Haiga from Rob
By Rob Kingston
A few haiga from my IG page.
Enjoy!
The third one was a paint-off between myself and an eleven year
old nephew.
The second is a bruise/scar from an op before my main one.
The first is self explanatory.
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 Rob Kingston
A few haiga from my IG page.
Enjoy!
The third one was a paint-off between myself and an eleven year
old nephew.
The second is a bruise/scar from an op before my main one.
The first is self explanatory.
Janet Baldey
Mary knew it always snowed at Christmas. Even now, her fingertips tingled as she remembered scratching away at the ice crusting the inside of her window until there was a hole just big enough to peer through. Pressing her face against its frostbitten surface, she’d stare up at the sky until she saw the first tiny flakes break away and float towards her. Once they reached the ground, the delicate crystals seemed to disappear but Mary knew they were just in waiting, icy arms outstretched until their sisters joined them. As soon they would, a multitude, swirling to earth, falling one upon the other until they smoothed the hard angles of the houses with a chilly blanket.
For hours she’d crouch watching, her
thin arms shielding her body against the draughts knifing through the rotting frames. At last, stiff with cold and dazzled by the
dancing snowflakes, she’d slip to the floor and lie, arms and legs
outstretched, waiting for her sisters to join her.
As soon they did. Chattering and scolding, they flocked into
her room and pulled her to her feet.
“Foolish child. ‘Tis mid-winter and you are wearing but a
cotton shift. When will you ever learn,
you goose.”
Beth rubbed her frozen limbs while Meg
stripped off her tattered petticoat, her delicate fingers recoiling from the
grimy rags.
“Oh, my word. How did you get to be so dirty. And just look at your bruises. I do declare, I have never known such a
clumsy child. Quickly, get the Arnica
please, Amy.”
The girls then turned their attention
to the dismal room. Jo put a match to
the fire and slowly, the temperature rose as the flames chased ribbons of smoke
up the chimney. With much clattering and
banging they hauled a tin bath to the front of the fire and soon silky water
was floating away Mary’s grime and soothing her bruises. Ignoring the hard rim of the bath, she lay
back and closed her eyes. As she
relaxed, the chatter of her sisters faded.
She had lain like this before. As
now, water had lapped around her but then the warmth of the sun had been heavy
on her eyelids and there had been the cry of seabirds circling above. With a sudden swish, a curtain was drawn and
the memory disappeared. She was in the
bath and the cries she heard were the sound of her sisters’ voices.
“How thin Mary is. I can count every one of her ribs.”
“Marmee must make her some of her
special broth.”
Mary thought of her beloved
Marmee. She visualised her face with its
curving smile and soft blue eyes wreathed in a network of laughter lines. She was so lucky to have a mother like her.
Because, some mothers weren’t like
that. Some mothers had faces that were
scored by slashing lines and had eyes that glared; the eyes of wild beasts
loosed from the jungle.
Mary whimpered. She took a deep breath and thought about
Marmee again. She remembered how soft
Marmee’s hands felt as she brushed her hair, coaxing the golden curls into
ringlets and drawing them back with a scarlet ribbon.
But some mothers’ hands weren’t
soft. Some mothers had hands that were
hard and when they were swung at you, they felt like wood. These mothers hands didn’t smooth your hair,
they grabbed it and pulled it in hanks from your head and your blood felt warm
and sticky as it trickled down your forehead.
Mary jerked back her head and whimpered
again, louder this time. She opened her
eyes to see her sisters crowding around her, concern plain upon their faces.
“Don’t be sad Mary. See, we have a pretty dress for you to wear.”
Meg drew her forefinger across Mary’s
cheeks, wiping away the tears and patting her face with a towel.
“You realise it’s Christmas Eve, don’t
you? We’re going to have a feast and Jo
has written a special story to read to us over dinner.”
“But, best of all my dears…..”
Marmee stood in the doorway, her faced
was flushed and wisps of tawny hair escaped from beneath her bonnet. She waved a slip of yellow paper like and
mediaeval pennant and smiled at the group of girls.
“……your father’s got leave. He’s coming home for Christmas.”
Her sisters shouted with delight and
clapped their hands. Mary stood up,
water streaming down her body, her heart bursting with joy. Father was coming home. She saw him standing in front of her, his
legs planted slightly apart as sturdy as oak trees, his teeth gleaming as he
smiled. She would dart towards him and
bury her nose in his greatcoat, smelling his special aroma, a mix of tobacco
and wood-smoke. How safe she felt in the
shelter of his arms. How lucky she was
to have a father like him.
