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453 lines
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Plaintext
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
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Summer 1961.
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Sausages sizzled in the bottom of the old, battered frying pan,
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sending up a delicious aroma that combined with the pine and oak
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twigs that hardly smoked at all as they burnt in the little circle of
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stones.
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‘Sausages is the boys,’ Colin said, snij§€ng the tang of crackling
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fat. He was stirring the embers on the other side of the fire to make a
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flat space for the equally battered little saucepan that was filled with
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baked beans.
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‘I’m starving, ’ I said. ‘I haven ’t eaten for hours. ’ That wasn ’t true,
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but it sure felt like it.
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‘Real commandos can go for days without food, and still fight, ’
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Colin asserted. Today he was a commando. Today, we were on a
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three-man mission of derring-do. Our gang hut was now our
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foxhole beside the stream. Sausages and beans were iron rations.
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My bow was a rifle. Colin ’s spear of rowan was a bayonet. Barbara
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was so far unarmed, because her father had confiscated her slingshot
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after he’d lost a pane of glass in his greenhouse. That miss-hit had
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almost put paid to our adventure in the woods at Strowan’s Water.
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Doctor Foster disapproved of his daughter hanging around with the
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likes of us kids from down the hill, but we kepta diplomatic distance
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between ourselves and him, and the one and onlies were still a
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threesome.
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‘They live off the land, ’ Colin said. ‘You can send them anywhere
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and they can find their own food, rabbits and deer and everything. ’
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‘And berries and mushrooms, ’ Barbara said. ‘I can find berries
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and mushrooms. ’
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‘Berries don ’t go with sausages, ’ 1 chipped in.
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‘But mushrooms do, ’ Barbara said. ‘I know where there’s plenty.
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I could live off the land. ’
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‘They’re probably poisonous Toadstools,’ I told her. Barbara
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was already starting off down the path.
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‘Some of them can kill you just by looking at them, ’ I said.
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‘Naw, you have to touch them first, ’ Colin refuted. ‘And then you
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can make a cut where you’ve been touched and suck out all the
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170
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poison. ’
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‘What about the poison in your mouth? ’
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‘That’s easy. You just spit it out. ’
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‘I don’t fancy that much. 1fy0u touch one of them, you can suck
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your own poison out. ’
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‘Some commando you are, ’ Colin snorted. ‘They’re supposed to
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defend each other to the death. ’
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‘What if your tongue got poisoned when you sucked it out? ’
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‘Then you’d go dumb, dummy, ’ Colin said, laughing at his pun.
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‘And then you wouldn ’t be able to ask a lot of silly questions. ’
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He got a slender stick and started rolling the pink sausages over,
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exposing the dark brown, sizzling undersides. Then with the same
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stick he stirred the beans. They were just starting to bubble.
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‘Look what I ’ve got, ’ Barbara called from a little way down the
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track. ‘There’s hundreds. ’
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She came striding up, bright and smiling, her hair bobbing with
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her gait. She had an armful of big oatmeal-capped mushrooms.
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‘They’re toadstools, ’ I said. ‘They’ll make you dumb. ’
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‘Don’t be daft, that’s only after you suck the poison out, ’ Colin
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retorted.
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‘No, they ’re mushrooms, ’ Barbara said. ‘They’re just the same as
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the ones my mum gets. Isn ’t that right, Colin? ’ she added, looking to
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him for support.
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Colin stood up, backing away from the jire, and he wiped the
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smoke out of his eyes. His face was streaked with the tears that had
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poured down his cheeks when we first lit the fire and the smoke had
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billowed into all our faces.
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‘Let me see, ’ he said. Barbara kneeled down and let her load spill
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from her hands on to the grass.
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‘They look all right to me,’ Colin announced. ‘My Aunt May
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picks mushrooms up here, and they ’re just the same as them.
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They’re OK.’
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To prove it, he picked up one ofthe big mushrooms and sniffed it,
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then bit a piece off chewing quickly, like an expert tasting truffles.
