Showing posts with label docking at Mayne Island. Show all posts
Showing posts with label docking at Mayne Island. Show all posts

Sunday, April 30, 2023

Mrs. Kenneth James Stevens Wants A Baby by Leanne Dyck (Ch 17)

 Chapter sixteenAster envisioned Kenneth James waiting expectantly at the ferry. The ferry docked, and Kenneth James wasn't there. What had happened to him?  


photo by ldyck

Chapter seventeen

Occasionally, a car or a truck would drive passed the bench. Most swished by, but some drivers did stop to ask if Aster would like a ride.

“No, thank you,” she called from the bench and waved the drivers away. The waiting time increased, the traffic dwindled, and anxiety's grip tightened.

Aster tried her husband's cell phone again but was forced to leave yet another message. “Kenneth James, where are you? You told me you would be here to receive me, but you’re nowhere to be seen. I’m waiting and growing a little worried. When you get this message, which I hope will be soon, please contact me and tell me you’re on your way. It will bring me some peace of mind. I’m counting on you. I know you won’t disappoint me. Hurry, my love. Do hurry.”

Minutes stretched into hours, hours stretched into days, days stretched into weeks, weeks stretched into—. Or at least that was what it felt like to Aster. Vehicles had stopped driving down that desolated road. Her husband had abandoned her. She would have to live out the rest of her days on that park bench. Alone. Completely and utterly a—.

A white four-door hybrid Honda glided up beside the bench. The driver had replaced her BC Ferries uniform with jeans and a tee, but Aster quickly identified her. “Would you like a ride?”

“I believe my husband has been unavoidably detained.” Aster sunk into the cushy red-cloth passenger seat.

“That’s just island time.” The woman climbed out of the car, retrieved Aster’s luggage, and—.

“Do be careful with my suitcases. They’re rather expensive.”

Fitting all of Aster's suitcases into the car’s trunk was a challenge but the woman enjoyed playing Tetris. She quickly solved the puzzle and returned to the steering wheel. “Save and sound, without a mark. Now, where can I take you?”

The address...? Aster may have had that information once but she had long since replaced it with something more important. Her lack of knowledge embarrassed her so she changed the subject. “Do you like residing on Mayne Island?” When Aster thought of island life, the words that came swiftly to her mind were boring and depressing and—.

“I wouldn’t live anywhere else.”

“And why is that?”

What do I like about Mayne Island? Huh?”

Aster felt sorry for the woman—self-imprisoned on this remote island for the crime of poor judgment. Clearly, her life here was an empty existence—bereft of cultural enrichment or anything that would bring fulfillment or value. But somehow the woman had convinced herself that she enjoyed this prison. Aster was interested to hear what foolishness she had fed herself.

“I could make one of those travel commercials. I’d include the golden orange sunsets. The wild deer prancing around the island like royalty. Seals sunning themselves on rocks like movie stars with cocktails. And the soundtrack... Tree frogs sweetly serenading. An eagle’s cry. The sound of a wing moving through air. And the people. I can’t forget the people. Do you know that many island seniors still cut and stack their own firewood? And the children...” 

As the woman went on and on, Aster unzipped all the compartments on her purse and then re-zipped them.

 “Do you know that after every performance at the Ag Hall we all help put the chairs away? It doesn’t matter who we are or once were. We all help.”

“How long have you lived like this?”

“Twenty years.” The woman smiled. “Watch out.” The woman swept a hand over her face. “This could happen to you.” She laughed. “Where would you like to go?”

Go? Aster saw herself sipping wine in Paris or applauding as a curtain opened in a London theatre or carrying an armful of clothes to a New York cashier or riding the elevator in Toronto’s CN tower or—.

“Your husband’s address?” The comment brought Aster back to reality.

Aster sighed. “I always regarded that information as extraneous.”

“Oh, well, don’t worry. We’ll find him.”

