Authors: Lucy Christopher
âYou OK?' I ask.
Dad doesn't answer, just shifts the bird's weight in my direction as we both lower it gently. I try to stretch the broken wing out. I feel all those tiny bones, barely beneath the surface. There's one sticking up where it shouldn't, almost breaking through the skin. I touch it, feel its jaggedness
beneath my fingers like tiny teeth. The swan bites me on the hand. Hard. It even draws blood. It hisses until I stop touching.
âI'm sorry,' I murmur, sucking at the blood.
I turn back to Dad. He looks worse now. His hand is pressing against the side of the car and his head is bowed. He's breathing heavily.
âDad?'
He waves me away. âI'm fine.'
I get to his side, wait until he looks at me. I forget about the swan for a moment. Dad's face is so red and sweaty. âYou were cold a moment ago,' I say. âYou were shivering from the water. Now you're hot.'
âI'm fine,' he says again.
âShall I call Mum?'
âNo.' He straightens up to show me he's OK, but I can see the effort of moving makes him wince. âThat chap was heavy, that's all.'
He smiles a little, tries to make a joke of it, but his eyes won't hold my gaze and I don't believe him. He steps towards the driver's door. I stop him from getting in. âI'm calling Mum,' I say, fumbling for the phone in my pocket. âOr Granddad, he's closer. Maybe you shouldn't drive.'
âI'm OK,' Dad says firmly. âI can drive to Granddad's, drive home even. Stop worrying.'
I keep my hand on his arm. It's the only thing I can do to stop him from getting in. âMum said you were sick,' I say quietly. âShe said you were sent home from work.'
âDid she?' He wipes his hand across his forehead, his eyes flicking away angrily. Then he sighs, leans back against the car to look at me. âI'm cold and wet and that thing was heavy, that's all. The quicker we get to Granddad's the better, yes? That swan's going to die otherwise.'
I nod, reluctantly, as he turns to open the door. I glance around the car park. There's still no one else here. Suddenly, I just want to get out of there, take Dad somewhere where it's not only me around. âI'm calling Mum if you're not better soon,' I say.
âFine.' He brushes my words off with a flick of his hand.
I watch every single move he makes as he gets into the car. He's frowning a little and his skin looks tight. If he's worried, he's trying to cover it up in front of me. But this isn't the first time this has happened. Mum said that when Dad was chopping branches in the city park, he had chest pains then too. That's why he was sent home early. I get into the car, still watching him. I look over at the swan in the back. It's not moving, though it's still making a low, hissing noise. I touch its wing, and hope we all make it safely to Granddad's.
Dad tries to smile at me as we pull out of the car park. âHe'll be OK,' he says, nodding at the swan.
But I don't know whether it's the swan or him I'm more worried about. I hold my breath all the way down the lane until we're back on the ring road. There are other cars around now. More people than just me and Dad. And it's not far to Granddad's house.
CHAPTER 4
I
can't remember the last time I went to Granddad's. It must have been months ago, back in the summer. Dad tries to avoid Granddad in the winter, says he's too grumpy and takes longer to warm up.
The turn-off is only a few miles down the ring road, but I watch Dad carefully all the way. He drives slowly but confidently, his skin gradually turning back to its normal colour. It feels strange, pulling into Granddad's lane. The hedgerows seem so much smaller and deader. But then, it is winter. I glance at the new dairy farm that's been built right next door, the one Granddad hates so much. A cow lifts her head and watches us as we pass.
The engine strains as the tyres churn through the puddles of Granddad's drive. The house is how I remember it, maybe just a little more run down. The big tree out front is fragile-looking
without its leaves and the front gate is off its hinges. No dogs come running to greet us, as they would have once. It's quiet and cold when Dad turns off the engine. Dad gets out quickly and goes around to the boot.
âI'll take it,' I say, reaching for the swan.
âI'm fine, I told you,' he growls, a little angry with me now. He places his hands under the bird and lifts it up. I run ahead to get the door. There's no answer at the front, so I run around to the back. Dad follows slowly behind. I watch him, as carefully as I can, checking to see if he looks as weak as he did at the reserve. But he's better now. Strong like he normally is.
Granddad is in his conservatory, sitting in the cane chair that looks out over the fields behind his house. I turn and try and see what he's looking at. Cows . . . fields . . . I can't see his lake from here. I stand on my tiptoes and listen for the sound of swans. Maybe the flock has gone there. But Dad's caught up with me now and has seen where I'm trying to look.
âNot a chance,' he says. âIt's too built up now for swans. They won't like the dairy farm.'
I keep standing on my tiptoes, hoping to catch a glimpse of the water but there's too much field and too many cows in between. âThe flock has to go somewhere.'
Dad shakes his head. âThat lake's ruined from the cows.' He looks back at Granddad in the conservatory. âGet the door.'
Dad's cheeks are going red again and I see the strain in his face. Granddad still hasn't noticed us, so I have to rap on the
window to get his attention. His eyes open wide as he sees me, as if he's trying to work out who I am. I hear his old dog, Dig, start to growl. Granddad looks behind me, his lips pressing together as he spots Dad struggling with the swan. He takes a key from under an empty plant pot and opens the door.
âWhy've you brought me this?' he says immediately.
âNo hellos then,' Dad mutters.
I step forward to explain. âIt flew into a power line above the wetlands reserve, we thought you could fix it.'
Dad nods at that.
Granddad flicks his eyes skyward. âThis thing's alive?'