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His tongue didn ’t go black at all and that settled it.
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I used my penknife and sliced up the caps and we threw a lot of
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them into the fat with the sausages. They quickly went from white to
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grey, fat mushroom steaks that added their tantalising smell to the
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already mouthwatering mix.
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We ate the lot, along with the beans and the sausages, scooping
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them out of the pans and on to the enamelled tin plates that formed
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part of our survival cache in the little hidden lean-to. Every
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mouthful was a delight. Afterwards, Barbara brewed up some tea in
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171
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a dried-milk tin that we had punctured at the t0p t0 take a wire
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handle. We debated as t0 h0w much tea we sh0uld put in, because
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n0ne 0f us were experts in that field, and there was a brief argument
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0ver wh0 f0rg0t the milk, but the argument faded as we sat in the
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shade 0f the huge beech tree and scalded 0ur m0uths 0n the tarry
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brew.
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We decided t0 wait until it had c00led dawn. The plates were lying
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at the edge 0f the stream, lightly c0vered in the gravel which w0uld
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help sc0ur them clean 0f 0ur 0utd00rs dinner. C0lin asked t0
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b0rr0w my knife and I warned him n0t t0 l0se it and he pr0mised t0
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guard it with his life. He str0de d0wn t0 the stream edge and cut 0ffa
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stem 0f saxifrage that swayed 0ver the still water 0fa sunlitp00l, and
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br0ught it back t0 where Barbara and I were gingerly taking sips 0f
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the sm0ke-blackened tin.
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‘Making a peash00ter? ’ I asked. C0lin cut the c0rrugated h0ll0w
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stem int0 a little 0pen—ended tube.
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‘N0pe.’
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‘What then? ’ I asked.
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‘Wait and see, n0sey,’ he said, cutting the fragile tube with the
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sharp blade. Barbara and I watched curi0usly as he t00k a piece 0f
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bread fr0m the slices I ’d hlched fr0m the kitchen and nipped 0ff a
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m0rsel between his jinger and thumb. This he jammed int0 the base
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0f the tube.
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‘Right, n0w watch this,’ he said. C0lin t00k the bag 0f tea and
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p0ured s0me 0ut int0 his hand. I c0uld see his t0ngue — still un-
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damaged fr0m the mushr00ms — sticking 0ut 0f the c0rner 0f his
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m0uth as he c0ncentrated 0n the delicate task 0f funnelling the tea
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int0 the 0pen end 0f the tube. When he was d0ne, he reached 0ver t0
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the fire, shielding his face fr0m the heat 0f the flame, and stuck the
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thing int0 the red base where the c0als gleamed red. It immediately
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started t0 sm0ulder and he hissed t0 himself as the heat started t0 sear
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his hand. He pulled back quickly.
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‘Right. Watch this,’ he ardered, and sat back against the b0le 0f
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the tree and put the end 0f the saxifrage stem in his m0uth. Fr0m
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where I sat, 0nly a f00t 0r s0 away, I c0uld smell the aniseed ar0ma
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0f the sm0uldering plant, and an0ther, bitter—sweet smell which I
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assumed was the tea. C0lin sucked hard thr0ugh the plug 0f bread,
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and we watched in amazement when he blew 0ut a thick cl0ud 0f
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blue sm0ke.
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‘Great sm0ke, ’ he said, and then c0ughed a little.
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‘Where did y0u learn that? ’ I asked. ‘I didn ’t kn0w y0u sm0ked.’
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‘Trade secret, ’ C0lin said. ‘Want t0 try it?’
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Barbara screwed up her n0se, then reached 0ut and t00k the
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172
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smouldering stem from Colin. She sucked in hard, and then went 0n
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to a paroxysm of coughing.
