Me: Hi Sawyer.
S.M: Hi Miz Vonnie. Here, wanna hold my frog? His...his name is Scream. He gets lost in the house or the car and then eberbody screams.
Me: Ewwl! No...ah... no, honey, I don't want to hold him.
S.M: It's okay, Miz Vonnie. He don't bite. Unkie Storm says frogs don't got teeff.
Me: Tell me about your Uncle Storm, Sawyer. Do you do stuff with him?
S.M.: Oh, yeah. I go widing wif him lots. And I take my af'ta'noon nap in his big bed. He...he let me nap dere after Mommy got sick with cancer. I was sad 'cause Mommy was too sick to play wif me. Unkie Storm, he let me sleep dere and he weed me stories and showed me how to tie knots in rope. Do you like books, Miz Vonnie?
Me: Well, yes. Yes I do. What kind of books do you like?
S.M: Well, I got all the Courious George Books and Doctor Seuss books too, but...but you know what? He's not really a doctor 'cause he don't take care'a sick people.
Me: (Laughing) He doesn't?
S.M: (Shakes his head) Nope. My mommy don't go to him and she's sick. Her...her got loo-keem-ya.
Me: Do you have a favorite super hero?
S.M: (His eyes light up.) Yeah! Superman. Wachel, she's my mommy's nurse, made me a superman cape with a BIG "S" on the back for Superman Sawyer. I wund through the house with it on and "save the day."
Me: Oh, I bet you do.
S.M: Do you think I'm smart, Miz Vonnie? My mommy says I'm the smartest boy in the whole wide world and pro'bly the smartest boy in Texas, too. Miz Noella says I smart 'cause I drink all my milk when I get done eatin'. (Rubs his stomach) All dat milk fills in the cracks dat the food makes.
Me: (totally charmed) Oh, I see.
S.M: Miz Vonnie. Are you gonna scream? 'Cause I don't know where my frog went...
Excerpt:
“Unkie Storm!
I’m all clean fwom my baf.” Sawyer streaked onto the patio wearing Sponge Bob
pajamas, a book in his grasp and his hair still wet from his bath. Storm held
out his arms for his nephew, who shot into them. He loved the feel of this
child in his arms.
If Pilar had
her way, Sawyer might be the closest he came to being a father. Although she
promised, insisted even, she’d help raise the boy if something happened to
Sunny, Pilar made it quite clear getting “big with child” and “changing
disgusting diapers” was not in her future.
“Mommy got me a
new Georgie book.” Sawyer wiggled and grunted and settled into Storm’s lap. He
held the book in front of Storm’s face, waving it back and forth. “Will you
wead it to me?”
“I didn’t hear
the magic word.” Storm gave the child a stern look.
“Oops. Sowwy.
Will you please wead it to me?”
Sunny lowered
herself into a chair next to Jackson. “Does Unkie Storm have a choice?” She
laughed softly.
Jackson reached
out and took her hand, bringing it to his mouth for a kiss. “You always were
beautiful in the moonlight.”
Sunny’s eyes
opened wide. “Well, aren’t you just full of compliments tonight.”
Jackson winked.
“Darlin’, you ain’t seen nothin’ yet.”
“Okay,
grown-ups. Time to be quiet while I read Curious
George Goes to the Beach.”
Sawyer laid his
head against Storm’s chest. “I wuv you, Unkie Storm.”
Storm kissed
the child’s dark hair, inhaling the smell of the child’s shampoo and savoring
that sense of contentment he always felt when holding this little fellow. “I
love you, too, son.”
Nice selection, Vonnie. What a sweetie.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Margo. I love putting children in stories, but then I have to keep a close eye on 'em. They tend to want to take over the story.
ReplyDeleteVonnie - Sawyer's so cute! I'd adopt him any day, frog and all:-) Sounds like you've penned another terrific story in Storm's Interlude.
ReplyDeleteI loved Sawyer in SI. What a cute and fun interview. That scene is one of my favorites. :)
ReplyDeleteKids definitely add a sweet and frequently unexpected dimension to a book. Oh, love the frog! Great interview.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Glenys. He is a darling, but this old broad doesn't do frogs or white mice or lizards. My grandchildren do, however, and love to laugh at Grandma-Scardy-Pants. LOL
ReplyDeleteOh, Calisa, I cried when I wrote that scene. I wanted it to be a touching moment between Storm and his beloved nephew.
ReplyDeleteAnimals and children. The hero and heroine's reaction to both tell a great deal about them, don't you think, Jannine?
ReplyDeleteLoved your interview! Too cute! I loved Storm's Interlude too! Great book!
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ReplyDeleteThanks, Jerri. Sawyer was modeled after my grandson who started high school today. He was such an enthusiastic little boy, so full of himself...and, OH, how he loved his books.
ReplyDeleteWonderful interview and excerpt. I really love that book cover too. Sharp.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Lisa. Rae Monet designed my cover and she did a fabulous job.
ReplyDelete