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The cure for drowning

Paylor, Loghan. (Author).

Born Kathleen to an immigrant Irish farming family in southern Ontario, Kit McNair has been a troublesome changeling since, at ten, they fell through the river ice and drowned--only to be nursed back to life by their mother's Celtic magic. A daredevil in boy's clothes, Kit chafes at every aspect of a farmgirl's life, driving that same mother to distraction with worry about where Kit will ever fit in. When Rebekah Kromer, an elegant German-Canadian doctor's daughter, moves to town with her parents in April 1939, Rebekah has no doubt as to who 19-year-old Kit is. Soon she and Kit, and Kit's older brother, Landon, are drawn tight in a love triangle that will tear them and their families apart, and send each of them off on a separate path to war. Landon signs up for the Navy. Kit, now known as Christopher, joins the Royal Air Force, becoming a bomber navigator relied on for his luck and courage. Rebekah serves with naval intelligence in Halifax, until one more collision with Landon changes the course of her life and draws her back to the McNair farm--a place where she'd once known love. Fallen on even harder times, the McNairs welcome all the help she is able to give, and she believes she has found peace at last. Until, with the war over, Kit and Landon return home.

Book  - 2024
FIC Paylo
1 copy / 0 on hold

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Stamford Available
  • ISBN: 9781039006454 (pbk.)
  • Physical Description 390 pages ; 21 cm

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Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 9781039006454
The Cure for Drowning
The Cure for Drowning
by Paylor, Loghan
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Excerpt

The Cure for Drowning

JANUARY 1931 It was a bitter afternoon, during one of the worst winters the province had ever seen. A ten-year-old girl walked into the forest with her two brothers and didn't come out again. The youngest, Jep, remembered they were looking for cranberries, drawn over the snowy fields and across the river into the wetlands and forest on the other side. He blamed the oldest, Landon, for getting them lost. Landon always reminded Jep that there were no cranberries to be found in January. That they had been seeking beech nuts, buried deep under the snow. Six-year-old Jep had been told to stay home but followed his siblings anyway. The three of them had trod a large, meandering loop of the forest without finding a single cranberry or beechnut. Kathleen wanted to press on, up into the pine forest on the ridge, but it was too far for the smallest feet in their party, so Landon turned them homeward, unsure of his way among the snow-buried trails. After, he would claim it was Jep's fault they ended up at that part of the river at all. Neither disputes that it was a late winter afternoon, with blank, heavy clouds overhead. Three children walked among ever­greens so dark they seemed black, the snowscape slowly turning blue-grey as the light slanted. Twelve-year-old Landon in the lead, his hat frosted like a birthday cake. Kathleen, ten, in the mid­dle, glaring at the back of his head. Behind them, jumping from one boot hollow to the next, came Jep, bundled in his oversized coat and scarf. Unseen eyes watched their progress with silent, patient interest. They emerged from the woods on the ridge that swept up from the river and stopped. They could see the farm where it lay a few miles ahead, skirted on three sides by fields marked with fletchings of trees and fences. The river traced the foot of the ridge for several miles, then ran down to join the Grand River and finally empty into Lake Erie. Kathleen started whistling. A long gust of wind shook the branches of the trees behind them, the evergreens adding their hissing chorus, until the children were surrounded by the sounds of rushing water, the creak and groan of branches rubbing together. "Stop that," Landon snapped. "You'll call them up." "No, I won't," Kathleen said, but she fell silent and tucked her face back into her scarf. The wind died away. Sparkling lights flick­ered at the edge of their vision, dancing along the snow. A trick of the fading winter light, the children thought. Below their feet, the ridge plunged straight down to the bank for half a mile in either direction, cut by a narrow gully that was a creek in warmer seasons. The downed ash tree they had used to cross the water hours earlier lay several miles northwest. It would be dark by the time they reached it again. To the left, the river was wider and deeper, the ice hidden under a blanket of pristine snow. To the right, it narrowed and broke into shallow rapids, the cur­rent moving too quickly to be caught by the frost. "We'll cross there," Landon said, pointing to a place just above the rapids where the ice was solid and impressions of animal tracks marred the snow. Without waiting for a reply, he plunged down, breaking a path for the others to follow. When they reached the bank, Landon stepped out first, slid­ing his boots one at a time through the snow. Kathleen took Jep's hand and towed him along in her wake. To their right, the ice fell away, revealing the rushing, blue-black water of the rapids. As Landon pulled ahead, moving quickly towards the opposite bank, Jep tugged free of Kathleen and hurried after him. Kathleen placed her feet hesitantly, arms windmilling for bal­ance when her boot slid on the hidden ice. When the boys reached the other side, they waited for their sister impatiently, cold and hungry and eager to be home. Landon tucked in Jep's scarf, brushed the snow from his hat. Darkness rushed up the valley, the very last of the light dying in the northwest. Purple-blue shadows slithered across the snow to lick their boots. "Kath, come on!" Landon called. But Kathleen had stopped in the middle of the river, staring at the gap in the ice where the rap­ids rushed. As they watched, she took two steps towards the open water. As though she were hypnotized, Jep would say later. "Kitty?" Jep started towards the river's edge, but Landon grabbed the back of his coat. She took another step and paused, her head cocked, eyes on the open water. "Can't you hear it?" Kathleen's voice was barely a whisper above the wind over snow. "Someone's calling me." "That was us," Landon yelled. "No, there's a light, somewhere under . . ." She shuffled a few more steps. The ice groaned. Landon shoved Jep farther up the bank, telling him to stay put, and started towards his sister. He remembered later that her face was lit with a faint green-blue glow. Jep claimed that the footprints they'd made on the ice also shone with the same light, like a reflection of the dusk sky. Except the clouds hung low and there was no light anywhere. Kathleen took another step towards the water, her eyes follow­ing something under the ice. "No!" Landon's voice cut through the darkness. "Look at me, Kitty. At me." His sister startled, as though just realizing where she was. The ice creaked beneath the children's feet. On the bank, Jep started to cry. "Don't move, Kitty," Landon said. "Stay exactly as you are." He began edging forward. Snot dripped from Kathleen's nose. She wiped it with her mitten. A few more steps and he would be within reach. A blue-green light under the ice drifted towards the centre of the river. Kathleen followed it with her eyes, and then turned, lifting a boot. A sharp crack. Landon's shout. The ice broke and Kathleen plunged into cold black water. Excerpted from The Cure for Drowning by Loghan Paylor All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.