we lose something important, but it is something that we can never know… We try to complete this part of the story, and we can only do that by importing our own experiences, prejudices, ideas. Kyle’s story becomes our own, but it also stops being
12
Things never happen the way you think they are going to. Too many random factors between thought and action, I guess. My dad used to sum it up with this weird golfing saying:
NOTE – ‘golfing’
Two things here:
1. Golfing was a sport, thought to be an early version of what we now call ‘flagellum’. Golf, however, used an external, manufactured club to strike a ‘ball’ towards a much closer target (hundreds of metres, rather than tens of kilometres) called a ‘hole’, which was traditionally marked by a flag.
2. The proverb ‘many a slip…’ is unlikely to have ever originated from the sport of golf, and is more likely to do with the way primitive humans used to drink by raising a drinking vessel (or cup) to the mouth (which used to feature ‘lips’, or movable organs that fringed the mouth and were used for assisting eating, for rudimentary sensing, and for speech formation). See Bathgate’s
We left Mrs O’Donnell’s house in a flat depression. The idea was to go back to Mr Peterson, check he was OK, then head out of the village on the Crowley road to see how far the phenomenon stretched.
Easy plan.
We were halfway down the road when Mrs O’Donnell stopped walking.
‘They’ve gone,’ she said, and I realised she was at the house where the boy and girl had been standing, frozen in the act of coming out of their house.
Had been.
They weren’t there now.
The hallway was empty.
13
We hit the high street at a run.
Gone was the heaviness that had settled over our minds and bodies, now we felt light as clouds. If the Cross children were gone, then surely it was likely that
Suddenly we stopped running. People were moving down the high street.
People.
Were.
Moving.
In fact, it was a great number of people and they were walking, as a crowd, away from the village green and heading for, I guessed, their houses.
People.
Moving.
It was wonderful.
And if they looked a little dazed – staring about as if seeing an unfamiliar place – then that was probably to be expected after what had just happened to them.
I wondered if they realised anything
Relief flooded through me, as if my world had suddenly been set back on to its proper axis. I saw Lilly’s face register her own internal relief. Tension replaced by excitement and a hint of a smile.
I knew that the smile was for Simon and I felt an eel of jealousy uncurl within my stomach.
NOTE – ‘eel of jealousy’
This is quite a bizarre phrase, because an eel was a snakelike fish of the type we now refer to as an Anguilliforme. How this related to jealousy is unknown, although Kenton argues for it being a kind of metaphor for the feeling the primitive emotion caused within the individual. LeGar, however, points to a fragment of a text called
It didn’t last.
Whatever it was that had occurred was over now.
The people of the village were making their way back home.
I noticed my parents and brother in the crowd, turned to Mrs O’Donnell and she offered me a reassuring smile.
I smiled back, nodded at Lilly, and made my way through the crowd to join them.
14
There was the oddest of moments when my mum’s eyes met mine and she seemed to look straight through me, as if she didn’t recognise me, or was looking past me, in search of…
I couldn’t even finish the thought because suddenly her eyes flicked back to me. They
‘Kyle,’ she said, and there was a softness to her voice that hadn’t been there for a while. The way she said my name
I ran to her and she hugged me tight.
‘I was so scared,’ I told her.
‘Scared, poppet?’ she comforted me. ‘Now what on earth is there to be scared about?’
Dad squeezed my arm.
‘There’s nothing to be scared about,’ he whispered, and again it was a voice from the past. ‘We’re here.’