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424 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
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CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
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Barbara invited me in for a nightcap and Paddy insisted I come up
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and wish her goodnight, waking up briefly but dopily for as long as
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it took to get her bundled into her pyjamas, and then she smiled
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and her eyelids drooped and she was fast asleep in the way that
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only small children and drunks can do.
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Down in the living room, Barbara see-sawed the cord on the
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blinds and shut out the dusk. She poured me a Drambuie and made
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herself a brandy with ice, and we sat down in the broad armchairs
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on each side of the hearth. The liqueur sparked on the tip of my
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tongue and blazed a hot trail down my throat.
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We sat and sipped and spoke in soft voices about the fun of the
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festival and other things, the conversation just rolling along nice
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and easy. Barbara had liked all the old guys that I liked, and she did
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a quick take—off of Donald’s interminable Gaelic, which was so like
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him I had to laugh. She got me another Drambuie, filling the tiny
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Edinburgh crystal glass, and shushing my half-hearted protest. It
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was going down a treat. She had another brandy, swirling the spirit
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around in a fine balloon glass, and dipping her head every now and
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again to catch the fumes.
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It must have been way past midnight when Paddy started crying
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upstairs, breaking the mellow mood that we had fallen into. Apart
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from the hassle with Billy Ruine and his mob of nut—cases, I had
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had a ball, and when Paddy started up, yelling for her mother, I
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had a fleeting unchristian thought which I suppressed a little
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guiltily.
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Barbara gave me an apologetic look and went upstairs. She
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came down a minute or two later with Paddy in her arms, red-eyed,
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but still half asleep. Barbara was patting her gently on the back the
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way all mothers do, and Paddy’s arms were tight around her neck.
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‘It’s all right honey,’ she said soothingly while her daughter
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snuffled into her neck. ·
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‘She’s been dreaming again,’ Barbara said to me. ‘But it’s all
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gone now, baby,’ she said, in a different tone, to Paddy.
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‘She’ll be all right in a minute or two. Must have had too much
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excitement} Barbara sat down on the sofa, still patting her
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‘ 207
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daughter between the shoulder-blades, and the girl’s panicky
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snifiling began to fade down. In a few moments the night shakes
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seemed to have left her. Barbara looked at me over her shoulder.
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She was smiling a little.
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In a few minutes, Paddy’s breathing settled down and she was
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asleep on her mother’s shoulder. Barbara took her back upstairs
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and when she came back she said: ‘She’s been waking up a lot these
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nights. And so have I.’
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‘Me too. Must be the heat,’ I said, and stood up, putting my glass
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down on the stone mantelpiece.
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‘I suppose I’d better shoot off. You’ve got an early start in the
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morning. I’1l come up for Paddy about ten, and we’ll think of
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something to keep us both amused.’
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‘Thanks a million, Nick. It really is awfully good of you. Ifl get
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this job I’ll have to get some sort of babysitting service full time.’
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I shrugged and told her it was no trouble at all, and I meant it.
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Having a day with a ten year old isn’t everybody’s idea of having a
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good time, but hell, I still wasn’t beyond the stage of hankering to
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go climb a tree or hook a trout out of the burn. It was just that there
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weren’t too many people my age with the same hankering. There
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are some things which most people have outgrown, and some of
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these things I guess I’m stuck with. Anyway, I was looking forward
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to it.
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Barbara came to the door with me, and I slipped my arms
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around her back and joined them together. She pulled herself close
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and her arms snaked around my neck and she brought my head
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down to hers and kissed me. It was not a friendly kiss. Not a sisterly
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gesture. Above us, the moon was bright and silver, with that
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shaved way that tells you it’s only a day or so away from a full
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moon, and the light tingled the needles of the cypress trees that
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lined the wide lawn. I returned the kiss with interest and she
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pressed her body up against mine, lithe and taut and soft at the
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same time. We held the moment, and each other, for quite a while
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before we broke away gently. I held on to her shoulders and she
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looked down at my feet (at least I hoped it was my feet because I
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was sure that kiss had done some pretty evident things to my
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hormones) and I nuzzled the top of her head.
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‘Right, kid,’ I said eventually. ‘I’ll see you in the morning.’
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I took my hands off her shoulders, and she continued looking
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down, and I went down the stone steps towards the jeep.
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I had just reached the driver’s door and was fumbling in my
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pocket for the keys when she called my name, quite softly, from
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the shadow of the doorway. I had half turned to wave goodnight,
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208
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and she came tripping a quick-step down the stair and pattered
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across the pebbles. The moonlight outlined her body and blued the
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edges of her hair like St Elmo’s fire and she came right into my
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arms in a rush and kissed me. Hard.
