: Part 1 – Chapter 1
Cherry Girl
ELAINA People who are meant to be together will find their way back to each other.
There may be detours along the way, but they are never truly lost.
AUTHOR UNKNOWN I remember the very first time I ever saw him. That first moment our paths crossed. The memory is branded into my head with indelible clarity. As clear as fine crystal with bright, sunlight shining through it.
I was ten years old when my brother, Ian, brought him home for dinner. He sat across from me at our family table. I probably looked like a total idiot gawking at him, but he didnât seem to mind my staring. Good thing, because even then I couldnât take my eyes away. Neil was beautiful to me when I laid my childâs eyes upon him for the first time. Purely and simply beautiful.
It didnât matter that he was seven years older and totally uninterested in a gangly little girl with braces on her teeth who was definitely not anything close to beautiful.
He winked at me when he caught me sneaking a peek over a bite of Mumâs delicious buns. I remember that gesture of his made me feel strange inside, like everything was squished together and turned to mush. Feeling shy and self-conscious, I tried to come to grips with the knowledge that I had met the boy I had every intention of marrying someday.
Yes, itâs true. I fell in love with Neil McManus when I was a child. I am sure of how I felt, just as I am sure the feelings didnât go both ways. I watched him go through plenty of girlfriends over the years, too. What I donât remember is if he said anything to me that very first time we met. I do know he looked my mother in the eye with respect, and thanked her for the delicious dinner. That impressed me, even then. Even in my ten-year-old mind, I could read in him the deep appreciation he had for what Mum had easily offered to a guest in our home. I could tell that Neil was not accustomed to cozy dinners at the family table. He appreciated something I took for granted every day. He was just a young friend my brother had dragged home from God knows where, and from whatever trouble theyâd been deep into, but he became something more than that from the very beginning. At least, for me he did.
Neil showed up for dinner quite often after that first meeting. Some days it felt like he was my new brother whoâd just moved in with us. Other times, heâd show up after a few weeksâ absence, wearing a hollow look in his dark, dark eyes. His home life was shit, apparently. No mum, just a dad of some sort who didnât care about him. My dad wasnât around a great deal either, but it wasnât because he didnât want us, it was because he travelled a lot for his job. I missed my father, of course, so I suppose it was natural for me to connect with an older male figure who was always nice to me, and didnât act like I carried the plague.
Neil called me Cherry Girl due to the colour of my hair. Iâd have to agree with him on that. My hair was pretty much the colour of one of those dark cherriesânearly black with an undertone of deep red running through it. Neil told me my hair was very beautiful, and that small gesture was enough for my self-confidence to blossom. I took his compliment and ran with it.
I remember when he touched my hair for the first time, too. The memory is as perfect as the day it happened and I couldnât forget if I wanted to. Because it was also the first time he rescued meâ¦
The cricket field stretched out to meet the forest edge a fair distance back. When I was eleven, on a summery Sunday afternoon, I had been sitting on the fence watching the local team play cricket. Neil and Ian were there too. Iâd seen them strolling through talking to girls and other friends they knew. I was content to watch the match from my perch on the fence and blend into the background. The warm day brought out the crowd and space had become a premium, I guess. When a noisy, obnoxious group came through, being so small, I just got swallowed up in the melee that resulted.
A disputed call by the official started the ruckus. Then a fight broke out in front of me with two blokes pounding into each other, with no regard for who they might include with their misfires. I didnât duck out of the way fast enough, and was shanked by a fist that relieved me of my front-row fence spot. And right onto my left forearm, which managed to find a large rock to land on. Lucky me.
I heard the crack of bone, felt the pain, saw the brutal blows of the two brawlers, and smelled the beer thatâd been sprayed about when the first punch was thrown.
I clutched my arm and tried to breathe, crying through the pain, sure that nobody would ever see me, let alone help me out.
I was wrong, though.
The sweetest sound was Neilâs voice in my ear saying, âIâve got you, Cherry Girl, and youâre going to be just fine.â
âMy arm hurts,â I told him through the tears.
âI know, darlinâ.â
âI heard a noiseâ¦like something snapped. Does that mean itâs broken?â I wailed.
He picked me up and shouted something to my brother, the anger in his expression darkening his eyes to a frightening black as he eyeballed the two whoâd caused my injury. I wouldnât want to be either one of those idiot blokes, confirmed by what I found out a day later.
