Caleb 75 - Welcome to the family.
I reversed my truck onto the drive at our new temporary home. Louise drove up beside me, as did Amanda. Ness, whom I'd given a garage opener, pulled straight into the garage. I'd put my truck in the garage later, but thought it would be easier to unload from the drive.
Amanda was the first to the front door and she opened up to let us all in. The girls hadn't seen the house with all the furniture in yet so they decided to go on a tour before we unloaded the cars. Ness, of course, started with the kitchen.
I noticed her eyebrow raised on a couple of occasions as she noted where things were. I grinned at her.
"As long as you know," she said with a superior air.
After the tour we started to unload all of our stuff. We'd put three wardrobes in the main bedroom and another two in the guest bedroom. If guests stayed, they'd have about half a wardrobe's space to put their things in. With five girls in one bedroom, storage was at a premium. The new build was going to have a sizeable walk-in in the main bedroom.
Sarah also offered up some of her wardrobe space, since she had a double in her room and the girls were more than happy to take her up on it.
It took us over two hours to unload all the cars and get things put away roughly where we wanted them. I knew it was going to take a few weeks for us to completely settle in, but we made a great start. We were by no means finished though. Next, we needed to go food shopping since we had nothing at all in the house. There wasn't as much as a grain of salt in any of the cupboards, so we needed to completely stock up.
We headed to the discount warehouse and literally filled my truck. I don't ever remember spending quite so much in one hit on groceries. We not only had to buy the week's food, but stock up on all the staples.
As normal, there were a few things that we'd couldn't get from the warehouse. We stopped in at the supermarket on the way home and stocked up there too, spending almost as much as we used to spend on our weekly shop when we first moved out of the dorms.
We unloaded everything into the kitchen and I left Ness to put it all away. I went to the range and collected my guns, brought them home, and put them in the gun safe.
I stared into the safe once I'd put both guns inside. I really regretted not putting my grandfather's ring inside the gun safe. I'd been wearing the ring that my parents had bought me for my 21
st
, but my grandfather's ring had been in the house when it burned up. There wasn't a detectable trace of it left.
My father had actually cried when I'd told him over the telephone that it was gone. It had meant so much to him. I'd written to my aunt to let her know too. Somehow an email didn't seem to have enough weight. Her response was more pragmatic.
"Just thank your lucky stars you weren't wearing it when it burned up," she sent back. That made me smile a little and I resolved to make the effort to go see her at some point in the summer break.
I was heading out to move my truck into the garage when I saw a middle-aged man leaving next door's house. I figured he was too old to be June's husband, perhaps one of their fathers? He had the look of law enforcement about him. I smiled and nodded at him as he walked to his vehicle. He gave a short nod as he looked me up and down. When he got into his car, I noticed him writing something down. I got the distinct impression he was taking down my license plate and wondered about that.
Shrugging, I moved my truck and went back into the house.
While the girls organized the bedroom, and Jules organized her workbench, Ness and I organized the kitchen. I looked out into the back yard and checked out the brick-built barbecue out there. It was in decent condition and, after a clean, would be very useable.
"Hi," a man's voice interrupted my inspection of the barbecue. I looked up to see him looking over the fence at me.
"Carl?" I asked walking over to shake his hand.
He nodded. "June said you were moving in today."
"Yes," I said. "We are. And yes, sorry, we're students too. I'm Caleb."
He laughed. "Yeah," he said. "We kind of screwed up. On Google Streetview it looks like a nice family neighbourhood."
"They didn't really give us much choice,"
I caught from his thoughts.
"There seems to be quite a lot of you," he said. "I saw you moving in."
"Yeah," I said. "There's nine of us. But we're not a rowdy bunch, I promise. Although we have been kind of forced into a house-warming party in a couple of weeks, so - sorry about that. You're more than welcome to drop by."
"We're not really the party type," he said. "With a young child, who sleeps when she wants, anytime she's asleep we try and join."
"I met her," I said with a smile. "She seems full of mischief."
"That's one way to put it," he said with a weary sigh.
Just then June came out to join her husband. She was carrying Carly. On seeing me, Carly broke out into a wide grin and, as June approached the fence, held her arms out toward me.
Carl shook his head. "She's not usually so keen on strangers," he said.
I shrugged. "Kids and cats," I said. June smiled a little, having decided I was kidding, but Carl looked confused.
"Listen," I said. "I was going to fire up the barbecue for dinner. How about you guys join us? It will save you cooking at least, and you can get to know the madhouse?"
"You just moved in," said June. "Surely you have enough to do?"
"We have to eat," I said, "and given there's so many of us anyway, a couple more mouths aren't going to make that much difference. To be honest, we've been living in a hotel for a while and my fiancΓ©e and I have both been dying to get back to cooking.
They looked at each other. Both of them looked bone tired. I wondered if Carly was the only cause, but didn't snoop.
"If you're sure," said June. "Can we bring anything?"
"Just yourselves, oh and something to sit on," I said. "Is there anything you don't or won't eat? Allergies and that kind of thing?"
"No," said Carl, "we're pretty omnivorous."
"Perfect," I said. "I'm going to get the grill cleaned, and then fire it up. Shall we say six thirty? Or is that too late for little miss there?"
"Ha," said Carl. "If only. If we put her down before nine, she's up at two. Even then we're lucky to make it to four most mornings. Any later though and she won't sleep at all and then she's a demon the next day."
"Wow," I said. "I don't envy you in the slightest."
"That's why noise is such a problem for us," said June. "If she goes down and gets woken, then that's her up for the night."
"We'll try and make sure not to wake her," I said sympathetically.
Just then Mary came out into the yard.