Haiku Collaborations :
By Rob Kingston & Christina Chin
Enjoy...
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 Jane Goodhew
“Are we there yet, are we there yet?” they repeated the
words over and over until I thought if I heard them one more time, I would open
the car door and shove the pair of them out!
What was I thinking of, not about shoving them out the door but in
taking them to a pantomime. A pantomime
used to be exactly that a mime meaning actions speak louder than words but how
they have changed and now they are loud, brash and not my idea of comedy or fun
in any shape or form. I tried to control
my temper, to refrain from taking the next left and going back home after all
it was Christmas. The season to be
loving and giving and suffering, after all isn’t childbirth suffering and Mary
had given birth to Jesus, which was why we celebrate, isn’t it? Although I think the meaning has been lost in
translation over the last century and now it appears to be a time for greed and
overindulgence and pantomime. I could
almost hear myself say “BAH Humbug” as I was beginning to sound like
Scrooge.
“Which one are we seeing,” they ask in unison, and I have to think hard for which one we are seeing. “Cinderella” I say and then the song Cinderella rock a fella keeps on repeating itself in my head and how I long for the Sound of Silence. I keep driving telling myself to still be calm, and at peace, it will soon be over, and they will be back at school and normality will prevail. For they are not even my children but my sisters, away at the moment taking a restful holiday in the sun with her workaholic husband who could only take this period off from his busy schedule. How convenient!
I remind myself to be more charitable and less hostile towards them
after all they are delightful, polite, well mannered, no problem at all. Who was I kidding they were little monsters, they awoke early, and even when sent
to bed they continued chattering away until late and if I went upstairs to ask
them to be quiet they just looked at me as if butter wouldn’t melt in their
mouths and as soon as my back was turned begin again.
“Aunty, Aunty” they scream in delight, as they see the
sign for the theatre. We are almost
there but, first we stop off to buy some sweets at the corner shop; as they are
always extortionate in the foyer. I am
Scrooge! They stock up on all that would
be banned the rest of the year, and they look so angelic when they smile
sweetly and say, “Thank you Aunty, we do love you and enjoy staying with
you.” How they manage to say it with
such a straight face I don’t know perhaps they are psychopaths in the making.
My prayers had been answered as I turned the car around and headed
back home with two very subdued and forlorn children who would now have to
finish decorating the tree instead and go to bed early whilst they waited for
Santa to call.
Copyright Jane Goodhew
By Bob French
It
was a crisp February morning, the mist still hung over the meadows and fields
that led into the High Street of Little Easton, in
He knew not many people would recognise
him. When he left five years ago, he was a pimply, five-foot
three-inch boy who was always being picked on in school. Now he
stood six foot two, sported a tan that some would die for and was well
built. He felt sadness creep throughout his body, knowing that his
mother’s neighbour had written to him, to tell him that his mum was very poorly.
Once his platoon sergeant heard about it, he was on the first flight out of
When he reached the bus stop, he glanced down at the
little cottage set back from the high street and was angry with himself. The
peeling paint, sagging porch, and the rose bushes and shrubs that his mother
cared for since his dad had passed, looked wasted and desolate.
He rang the door-bell, then realized that it didn’t
work, so he banged on the door a couple of times. Within minutes he
heard the “ow-ee” from Mrs. Jones, her next-door neighbour.
“Can I help you young man?”
“Mrs. Jones. It’s me Roddy. I have come
home to see what’s the matter with Ma; I can’t thank you enough for your
letter.”
“Come around the back. The front door is a
little warped.”
Roddy followed her around the side of the cottage and
his eyes picked up more neglect; windows cracked and drain-pipes leaking, then
he caught site of the once beautiful garden. It now resembled some
of the sites he’d passed through on patrol in the
Mrs. Jones pushed open the kitchen door and moved
quickly into the front room. The stench of body odour and dampness
stung the back of his throat. There sitting in his Dad’s old arm-chair
was his mum.
“Angie. I got someone who wants to see
you.”
Roddy’s eyes filled with tears as he stared down at
his mother.
He had to really look into her face to find the woman
who had brought him up, then cared for him when her soul mate and his dad had
passed.
In a frail voice, Angie called out his name. “Roddy
love, is that you. What are you doing here?”
