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Trust

Page 5

by David Moody


  ‘Newsflash, mate,’ Rob laughed, digging his brother in the ribs. ‘Star Trek’s made up. This is real.’

  ‘I know that, you prick, but that just makes it even harder to swallow, doesn’t it?’

  ‘Why?’

  ‘Because it does. Christ, we don’t even bother learning new languages when we go abroad. We just shout louder and hope the locals understand us.’

  ‘Well maybe we should make more of an effort. Anyway, if they can build and pilot a ship like that, something like Google Translate will be a piece of cake for them. They’ve probably got it implanted in their brains or something like that.’

  ‘Now you’re just taking the piss.’

  ‘I’m not! I’m serious. You can get things for your phone that’ll give you a translation if you take a photo of a sign written in a foreign language, and you can get software that understands speech. Put the two together and you’re not a million miles away. It’s a logical next-step.’

  ‘There’s nothing logical about what’s going on around here.’

  ‘Like I said, mate,’ he sighed, ‘they’ve got a great big, fuck off spaceship, remember? If they can manage that, I’m sure they can out-Google us too.’

  ‘Suppose. You’ve changed your tune. You didn’t sound so sure about all of this last night.’

  ‘I’ve had time to think about it, that’s all. Your problem, Tom, is that you’re a bloody cynic. I reckon it’s all those years spent shafting people in your job, all those takeovers and acquisitions. You need to start being a bit more altruistic. Not everyone’s always out to get you, you know.’

  ‘I know.’

  ‘When we were little, you always said you wanted to go into space. Well now you might have a chance. Imagine that! They’ll share their technology and there you go, the sky’s no longer the limit.’

  ‘I hope you’re right. I already know how it’ll pan out though. They’ll show someone how to build a ship, then someone else will want to build a better one, then we’ll be racing to build bases on the Moon and on Mars…’

  ‘I know what you’re saying, but let’s hope this is different, eh?’

  ‘Why should it be? In fact, why should they show us anything? Why not just take what they want then leave us broken and in pieces? When has a superior power ever truly given a damn about the people they’ve conquered?’

  ‘You’re still looking at this all the wrong way, Tom. It’s not about battles and fighting, is it? These aliens aren’t here because they want to pick a fight. They’re not here because they want to be here either. Their ship is fucked, and we just happen to be their only hope, even if all we’re doing is offering them bed and breakfast until they can get back. Thing is, when you step back and look at it, it looks like they need us far more than we need them.’

  CHAPTER 5

  Whether it was because of his hangover, the constant barrage of news overload, or his brother’s endless conjecture, Tom felt like he needed a change of scenery. The chance to visit Clare Austin, a good friend, presented him with an opportunity to return to the welcome normality of life for a while and shut off from all the talk of aliens and new horizons and the like. He didn’t know anyone who was more grounded and down-to-earth than Clare, and that was probably why he liked her so much. A spade was a spade to Clare. It wouldn’t have mattered if the aliens had touched down in her back garden instead of just flying over it, he knew she wouldn’t have given a damn.

  As was often the case, Clare needed Tom’s help. She was perfectly capable, she just didn’t have time to waste, and that was something Tom had in abundance. A recently-separated single mum with a young daughter, she felt like she had to work twice as hard as everyone else just to keep standing still. Her partner had walked out on her and their daughter, Penny, at the end of last year, leaving behind little more than bad memories and a heap of jointly-held debts. There was no disputing the fact that Aiden had been a selfish, inconsiderate shit (any of his many girlfriends would agree), and Clare knew it was for the best.

  Tom had been helping Clare out with odd jobs for almost as long as he’d been living in Thatcham. They’d been introduced to each other by James, and they’d immediately got on. It was a purely platonic relationship. Tom sometimes got bored. There was only so much daytime TV and video games he could take. His lack of motivation was becoming a serious concern, and putting up a shelf or painting a wall for Clare often provided him with a welcome kick up the backside and gave him the impetus to do something constructive. Today he hoped that fixing her computer would bring some purpose to this incredibly strange day.

