The Right Time

“You can’t lose it, Alex. Your talent is too big to disappear like that. It’s all about timing. And it’s all cooking somewhere inside. Something will get you going again.” She wanted to think it was true but she didn’t. She missed the days of being able to write effortlessly, but that was long gone.

When Desiree turned five, Alex hadn’t talked to Bert in a while so she called him, just to say hello. There was no answer. She called him the next day, and still got nothing. She wondered if he’d gone on a trip, but he never did. She got an odd feeling about it, and called Rose Porter the next morning. She came on the line quickly.

“I was just going to call you,” she said in a subdued voice.

“Have you talked to Bert lately? I’ve been calling him for two days. The message machine isn’t on and he’s not answering.” Rose was silent for a moment at her end.

She didn’t know how to tell her, but she knew she had to. “I wanted to talk to you today. I was worried about him too. I don’t know why, but I have his landlady’s phone number. I called her yesterday. He had an accident two days ago. He slipped on the sidewalk and hit his head on the curb. It was a freak accident.” Alex felt sick as she listened.

“Where is he now?” she asked, sounding panicked, but not wanting to know the end of the story. “Is he at the hospital? Is he okay? Did he have a concussion?”

“Alex,” Rose said in a strong firm voice. “It’s over. Bert is gone. He died instantly when his head hit the curb.” There was silence at Alex’s end as she tried to process what Rose had told her, but her brain didn’t want to. What Rose had just said couldn’t be true. He couldn’t be gone. She needed him. She loved him like a father. She was thirty-eight years old and had known him for exactly half her life.

“Are you sure?” she said in a whisper.

“Yes, I’m sure…I’m so sorry.” Alex was more than sorry, she was devastated. She couldn’t imagine a world without him, any more than she could a world without Miles, and now they were both gone. They had left her alone, just like her father.

“I have to go,” Alex said, unable to talk to Rose any longer. She sat in a chair in her room crying for a long time, and Desiree came to find her. She was just back from playing in the garden, and saw Alex with tears running down her face.

“Mama’s crying?” her beautiful little blond child asked, and Alex nodded. There was no point hiding it from her. She couldn’t. Another of the most important people in her life had disappeared.

“Mama’s sad,” she said, pulling the child onto her lap and holding her in her arms. Desi was all she had now. Everyone else was gone, except people who were so far away. She hadn’t seen the nuns in years, or Brigid, not since Miles died, and now Bert was gone forever.

“Don’t be sad, Mama,” Desi said and kissed her where the tears were, and Alex smiled at her, and went to make her lunch. She thought about Bert all day, and fell asleep thinking about him, and in the middle of the night, she sat bolt upright, as though he was sitting in the room with her, and she knew what she had to write. The story came out in one piece, already finished in her head, and she hadn’t even begun it.

She sent Desi out to play with Maude the next day, sat down at her desk, and pulled out her Smith Corona. The case was dusty. She hadn’t touched it in years. For five years the sleeping giant in her, as Bert called it, had been in a coma, and now it was wide awake, turned into a dragon in her chest, fighting to get out, and nothing could stop it. She wondered if Bert was doing it to her, if he had willed it to happen, or if it was simply time. He had said something would get her going again. And ironically the something was him. She couldn’t stop writing from the moment she sat down.

She wrote day and night for three weeks, and then she sent Rose Porter two chapters. She called Alex as soon as she read them.

“That is one fantastic story.” She sounded thrilled and so was Alex. It felt like the best book she’d ever written.

“I started writing the night you told me about Bert. I think he gave me the story.”

“No, you gave you the story, Alex. It’s all in there, you just have to find it again.”

“That’s what Bert told me. I thought it was gone.”

“No,” Rose said firmly, “it’s better than ever. It will never be gone. Keep writing.”

Alex kept writing for the next four months with no one to show the book to. She couldn’t send it to Bert now, or follow his directions. But she could hear him in her head, telling her what to do, when to stop and when to move ahead, when to end a chapter or write something really vivid with details of brutal murders. The story just rolled out of her head and onto the page, and she couldn’t hold it back. And on the last page, with a shocking exposé at the end, she knew it was finished, she didn’t need anyone to tell her. Not even Bert. And she knew he would have loved it.

She spent two more weeks polishing it and making small corrections. It was surprisingly clean, and then she scanned and emailed it to Rose Porter.

She read it the next day, in one sitting. She finished at 3 A.M. and called Alex. It was 8 A.M. in England.

“You’re back!” Rose said, sounding elated, as Alex sat smiling, staring into space. She knew it too. She had found the magic again, the secret. After five years of silence, Alexander Green had come alive again, returned from the dead, stronger than ever. “I’m sending this to your publisher tomorrow. And you’ll be paid three million this time.”

“That would be nice,” Alex said, smiling broadly. But it wasn’t about the money. It was about the dragon in her that wasn’t dead but only sleeping, and had roared to life again.



Rose told the publishers she wanted three million per book and a four-book contract, which made Alex nervous at first, but now she knew that she could do it, and so did her publishers. They all agreed, it really was the best book she’d ever written. She was better than ever. The shock of Bert’s death had brought her back to life. The pain of losing Miles had put her to sleep, and now every fiber of her being was tingling as though there was an electric current passing through her body.

She walked out into the garden with Desi after Rose called to tell her she got the four-book contract for her asking price. After scrimping and saving, losing everything, and almost having to sell the farm, she was back with more money than she’d ever had. She had lost Miles and Bert, but now she had Desi. Life had a strange way of trading one blessing for another. It had worked out in the end, and she hadn’t sold the farm. She knew Miles would have been proud of her. And now so was Bert.





Chapter 21