A Picture Haiku ~ Tanka 1
By Robert Kingston
We are a diverse group from all walks of life. Our passion is to write; to the best of our ability and sometimes beyond. We meet on the 2nd and 4th Thursday each month, to read and critique our work in friendly, open discussion. However, the Group is not solely about entertaining ourselves. We support THE ESSEX AND HERTS AIR AMBULANCE by producing and selling anthologies of our work. So far we have raised in excess of £9,700, by selling our books at venues throughout Essex.
By Len Morgan
Aldor strode purposefully down familiar
corridors, his mind seeking far ahead.
He located his target and entered her mind without subtlety, it was
immediately open and receptive, he was seeking the manner and bearing of her
handler. He realised immediately the handler would
be a Bride of Bedelacq and that she was in the city. He would have to act quickly if
his plan was to succeed. Zophira’s mind
was open to him. He could view her past
and identify her prime motivators. He
could trigger the right synapses and turn her around, but he had to be decisive
and act now!
.-…-.
Sloan
rubbed his eyes, they felt tired and itchy, and the day had barely begun. He had already issued orders to a dozen
teams of Militiamen, working the streets in pairs, looking out for potential
troublemakers and malcontents. In less
than an hour, the procession would be heading down the Central Highway, it was
time to take up positions which for him meant being out on the route. He felt it unlikely an attack would be
launched whilst everyone was fresh and alert, but nothing could be left to
chance.
He freely admitted he had occasionally been wrong in the past, and thought it likely he could be wrong again, so his men would not be complaisant.
“Yes?”
He acknowledged the knock on his office door.
“”We have Bordek,” said corporal Dragor.
“Send him in corporal.”
“I ain't done athin Sloan, I bin straight as an
arrer, since you was corprel, Tads faith.”
“You are wanted in connection with the
disappearance of an official, from the palace, name of Hestor,” said Sloan.
Bordek returned his gaze with a look of puzzlement. “Don’t know what yer at, I’ve never eard the name.”
“I won’t trade semantics with you maggot. You were seen in the Black Gryphon in the
company of this man. You led him down
an alley on C16…”
“Aw-rite, Aw-rite! Yes, I met a cove and led him to a meeting
place as a faver to a quaintnce. Nothin
L’egal bout that is there? Try to offer
a helping hand an I’m in trouble fer it...”
“Your always trouble” said Sloan quietly.
“An yer alus trouble! If I see ya a-comin I run the other way. Yer pafetic! Ya don have a life, outside this place, yer institushonlised!” Bordek yelled. Then he stopped shouting, realising where he was, and with whom; the silence stretched interminably.
“Ha Ha Ha!”
Dragor burst into hysterical laughter.
“What’s so damned funny,” Sloan had to yell to be
heard.
“He has got a point there, even you must
concede, don’t you think?” said Dragor.
Outside the office, curious bystanders were
treated to a sound as rare as dragon’s blood, first two then three voices burst
into uncontrollable laughter.
Infectious laughter everybody remaining in the watch room was roaring
with laughter and most of them didn’t have an inkling why, yet they were unable
to stop.
“So tell us what was said and where you took
him. If it was harmless as you say,
your friend will have a reasonable explanation, and we can all attend to more
pressing business. I may even stand you
a few mugs of ale by way of recompense,” said Sloan.
“Don’t, I’ve laughed enough for one day”
pleaded Dragor.
Bordek thought a while.
“A’right I’ll tell it as it happened,” he
said. “I met a man who I owed, Peyker’s
is name. He said as he wuz buzzy, would I meet a cove fer-im. Depends I
said. S’legal he said an since it was
o some import, to a client he wuz cortin, he would pay me fer it. What is it, I aksed. Meet the man and take him to my place at C18
off E8 (No.36). He wuz most particolor
that we wasn’t follered; Peyker has a deal o enemies so ter speak. I aksed him what’s in it fer me and he says
I’ll wipe yer slate. That wuz good enough
fer me I says. So he proceeds ter
describe the cove in detail an tells me when and where. So I waits at the Black Gryphon, an he
arrives. He took jus one small sip o the
ale I’d lined up as agreed an paid fer by Pyker. I’ll do whatever you asks, he says jus don’t
arm the boy. Don’t know nuthin about
anything I says, I’m jus here ter guide yer to an appointment, so sup up yer
ale and let’s be goin. All the while
he’s on about this lad Gavein, as he don’t in any circumstance want im in no
comprermizin perzishiun…”
“When was this,” Sloan asked his urgency
showing in his voice.
