Authors: Kevin Brooks
I looked at him. âI can't believe you said that.'
âYeah, well,' he said, lowering his eyes. âIt's true, isn't it?'
âI've had enough of this,' I sighed. âI'm going to bed.'
I was halfway to the door when Dominic stopped me,
putting his hand on my shoulder. âCome on, Cait,' he said. âAll I did was go out for a few drinks with some friends. All right, so we were a bit rowdy when we got backâ'
âYou just don't get it, do you?' I spat.
âGet
what
?'
I glared at him, my lips quivering. âYou ⦠you and your so-called
friends
â¦' My voice trailed off. I couldn't speak. I couldn't find the words.
âWhat about them?' he said.
âNothing â it doesn't matter. Just leave me alone.'
âCaitâ'
âGet your hands
off
.'
He backed away, bemused. âAll right, all right, keep your voice down. Listen, I'm sorry. I didn't mean anything ⦠I know I shouldn't have said that about Dadâ'
âNo, you shouldn't.'
âBut I didn't meanâ'
âForget it.'
âAll I meant wasâ'
âYeah, I know what you meant.' I stopped in the doorway and looked him in the eye, searching for a trace of the old Dominic,
my
Dominic ⦠but I couldn't find it.
âWhat?' he said, unsettled by my gaze.
âNothing. Don't worry about it.' I turned to go. âOh, and by the way, Angel sends her love.'
He licked his lips. âWho?'
âAngel Dean,' I repeated.
âWhat? ⦠when didâ'
âGoodnight, Dominic.'
He was nine when Mum died. I was five. Dad was thirty-four. I suppose it affected us all in different ways.
*Â Â *Â Â *
That night I dreamed about the Boy. It was raining. He was running on the beach and people were chasing him, throwing stones at him and calling him names.
Gyppo! Thief! Dirty pervert!
There were hundreds of them, brandishing sticks and bits of piping, shovels and rocks, whatever they could lay their hands on, their nightmare faces gripped with hate and streaked with tears of rain.
Dirty gyppo! Dirty bastard!
Jamie Tait was there, oiled, in his too-tight swimming trunks. Angel and Robbie were there. Lee Brendell, Bill, Dominic, Deefer, Simon, Dad, everyone from the island was there, all storming across the beach screaming out for blood ⦠and I was there, too. I was with them. I was running with the mob. I could feel the wet sand beneath my feet, the rain in my hair, the weight of the rock in my hand. I could feel my heart pounding with fear and excitement as I raced along the shore, past the pillbox, heading for the Point. The Boy had stopped running and was standing at the edge of the mud flats. All around him the air shimmered with unseen colours. He glanced over his shoulder, looking at me with beseeching eyes, pleading for help. But what could I do? I couldn't do anything. There were too many of them. It was too late.
DON'T STOP!
a voice cried out. It was mine.
DON'T DO IT! DON'T STOP! KEEP RUNNING! DON'T GIVE UP! JUST RUN! RUN FOR EVER
â¦
three
O
ver the next few days the weather never settled. In the space of a single day we'd have bright sunshine in the morning, followed by cloudy skies and a light summer shower in the afternoon, then another brief spell of baking heat, before the clouds built up again and the rain poured down in torrents. It was like watching one of those speeded up films of the passing seasons. In the evenings a cool wind breezed in from the sea scattering clouds of dust and sand to the air, and as the light on the horizon filtered through the haze, the skies took on the pastel colours of autumn. Then at night the air turned hot and sticky, and sometimes I could hear thunder rumbling faintly in the distance, like the mutterings of a disgruntled bully.
They were unsettled times.
I stayed at home as much as possible. I'd had enough of other people for a while. I didn't want to talk to anybody and I didn't want to think about anything. I just wanted to sit around and do nothing.
But it wasn't easy.