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Then she stopped and looked right up into my eyes.
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‘Don’t go,’ she said, like an order. Like a demand.
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Stupidly, I said: ‘Pardon?’
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‘Don’t go tonight. Please Nicky, I don’t want you to go. Stay
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with me, won’t you?’ She said it quickly, getting it all out in a rush
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as if she might not be able to say the words if she spoke them
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slowly.
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I didn’t say anything at all. I just looked into her eyes, seeing the
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green shift to blue, and sparkling with the little reflections of the
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nearly full moon. I turned her around with one arm across her
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shoulder and walked her back up the stairs. I shut the door behind
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me and clicked the mortice lock over. We walked straight up the
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stairs and into her room and she closed the door and came right
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into my arms again.
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The moonlight was a dim arc-lamp that shone a pillar of
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fluorescence through the pane.
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Barbara and I made love on the eiderdown. The tomboy had
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become a stunning woman whose long legs entwined mine, and
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whose breasts gleamed slick with the heat of our bodies in the
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moonlight, and whose soft, rich voice moaned low and hungry in
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the night and whose tears ran cool on my cheek.
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We held each other for a long time and her tears evaporated, and
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then we talked for an even longer time, before we slept. Both of us
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knew, without saying anything, that something had changed,
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clicked into place, and that we would have to do something about
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it.
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Barbara fell asleep before me and just as she began to fade out
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she told me in a whisper that she thought she loved me. I felt a
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surge of happiness welling up inside me.
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I slept for a couple of hours, I think, for it was still dark when I
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was whiplashed right out of sleep by another of those dreams. I was
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sitting up straight before I knew where I was, before I realised I
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had been dreaming. This was one clear as ice; no aftershock fade.
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In my dream I saw a thing that swelled and pulsed, a thing that
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changed as I watched, from a black shadow that shifted in and out
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of walls and trees and smeared everything it touched with a dead
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darkness.
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In my dream I watched as it changed shape and stalked through
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the town, spreading its black disease, ripping here with a claw,
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209
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touching there, and burning with the pale white eyes that were so
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dead they sucked out life. And as I watched, stuck in the mud and
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unable to walk or talk, it changed and the wind took it high where it
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became a flapping sheet, pale against the dark, that fluttered in the
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wind and started to spiral down, and I saw a gaping beak open and
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screech with a great cry that sounded like mad laughter and saw
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that it wasn’t a sheet at all. It was a huge white bird that dived and
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dived, and down there was Barbara who was running frantically
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away from the winged horror and its great stabbing beak. I heard
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the wind of its wings and tried to call to her, to move to protect her,
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but no words would come out of my throat, and the wind became a
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roar and I saw that the great beak was going to. . . no. . . no. . .
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NO!
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And I was awake, shattered into the world again, and gasping
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for breath that wouldn’t come, and beside me Barbara was awake
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and had her arms around me and was asking me what was the
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matter.
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‘Nothing,’ I said, ‘just a dream,’ and I could still see her running
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in the distance and that huge thing streaking down towards her
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with the screech of mania trailing in the wind.
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‘Some dream,’ she said, and kissed me on the cheek, hugging
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tight, the way she had with her daughter. ‘Come on, lie down.’
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Numbly I did, and she soothed me in her arms, and gradually my
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heart slowed down a bit and my breathing regulated itself down
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from high gear to idle. After a bit, she started to kiss me again and I
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felt myself responding, and then there was a great urgency. I
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sheltered in her, driving away the picture that was freeze-framed in
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behind my eyes, holding on tight enough almost to crush her ribs
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into mine, and some time during it she grabbed my hair and
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shouted my name loud.
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Afterwards, it was me who fell asleep first, under the soothing
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pressure of her fingers trailing my brow, and her whispered
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murmurings on the threshold of my hearing. As I drifted down,
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safe in her arms, I had a dim twinge of guilt that she should be
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sleeping to prepare for her interview, and then the curtain closed
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over the show and I did not dream again that night.
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It was just going on nine, and the sun was high enough to make a
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big square of light on the wall, when Barbara gently shook me
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awake, ruffling my hair with her left hand. I opened my eyes
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groggily and she was lying beside me, propped up on one elbow
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and looking like a vision.
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Everything came back to me and I smiled, a bit sheepishly.
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210
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‘Morning,’ I said.
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She chucked me under the chin. ‘Hiya.’ She smiled, and added:
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‘Tiger.’ I smirked, I’m sure, with embarrassment.
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‘Tigress,’ I countered. ‘What time is it?’