“Why yester evnin as I rekerlect.”
“Ok Bordek, you can go.”
“I – I can?”
he said looking incredulous.
“You told me the truth?”
“Why yes sir,” said Bordek.
“Then you are free to go, and thank you for
your help.”
“If I’d known what comes of elpin true, ida
done it years past,” he smiled.
“Here’s something for the ale I promised you,”
said Sloan, tossing a handful of coins in Bordek’s direction.
Bordek grabbed and ran.
“I want half a dozen men outside ready to go
in two minutes,” he said to Dragor. “We
are going to pay a visit on that address, there are still questions to be
answered, and send a messenger to fetch Aldor.
Jump to it, corporal.”
“Sir!”
Dragor dashed from the office and was ready with six men when Sloan
emerged.
“You will have to walk the route for me Dragor,”
he said, “I must get to their lair.
They will not be there of course but we need to get as much information
from the scene as possible and that is my forte. Be careful corporal, they are a dangerous
breed,” said Sloan; “Remember our first priority is to maintain law and order,
let the Reds and Aldors lot worry about the emperor's safety. If they are required to act, it means we
have failed to do our job.”
They shook hands and took off in opposite
directions. “Come on lads, double up,
there are killers abroad this morning.”
Within ten minutes they were outside the
house. Three men went to cover the rear
of the building; the others took the front with Sloan. They tried the door first, it was
locked. They knocked, three times in
quick succession without reply. They
listened at the key latch; there was no sound of movement, though one of the
men at the rear thought he heard a cry.
Sloan knocked again and listened
intently. “Ha Aah!” there it was louder
and more insistent. “Right! I want this door opened, if necessary break
it down,” he said.
His men responded with coordinated shoulder
charges, but the lintels absorbed the power and the door did not budge, “keep
at it lads,” said Sloan, crossing the road to the local tavern. He returned in moments with a heavy oak
trestle bench and two hefty barmen.
“They are not the most popular occupants of
the street,” the barkeep volunteered, “there have been a lot of strange comings
and goings at all hours and none of them ever use our hostelry.”
“Put your backs into it lads!” Sloan yelled
encouragement. After multiple attempts
with the improvised battering ram, the door hung off its hinges. Sloan was first in and followed the muffled
cries, they were louder now.
“Search the place from top to bottom, I want
to know everything you find,” he went through to open the rear access door.
“Nobody came out this way sergeant.”
“Sergeant this way sir!” Sloan followed the voice down into a dank
bare cellar.
“This is how I found him sir” Sloan nodded,
staring down at an elderly man, manacled to the wall by wrist and ankle
restraints, he was completely naked.
One look at the man, his skin pallor, confirmed he was in a serious
condition.
“Call the nearest physician, it’s urgent and he must come immediately. When Aldor arrives I want him brought straight here.
.-…-.
Aldor plunged deeper into her mind; there was
no time for niceties. He went straight
to her formative years, as a child when other children made fun of her because
of the odd beliefs her parents held; they were worshipers of Bedelacq.
‘Do they
make you drink blood? Do then kill and
eat babies,’ one boy chided. ‘You’re a bloodsucker, a leech, leech,
leech,’ the other children took up the chant and she ran off in tears.
“I don’t want to go back there, they are evil
children. Please mother don’t make me
go back to that school” she pleaded.
“You must go back child your father has worked extremely hard, to ensure you get a good education, would you tell him he’s wasted his efforts and his money? If you do not return they will think it is acceptable to treat any child from Bluttland in the same manner. You must be strong and face them down my child.”
She was hassled and bullied for two years, but she learned to fight back, and by so doing gained the grudging respect of some of her tormentors. Others who found themselves to be victims went to her for support and she showed them how to resist and fight their tormentor in so doing she was able to convert a small group to ‘the way of blood’. She had been indoctrinated by her parents and by the priests, almost from birth and where peer pressure might have led her away from it, the attacks and bullying had the exact opposite effect. She was pushed back into her faith, drawing it around her like a protective cloak, wielding it like an avenging sword. In reality, she did not hate or despise intolerant people, they were just people, who were afraid of what they did not understand.
The
big difference, being raised in Cheilin, was that she was cushioned from the
realities of ‘the way of blood’. Yes, they sacrificed a few animals and birds; it was done reverently and
respectfully, and afterwards, they feasted on the flesh.
