‘You mean I should take steps to find out what she’s doing – and who with?’
‘I can… help maybe, if you want.’
‘Why are you doing this, Lol?’
‘A number of possible reasons.’ Lol stood close to her but looked across the river to the haze of misted lights on the fringe of the city. ‘You choose.’
Merrily sighed. ‘I can’t go to bed with you, you know.’ And, naturally, she looked soft-focus beautiful under the lamp. ‘Not the way things are.’
‘God,’ Lol said sadly. ‘He has a lot to answer for.’
‘It isn’t God,’ Merrily said.
‘Oh.’ He wanted to roll over the rail into the black river. ‘That means somebody else.’
‘Yes.’
She turned away from him and from the light. In the moment before she did, he saw her eyes and he thought he saw a flash of fear there, and he thought there was a shudder of revulsion.
But he
‘I’ll take you back now,’ Merrily said.
32
Fantasy World
JANE THREW OPEN the bedroom window, and the damned fog came in and she started to cough. It was like being with Mum in the scullery-office on a heavy Silk Cut night.
Down on the lawn the last rags of snow had gone. Snow was clean, bright, refreshing. Fog was misery. It was December today, so only three weeks to Midwinter, the great solstice when the year had the first gleam of spring in its eye.
Always darkest before the dawn. This, Jane thought, was like a midwinter of the spirit. She cleared her throat.
That was a bloody laugh.
It had been so brilliant last night out in the garden. Maybe she was a night person. Maybe a moon person. And yet the bedtime exercise had not gone too well, the great rewinding of the day.
It was impossible to stay with it. You got sidetracked. You thought of something interesting and followed it through. Or something bad, like Mum being ill, which could plunge you without warning into some awful Stalinist scenario at Gran’s in Cheltenham:
Gratefully, Jane closed the window. Mum had not looked too bad last night. Quiet, though: pensive.
‘You’re not OK! You’re not! You look like sh—’
‘Don’t say it, all right?’
‘It’s true.’
And, Jesus, it
‘It’s the weather,’ Mum said.
‘It so is
For a moment, Mum looked quite horrible, face all red and scrunched up like some kind of blood-pressure situation. And then…
‘STOP IT! Don’t you ever
‘And, like whatever happened to the sense of humour?’ Jane backed away into the kitchen, teetering on the rim of tears.
They ate breakfast in silence apart from the bleeping of the answering machine: unplayed messages from last night. ‘Aren’t you going to ever listen to that thing?’ Jane said finally at the front door.
‘I’ll get around to it, flower,’ Mum said drably, turning away because, for less than half a second, Jane had caught her eyes and seen in them the harsh glint of fear.
Standing desolate on the dark-shrouded market square, as the headlights of the school bus bleared around the corner, Jane thought, suppose it’s not flu, nor even some kind of virus; suppose she’s found symptoms of something she’s afraid to take to the doctor.
The only time Jane ever reverted to the Old Guy was when it was about Mum.
Bleep.
‘
Bleep.
‘
Bleep.
‘
Bleep.
‘
Bleep.
‘
Merrily didn’t think so.
Lol said, ‘Viv,
‘My love,’ Big Viv laughed throatily, ‘I
‘What happens over that healthfood cafe in Bridge Street?’
‘Pod’s?’ Viv gave him a sharp look. He saw she had two tight lip-rings on this morning. ‘Well, they used to do a good cashewburger, then they got a different cook and it wasn’t so good. You won’t meet anybody there.’
‘Uh-huh.’ Lol shook his head gently. ‘I’m not looking to score anything chemical.’
He collected another hard look. ‘What then?’
‘I don’t know. Mysticism?’
‘You won’t score that either. Not at Pod’s.’
He didn’t know whether to be relieved or disappointed.
‘Wrong gender, Lol. It’s a woman thing there. I can put you on to a few other people, if you like, depending