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‘Too much, ’ he said, and started beating her on the back. As far I
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could see it wasn ’t helping the cough any. It took her a few moments
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for the coughing jit t0 subside. Colin took back his extraordinary
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cigar and said, ‘Watch this. ’ He put it to his lips and pursed them
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around it, and his cheeks caved in with the vacuum. Then, to our
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astonishment, he blew out two blue plumes of smoke from his
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nostrils. It reminded me of a picture in a book where a dragon
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puffed out jets, and I started to giggle.
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‘Here, you try it, ’ he said, and handed it to me. I did. There was a
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dejinite liquorice—aniseed taste from the smoke, and another that
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was strange, and not at all unpleasant. As soon as the smoke filled
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my mouth, I could feel saliva welling up, and when I blew out the
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cloud, I had an immediate need to spit it. It landed on one ofthe hot
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stones that ringed the j$re and sizzled loudly and satisfyingly.
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Barbara had another try, and this time she didn ’t cough, then we
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all had shots each, passing it around like I would much later in
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sociable company.
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‘Right. Take in some smoke. Not too much, ’ Colin said,
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demonstrating. His voice was wheezy when his cheeks were full of
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fumes. ‘Then, ’ he said, smoke dribbling out as he did so, ‘suck in. ’
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He took a big breath and it all disappeared inside him. When he blew
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it out again, it was grey, not blue. I wondered how that happened. It
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took Barbara three tries, and me jive, to get the hang of it. The
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smoke burned my throat, and I could feel my lungs starting to swell,
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but it was a nice sensation. The saliva ran, and we all spat
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intermittently into the fre and on to the hot stones, relishing the hiss
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as it evaporated.
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I blew a smoke ring, and the other two fell about, helpless with
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laughter. I tried, but I couldn’t repeat the action. We giggled
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together, sharing the tea-filled steam, and didn’t notice at all that
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everything was getting hazy.
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‘Great shmoke, ’ Barbara said, and Colin nearly wet his jeans.
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‘Trij§‘ic, ’ I agreed, to another gale of laughter. Colin laughed so
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hard he fell over, and lay staring up into the trees, his belly shaking
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in spasms. I leaned back against the tree and wondered why
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everything went in and out of focus. Barbara, who had been sitting
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on a gnarled root, slowly slid off landing with a gentle thud on the
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dry grass, and that set us all off again.
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And a few moments later, the world started to sway and spin and I
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shot away from it in a blaze of colour that swirled and sparkled in
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front of my eyes and ....
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173
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I squatted at the edge ofthe stream, watching the sunlight catch the
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expanding rings from where the fish had risen t0 dipple the surface.
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Rings of gold, ever moving outwards. I was in a glade where the sun
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shone between the tops 0f huge trees. In front of me, the field was
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gone. Instead there were big—boled beeches and massive firs, wide
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and monstrous, marching up and 0ver the hill and 0n for ever. I
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could see between their great trunks, but only for a little distance into
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that forest, for it was gloomy in there, dark and shadowed. The sun
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shone where I sat by the edge of the water, watching the slow
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movement of trout, big and fat, lazy in the pool.
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I looked around me, curious, yet accepting that I was alone. This
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was a strange place, yet not strange. Familiar and unfamiliar. The
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big stone where Barbara had sat like the little mermaid was still
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there, but the stream was different. The trees were tall and mighty,
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bigger even than the gnarled beech that we’d been sitting under.
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Somewhere downstream a bird called, a hooting cry that echoed
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among the trunks, and there was a reply from further away. Behind
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me, something crashed through the trees, and I turned to look into
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the forest behind me, but there was nothing but shadow. I sat still for
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what seemed an age, and then a movement caught my eye, a flash of
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dark in peripheral vision. For some reason, I did not move, only
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sliding my eyes to where the movement was. Out of the trees, slowly
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and majestically, came a huge stag, the king of all stags, bigger even
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than the huge Clydesdale that towered over the hedges up at
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Kilmalid Farm. If I had stood up, my head would not have even
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reached its belly. I stayed rock still, and so did the deer, standing like ~
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a huge dark shadow as it surveyed the glade. Its nostrils flared like
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black tunnels as it sniffed the air, and its ears turned and twisted,
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quartering for danger. Satisfied, it slowly emerged from the gloom,
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one slow step at a time, grand and dignified, and as it came out into
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the light I almost gasped in wonder. For on its head it bore an
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impossible spread of antlers that I hadn ’t noticed in the background
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shade and tangle of branches. They were immense, a great two-
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handed sweep of pronged bones that were almost, to my eyes, as
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wide as a road. The far edge of one of them lightly scraped against
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the trunk of a fir tree, cutting a neat gash that started to drip resin.