That all changed however when his Bride,
Efelel, arrived. Suddenly there were
human sacrifices. They were not willing
offerings, they were brought to the feast bound and gagged, and she knew that
here in the eternal city it was against the law to take a life. Rather than feeling uplifted after the
conjunction she had felt ashamed. Some
people who were braver than she, spoke out against the acts, and became victims
themselves at the next conjunction. She
resolved to keep silent about her distaste.
It was therefore not difficult for Aldor to tweak and modify a thought here a memory there, just enough to moderate her memories and paint over the years of indoctrination and turn her away from the path laid down by Efelel. When he finally arrived in her chamber she was crying.
“Uh!”
She gazed at him with a mixture of shock and horror… “You!
What are you doing here?”
Unable to disguise her feelings, she retreated from him.
“I am not who you think,” he began, looking
deeply into her eyes.
“No, I will not do harm Gavein, I – I love
him…” she said.
“I am not here to hurt anybody,” Aldor said.
“Then why do you risk coming to the palace, today of
all days, Why?”
He looked into the dark pointing her mind
where her fear and prejudice lurked; it was interesting that she feared Efelel
but not his double, and It was obvious she really had fallen for Gavein, the
heir apparent, without regard for his office; not very professional of her.
“He doesn’t want to be Emperor you know,” she
said as if reading Aldor's mind. “He would
kill himself, rather than do harm to his father or to the empire. Even though she has made him hers, he will
not strike the blow for Bluttland. He
is first and foremost a servant of the Cheilin Empire.” Her voice was strong and defiant.
“You think not,” he asked, testing her.
“I have warned him of her power, of how I
betrayed him by leading him into her trap.
He knows she could command him to do anything, and so is prepared to
take his own life if necessary.”
“You think she would allow that?”
“Don’t
you think I know? I have tried to break away from her...”
“She is too strong?” he said still testing her.
“He made me swear that if he looked like
striking the blow, I would kill him!”
“Then what would become of you killer of the
Emperor elect?”
“I would not care,” she said, “I would kill
myself, do you think I would want to live on; without him I am nothing?”
“Then what is to prevent me from killing you
before it is time,” said Aldor.
“You’re him aren’t you, the other one?” she
said.
“I am Aldor, if that is what you mean, how did
you know?”
“Your eyes are pale blue and full of life. You sound less demanding, but the activity in my mind is far more than I ever experienced from my contacts with Efelel, yet you are gentler and somehow more respectful. When she leaves me I feel bruised and misused. When you moved through my mind it felt as if a healing hand had passed over me. It felt as though things, which had been long hidden from me, were suddenly revealed. Please, don’t let her win!”
(To be
continued)
Copyright
Len Morgan
By Peter Woodgate
I lie on the grass
And look up at the sky
The black night sky
And recall you and I.
The times when we voiced
Our wishes out loud,
There was no one to hear us
Away from the crowd.
We filled that great void
With a love for each other,
A love that we thought
Would be lasting forever.
We dreamed of the day
When we would be one
And departing the night sky
Walk with the sun.
But a dark cloud descended
The sun turned to rain,
The joy and the ecstasy
Gone, leaving pain.
Why did it happen?
Where did we go wrong?
We both sang the lyrics
But not the same song
So, I lie here alone
Looking up at the sky
The black night sky…
And a tear fills my eye.
Copyright Peter
Woodgate
by Richard Banks
Theo
wants to see the harbour, so that's where we go. We find a fishing boat at its
mooring and two old-timers mending their nets. They're taking the boat out in
the evening. They're not expecting to catch much but, as one of them says, it's
better than doing nothing. Their faces are as desolate as the abandoned cranes.
Theo asks if they know of a decent restaurant where we can have dinner. They
recommend Franco's Trattoria, a few hundred yards along the promenade.
If
Theo thinks he's getting away with a cheap meal in a no star cafe he's got
another think coming, but when we get there it looks okay. There's a sign
saying it opens at six.
“Look
at that,” says Theo. Under the name on the shop front are the words,
'established in 1983'. “Maybe someone here will remember you and your folks.”
We
go for a walk and return at half six. The restaurant's run by three generations
of the same family, the Anselmos. Theo tells the waiter that his grandfather
was born in
Giuseppe,
the waiter, tells us that the family is from
Giuseppe
says he was only a boy then but will ask his aunt who's working in the kitchen.
