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The Hope of Times to Come
The Hope of Times to Come
The Hope of Times to Come
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The Hope of Times to Come

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Westway Private is not a place that Raymond Dubois cares to remember. The rundown neighbourhood was the size of a postage stamp with too many small rental homes crammed together, the lawns were mostly dirt, everyone heard everyone’s business, and his sister almost died there.

The only good thing about Westway Private was Dorothy Nightingale. But she moved away when he was thirteen and he hasn’t seen her since.

Now retired, Raymond just wants to live his remaining years in peace. But when a young couple move in next door, he quickly notices that something isn’t quite right with the husband. The guy drives a BMW, wears expensive suits, but there’s something behind the façade that awakens a past Raymond tried hard to forget.

Dorothy Nightingale just signed her divorce papers, she’s selling the family home, and her kids opted to live with Dad. All her life, Dorothy made sure she was the perfect mom; she wasn’t going to make the same mistakes her mother made.

Except that she did.

Dorothy needs to fix things with her kids before it’s too late . . . but then tragedy strikes and she finds that her future lies in the pain of her past.

The Hope of Times to Come digs into the scars that shaped our childhood to find the strength we never realized we had, and unleashes the truth we must face to set us free.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 12, 2022
ISBN9781989734094
The Hope of Times to Come
Author

Francois Houle

François Houle’s first novel IT HAPPENED TO US spent multiple weeks in 2019 as an Amazon top 100 best seller in two categories. His fiction explores themes that are universal such as family and friendships, love and grief, and anything else that makes us all human. Reviews often refer to his books as “beautifully written,” “heartbreaking and heartwarming,” and “intense and emotional.”François is one of five boys so it’s no surprise that family is a strong theme in his books. A lot of the inspiration for his first two novels IT HAPPENED TO US and BEAUTIFUL MIDNIGHT came from the passing of his father in 2005.François grew up in a small town outside of Montréal, moved to Toronto when he was ten, and currently lives in Ottawa. An avid reader from a young age, he tried to create a comic book when he was twelve, penned hundreds of song lyrics as a teenager, and wrote his first novel in 1985.When he's not writing, he's probably outside doing something around the house or down in his basement workshop, enjoying a little woodworking.If you’d like to stay current with what he’s working on, signup to his Insiders Group and get a free ebook as a thank you: www.francoisghoule.com/your-free-starter-library/

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    The Hope of Times to Come - Francois Houle

    FRANÇOIS HOULE

    logo_white-background small.tif

    Dawn Rainbow Books

    OTTAWA, ONTARIO

    This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are a product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, or to businesses, establishments, events, institutions, or locales is completely coincidental.

    Copyright © 2022 by François Houle

    Smashwords Edition

    All rights reserved.

    No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the author or publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.

    For permission requests, email: francois@francoisghoule.com

    www.francoisghoule.com

    The Hope of Times to Come/François Houle. -- 1st ed.

    ISBN: 978-1-989734-09-4

    Published by Dawn Rainbow Books

    Cover Design: KD Design

    Cover Art Image: inyrdreams©123RF.com

    Editor: Geffen Semach

    For Colleen

    Table of Contents

    Title

    Copyright

    Dedication

    Table of Contents

    One

    Two

    Three

    Four

    Five

    Six

    Seven

    Eight

    Nine

    Ten

    Eleven

    Twelve

    Thirteen

    Fourteen

    Fifteen

    Sixteen

    Seventeen

    Eighteen

    Nineteen

    Twenty

    Twenty-one

    Twenty-two

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    Acknowledgments

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    About François Houle

    ONE

    _________

    The afternoon sun drags shadows across my front lawn as I sit in one of the red painted Adirondack chairs on my front porch. I finish my beer and put my empty bottle with the other two on the small table beside me, grab another from the case at my feet, and twist the cap off. I take a long swig, grimace at the bitterness, and take another. It’s been a while since I’ve drank so much, to the point of being drunk, and I know I should stop but I’m not really in the mood to stop.

