Haven River
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About this ebook
Sixteen-year-old Luke Conway is in his last year of high school in the harbour side town of Haven River.
Writing is Luke’s life. All he wants to do is be a journalist and write stories about storm chasers.
But Ryan, Luke’s protective older brother and guardian, has other ideas.
When Luke meets newcomer to town, the mischievous Jamie Pascoe, his world is turned upside down.
Tragedy strikes and Luke is catapulted down a path of self-destruction.
Can Luke overcome the odds pitted against him? To make Jamie proud of him. To hold on tight to his family. To follow his dream on his own terms.
144 pages
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Book preview
Haven River - Casey Fae Hewson
To VB
for encouraging me to keep going when it all seemed too hard
Part 1
Autumn is a second spring where every leaf is a flower.
Albert Camus
Chapter 1
Luke paused, angling his head closer to the house, waiting for the inevitable.
And yep, there it was.
Luke! Get your butt in here. Where’s the lettuce? Hurry up.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Luke yanked a lettuce out of the veggie garden.
Time. His older brother Ryan’s obsession with being on time or early drove Luke nuts. Luke did what he needed to do, and got where he needed to go – eventually. What did it matter if he was late? He hated having to do things on time, be somewhere at a certain hour. Why couldn’t people just let him be?
Minky nuzzled Luke’s hand and munched the lettuce.
Oh, Minky.
Luke rapped the goat lightly on her back. That was for us, silly goat.
Minky chewed on, her eyelashes blinking in time to the lazy rustle of the trees. Luke wiped his forehead and pushed his cap further back on his head. He plucked another lettuce, and strolled past Marcus’s latest car project and into the kitchen, reciting a half-finished poem under his breath.
Ten minutes later confusion reigned as bowls of salad and boiled potatoes, piles of well-done sausages, plus tomato sauce, salt, pepper, dressing, butter and bread circulated around the five brothers.
It was one of those rare weeknights when they were all home for dinner. Often Ryan worked late, and Marcus, the second-eldest of the five, went who-knows-where after he’d finished at the garage for the day. Luke’s twin brother, Quinn, compared science experiment notes with his classmates, while Braydon, the youngest, volunteered at the animal shelter.
So how’s school going?
asked Ryan from the head of the table, addressing no one in particular. He punched something into his cell phone and then pushed it aside.
Braydon, never one to miss an opportunity to join in a conversation, replied, We’ve got camp at the end of next week.
So soon in the new year? God, I’d forgotten.
Ryan stuffed some sausage in his mouth. What do you need to take?
The list is on the bench, remember?
Vaguely. I’ll look at it after dinner. How about you, Quinn?
Mrs Sutherland thinks I have a good chance of getting on the science team, there’s the maths comp in two weeks, and we’re going up the Sounds to visit the salmon farm operation, I think at the end of the month. So it’s all on.
He waved his knife and fork around in the air as he spoke.
Luke dipped his head down. He was used to being overshadowed by his academically gifted brother.
There had never been any doubt about Quinn’s career path. The straight-A student would be off to university next year to study for a Bachelor of Science.
Luke chomped into his second slice of bread. Eventually the questions would be directed his way. Would he be able to escape interrogation tonight? Frazzled from the heat of the day, he was too tired to think and the bread stuck to the roof of his mouth.
Marcus’s cell phone buzzed and he tapped out a reply.
Luke, how about you?
Ryan snapped.
Oh boy, there it goes. It’s going good.
When’s your first assignment due?
End of next week.
What’s it on?
It’s a book review for English.
What’s the book?
"The Summer Now Ending."
I remember reading that,
said Marcus, still busy tapping. It wasn’t bad. Some good themes around following your own path despite what others may want for you.
How long have you had the assignment for?
Ryan asked, drumming his fingers on the table.
Since last week,
Luke mumbled.
Why do you have to leave everything to the last minute?
I didn’t. I kind of forgot.
Ryan sighed. You never change. It’s always ‘I forgot’, or you lose track of time. You really need to smarten up.
Luke pushed his chair back, eager to leave, but Ryan hadn’t finished.
You don’t have many chances left. This will be your final year at high school. Have you given any thought to what you’re going to do at the end of the year? Where you want your life to go?
His drumming fingers speeded up.
Luke stared at his empty plate, his mind a blank. Too many questions, with too few answers.
He lifted his head in time to see Marcus, Quinn and Braydon shoot sideways looks at each other. How many times had they witnessed a full-blown argument between Ryan and himself? Luke didn’t see eye to eye with Ryan, who relentlessly pressured him over his performance (or lack of) at school. Chalk and cheese.
Hey,
Marcus cut in. I thought I’d go down to Haven River after dinner for a swim at the waterfall. You guys wanna come?
You bet,
yelled Quinn.
Yip,
shouted Braydon.
It would be a great way to end a hot day. The gushing, spurting, sluicing force of the river could tear away his restlessness.
I’m in,
Luke said, passing a finger along the neck of his T-shirt, releasing the sticky material that clung to his chest.
Quinn and Braydon can go. Luke, I want you to start that book tonight,
Ryan said, the military-like command shooting out of him.
Luke glared at Ryan. He could sometimes be a right pain in the arse, playing the heavy hand because he thought Luke needed it.
Quinn, Marcus and Braydon darted about, gathering swimming shorts, towels and bags.