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‘Too late for any more of that,’ she said.
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‘Pity.’
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‘Aw, come on. I haven’t got the energy or the time,’ she said
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with a laugh. Then she came off her elbow and leaned over me,
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trailing my chest lightly with her nipple, and sending ripples
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through my skin. She puckered up and kissed me a smack on the
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lips.
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‘Thank you. Thanks for staying,’ she said.
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‘No ma’am. Thank you.’
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She gave me another kiss then rolled over and out of bed. I
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watched her walk to where her robe lay on a chair. She picked it up
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and with awide movement swung it on. For a brief and tantalising
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moment I could see her outline through the line gauzy material.
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She caught my look and grinned.
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‘Voyeur,’ she said. ‘Come on, and bring your mind with you.’
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‘I’ll leave that behind,’ I said. ‘I think it would just get in the
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way.’
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She laughed brightly and ordered me out of bed and said she was
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going to check on Paddy and fix breakfast. For some reason, I
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didn’t want her daughter to know I’d spent the night, so I got out of
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bed quickly and fumbled around for my scattered clothes. It took
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me a while to find my socks, but I located them under the dresser
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and pulled them on and followed her downstairs. Barbara was
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bustling in the kitchen and I sat down at the pine table. She’d put
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out some orange juice which I downed in one gulp and she started
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to make coffee. There was a plate of cereal on the table for Paddy.
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I watched Barbara move about, and I had to say something but I
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wasn’t sure what to say, or how to start. But she got in first.
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‘You don’t have to say anything.’
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I looked up, and she must have read the surprise.
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‘It’s all right Nick. It was terrific. It was wonderful. But that
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doesn’t mean you have to .... ’
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‘You said you thought you loved me,’ I said, and she stopped in
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mid fiow. She looked at me for a while, twisting a coffee cup
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between her fingers.
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‘Right. I know I said it, I can’t take it back. But you don’t have to
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feel you’ve got anything holding you. I mean, I just let my mouth
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run away from me.’
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‘I hope not.’
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211
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‘Morning,’ I said.
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She chucked me under the chin. ‘Hiya.’ She smiled, and added:
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‘Tiger.’ I smirked, I’m sure, with embarrassment.
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‘Tigress,’ I countered. ‘What time is it?’
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‘Too late for any more of that,’ she said.
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‘Pity.’
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‘Aw, come on. I haven’t got the energy or the time,’ she said
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with a laugh. Then she came off her elbow and leaned over me,
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trailing my chest lightly with her nipple, and sending ripples
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through my skin. She puckered up and kissed me a smack on the
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lips.
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‘Thank you. Thanks for staying,’ she said.
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‘No ma’am. Thank you.’
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She gave me another kiss then rolled over and out of bed. I
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watched her walk to where her robe lay on a chair. She picked it up
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and with awide movement swung it on. For a brief and tantalising
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moment I could see her outline through the line gauzy material.
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She caught my look and grinned.
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‘Voyeur,’ she said. ‘Come on, and bring your mind with you.’
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‘I’ll leave that behind,’ I said. ‘I think it would just get in the
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way.’
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She laughed brightly and ordered me out of bed and said she was
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going to check on Paddy and fix breakfast. For some reason, I
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didn’t want her daughter to know I’d spent the night, so I got out of
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bed quickly and fumbled around for my scattered clothes. It took
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me a while to find my socks, but I located them under the dresser
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and pulled them on and followed her downstairs. Barbara was
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bustling in the kitchen and I sat down at the pine table. She’d put
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out some orange juice which I downed in one gulp and she started
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to make coffee. There was a plate of cereal on the table for Paddy.
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I watched Barbara move about, and I had to say something but I
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wasn’t sure what to say, or how to start. But she got in first.
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‘You don’t have to say anything.’
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I looked up, and she must have read the surprise.
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‘It’s all right Nick. It was terrific. It was wonderful. But that
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doesn’t mean you have to .... ’
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‘You said you thought you loved me,’ I said, and she stopped in
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mid fiow. She looked at me for a while, twisting a coffee cup
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between her fingers.
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‘Right. I know I said it, I can’t take it back. But you don’t have to
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feel you’ve got anything holding you. I mean, I just let my mouth
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run away from me.’
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‘I hope not.’
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211
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‘What I mean is. Oh, G0d,’ she said. ‘I don’t really know what I
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mean.’
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‘Well, I hope you mean that what you said was what you mean.’
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‘It was. It is,’ she paused and I didn’t let her go on.
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‘Well, that’s all right then. Because that’s what I mean too,’ I
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said, and took her in my arms. She raised hers up around my neck
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and clonked me good and proper with the coffee cup which was still
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in her hand. She jumped back with a look of surprised shock on her
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face. My head was ringing.
