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379 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
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Paddy waited impatiently for me as I put on my treks and settled
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for my old denim jacket. I slipped my penknife into the pocket of
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my jeans, and on impulse I picked up the smooth old stone from
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the dresser and shoved it into my jacket pocket. It was hard and
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warm, a touchstone under my hand. At the door, I paused at the
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old umbrella rack that had stood there since before I was born, and
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I picked out the smooth, worn walking stick of my grandfather’s. I
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plucked my ancient fishing hat from the top spike, a battered old
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affair with a peak that was threadbare and bent out of shape, with a
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couple of antique flies irretrievably embedded in the green cloth.
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This I spun in the air and plunked down on Paddy’s head, fiicking
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the peak up so I could see her eyes.
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‘Right. Now we’re all set for the wilderness,’ I said. ‘Just watch
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out for the bear, kid.’
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I opened the front door and was just stepping through, still
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looking down at Paddy’s grin, when I bumped smack into Jimmy
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Allison whose fist was raised high, caught in mid flight on the first
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knock.
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‘Jimmy,’ I said. ‘You nearly gave me a heart attack.’
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His hand stayed in mid-air, big and gnarled, and swollen at the
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joints where the corkscrew of arthritis was digging inexorably. His
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eyes were bloodshot and wide. He stared at me for quite a while
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and I could hear his breath rasp heavily in his throat. There was
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something wrong with him.
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‘Jimmy, are you all right?’ I asked.
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‘Where is it?’
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‘What?’
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‘Where is it? You’ve got it.’ .
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‘Where’s what?’ I asked.
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‘My book, you damned thief. You’ve stolen my book. And I
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want it back.’ His voice was hoarse and he seemed really wound
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up, like the tension rope on an old frame saw. I just stood agape.
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‘Give me it back, you bastard. Thought you’d get away with it,
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did you? Thought you’d steal my book and have it published
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yourself? After all I’ve done for you, you little bastard.’ He
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216
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snarled , and I was standing close enough to feel a spray of spittle on
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my face. Paddy’s hand, which had been holding mine, clenched
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tight.
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‘Wait a minute Jimmy. That’s no language in front of the
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youngster,’ I said, nodding down towards Paddy, who was staring
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up, her eyes flicking from me to him.
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‘Don’t give me any of your excuses, you dirty thief. You’ve
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stolen what’s mine, and I’ve come to get it back,’ he said, spitting
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more flecks at me. Some of them had gathered at the corner of his
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mouth and were working themselves into a revolting lather.
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Before I could reply, Jimmy blundered past me in the hallway.
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His big frame nearly filled the narrow space. For some reason, I
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noticed that his shirt had been buttoned wrongly, and that this was
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the first time I’d seen him outside his own house without a tie on.
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He hadn’t shaved either, and the grey and white bristles on his
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cheeks gave him an unkempt, trampish look. The weird expression
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in his eyes was something else.
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Jimmy lumbered into the living room and I followed him, pulling
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Paddy along with me. She stuck right at my heels, keeping me
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between herself and Jimmy. From the room I could hear things
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being moved about and when I looked through the doorway Jimmy
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was rummaging about, scattering books and papers on the floor.
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‘Right, Jimmy, enough’s enough,’ I said. ‘It’s bad enough you
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coming down here drunk and talking like that in front of a kid, but
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you’ve gone too far.’ I walked towards him, leaving Paddy
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standing at the doorway, and took Jimmy by the elbow. He swung
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round and shoved me away and I skittered backwards in surprise
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and landed in the easy chair. Behind me, I heard the girl give a little
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cry of fear. I leapt up again quickly and faced him.
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‘OK, Jimmy. I’m not going to argue with you. Tell me what it is
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you want and you can have it. And I’ll see you when you’re sober
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enough to apologise}
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‘Give me my book. You took it away. I want it back. Now.
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Now! ’ he shouted, his voice rising up the scale.
