New Worlds

Home > Other > New Worlds > Page 6
New Worlds Page 6

by Edited By David Garnett


  He had become increasingly embittered, over the years. Now he wanted to reach out to Susanne, make some gesture to show her that he cared, but found himself unable to even contemplate the overture of reconciliation.

  In the distance, miles away on the far horizon, was the faerie structure of the Station, its tower flashing sunlight.

  At last she said, "I'm sorry," so softly that he hardly heard.

  His voice seemed too loud by comparison. "I understand," he said.

  She shook her head. "I don't think you do." She paused. Tears filled her eyes, and he wondered why she was crying like this.

  "Susanne..."

  "But you don't understand."

  "I do," he said gently. "Your mother didn't want me to know about her illness - she didn't want me around. Christ, I was a pain enough to her when she was perfectly well."

  "It wasn't that," Susanne said in a small voice. "You see, she didn't want you to know that she'd been wrong."

  "Wrong?" He stared at her, not comprehending. "Wrong about what?"

  She took a breath, said, "Wrong about the implant," and tears escaped her eyes and tracked down her cheeks.

  Lincoln felt something tighten within his chest, constrict his throat, making words difficult.

  "What do you mean?" he asked at last.

  "Faced with death, in the last weeks... it was too much. I... I persuaded her to think again. At last she realised she'd been wrong. A week before she died, she had the implant." Susanne looked away, not wanting, or not daring, to look upon his reaction to her duplicity.

  He found it impossible to speak, much less order his thoughts, as the realisation coursed through him.

  Good God. Barbara...

  He felt then love and hate, desire and a flare of anger.

  Susanne said: "She made me swear not to tell you. She hated you, towards the end."

  "It was my fault," he said. "I was a bastard. I deserved everything. It's complex, Susanne, so bloody damned complex - loving someone and hating them at the same time, needing to be alone and yet needing what they can give."

  A wind sprang up, lifting a tress of his daughter's hair. She fingered it back into place behind her ear. "I heard from her three months ago - a kind of CD thing delivered from my local Station. She told me that she'd been terribly cruel in not telling you. I... I meant to come up and tell you earlier, but I had no idea how you'd react. I kept putting it off. I came up yesterday because it was the last chance before she returns."

  "When?" Lincoln asked, suddenly aware of the steady pounding of his heart.

  "Today," Susanne said. She glanced at her watch. "At noon today - at this Station."

  "This Station?" Lincoln said. "Of all the hundreds in Britain?" He shook his head, some unnameable emotion making words difficult. "What... what does she want?"

  "To see you, of course. She wants to apologise. She told me she's learned a great many things up there, and one of them was compassion."

  Oh, Christ, he thought.

  "Susanne," he said, "I don't think I could face your mother right now."

  She turned to him. "Please," she said, "please, this time, can't you make the effort - for me? What do you think it's been like, watching you two fight over the years?"

  Lincoln baulked at the idea of meeting this resurrected Barbara, this reconstructed, compassionate creature. He wanted nothing of her pity.

  "Look," Susanne said at last, "she's leaving soon, going to some star I can't even pronounce. She wants to say goodbye."

  Lincoln looked towards the horizon, at the coruscating tower of the Station.

  "We used to walk a lot round here when I was young," Susanne said. There was a note of desperation in her voice, a final appeal.

  Lincoln looked at his watch. It was almost nine. They could just make it to the Station by midday, if they set off now.

  He wondered if he would have been able to face Barbara, had she intended to stay on Earth.

  At last, Lincoln reached out and took his daughter's hand.

  They walked down the hill, through the snow, towards the achingly beautiful tower of the Onward Station.

  <>

  ~ * ~

  GREAT WESTERN

  BY KIM NEWMAN

  Cleared paths were no good for Allie. She wasn’t supposed to be after rabbits on Squire Maskell’s land. Most of Alder Hill was wildwood, trees webbed together by a growth of bramble nastier than barbwire. Thorns jabbed into skin and stayed, like bee-stingers.

  Just after dawn, the air had a chilly bite but the sunlight was pure and strong. Later, it would get warm; now, her hands and knees were frozen from dew-damp grass and iron-hard ground.

  The Reeve was making a show of being tough on poaching, handing down short, sharp sentences. She’d already got a stripe across her palm for setting snares. Everyone west of Bristol knew Reeve Draper was Maskell’s creature. Serfdom might have been abolished, but the old squires clung to their pre-War position, through habit as much as tenacity.

  Since taking her lash, administered under the village oak by Constable Erskine with a razor-strop, she’d grown craftier. Wiry enough to tunnel through bramble, she made and travelled her own secret, thorny paths. She’d take Maskell’s rabbits, even if the Reeve’s Constable striped her like a tiger.