“I’ve come home to care for you Ma. Help
get you back on your feet, thanks to Mrs. Jones.”
“Roddy love, I’ll let you get acquainted with your Ma. If
you want anything, I’m only next door.” With that she quietly left.
True to military fashion he stood. “Let’s
get you a cup a tea, then we can talk.”
It took him a few minutes to find a
couple of clean tea-cups, then glanced around the kitchen and thought that the
place needed a major renovation job. Then his eyes fell on a bundle
of unopened letters underneath her old green cardigan.
He scooped them up and put them on the top shelf of
the kitchen cupboard, promising to read them once he had got his mum sorted.
Sitting down opposite her, Roddy gently asked what has
been going on. Has she been poorly?
“Roddy Love, it’s the new land lord. He said that I
had signed a new contract which gave him the right to take over the upkeep and
maintenance of my home.”
“Did you?”
“Did I what?”
“Did you sign the new lease? Have you got a
copy of this new contract?
He could see his mother struggling with question.”
“Don’t bother just yet Ma, Let’s get you sorted
out. Do you mind if I have a wander around the place and see what
needs sorting first?”
She smiled with her eyes and nodded. “Will
you be staying long?”
“As long as it takes Ma. Don’t you worry.”
It took him nearly two hours to have a good look at
the damage that had been caused by neglect, then he came and sat down next to
his Ma.
“Ma, it’s going to take me a little while to get this
sorted, but I don’t want you to worry. Who collects your pension?”
“Mavis, next door. Why”
Roddy had to think who Mavis was, but his thoughts
were interrupted when she explained that Mavis was Mrs. Jones.
“And what standing orders do you have, like the gas
and electricity?”
“Oh, its that nice man, Mr. Green down at the
Natwest. He sorts all that stuff for me.”
“What about the rent. Do you pay for that
through the bank?”
Her voice quietened and he could see fear in her eyes.
“Ma, what’s the matter. Don’t you like the man who comes and
collects the rent?”
“No. I don’t trust him. Every
few months he tells me that the rent has gone up. I tell him that I
won’t pay any more rent unless he comes and fixes the gutters and windows.”
Roddy was beginning to see where this was going and
had to really control his anger.
“OK Ma, but don’t you worry. I will take
care of things. But I want you and Mavis not to say they have seen
me to anyone who knows you, including people you don’t know. I can
sort all this out if the people who are hurting you, don’t know I am here, is
that OK?”
For the first time his mother smiled and he knew that
she was on the mend.
“Right then, breakfast.”
Later that morning, Roddy climbed over the back fence
onto the road. He walked for about half an hour until he came to a
car hire garage and hired a non-descript hatch back. Then he went through the
local paper and jotted down various tradesmen who could repair and redecorate
his mother’s cottage. He explained that it was a cash in hand job.
That afternoon, having done a mega shop at Liddle’s in
Colchester, he drove home and parked his hire car next to the cemetery,
along-side several other cars. Then spent a couple of hours helping
his mother sort out the laundry, bedding and clearing out the kitchen. After
dinner, he sat down and started to go through the pile of letters that his Ma
had received.
By ten, it was time to crash. He had
assembled those letters demanding payment; those from the land-lord’s company
and those who were responsible for the upkeep of the cottage. he settled down
to go over the letters.
Something nagged him. It was a name;
Duggan. Then it came to him, Harry Duggan was one of the gang leaders who had
made his life at school unbearable. He grinned as he read that Duggan was part
of the landlord organization who took the rent. Then, to his surprise, he read
that Bert Duggan, the younger sibling of the Duggan empire, ran the maintenance
company responsible for the up-keep of the eight small cottages on the edge of
the village.
He asked Mrs. Jones if she would act on behalf of his
mother when any tradesmen came to repair things around the cottage or the
grounds. He gave her the names of the companies who would be doing the job. She
understood why the need for secrecy.
He then recalled that Ann, a girl he had a crush on in
the senior year of his school, had taken an apprenticeship with a legal firm in
Colchester, so he chanced his luck and once he’d found the firm on the
internet, called her. After a brief chat, he made an appointment to
see her.
They met at the Wimpey Bar and to his surprise
they hit it off. Once he had explained what had brought him back
from overseas, she was angry and promised if there was anything she could do,
all he had to do was ask.