    Marie loves the colour red. Her bedroom walls are two different shades of red, most of her shirts and sweaters are red, and her winter jacket is a bright, cherry red. Even the curtains in the living room are a dark burgundy. So when we bought these chairs ten years ago, to no surprise, she insisted we paint them red.

    I let out a sigh weighted down by a lifetime of responsibilities that should never have been mine to bear.

    But my mother was incapable of shouldering them.

    So, they became my burden.

    I was seven when my father left us. What I remember of him was that he loved me. He was kind and soft spoken. He’s the one who used to tuck me in at night. And I remember, the night he left, he had tears in his eyes when he kissed me goodnight and whispered in my ear that he was sorry. Looking back, he must have known it would be the last time he’d put me to bed and it broke his heart. At least, that’s what I used to tell myself. I didn’t want to think that he had left because he had stopped loving me. No, he left because of my mother. She was hard and cruel and mean to him. I used to sit on my bed and through the paper-thin walls of our tiny house, I could hear the viciousness in her voice as she yelled and swore at him, telling him that he was the worst mistake of her life and that if it wasn’t for him getting her pregnant, her life would have turned out so much better.

    He never fought back. Never raised his voice. I really think he loved her too much to hurt her back. He tried to make her happy. I know he did. But in the end, she wore out his love and he left.

    So yeah, I blame my mother for my father leaving. She was ill equipped to raise me. She was ill equipped to take care of herself. She was ill equipped to handle life.

    Period.

    I wished for a long time that my father would come back and take me with him, but then my sister was born a few months after he’d left so then I wished for him to come back for both of us, but he never did.

    Things could have been so different for Marie and I if he’d come back for us.

    Especially for Marie.

    I never saw him again so he probably never knew about Marie, what happened to her. I don’t know if it would have made a difference to him if he’d known. Probably not. He did leave, after all.

    I take another swallow of my beer and stare out at my front yard. It faces Dow’s Lake. I love to sit here in the mornings with a cup of coffee and watch the sunrise, Marie in the chair beside me drinking a hot chocolate—she tried coffee a few times but never really took to it—our eyes closed, taking in the warmth of the rising sun.

    I’ll never do that again with her.

    From here I can see a few people kayaking, a group of teenagers throwing a Frisbee in the green space along the lake, families, happy families, bicycling.

    My head is starting to spin, so when I finish my beer, I don’t grab another. I just sit and stare at a world that continues to move on while mine feels like it’s come to a dead stop.

    Marie is very sick and in the hospital. At fifty-eight, this is the first time in my adult life that I can’t protect her.

    I close my eyes and rub them, using my thumb to rub the right eye and my index finger to rub the left one. When I open them, the world is a blur.

    Marie is fifty-one, but because of what happened when she was a baby, because of our mother, Marie only has the mentality of a child. An eight- or ten-year-old. I’ve had no choice but to protect her.

    I reach for a fifth beer in the open beer case by my feet but change my mind and pull my hand back. Getting any more drunk won’t change anything that’s happened and won’t cure Marie. It won’t bring me the closure that I’ve hoped for or make me understand why our mother tried to suffocate Marie that night all those years ago.

    I do remember that every night afterward, I prayed hard, my eyes closed, kneeling by my bed, for God to send my father back. We needed him, I told God.

    My father never came back so I pretty much stopped believing in God after that. It became clear to me, at seven, that I was the only person I could depend on.

    I’ve never forgiven our mother but I eventually had to let go of my anger so that I could give Marie a decent life, the best that I could.

    I reach for another beer after all but stop when I notice a blue BMW drive by and turn into my neighbour’s driveway. I’ve lived here a long time but this neighbour—his name is Brayden or Branden, I just can’t really remember right now in my inebriated state—always puts me on guard. He’s about thirty or so and the first time I spoke with him, I left feeling like I needed a shower.

    Something about him isn’t on the up and up.

    His wife Joanne, though, is so sweet. I see her each morning, around seven, pack her twin boys into a stroller and go for an hour long walk, just after Mr. High and Mighty has left in his pride and joy of a car.