  She set a few snares in obvious spots, where Stan Budge would find and destroy them. Maskell’s gamekeeper wouldn’t be happy if he thought no one was even trying to poach. The trick was to set snares invisibly, in places Budge was too grown-up, too far off the ground, to look.

  Even so, none of her nooses had caught anything.

  All spring, she’d been hearing gunfire from Alder Hill, resonating across the moors like thunder. Maskell had the Gilpin brothers out with Browning rifles. They were supposed to be ratting, but the object of the exercise was to end poaching by killing off all the game.

  There were rabbit and pigeon carcasses about, some crackly bone bundles in packets of dry skin, some recent enough to seem shocked to death. It was a sinful waste, what with hungry people queueing up for parish hand-outs. Quite a few trees had yellow-orange badges, where Terry or Teddy Gilpin had shot wide of the mark. Squire Maskell would not be heartbroken if one of those wild shots finished up in her.

  Susan told her over and over to be mindful of men with guns. She had a quite reasonable horror of firearms. Too many people on Sedgmoor died with their gumboots on and a bullet in them. Allie’s Dad and Susan’s husband, for two. Susan wouldn’t have a gun in the house.

  For poaching, Allie didn’t like guns anyway. Too loud. She had a catapult made from a garden fork, double-strength rubber stretched between steel tines. She could put a nail through a half-inch of plywood from twenty-five feet.

  She wriggled out of her tunnel, pushing aside a circle of bramble she’d fixed to hinge like a lid, and emerged in a clearing of loose earth and shale. During the Civil War, a bomb had fallen here and fizzled. Eventually, the woods would close over the scar.

  When she stood up, she could see across the moors, as far as Achelzoy. At night, the infernal lights of Bridgwater pinked the horizon, clawing a ragged red edge in the curtain of dark. Now, she could make out the road winding through the wetlands. The sun, still low, glinted and glimmered in sodden fields, mirror-fragments strewn in a carpet of grass. There were dangerous marshes out there. Cows were sucked under if they set a hoof wrong.

  Something moved near the edge of the clearing.

  Allie had her catapult primed, her eye fixed on the rabbit. Crouching, still as a statue, she concentrated. Jack Coney nibbled on nothing, unconcerned. She pinched the nailhead, imagining a point between the ears where she would strike.

  A noise sounded out on the moor road. The rabbit vanished, startled by the unfamiliar rasp of an engine.

  ‘“S’blood,” she swore.

  She stood up, easing off on her catapult. She looked out towards Achelzoy. A fast-moving shape was coming across the moor.

  The rabbit was lost. Mas
kell’s men would soon be about, making the woods dangerous. She chanced a maintained path and ran swiftly downhill. At the edge of Maskell’s property, she came to a stile and vaulted it—wrenching her shoulder, but no matter—landing like a cat on safe territory. Without a look back at the “TRESPASSERS WILL BE VENTILATED” sign, she traipsed between two rows of trees, towards the road.

  The path came out half a mile beyond the village, at a sharp kink in the moor road. She squatted with her back to a signpost, running fingers through her hair to rid herself of tangles and snaps of thorn.

  The engine noise was nearer and louder. She considered putting a nail in the nuisance-maker’s petrol tank to pay him back for the rabbit. That was silly. Whoever it was didn’t know what he’d done.

  She saw the stranger was straddling a Norton. He had slowed to cope with the winds of the moor road. Every month, someone piled up in one of the ditches because he took a bend too fast.

  To Allie’s surprise, the motorcyclist stopped by her. He shifted goggles up to the brim of his hat. He looked as if he had an extra set of eyes in his forehead.

  There were care-lines about his eyes and mouth. She judged him a little older than Susan. His hair needed cutting. He wore leather trews, a padded waistcoat over a dusty khaki shirt, and gauntlets. A brace of pistols was holstered at his hips, and he had a rifle slung on the Norton, within easy reach.

  He reached into his waistcoat for a pouch and fixings. Pulling the drawstring with his teeth, he tapped tobacco onto a paper and rolled himself a cigarette one-handed. It was a clever trick, and he knew it. He stuck the fag in his grin and fished for a box of Bryant and May.

  “Alder,” he said, reading from the signpost. “Is that a village?”

  “Might be.”

  “Might it?”

  He struck a light on his thumbnail and drew a lungful of smoke, held in for a moment like a hippie sucking a joint, and let it funnel out through his nostrils in dragon-plumes.

  “Might it indeed?”

  He didn’t speak like a yokel. He sounded like a wireless announcer, maybe even more clipped and starched.

  “If, hypothetically, Alder were a village, would there be a hostelry there where one might buy breakfast?”

  “Valiant Soldier don’t open till lunchtime.”

  The Valiant Soldier was Alder’s pub, and another of Squire Maskell’s businesses.

  “Pity.”

  “How much you’m pay for breakfast?” she asked.

  “That would depend on the breakfast.”

  “Ten bob?”

  The stranger shrugged.

