Blurb:
Brian Cummings has come a long way from Leicestershire, England. Miles of hard road lay between then and now – hard road he's kept hidden—until the nightmares began again.
Diane Starling loves Brian. If she were not carrying his child, she'd still do anything to make him happy—even letting him go to someone else. Who is the woman in his nightly dreams? Why does she make him scream?
Valerie Leonard, journalist, dredged up history that should remain buried; history that could ruin Brian and hurt the people he loves most. Should Val keep his dangerous past to herself? Doesn't Diane have the right to know the truth about the father of her child?
Brian and Diane fight to overcome the past, embrace the present, and build a future as they travel with ShadowsForge on THE LONG WAY HOME.
Diane Starling loves Brian. If she were not carrying his child, she'd still do anything to make him happy—even letting him go to someone else. Who is the woman in his nightly dreams? Why does she make him scream?
Valerie Leonard, journalist, dredged up history that should remain buried; history that could ruin Brian and hurt the people he loves most. Should Val keep his dangerous past to herself? Doesn't Diane have the right to know the truth about the father of her child?
Brian and Diane fight to overcome the past, embrace the present, and build a future as they travel with ShadowsForge on THE LONG WAY HOME.
Setting:
Nineteen year old Brian Cummings had an affair with Mia Radley for three years. She finally sent him a letter saying she had to tell him something important and that she is leaving her husband, Nolan Radley, to be with Brian. An accident claims Mia's life. Before she died, she told her mother, Alison, to give Brian her journal and tell him that her son is actually Brian's son, not Nolan's. Alison brings Brian and Nolan together after the funeral to decide what will be best for young Brian, the son Brian never knew he had. Brian lost Mia but found his son, Brian Joseph Radley, only to lose him.
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"You two have a nice talk,
now." Alison retreated down the hallway as the boy looked at Brian over
her shoulder. Brian's heart went with the child. Mia's child. His child.
"So, Mr. Cummings, we find
ourselves in an odd situation. My wife was less than truthful."
Nolan lowered himself into a chair before the fire, and crossed his legs in a
casual but arrogant, superior manner. Brian wanted to stand but for the sake of
civility, he took the second chair.
"With both of us. Until today,
I had no idea." Brian felt uncomfortable. Nolan's eyes seemed to audit
Brian's net worth by the value of his suit. "I didn't know what you were
talking about at Avery's."
"You've seen him before?"
"Never. Mia talked about him…"
"When?" Nolan raised an eyebrow.
Brian weighed the consequences of
telling Nolan about their meetings over the years. What harm could it do to
tell the truth?
"She spoke of him every time she came to town."
"You met with her each time she
was here."
Brian defiantly looked him in the
eyes. He didn't like the way Nolan made statements instead of asking questions.
"Each time. Do you want the details?" Brian felt heat rise along his
spine.
"I could probably tell you. You
met at some dismal motel somewhere to have a meaningful toss in the sheets. She
probably meant more to you than you did to her." He gave Brian a smug
look; his blue eyes sparked with arrogance.
"Meaning?"
"You were a means to an end.
She wanted more children. I refused. She probably hoped to gain another one
from you."
"Odd you never brought it up to
her. She feared you'd find out."
"I'd hoped to gain more
sons." He waved a dismissing hand.
"She said he was named for his
father. I assumed his name was Nolan. I called him Joey to save
confusion."
"Joey? Joseph. Brian
Joseph." Nolan took a thoughtful sip of his drink. "I thought nothing
of the name when she chose it. To be truthful, I didn't care. She trapped me
into a marriage neither of us wanted. My family insisted I take the opportunity
once it was presented. It worked out well, though, because she gave birth to a
boy. If she had produced a girl, I would have seen to the divorce
directly."
Brian blinked. "Having a lover
was acceptable but you'd divorce her for having a girl? There's a truly odd
sense of morals in your family, Radley. Do you think you're Henry the
eighth?"
Nolan smirked, and gazed through his
glass. "You see, there are no heirs in my family. I'm the last of the
Radley line."
"So you get a girl. Not that I
would have objected to divorce, but try until you get a son."
"Not possible. There were
certain medical issues when I was a lad which prevent me from siring
children."
Brian narrowed his eyes. "How
come you married her?"
"As I said, my parents saw the
opportunity to have an heir to carry on the name. They decreed I should marry
and take full responsibility for the child even though we knew it couldn't
possibly be my genetic offspring." Nolan drained the glass. He stood as he
set it on the table, and faced Brian. Not to be looked down on, Brian rose.
"Make no mistake, Mr. Cummings. He is my son and will remain so. You were
merely a donor."
"Did Mia know you're
defective?" Brian inwardly smiled at the flinch his barbed remark
produced.
"She knew I'd only make use of
her before her trips to visit her mother. She didn't know it was to keep up
appearances in case she did conceive again. I wanted her to be unaware that I
knew she was meeting with someone. I'd hoped it was someone of better breeding
but…" He gave a resigned wave of his hand.