Because, some fathers didn’t smell of
tobacco and wood-smoke. Instead, they
stank of beer, sweat and old dirt and they didn’t make you feel safe. Instead, you listened with dread to the sound
of wood creaking as they climbed the stairs.
This time, Mary didn’t whimper, she screamed.
***
The scream erupted out of her mouth,
causing heads to swivel in her direction.
“Who’s that?”
Betty jumped, almost dropping the
syringe. She let out her breath; the new
Matron had crept up so quietly that the hairs on her neck prickled.
“It’s Mary in bed five. Poor soul, she’s having one of her turns
again. This’ll quieten her down.”
Matron’s eyes narrowed.
“Is she written up for that?”
“No. Mary’s special.”
“Nurse, you know the rules. There are no exceptions.”
Betty shook her head. “She’ll not settle….”
Another wail, jangled their
nerves. Matron turned and stalked down
the ward.
A grey straggle of Mary’s hair clung to
the pillows as she whipped her head from side to side. Her mouth opened and closed and with each
lament she drew a ragged object closer to her.
“This bed’s a mess.” Matron rapped,
eyeing both it and the occupant with distaste. “And what’s that?”
“It’s her book.”
“Her book! It’s disgusting. And what’s she doing with a book? I doubt if she can even read!”
Betty’s face flamed but angry words clogged
her throat as she watched Matron wrench the book out of Mary’s grasp. Mary howled even louder and her arms rose as
she clawed at the air. The sound swept
around the high-ceilinged room and echoed along the corridor until it reached a
thick oak door. The man on the other
side raised his head, then threw down his pen.
Rising, he crossed over to a window and stared at the thick, yellow
clouds oiling their way across the sky.
His lips pursed; it wasn’t snowing yet but it would be. Mary was never wrong. He wondered who was on duty. He hoped it was Betty. The gargling cries continued, dying, then
rising in jagged spikes. Dr. Palmer left
his office, his footsteps quickening, as he strode down the corridor and entered
the ward.
“Is everything under control, Nurse?”
At the sound of his voice Betty turned,
relief varnishing her face.
“Matron’s taken Mary’s book,
doctor. She says it’s unhygienic.”
“Matron’s quite right, Nurse. Excuse me, matron. One moment….”
Gently, he retrieved the book. Catching hold of one of Mary’s flailing arms,
he pressed it into her hand.
“Chlorpromazine please, nurse. I’ll write it up myself, later.”
Matron stood motionless; a grim
stalagmite dressed in blue. Dr Palmer
looked at her.
“Matron, we’ve not met before. Let’s have coffee.”
He turned and led the way to his
office.
As the percolator bubbled, Dr Palmer
cast covert glances at the woman. He
noticed how she sat, bolt upright as if wired to the chair. He sighed, she looked tough; for Mary’s sake,
he hoped she had a heart. With a cup in
each hand, he turned and with an effort, softened his expression.
“I know exactly what you’re thinking
Matron. Bloody consultants. They don’t have to carry the can for rising
infection rates. Yes, I know it was
wrong of me to interfere, but you’re new here and there are things you can’t be
expected to know.”
He walked to a cabinet and drew out a
bulging set of case notes, almost as tattered at Mary’s book.
“If you could just look through these
notes, I’d be grateful. They’ll explain
a lot.”
Reluctantly, the woman started to flick
through the pages with impatient fingers but as the seconds stretched into
minutes, the rustle of paper slowed and her expression changed. At last, she spoke.
“These go back fifty years.”
“That’s when I first met Mary. I was a very new houseman. It was a snowy Christmas Eve when they
brought her in, very much as it is today.”
They sat listening to the icy spatter
of sleet against the windows. Matron
forced her attention back to the notes.
With growing unease, she realised they were bringing back memories she’d
tried hard to forget.
“It sounds as if she was in a bad way.”
“Little more than skin stretched over
bone and what flesh she had was black and blue.
X-rays taken later showed numerous healed and healing fractures. She was barely alive and we didn’t hold out
much hope but she clung on.”
“What had happened.”
“We never found out. New tenants heard scratching noises coming
from a seemingly deserted house next door.
They broke in to deal with what they thought were rats. Instead, they found a pathetic mite between
six and ten years old. She was lying in
a filthy room without heating or food.