He takes our order for desserts. They are brought to our table by a woman in
her fifties, who introduces herself as Marella.
“You
must be little Anna?” she says. I stand up to greet her and she kisses me on
both cheeks. She laughs, looks pleased to see me, tells me I look like my
mother. “And how is your mother?”
I
tell her about the car accident and her expression registers genuine regret.
Theo invites her to sit down with us.
“I
knew your mother well,” she says, “a lovely woman. How old were you when she
died?”
I answer, “five.”
“Do
you remember her?”
“Yes,
but not well.”
“And
you would like me to tell you something about her?”
I
nod. This isn't what I was expecting; it's emotional and I hang on every word.
She tells me that my mother was born in
“So when they died there were no relatives for me to go to?”
“Well,
none I know of. I only wish I had known about your parents' deaths, I would
gladly have taken you in.”
“I'm
sorry you didn't,” I say. “I would have liked it here.” I feel the tears coming
but manage to hold them back. “Was I a happy little girl?”
“You
were mischievous, quite wilful at times, but yes, you were happy. You liked
your ice cream I remember. Your face always lit up for that. You lacked for
nothing and neither did your brother.”
“But
I don't have a brother,” I say. “There were just three of us; Mum, Dad and me.”
Maria
looks perplexed, then bewildered. For a few moments, she seems uncertain what to
say.
“No, Anna, you are wrong, you had a brother.”
“Had?”
I say.
“Yes,
had. He died one month after you moved to
“Was
it suicide?”
“No, nothing like that. The boy was only twelve; a little slow in his
thoughts. In your old house, there was a balcony outside his bedroom on which he
sometimes played. We think that maybe he was forgetting where he was. It was
nighttime, maybe he was sleepwalking. It was a terrible accident.”
She falls silent and I don't know what to say. Theo suggests we exchange addresses. He says we must have much to catch up on after all this time. Marella agrees. She thinks she may have some photographs of Mum and myself. If she does she will send them to me. Theo replenishes our glasses. “So, what about you?” asks Marella, “what have you been doing all these years?” There is much to tell.
**********
We return to the hotel around 11:30. There's a party going on in one of
the downstairs rooms, but as we mount the stairs to our room the music stops
and the party moves on to a club. I'm putting
the sheets on the bed when Theo has one of his eureka moments. Usually, these
happen when he's reading his encyclopedia and discovers something really,
really interesting that he can't keep to himself. This one happens when he's
staring out of the window.
“Come
and take a look at this,” he yells.
I
do and see two red lights on either side of the entrance to the harbour.
“There's
your monster eyes,” he announces triumphantly, “and if the bed was nearer the
door you would be seeing them bang in the middle of the window,” … which means,
if he's right, that this was once my bedroom.
We
sit up for an hour or more discussing possible explanations for the other
things in my dream but nothing rings true. Theo goes to draw the curtains but
realises, for the first time, that there are none. We undress in the dark and
slip under the covers. He gives me a hug and we slowly drift off to sleep.
At
3am the inevitable happens and I sit up in bed screaming. There are images in
my head that weren't there before, but worse of all is the gorgon. I'm awake
now and it should be gone, but it's not. It's standing at the foot of the bed.
I scream again. Theo tries to calm me, then he sees the gorgon and he's as
freaked out as I am. The gorgon should be coming towards me with that black
stuff, but it's beating a rapid retreat towards the window which is wide open.
Theo gives chase onto the balcony. He returns a few seconds later breathing
heavily.
“It's
okay,” he says, “it's that guy in the end room. The chancer was probably after
my tablet. He's got nothing.”
Theo
wants to call the police on his mobile but I say sod the guy, forget him. I've
got something important to say and I need to say it now while it's fresh in my
head. He sits down on the bed and I tell him how the bars in my nightmare were
really the railings on my cot and that it wasn't the gorgon doing the
shrieking, it was seagulls. “But how can that be,” I ask, “birds sleep at night.”
“Not
if the harbour lights were on and fish were being unloaded,” says Theo. “Don't
you see, it makes perfect sense. Your gorgon opens the window to let himself in
and the outdoor noises get louder, just like someone turning up the volume on a
TV. And what about the blackness that was pressing down on you?”
“A
cloth, probably a blanket. The gorgon was trying to suffocate me.”
“And
who is the gorgon?” Theo speaks quickly, abruptly, as though he's trying to jolt
the information from my sub-conscious.