“Ann, Can I ask you a huge favour?”
“From what you have told me you don’t need a favour,
you need to hire my firm to represent your mother in court.”
Roddy took his time explaining what he wanted her to
do, which she quickly agreed to.
Her first call, after checking with the Inland Revenue
to see if the Duggan’s had submitted their tax returns for this
year. Within an hour they had called her back and explained that the
firm had avoided any returns for the past four years. Before hanging
up, she warned the officer that the Duggan’s would almost certainly try to
destroy their accounts, and leave the
It was three o’clock on Friday afternoon when Harry
read the letter from Ann. It was a very formal and straight forward
demand:
‘It is noticed that your company has failed to present
your accounts for the past four financial years. You are there for required to
have all your accounts and supporting receipts for the past four financial
years ready for inspection by Wednesday next week.’
Harry’s face went white and quickly lunged for the
telephone and dialed Frank, his accountant. The phone was answered by one of
the clerks who explained that Frank was away for a week; funeral of his brother
or something.’
Harry, knew that he had to destroy everything and then
warn his brother to do the same before Monday morning, then head off to
It was reported in the local newspapers that the two
Duggan brothers had been arrested on Friday evening trying to destroy evidence
required by the Inland Revenue. They were expected to receive a
lengthy jail sentence each. It was also reported that the three
local tradesmen who had been shut out of the village had now formed a new
company who would care for and look after the original eight cottages in the
village.
Roddy pushed the door open to his mum’s front room and
was greeted by a smiling face; the face he remembered before he left home all
those years ago.
Copyright Bob French
By Janet Baldey
“Between
Tesco’s and the station, that’s where you’ll find me. Riding the pavement from
dawn till dusk. It’s a good pitch, the
best. You get a steady stream of shoppers raiding Tesco’s and later there’s
party goers back from an evening in Town.
But it’s hard being me. I thought
of getting meself a dog, for company as well as the sympathy vote, but I
wouldn’t wish my life on any animal. For starters, it’d have to put up with the
verbal abuse. Not that it bothers me, I’m used to it. It was my lullaby when I was a kid. There’s
nothing folk can say to me that I haven’t heard before.
Have you ever been
lonely? I don’t mean like if your
family are away for a bit, or you’re on your tod in a strange town - I mean really lonely. Like when you know no-one in this world gives
a toss about you. You could die in your
sleep and no-one would care, or even notice, except they would because the
pavements have to be kept clear of dead bodies, ‘cos it would never do to have
commuters tripping over them.
Sometimes I watch little kids going in and out of the
supermarket, clutching their Mum’s hand or swaying on their Dad’s shoulders and
feel I could kill for a childhood like that.
My mum never loved me. Not in the slightest. I often wonder why she never got some pills
and flushed me down the toilet when she first realised she was up the
duff. Too stoned, I suppose, or drunk,
and eventually I popped out of her fanny.
My gran took care of me. She loved me – when I was little she used to
take me to the park to feed the ducks, only I didn’t understand and ate the
bread meself.
‘No, lovie, that’s for them fellas over there, the ones
with the feathers.’ Then, she’d roar
with laughter and give me a hug.
Sometimes we made
gingerbread together. I mixed the ginger in with the flour and when she’d
rolled out the mixture, I cut out shapes of little men. Lovely, they were. We ate them straight out
of the oven, warm and crumbly they melted in yer mouth. I remember their taste
and me mouth fills with water.
Yeah. My gran loved me. Although sometimes she’d cry and stroke my
hair and call me her ‘poor little lamb’, but she’d never say why although,
looking back, I think she knew. Then, she died and left me all alone.
I lived with Mum
afterwards. At first, I didn’t
understand why Gran wasn’t there and kept crying for her. Mum use to yell at
me, said I was getting on her nerves.
She’d throw me in a bedroom and lock the door.
There was a constant stream of men coming in and out but I
never knew their names. I reckon Mum
didn’t know either ‘cuz she told me to call them all ‘Uncle’. When there was a special ‘Uncle’ expected,
Mum didn’t want to let on she had a kid so she shut me in the cellar. It was pitch black and I was terrified at
first. Later though, I got used to it,
at least no-one screamed or hit me down there.