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Out into the light, one silent step after another, the giant stag came
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towards the stream. And behind it followed another huge beast,
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though by comparison much smaller. Walking carefully behind the
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second beast was a slender fawn, tawny and speckled, picking up its
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dainty hooves with light, jerky motions of its impossibly spindly
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legs. The stag was magnificent, the fawn simply beautiful.
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It followed its parents down to the waterside where the stag drew
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174
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itself and its great antlers up high t0 scan the clearing, then, satisfied,
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bent down t0 drink, snuffling noisily at the clear water. The doe and
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the fawn followed suit, lapping thirstily. They drank copiously, then
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something seemed t0 startle the baby. With a smooth, clean jerk, it
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raised its head up from the water, its ears fanning like radar, and it
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looked round. Then 0ne huge black eye, infinitely gentle, found
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mine, and stared. It was like looking into a pool. For long moments
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we watched each other, the fawn standing stock still, and me afraid
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t0 breathe, then it bent back t0 drink. Finally, the stag lifted its
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magnnicent head and shook its thick mane, sending droplets of
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water scattering, then it walked across the bed 0f the stream, its
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hooves clattering 0n the hard rock. The doe and the fawn followed
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and the three animals moved into the forest and were lost in the
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shadow.
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Only the glistening water that their hooves had splashed 0n the
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stones 0f the stream, now quickly evaporating in the sun, marked
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theirpassage. For a long time, my eyes were fixed 0n the spot where
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they had entered the shadow, hoping that they would come back, but
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they must have been far away. From somewhere in that general
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direction, far in the distance, a deep, bellowing roar, that kind 0f
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rumbling, numbing growl that y0u hear from lions in the zoo, came
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rolling through the trees, muffled by distance, but powerful and
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hard. There was a tearing screech and another bellow, this time a
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lowing, high and despairing. The lowing sound suddenly stopped,
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cut off Then there was a silence that seemed t0 go on for ever, and
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then the birds in the trees started singing and twittering again. I
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turned back t0 the stream and looked into the water again, and in the
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water I saw a shape, dark and looming, wavering 0n the surface. It
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was a reflection, and when 1 looked up, there was a man standing
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there, staring at me with black eyes. Tall and broad, with a ragged,
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hairy animal ’s pelt that had a hole cut in it where his grizzled head
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popped through. A strip of different skin cinched the garment
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together at the waist, and there were other strips that formed boots
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with leggings. He carried some sort of satchel and in his hand was a
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long curved bow and a straight spear. The man ’s hair was long and
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straggly and tangled, just like his beard, and his arms were matted
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with a thick pelt.
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Our eyes locked. I felt no fear. For some reason this was not a
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man to be afraid of He looked at me, right into the back of my
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mind, reading all of me that there was to be read. Then he nodded
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big and broad, and as digndied as the stag that had glided out ofthe
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gloom.
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With one hand, he took the spear from the clutter of bows and
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175
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arrows and hefted it. The sun sent shards of light from the long,
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black head. He stared at me, without malice, but with an expression
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of infinite wisdom; then he swung his arm up high. I could see the
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muscles on his forearm bulge as he gripped the shaft tightly — then his
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whole arm flashed in a blur as he launched his spear towards me.