“Pass,”
I say. “But it wasn't the guy in the end room.” I mean this to be humorous but
Theo doesn't get it. He shuts the window and finds the catch that locks it. “Do
you want the light on?” he asks.
I
say that man with no clothes on should leave lights off, otherwise, he might get
arrested. Better he gets back into bed and be arrested there. That's a joke he
does understand but he knows that what I really want to do is talk some more.
By the time it's light we have most of the nightmare figured out: someone or
something – no let's stick with the rational – someone comes along the balcony
and through the window of my room while I'm asleep, except that I'm not asleep,
maybe I wake up when I hear that person clambering in. The lights are off so all I can see is a dark
outline and the harbour lights. I want to run away but can't get past the bars
on my cot. The man, surely it must be a man, presses something down on my face,
shutting out whatever light there is in the room, making it impossible for me
to breathe. I try to cry out but can't, lose consciousness, I think I'm dead.
“And
you still don't know who the gorgon is?” Theo asks.
I
say, “No. Maybe I never did.”
Theo
says, “Let's think about it logically. The gorgon is unlikely to be an
intruder. The balcony is on the second floor. There's no way anyone could climb
onto it from the street. So it must be someone already in the house. Did you
have live-in servants, a nurse perhaps?”
“I
don't think so,” I whisper.
Theo
speaks softly, telling me what I do not want to hear. “In that case the gorgon
is one of three people no longer alive.”
“But
that's horrible,” I say.“You're telling me that someone in my family tried to
kill me.”
Theo
clicks his tongue in that irritating way he has when he's annoyed with himself.
He's about to start back-pedaling; we've been there before. “Not necessarily,”
he says, “dreams are not always what they seem. You remembered monster eyes
when they were harbour lights. Maybe the gorgon wasn't trying to smother you.
Who knows what it was intending to do.” He clicks his tongue again. “I wish
this was ending better but we are where we are. I hope it's been of some help.”
I say that it has, but already I'm thinking it's worse than before. I'm tired. I want to sleep, and sleep I do.
**********
We awake at 9:00 and are out of the
hotel by 10:00. All I want to do is go home and have a shower. We are making
our way back to the car when we see Marella coming back from the shops with a
bag of groceries. She waves and crosses the road to speak to us.
“There's
one thing I forgot to tell you,” she says. “Your brother; his name was George,
after your father. That's what he was christened but the priest was the only
one calling him that. Even as a baby he was always known by his second name,
Gordon.”
For
a moment I can't take it in, then I do. “The Gorgon!” The words spill out
before I can stop them. I sound like I feel; in shock.
Marella seems not to notice. Her own voice is thoughtful, matter of fact. “No,” she says. “It was Gordon, as in the gin. Here is a picture of him. I was going to send it in a letter but I give it you now. As you see he was a handsome boy, the same fair hair as yourself. Your mother loved him but he was always in trouble; a difficult child but not a bad one. He was, how can I say it, a boy not clear in his understanding. A pity.”
**********
So, that's it, the last piece in the
jigsaw: the gorgon was a boy called Gordon, my brother. Did he try to kill me?
I doubt it, although he gave me one hell of a fright. More likely it was just a
silly prank by a mischievous boy 'not clear in his understanding'. I don't know
whether to laugh or cry. Theo favours the happy option. “Today,” he says, “is
the first day of the rest of your life. We should celebrate.”
I
say, “Yes, let's do something we've never done before.”
“Like
what?” he says.
“Like
going to bed and not waking up until morning.”
Theo
says that’s a really odd reason for going to bed, but he's prepared to give it
a try.
“Me
too,” I say. “We could even make a habit of it. The first fifty years will
probably be the worse, but then again it might even be fun. What do you think?
Shall we give it a go?”
He
asks if the last 'it' has the same meaning as the two before?
“It's
a commitment sort of it,” I say.
Theo
pretends to be distracted by a pigeon walking across the road. The twat! Then
he gives me his answer.
I'm not going to repeat his rubbish line about the first day of my life, I have one of my own. It goes like this: it’s a special day and there’s no word special enough to describe it. So crap, so true.
(The End)
Copyright Richard Banks
The Riddler
Three prisoners are condemned to death. The Prison Warden explains that as a cruel joke he will allow one to go free… The remaining two will be executed.
The Warden produces three black and two white discs. He fastens one to each of their backs, there are two discs remaining.
(For your benefit alone, I will reveal that he is left with one black & one white disc.)