    That’s what he told me that first time I met him last spring when they moved in after the Malenkovs, a lovely couple in their seventies, moved because Mrs. Malenkov—her first name is Alena—was diagnosed with early-stage Alzheimer’s about a year ago. Her husband, Stanko, decided that they needed to move to a safer location after Alena had wandered off for the third time in the span of two weeks only to be brought home by the police each time.

    I miss them. They were nice.

    Mr. BMW, not so much. His wife and kids should be his pride and joy, not that hunk of plastic and metal. But I sense there’s a little bit of trouble in Mr. High and Mighty’s marriage. Nothing I’ve been told by either one of them, but I’ve always been observant, I notice things.

    I sort of had to to keep my sister safe. I had to learn real young to read my mother. It wasn’t all that difficult. Her moods were explosive, and to miss them, well, you’d have had to have your head up where the sun doesn’t shine.

    She used to scream that at me when I was young—Get your head out of your ass!—when she’d catch me staring at her when she was sprawled out on the floor, drugged up. She was pathetic. My mother had many personalities and all of them were screwed up. Some more than the others.

    Yeah, she probably had mental issues, but this was back in the 1960s. No one talked about that.

    Mr. BMW sees me sitting on the porch as he pulls up his driveway and parks. He climbs out of his pride and joy, and puts on his best sleazy, fake smile, the kind that can’t possibly be comfortable as it stretches his entire face. He reminds me of Joaquin Phoenix in Joker.

    I could sure use a few of those, he says as he approaches the porch but the railing keeps him at a nice distance. I see his eyes notice the empty bottles of beer on the small table that sits between the Adirondack chairs, then move to the two full ones in the open case by my feet. I had one hell of a day.

    I don’t ask. I don’t offer him a beer. It’s just after six on a warm September evening and I don’t want to ruin it by engaging in meaningless chatter with Mr. BMW. I’ve had my own one hell of a day.

    And I know Joanne would be in for a troubling evening if her husband gets into too many beers. He’s a mean drunk. I know because he gets really loud, and I don’t care for the condescending tone of his voice. Joanne and I don’t know each other that well, so I understand that she hasn’t said anything to me when we happen to see each other outside, and they probably don’t realize how easily sound carries across the neighbourhood. But I listen, and if things ever get out of hand, I will be paying Mr. BMW a visit.

    I don’t like mean drunks. Had to deal with too many of them before I retired. They remind me of my mother.

    I’d rather not be reminded of her tonight. No, tonight I just want to think about Marie. Everything she could have been, I’ll never know.

    Well, have a good one, Mr. BMW mumbles and leaves.

    You too, I say, relieved he got the hint. Once I hear his steps become more distant, I watch him from the corner of my eye. There’s just something about him that doesn’t feel right. I was a cop for a long time and I was good at reading people, and this guy, I just don’t like what I read. Sure, I took early retirement three years ago to spend more time with Marie, and I’m glad I did, but once a cop always a cop.

    I breathe in the sweet smell of red meat cooking on someone’s barbecue and suddenly my stomach growls. It would be a good idea if I ate something to soak up all that alcohol I’ve drank in the last couple of hours. At least, for me, it’s a lot. Maybe for Mr. BMW it’s nothing, but I used to stop people who swore up and down they’d only had two beers hours ago yet failed a breathalyser test. Seen a few real nightmarish head-on collisions, too. Used to keep me up at night just wondering what could have possibly made those drivers think they were fine to get behind the wheel.

    I know the answer to that.

    They weren’t in any state to think clearly. The lives that were stopped short because of stupid mistakes. It was worse when kids were involved. Maybe that’s why, after Sammy died, I never got involved with another woman seriously, or ever felt the urge to get married and have kids of my own. Just couldn’t stomach the possibility of losing them.

    Then again, I had Marie.