I was always hungry but it was easy to
scavenge in our house. There was always
bits of pizza lying around and occasionally an ‘Uncle’ would send me to the
chippy.
‘Don’t bother hurrying back.’ He’d add.
So now I reckon I know every nook and cranny of this shitty town. That’s
come in handy now.
At school, no-one wanted to sit next to
me.
‘He smells, Miss….’ I reckon they’d smell if their Mum didn’t
bother to wash them or change their clothes.
But I always wanted a friend. I
hated break times when I had to hang around alone and look as if I didn’t
care. Then I noticed that all the kids
were on about their latest ‘designer’ trainers so I thought if I got some then maybe I’d fit in. That’s how I first learned to steal. I’d tag onto a family in a shoe-shop, follow
them around, then when no-one was looking, I’d sneak some trainers and scarper. The trainers didn’t always fit and anyway,
they didn’t make any difference - I still had no friends. Later, I graduated to nicking jeans and
that’s when I got caught. From then on
it was Remand Home, Children’s Home and now the streets. Story of my life.
It was about a month ago, I first
noticed her. A little girl of around five, standing looking at me. Normally, I hate kids. They pinch my money,
or kick my tin over. Others will cling onto their Mum’s arm and pretend to be
frightened. But this kid wasn’t like
that and when I looked at her, I recognised the signs - fading bruises,
stained, too-short dress and no coat.
She smiled, whispered ‘Hello’, then scuttled back to where her Mum was
yakking on her mobile. Sometimes she
seemed to be completely on her own and she’d sit down beside me and we’d
talk. Not much, but enough to realise
I’d found a friend. She’d show me stones
she’d found and I’d say they were pretty. Eventually, her Mum’d show up and
yell at her. It used to make me so sad
to see the cowed way she’d slink back.
One day she turned up with a fresh
bruise on her face.
‘What’s that?’ I said.
‘I was naughty,’ she whispered, and
that was when I made up my mind.
It’s nearly dark and the first stars are out. In the surrounding fields, pinpricks of light
jitter in mad circles and above the sky is full of the machine gun rattle of
helicopter blades. They’re searching
hard but I grin, ‘cuz they’re way off course.
As I said, I know all the rat runs in this town and they’ll never guess
where I’ve hidden her. She’s mine now
and I’ll never be lonely again.”
Copyright Janet Baldey
By the Riddler
The Riddler has three puzzles for us today:
No 1. What can go all around the world but stay in the corner?
No 2. What can you not see, that never was, but always will be?
No 3. There was a girl half my age when I was
10. I’m now 56. How old is she?
Keep em
coming Riddler
A NEW BEGINNING
by Richard Banks
It
was Sarah’s idea to buy the Old House. She had had enough of
It was, I told myself, the price to be
paid for a salary that allowed us to reside in a part of
The Old House has definitely seen
better days. Sarah says that when her grandmother was a girl it was the
grandest house in the hundred, a mile out of town and with well tended gardens
the size of three or four fields; but that was then, and many years of decline
have reduced it to the near ruin it is today. The main advantage in buying a
ruin, probably the only one, is that the asking price goes down rather than up. Already low enough to be within our
price range I learned that the local council was considering compulsory
purchase with a view to replacing the house with a housing estate. There was no
time to lose, and when I offered a sum well below the advertised price, the
owners - a distant offshoot of the minor nobility that once lived there -
realised that a low offer was better than an even lower one they couldn’t say no
to.
On completion we put our furniture in
storage and moved into a caravan in the front garden. From there we would sally
out and do everything that was needed. At least that was the plan, but when it
became obvious that the roof was letting in almost as much rain as it was
keeping out we had no choice but to pay a roofer to replace it with a new one.
Unsurprisingly our next discovery was wet rot, and another job for local
industry. But after that it was us, all us, learning the skills that were
needed to do everything else that had to be done.
Even our slow start had not been time
wasted. While the professionals were at work so were we, clearing the long
neglected gardens of chest high brambles, nettles and every other weed known to
man. We slew all before us, including a half dead birch tree which I felled
within a foot of the spot I was aiming at.