Do you know how it feels when you don't know how to feel? When your mind keeps slipping from one thing to another, when you can't relax, when you know you've got an itch but you don't know where to scratch it? That's how I felt after the events of the weekend. I just didn't know how to feel about anything: me, Dad, Bill, Jamie, Dominic, Angel, the beach, the Boy ⦠everything kept
going round and round in circles in my head. It was as if someone had opened up a conjurer's box and a dozen grinning jack-in-the-boxes were waving their heads and screaming questions at me â what do you think of Simon? you like him, don't you?
how
do you like him? and what about the Boy? the dream? what does
that
mean? and what's up with Dominic? why's he hanging around with Jamie? is he seeing Bill? or Angel? do you care? do you
want
to care �
I wished I knew.
I wished ⦠yeah, I wished.
At least the weekend was over. It had been a long one â long, chaotic, and disturbing. Awful. Probably the worst few days of my life. But it was over now, I kept telling myself. It was over. Things would soon get back to normal. The skies would clear and I could settle down to a quiet summer of long hot days with nothing to do and nothing to think about. Just blue skies, good books, cold drinks, and cool nights. No more surprises, no more horror, no more crap.
That was it.
That's what I wanted.
Nothing to do.
Nothing to think about.
No more crap.
Fat chance.
On Tuesday afternoon I bumped into Bill in the village. I was with Dad. I hadn't really wanted to go with him, because whenever we go into the village together it always feels like one of those scenes from an old cowboy movie, when the homesteaders who won't sell out to the cattle
baron ride into town in their cronky old wagon and all the gunslingers and tough guys are lounging around giving them dirty looks â¦
That's how it feels to me, anyway.
It's not that the locals dislike Dad. They might be a bit suspicious of him, I suppose. A bit wary, a bit stand-offish ⦠but I'm sure they don't
dislike
him. Well, maybe some of them do. They probably think he's a bit weird. A bit scruffy. A bit
distasteful
. He drinks, you know. Smokes pot. Writes books. And, worst of all, he's not an islander. He might have lived on Hale for over fifteen years, but he wasn't
born
here. He's still an outsider. He's still
Irish
.
So, anyway, I wasn't that keen when he asked me to go with him, but he'd run out of whiskey, and he wanted to go to the library, and if I didn't go with him he'd have to walk ⦠and he was feeling a bit down ⦠and I didn't really have anything else to do anyway ⦠so what else could I do? I fixed a smile to my face, fixed up my hair, and off we went.
When we got to the village, we parked in the square and headed down the High Street towards the library. There weren't that many people about â one or two old folks lazing about on benches, young mothers with Jeeps full of kids, a couple of fishermen clomping about in waders with roll-ups dangling from their lips. There were a few bikers moping around by the bus stop giving us dirty looks, and a bunch of kids from school were hanging around outside the newsagent, but none of them saw me, and I was happy to leave it at that.
The library is a nice old place at the end of the High Street, with crumbly stone pillars guarding the entrance and high windows that glaze the interior with a cooling light. Although it's small, with only a limited selection of
books, it's got a reasonably good reference section and it's always nice and quiet, the way libraries should be.
Dad needed to photocopy something from a reference book, but the copier was playing up, so while he waited patiently as the ancient librarian fiddled around hopelessly inside the machine, I passed the time messing about on the library computer.
I'd logged on and was checking out the RSPCA website when someone tapped me on the shoulder.
âLooking for porn, girl?'
I turned around to see Bill, chewing on a wad of gum, looking down at me.
âOh, hello,' I said.
âWhat are you doing?'
âNothing. Just browsing, you know.' I looked around. âAre you on your own?'
She looked a little embarrassed. âAngel's outside.'
I looked out through the door. Angel Dean was leaning in a doorway across the street talking to one of the bikers. She was wearing a skinny little vest and ripped denim shorts that were more rip than short. Her face was done up in goth lipstick and a ton of black eye-liner, and she was standing with her back arched and her hands hooked behind her head to show off her belly.
âNice,' I said.
Bill shrugged.
âSo what are you doing in here?' I asked.
âI saw you come in. I thought I'd say hello.'
I nodded, staring at the computer screen. I didn't know what to say.
âLook,' she said. âAbout the other dayâ'
âDon't worry about it.'
âWe're still friends, aren't we?'
I shrugged. âI suppose.'
âIt was only a bit of fun.'