    Sammy and I, we lasted seven and a half years. We were both cops. I never planned to fall for her, but I did. She was the first woman I truly loved after Dorothy, and just like Dorothy, Sammy never treated Marie like she had a disability. Maybe that’s why I fell for her. Maybe Marie was always my compass when it came to letting people into our lives.

    Sammy got shot in a routine speeding pullover and died on the way to the hospital. Bastard was never caught.

    That still eats at me. It hit Marie and me hard, the void that Sammy left. Maybe that was part of the reason Marie never quite took to any other woman I tried to date. There had been a handful, but our hearts seemed to belong to Sammy.

    I’m not sure drinking so much was such a good idea. I seem to be somewhat melancholy and I can feel myself losing my composure.

    I set my jaw.

    Marie won’t be coming home and that breaks my heart more than anything in the world. My entire life has been defined by me taking care of my sister and now I have no idea who I will be without her. All I ever wanted was to just ease into old age with my little sister by my side, the two of us, the way it has always been.

    The realization that that isn’t going to happen now slams into me and I feel a huge knot in my throat. It’s too big to swallow and suddenly I can’t stop the tears from running down my stubbled cheeks or the hiccupping of my massive shoulders. It seems to last forever but eventually, I’m spent. I rub my eyes a few times, and the world returns to focus.

    I let out an audible, jagged breath.

    I can hear Marie laughing as we watch a comedy on the television. She’s always had this laugh that comes from deep inside of her and wraps itself around everyone nearby in a contagious way, making everyone laugh too. I can hear her singing at the top of her lungs while in the shower, draining the hot water tank.

    I pull a sad and tired smile out of my pain.

    It’s been too quiet here without her.

    I’m not sure I’ll get used to it.

    I know I don’t want to get used to it.

    And I also don’t want to let my sister go but I really don’t have a choice. Marie is on life support and will never recover.

    TWO

    _________

    Dorothy Nightingale sat at her desk on the thirty-seventh floor of the First Canadian Place building in downtown Toronto, her gaze following a flock of geese flying across the dark blue sky of late afternoon. She glanced at the vintage, golden table clock sitting on the corner of her massive oak desk—a gift from her daughter five years ago as if Trish had known that her mother’s good luck was on the clock, as if Trish had known her parents’ marriage was ticking away— noticed it was just after six, and fleetingly she thought it was no longer afternoon but early evening.

    Maybe the clock had been Trish’s way of telling her mother that it was time to go home and spend time with her family instead of always working late, usually missing the dinner that David had prepared. He’d become quite the chef over the years, which definitely outdid her limited culinary skills.

    Another clue from Trish she had missed.

    Her divorce had become final this afternoon when she’d met her lawyer for lunch to sign the papers. Even though she knew she should be celebrating her new found freedom from her marriage with David—twenty-three years of mostly heartwarming memories, except for the last five—Dorothy realized that she felt rather empty and maybe even a little sad.

    They’d had two kids: Trish, who was nineteen now, and Kevin, seventeen. Maybe their trouble had started when the kids became teenagers. It hadn’t been a smooth transition for them, becoming parents of teenagers, and she and David were at odds most of the time, even now, when it came to raising them. She wanted more discipline, he didn’t. They were just teenagers, let them have fun—life would get sucked out of them quickly enough, he’d told her on more occasions than she cared. She could read between the lines: just like life had been sucked out of him thanks to her. He never had the guts to say so, but she got it.

    Or maybe she had just imagined his animosity, the friction between them the result of her own insecurities over needing control.

    The clock was beautiful, the craftsmanship exquisite. She absently wondered where Trish had bought it, and how much it had cost.

    Not that it mattered.

    Especially now, after five years.

    Five hard years for them all.

    Maybe that’s why she had finally asked for the divorce, after realizing it would be best for all of them.

    Still.

    Divorced.

