A Charmed Life - Cover

A Charmed Life

Copyright© 2016, 2024 by The Outsider. All Rights Reserved.

Chapter 48: Plans

30 August 1999 – Hospital Road, Shirley, Massachusetts

Jeff dropped the three kids off at the day care center on Keiko’s first day of school. The center was right across the street from Devens Regional High School; Keiko would do the drop-off the next morning while he fought traffic on his drive to Medford. Jeff was glad the center opened well before she’d need to be in her classroom.

Yay! The Knox kids are back!” cried Marie Falcone, director of the Big Steps Childcare Center. The boys sprinted to her while Sabrina waddled to Sophie Sherman, the woman who’d watched over her last year.

“Look at you, Sabrina! Walking! You’re such a big girl!”

“Tofie!” she giggled while giving Sophie a hug.

“Hi, Jeff,” Marie said while hugging the boys.

“Hi, Marie,” he replied, shaking her hand. “You ready for these three this year?”

“You bet! Keiko’s first day of school is today, huh?” she asked while motioning to the crowds in front of the high school.

“Yeah. Keiko will pick them up after school today; she’ll drop them off tomorrow morning while I’m at work, too. I’ve got a pretty good-sized ‘honey-do’ list waiting for me at home while these guys are here today.”

“Lucky you.”


Shawna blew her nose for the third time in thirty minutes.

“I swear I start with a runny nose every time we’re here lately.”

“With the change in the seasons do you think that might be it? More rain, wet, musty leaf piles...?”

“Maybe, but I’ve been fine unless I’m here.”

“Any of the firefighters reporting similar problems?”

“No, not that I’ve heard but I’ll start asking around.”

“How’s your six year-old?”

“I can’t believe she’s that big already,” Shawna said, shaking her head. “A First Grader! That makes your little girl one year-old and the twins two and a half now, right?”

“Yep. Hey, I don’t think I’ve ever showed you the best picture from Sabrina’s first birthday...” Jeff pulled out his wallet and extracted a photo. Shawna began laughing.

“Did she eat any cake, or did it all wind up on her face?”

“She didn’t get all of it on her face! Some of it ended up on her dress, Shawna.”

“Oh, my apologies, Sir,” she giggled.

“I don’t know why I put up with your abuse; I can call my sisters if I want to hear that!”

“Yeah, but they pay you to listen to me!”

“I hear you, but I’m not sure how much I listen to you, Shawna.”

She blew him a raspberry.


One Friday in mid-October Keiko left school as soon as the students were dismissed, picked up the kids at Big Steps, and headed home. The following day Jeff’s and Kara’s families would gather at his parents’ home to celebrate his father’s fiftieth birthday and his parents’ twenty-eighth anniversary. They would leave for Enfield early the next morning to spend the whole day with his family. The solo part of Jeff’s workout was nearly complete when Keiko arrived home with the kids; his feet pounded out a steady rhythm on the treadmill while the four trouped into the workout room.

“Dada!”

“Hi, Princess!” he answered Sabrina while she waddled up to the treadmill.

The noise his feet made, as well as the whirring of the machine, kept her at a distance. Ryan came over to join his sister and make sure she stayed back. Alex looked on from a distance, holding a book in his hand.

“Jeffrey, I will change into my gi and return shortly.”

“‘Shorter?’ You’re already only five-six, Keiko.”

“Shortly, Jeffrey! Do not make me use foul language with you! Based upon your lack of respect for this dojo’s Sensei, perhaps we should adjust the intensity of our sparring session today?”

“I like a challenge,” he replied with a smile. Since Keiko was almost fourth-dan and Jeff only first-dan, he liked to refer to her as “Sensei” during their sparring sessions. She usually rolled her eyes at the term.

“I shall remember you said that,” she retorted and walked out.

The treadmill signaled the end of Jeff’s interval running program and slowed into the cool-down program. Five minutes later it slid to a stop, allowing Jeff to dismount and give Sabrina kisses.

“No hugs yet, Princess,” Jeff said while pulling at his t-shirt. “Daddy’s all stinky-sweaty.” He traded high-fives with Ryan. Sabrina put her hands on her hips as she’d seen her mother do.

“Dada smell!” she stated with a scowl on her face.

“I guess she told me,” he said to Ryan with a chuckle. “If your Mom comes back while I’m in the bathroom, tell her I’m changing, okay Ryan?”