  The traffic in and around the village remained heavy, the single carriageway which wound along the length of Thatcham far busier than Tom would have typically expected, even at the peak of the season at this time on a Saturday afternoon, when one lot of tourists left for home and the next moved in to take their place. He sat at a junction waiting to turn right to get out of the village, watching the chaos deeper in the heart of Thatcham. The place was, in reality, little more than a meandering line of shops, cafés, takeaways and houses, most of which looked out over the ocean or, more accurately now, over the recently bolstered sea defences. The council had spent a small fortune dropping tons of boulders at strategic points along the coast to reduce the risk of the village flooding, as had happened in previous years. Parking space along the main road was severely limited at the best of times, with residents claiming those spots where there were no markings or warning signs. Today, however, all such warnings were being ignored.

  An unexpected gap in the traffic (Tom might have been wrong, but he thought he heard Ken Trentham screaming at a hapless motorist) allowed him to nudge forward, then finally make the turn and start heading out of the village. He accelerated as he broke free from the congestion, and with his windows down, his music playing and the smell of the sea hanging in the air, for a few seconds everything was reassuringly familiar again. No sooner had he got up speed, though, than he was forced to slow once more as he joined the back end of another queue of traffic waiting for a large truck to reverse into the car park of one of the many campsites dotted around the village. He thought it strange, and not a little surreal, when he saw the truck pull up alongside several more of a similar size. Some had satellite dishes and huge aerials bolted to their roofs, and they all belonged to various media companies: BBC, ITV, SKY, and a few more he hadn’t heard of besides. The campsite itself resembled something from the outskirts of a music festival: a sea of wildly coloured canvas roofs with barely a scrap of space between them. Still, he thought, this sudden media influx was by no means the strangest thing which had happened in Thatcham recently, and his mind wandered back to this time yesterday when he’d been out on the hills…

  The road ahead was clear again now, Tom put his foot down and continued out towards Clare’s. He passed a lone house about a mile further down the lane, the people who lived there enjoying a barbeque in the sun. He caught the sound of their laughter on the breeze, their relaxed noise making him realise how uncertain he still felt. Maybe Rob’s right, he thought. Maybe I just need to lighten up and stop overanalysing everything. He couldn’t help himself, though. Everything looked the same today as it always had done, but somehow it all felt different.

  Clare’s house was near Welbeck, a small village on the way to Drayton, the largest town in the area. Even with today’s traffic it didn’t take Tom long to get there. He pulled up outside her terraced cottage, behind the heap of a car her ex-in-laws had given her to appease their guilt over their son’s behaviour. The house door was open before he’d even rung the bell. Penny stood in the hallway, grinning at him.

  ‘What did your mum say to you about opening the door to strangers?’

  ‘She said don’t do it. But you’re not a stranger, are you.’

  ‘No, but…’

  ‘Let Tom in, Pen,’ Clare shouted from inside the house. ‘I’m in the kitchen.’

  ‘Mummy’s been swearing at the computer again,’ Pen
ny explained.

  ‘I heard.’

  Tom shut the door then side-stepped the little girl to get through. Clare was ironing, and dinner was cooking on the stove.

  ‘You were quick,’ she said.

  ‘Not a lot else to do,’ he replied without thinking.

  ‘It’s all right for some,’ she grumbled, semi-seriously. ‘Bloody hell, Tom, it’s a sad state of affairs when you’ve got nothing better to do on a Saturday afternoon than come here.’

  ‘There’s nothing happening at home. Siobhan’s at work and Rob’s still half-drunk from last night. He was asleep when I left him, actually.’

  ‘How the other half live, eh?’ she said as she hung a pair of trousers on a hanger then picked a crumpled shirt out of the washing basket. Tom remained in the doorway, feeling redundant and slightly awkward. He was glad of the distraction when Penny reappeared.

  ‘So how are you, mate?’ he asked her.

  ‘Okay.’

  ‘Been up to much since I last saw you?’

  ‘Not really.’

  ‘Enjoying the holidays?’

  ‘They’re all right.’

