Book of Dreams (16 page)

Read Book of Dreams Online

Authors: Traci Harding

‘Oh.’ Zoe drew back, concerned, and folded her arms, thinking female rights were being threatened. ‘And why, may I ask, is it considered sacred
male
ground?’

Tim smiled, knowing the reason would seem incredible to western ears. ‘Because this waterhole hosts a bunyip who likes to eat women and children.’

Zoe fixed him with a look of scepticism. ‘You don’t believe that, do you?’

‘That’s why I can trust that there are no crocs in here,’ Tim replied. ‘Bunyips don’t tolerate other predators in their waterholes.’


Cool
.’ Kyle confirmed his belief in Tim’s story, as the man moved past him to fetch dry clothes. ‘Have you seen it?’

‘Seen it?’ Tim echoed. ‘It guides my destiny.’

Kyle’s smile broadened. He thought of telling Tim about his yowie, which led him to wonder how Tim knew the bunyip was his guardian … Kyle decided it was not the time to pursue this line of inquiry.

‘I was under the impression that bunyips were mythological creatures.’ Zoe risked voicing her limited understanding.

‘Such a creature has an ability to shift dimensions,’ Tim explained. ‘It’s an understandable misconception.’

‘So you can see otherworldly creatures, Tim?’ Zoe ventured to say on Kyle’s behalf, knowing he would be excited to learn of someone else with his talent.

‘I don’t want to strike you as a loon or anything,’ Tim observed, ‘but yes, I have been known to see them.’

Zoe looked at Kyle, thrilled for him, and was surprised when Kyle changed the subject.

‘Well, how about we break out some of the groceries we have in the car and make ourselves something to eat?’ he suggested.

Everyone seemed very keen on the idea.

 

 

By the time their hunger had been appeased, the afternoon shadows grew long across the landscape.

Matt had wandered back over to the waterhole. He had it in his head to experiment with the night vision function on his camera, in the hope of capturing a bunyip on film.

‘Can I help?’ Kyle offered as he joined Matt by the water.

Matt was peering through the camera, which he’d mounted on a tripod, and was adjusting the focus. ‘Um … I suppose.’ He considered the offer with an air of distant ill will.

Matt had been suppressing his feelings ever since they’d met up again, and they hadn’t had the chance to speak alone until now. Zoe had gone to lie down in the back of the car, and Tim was relaxing by the fire. Kyle wanted to talk to Tim, but clearing the air with his best friend was a more pressing concern.

‘You can stand on that rock by the water there.’ Matt directed Kyle to his point of focus and as Kyle made a move to comply, Matt added. ‘And try to be taken by a mythological beast while you’re at it.’

Kyle looked back to Matt, feeling he was not joking about his desire. Matt wore his jester’s grin, but it was not as sincere as normal. ‘I know I’ve really stretched the friendship lately.’

Matt looked away, wanting to avoid the subject.

Kyle had never thought to see Matt so hurt, or that he would be the cause. ‘It seems you were right about me pissing people off so they won’t get too close. I knew you liked Zoe, and yet I pursued her anyway.’

‘What did you do?’ Matt looked back to Kyle. ‘I mean, one minute she hates you and the next …’

‘I don’t know what happened,’ Kyle defended, and when Matt appeared disappointed by the response, Kyle endeavoured to explain. ‘Zoe and I connect on another level.’ Kyle fumbled for the words that would save his friendship, but Matt was clearly not impressed.

‘Which is supposed to mean, what?’ Matt raised both brows, eager to learn.

In his frustration Kyle suddenly realised the confession he was avoiding. ‘There’s something about me that I’ve never told you Matt —’

‘Spare me.’ Matt held up a hand, feeling that Kyle had confessed all his horrors in one drunken stupor or another.

‘I see things,’ Kyle blurted out and began to tremble at the thought of confessing that which had always caused him grief. ‘Creatures, visions, prophetic dreams … Zoe tells me it’s clairvoyance.’

Matt was stunned a second, bombarded by suspicion, doubt, then anger. ‘Bullshit!’ Matt left the camera to charge at Kyle.

‘It’s true, that’s how I knew you’d be in Nivok’s office that night,’ Kyle blurted out and winced as Matt grabbed hold of his shirt, of a mind to punch his lights out. Kyle was fearful for his injury and had no desire to make it worse, what’s more he was already freezing and feared ending up in the drink. Matt, hesitating to digest the information, gave Kyle the chance to add, ‘In the vision Nivok shot you.’