Ryan gave him a thumbs-up. Jeff ruffled Alex’s hair and gave a kiss to the top of his head when he passed; Alex looked up from his book for a second before returning to it. Jeff returned a few minutes later; Keiko was already on the large mat doing her stretches.

“Do you need time to stretch, Jeffrey?” The children were safe beyond the edge of the mat, each with something to occupy them during their parent’s workout.

“Only a minute or two, Keiko. I’m pretty well warmed up from my workout.” Five minutes later they faced each other at the center of the mat and bowed. Slipping into their preferred starting positions they began to spar.

Jeff and Keiko adjusted their teaching times at the dojo after Sabrina was born so one parent could always be home with the kids. Their joint workouts usually occurred after the kids had gone to bed at night; cameras and baby monitors alerted them if any of the kids needed them. Alex and Ryan had been to the dojo as infants and saw them spar, but Sabrina never had. When they paused following their opening flurry she came running over, crying.

“NO HIT! NO HIT!” she screamed while standing between her parents, tears streaming down her face, unsure of who to go to first. Alex and Ryan stared from the edge of the mat. Both Jeff and Keiko stopped immediately and knelt by their daughter.

“Princess, what’s the matter?” Jeff asked while gathering her into a hug.

“No hit Mama, Dada!” she sobbed. “Mama, no hit Dada!” Jeff rocked Sabrina while trying to soothe her.

“Sabrina,” Keiko said softly, “your father and I are not mad at one another. We are practicing a skill known as ‘karate.’ It allows us to protect ourselves and others from bad people who try to hurt us.”

“‘Tay?” Sabrina sniffed.

“Yes, Princess, karate,” Jeff answered. “We were practicing with each other so we can get better at it. Your mother has been doing this most of her life and is very good. I started practicing again when I met your mother and I’m getting better because I learn from her. Practicing like we were helps us stay good.”

“Not mad?” Sabrina asked looking from parent to parent, wiping her face.

“No, Sabrina, your father and I are not mad at each other. We love each other very much; we would never hit each other, nor you, nor Ryan, nor Alexander.” Keiko ran her hand over Sabrina’s dark hair, smoothing it and further calming her daughter. “Hitting another person is wrong, unless you are practicing like your father and I. We practice to stop others from hitting us when we do not wish it.”

“Bina do ‘tay?”

“When you are a few years older yes, Sabrina, should you still wish to. Your brothers also, should they wish to. We did not mean to scare you, daughter, and we are sorry. Are you alright now?”

“Yes, Mama. Okay now.”

“Why don’t we give this up as a lost cause?” Jeff asked his wife. “You go relax on the couch with the kids while I shower before starting dinner?”

“Perhaps that would be best, yes. I will speak more with Sabrina about what she saw.”


Two weeks later Keiko and Jeff brought the kids to the dojo. They’d alerted Emily and Ben so they’d be available to help watch the kids; they’d also be able to help explain what Sabrina would see there. Alex and Ryan both ran to Emily when they caught sight of her; they gave Ben ‘five’ after hugging his girlfriend.

A children’s beginners class occupied the mat when the Knox family arrived. Sabrina watched while kids her cousin Jenni’s age practiced their first forms. Keiko and Jeff pointed out what they were doing and why. Emily drifted over once Ben was reading to the boys.

“Emlee!”

“Hi, Sabrina!”

“Day do ‘tay?” she asked, pointing at the class.

“Yes, they are. Do you see that man teaching the class?” Sabrina nodded. “That’s my dad.”

While Emily was about to get her license, while at sixteen and a half, Ben already had his, so Sabrina had never met Sensei Daoust; the teenagers drove themselves to Lancaster when they babysat.

“That your dada?”

“Yes. My Dad has been studying karate for his whole life, like your mom. See the gold stripes on the black belt he’s wearing? The only reason he has more than your mom or dad is he’s been taking karate much longer than they have.”

“I doubt he’d appreciate the ‘much longer’ part,” Jeff muttered to his wife. His comment received one standard eye-roll from Keiko.

“You do ‘tay?”

“Yes, Ben and I both do.”

“Your dada teach you?” Sabrina asked Emily.

“Not at first, no. Dad was just beginning to teach when I started and he didn’t think he was ready to teach younger kids. I didn’t take any classes with him until I was ten.”