Neil stroked my hair and sat with me until the doctor could cast my arm. And then, when he actually set the bone. The bone setting hurt, but the gentle reassurance and soft touch of Neilâs hand on my hair almost made it cancel out. âLook at me, Cherry. Keep your eyes on me,â heâd said with a smile, his hand moving slowly down my head over and over.
The next day, Neil brought some visitors by my house. Armed with humility and the telltale evidence of a second round of beatings, courtesy of Ian and Neil, the two fools responsible for my broken arm arrived with flowers and apologies for me and my panicked mum. My dad had a go âround as well with them when he returned home from his business trip. Poor bastards didnât stand a chance, and it was safe to say they were scared straight onto a much more righteous path after that.
Neilâs actions with me, in my time of need, cemented his place in our family for good. He basically became a second son to my parents and everyone seemed to understand and settle into this knowledge. I had to accept that Mum and Dad loved Neil tooâ¦which meant I had to share him with everyone in my family.
I wouldnât even let my best friend sign my cast until Neil did first. My knight in shining armor.
Back then.
When I was fourteen, and he was twenty-one, he joined the army and went away to fight for Britain. Mum and Dad had a goodbye party for him, and I remember how it seemed totally normal that we threw the going-away celebration for him and not his own family. Not that they had ever shown an ounce of interest that weâd seen expressed. It made me sad to realize that I could not recall even a single conversation where Neil ever spoke about anything personal in all the time he was around our family. The information I did know about him had always come from my brother, Ian.
The Morrison family had claimed Neil McManus for their own, and that was simply the way it was going to be.
When it was time to say our goodbyes I got shy, struggling with the words I wanted to say, but knew didnât have a snowballâs chance in hell of forming on my lips. I didnât want Neil to leave without a proper send-off, but I was also totally self-conscious like any young girl would be with an adult man she adored and thought walked on water. I also waited until his girlfriend Cora had gone to the loo. I didnât care for Cora much at all and surely wouldnât have her fouling up my coveted goodbye to Neil. I wasnât stupid, just at a disadvantage.
âSo, Cherry Girl, donât go falling off any fences or getting into the middle of a bunch of sodding idiots brawling while Iâm away, all right?â His dark eyes twinkled with teasing so that I couldnât help but return a smile as they swallowed me up.
âI wonât.â
âIâll have a hard time cracking heads all the way here from over in Afghanistan.â
I looked at the floor and gulped down the lump that had suddenly formed in my throat. âNobody will bother with me. They never do,â I said.
He dipped his head to find my eyes, waiting for me to look up. âI think thatâs about to change, Cherry. Youâre growing far too pretty for your own good. The blokes are going to be all over you and theyâd better be nice. Ianâs got strict instructions to keep the crowds of arseholes at bay and make sure Iâm regularly updated.â
I blushed to the roots of my hair and gathered the courage to give him my gift. âI made you something.â I handed the small packet to him and waited while he opened it, his big hands moving the tissue paper carefully aside. âItâs a bracelet,â I blurted, âfor luckâ¦to keep you safe.â I held up my own wrist. âI made one for me, too. It has the infinity symbol and two good luck owlsâ¦Iâll say a prayer for you every day and this will help me to remember,â I trailed off, feeling shy again. âBe really careful over there, Neil, I want you to come back.â
He brushed over the black-braided leather with the charms Iâd added and smiled before looking up at me. âI will,â he said in a whisper. The expression Neil wore was different this time. Something Iâd never seen from him before, at least not directed at me personally. His eyes seemed like they could be a little watery too. We were definitely having a moment.
He brought a hand up to my cheek and held it there for a moment. âThank you.â He slipped the bracelet onto his wrist and tightened it. âIâm going to miss you very much, Cherryâ¦and Iâll wear this, and be the luckiest bloke in the British Army.â He held his wrist up to show my bracelet before wrapping me into a hug with his big arms.
âIâm going to miss you too, Neil.â And, I love you. I breathed in the smell of him and held onto it, hoping he would return safely someday, that the war would not take him away from us forever.
I felt his soft lips against the side of my temple and got the squishy feeling in my insides again. I didnât want to pull away, but the awkwardness of my young emotions bouncing all over the place made me self-conscious.
âDonât you ever change, Cherry Girl. Stay just how you are right now. Youâre utterly perfect.â
Those were Neilâs final words to me before he left to be a soldier.