Summer of Light

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by W. Dale Cramer




  Summer of Light

  Copyright © 2007

  W. Dale Cramer

  Cover photography by Steve Gardner, Pixel Works Studios, Inc.

  Cover design by studiogearbox.com

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations inwritten permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations inwritten permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations inwritten permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations inwritten permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

  Published by Bethany House Publishers

  11400 Hampshire Avenue South

  Bloomington, Minnesota 55438

  www.bethanyhouse.com

  Bethany House Publishers is a division of

  Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan.

  www.bakerpublishinggroup.com

  Ebook edition created 2012

  eISBN 978-1-4412-0542-1

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

  Praise for W. Dale Cramer’s earlier novels:

  Levi’s Will

  “[A] beautiful and original story. . . . This is an accomplished work.”

  —Booklist (starred)

  Named Best Christian Novel of the Year (2005) by Booklist

  “Cramer’s third novel (after Sutter’s Cross and Bad Ground) expands on his unique talent for creating complex, fallen heroes and examining the complicated relationships between fathers and sons. . . . Highly recommended for all collections. . . .”

  —Library Journal (starred)

  “Will’s long wrestling match with his father’s will echoes into his relationship with his own sons. The generations, in Cramer’s vivid phrase, grate against each other ... If Cramer’s work is anything to go by, at least part of the Christian book industry has finally figured out that a novel is not a theological argument. . . .”

  —Christianity Today

  “. . . powerfully portrays the relationships between fathers and their children, the bitterness of rejection and the redeeming power of friendship, faith and forgiveness.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  Bad Ground

  “Cramer has a delicious way with a pen, whether he’s crafting a lush Southern backdrop or offering glimpses of [his characters’] interior lives. . . . With its notes of hope, humor and redemption, this delightful book exemplifies what good Christian fiction should aspire to.”

  —Publishers Weekly (starred)

  Selected by Publishers Weekly as one of the “Best Books of 2004.”

  “Cramer’s second novel offers a refreshingly inventive perspective with its portrait of the dangerous world of hard-rock mining and the men who do it for a living. The spiritual message is clearly about the healing power of forgiveness, but the well-developed characters never fall into the cookie-cutter stereotype of being ‘too perfect’ as so often happens in Christian fiction. Both male and female readers will identify with Aiden Prine’s physical and spiritual struggles. Highly recommended for its excellent storytelling and believable characters.”

  —Library Journal (starred)

  Library Journal listed Bad Ground in the Top 5 of “Best Genre Fiction 2004,” Christian Fiction category.

  “ Skillful storytelling, beautifully described settings, and original, fully realized characters set this novel of faith by W. Dale Cramer apart from typical coming-of-age stories. . . . This novel confirms Cramer as one of the brightest new voices in faith fiction.”

  —Christianity Today

  “Bad Ground proves that Sutter’s Cross [Cramer’s debut novel] wasn’t just beginner’s luck. Cramer has an uncanny command of dialogue that can put a smile on your lips as easily as a tear in your eye. With a truckload of danger, a few traces of romance, and a heart that reflects God’s own, Bad Ground should appeal to fiction lovers. Highly recommended.”

  —CBA Marketplace

  “ Cramer’s detailed, enthusiastic portrait of rough men following the dangerous trade of hard-rock mining is original, and in the end, the novel is almost a hymn to working men.”

  —Booklist (starred)

  For Ty and Dusty. My boys.

  Contents

  * * *

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Endorsements

  Dedication

  1. The trouble with Dylan

  2. What the day will bring

  3. To be a man

  4. Hap Harrelson

  5. Aubrey’s chainsaw

  6. Caving in

  7. Learning the trade

  8. Of kids and dogs

  9. Christmas

  10. The gift

  11. Fribbles and penguins

  12. The Man With No Hands

  13. Snapshots

  14. Expectations great and small

  15. The road to hell is paved with tourist dollars

  16. Livestock

  17. Spring break

  18. Aubrey’s notion

  19. Self portrait

  20. Still life with children

  21. Banana pudding and pine trees

  22. Toad’s backpack

  23. Ick’s Fish

  24. Rounding out the six

  25. Looking for answers

  26. The thief

  27. When frogs and crawfish fly

  28. Of shoes and ships

  29. The show

  30. The next level

  31. Beal Street Mission

  32. Marco Polo

  33. Goats and dogs and highborn ladies

  34. The mold

  35. Pretend cigars

  36. The heart of the matter

  37. Clothes is clothes

  38. Games

  39. The zip line

  40. Final exam

  41. Ghost crabs

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Other Books by Author

  Back Ads

  1

  * * *

  The trouble with Dylan.

  MICK Brannigan’s daddy only gave him one piece of advice when he was growing up, but he gave it to him on a number of occasions.

  He said, “Son, you need to sit down and shut up.”

  Mick’s father was quiet most of the time—in the same way that a rattlesnake is quiet most of the time—but the genetic pendulum swung the other way a generation later, and Mick didn’t inherit his father’s taciturn nature. Constantly surprised and delighted by the things he heard himself say, he was often baffled by other people’s failure to see the humor in it. The great turning points in Mick’s life almost always hinged on things he wished he hadn’t said, and yet it still came as a surprise to him when something he said got him dragged off the top of a twelve-story building and cost him his job.