Sarah was nervous seeing me, axe in
hand, but she had nothing to be concerned about. As I have told her, the
destruction of my desk was a symbolic act of defiance, nothing more. No harm
was meant, not even to that vulgar, little Yank who was taking my place. I
couldn’t stop him taking my job but he wasn’t having the desk I had sat at for
fifteen years. Some of the old guard cheered me. They stood well back when they
saw what I was about to do, only the Yank came running over and tried to stop
me. Did I mean to hit him when I swung the axe back over my head? Of course
not. I was looking at the desk, not him.
It was all hushed up, of course, for
the sake of the firm, and I received the severance pay that had been agreed,
but the Yank put it about that I was unfit for future employment, and that
ended my career in financial services. But what do I care. Like every man worth
his salt I won’t be kept down; I will come again, reinvent myself, find a new
niche in life. Until then I will restore this house, make it better than ever,
no effort spared, and with new hydraulics throughout the house we were now
ready to install the new kitchen that Sarah had seen, and just couldn’t do
without. Us, just us. Who would have thought it. Even the builder who came
round touting for business could find no fault with what we had done.
It was on returning from Wickes one
afternoon that we came across the new Volvo of my former employer parked at the
top of the driveway outside the conservatory. Any thoughts I had that he had
come with a job offer were soon put to rest. This was a social visit; he was in
the area and thought he would drop by to see if I was, “all right”. Better than
him, I was tempted to say, but didn’t. Even he could see how fit I was, how I
had shed the corporate flab for a leaner, more active me. Sir, or JT as he
likes to be called by senior management, once had a brief fling with my wife.
At least that’s what he thinks happened. The truth is somewhat different.
I first noticed he was attracted to
Sarah at the firm’s annual dinner and dance. It was while I was dancing with
his wife, Lady Yiewsley – surely a sign that I was under serious consideration
to replace my old boss in accounts – that they discovered a mutual interest in
the opera. He had a pair of tickets for Figaro at Covent Garden, and as his
dear wife was out of town that evening and unable to attend, he wondered
whether Sarah would like to fill a seat that otherwise would be unused. Knowing
his reputation Sarah played for time. She would, she told him, have to check
her diary and promised to get back to him on the mobile number he gave her.
Having reported all this to me we
thought a night at the opera was not an unreasonable price to pay for what
would hopefully be another step up the greasy pole. With the promotion still
not decided the opera was followed by dinner at the Ritz when Lady Yiewsley was
again out of town and I was in
So, what is he doing here unchaperoned
- not to see me I wager? Does he really think that after all these years he can
rekindle their imagined affair? What a pathetic, deluded little bore he is and
yet Sarah’s surprise at seeing him has no trace of the deep distain she should
be feeling. Indeed she appears perfectly at ease in his company. Has she
forgotten all that happened; how when the merger was agreed he abandoned me,
cast me aside like I was of no value or use, while he stayed on as Chairman.
Betrayal it was, brutal betrayal!
Sarah casts an anxious glance in my
direction. This is dragging me back when I was doing so well. I take a deep
breath. Sarah slips a pill into my hand and suggests that I show JT the garden.
She knows I’m better outside. More deep breaths. It’s going to be OK I tell
myself. Inadvertently I say this out loud. He thinks I’m referring to the
garden. He raises an eyebrow at the pyramid of wood and other combustibles
towering over what was once the
The door is open and I invite him in
for a glass of the double malt I say is inside. There is no malt, nothing
inside but my garden tools and the axe.
*****
Sarah says that I must steady myself,
that it wasn’t my fault. He had no right to be here. What has happened is
unfortunate, a setback, but nothing that need do us any harm. No one heard him
scream and, more than likely, no one saw him turn into the driveway. It will be
our secret and, if we don’t panic, no one will ever know but ourselves.
She has already moved his car into the
garage where it can’t be seen and checked his mobile to make sure there’s
nothing on it about us. With luck he will have told no one of his intention to
visit. If the police should come we will say that JT paid us a courtesy call
and departed within an hour. If they don’t, we do nothing, nothing at all but
enjoy our new life. Anyway, what can they do without a body?
Already we have doused it with petrol
and pushed it into the mounting tip of rubbish that will be his funeral pyre.
Tomorrow we will set it on fire and reduce everything to dust and ashes. It
will be yet another step in our new beginning. In death, as in life, we triumph
yet again.