The only thing she had was the book you saw tonight. Did you notice its title?”
Matron nodded; when she was a child it
had been one of her favourites.
“When she was well enough, we asked
about her family. Her answers threw us
right off track. She said her name was
Mary March and she lived with her mother and four sisters but neither the
police nor social services could find any trace of them. It was a while before the penny dropped –
Mary had retreated into fantasy; it was her way of coping. In her mind, she was a member of that idyllic
family depicted in the only book she owned.”
Trying to ignore the ice settling
around her heart, Matron looked at the notes again.
“There’s a gap here, of about six
years….”
“Yes.
As soon as she was well enough, she was discharged to a foster
home. She went to live with a couple who
lived on the coast. They grew very fond
of her and she loved living near the sea.
Everything seemed to be turning out fine.” He swallowed.
“When she was fourteen, she was struck down by a massive stroke. A blood clot, the legacy of too many beatings
we guessed, had broken away and found its way to her brain. She’s been here ever since and will be, until
she dies.”
Matron glanced up and saw the look on his
face. She felt herself shrivel as she
read his mind. He thought she was unfeeling,
but he was wrong. The truth was, she and
Mary had more in common than he would ever know. Her mouth opened but then closed, knowing
there was a barrier between them that nothing could breach. She got up but just before she left the room,
she turned and looked directly at him.
“There is no reason for you to worry
doctor.” Without another word, she left
the room.
***
That night, just before she went off
duty, she visited Mary again. The skies
had cleared and the bed was bathed in moonlight. As she looked at the sleeping woman, her
stomach churned as she remembered the silent, empty days of her own childhood. There had been no violence, but she bore
witness that beating was not the only way to destroy a child.
On an impulse, she bent and kissed Mary’s
withered cheek and whispered.
“Give my love to your family, my dear.”
Mary stirred and smiled in her
sleep. Tomorrow they would go skating on
the lake with Laurie and in the evening she and her dear sisters would decorate
the tree.
Copyright Janet Baldey
Jane Scoggins
He looked like he had had too much to drink. He was slumped against a tree when Jim and Tony walked by on their way to the fishing lake one Saturday morning. The brothers had grown up going fishing with their Dad. Now in their forties and Dad recently passed away, they liked to continue the tradition. They hadn't seen each other for a couple of weeks so were engrossed in chat when they passed the man. They'd been young men themselves who had often drank too much on a Friday night. They had not paused their conversation but had glanced and made their own similar assumptions. A young man nicely dressed and wearing good shoes sleeping off a heavy evening’s drinking propped up against a leafy tree, head down, on a warm Saturday morning. Jim and Tony set up their camping chairs and propped up their rods ready to prepare the bait. They were the only two fishing that morning and soon settled into almost silent companionship. It was a couple of hours before Jim said he was hungry. He’d left his sandwiches in the car so headed off to get them. He passed the young man still sleeping. On the way back he decided to check if he was OK.
‘You OK mate?’ No reply. He tried again a bit louder. ‘You OK mate?’
Still no reply or movement, so he bent nearer and touched his shoulder. The young man’s head remained bent forward into his chest. Jim gave him a gentle shake and the man slid sideways and the movement turned his head. His eyes remained closed. His face was pale and Jim wondered if he was breathing. He felt a sense of anxiety about what he might have discovered. He ran halfway around the lake to where Tony was sitting quietly and still, his eyes intently on the water and the end of his rod where he thought a perch was about to bite. Jim’s noisy arrival put a stop to that and Tony looked up annoyed. Jim breathless and afraid told his brother he thought the man they had seen was dead. Hardly believing this could be true he nonetheless jumped up and ran back with Jim. Tony agreed that he thought the man was actually dead, and fumbling for his mobile phone phoned 999 for an ambulance, and the police.
The ambulance arrived within 20 mins and very quickly established that the young man was indeed dead, and had probably been so for quite a few hours. Jim and Tony felt sick with guilt but were reassured by the paramedic that the man would have been dead before they arrived that morning. The police took their statements and seeing how upset they were suggested they pack up their fishing gear and head off home before forensics arrived.