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And then suddenly we were both falling about with laughter.
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Maybe the mood was broken, but it broke the right way, and we
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had to hold on to each other for a bit just to stop ourselves landing
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on the floor. We were still grappling with each other and the gales
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of laughter when Paddy came wandering into the kitchen and
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asked us what was so funny.
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‘Nothing hon,’ Barbara said, with difficulty.
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‘Your mum hit me on the head with a coffee mug,’ I said
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sneakily. ‘I don’t think she likes me.’
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‘Well, I like you,’ she said, primly, flashing her mother a look of
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disapproval. ‘What’re we going to do today? You’re early too.’
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‘Yes, I thought we’d make a day of it, so I came as early as I
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could.’
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‘You’re still wearing the same clothes,’ she said. ‘Didn’t you get
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to bed last night?’
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I looked at Barbara and she had to turn away to the sink to
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prevent Paddy seeing her next fit of the giggles.
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‘Something like that,’ I said. From behind me I could hear
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Barbara snorting in a bid to stifle her laughter.
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Barbara went upstairs to get changed and Paddy and I sat in the
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kitchen with our respective breakfasts. The radio was on in a
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corner playing early morning wallpaper stuff and then the local
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news and the weather. I wasn’t really listening, I suppose, lost in
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my thoughts. Paddy munched her cereal diligently. The
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weatherman said something about storms heading in over the
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Atlantic, bringing rain to most parts later. I didn’t quite catch it,
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but Paddy heard too.
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‘It’s not going to rain, is it?’ she said, pulling a disgusted face.
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I looked out of the window. The sun was working overtime.
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‘Nah. Not today anyway, I don’t think}
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‘That would be really rotten,’ Paddy said. ‘Can we go a picnic
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then?’
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‘OK, but I’ll take you somewhere you haven’t been yet.’
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‘Where’s that?’
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212
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‘I thought I’d show you some of the places me and your mum
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used to play when we were kids.’
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‘Really? I can’t imagine my mom being a kid,’ Paddy said. ‘What
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was she like?’
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‘Well, she could climb better than anybody, and she was good
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with a slingshot and she could hit a rabbit with a rock.’
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Paddy’s eyes opened wide. ‘My mom? My mom could hit a
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rabbit with a rock?’
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Her face was such a picture of disbelief that I had to laugh out
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loud and that made her laugh too.
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‘You’re kidding me, ain’tcha?’ she said, falling into her
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American idiom. I realised then that I might have been just a bit
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iconoclastic and that Barbara might disapprove of her image being
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tampered with.
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‘Yeah, I’m just kidding. But she was a lot like you. Same colour
|
|||
|
of hair and same freckles. I reckon you’ll be a lot like her.’
|
|||
|
‘Do you think so? Do you think I’ll be like her? I mean, she’s
|
|||
|
awful pretty and all.’ -
|
|||
|
‘Don’t worry about it,’ I said, on surer ground now. ‘Even
|
|||
|
prettier probably.’
|
|||
|
‘Don’t know if I want to be pretty,’ Paddy said, thoughtfully.
|
|||
|
‘But hey, I’d sure like to hit a rabbit with a rock.’
|
|||
|
When Barbara came downstairs I was still grinning and she
|
|||
|
asked both of us what was so funny. I turned around and there she
|
|||
|
was standing by the door and looking like something from the front
|
|||
|
cover of Vogue. She had put on a simple white suit and had shoes
|
|||
|
and handbag to match, and frankly she looked perfect.
|
|||
|
I gave her a low wolf whistle that Paddy tried unsuccessfully to
|
|||
|
emulate, and Barbara shot me a look that conveyed pleasure and
|
|||
|
incredulity and disapproval all in one.
|
|||
|
‘Do you think I’ll pass muster?’
|
|||
|
‘I’d say if they don’t hire you they’ll need their heads looked at. ’
|
|||
|
‘Me too,’ Paddy chipped in. ‘You look lovely mummy.’
|
|||
|
‘Well, thank you for that,’ Barbara said. ‘I take that as a vote of
|
|||
|
conHdence.’
|
|||
|
I wished Barbara the best of luck and she smiled. Then she told
|
|||
|
both of us to take care of ourselves and not get up to any mischief,
|
|||
|
and made us both cross our hearts. We did.
|
|||
|
Out front, Barbara pecked us both, me on the cheek and Paddy
|
|||
|
on the top of the head, thanked us for our good wishes and warned
|
|||
|
us sternly to behave. She swung the estate car out of the gate and
|
|||
|
was gone with two brief toots on the horn. If it was up to me I’d
|
|||
|
have hired her on the spot.