  It certainly wasn’t his idea to stay home with the kids. Layne’s church friends, the homeschool crowd, were always pontificating on how the parenting of children was the highest calling and the noblest sacrifice. Mick didn’t buy it for a minute. Those people seemed to live in a world that was very different from the one he lived and worked in every day, though he did manage, at least, to keep his father’s advice and hold his tongue whenever Layne’s church friends pontificated. But he never wanted to be a stay-at-home dad. He loved his job, and he’d sooner have sawed off his left arm than give up being an ironworker to stay home with three kids. In the end he didn’t have a choice. He was forced into it by wha
t seemed like a bizarre string of accidents, though after the dust settled even Mick understood that a string of accidents can only go on so long and can only be so bizarre before reason rules out chance. At some point, the sheer weight of the odds begins to argue for design.

  It started innocently enough. The daycare center called Layne at work and asked her to stop by. Layne always dropped off Dylan in the morning and Mick picked him up in the afternoon, but whenever there was a problem the daycare people didn’t mention it to Mick, no doubt because he showed up every day with rust stains on his hands and battle-scarred work boots on his feet, ragged jeans, hair mashed down in a sweaty ring by a long day under a hard hat. Mick never had much to say to them. He could understand why the ladies at A Small World daycare would rather talk to the polite, smiling, nicely dressed mother who dropped Dylan off every morning than the nasty ironworker who picked him up in the afternoon.

  The first few times Layne sat facing him in the living room with a yellow note in her hand and that look of deep concern on her face, Mick told her flatly that she and Dylan’s teachers were overreacting, that Dylan was perfectly normal. Lots of kids preferred to play alone. Lots of kids refused to eat lunch. Lots of kids, particularly four-year-olds, fell on their faces whenever they tried to jump rope.

  But then came the weird stuff.

  A normal kid might gripe about his shirt irritating him, but he wouldn’t strip down to his tightie-whities in public and leave a trail of clothes all over the playground.

  “Itchy,” Dylan explained. He had a normal vocabulary for his age but never used more words than necessary because he had trouble getting them right. He lisped a little, and his Gs came out like Ds. He was a gifted mimic and could imitate virtually any kind of noise with uncanny accuracy, yet he couldn’t make words come out right.

  For the most part Mick managed to calm Layne’s fears until the evening she blocked his view of Monday Night Football and read him the latest note from Dylan’s teacher.

  “He does what?” He picked up the remote and muted the game.

  “He licks her ankle.” One of her eyebrows went up—a bad sign—and she sat there straightening out the crumpled note against her knee, staring at it. “He does it a lot lately, and she finds it . . . disconcerting.”

  “Which one?”

  “Which ankle? What possible difference—”

  “I meant which teacher,” Mick said.

  “Oh. Mrs. Fensdemacher. Why?”

  He shuddered. “Well, if it was Miss Gabriel I could sort of understand it, but Mrs. Fensdemacher . . . ugh.”

  “He’s four, Mick. Grow up.”

  Two days later she took a day off and carried Dylan to the pediatrician, who asked a few questions and referred him to a child psychologist, who asked more questions and referred him to an occupational therapist, who asked still more questions and then put Dylan through a whole battery of tests. She put lead weights on his arms and legs to see how it made him feel, then laid him in the floor and put a weighted blanket on top of him. She had him dancing, hopping, marching, and literally jumping through hoops. None of the doctors was ready to commit to a diagnosis, though they all felt there was reason for concern. They scheduled more appointments.

  But the day Dylan put Ryan Carden up against the wall and it took three grown women to keep him from strangling the larger boy, the call from A Small World was approaching hysteria. It would be their last warning.

  “Boy needs discipline,” Mick said. It was after supper. He was drying a plate while Layne washed. Dylan was in the tub and the other two were off doing homework. “You and those old ladies at the daycare center are too soft, that’s all. My old man would’ve killed me . . . if he’d been there.”

  Layne let that one slide. She knew Mick didn’t want to be like his father.

  “Seriously, Mick, what are we going to do? The daycare people are trying to be sympathetic, but they see him as a threat now. The very next incident—no matter how minor—he’ll get expelled, and then what do we do?”

  “Find another daycare.” He said this absently, sliding a plate into the cabinet.

  “And then what? Wait for it to happen again? Mick, there’s a problem here that we can’t ignore. We have another appointment with the therapist tomorrow.”

  “Right. Doctors have to make their BMW payments.”

  “You’re not listening,” she said, and the fist holding the wet rag splashed down into the dishwater. He’d pushed her a little too far. “I’ve researched this pretty thoroughly, if you’re interested, and what the doctors aren’t saying yet is three words—sensory integration dysfunction. They don’t want to put it on his record because once it’s there it stays there, but that’s what they’re thinking. It’s a serious problem, Mick.”