“Wanna do ‘tay.”

“When you’re older, maybe about five or six, you can start taking lessons here. There are some really good teachers who help my dad here,” Emily said while looking at Keiko and Jeff.

“‘Sander an Ryan do ‘tay, too!” Sabrina pronounced. Jeff had visions of his family sparring at home.

That’ll make for an interesting family game night...


With a yard the size of the one in Lancaster came an equally sizable problem: the volume of leaves that needed to be raked in the fall. Jeff purchased a riding mower when he and Keiko’d first moved in. After spending three days raking by hand that first fall, he tried gathering the leaves using the mower with a bagging attachment; the volume of space the mulched leaves took up still required frequent emptying of the bagger. By the time the boys saw their first fall, he’d bought a separate riding leaf vacuum.

Now that the kids were all old enough to walk Jeff used the vacuum everywhere except near the house; there he used a hand rake to pile the leaves for them to jump in. When they’d enjoyed themselves he picked up the large pile. Once mulched it joined the larger pile of decaying material in the woods. Jeff found Keiko by the grill outside after he’d parked the vac and returned to the house; the kids were reading at the outdoor table next to her. Whatever she was cooking smelled terrific.

“Hey good lookin’,” he said while hugging Keiko and nuzzling her ear. “Whatcha got cookin’?” Keiko smiled, pulling herself deeper into his arms.

“Beer can chicken. Baked beans are on the side burner and there is a salad in the refrigerator.”

“You’re not on the menu?” he asked in a whisper. Keiko kissed her husband.

“Perhaps later,” she whispered back.

“Hubba, hubba, hubba. How soon until dinner is ready?”

“The chicken will be finished cooking in five minutes, but will need another fifteen to twenty to cool. Everything else is ready.”

Jeff stole another kiss before walking over to the kids. Ryan and Sabrina were coloring together, but Alex was coloring his own picture.

“Whatcha doin’, Alex?”

“Coloring.”

“Can your Dad join you?” Alex didn’t respond verbally but slid the picture towards an empty seat; Jeff sat next to his oldest. “Which part do you want help with?”

Keiko smiled at the scene. Alex, who’d been more talkative before Sabrina’s arrival, withdrew once the focus shifted to his younger sister. Now that Sabrina was more independent, Alex started to emerge again; he still seemed to avoid Sabrina where possible, though. Keiko was thankful Jeff didn’t need many hours at a second job like so many in EMS seemed to, just one or two nights a week at the dojo. He made sure he was home with the family as much as possible.

This would likely be the final time they could eat outside with the kids for the year. The forecast for the coming week was for daytime temps in the fifties but with nights dropping into the mid-thirties; too cold for young kids to be outdoors and be comfortable while sitting still. Keiko would not be surprised if they saw snow by the middle of November.


“Jim, I’m telling you, I’m getting uneasy when I think about my tech stocks these days,” Jeff said to his broker, Jim Teller, a week before Thanksgiving. “I want you to get me out.”

“Jeff, I agree; there’s too much volatility lately. You know I’ll do what you ask me to, so don’t worry. You told me when we started working together that you liked my conservative approach. Just tell me how far out you want to get.”

“About three-quarters of the way out, Jim. Find someplace with a moderate level of risk to invest for about five years or so; I want to protect what we have. I also want to cash out a portion of that tech portfolio to invest elsewhere.”

“Can you tell me where?”

“I wish I knew if I could, Jim. It’s still a privately held company, one not being traded on the market, but I don’t know where the line is for you.”

“It’s not a public company? I should be in the clear.”

“I’ll have to ask if they’ll let you invest at this stage, but here’s what the company’s doing...”


“Are you still getting those runny noses?” Jeff asked Shawna in early December; they were in the small room set aside for EMS crews at Medford’s Station Five. She shook her head.

“It seems to have gotten better. I’m not blowing my nose every five minutes.”

“Was it the change of the seasons do you think?” This time Shawna shrugged.

“It must have been. I haven’t had much of a problem since the cold moved in.”

“It moved in, alright,” Jeff muttered.

The outside temperatures hovered just below freezing, as they had for three weeks; there hadn’t been any snow yet. Jeff and Shawna dressed for the outside weather but had to find ways to stay cool while waiting inside. They’d lowered the thermostat in their office/bunkroom to the low sixties so they wouldn’t sweat to death.

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