When Julia heard on the news about the unidentified young man that had been found dead near the fishing lake she thought about a family that would be grieving. She had lost her father in a car accident and knew what terrible grief from an unexpected death felt like. It was only recently that she had allowed herself to start having fun again. One of her friends had persuaded her to go with a group of girls on a Hen weekend in
‘I would have been happy for you to give him a bit of a kiss and a cuddle. I don't mind sharing you’ Julia didn’t much like the sound of that but thought she was being a prude, and taking it too seriously. Men had come on to her before, but now she was with Mark she didn't want to deal with that anymore. It took her some time to realise the truth, and she was shocked. At first, she cried but then decided she was strong enough to deal with it. She met with Mark a couple more times before telling him it was over between them. He had become quite possessive and didn't like the idea of losing her. Julia knew that he would want to see her again and wouldn't be happy to let her go. He told her he would come and see her and ask her to explain why.
He came, she made a meal and they drank wine. When he went into the bathroom she knew he was taking cocaine. It had taken her some time to realise the extent of his drug use. And that he was a supplier and a controller of underage vulnerable girls and boys for prostitution and as county lines carriers of drugs across the country. He was trying to involve her in carrying drugs and share her with other men. He had spiked her drinks, and later realised she had been raped. She knew she could not easily if at all extricate herself from this man without danger to herself. So she had stolen some of his drugs over the last few meetings. She added them in high doses to his food and drink when he was already under the influence of cocaine. Later in the evening, she suggested they take a walk down by the fishing lake. It was getting dark and there was no one about. The drug cocktail was taking effect. When Mark became unsteady he sat down under a tree. Julia watched as he convulsed. She withdrew and watched until she thought he was unconscious. With gloves on, she searched his pockets and removed everything that could connect her to him. She put his roll of banknotes in his inside jacket pocket and bag of cocaine and amphetamines in another inside pocket. She waited in the bushes trembling until she heard him vomit and then the sound of choking. When all was quiet she checked his pulse with a gloved hand and went home under cover of darkness. Nobody came forward and the verdict was misadventure from a drug overdose of a habitual user. Case closed. Julia’s Dad had been mowed down by a drink and drug fuelled driver who had smiled in court. He had been given a three year sentence. If she was ever found out, she reckoned on two years for good behaviour. That was a price she would readily pay for Dad.
Copyright Jane Scoggins
By Len Morgan
Carlie punched the air, “Yes!” She’d just won ten matches in a row, and the crowd roared their delight. In just three days she’d won the ‘human Drone pilot’ world championships. She’d beaten ten contestants in single combat. She’d also won the Pairs.
Now came the final challenge against the winner of the AI class. The top Artificial Intelligence contestant was Majik. It was just another game, that Carlie didn’t expect to win, AI had won ‘Final Conflict’ 10/0 over the last five years, and Majik had won three years running. So, there was no shame in coming second.
She’d been so confident she could win, that she spent her downtime analyzing the attacks employed by all the AI competitors, but Majik in particular. Majik was swift and ruthless, but Carlie detected a little predictability in the attacks. The more she played the video clips the more she felt it would be possible to win! However, Majik won the ‘Final Conflict’ 7/3. Carlie felt deflated, she'd fought her best fights but she was just not good enough. She brightened up when she realised she was the first human ever to beat Majik in competition mode.
She visited the restaurant area but left in a hurry after being mobbed by fans, wanting selfies and autographs…
“If you’ll follow me I think we can escape this attention,” a young man in uniform led her into a private room. They sat at a convenient table, where a waitress left them with a pair of ornate looking menu’s.
She gazed at the prices in disbelief, “I can’t afford anything listed here.”
He smiled, “My name is lieutenant David Crosby. Your meal will be on the RAF, we have a proposal for you but whatever you decide you can walk away without obligation.”
“I could, if I knew what you were talking about…”
“Let’s order and eat first.” They ordered and ate in silence. “More wine Carlie?”
“Please. Let’s sit over there,” she indicated a snug seating area near the window.
“An unidentified group from the Eastern block have infiltrated our security and have intercepted and destroyed a number of our surveillance drones. Once could be luck, twice coincidence? But, it happened again yesterday…”
“Was it a missile or a
drone that attacked?”
“It was a drone, but the attack pattern didn’t match with any AI profile we’ve ever met. The nerds are convinced the attack was from a drone driven by a human operator.”
“Then they should be able to identify its origin.”
“They have a general location, within a three mile radius. We tried sending in a killer drone, but it was shot down before it even entered the area. We need to fight fire with fire; we need a piloted drone and a pilot who’s better than him. You are our best hope!”
“When will your next drone be launched?”
“According to the schedule I’ve been given, tomorrow, at noon.”
“I need to get some quality time piloting that drone.”
