much to his disappointment. He was an accountant at the bustling law practice down the street. A good job, as her mother was constantly reminding him. George Darling gazed sadly out at the rooftops of their London neighborhood.

  “Yes. The firm. That is right. The firm matters.” He said it in such a way that Wendy was sure that the firm didn’t matter one bit. She looked at the ground shyly, making small taps with her tiny black slippers on the window ledge.

  “How quickly did John see it?”

  She hoped her father would say that John didn’t, that it was something he only shared with her—his eldest daughter, their relationship so special—but of course that wasn’t the case.

  “Oh yes, so quickly! John saw it early this morning, before you got up, before the sun came up. He actually didn’t need my help to find it!”

  A familiar disappointment rose in her chest. John, always at her father’s heels; John, so prized, so brazenly intelligent, her father’s eyes lighting up at the very sound of his name.

  “Say, where is John?”

  “He’s giving Michael a bath. It was his turn.”

  “Hmm . . .” Her father stepped back, tucking his flannel shirt into his pajama pants. “Well, I should find your mother. She’s probably lying in bed right this moment having nightmares about children falling out nursery windows.”

  Wendy stepped back into the nursery, pulling the windows closed. “Thanks for showing me, Papa.”

  He gave Wendy an absentminded smile. “Of course, my dear!

  When John comes in, will you send him to my study? I’m going to have him help me with some star charting.”

  By “study,” her father meant the cluttered extra bedroom stuffed with navigation charts and star illustrations, with socks drying and mobiles of the planets circling overhead, with science textbooks overturned, their ripped-out pages dripping with scribbled notes.

  “Yes, Papa.”

  George Darling turned and patted Wendy’s head, tucking a strand of her hair behind her ear.

  “Night then, Wendy bird.”

  He left the nursery door cracked open a few inches, so the light from the hallway could filter through the bedroom, illuminating her brothers’ double beds, stripped down to the blue sheets and thick wool blankets. Their beds were always messy, despite the fact that Liza made them each morning. Wendy’s bed, moved across the room last year by her annoyed father, sat closest to the window. Now she could watch the stars from her bed, see them whirling in the bright night sky. She could watch the snow fall down in endless whorls, or see the occasional blowing autumn leaf dance across the frame. In the winter it had proved to be bitterly cold, and she found herself often climbing into bed with Michael, snuggling against his warm, round body, pushing aside his teddy bear, Giles, and tucking her freezing feet under his warm blankets. His bed always smelled like little boy—like dirt and cookies and worms—but Wendy never slept as soundly as she did when he was tucked securely under her chin, his breath on her neck, her baby brother. Before John woke every morning, she would try to sneak back into her own bed, not wanting to see his judgmental face as she headed across the room.

  “Scared, Wendy?”

  “No. Just cold.”

  “Of course.”

  Not that his snide comments would ever make her pull her bed away from the window. That would be taking the stars from her, and that she could not abide. Also, it wasn’t just the stars that she could see from her window. It was a tiny shop, down the street, and the bedroom that she knew sat in the attic of that building . . . Looking over her shoulder, seeing no one, she started to reach under her bed for the letter that she had read four times already today; but figured once more couldn’t hurt. Her hands curled around the paper, folded so gently, the thin papyrus crumpling under her fingers. She hoped that it would still smell like him as she brought it up to her nose . . .

  “OWW!” Now there were little boy knees in her stomach, on her chest, feet in her face, a tumble of blond hair.

  “Michael! Get off me!”

  Michael giggled and jumped on her again, his head buried in her armpit, his chubby legs kicking everywhere, destroying her neatly made bed.

  “Michael, I mean it!” With a big laugh, he rolled off Wendy, but not before sticking a foot into her face.

  “Smell! All clean!”

  “Michael,” she said calmly, pushing his foot away. “No, thank you. I would not like to smell your feet right now or anytime, even if you have just had a bath.”

  Michael gazed up at her before sticking his foot out again, wiggling his pudgy toes around. His tousled, wet blond hair hung over his eyebrows, and his mischievous blue eyes gazed up at her with adoration that bordered on worship. “Kiss them!”

  “No.”

  “Please, Wendy?” She looked at his chubby cheeks, always reddened and raw, and his full pouty lips, and she gave a sigh of surrender before planting one kiss on the sole of his foot.

  “There. No more.” That seemed to be enough for the five-year-old.

  “Whatcha looking at? What is that letter?”

  Wendy felt her face burning and tucked the envelope back underneath her bed. “It’s nothing, Michael. It’s for grown-ups.�


  Michael turned his head. “But you’re not a grown-up.”

  The nursery door bounced open, and John stalked into the room, wearing, as he always did, his long cotton nightshirt and sensible brown slippers, looking much older than his fourteen years. His messy straight brown hair was tousled on his head, his heavy eyebrows hiding hazel eyes. From behind his perfectly round spectacles, he peered at Wendy with that infuriating, studious look before grabbing a book down from the bookshelf and curling himself into the rocking chair.

  “It’s from Booth. It’s probably a misguided declaration of love.”

  “John!” Wendy felt the blush rise to her cheeks. “You don’t know what you are talking about.”

  Michael was standing beside her bed now. “Booth? Booth sent you a letter?” He narrowed his eyes. “Booth?”

  John pulled his father’s top hat from the rocking chair arm and placed it cockeyed on his head. “Yes. Booth is in love with Wendy, the fool.” He continued reading as if nothing had happened. Wendy felt her heart go cold, and her skin suddenly seemed too tight.

  “You don’t . . . you shouldn’t talk about that.”

  John raised an eyebrow at her. “Don’t worry, I won’t tell Mother. You know how women can be. Hysterical.”

  “John, you don’t know anything.”

  A wide grin stretched across his thin face, a lock of dark brown hair falling out of the hat and onto his forehead. “I know that you like to meet at the bookshop. I know that you are gone for several hours in that attic before anyone comes looking for you. And I know you have lots of books that you pretend to read, so that you have an excuse to go there, when you really only read about two novels a week, though usually they’re quite sizeable.”

  Wendy stood up to face John. “You don’t know anything about Booth and me. We are just friends. He is my dearest friend.”

  John rubbed his glasses absentmindedly, something their father always did, and Wendy realized with a shock how much he was beginning to look like George Darling. “Your friend who wants to kiss you.”

 

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