    It didn’t feel quite real yet. She had tried, really, she had. Maybe only half-heartedly, but hadn’t that counted? It had been more than David had put in. Maybe she was being unfair there, only seeing her side. David wasn’t a bad man. Maybe they’d never been the right match. Her mother had told her as much long ago, but Dorothy had stopped caring about what her mother thought the day she’d left for college. After her dad had died and they’d moved to that tiny square box of a dump they’d called a home on Westway Private, her mother had changed. Misery, cynicism, and a weekly bottle of scotch had replaced Dorothy’s father.

    Until it became two bottles.

    Then three.

    Dorothy had gotten a job as a dishwasher at the local diner when she was fifteen, moved to waitressing when she turned sixteen, and saved every penny she’d earned. Which angered her mother when she’d ask Dorothy to borrow money to pay the rent because the rent money had been consumed in bottles of scotch and Dorothy wouldn’t lend her the money. She’d known that the money would never get paid back, and Dorothy had wanted to save up as much as she could to move out.

    The other reason why Dorothy hadn’t given her mother any money was that she’d known the only true way out of the misery was to go away to college. That didn’t happen exactly as planned, staying in Ottawa to go to Algonquin College, but at least she’d been able to live on campus.

    Away from her mother.

    It had been the first time she’d been able to breathe since the day her father died.

    There were a few boyfriends while in college, but she’d always had a hard time letting loose, fearing she might have inherited her mother’s thirst for the bottle.

    After graduating, she moved to Toronto and got an entry level job with an investment firm, and finally, her past began to fade and she was able to let loose. Her life became out of control, until she met David through a mutual friend.

    It had been good at first, like all new loves are. She had been drawn to him by his boyish looks and easy-going attitude toward life, which seemed like a perfect match to her new found wild side. She’d welcomed his quirky and nonchalant ways, and when he’d convinced her that they should get married and have kids, while flashes of her past mistakes had haunted her, she’d been unable to say no to David even though she’d told herself years ago that kids weren’t going to be in the picture.

    Trish had been an easy baby, but Kevin hadn’t. And Kevin had been an extremely difficult teenager. Drugs, drinking, partying. Attitude.

    Too many reminders of her past life lived in her son.

    Having children had changed Dorothy over the years, made her protective. She was all about rules and discipline now. Goals and purpose. David hadn’t seen the big deal in letting the kids have a little fun.

    Dorothy just had to think of her little sister Laura, dead at the age of just twenty-two. She sure had loved to party. Drinking and drugs. Dorothy had blamed Laura’s death on her mother. She shouldn’t have been surprised that her mother never took responsibility for what had happened to Laura. Her little sister had grown up watching their mother drink her life away. Laura had always adored their mother, so why wouldn’t she have wanted to be just like her. Dorothy didn’t want her kids to end up like the aunt they had never met.

    Trish was mostly angry with her, she assumed it was because of the divorce—which had been Dorothy’s idea—and also for all the long hours she worked, even on the weekends, sacrificing family time. And Kevin adored his sister and sided with her no matter what.

    Both of her kids had opted to live with their father which meant that their well-being was now completely in David’s hands, which didn’t sit all that well with Dorothy. But what choice did she have? She had asked for the divorce and the kids were punishing her by living with their father.

    So, maybe even in her mother’s drunken stupor—David had insisted they invite her mother to the wedding even though she had told him months before that she didn’t think he was right for Dorothy, but then again, she’d been drunk at the time so he had simply laughed it off—she had been right after all.

    Not like Dorothy was going to call her mother and tell her so. She hadn’t spoken to the woman since her wedding day when she had taken advantage of the open bar and made a complete fool of herself, tripping over herself, being loud and making inappropriate advances with the bartender, running into a table and knocking over David’s mother who ended up on her back, showing everyone nearby her underwear. Dorothy had been mortified and for years had felt uncomfortable around his mother.

    Maybe her marriage had been doomed right there and then.

    The divorce wasn’t really bitter, which was a blessing. Maybe they’d exhausted the bitterness out of their failing marriage over the last five years, so there wasn’t much left. Even David had conceded in the end that it was for the best. At first, Dorothy had been angry with him because he hadn’t said no to the kids wanting to go live with him. Trish was finishing her second year of college

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