  “Susan’ll breakfast you for ten bob.”

  “Your mother.”

  “No.”

  “Where could one find this Susan?”

  “Gosmore Farm. Other end of village.”

  “Why don’t you get up behind me and show me where to go?”

  She wasn’t sure. The stranger shifted forward on his seat, making space.

  “I’m Lytton,” the stranger said.

  “Allie,” she replied, straddling the pillion.

  “Hold on tight.”

  She took a grip on his waistcoat, wrists resting on the stocks of his guns.

  Lytton pulled down his goggles and revved. The bike sped off. Allie’s hair blew into her face and streamed behind her. She held tighter, pressing against his back to keep her face out of the wind.

  ~ * ~

  When they arrived, Susan had finished milking. Allie saw her washing her hands under the pump by the back door.

  Gosmore Farm was a tiny enclave circled by Maskell’s land. He had once tried to get the farm by asking the newly widowed Susan to marry him. Allie couldn’t believe he’d actually thought she might consent. Apparently, Maskell didn’t consider Susan might hold a grudge after her husband’s death. He now had a porcelain doll named Sue-Clare in the Manor House, and a pair of terrifying children.

  Susan looked up when she heard the Norton. Her face was set hard. Strangers with guns were not her favourite type of folk.

  Lytton halted the motorcycle. Allie, bones shaken, dismounted, showing herself.

  “He’m pay for breakfast,” she said. “Ten bob.”

  Susan looked the stranger over, starting at his boots, stopping at his hips.

  “He’ll have to get rid of those filthy things.”

  Lytton, who had his goggles off again, was puzzled.

  “Guns, she means,” Allie explained.

  “I know you feel naked without them,” Susan said sharply. “Unmanned, even. Magna Carta rules that no Englishman shall be restrained from bearing arms. It’s that fundamental right which keeps us free.”

  “That’s certainly an argument,” Lytton said.

  “If you want breakfast, yield your fundamental right before you step inside my house.”

  “That’s a stronger one,” he said.

  Lytton pulled off his gauntlets and dropped them into the pannier of the Norton. His fingers were stiff on the buckle of his gunbelt, as if he had been wearing it for many years until it had grown into him like a wedding ring. He loosened the belt and held it up.

  Allie stepped forward to take the guns.

  “Allison, no,” Susan insisted.

  Lytton laid the guns in the pannier and latched the lid.

  “You have me defenceless,” he told Susan, spreading his arms.

  Susan squelched a smile and opened the back door. Kitchen smells wafted.

  A good thing about Lytton’s appearance at Gosmore Farm was that he stopped Susan giving Allie a hard time about being up and about before dawn. Susan had no illusions about what she did in the woods.

  Susan let Lytton past her into the kitchen. Allie trotted up.

  “Let me see your hands,” Susan said.

  Allie showed them palms down. Susan noted dirt under nails and a few new scratches. When Allie showed her palms, Susan drew a fingernail across the red strop-mark.

  “Take care, Allie.”

  “Yes’m.”

  Susan hugged Allie briefly, and pulled her into the kitchen.

  ~ * ~

  Lytton had taken a seat at the kitchen table and was loosening his heavy boots. Susan had the wireless on, tuned to the Light Programme. Mark Radcliffe introduced the new song from Jarvis Cocker and His Wurzels, “The Streets of Stogumber.’ A frying pan was heating on the cooker, tiny trails rising from the fat.

  “Allie, cut our guest some bacon.”

  “The name’s Lytton.”

  “I’m Susan Ames. This is Allison Conway. To answer your unasked question, I’m a widow, she’s an orphan. We run this farm ourselves.”

  “A hard row to plough.”

  “We’re still above ground.”

  Allie carved slices off a cured hock that hung by the cooker. Susan took eggs from a basket, cracked them into the pan.

  “Earl Gray or Darjeeling?” Susan asked Lytton.

  “The Earl.”

  “Get the kettle on, girl,” Susan told her. “And stop staring.”

  Allie couldn’t remember Susan cooking for a man since Mr Ames was killed. It was jarring to have this big male, whiffy from the road and petrol, invading their kitchen. But also a little exciting.

  Susan flipped bacon rashers, busying herself at the cooker. Allie filled the kettle from the tap at the big basin.

  “Soldier, were you?” Susan asked Lytton, indicating his shoulder. There was a lighter patch on his shirtsleeve where rank insignia had been cut away. He’d worn several pips.

  The stranger shrugged.

  “Which brand of idiot?”

  “I fought for the southeast.”

  “I’d keep quiet about that if you intend to drink in The Valiant Soldier.”

  “I’d imagined Wessex was mostly neutral.”

  “Feudal order worked perfectly well for a thousand years. It wasn’t just landed gentry who resisted London Reforms. There are plenty of jobless ex-serfs around, nostalgic for their shackles and three hot meals, a day
.”

 

‹ Prev