“You’ll do it?”
.-…-.
Eight hours later, Carlie felt she had mastered the drone. “I want two drones David, one with an AI in control, preferably Majik and one with dual controls, Majik and Me. If it goes according to plan, I could override Majik if necessary…”
She reviewed the unsuccessful drone flights a dozen times each, I think I have his measure she thought, his mode of attack and techniques put me in mind of ‘IvanO20’ he nearly beat me in the semi’s six months ago. I think your gook is a pilot with the handle ‘IvanO20’ and he's good."
“You know him. But, can you beat him?”
“I’ll have a damned good try…”
“There’s something I didn’t tell you Carlie, one of the best drone pilots in the RAF, Guy Overton went up against him. He destroyed our drone and honed in on Guy’s location…”
“Did he…”
“Guy is in intensive care, we don’t know if he will pull through.”
“Wo~ah this is starting to sound serious, if he can locate me can you locate ‘IvanO20’?”
“We can pigg-a-bak on his signal and locate him as soon as he attacks our AI drone. But, be warned, I’ve looked him up, he is the Russian drone champion…”
“I know, I beat him in ‘The World’s’, but my life wasn’t on the line then.”
“We’d understand if you changed your mind. Is there anything you want that would persuade you to stay?”
She thought a while, poured herself more coffee, and took one of the fancies from the tray on offer.
“I think it would be nice to learn to pilot a real jet, what would you say to that?”
“Mmm, you know it would take you three years to graduate flying school…”
“And…?”
“You would still have to do basic training first. Are you sure that is what you want?”
“That’s what I want. Look on the bright side, I may lose the fight…’
“There is that… I’ll see what I can arrange.”
.-…-.
“You’ve been enrolled provisionally in an ‘RAF fighter training program’. It’ll cost the taxpayers a fortune because I’m convinced you can nab Ivan.”
“Will I be in a position to take him down?”
“Of course, as soon as we have his coordinates they will be sent to the drones navcon.” Do you want to eat first?
“No, I fight better on an
empty stomach, let’s go!”
She strapped herself into the drone pilot’s seat, and both drones took off on their pre-planned route. She would interfere as little as possible, letting them both behave as standard AI-driven drones.
Two hours later as they approached the area where they thought Ivan0 was located, a third drone appeared in the sky.
“So you return for another lesson in drone fighting ‘GuyFox’! I’m gonna give you another beating…”
“Ivan, is that you? This is ‘Carlie. Guy won’t be coming anytime soon your last drone followed his carrier signal and crashed on his location…”
“I didn’t know, they never told me it was for real, he was an excellent opponent, he was almost as good as you…”
Majik's drone zero’ed in on Ivan, Carlie tried to take over control of the drone but failed.
“Ivan, get out of there, you’re about to be bombed for real!” Seconds later, there was an explosion and the contact was broken.
“He never knew it was for real, I’ve taken out an innocent man,” she thought as she closed down her connection.
That evening she was in a
low state, “how could I have been so
gullible,” she thought.
Then her Laptop announced ‘YOU HAVE MAIL’:
Thank you for the warning Carlie, I got out just in time. I was up for taking out spy drones, but not harming fellow DP's, No sport in that! I plan to resign from the ‘Counter Espionage Program’. So I’ll see you in the ‘Worlds’ next year.
Carlie smiled, so she wouldn’t be going to the ‘RAF fighter training program’ after all, but she’d made a new BF in Ivan0.
By Bob French
I don’t know why, but I
suddenly started to think about Sandie, a girl I had met in the Pink Toothbrush
night club last time I was on leave in Rayleigh. I grinned at the memory of
some of the antics we had gotten up to, and when we started to dance to some of
the Garage and Street music, we fell about in stitches. Exhausted,
we retreated from the blaring music and jostling bodies of the dance floor to
the tranquillity of the bar, where she told me to “keep up the dance classes.”
I told her
that I was involved in travel. She replied that she was a nurse and
we exchanged telephone numbers. Suddenly the night was over and I
agreed to walk her home. We talked about where we had grown up; she
went to Fitz whilst I told her that I went to Swain. She lived just opposite
Sainsbury’s supermarket down by the Weir and when we kissed good night on her
doorstep I asked if I could see her again. She smiled with her eyes
and spoke softly.
“I
have your number. I’ll let you know.” That was the last
time I saw her and that was nearly four weeks ago. I still think of her.