  ‘Only all right? You live near the seaside and you don’t have to go back to school for another week, how can it only be all right?’

  ‘I was in day club most days. Some days Mum and me had chips on the beach when she finished her work.’

  ‘Sounds great. Were the chips good?’

  ‘Chips are always good.’

  With that she was gone again. End of conversation. She caught a glimpse of her ever-elusive cat out of the corner of her eye and went chasing after it with predatory speed. Clare shouted after her to slow down but her warning had little effect. Tom watched as Penny chased the cat down the length of their short back garden, then saw it slip through a hole in the wire-mesh fence and run out into the fields beyond.

  Clare watched her daughter from behind the ironing board, standing on tiptoe to make sure she was okay before returning her attention to the laundry. Again Tom felt awkward, and a little sad too. Clare never seemed to relax, never switched off. He’d only come into her life at the tail-end of her relationship problems, but he knew the break-up had taken its toll. He hadn’t had it easy himself since the death of his parents, but there was a major difference in their relative situations: he had no one to think about but himself. If Tom wanted to cry, he could cry. If he wanted to get drunk and smash something up, he’d do it. If he wanted to stay in bed all day and not say a damn thing to anyone, then that was what he did. Clare, on the other hand, had to keep everything bottled up and hidden away for her daughter’s sake. He could see the strain etched on her face.

  ‘So how are you doing?’ he asked, slightly cautiously, treading a fine line between caring and patronising.

  ‘Okay,’ she said as she folded up the ironing board. ‘Been better, been worse.’

  ‘Work all right?’

  ‘I’m a dental nurse, Tom. I spend my days sterilizing instruments, checking notes and looking into people’s mouths. Work’s as all right as can be expected.’

  ‘Well that’s something, I guess,’ he said, and she managed a subdued grin as she passed him the ironing board to put away. She immediately turned her attention to the oven, and served up Penny’s dinner then called her inside.

  ‘Drink?’

  ‘If you’re having one,’ Tom replied.

  ‘I am. Hot or cold?’

  ‘Whatever’s easier.’

  ‘Juice or beer?’

  ‘Don’t mind.’

  Clare grinned again. ‘Typical bloody man, couldn’t make a decision if your life depended on it.’

  ‘Juice then,’ he answered quickly. ‘I’m driving.’

  ‘That’s better,’ she said, deliberately patronizing.

  ‘You’re not going all feminist on me are you, Clare?’

  ‘What if I am? What’s wrong with that?’ she asked as she led him through to her over-cluttered but comfortable living room.

  ‘Nothing,’ he replied, backpedalling furiously. ‘It’s just that—’

  ‘I’ve had enough of men,’ she said. ‘You’re more trouble than you’re worth, you lot. That guy next door, Jim Franks, he’s such a bloody chauvinist. Him and his wife are both in their eighties, and I can’t believe how he talks to her. You can hear him out in the garden, shouting for her to get him something to eat. And she puts up with it too, silly cow. Has done for years’

  ‘But they’re ancient. It’s probably just a generational thing.’

  ‘That’s no excuse. Honestly, she’s scared to do anything without checking with him first. Spends her entire life cleaning up and fussing around him. You try talking to her and it’s pitiful. She’s got no conversation, absolutely nothing to say for herself. Christ, I think she has to check with Jim before she goes to the toilet.’

  ‘Bloody hell, Clare, who rattled your cage?’

  She sighed and shook her head. ‘Sorry, bad week.’

  Tom sensed he shouldn’t pry. ‘Want to show me what the problem with the computer is? Let this useless bloke try and fix it for you?’

  ‘I could probably do it myself if I tried. I just don’t have the time.’

  ‘No worries. You said something about it not connecting?’

  ‘Yes, bloody thing,’ she said as she led him upstairs. The computer was in her cramped bedroom, set up on a dressing table littered with loose cables, CDs and data sticks, unused user guides, and a layer of dust. Tom sat down and turned it on. Clare cleared her throat. ‘Sorry.’

  ‘What for?’

  ‘For going off on one just now. For ranting.’