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And still I was unafraid. The wind from that spear tousled my hair in
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the passing, and I heard the hissing as it cut the air. There was a loud
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thud and I didn’t turn round. I could hear the shaft of the spear
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thrumming as it vibrated with the impact. I kept looking at the man ’s
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eyes, and he kept looking at mine for a long time until the reflections
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ofthe sun on the water made them water and the world blurred in a
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riot of gold and green and then went right out of focus.
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Everything slowly started to emerge from grey and I opened my
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eyes again. The sunlight was dancing up from the ripples the tiny jish
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were making, bright sunlight that came from the direction of the
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trees. But the trees were gone. The field, with its short, cropped grass
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and the buttercups and clover, was back, with its hoof-tracks and its
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cowpats. And I was back again.
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Colin was sitting with his back against the big gnarled root of the
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beech tree. His sloppy-joe had risen up as he’d slid down against the
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bark, exposing a slice of his tanned belly. There was a dark blue
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patch on his jeans at the knee, a deeper shade than the rest of the
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weathered and well-washed denim. His feet were splayed out and
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one baseball boot, black and white and red and wearing thin at the
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sole, was slowly swaying from side to side. Colin ’s eyes were half
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shut, and I could see a glimmer in the dark where his iris was
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throwing back the light. There was a half smile on his face.
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Barbara was lying down, spread out on the short grass next to
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him, her arms wide and her feet together. There were leaves in her
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hair and, though her eyes were closed, there was a radiant smile, an
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expression of joy that lit up her whole face. Her jeans, newer and
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better kept than Colin ’s, had muddy patches on the knees.
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My head felt hill of cotton wool, clouds that were very slowly
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dispersing. There was a buzzing in my ears, a deep tickly vibration
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that was more of a feeling than a noise, as if a bee had got into the
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back of my head and was busy spreading honey in there.
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Colin muttered something, low and jumbled, the way children do
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when they talk in their sleep. I couldn ’t make it out, but as I turned to
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look at him, his eyes flicked wide open. His eyes were glazed at first,
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then seemed to find their focus. He shook his head, and put his
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hands up to his temples and screwed his eyes up tight, very much the
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way a man with a bad hangover does at the moment of awakening.
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‘Jeez-O, ’ he said softly. He took his hand down from his head and
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176
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looked around him, looking a little shaken and a bit bewildered.
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‘Where are we?’
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1 was about to answer, still feeling as if the white clouds were
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drifting about inside me, as if my voice would come out all soft and
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cottony, if it came out at all, when Colin said: ‘At the gang hut. ’
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He nodded, confirming it to himself getting his bearings. ‘The
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gang hut. Jeez—O. 1 must’ve fell asleep. ’
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‘Me too, ’ I said, and my voice was all cottony, sticking at the back
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of my throat. My lungs felt stiff.
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‘Weird, ’ Colin said, this time with vehemence. ‘What a dream! A
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knight in shining armour with a big gold sword. Like Lancelot. Or
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Galahad. A black knight. He was terrible. ’
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Colin stopped and looked around. Barbara had made a noise,
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and she was trying to raise her head up from the carpet of green. It
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slumped back sleepily at first, then she too seemed to shake her head
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to clear it. The radiant smile was still there.
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‘Ooooh. Beautiful, ’ she murmured with a sigh. ‘She was
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beautiful. ’
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‘Who was? ’ Colin said.
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‘The lady with the flowers. ’
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‘What lady?’
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‘She came to me with flowers. Golden flowers, just like her hair.
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Didn ’t you see her? ’
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‘Nope, ’ Colin and I said together.
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‘You must have,’ Barbara said. ‘She was there. Right thcrc. ’
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Barbara pointed at the bank ofthe stream. There was nothing there.
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‘You’ve been dreaming, ’ Colin said. ‘We must have fell asleep. ’
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‘Fallen asleep, ’Barbara corrected him absently, her voice still soft -
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and dreamy.