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‘Oh, your history? Is that it? Well, you can have it back. Just
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don’t touch anything else.’ He kept on rummaging, opening
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drawers and turning out the contents on to the floor. The place was
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a mess. I was torn between absolute fury at Jimmy’s behaviour,
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and disgust at what I was witnessing. I had never, in all my life,
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seen the old man like this. I would have been hard pressed to even
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remember seeing him angry. I crossed over to the far side of the
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room to where I’d put the box with all his papers and jottings down
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in the corner beside the old dark dresser, and hefted it in my arms.
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217
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‘Is this what you came for? The book? Well here it is.’
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Jimmy turned and his red-rimmed eyes fastened on the box
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greedily. He whipped it quickly out of my hands and clasped it hard
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against his chest. There was still foam at the corners of his mouth,
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and he grinned, and then he let out a little laugh that was more
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chilling than any display of anger.
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‘Take it and go, Jimmy. Just go now,’ I said. I was shaking a bit,
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from anger or dismay, and I’m sure it showed in my voice. I’m also
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sure he didn’t notice.
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He giggled again, a sly, triumphant little laugh that was chilling,
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and almost ran out of the room. Paddy shrank back into the
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hallway as he went past, as if she was afraid he’d turn on her, or
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maybe just knock her down and trample her. I was suddenly afraid
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of that too, but Jimmy didn’t even notice her.
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His mind was totally wrapped around the box and its contents, as
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tightly as the arms that clutched it to his chest, and he blundered up
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the hallway and out of the front door like a looter getting out
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before he hears the sirens. I took Paddy’s hand and we went out
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into the pathway and watched as the old man hurried up the middle
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of the street, half walking, half running, his coat flapping behind
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him.
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That was the last time I saw Jimmy Allison alive.
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I loved that old man, and I believe I’ve told you already what he
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meant to me.
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He scurried away and went home and some time later he was
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found there, lying at the bottom of his stairs, in a crumpled heap.
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His neck was broken, and nobody knew whether he had fallen or
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had thrown himself down the narrow flight. He was still wearing his
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coat and his shirt was done up wrongly, and I’m sorry now that I
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was angry and disgusted with him that last time.
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Paddy asked me what was wrong with the old man, and I told her
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I didn’t know.
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‘Isn’t he a friend of yours?’ she said. ‘He was with us at the
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festival.’
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‘That’s right, but I think he’s not very well today. I’m sorry you
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were scared}
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‘I’m not scared as long as you’re there}
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‘We’ll thank you ma’am, for that big vote of coni‘idence,’ I said,
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trying to raise the mood and shake off the bad taste that Jimmy’s
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visit had left under my tongue.
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I twirled the rough walking stick around like the fox in Pinocchio
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and made a deep bow.
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‘Care to walk out with me, ma’am?’ I said, smiling as widely and
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218
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as genuinely as I could. She caught on and took my extended hand.
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‘Why thank you sir, I’d love to,’ she said, and laughed her
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momentary fear away. I flicked down the peak of the iishing cap
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and she said ‘Hey, watch it, buster’, and we went down the path
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and out through the gate. We went the opposite way from Jimmy
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Allison.
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As we got to the corner of the street and took a left that would
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take us in a sweeping curve thro ugh Westbay and up on to the main
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street, there was a wail of a siren up ahead starting in the east of
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town and getting louder as it got level with us, then dopplering
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down in ilat tones as it gained distance in the direction of
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Levenford.
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‘What’s that? A cop car?’ Paddy asked.
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‘Don’t know, sunshine. Maybe an ambulance, or even a fire
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engine.’
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‘Pity we missed it. I ain’t seen a fire engine here.’
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‘Haven’t seen,’ I corrected.
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‘Right. Haven’t. Where’s it going anyhow?’
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‘I don’t know. Probably out of town. Sometimes the Kirkland
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brigade gets called out to help out at Levenford and vice versa.