"I could take my son." Brian flexed his
hands at his sides. He stood only two or three steps from Nolan; close enough
to take him down with one swing.
"You couldn't afford the legal
battle." Nolan eyed Brian's hair and raised one brow. "What do you do
for a living, Mr. Cummings?"
"I'm a musician."
"I'm a musician."
"How do you intend to care for
the boy on your income? Can you provide him a home, food, clothing, everything
he needs?"
"Not at the moment. I'm moving
to London where…"
"Where you'll spend your nights
hanging about in pubs? Taverns? Nightclubs? Do you have a woman of your own, a
wife? Someone to look after the lad while you're off doing what ever it is
musicians do? Oh yes, drink yourself blind, sleep around with jaded women and dream
of fame, is it?"
Brian clenched his teeth, fighting
his first instinct. Punching Nolan in the face would alleviate a lot of tension
but it wouldn't change the fact Brian had nothing to offer the boy.
Nolan smiled at Brian's obvious
anger. "I am the vice president of an established investment firm. I can
give him everything he will ever need or want. Let me tell you what you'll do,
Mr. Cummings." He slipped his hand into his jacket. "You will take
this," he handed Brian a cheque, "and you will walk out the door and
not look back. This will see you on your way to where ever you care to reside.
Payment in full for services rendered. Mia neglected to pay you a stud
fee."
Brian read the amount.
Nolan continued. "This will get
you out of Leicester. You may take your fond memories of my loving wife as well
if it keeps you warm at night. Just forget about my son."
"Five
thousand pounds locked in a vault is not quite what I need." Brian
glowered at Nolan. "Would you have a fifty pound note?"
Nolan frowned. "You’re a
strange sort, Cummings. Is this your way of having the last word?" He
pulled the requested amount from his wallet.
Brian folded it and placed it in his
jacket pocket. He curled the cheque in his fist, and lashed out with all of the
anger and humiliation he felt. He backhanded Nolan, and sent the man crashing
into the chair. Nolan cried out, and held his face, shock-filled eyes locked on
Brian.
Brian stood over Nolan as Alison
scurried into the room with the boy in her arms. Brian stabbed a finger at
Nolan. "That's my way of having the last word." Brian took the lad in
his arms. He hugged him, and kissed him on the forehead before looking him in
the eyes.
"Always remember me, Brian. Ask your daddy,"
Brian tossed a nod toward Nolan, "who I am. Ask him every day of your life
until he tells you the truth. Can you do that, son?"
The child nodded. His large eyes moved from Brian to Nolan,
back to Brian.
"That's my lad." Brian
kissed him again, and handed him to Alison before he stepped in front of Nolan
again. He savored the fear in Nolan's eyes. "You will take care of my son.
I'll be watching. If anything happens to him, if he wants for anything, I'll
come back. I'll keep coming back. I'll shadow you for the rest of your
life." Brian looked with disgust at the cheque in his fist before he
locked eyes with Nolan. "He's not for sale." He spat the words as he
crumpled the cheque completely into a ball and threw it into the fire.
"Neither am I."
Brian grabbed the journal, stalked
to the door, and jerked it open. The cold blast of air refreshed him as it
cooled his anger. "Alison," he said over his shoulder, "thank
you for your hospitality. I'll be in touch. See he takes care of my
son."
Ty Synclair with beardless Brian Cummings |
With that, Brian shoved his hands in
his pockets, and walked into the night with his shoulders hunched against the
cold wind. He would spend his last night in the house. Tomorrow, he would pack
what clothes he could into a sports bag, along with the journal and the
envelope of pictures. The rest he would leave behind. Fifty pounds would see
him to London and hopefully feed him for a few days, until he could hook up
with a successful band and get on with his life.
______________________________________________
In the week leading up to this scene, Brian lost his family, his band, his job, Mia and was arrested on two counts of murder. Then he lost the son he never knew he had. I think this is the most emotional piece I've written for the ShadowsForge series.
The fourth book in the series, The Long Way Home is the most emotion-filled book, following Brian Cummings from age sixteen to twenty-six. I spent two years writing Brian's story. We spent many nights in tears together.
"ShadowsForge 4: The Long Way Home is a reader's dream. The tug of emotions I felt while reading of Brian's story is a credit to Ms. Galifany as a writer.
Ms. Galifany has woven a tale of tragedy and love that is more genuine than any I have read in a long time. I wasn't expecting such a deeply moving story from a series devoted to a popular British rock band , but ShadowsForge 4: The Long Way Home is just such a story."
- Sabine Maurier, reviewer for Novelspot.net
Buy The Long Way Home HERE
Read more excerpts HERE
See the Trailer HERE
Cheers!
Jena
2 comments:
Powerful stuff, Jena!
And this is only a piece in the middle of the story. =)
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