Storming: A Dieselpunk Adventure (64 page)

Read Storming: A Dieselpunk Adventure Online

Authors: K.M. Weiland

Tags: #Dieselpunk, #Steampunk, #Mashup, #Historical

Walter rounded the front of the plane, without Jael, who must have realized what was in the wind and backed off. He saw Hitch and danced over, eyes sparkling.

“Howdy,” Hitch managed.

The boy grinned up at him all the harder.

“What’s this? Don’t tell me you’re back to not talking?”

Walter shrugged. He seemed to think about it, then said, “Howdy.”

“That’s more like it. ’Cause, you and me, we got things to talk about.” He knelt and set his hands on Walter’s shoulders.

Every minute in that jail cell, he’d been trying to figure the best way to say this. Nan and Byron had promised to prepare the way for him.

He wet his lips. “What would you think if I were to start being your dad?”

Walter cocked his head and raised his eyebrows. He looked intrigued.

Hitch kept going. “What would you think if it turned out I
was
your dad? And maybe, one of these days, if you wanted to, you could come live with me?”

Walter kept staring. If anything, the look rising in his eyes seemed to be one of hope. He flung himself against Hitch’s chest, wrapped his arms all the way around, and hugged him.

Hitch’s breath ripped right out of him. How could anybody forgive that fast? Or trust that easy? He didn’t deserve it, that was sure. But here it was, like a gift someone had slipped into the palm of his hand. And he’d almost missed catching it altogether.

Walter stepped back from Hitch's arms and looked up at him, fairly glowing.

Then J.W. hollered, “Hey, kid, you playing or not?”

Walter glanced over, then again at Hitch, eyebrows raised, asking for permission.

Hitch nodded. “Go along. We got more to talk about, but it’ll wait.”

He stayed on his knees and watched Walter scamper off.

So help him God, he was going to make good this time. He’d be there for Walter, every single day of his life. He’d accept this gift, and he’d do his best to take care of it like it deserved to be taken care of.

Beside the plane, Jael stood with her hands in her back pockets. She grinned.

He pushed up to his feet and joined her. “I hear Livingstone offered you a job?”

She inclined her head.

“Me too.” He took a breath. “I don’t have any kind of right to ask you to stay, after everything that’s gone down. But just in case it might mean anything to you, I am promising
I’m
going to stay.”

Her grin faded. She stitched her eyebrows together and pursed her lips. She’d never seemed to have much trouble making up her mind about things. But right now, she looked downright indecisive.

He tried again. “I reckon you don’t have to say anything right now.”

“It is not that.” She moved a step closer. “It is that I am not knowing right word for... this.” She set her palm on his chest. Without so much as a blush this time, she leaned in and kissed him right smack on the mouth. Then she pulled back, shook a few loose tendrils of hair out of her face, and grinned wickedly.

He blinked. “What? No slap this time?”

She shrugged one shoulder. “Not this time, I think.”

“What about this time?” He cupped a hand around the nape of her neck and pulled her back in.

From behind him, voices started hollering.

“What kind of umpire are you?” J.W. demanded.

“The boy was safe,” Matthew said. “I make the calls the way I see them.”

“Well, maybe the fact you’re wearing
spectacles
is a hint you shouldn’t be umpire!”

“And maybe the fact you’re
not
wearing them is a hint why you weren’t voted umpire in the first place.”

Hitch stopped kissing Jael, but kept her close, and looked over his shoulder.

Livingstone wheeled his way over to where Matthew and J.W. stood nose to nose. “Gentlemen, gentlemen, was this not supposed to be a friendly ballgame?” He turned to Hitch. “Perhaps our resident flight instructor might be persuaded to give free rides instead?”

Hitch looked at Jael. “What do you say?”

She tilted her head all the way back to see into his face. “I have lived in sky for as long as my life. Take me home, Hitch Hitchcock.”

“My home too.” And he didn’t mean just the sky this time.

He stepped away from her. “All right, who wants a ride?”

Several people whooped, Walter loudest of all.

Hitch hopped up into the rear cockpit. Almost before he’d settled, Walter scrambled into his lap. Taos jumped right in without so much as an invitation—barking his head off, of course—and somebody coaxed Nan and Molly into the front cockpit. Jael perched herself on a wing, while Earl swung the propeller. The Jenny couldn’t take off with all of them, but Hitch could taxi them around the field.

“Contact!” Earl shouted.

Hitch flipped the magneto switches. “Contact!”