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Might not even be a fire engine anyway. It’ll be long gone by the
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time we get up to the main street}
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When we got up to the middle of the town and past the shops, the
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place was fairly quiet, which was strange for a Monday morning.
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There was hardly anybody about, and I could see at a glance that a
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few of the shops hadn’t even opened yet, which was even more
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strange. Mary Baker’s was still closed, and there was nobody in
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Tom Muir’s butcher’s shop which normally had a queue at this time
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in the morning. The red—faced shopkeeper was standing behind his
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white marble counter and he tipped his white paper hat to us as we
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passed, before going back to sharpening one of his big knives on
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the long whet with the practised ease of long experience.
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A woman passed us and we both said hello, but she didn’t
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acknowledge, and Paddy and I looked at each other. There was a
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clatter, and we both turned and the woman was still walking slowly
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along, but she’d let go one of the handles of her shopping bag and a
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can of fruit or beans had rolled out on to the pavement and
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continued across to the kerb before toppling slowly into the street.
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Paddy let go of my hand and skipped back and picked the can up
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and caught up with the woman. When she got level, she handed it
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to her and the woman took it. Paddy came back to me and I
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watched as the woman looked at the can in her hand as if she didn’t
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know how it had got there. She was still looking at it when I turned
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219
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with a shrug and continued along the road. We had got a few
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hundred yards along the main street when I turned back, and the
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woman was still there and still staring, as far as I could see from that
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distance, at the can Paddy had given her. Weird, I thought.
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There was hardly anybody else about. It felt as if Paddy and I
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were walking through a ghost town.
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Out towards the Milligs it still looked as if Arden was having a
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lie—in after the exertions of the harvest festival, but when we got to
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the bridge that went across Strowan’s Water, just as I was going to
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turn left and take the path that would lead us up the valley, I saw a
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pall of smoke further ahead and caught, through the trees, the
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sapphire-blue sparkle of a flashing police light.
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‘What’s that?’ Paddy asked, pointing ahead.
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‘I don’t know. Looks like a fire, or maybe an accident.’
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Just as I said that my stomach did a slow, lazy flip, turned itself
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over as if the ground had just disappeared from beneath my feet,
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and suddenly I was shaken with a wave of certain dread. I
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remembered the rumbling, thundery noise I had heard as we
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motored down from Barbara’s place — a deep, growl that seemed to
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shake the jeep. I had assumed it was thunder and I remember
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thinking that Barbara should take it easy if we did get a sudden
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rainstorm.
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But it had come from the east of town. Suddenly I was sure of
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that. And the clouds that were far out over the firth were still far in
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the west. The thunder had come only five minutes or so after
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Barbara had left us. A cold, knife—hard fear probed at the back of
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my head and instantly I didn’t want to walk a step further.
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‘Come on,’ I said. ‘We have to go quickly.’ And we ran towards
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the flashing lights and that tower of smoke that was piling up high
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into the sky. Paddy kept up with me easily and we got along past
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the curve at Milligs and raced along the road to where I could see,
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in the distance, a couple of police cars and an ambulance blocking
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the road. There was a fire engine there too.
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Even from several hundred yards away, and despite the trees
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that hid most of the scene, I could hear that loud crashing roar that
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sounded like a giant blowtorch, and above the trees there was a
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sheet of flame that sent tongues of fire licking high. The smoke
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billowed upwards in a huge cloud.
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My heart started thudding heavily in my chest and I wished I had
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felt fitter, but we covered the distance and got up to where the cars
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were parked just at this side of the Kilmalid Bridge, the old stone
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hump-back that spanned the stream that ran past the far edge of
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the Milligs and down to the mudflats. There were a lot of men,
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220
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police and firemen running about, and not much else to see, unless
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you counted the thirty-foot wall of ilame that seemed to spout up
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from the stream itself. The heat, from almost forty yards away, was
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intense, and I felt a searing gust on my face. I stopped to look,
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stunned by the white heat, and with my left arm I made sure Paddy
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was behind me.