I
suddenly came to my senses as the distant horizon slowly started to change into
a hundred shades of dawn and shadows started to appear. A cold
breeze cut across the wadi where our platoon lay hidden, spraying us all with a
fine sand that stung our faces. We had been making good progress
until one of the forward recce blokes gave the hand signal to warn us that
there were Taliban in the vicinity. That was at 02:45 hours this
morning. Since then we had lain still; not moving. When
you are laying in the cold desert in total silence with your nerves ready to
snap, you start to search your mind and ask yourself a lot of dumb questions,
but I remembered what the Sergeant Major told us before we left our forward
base.
“Listen
Up, when you’re out there waiting, do not start to think about things like
‘what am I doing here’. It’ll screw you up. Just keep
your mind on your patrol tactics. Got it.” So I did my best and
started to think about Sandie.
Like Jake,
my best mate, this was my first patrol in
All of a
sudden, he raised his fist; the sign to get ready, then up went his thumb and
all hell broke loose. The noise was deafening. Jake and I screamed
at the top of our voices as we scrambled to our feet and rushed forward to our
allotted covering positions. I had started to fire my rifle before
I even saw the enemy. Then, as I skidded down the side of the wadi,
I saw them for the first time. Eight of them; were all armed with AK47
rifles. Jake was screaming beside me as we went rushing in toward
them. I felt the zing and crack of rounds whizzing past my head,
then a sickening thud, but I rushed on, thinking that if I was hit, I was damn
well going to take one of them with me. As I rushed in, someone to
my left caught my eye. My training and instinct taught me to react and I
turned; pointed my rifle and fired. It hit the man in the chest,
spinning him backwards like a rag doll. It was over in
seconds.
Then there
was total silence again. Sergeant Hawthorn quickly gave hand signals to effect
a wide perimeter cordon and men started to silently scatter. When I looked
around for Jake, the patrol medic was kneeling beside him trying to stop the
bleeding whilst Muffin was beside him on the radio calling for medivac
support. My heart sank. I wanted to go to him but
Corporal Tavish grabbed my shoulder and nodded to my position. He
leant forward and whispered.
“Don’t
worry kid, he’s in good hands.”
In no time
at all the sound of the chopper could be heard thudding over the
horizon. After a mini sand storm, it had landed and bodies were
rushing towards Jake and our patrol medic. Then the radio crackled
into life.
“Victor
Lema 55. You have bandits approaching your position. ETA approx 15
minutes, repeat 15 minutes. Out.” Sergeant Hawthorn yelled above the
noise of the helicopter to pull back to protect it. He then pointed
to me and three other men to act as stretcher bearers. As I knelt
down beside Jake, I heard the paramedic giving instructions to our patrol medic
and instantly recognised her voice.
“Sandie?” She
looked up, recognised me and smiled.
“Sorry I
didn’t get back to you. Been a little busy. How you been
keeping anyway?” And smiled again. She then seemed to
ignore me as she started to inject a drip into Jake's arm and give rapid
instructions to one of her team. We anxiously waited whilst his wound was being
dressed and Jake was stabilised. I kept thinking ‘time was running
out.’ Then we heard it. That blunt crack of the AK47. The
Taliban were here. It was time to move. The sand around us started
to spurt up as bullets peppered the ground. Sergeant Hawthorn rushed
forward to the paramedic and leant into her face.
“No time
to wait, let’s move.” As he stood up a bullet tugged at his shoulder
webbing. He just spun around and emptied his magazine into four men
who were foolish enough to break cover and rush at him.
We
carefully lifted Jake up and started for the helicopter just as it revved up
its engines to create a sand screen for us. We must have been about
ten yards from the backdrop when I felt a sledgehammer hit me in the back of
my leg. It spun me around and I screamed. The last thing
I saw was Sandie quickly filling my place on the stretcher and vanishing into
the back of the helicopter.
I
gradually came around to the smell of antiseptic, bright lights and murmuring
voices. I tried to swallow and realised that I had a mouth that
tasted like a Turkish wrestler’s jock-strap. I made a feeble attempt
at sitting up, when someone spoke to me.
“Ah, I see
we are awake. How do you feel?” I was about to tell her
exactly how I felt, then realised that she was a Lieutenant in the Queen
Alexandra’s Royal Army Nursing Corps. My mind was starting to fill with
hundreds of questions and I tried to speak but found that I couldn’t. The nurse
seemed to sense what I needed and gently helped me sit up and made me sip a
little water.