|
|||
|
213
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
‘Right, now what?’ Paddy said.
|
|||
|
‘First, down to my place, young lady, so I can get changed. Then
|
|||
|
we’ll decide.’
|
|||
|
We went in the jeep and Paddy was jumping and excited, a
|
|||
|
condition that I was beginning to take as par for the course with
|
|||
|
her. I let her ride shotgun, but insisted she get strapped in, and as
|
|||
|
she leaned back to slot the belt into the mount she came close to
|
|||
|
mei
|
|||
|
Phooey. Boy, do you need a bath,’ she said, wrinkling her nose.
|
|||
|
‘Less of your lip, young lady. I told you I didn’t get much sleep
|
|||
|
last night.’
|
|||
|
‘What’s lip?’ she asked innocently.
|
|||
|
‘What you’ll have a fat one of, kid, if you don’t button it, and
|
|||
|
pronto.’
|
|||
|
That brought on another fit of the giggles. I was beginning to
|
|||
|
enjoy myself already. Yesterday, apart from the scene with Billy
|
|||
|
Ruine and his bunch of nutters, had been good. The best day I’d
|
|||
|
had in ages. Last night was just incredible. Today promised to be
|
|||
|
fun, pure and simple.
|
|||
|
Paddy loved my place. She sat in the big rocker and swung back
|
|||
|
and forth while I pottered about in the bathroom, trying to
|
|||
|
convince the shower that lukewarm was not going to solve the
|
|||
|
problem, but that was all I got, so I just used a lot of soap. I
|
|||
|
changed into a pair of faded Levis and a light shirt and had a quick
|
|||
|
shave before going down to attend to my guest. She didn’t say no to
|
|||
|
a couple of bacon sandwiches and insisted, despite my disbelief,
|
|||
|
that her mother allowed her to have coffee. I split the difference
|
|||
|
and made up a cup of decaffeinated instant and she was none the
|
|||
|
wiser.
|
|||
|
While we were eating and swapping tales — me about being a kid
|
|||
|
here, and she about being a kid over there — I flipped on the radio
|
|||
|
and heard the weatherman on the other channel promising a big
|
|||
|
change in the weather. As I’d driven down from the heights of
|
|||
|
Upper Arden, I’d noticed some cloud piling high over the firth, but
|
|||
|
there was hardly any breeze at all, so I thought we’d get a last day
|
|||
|
of it. Over the roar of the low gears on the steep hill, there had
|
|||
|
been a low rumble like distant thunder. I hoped the day would stay
|
|||
|
fine, otherwise Paddy and I would be relegated to playing I—spy and
|
|||
|
happy families, but it was still hot and bright.
|
|||
|
I thought we might head along to Strowan’s Water and take the
|
|||
|
forest path into the valley where our old gang used to be. I
|
|||
|
reckoned I could spin a few tall tales about the old days, what I
|
|||
|
214
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
remembered of them anyway, that still wouldn’t spoil Paddy’s
|
|||
|
image of her mother, and retain mine — both versions that is.
|
|||
|
Paddy asked me where the bathroom was, and I gave her
|
|||
|
directions and she thumped up the stairs.
|
|||
|
She was on the second flight more than halfway up to the top,
|
|||
|
when she stopped. I could hear the sudden cessation of her
|
|||
|
footsteps on the treads.
|
|||
|
‘Anything up kid?’ I shouted up. There was no reply. I took the
|
|||
|
bottom ilight two at a time and cocked a head over the banister.
|
|||
|
Paddy was standing at the sixth step, with her right foot poised for
|
|||
|
the seventh. She was standing stockstill, one hand on the banister
|
|||
|
and the other almost touching the wall. Then, quite deliberately,
|
|||
|
she lifted her foot higher, and put it on the eighth step up, missing
|
|||
|
out the previous one, the one that creaked like the crack of doom
|
|||
|
in the middle of the night.
|
|||
|
How the hell did she know about that, I wondered.
|
|||
|
‘Are you all right?’ I asked, and Paddy turned on the top landing
|
|||
|
and nodded. There was a strange look on her face, puzzled but not
|
|||
|
afraid.
|
|||
|
‘Yes, I’m OK,’ she said. ‘That step isn’t right, though.’
|
|||
|
‘What do you mean?’
|
|||
|
‘It was going to creak at me. Step on a creak makes you weak.’
|
|||
|
She went into the bathroom, leaving me with the puzzled
|
|||
|
expression.
|
|||
|
215
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|