Who on earth would be ringing me at 1:30 in the morning, I groaned while picking up the phone from the night stand.
I recognized my wife's phone number on the screen. Before I could say a word, I heard a sob from the other end.
"Can you hear me Daddy?"
My anger dissipated in a flash.
"Sure Pumpkin. What's up?"
"I'm all wet and cold, Daddy."
"How come?"
"My sleeping bag is wet 'cos there's a puddle on the floor in the tent."
"Can't Mummy help you get dry?"
"Mummy isn't here."
"Why isn't she there. It's the middle of the night. Do you know where she is?"
"Yes Daddy."
"Well, where is she?"
"She tucked Mikey and me in after our barbecue dinner and went over to Uncle Dave's tent."
"Why didn't you go and get her?"
"She told us to stay in our tent, no matter what. She said she would be very angry if she was disturbed."
My blood pressure was rising.
Dave Murdock married my wife's sister. He was a sleazy son-of-a-bitch who was always making inappropriate remarks to my wife and touching her when he thought I wasn't looking.
A week ago my wife Mandy suggested we head to our favourite camp ground about two hours out of town in the foothills, a beautiful spot that we visited three or four times a year. Her sister Sue and husband Dave had agreed to join us.
I am an architect, working mainly on high priced homes, individually designed for select customers. I don't advertise -- my reputation is well established from word-of-mouth referrals and I have enough projects coming up to keep me busy for at least the next two years. We live in a three level home in a leafy suburb in the outer metropolitan area. My design studio occupies the top floor.
We were due to leave home after the kids finished school on Friday. It was a two hour drive to the campsite so we would have plenty of time to set up camp before darkness set in.
The day before, a panicked builder who had worked with me on many project homes phoned about a problem with the roof design of the house we were building. Although the roof structure had been checked and signed off by a structural engineer, his gut told him that the design was flawed and would fail in extreme weather conditions.
After re-checking my drawings I had serious doubts too and agreed to meet the builder on site on Friday morning. It was obvious that it would take more than a few hours to re-work the plans so I phoned Mandy, explained the problem and suggested she take the kids in her car so I could join them some time on Saturday. She was surprisingly agreeable so I was able to concentrate on correcting my error.
Which brings us to the phone call on Friday night -- or rather, Saturday morning.