Copyright Richard Banks
By Bob French
Robert
Henderson clenched his fists in anger as Geoffry Smitherton, the CEO of
Hamilton and Buckfast, the firm where he had worked for the past 9 years,
cleared his throat.
“You
leave me no choice
Robert knew it was a stitch-up. Jess, an
old navy friend who worked in the security business had tipped him off that
some one was going to steal the year’s gold deposits. He also knew
that, according to Heidi, his girlfriend, and the assistant accountant of the
firm, that when she checked the findings of the November audit, the books
didn’t balance and there was a deficit of several million
pounds. He had to say something, but he knew that if he did,
innocent people would lose their jobs, so he stood there and took it.
“Please report to the head porter, who will accompany
you to your office where you will clear out your desk and hand over any
security access cards you have. I want you out of this building by
mid-day, now get out of my sight!” As he made his way out of
the building, he thought it strange that if they were sure he was responsible
for the crime, why weren’t the police being involved?
It was two weeks later that he had a call from Jenny,
a close friend to say that Heidi had been involved in a hit and run and was in
hospital. He was beside her bed within the hour, and as he held her
hand, he whispered that he loved her and that she must get better so they could
get married. He felt her hand gently squeeze his as she whispered
something that brought tears to his eyes. As he clung onto her hand, he could feel
her slowly slipping away. When the monitor stopped recording her heart beat, he
looked up at the nurse and questioned her with his eyes. The nurse slowly shook
her head, then quietly left the room to seek assistance. Robert gently kissed
her and spoke quietly that he would avenge her death.
Robert retired to his cottage where he found solace in
the silence of the snow-covered countryside. Each day he
would slowly trudge through the winter landscape as snow fell softly around
him, blanketing the world in a muted hush. Each step crunched beneath his
boots, a sound that felt alien in the vast silence around him. He
used to love walks like these with Heidi, her laughter dancing on the crisp
air, her breath visible in frosty puffs. Now, each footfall felt like a
reminder of her absence and it tore at the muscles of his heart.
It had been eight months since the day everything
changed. When the future he expected with his Heidi had flickered and then
dimmed. He recalled the way Heidi held his hand in those last dying
minutes of her life, her fingers entwined with his, whispering that she would
always be with him,
“Just look for me in the small things,” she had said,
her voice barely above a whisper. And yet he found himself lost in a
world that felt impossibly large without her.
The trees loomed tall and bare, their branches heavy
with snow, creating a fragile canopy above him. He paused for a
moment, allowing the chilly air to fill his lungs, letting it clear the fog in
his mind. He remembered how they used to walk this very path, hand
in hand, sharing dreams and secrets beneath the shelter of the pines.
Robert shook his head, trying to dispel the sorrow
that clung to him like the falling snow. He continued, his breath coming in
steady puffs as he moved deeper into the woods. The world was a
tapestry of white and gray, and he felt as if he were wandering through a
dream, disconnected from reality.
As he rounded a bend, he spotted the small clearing
where sunlight used to break-through the clouds of falling snow, illuminating a
lone bench dusted with snow. It had been their favorite spot – a place to
pause, to breathe, and to watch the world go by. He approached the
bench, his heart heavy with memories, as he sat down, allowing the cold to seep
through his coat, feeling the weight of solitude settle in beside him.
A gust of wind stirred the snowflakes, swirling them
like tiny dancers in the air. In that moment, he thought he heard
her voice, soft and melodic, beckoning him to remember the beauty around him.
“Look for me in the small things,” it
echoed. He closed his eyes, letting the memory wash over him; a gentle
warmth seeping through his body. Robert sat silently for a while, then opened
his eyes at the sight of a small bird flitting from branch to branch, its
vibrant plumage standing out against the winter backdrop. He smiled
as the little bird seem to look at him before vanishing into the depth of the
forest. May be Heidi was right. In the stillness of the
snow-clad forest, in the life that persisted, even in the cold, she was
there-embedded in the beauty of the moment.
With a deep breath, Robert stood up, brushed the snow
from his coat, and took one last look around the clearing, a quiet farewell
mingling with the gentle falling of snow. As he walked back along
the path, he felt a little lighter, as if the memories, though bittersweet,
could also be a balm. The snow continued to fall, but now, it felt
like a blanket of hope, wrapping around him, inviting him to carry on.