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‘Oh, she was so beautiful and kind. She put the flowers round my
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neck, like a daisy chain, and smiled at me. ’ Barbara’s hand slipped
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up to her neck, feeling the skin.
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‘It was thcrc,’ she said, and her voice lost the dreamy quality.
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Now it had the tinge of ache of a lost dream.
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‘I dreamed I saw a knight with a sword. And he was riding around
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waving it and shouting at people. He was fighting everybody and
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chopping at them with the sword and they were screaming. He was
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terrible. ’
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‘The hunter, ’ I said, and they both looked at me. ‘A hunter. That’s
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what he was. He came here, to me, out of the trees, over there. ’ I
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pointed.
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‘What trees? ’ Colin asked.
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‘There was trees. Big forest there, ’ I pointed across the stream.
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177
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‘He came 0ut and st00d there and l00ked at me, and then he threw
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s0mething at me. ’ I paused. That wasn ’t right. ‘N0. He threw
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s0mething t0 me. A spear. ’
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I had been sitting d0wn. In my mind ’s eye, the man in the furs and
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skins was still standing 0n the far bank. I heard the swish and felt the
|
||
wind again as the l0ng spear raked the air. I heard the thud and the
|
||
thrumming vibrati0n, and I knew where the spear had hit.
|
||
1 scrambled 0n t0 my knees and crawled a few feet away fr0m the
|
||
0thers t0wards the bank. The turf was dry and hard.
|
||
‘It landed right here, ’ I said, feeling the grass and earth with the
|
||
palms 0fmy hands.
|
||
‘What did?’ Barbara asked. The dreamy t0ne was g0ne fr0m her
|
||
v0ice. C0lin was just staring at me as if l’d g0ne crazy.
|
||
‘The spear. He threw it here. He wanted me t0 have it. ’
|
||
‘It was just a dream, ’ C0lin said. ‘1’m n0tsm0king any 0f that stuff
|
||
again. It gives y0u scary dreams. ’
|
||
‘Mine wasn ’t scary, ’ Barbara said, alm0st dejiantly. ‘And it must
|
||
have been the mushr00ms. They give y0u a belly—ache and y0u get
|
||
dreams. ’
|
||
‘That’s cheese,’ C0lin said. ‘Cheese makes y0u dream. ’
|
||
‘And mushr00ms t00, ’ Barbara argued. ‘1 saw it in 0ne 0f my
|
||
dad’s b00ks, s0 there.’
|
||
All this was g0ing 0n in the periphery. 1 was still 0n my knees, and
|
||
there was s0mething inside 0f me that knew, with clear certainty, that
|
||
I had t0 rip up the turf right here where I was kneeling. I struggled
|
||
with that l0ng ruler-p0cket in the leg 0f my w0rking-man ’s cut d0wn
|
||
jeans and w0rked my 0ld penknife up the material until the h0rn
|
||
handle p0ked 0ut. I grabbed it and pulled 0ut the big blade and
|
||
started cutting a square 0f the turf
|
||
‘Y0u’ll break the blade, idi0t features, ’ C0lin said. He’d
|
||
rec0vered fr0m whatever was scary in his dream. I hadn’t quite
|
||
rec0vered fr0m mine. Barbara’s was real en0ugh f0r her t0 watch
|
||
me n0n-c0mmittally.
|
||
‘D0n’t care. It was here. I saw it, ’ I said, sawing away rapidly, up
|
||
and d0wn, n0t caring if the 0ld treasured blade was rasped d0wn t0 a
|
||
blunt nubbin. When the square was cut, I grasped the grass at the
|
||
edge 0f 0ne 0f the lines and started hauling, feeling my nails bend
|
||
backwards under the strain.
|
||
‘Oh, let me, ’ C0lin said resignedly, as tfhe’d decided he wanted t0
|
||
hum0ur me. The tw0 0f us tugged and then the turf came up with a
|
||
rip, like wet cl0th rending, and we fell backwards. The red square 0f
|
||
earth underneath was just earth. N0thing m0re. I started t0 dig again
|
||
with the blade 0f my knife, but C0lin st0pped me.