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The Kilmalid Bridge had gone. There was nothing left to span
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the stream, and there was a moraine of rocks and stone all round,
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scattered across the street and on the verge. The air was shimmer-
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ing and, through eyes that were already watering, I could see the
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hulking shape of a lorry or tractor in the middle of the flames,
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angled down towards the stream. Even without the heat haze, it
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looked like a twisted mass that glowed white and red. And there
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_ wasn’t that much of it.
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One of the policemen turned round and saw us standing there,
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and waved his hands at us. Over the roaring of the fire, his words
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were lost, but there was no mistaking the gesture. He was a lot
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closer to the ilames than we were — and it must have been damned
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hot where he was, and he wanted us to stay well clear. I took the
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hint.
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I pushed Paddy ahead of me in the opposite direction from the
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inferno, crossing at the same time to the north side of the road,
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_ where there was some shelter in the trees. We got under the spread
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of an oak, well out of the heat, and sat down.
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‘What’s happened, Nicky?’
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‘I’m not sure, Paddy. There’s been an accident, but I think we’d
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better stay well away. It looks pretty hot out there.’
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‘It is pretty hot,’ she said. ‘It’s like when mom opens up the
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oven.’
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‘Yes,’ I said, and again that sick feeling of dread stole in.
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For some reason, I had to get across to the other side of the
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demolished bridge and find out who was in that wreck.
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We sat there until I got my breath back and Paddy stared at me
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from under the peak of my hat. She looked solemn and a bit
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scared. So was I. After a few minutes, I stood up and took her hand
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again, and instead of going along the road I headed into the trees
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and down the slope towards the burn, maybe sixty yards north of
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the road. The stream was fairly full, despite the dry spell, but we
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had no difficulty in crossing it, far from where the action was. t
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When we were on the other side of the burn, we continued along a
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well-worn path until we were a good distance from that dreadful
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gusher of flame. Down on the main road — the Kilcreggan Road
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again — we followed the hedgerow until I could see another fire
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221
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engine on this side of the bridge. I told Paddy to wait there and she
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sat down on a tussock of grass obediently and nodded when I told
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her not to move. Her eyes were wide and glassy. She knew that
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something had happened and she didn’t know what, but I knew
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without being told that she had had that dreadful sinking feeling
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that, whatever it was, it had something to do with her.
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I stepped out from the hedge and sprinted towards the bridge.
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There were two flre engines, obviously from Levenford, and two
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teams of men in their yellow helmets were wrestling with thick
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hoses, straining to aim their hard jets of water at the centre of the
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flames. Out of the corner of my eye, in a small stand of trees and
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sapplings, I saw a car that was angled off the road, on its side. My
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heart did a dive and then it started thudding in my ears. It was
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Barbara’s Volvo estate, crumpled in on the passenger side. The
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front end had concertinaed and a wheel had sheared off. The
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windscreen was gone, and even as I turned to look directly at it, I
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saw the red mush that covered the white of the bent bonnet. I could
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feel my breakfast make a bid for release and swallowed hard
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against it. I turned back towards the flre and, as I did so, I saw
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something, maybe a rag, fluttering limply in the fork of a sapling,
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white and red among the green. It wasn’t until later that I realised
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what it was.
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There was another police car, parked well behind the fire
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engines, and a uniformed officer standing well behind that. The
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roar from the flames was enormous, and when I reached him I had
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to shout to be heard.
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He tried to tell me to get back, but I shook my head. I pointed
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back to the wrecked Volvo and yelled in his ear.
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‘What happened to the driver?’
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‘Hospital. Ambulance has just gone,’ he shouted into my ear.
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‘Alive?’ _
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‘Dunno. Couldn’t tell. Looked pretty bad. Blood everywhere}
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The left side of the policeman’s face was red from the heat of the
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flames, giving him a two-toned look.
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‘Which hospital?’ I asked, and again he shrugged.
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‘Western Infirmary, most likely.’