  “So you think just because he nutted up on Ryan Carden, Dylan’s got this sensory whattayacallit disease? Listen, if that Carden kid is anything like his dad, I can understand it. I’ve thought about throttling his old man a time or two my ownself.” He poked the towel down into a glass.

  “It’s not a disease, Mick, it’s a developmental disorder. It’s just that Dylan’s brain doesn’t get the messages from his senses exactly right. It’s like his volume knobs are out of whack—some are turned way down low and some are up too high. He licked Mrs. Fensdemacher’s ankle because he likes the texture of pantyhose on his tongue, that’s all. But this stuff has got him so disoriented he just doesn’t understand that he can’t go around licking people’s ankles. Then one day, when he feels like his feet won’t touch the ground and everybody around him is speaking Chinese, he gets frustrated and takes it out on Ryan.”

  Mick blinked, lowered the towel. This was serious. “So. Is it permanent? I mean, is he like stuck with this thing for life?”

  She shook her head, dropped a handful of silverware in the rack. “No. There are all kinds of different ways it can affect a kid, and all sorts of other stuff it can be mixed up with, like autism or ADD, but no. Sensory integration dysfunction by itself is usually just a matter of time and therapy.” She went on at some length, describing Dylan’s problem with a bag of words he’d never heard before—words like proprioception and dyspraxia. He knew she wasn’t trying to show him up; it was just her way of making him see that she knew exactly what she was talking about. Layne was a paralegal. She did research for a living.

  “If we work with him,” she said, finally, “we can help him catch up with his senses, maybe in six months or a year. If we don’t do something now it could affect him into his twenties—all the way through school.”

  But she stopped too abruptly and left her words hanging. There was something else—he could see it in her face.

  “What?” he finally asked.

  She bit her lip and squinted. “It’s just that it’s going to take a lot of work. One on one. He needs to be at home, in a safe, uncomplicated social setting for a while. And he’s going to need therapy. He’ll have to see a therapist once a week and he’ll have to have special exercises at home every day.”

  “Sounds expensive,” he said.

  “Well, I think insurance will cover most of it, but that’s not the point.”

  There was a sadness in her eyes, and he suddenly realized there was no way she could deal with Dylan’s problems while working a full-time job. Layne had put her career on hold for five years while she was having babies, and when she finally got ready to go to work it took her six months to land a job with the right law firm. She loved her work, and she made good money. Most of all she felt incredibly lucky to have landed where she did. She felt it was a once-in-a-lifetime break, and she would never get it again. All at once it hit him just how cruel it would be for her to have to give up her job now, just when things were going so well. She needed his support.

  “I see,” he said. When she placed a bowl upside down in the rack he laid his hand on top of hers. “You want to know if it’s okay for you to quit your job.”

  “Nnnnno,” she said, with a sideways ch
uckle that scared him a little. “I want to know if it’s okay for you to quit yours.”

  He froze for a second, staring at her, his eyes slightly wider.

  “Um, my job? Quit my job? Mine?”

  A nod.

  “Ah, no. Never gonna happen.” He picked up three plates at once and shoved them into the cabinet with a decisive clatter. Case closed.

  She smiled, too sweetly. “But Mick, dearest”—dearest was her patience word—“someone has to do it. You can see that, can’t you? It’s the only way.”

  “All right, then do it. Knock yourself out. I can pay the bills while you’re not working. I’ve done it before.”

  For a while she said nothing, standing there looking at him with a little smile that made his palms sweat.

  “Layne,” Mick said, and he heard the faint cry in his own voice, “you know why. I have to bring home a paycheck. I can’t not make a living.”

  She knew. Over the years he’d told her plenty of times how his father had left them high and dry, and what they had to do to make ends meet. He wouldn’t—couldn’t—put himself in that position. Layne didn’t say anything for a while, just stood there scrubbing a pot with a Brillo pad. She seemed so calm. Finally she took a deep breath and drove a spike through the dialog.

  “Well,” she said, “I’ll pray about it. We’ll see.”

  That was the worst. Layne had an irritating way of trumping an argument by saying she’d pray about it. He knew better than to bring it up in front of her church friends but it always seemed kind of bogus to him. As if the God of the universe would pick out a man’s tie for him. Layne prayed about everything, which was fine if it made her feel better, but when she ran it out there as a closing argument it almost felt like she was using religion as a lever to get what she wanted. Appealing to a higher court.

  “Yeah,” he muttered. “We’ll see.”

  2

  * * *

  What the day will bring.

  THE NEXT day started off with the usual insanity, hitting the snooze button one too many times and then flying out of bed in full panic mode—from zero to sixty in one bleary-eyed glance at the clock, shouting three kids up and into their clothes, shoving cereal at them, digging socks out of the dryer, hurling orders for teeth to be brushed and hair to be combed, slinging book bags into the back seat of Layne’s Ford Explorer. Mick threw on yesterday’s jeans, grabbed his coffee in a travel cup, nuked a quart of water to boiling for his lunchbox thermos and ran out the back door at the height of the yelling. He had to be at work an hour earlier than Layne, so the kids were mostly her problem in the morning. Madness. It was all madness, but it was their madness and they figured it was no worse than anybody else’s.

 

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