âRight.'
âCome on, Cait â¦'
She'd dyed her hair black and was wearing a short leather jacket and tight black leggings. With her mascara'd eyes and a cupid's bow of dark red lipstick, she looked like a 1950s motorcycle-slut. Not that there's anything wrong with that, in fact I thought she looked pretty cool. It just wasn't the Bill I
knew
.
She flicked at her hair and said, âHey, did you hear about the gyppo?'
âThe
what
?'
âThe kid we saw at the Stand.'
âHe's not a
gypsy
, for God's sake. And you didn't see him anyway, you were puking your guts up at the side of the roadâ'
â
Sshhh
!' the librarian hissed, giving me a filthy look.
âSorry,' I whispered.
Bill grinned. âOld fart.'
I lowered my voice. âWhat about him?'
âWho?'
âThe
boy
⦠the boy at the Stand.'
Bill smiled. âHave you seen him? Sheesh! I wouldn't say no, even if he isâ'
âWhat
about
him?' I interrupted. âWhen did you see him?'
She leaned closer. âLee's got a friend with a powerboat. We were out on it last night, round the other side of the Point.'
âWho's
we
?'
âLee, Angel, Robbie, a couple othersâ'
âWhat were you doing out at the Point?'
âWell, you know â¦' She winked and touched the side of her nose. âAnyway, we were drifting along with the engine off when Lee spots this
naked
guy in a pool at the edge of the woods across from the mud flats.' She laughed. âIt was him, the gyppo. Having a bath.'
âHow do you know it was him?'
âLee had a pair of binoculars. Angel recognised him from the Stand.'
âYou watched him through
binoculars?
'
âYou bet.'
I shook my head. It couldn't have been the Boy. The only way out to the woods is across the mud flats, and the only people who know the flats well enough to even
think
of crossing them are local. If you don't know what you're doing out there, you're dead in seconds.
âIt must have been someone from the island,' I said.
âNo way,' said Bill. âIf there was anyone round here who looked like that, I'd know about it.' She smirked. âAnd if I didn't, Angel certainly would.'
I sighed. âWhat happened? Did he see you?'
âDon't you want to know what
I
saw?'
âJust tell me what happened,' I said coldly. âDid he see you?'
A look of annoyance crossed her face, and for a moment I thought she was going to tell me to stuff it. I wouldn't have blamed her. I was speaking to her as if she was dirt. But she's never been the sort of person to let annoyance get the better of her. And, anyway, the temptation to tell me about it was too great.
She squatted down beside me. âIt was really weird, Cait. I was watching him through these binoculars â I couldn't see
much
because the pool was sort of half-hidden behind some bushes.' She gave me a leery look. âI could see
enough, though, if you know what I mean.'
I ignored her nudging arm.
She went on. âHe was just standing there â totally naked â staring at something in the water. It was like he was in a trance or something. And then, as I was watching him, he suddenly turned his head and looked at me.' Her eyes narrowed at the memory. âIt was really weird. I mean, he couldn't have known we were there. We weren't making any noise or anything and we were a fair distance away ⦠I don't know how he knew. I just remember these calm blue eyes staring at me through the binoculars â¦' Her voice trailed off and she stared at the floor.
âWhat happened then?' I asked quietly.
She looked up. âHe just disappeared. It was
so
weird. I must have looked away for a second ⦠I'm sure I didn't ⦠but I suppose I must have. One second he was there â and the next he was gone.'
I was staring at the blank computer screen imagining the Boy's face â the eyes, the smile â and I remembered that ghostly silence when I saw him for the first time on the Stand, my skin tingling â¦
âThey reckon he's living rough,' Bill said, standing up.
âWho?'
âThe gyppo.'
âWho's saying that?'
âI don't know, it's just what I heard. He's been seen around the village a couple of times. Bought a few things at the Paki shop â tobacco, matches, soap. Apparently he's done a bit of casual work for old Joe Rampton. Cleared out his chicken sheds, bit of painting â¦' She laughed. âJoe gave him a fiver for the day's work. Mind you, I've heard he's been nicking stuff, too â¦'