Luke poked his fork into a half-eaten sausage and brooded over Ryan’s unfair order.
Braydon patted Luke’s shoulder. We’ll take an extra swim for you.
Are you coming, Ryan?
Marcus asked.
Would love to, but I need to go over the work rosters for next week.
You work too hard.
Ryan grimaced, but his attention was diverted as his cell phone rang.
The brothers bundled out the door.
Be careful. Watch the railway line, and it’s a school night.
Ryan’s voice was drowned by the slam of the front door and the brothers’ banter.
With Ryan on the phone, Luke took the opportunity to escape. He hot-trotted upstairs to the bedroom he shared with Quinn.
Luke switched on the computer. While it kicked into life, he removed his books from his back pack and placed them on the desk. He didn’t know why he’d a general reluctance to study. Something made it all too hard. It wasn’t that he didn’t like school - he did, particularly English. He loved to make up stories, but a barrier prevented him from getting the words out of his head. As he started to type he would forget how to spell a word. Sure, the spell-checker helped but he just couldn’t leave spellchecking his work until the end. He needed to have the right word and have it spelt correctly. But by then the moment had passed and he’d lost the flow.
Luke picked up the The Summer Now Ending off the top of the book pile.
He threw the windows wide open and clambered onto his bed his head sinking into the comfortable softness of two pillows. He read the back cover of the book.
Daniel Jenkins, has spent his whole life living in a sleepy, Australian outback town.
But that was about to change. To fulfil his parents’ wishes and against what he wanted, Daniel prepares to leave the comfort of the familiar to embark on university study in a city of over four million people.
As the day draws closer for Daniel to leave his family, friends and the security he has always known he fights an overwhelming feeling of self-doubt and anxiety.
Will the city bear the opportunities waiting for him or will he be swallowed up in an uncaring world?
What effects will maintaining a long-distance relationship have on both himself and his childhood sweetheart, Melanie?
Daniel must face these fears on his journey to adulthood and carve out an identity for himself.
Daniel sounded like him. Fear of the unknown. Luke swallowed hard. Just reading the words ‘self-doubt’ and ‘anxiety’ made his stomach churn.
He flipped the book over to the front. Dawn in the country. That special time when nature slowly comes to life. Fields that went on and on, separated by large trees or wire fencing. Wisps of fog hugging the ground. Luke could almost feel the slight foggy chill. In the middle of the photo long driveways spoked out of the main road which led to a scattering of old wooden houses. In the absence of animal life Luke imagined sheep baa-ing. The sun had awakened, casting peacefulness over the gold-tinged fields.
Luke opened the book to the first page. All was good until he got to page three. Then it happened. The words swam on the page, preventing him from focusing on them. Dizziness enveloped him and he stopped. This had happened for as long as he could remember. He wasn’t sure why it happened and he’d never mentioned it to anyone. Maybe because no-one had ever shown much interest in what he did. His brothers were the more interesting people. Perhaps all he needed was glasses. Great. Another reason to make Ryan grumpy about more expenses, and another reason for his classmates to tease him.
He sighed and rubbed his sore eyes. He let the book drop to the floor. It just wasn’t going to happen tonight.
His eyes travelled to the enormous poster on the wall. Three-quarters of it was taken up by the menacing black form of a tornado, which was whipping everything into its destructive path. In the foreground, standing with his back to the photographer was the award-winning journalist, Michael Sharp. Michael accompanied storm chasers in the notorious tornado alley in the US and reported on their quest to capture storm data that often put them in life-threatening situations. Michael was Luke’s hero and he wanted to be just like him - to be a journalist reporting on storms and tornados would be the coolest job in the world. A job where he could write for a living and report on weather phenomena. He followed Michael’s Facebook page and devoured everything the guy wrote - slowly.
Luke rummaged around in his desk for his journal. He turned over the worn, dog-eared and tatty pages, the familiar roughness reassuring against his hand. He would need to get a new one soon.
Pictures stuck randomly within the notebook stared back at him. Landscape scenes, the All Blacks, The Matrix movie stickers and cut outs of Eminem, Linkin’ Park, Foo Fighters and Pearl Jam.
Luke had kept a journal since his folks died - something the counsellor had suggested might help him deal with his grief. It had been a source of comfort for him, even now four years on.
He could rely on his journal 100 per cent. It was always there, reassuring, and it never talked back to him.
Telling him he was no good.
To try harder.
Passing judgement.
He wrote most days. Sometimes it was just random lines; sometimes the words grew a life of their own and turned into poems.
He wrote what he felt.
What he thought he was.
What he wanted to be.
His journal was his best friend and he’d never shared it with anyone. Not even Quinn. When Quinn saw Luke writing in his journal he would good-naturedly tease him that he was worshipping the altar
.
But lately nothing had inspired him to write.
He popped the journal back in the drawer, logged onto the computer and idly browsed the internet. Should he search on The Summer Now Ending? Someone might have posted a review of the book he could use. He discarded the idea; it would be dishonest and it didn’t sit comfortably with him. He continued to browse ending up at his favourite websites, CNN and BBC, where he intently studied the journalism style.
***
Luke had lost track of time. He glanced at the clock - 9.35. Had he been surfing for that long? He yawned catching a glimpse of The Summer Now Ending on the desk, guilt snapping at him. He stripped and slumped into bed. What would he tell Ryan tomorrow when he was asked about the book? He