  ‘It’s water off a duck’s back. Honest, it doesn’t bother me.’

  ‘You’re a good punch bag at times, Thomas Winter.’

  ‘I aim to please.’

  ‘No, seriously, you’re a half-decent bloke. Best of a bad bunch. I didn’t mean to lump you in with the rest of the shysters.’

  Tom watched the computer beginning to boot up. Should he say anything else or just let it go? He didn’t want to, but decided he probably should. ‘So what’s he done now?’

  ‘He’s messing me around, that’s all.’

  ‘More than usual?’

  ‘Not really. I just get fed up of it, you know? Everything’s a battle with Aiden. He’s a spineless, selfish bastard.’

  ‘Bloody hell, don’t hold back.’

  Clare had no intention of doing so. ‘I mean, just look at the way he left here. No hint there was anything wrong until he told me he was going. No discussions. No negotiations. Right before Christmas too. Bastard. Now I look back I feel like such an idiot. I should have seen it coming. The warning signs were there. All those bloody business trips. And he never wanted to get married either. It’s obvious why now. It would have been harder for him to walk out if we’d been married.’

  Tom seized on a pause in her rant to try and divert the conversation elsewhere. ‘You said you were having trouble getting online…’

  ‘It gets this far,’ she explained, ‘then it freezes up. See?’

  ‘Ahh… I think I can fix this. You installed anything new recently?’

  ‘No idea. Aiden probably emailed me a virus or something stupid.’

  ‘He wouldn’t do that, would he?’

  ‘I don’t think he’d have the intelligence. He’s such a shit, Tom. You know, I don’t think he gives a damn about Penny. He keeps making excuses for not seeing her. She hasn’t seen him for over a month. It’s Pen I feel sorry for. She’s the one who’s suffering most in all of this, but she’s too young to express how she’s—’

  ‘We got any more ketchup, Mum?’ Penny asked from the doorway. Neither Tom or Clare had heard her creep upstairs. Clare smiled at her daughter, hoping she hadn’t overheard.

  ‘There’s some in the cupboard. I’ll come down and get it for you in a sec, okay?’ Clare replied quickly, her voice overly bright. With that Penny disappeared back down to her dinner. Tom looked over his shoul
der and saw Clare staring into the space where her daughter had just been.

  ‘I’ve got this,’ he said. ‘Shouldn’t take long.’

  Clare nodded and went downstairs.

  *

  The computer problem turned out to be a relatively simple one to fix, which was a relief because Tom definitely wasn’t an expert. He’d picked up a fair amount of knowledge from his time working in the city, but until he’d moved to Thatcham he’d always had the support of an IT helpdesk to fall back on whenever he hit trouble. But he had a logical mind, and he managed to work his way back through the problem by adjusting and readjusting various settings until something happened, removing a couple of redundant programs, and turning the whole thing off and on again several times.

  ‘Done,’ he announced triumphantly as he returned downstairs. Clare looked up from where she was sitting on the sofa, watching TV with Penny.

  ‘Brilliant. Thanks, Tom.’

  ‘You’re welcome.’

  ‘What was the problem?’

  He tried to fob her off with some bullshit or other – a string of words he’d seen but didn’t quite understand – but she could see straight through him. ‘Not sure really,’ he admitted. ‘I just kept messing with it until it started working.’

  ‘Thank you, anyway. You’ve got to let me give you something for your time.’

  ‘Another drink will be enough.’

  Clare got up and disappeared into the kitchen. Tom sat down next to Penny on the sofa. The programme she’d been watching finished, and she grabbed a handful of remote controls. With remarkable speed and dexterity, she switched off the DVD player and surfed through several of her favourite channels.

  ‘You’re faster than me with those things,’ Tom said, genuinely impressed.

  ‘I use them a lot,’ she answered. ‘There, I like that programme,’ she said, pointing at the screen as the channel numbers and programme names flashed past.

  ‘What, the news?’ Tom asked, surprised. The TV had stopped on one of the many channels still broadcasting footage of the alien arrival.

 

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