Matt backed down. ‘So it was my life you saved that night.’ With the revelation, Matt let Kyle go.

Kyle shrugged off his heroic gesture, as he didn’t feel it justified betraying his best friend. ‘So, I saved your life … what was stealing your girlfriend? Payment?’

Matt figured Kyle was being a little hard on himself and he hesitated, reluctant to admit: ‘Zoe was never my girlfriend. She’s a good friend though,’ he granted, cracking a smile. ‘As she is such a dear friend, you had better start treating her better than you have in the past.’ Matt threatened to belt Kyle over the skull, but avoided contact and released his frustration with a growl. ‘Now get over there and stand on that bloody rock!’ Matt shoved Kyle along, the ill will dispersed, and their friendship resumed its merry course.

‘Thanks for getting me to a doctor and finding Tim.’ Kyle started remembering all the instances he’d yet to thank his friend for.

Matt waved off the sentiment as he returned to his tripod. ‘You saved my life, let’s call it even.’ Matt resumed his focusing. ‘Still, I don’t understand why you are thanking me for hunting down Tim Burke.’

Kyle took a deep breath; he wasn’t prepared to admit what he so strongly suspected, until he’d had it from the horse’s mouth. ‘I’ll get back to you on that.’ He left his mark to go resolve the issue.

‘I’m not finished with you yet,’ Matt protested.

‘Sorry,’ Kyle appealed. ‘There’s something else I really need to do. But, I’ll be back.’

 

 

Tim had thrown down his jacket and was lying not far from the fire with his head resting on a log. His eyes were closed, but Kyle knew he wasn’t asleep.

Kyle took a seat by the fire and stared into the flames to psych himself into asking Tim something that had been playing on his mind for hours. ‘How do you know the bunyip is your guardian, Tim?’

Tim decided to humour Kyle, although he suspected the kid was taking the piss out of him. ‘I read it in a book long ago.’ Tim thought his answer was rather clever.

‘The
Book of Dreams
.’ Kyle was astounded by the revelation. He knew he’d guessed correctly from the astonished look on Tim’s face.

‘I’ve never mentioned that to anyone,’ Tim uttered, as he sat up. ‘How could you know?’

Kyle was distracted by his own deductions, however. ‘I assumed I inherited this sight from my mother’s side of the family, but it was yours … you have it.’ Kyle abruptly ceased his verbal theorising when he realised he’d let the cat out of the bag.

‘You know who I am, Kyle?’ Tim seemed mildly relieved by the possibility.

Kyle nodded.

‘How?’ Tim was amazed, and a little perplexed. How should he handle this development?

‘I read it in a book recently.’ His smug confession triggered so many emotions in Kyle that he found himself struggling to hold back tears. The relief of finally finding and confronting his father conflicted with the sorrow he felt at misplacing Book before he’d finished his own story.

Tim was intrigued and inspired by Kyle’s admission. ‘My time under Book’s tutelage was so long ago that it was starting to seem nothing more than a dream.’ Tim crawled over to take a seat nearer Kyle, but not too close; he didn’t want to make this situation any more awkward than it already was. ‘But everything I foresaw at that time is now coming to pass. And there can be no doubt that you are my son,’ he concluded in earnest.

‘Were you in doubt?’

‘Well,’ Tim shrugged, ‘they moved you around a lot as a child. It became harder and harder to keep track of you. The last time I saw you, you were about nine years old.’ Although Kyle was silent, he seemed open to hearing more, so Tim continued. ‘You were riding a skateboard on one of those park ramps and you took a bad fall. I ventured over to see if you were okay and —’ He shrugged, trying not to laugh at the memory. ‘You told me to piss off or you’d shove your skateboard up my arse.’

The story made Kyle laugh. ‘I don’t remember, but that sounds like me at nine.’

‘I’m hoping you’ve changed a bit since then,’ Tim commented, leaning away from Kyle. ‘I understand that your life has been anything but a bed of roses and that you might not be very well disposed towards me. In fact, I’m surprised you’re even talking to me.’

Kyle shook his head and offered Tim his hand to shake; he wasn’t ready for the fatherly hug yet. It was still a bit strange having family. ‘If there’s one thing Book has taught me, it’s that I choose my own path and I alone am responsible for walking it.’

Tim took Kyle’s hand and clenched it in both of his own. His son’s offer of friendship after all these years of worry, guilt and remorse was a true gift from the gods.