âIt is at the moment,â Dad says.
Granddad turns away. âYou know I don't fix swans.'
I reach out and grab his arm. âPlease,' I say. My eyes dart to Dad's face. âJust help us carry it to your surgery.'
Granddad follows my glance and looks more carefully at Dad. Perhaps he also sees that Dad doesn't look well because all of a sudden he sighs and reaches for the swan's shoulder. The surprise registers in Dad's eyes as Granddad takes the weight of the bird and lifts it right out of Dad's arms. Granddad doesn't look down at the swan, though. He keeps glaring at Dad.
âNot worried about my shaky hands now, then?' he murmurs.
I brace myself, wait for them to start arguing. They usually do, at some point.
But Granddad sighs slowly. âYou've got a nerve, bringing
this,' he says.
âIt was her idea,' Dad says, nodding at me. âI was going to take it to a proper vet.'
I grab Granddad's arm and lead him towards the cottage before he can say anything else to Dad.
âYou OK with that?' I ask. But Granddad's not struggling with the weight of the bird at all. As we walk the twenty metres or so to the cottage, I glance across the fields again. There are no birds in the air. No birds anywhere. No sound of swans.
I switch on the lights in the old cottage surgery. It all looks the way I remember it, just smells different. The medical posters on the walls are turning yellow at the edges, curling up over the Blu-Tack. Granddad carries the bird through the reception area and into the operating room, lays it on the steel table. Dad follows after us a moment later, shutting Dig outside.
The smell is stronger in the operating room. It's clean-smelling and dead-smelling at the same time, as if Granddad has wiped down all the benches with a skeleton. I remember the last time we were all here like this. It was a couple of years ago and Granddad's other dog, Rocky, lay between us, fur bloodied from the truck that slammed into him. His head had lolled to the side when Granddad injected the anaesthetic. He'd never woken up.
Dad creaks open a window and stands near it, breathing deeply. Then he sees me watching and jerks his head towards the swan. So I go back to Granddad. He's running his hands
over the bird's body. He shakes his head as he touches the wings. I reach out and stroke its neck, touch the wet, cold feathers.
âCan you fix him?' I ask.
Granddad doesn't answer, just keeps pressing his fingers to the swan. He stares up at Dad.
âWe couldn't leave him,' Dad says quietly. âHe would have died there.'
âHe'll die anyway,' Granddad says. âHe's in a right mess.'
I step away from the table. I don't want to believe him. But the swan's eyes are starting to close and there's a horrible gurgling noise in its throat. âYou can't do anything?'
Granddad stops staring at Dad and looks at me instead. His face changes as he watches me, becomes kinder somehow.
âThis bird has broken its wing quite seriously,' he says. âI could try and pin it, but I suspect that his liver also burst from impact with the water. That's why he's making that sound.'
Dad turns away from the window, steps towards Granddad. âYou must be able to do something,' he says, staring him full in the face, with his cheeks reddening. I remember how flushed and sick he looked as he leant against the car in the reserve. I don't want it to happen again here.
âTry something,' Dad whispers.
âA bullet?'
They stare each other out. The swan's leg moves a little and I glance back to it, wondering how much pain the bird is really in. He's brave about it, that's for sure. When I look
back at Dad, he's watching me; wanting to know if I'm about to cry probably. But, like the swan, I'm good at holding stuff in.
âIf the bird's in pain . . . ' I say. âMaybe Granddad's right.'
Granddad turns away and loads up a syringe, drawing up some sort of liquid from a glass phial, then flicks the top of it. Granddad catches Dad's stare and frowns. His hands shake as he moves the needle towards the swan's neck. I expect Dad to say something, but he doesn't. I know he's thinking it, though. Granddad's hands were shaking like this when he put the anaesthetic into Rocky's body, too.
âThat won't kill him, will it?' I ask.
Granddad pricks the swan's skin. âNo, just makes things easier. It won't be long though until he . . . '
I think he wants to say more, but he's not sure how. Instead, he presses down on the syringe and the liquid glides into the bird. I watch the swan's eyes shut. The skin on its eyelids is wrinkled and slack, like the skin on the back of Granddad's hand. But the bird's still breathing, just.
Granddad slides the needle out from the bird's neck. âI'll make him a bed out there.' He nods towards the room at the back of the cottage where small animals were sometimes kept overnight.
I run my hand down the broken wing. The swan doesn't flinch now. Too deep in sleep. I let Granddad turn me away from the swan and push me from the room.
Dad shuts the window with a thud. âCome on Isla, we're going,' he murmurs, grabbing me by the back of my coat.
I look around to see Granddad's face cloud over. He shakes his head then turns abruptly away. He marches back to the house and slams the conservatory door.
Dad shrugs. âHe's just a grumpy old coot. Always has been.'
He walks quickly to the car. I hold back a little, wait for Granddad to sit in his cane chair by the window again. But Dad starts the car and I run to get in it.
CHAPTER 5
M
um's waiting at the door when we get home, looking from Dad's face to me and back again.
âYou had the pains again, didn't you?' She grabs Dad's shoulders and stops him from going in the house until he looks at her.
âSomething like that,' Dad murmurs. âBut it's the swans you should worry about. Flew into the wires at the reserve.'
She leads him into the kitchen, ignoring his explanation of what we did today. âThat's the second time this has happened now, isn't it?' She glances over at me before lowering her voice. âYou're going to the doctor first thing.'