“Where am
I? What happened? I croaked. The Lieutenant stood and started to
pull back the privacy curtains. She spoke as she moved.
“Your
patrol was ambushed by the Taliban during a helo’ medivac. As you
carried your friend out, you were hit.” She turned and gave me a
gentle smile. “One of my girls, Lieutenant Sandie Bickford, went
back for you and carried you back into the helo.” I didn’t speak. I
felt choked up.
“Is she
alright? Can I see her?” My eagerness made me feel
excited and I could see the Lieutenant looking at me, then she gently sat on
the bed and held my hand.
“I am
sorry. Sandie was hit three times during your rescue and died on the
way in. She told your Sergeant Hawthorn that you were to ”keep up
the dance classes.”
Copyright
Bob French
by Richard Banks
Dibbs sits his hind legs on the pavement next to Benny and peers eagerly at the steady flow of people coming from the direction of the station. This he senses will be a good day. After a long winter and an insipid Spring, the first warm day of the year has finally arrived.
The punters are in a good mood, glad to be out, to feel the sun on their faces, and although not quite Summer bare shoulders and legs are also to be seen. In the winter they scurried from stall to stall buying what they needed before returning to the warm comfort of their homes. Today they are at their ease, unhurried, ready to browse and be generous.
The main beneficiaries of their largess today will be the market traders, but those whose only utility is in triggering the altruism of others are also hopeful of turning a profit. In this respect, Dibbs and Co have a rival in an elderly lady rattling a tin for the Red Cross. Benny mutters aggressively at her and Dibbs joins in, baring his teeth and barking like he’s about to go for her throat. After holding her ground for a few seconds and finding no one coming to her aid she moves several shop fronts along to the pavement outside Marks & Sparks.
Benny isn’t the first con man Dibbs has worked with and he’s far from the best but having smeared his face with cement he looks ready for the graveyard. Who can resist him, especially when the nutrition of his doggie friend seems more important to him than his own well-being. To illustrate the point Harry who works in the burger bar at the back of where they sit will come out with a bog standard burger and give it to Benny who despite his unhealthy appearance insists on feeding most of it to Dibbs. In return, he makes big, doggy eyes at Benny full of pathos and unconditional love which Benny in his uninspired way tries to reciprocate. Time this right when people are looking their way the result is likely to be a deluge of coins and the odd fiver or two. Happy days!
At half past eleven they give it a go. Cindy buys the burger and on slipping Harry a few quid he makes a big show of bringing it out and handing it to Benny who pretends to be pathetically grateful.
“Don’t you worry, mate,” bellows Harry in a voice that can be heard on the other side of the square. “I’m not going to walk by and let you starve. Ex-army are you?”
Benny nods his head in acknowledgment
of his never-was past.
“Thought so, can always tell. One day a hero and the next you’re on the scrap heap. What sort of people are we that don’t look after our own.” He strides back to the burger bar shaking his head at the shortcomings of his fellow countrymen. He’s really rather good and few can resist this sudden and unexpected assault on their conscience. Coins are flying from every direction and if Benny and Dibbs don’t keep their eyes shut they’re likely to be going legit for the white stick brigade.
Cindy passes by and smirks. She provides the wheels that gets them to the big events. She’s also the brains of their little enterprise and sets-up the stunts that draw attention to them. Right now she’s off to buy a new dress, she’s off clubbing tonight. At half one she’s back and we do the whole burger thing again. This isn’t just a good day, it’s the best ever. Everyone’s happy except some clod on the far side of the square who passes out, and falls face down on the pavement. Cindy goes over to take a look. An ambulance comes and goes. She returns, via several stalls, and Benny asks her what’s up.
“Nothing much,” she says, “just that Bosnian woman selling the Big Issue. As thin as a rake, gawd knows when she last had a square meal. It’s her own fault, of course; doesn’t know how to work a crowd, no props, no patter, nothing, not even a mangy dog. No idea at all. Bloody immigrant!”
The End.
Copyright Richard Banks
By Robert Kingston
The following haiku appeared in the February edition of time
haiku. A small British journal that reads and accepts most Japanese genre
poems. Enjoy!
roadside reeds
the driver in front lets out
a huge plume of smoke
sun through fog
a seal surfaces
in a swirl of swarf
cock pit spider
dangling its thread
in the wind
thundering on
the Mallard disappears
into itself
Copyright
Robert Kingston