Tim’s parental guilt was still evident in his face; Kyle’s forgiveness was a comfort to him, but he obviously thought that it did not absolve him for the neglect.

‘I know why you never came for me and although it has taken me a while to get over it, I want you to know that I really respect what you did and what you are still trying to do.’

‘I never should have left Alex that night,’ Tim muttered under his breath. This piece of knowledge had plagued him for twenty years.

‘I know you had no choice and that the choice you made was under extreme duress,’ Kyle said, and for the first time he accepted that this was the simple truth of the matter. ‘Whoever killed Zoe’s parents is to blame for our past sorrows. What happens between us from here on in, that’s our own responsibility.’

‘True. And James Nivok was the catalyst of whom you speak,’ Tim informed him plainly. ‘He had my best friend, your mother’s youngest brother, killed the same way only yesterday.’

‘That was the other little accident that Nivok wanted arranged the night he shot me,’ Kyle realised. ‘You were the target but Nivok’s hired killer missed.’

‘And my parents were the previous little accident that my uncle referred to that day.’ Zoe stood alongside the car, the malice she felt visible on her face as she now approached the men. ‘He killed my parents so that he could brainwash me into selling him this land as soon as I was old enough.’

Kyle didn’t have a whole lot of energy left, but what he had he used to get to Zoe and give her a hug.

‘Son-of-a-bitch must pay,’ she sobbed into Kyle’s shoulder. Her resolution firm, she eased away from Kyle to look at Tim. ‘Can we do it? Can we bring him to justice?’

‘I have dreamed of little else for twenty years. I want my life back,’ Tim answered, ‘but before today I seriously doubted my chances. United, we stand a better chance of exposing Nivok. Still, even if we can prove our case against him, preventing this land from being mined is a completely different kettle of fish.’

‘Well, it’s my land and there’s no way I’m going to sell it now,’ Zoe reassured him, ‘so you need hold no fear of that ever happening.’

‘Your uncle is in very tight with the Queensland government and they can still enforce their mining rights if the right company has enough money to pour into the area,’ Tim said.

‘But that’s highway robbery!’ Now Zoe was fuming, her determination dented.

‘That’s the law,’ Tim concluded flatly, not liking it any more than she did.

‘I do believe that saving Turrammelin mountain is my quest,’ Kyle announced, and then, noting how he shivered, he added, ‘or at least it was.’

‘Did Book tell you that?’ Tim asked.

‘Who
is
Book?’ Zoe wondered, as they bandied the word around like a nickname.

Kyle shook his head and smiled. He knew Tim would be interested in hearing what he had to say: ‘My mother told me.’

Both Zoe and Tim were shocked by this news. Tim broke the silence. ‘You’ve spoken to Alex?’ He was overcome by joy at the prospect.

Kyle nodded, looking around the moonlit clearing. ‘She still inhabits this place and will do so for as long as her soul-land remains under threat.’

Zoe was staring at Kyle, enchanted, and then her eyes drifted to Tim. ‘I take it that etheric sight runs in the family.’ She’d overheard part of their earlier conversation.

‘Book gave me the sight,’ Tim confirmed. ‘I did not bear the burden of having it my whole life.’ He looked at Kyle with sympathetic eyes.

‘Who
is
Book?’ Zoe appealed to them once more, and Kyle and Tim both cracked a smile, aware now that they were teasing her by avoiding the topic.

‘Hey, guys.’ Matt tried to yell in a whisper as he ran. ‘There’s something weird going on down at the pool … you should really come take a look at this!’

‘Define weird,’ Kyle requested, as they moved to meet Matt halfway.

‘Um …’ He was reluctant to spit it out, as it seemed so fantastic. ‘Well … a ball of fiery light rose out of the water and then split into many smaller balls, which are darting all over the place. I’ve got it all on film,’ he was quick to add, and was surprised when no one expressed disbelief.

‘Min min lights,’ Tim supposed, though when they reached the pool of water there was no sign of the mysterious phenomena.

‘I swear they were here,’ Matt said defensively, rewinding the cartridge in his camera to view the footage he’d captured.

‘We believe you, Matt,’ Zoe assured him, having glanced back to see numerous yellow-orange lights dancing around their campfire.

‘Shit!’ Matt fast-forwarded his tape again, not wanting to tape over the extraordinary footage he already had.

‘They look like fairies,’ Zoe observed with delight.

‘What are they?’ Kyle asked Tim, as he seemed to know more than anybody else did.

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