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‘What happened here‘?’
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‘Petrol tanker came off and hit the gas pipe.’
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That explained the flames. From where we stood we had to
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shield our eyes against them, and I had to hand it to the firemen
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who were a lot closer in than we were, still huddled over their
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writhing snakes, jetting water into the heat.
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‘Must have gone up like a bomb,’ the man said.
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222
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The main gas pipe spanned the burn a couple of yards
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downstream from the old bridge. It was an unofficial bridge that
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kids from Arden had used since time immemorial, balancing on
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the two—foot wide shiny black surface, teetering across its smooth
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length, with a jam—jar full of sticklebacks or minnows. Now there
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was nothing left of the pipe, a great hole where the bridge used to
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be, and just a white—hot tangle of wreckage that used to be the cab
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and the bowser of the petrol tanker.
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I stood mesmerised by the giant blowtorch and I wished to God
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somebody would go and turn the gas off. The firemen were never
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going to be able to put out that fire, no matter how much water they
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threw on it. I left the policeman at his post and went back to where
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Paddy was still sitting quietly, and I didn’t even look at the
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wreckage of Barbara’s estate car in the grove. If I had, I’m sure I
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would have been sick. I didn’t want Paddy to see me throwing up. I
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didn’t know what I was going to tell her.
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She looked up at me from under the peak, still holding on to my
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walking stick like a little shepherdess, with inquiry in her eyes. I sat
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down and put my arm around her narrow shoulders, and two big
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tears sprang up and rolled down her cheeks.
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‘Is it my mommy?’ she asked. ‘Is she dead?’
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I pushed myself back and looked down at her, wondering how
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the hell she’d read my mind.
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‘What makes you ask that?’ I asked, backing out of the question.
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Paddy didn’t say anything. She just pointed past me, through a
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gap in the hedge that looked on to a curve in the road. At the other
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side of the curve, I could see clearly the battered and bent shell of
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the Volvo. I had made Paddy sit here alone in the one place that
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gave her a window on to the wreckage.
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I fumbled for words, casting about blindly, and came up with
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nothing. All I had was the truth.
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‘It’s your mum’s car,’ I said. It sounded like a confession. ‘I don’t
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know what happened, but they’ve taken her to hospita1.’
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‘Is she dead?’
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‘I think she’s hurt. I don’t know how bad. But we’re going to find
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out right now.’
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Tears were rolling in a steady chain down her cheeks and I felt
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her give a little sob. But that was all. I gave her what I thought was
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a reassuring hug and I felt I could have done with one myself.
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‘Come on, let’s go and find out. We’d better go quickly, ’cause
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your mum’ll need us right now.’
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I helped Paddy to her feet and took her hand again and she just
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came with me, her face blank, but the tears still rolling. I wished I
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223
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hadn’t sat her on that tussock. I could have spun her a line, maybe,
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delayed the moment, but I hadn’t and there was nothing I could do
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about it. We crossed back through the trees and over the stream to
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the far side, and by the time we got past the roaring of the fire
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geyser I just picked her up and carried her. The fast walk back to
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my place seemed to take for ever. Paddy just put her head into the
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curve of my neck and soaked me with those big tears and I felt sick
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for her.
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Back at the house I tried to phone the ambulance service and the
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police, but there was nothing but static on the line. I didn’t know
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right then, but discovered soon after, that the explosion that had
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wrecked the bridge had also burned away the telephone cable and
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the main power line that serviced half of the town, in one neat
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blast. All the time I was trying to get a line, Paddy kept looking at
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me with hope and fear and misery fighting for pole position in her
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eyes. I didn’t have the guts to look away.
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Finally I gave up and decided that we just had to go. Getting out
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to where we could find out what had happened to her was better
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than sitting here fretting. In a couple of minutes I had Paddy
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strapped in the jeep and we were heading towards Kirkland to
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double across the moor road, taking the long way round. I was in a
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panic the whole time. Paddy said very little.
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224
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||
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