Wildest Dreams (Thunder Point #9)(39)



Norm shrugged. “I hope she don’t have any high ideas of dance parties and shuffleboard. Could be bears, though. And there’s a glacier. You don’t even have to get off the boat.”

“I hear the food is good.”

“Food’s good right here,” he said.

“I’m sure you’ll have a great time,” Seth said.

“I’m sure I’ll throw myself overboard after the second day,” Norm said.

“That’s it,” Seth said. “Attitude is everything.”

Nine

Charlie wanted to begin his training program immediately. “Blake says I have to be patient because we’re going to start slow, but if I get started right away it’ll be no time at all and I’ll be able to run a mile. Ride five miles,” he told his mother.

Lin Su could work as much as she wanted to and if she needed time off, all she had to do was make arrangements with the other members of Winnie’s household to make sure she had all her meals and wasn’t trying to get around the house without supervision. So, if Charlie was going to be working out with Blake, Lin Su was going to be right next door, taking care of Winnie. It was all she could do not to beg Charlie to let her observe.

Of course, on Saturday Grace was at the flower shop all day. Troy and Mikhail took the opportunity to go somewhere. It was just Winnie and Lin Su when Charlie went next door at three, a prearranged time. Blake had his own training schedule to keep, mostly in the morning. While Charlie was next door, Lin Su was busier than usual doing chores that were rarely done on weekend afternoons—laundry, cleaning, linen changes, running the vacuum. Winnie sat in the living room, a book in her lap. Then she wanted to go to the deck since the sun was shining brightly. Then she wanted to be back inside.

By four o’clock Winnie started asking questions. “What’s taking him so long? He’s not supposed to do too much the first day! Lin Su, go next door and see what’s keeping him.”

“Uh-uh, no way. If they need me for anything they know where I am.”

“Oh, don’t be so tough! You’ve cleaned the kitchen five times!”

“A kitchen can never be too clean,” Lin Su said.

That first workout, which was supposed to be moderate and easy, lasted a long time. Charlie didn’t show up at Winnie’s until almost five. He was flushed and sweaty, not at all what she expected. She thought he would be bored and disappointed!

“You should see all the stuff he has,” Charlie said excitedly. He now had two books plus his notebook. He sat down in the living room with Winnie, and Lin Su joined them there. “He has heart monitors, breathing equipment, scales, speedometers, you name it. He can run a lung capacity check that’s almost as sophisticated as the hospital’s. It’s amazing!”

“Tell us about it,” Lin Su said.

“It was awesome. We started with some resting readings but I was too hyper so I had to lie on the massage table and...”

“He gave you a massage?” Lin Su nearly shouted.

“No, the table moves and vibrates and massages. Jeez, easy does it, Mom. So then when I was calmer, he did some resting readings. Then I took a hit of the nebulizer and he had me walking, then at an incline, checking vitals all the time. I thought I was ready to quit until he pushed me a little bit.” Charlie laughed and his face was bright. “I didn’t think I’d get to run—I got to run! Well...jog. My vitals were good. Then I had a rest and got on the elliptical for a while, till I started to sweat pretty good. Then he gave me a fruit drink and some power bar thing—tasted like shit... Oops, sorry, Winnie. But it did. Then I got on the bike. Just for a little while. Then he has this lifting operation—cables, pulleys and free weights. That wasn’t so much endurance—he was just checking my strength. Then I jogged a little—real slow. Just fast enough I couldn’t walk, just getting my heart rate up to an aerobic level for a little while. Then he stopped me, took my blood pressure, did some more readings. He listened to my lungs. He’s a physiologist and trainer—he has a stethoscope. My heart rate and breathing recovered in just ten minutes—I didn’t need another hit of the inhaler.”

“You were gone such a long time,” Lin Su said.

“It took a long time to do all that. We won’t have to do it all forever, just in the beginning. He does that for himself, you know—checks his heart rate, his breathing, his recovery time, his strength. Big muscles don’t swim very well but no muscle won’t get a bike up a hill. He’s always looking for exactly the right balance—a strong and lean one-fifty with good endurance. Timing is everything in a triathlon, did you know that? He can’t start out too fast or he won’t end in the money. He rations his strength and endurance perfectly—that’s what wins the race.”

“My word,” Lin Su said. “You got quite an education in one afternoon.”

“I have to read these two books,” Charlie said, holding them up. One was about anatomy and physiology and the training of athletes and the other was about asthma and training. “He has other ones—diet, weight training, body building, one called Speed. He said we’ll get to that someday. But the best thing? The absolute best thing? He said when I’m in a little better shape, he’s going to teach me to swim.”

Lin Su’s eyes widened. It took every fiber of her being to keep from yelling, No! Hopefully Blake would have all those heart rate monitors and other equipment at his disposal.

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