An Excerpt of the novel I am writing for NaNoWriMo 2012 entitled: Welcome to Green Idaho.
David
parked his car and walked up the short sidewalk to their single story house, he could hear Benjamin coughing miserably as he unlocked the door and stepped
inside. Charlotte looked up from the couch where she was holding their son
wrapped in a blanket. He coughed a heart wrenching cough and held his hands out
to be picked up. David set his bag on the end of the sofa and picked up
Benjamin who snuggled close.
“Has he had his medicine at all
today?” he asked Charlotte.
She shook her head, “No, the power
hasn’t been on long enough, I just get the nebulizer set up and it goes out
again.”
“It went out a work several times,
but it came back on pretty soon, we must be on a different leg of the grid.”
Benjamin wheezed again and began to
cry. David rocked him gently and sang softly in his ear until he drifted off to
sleep. Charlotte got up and began to make sandwiches in the partially darkened
kitchen. Once he laid little Ben down in his bed and covered with an extra
blanket, David joined her and began hunting through cupboards for a flashlight.
“David, if these outages keep
happening, we may have to go out to your parents until Ben is better. He can’t
keep missing his medicine.”
“I know, I wish the power company
could get their act together.” said David pulling a flashlight from under the
sink. He flipped the switch, but no light came on.
“Do we have any more batteries?” he
asked.
“Check in the medicine cupboard,
otherwise we are out.”
David opened the cupboard and went
through each combination of batteries until the light finally came on. It
wasn’t a powerful light, but it would have to get them through the night. After
a quick supper of sandwiches and chips, they sat and talked about what they
should do. Every so often Ben would start coughing again, and they would both
stop and listen to see if he needed help.
“If the power isn’t back on
tomorrow, take him out to my parent’s house. They will at least be able to keep
him warm.” said David.
“True, your mom may even know some
home remedies that will at least keep him comfortable so he can get some
sleep.”
“There must be something we can do,
so that when the power is out Ben can still get his medicine, and we can have a
little electricity.”
Ben began coughing, and they both
listened intently until he stopped.
“I think we need to get Ben feeling
better before we try to figure something out.”
“You are probably right,” said
David, but the thought would not leave him.
When 8:00 PM rolled around, they decided
to call it a night and get ready for bed by the light of the flashlight.
Fortunately there was always a pitcher of water in the refrigerator, so they
were able to brush their teeth and wash their faces without too much
discomfort. When they had read their scriptures and prayed as a couple, David
went to check on Benjamin. His room was still cold from the late winter/early
spring air, and his coughing seemed to be getting worse. He carefully picked
Ben up and placed him between Charlotte and himself so he would stay warm
through the night.
Around midnight David woke up. There
HAD to be something he could do for his family. He looked at the alarm clock to
see if the power had come back on, it hadn’t. David tucked the blankets tightly
around Benjamin and went into the front room. He looked out the window and saw
all the dark houses across the street. It seemed the only light in the area was
the full moon as it peaked through the clouds from time to time. He began to
pace the room as his brain strained to grind down this problem to a solution. They
could get a gas powered generator for backup power, but if the outages
continued for more than a day that would cost too much for their meager budget.
After some time he heard a dog bark, and he looked out to see whose it was. The
black lab sniffed around the porch of the house two doors down. That was the
Watsons. Soon a light turned on and Steve Watson opened the door to let the dog
back in. He glanced up and down the street, then closed the door and turned the
light off.
David paced around the room two more
times before he realized what he had just seen. He turned the light on and he turned it off! David flipped a light
switch in the front room… nothing happened. David examined the houses across
the street one more time, they were all still dark. Somehow, the Watsons had
power even when the rest of the street was in the dark. Perhaps there was a
solution to their problem. He would go talk to Steve tomorrow, and find out
what he had. There was no sound of a gas powered generator, and even if they
had a generator why would he turn it on just to let the dog in?
David found his way into the bedroom
and climbed back in bed, Ben coughed, but David wasn’t as worried this time. If
the Watsons had found a way to deal with power outages, they could too. If
nothing else, they would probably let Charlotte and Ben come over long enough
for Ben to get his medication. As he drifted off to sleep, the hint of a smile
crept onto his face for the first time since he arrived home that afternoon.
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