|
||
178
|
||
|
||
‘That will break the blade. Here, use a stick, ’ he said, handing me
|
||
the 0ne he’d cut f0r an arr0w. He ’d whittled a sharp p0int 0n 0ne end
|
||
and I t00k it and started t0 h00k the dirt 0ut 0f the h0le. In a few
|
||
minutes I’d g0ne d0wn ab0ut six inches, and there was n0thing
|
||
there. C0lin and Barbara were watching me, and I felt a flush 0f
|
||
embarrassment. The image in the dream had started t0 slip sl0wly
|
||
away, and suddenly I started t0 feel as if I were making a f00l 0f
|
||
myself
|
||
‘Let me at it, ’ C0lin said just as I was ab0ut t0 st0p digging t0 spare
|
||
myseU” further ridicule.
|
||
C0lin’s tanned arms jabbed up and d0wn, h00king at the h0le.
|
||
Within minutes he was panting with the eff0rt. Then the rasping 0f
|
||
the stick in the dirt st0pped and there was a little clicking s0und and
|
||
C0lin’s arms seemed t0 jar all the way up t0 the sh0ulders.
|
||
‘Ow, ’ he yelled as the stick br0ke halfway up and he lurched
|
||
f0rward, b0th hands plunging right int0 the dirt. Barbara and I
|
||
scuttled acr0ss t0 the h0le. The br0ken arr0w had reached r0cks,
|
||
tw0 big quartz st0nes that w0uld bec0me white when the rain washed
|
||
0ff their c0ating 0f dirt. Between them, jammed upright, there was a
|
||
thin, black, sm00th st0ne, l0dged in the narr0w space between the
|
||
tw0 r0unded b0ulders.
|
||
I reached past C0lin and grasped the st0ne and tugged. It didn ’t V
|
||
budge and I had t0 w0rk it back and f0rth ab0ut nine 0r ten times
|
||
bef0re it gave up its grip and came free.
|
||
‘That’s it! ’ I yelled. ‘That’s what he had!’
|
||
‘What is it? ’ Barbara asked.
|
||
‘Just a stupid lump 0f r0ck, ’ C0lin said. ‘N0t w0rth all that hard
|
||
w0rk. ’
|
||
‘N0. Y0u’re wr0ng, ’ I said c0ldly. It had been there. I walked t0
|
||
the stream, right t0 the edge where I’d been sitting, mesmerised by
|
||
the sun in my dream, and knelt d0wn with that flat st0ne in my hand.
|
||
It was l0ng and sm00th, and rimed with caked-0n dirt. I plunged
|
||
b0th 0fmy hands int0 the clear water and rubbed at the black st0ne’s
|
||
surface, watching the water g0 cl0udy and br0wn as the earth
|
||
washed 0ff It t00k 0nly m0ments 0f rubbing the st0ne with my
|
||
thumbs t0 clean it, f0r the dirt had n0 crevices t0 cling t0. Then I
|
||
lifted it fr0m the water and turned triumphantly t0 C0lin and
|
||
Barbara, h0lding the st0ne in b0th my hands like a tr0phy.
|
||
The sun ric0cheted 0ff the p0lished surface, making it gleam
|
||
bright and black.
|
||
‘Hey man, ’ C0lin wh00ped. 'It’s a st0ne—axe. A real cave—man’s
|
||
axe.
|
||
‘N0, it’s a spear. A p0intf0r a spear. And that’s where he threw it
|
||
179
|
||
|
||
in my dream. ’
|
||
‘I d0n’t believe it, ’ said C0lin.
|
||
‘Me neither, ’ 1 said, and although I held the weight in my hands,
|
||
marvelling at its sm00th surface and beautiful simplicity, I didn’t
|
||
believe it.
|
||
‘But it’s 0urs, ’ I said.
|
||
180
|
||
|
||
|