Each prisoner can see the discs on the backs of his fellow prisoners.
The Warden tells them: the first man to leave the compound and correctly identify the disc on his back will go free, while the other two will be executed.
They are allowed to speak to each other and ask questions but nothing said can be trusted… Yet one man left the compound and correctly named his disk.
HOW?
By Janet Baldey
The
police were conducting house to house enquiries and now they were starting on
her street. They’d be wasting their time
at her house, she had nothing of importance to tell them although she hoped
they had some luck soon. Two women had
already been found dead and she didn’t want there to be a third.
Marie opened the door of her sister’s
room and walked into a cloud of fragrance. Roses were everywhere. Thrust into vases, they decorated the room in
shades of cream, ivory and gold.
“Wow”. She said. “Ronnie’s really
pushed the boat out. What prompted this?”
“They’re not from Ronnie.” Joanne was
peering at herself in the mirror, her varnished fingertips blending in dabs of
foundation. “Ronnie’s history”.
“Oh, no! You haven’t broken up with
him?” Marie’s distress was real. In her
view, Ronnie had been a keeper. Her
sister, not yet twenty, had already left behind her a string of broken hearts.
Most had been not worth a jot but Ronnie had been different. Hard-working and
sensible, with good humoured patience he had tamed her wilful sister without
using either a whip or a chair.
“Yep. He was boring.” Joanne brushed
her hair into a tawny waterfall.
“Who sent the flowers then?”
Joanne put down her brush and her green
eyes were sparkling as she spun to face Marie.
“Neville from work.”
Marie’s heart took a dive. She shared
an office with Neville and detested him. Boastful and arrogant, he demanded
attention incessantly and even after work his voice followed her home. To get
by, he relied on charming the right people but always totally ignored her.
Homely women were not to his choice and he made this as obvious as a slap in
the face. Even worse, she sensed he had
a darker side. She’d caught a glimpse of it when a colleague had contradicted
some nonsense he’d spouted. Fascinated, she’d watched as his complexion
reddened and his eyes flamed. Sensing trouble, she’d immediately become
immersed in her work but not before she’d seen him stride out of the door and
punch the corridor wall with violence that scarred the plaster. Ever since,
she’d treated him as one would a time-bomb.
But it was no good telling Joanne this, she wouldn’t believe a word, so
Marie hid her feelings.
“Really. He’s an awful flirt, you
know.”
“Not now he isn’t,” Joanne smirked as
she slid into a sheath that accentuated every curve.
“So, where’s he taking you? Must be
somewhere special.”
“We’re going on a mystery tour!” Joanne
gestured dramatically. “Isn’t that exciting?”
“Depends on where you’re going.”
“Oh, I think I know. He’s taking me to meet his parents. That’s why
it’s such a secret. He’s terribly well connected. His dad’s an ambassador and
his mum’s a barrister. They’re an actual Lord and Lady and live in a huge manor
house in the Shires. He says it will all be his when they pop off.”
Marie’s concern deepened. She didn’t
believe a word of it. It was a typical ‘Neville flight of fancy’. But it did beg the question. What sort of man
treated his parents’ death as a pulling tool?
“If he’s so well off, why is he working
at the post office”.
“Research. He’s writing a book. He’s
written several. Fancy, I’m dating an
actual author. Can you do this up for
me?”
“Oh, that’s pretty. Marie looked at the
necklace Joanne was holding out to her.
“Beautiful, isn’t it. Neville, gave it
to me. Said it matched the colour of my eyes. Just paste but still…” Joanne
parted her hair and bent her slender neck.
The gold chain felt smooth and heavy in
Marie’s hands and its faceted stones caught the light and glittered. It didn’t
seem like paste to her and a memory struggled to surface. She looked at its clasp and gasped.
Goosebumps peppered her skin.
“Hold on, Joanne. I’ve seen this
necklace before. Do you remember that robbery that was in the local paper? They
showed pictures of jewellery that was taken and one of the necklaces was just
like this. It had the same clasp, a dragon’s head with little emerald eyes.”
“Oh, what nonsense. Are you saying that
Neville’s a thief? I call that downright
nasty. You’re just jealous. Give it back and I’ll do it myself.”
“No, really Joanne. Wait I’ll get the
paper.”
Her heart pounding, Marie ran
downstairs praying that she hadn’t thrown in out. With a gasp of relief she saw
it was still beside the table. She snatched it up.