“Why? Why would I worry?” Aster adjusted her glasses and straightened her back. “Please take me to Professor Kenneth James Steven’s residence.”


photo by ldyck

Mrs. Kenneth James Stevens Wants A Baby

Chapter eighteen


Aster waits and waits for her husband at the ferry terminal. Finally, a Mayne Islander stops and offers Aster a ride. But Aster doesn't know the address of her husband's house. How will she find him?

Sunday, April 23, 2023

Mrs. Kenneth James Stevens Wants A Baby by Leanne Dyck (Ch 16)

Chapter fifteen: Aster takes her worried self to the ferry and sails to Mayne Island.



photo by ldyck

Chapter sixteen

Aster followed a white-haired couple with bikes, a teenager with a backpack, and a woman with a small dog from the ferry to the ramp. She pushed two suitcases forward and returned for the third—forward, back, forward, back. Her progress was made a little easier because the suitcases had wheels but it could have been a lot easier if—. 

The woman with the dog was greeted by a man with a peaked cap who gave her a hug and a kiss. The dog jumped into the man's arms and the three of them carried on together. 

Where was Kenneth James?

“Please keep to your right.” A navy-uniformed woman directed the group.

All compiled but Aster. She didn’t budge. She just stared up the steep hill that was her next challenge after she had gained victory over the ramp. A challenge Aster refused to accept.

“Please keep to your right,” the woman repeated.

Still, Aster didn’t move.

So the woman rolled two of the trunk-sized suitcases to a corner of the covered walkway.

Aster followed with the third.

“Thank you. I—?” Before Aster could finish her sentence the woman returned to direct the ferry traffic up the hill.

It was pleasant enough under the covered walkway for Aster to be content to remain there until Kenneth James came to collect her. She looked from the cloudless sky to the rippling sea. She watched cars and trucks drive off the ferry and others drive on. Soon those passengers would sail away. She watched cars and trucks drive up the steep hill and out of the terminal. Soon only the BC Ferries workers would be left behind and then they would end their shifts and go home. Soon Aster would be alone. She didn’t mind. But—. What if—? Wild animals? Drug addicts? Vagrants? Soon Aster would be alone. And she did mind, in fact. It unnerved her. But with those trunk-sized suitcases, she couldn’t move. She was stuck which made her vulnerable. And what if—? She grew more and more concerned.

The uniformed woman came back. “Come with me,” she told Aster. “I’ll take you up the hill.” She wheeled two of Aster’s suitcases to a white truck with ‘BC Ferries’ on the door.

“My husband was supposed to be here to collect me.” Aster pulled the other suitcase behind her.

“He may be waiting for you in the parking lot.”

“The...parking...lot?”

What if Kenneth James had been waiting but because she hadn’t walked up the hill he had thought...? And now he was... What if she were...? Now...

No, for her, he would have waited. He would have. He was waiting. He was in the parking lot.

“Yes, that’s where he must be. He’s waiting in the parking lot,” Aster told the woman and climbed into the truck.

The woman loaded Aster’s suitcases into the truck bed and drove Aster to a row of three trucks and two cars parked in front of a fence—the parking lot. Kenneth James’ truck wasn’t waiting there.

The woman unloaded Aster’s luggage and carried them across the street and up a small grassy hill to a bench under a tree. “There’s no way your husband can miss you. And if he does, I’ll tell him where you are. Don’t worry.”

“Worry? Why would I worry?” Aster pulled a hanky from a side pocket of her oversized purse and dusted a corner of the bench.

photo by ldyck


Mrs. Kenneth James Stevens Wants A Baby

Chapter seventeen



Aster expected Kenneth James to be eagerly waiting for her at the ferry--but he wasn't. Where was he? When would he come to collect? Had he forgotten about her? Or had something happened to him?


Saturday, April 29th is Canada Indie Bookstore Day

April 30 at 1 PM
Agricultural Society Hall on Mayne Island, BC

National Geographic Explorer and author Erica Gies reads 
from her non-fiction book: Water Always Wins 
(University of Chicago Press)