Earl swung the prop again, and the engine started chugging. Inch by inch, the Jenny lurched forward, until she was bumping across the field. The wind touched their faces with the scent of cut grass.

Walter leaned back against Hitch’s chest, one hand on the stick, the other on Taos’s ruff.

Hitch glanced over at Jael, on the wing, and she laughed, delighted.

His stomach got that same old weightless feeling. He faced forward again, feeling the Jenny’s rhythm beneath him. Flying a biplane, especially one as rickety as a war-surplus Curtiss JN-4D, meant being ready for anything. He just hadn’t ever expected “anything” could turn out to be quite this good.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Extras

 

 

 

Get a free copy of acclaimed author K.M. Weiland’s BRAG Medallion-winning medieval novel BEHOLD THE DAWN, when you sign up for her Reader’s Group.

 

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Note From the Author
: Thanks so much for flying along with me on
Storming
! Did you know reviews are what sell books? If you’ve had fun reading this book, would you consider
rating it and reviewing it on Amazon.com
? Thank you!

 

Join the discussion: #Storming

 

About the Author:
K.M. Weiland lives in make-believe worlds, talks to imaginary friends, and survives primarily on chocolate truffles and espresso. She is the IPPY and NIEA Award-winning and internationally published author of the medieval epic
Behold the Dawn
and the portal fantasy
Dreamlander
, as well as the bestselling
Outlining Your Novel
and
Structuring Your Novel
. When she’s not making things up, she’s busy mentoring other authors through the award-winning website
Helping Writers Become Authors
. She makes her home in western Nebraska. Visit her on her website
kmweiland.com/news
for bi-weekly updates about her books and her adventures as a writer. You can email her at [email protected]. Join her
mailing list
for news of upcoming books.

 

Want more?

 

Use the following link to visit a hidden webpage, designed especially for fans of
Storming
!

kmweiland.com/storming-extras

Access exclusives such as:

Desktop Wallpaper

Story Soundtrack

Deleted Scenes

Character Interviews

Research Notes

Story Outline

And more!

 

 

More by K.M. Weiland:

 

 

What if your dreams came true?

 

Read the BRAG Medallion winner and NIEA finalist!

 

Every night, journalist Chris Redston dreams of a woman riding a black warhorse through the mist. The only thing she ever says is, “Don’t come.” And then she shoots him—every single time. And every single time, he wakes up in a cold sweat and wonders . . . what if dreams aren’t what we’ve always been told they are?

 

Claim Your Copy!

 

 

Dedicated to my beloved Savior,

who sets us free in His truth.

 

And to my sister Amy.

I write for her before I write for anyone else.

 

 

Acknowledgments

 

WRITING A BOOK is something one does alone. The finished draft is a solitary accomplishment. But a
good
book? That is the result of a generous collaboration of intelligent minds and wide-open hearts. I am blessed to have a good many such minds and hearts in my life—and it is the owners of these important organs that allow me to share my novels with you.

As I finish yet another literary journey, I must pass out rounds of espresso, dark chocolate truffles, and tremendous thanks to the following people who guided, encouraged, and joined me on the trip.

My chief writing buddy Linda Yezak: who brings all that redheaded verve to cheering me on and, occasionally, helping me fight my battles.

My editor CathiLyn Dyck: who gives me no nonsense and the confidence I’m on the right track.

My proofreader Steve Mathisen: who is so much more than that with his continual encouragement and fellowship.

My critique partner London Crockett: who is secretly much more brilliant than I am.

My beta readers: Lorna G. Poston (for whom I created Taos), Daniel Farnum (who gave me Snoopy as my writing mascot), Braden Russell (who is also secretly much more brilliant and— not-so-secretly—much funnier than I am).

My aviation experts: Chuck Davis (who actually drew up blueprints of
Schturming
!) and Matthew Gianni (who talked me into cutting all my favorite scenes and making the story much more plausible).

My family: who really are the
best
writer’s family I have ever heard of.

My illustrator and cartographer: Joanna Marie (who has been working with me since
Behold the Dawn
and who phenomenally outdid herself this time around).

My translator: Alex Shvartsman (who made the completely unfair trade of checking all my Russian translations in exchange for my reviewing his awesome book).

Wordplayers everywhere: What a community you guys have created! Thank you for showing up every day on my blog and social sites and reminding me why readers are the best people on the planet.

Thank you!

 

K.M. Weiland

November 2015

 

Storming

Copyright © 2015

K.M. Weiland

 

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written permission of the publisher and copyright owner.

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