“Look,” she slapped the newspaper in
front of Joanne and pointed. Her sister stared at it and when she did speak,
her voice wavered.
“OK, it’s similar, but it can’t be the
same. Now leave me alone, I’ve got to get ready.”
“What time are you meeting him?”
“Eight o’clock. Not that it’s any of
your business.”
Marie ignored her. “Joanne, listen. I
promised Dad I’d keep you safe and it’s just not safe to go out with a man you
hardly know. People get murdered. There was that poor girl only recently. You
don’t want to end up in a ditch, do you? Look, for Dad’s sake do me a favour.
The police station is just around the corner. You’ve got plenty of time.”
“Your trouble is you read too many
crime novels. Neville’s not a thief, he’s not a rapist and he’s certainly not a
murderer. He’s a sweet man.”
Yeah, thought Marie. As sweet as a
snake hiding amongst bluebells.
But, as Marie had hoped, the mention of
their father did the trick. Joanne had been his favourite. He’d always called
her “His prettiness” and even though he died over two years ago, Joanne still
cherished his memory. Eventually, she allowed herself to be led to the police
station where she pouted and stared at the ground. The Desk Officer examined
the necklace carefully and passed it over to a Detective Inspector who beckoned
them into his room.
It was Marie who did most of the
talking to the very nice man who listened intently and then asked Joanne a lot
of questions. So many, that Joanne began to fidget and look at the clock.
“Sorry to keep you madam. Just one
more. Where did you say you were meeting your young man?”
“I didn’t.” Joanne clamped her mouth
shut but changed her mind when she saw the expression on the detective’s face.
“The Mall, outside Creasey’s,” she said.
“I’m afraid I’m going to have to keep
the necklace. I’m sorry.” Now it was the
D.I.’s turn to look at the clock. “Now I just have to make a quick telephone
call, then we’re done.”
The telephone call was anything but
quick and by the time he re-appeared the room had grown too small for Joanne;
she was pacing its perimeter and spitting at Marie like a caged cat.
“Can I go now?” without waiting for an
answer, she was off, slamming the door behind her.
“Too late I’m afraid,” the officer
muttered. He winked at Marie and shook her hand. ” Thank you for your
cooperation. She’s a bit sparky, your sister so I’m afraid your name is going
to be mud for a while. But never mind, in a day or so she’ll be thanking you.
You may even have saved her life.”
Panting, Marie hurried to catch up with
her sister. As she did, she wondered what the detective had meant. He was
very nice, she thought. Lovely eyes, and had he held her hand just a trifle too
long? The sudden sound of police sirens exploded her dream and she followed her
sister back home.
It didn’t surprise Marie that Neville
didn’t turn up for work on Monday. What did surprise her was what he was
charged with. The detective had turned up on their doorstep the following day.
He couldn’t tell them much, but what he did say shocked them both and even
succeeded in wiping the scowl from Joanne’s face. Pieces from the same set of stolen jewellery
had been found on the bodies of the two murdered girls. It seemed that Joanne
had had a lucky escape; they’d brushed shoulders with a monster and for the
first time, Marie felt glad to be plain.
Copyright Janet Baldey
The Riddler
I like sitting quietly,
listening to the rain bouncing off a tin/glass patio roof. Watch rivulets of
water pouring down the window panes.
It’s calming &
relaxing, almost hypnotic, it concentrates the mind; encouraging deep thoughts.
“Chill in the rain it’s good for the brain!”
I like the aromatic smell
following a summer storm; after a dry spell.
The rich earthy scent lingers enticingly in the air! Others like the scent of new-mown grass, or
the perfume of spring flowers.
I am drawn to
unconventional faces. Freckles and
imperfections, Wonky, bent noses. Thin,
broad noses & lips, Almond-shaped faces, broad and square faces. The sameness of perfection, and classical
beauty, is a turnoff for me. The
unconventional is attractive & exciting appealing to my inner sense of
aesthetics.
Some might consider a
preference for short dark-haired girls with small breasts an indication of
latent homosexuality, I say not! Variety
is a constant theme in life; it keeps our species vigorous and diverse.
At a club disco, a group
of young men were asked to pick out the girls they thought were FIT (their
word). Seven boys each picked a
different girl. We then asked the same
question of the seven girls, selected; of the boys, they thought were FIT two picked
the same boy. The interesting thing was that three girls picked the boy who’d
picked them. What does this mean? There’s hope for us all…