Read Awakening Online

Authors: William Horwood

Awakening (29 page)

 

‘N
o,’ said Katherine, ‘I just don’t think it’s a good idea, that’s all. It’s too risky and we might lose her in the dark and anyway you don’t even know where Paley’s Creek is, do you?’

Jack knew she was quite right – and also absolutely wrong.

Twilight was already falling on the day after his reunion with Stort, and Jack had tried every way he could think of to persuade her. A break from everything was what was needed, a night out, a chance to see the world from outside themselves.

‘It’s just an hour or two . . . into the henge, back into the Hyddenworld . . . a way for us to show Judith how—’

‘No, Jack, I won’t agree to it.’

He knew that if she didn’t he couldn’t take Judith. It was both or none.

He had even tried the threat of saying he would go without them.

‘That’s probably for the best anyway,’ she had said, which wasn’t what he wanted.

He had tried to tell her that Paley’s Creek, as he understood it, was a carnival – liberty, freedom from normal restraint,
fun
.

And there was what he couldn’t say, had never said: that Katherine was too serious, too old in the head, too fuddy-duddy in the way she thought, the way she was, even dressed, even did her hair, too lacking in the joy in life he felt so much.

He looked at her with love and couldn’t say it.

Your father died, your mother was ill, and you lost your childhood when you became the primary carer . . . that’s what happened and you’ve forgotten how to let go, assuming you ever could . . .

‘Please,’ he said, ‘trust me.’

‘Not over this,’ she said stiffly. ‘We’ll get an early night.’

‘But Arthur’s coming and maybe Margaret.’

‘No,’ she said. ‘Come on, Judith, we have things to do.’

As they were leaving a short while later, Judith appeared.

‘Are you going out?’

‘We are.’

‘Can I come?’

‘Mummy would prefer if you didn’t.’

‘Why?’

‘Because she feels it’s unsafe for you.’

She looked him in the eyes.

‘Where are you going?’

He hesitated.

Judith said, ‘You’re going to Paley’s Creek and I want to come.’

Damn Stort and Barklice, they talk too much!

‘I know, my love, but—’

‘Why doesn’t Mummy want to come? Is she scared?’

Again he hesitated.

‘I am too,’ she said with a bright smile, ‘and I can’t go anyway, even if Mummy wanted.’

‘Why not?’

‘We never got me any nice clothes.’

They left at twilight with a sense of carnival in the air.

Margaret decided to come because, she said, ‘There’ll never be another chance. Arthur had all the fun with the Hyddenworld, I had none. So for once . . .’

‘I’m not sure I can remember how to use the henge,’ said Arthur.

‘Hold my hand, Margaret, and Arthur you hold her other one . . . It doesn’t hurt.’

They went between the conifers, made dexter and then sinister and all the deasil ways of the shadows that were there, the moon turning a circle above their heads as, so easily, they slid betwixt and then between and they were there, the trees vast above them and Stort waiting.

‘This is Barklice,’ said Stort, introducing him to Margaret. ‘Don’t let him out of your sight. And Judith, Katherine . . . ?’

‘Not coming,’ said Jack shortly.

‘Is it far, dear?’ wondered Margaret.

‘No distance at all and it’s on the flat. Follow Jack.’

‘That’s right,’ said Jack, ‘and I’m following Stort.’

‘Who, I believe,’ said Stort dreamily as they wended their way forth from the henge towards the sound of distant music, ‘is following Mister Barklice here who ought to know because he’s been there before.’

‘Yes,’ muttered Barklice, ‘I ought to and I do, which is why I’m following our leader, who is Jack, because that’s the right way to Paley’s Creek, the blind leading the blind and all following the moon . . .’

So they went and soon they had left Woolstone behind them and were walking in the dark with others near, going the same way, chattering and laughing and enjoying themselves in anticipation of more to come when they got to where they hoped they were going.

‘Not far, my dear,’ said Arthur.

‘I feel I could walk as far as the stars tonight,’ Margaret replied, taking his arm as she had done the first day they began courting.

‘Remember?’ she whispered as they went.

‘I do.’

It was not long before the path, clear now in the moonlight and marked by lights, veered away from the green road, turning away downslope towards the river.

The air grew cooler and more moist, but not unpleasantly so.

The music grew ever more noticeable, now loud, now soft, but rising with the wind and ever more insistent.

‘It is certainly seductive,’ said Stort, who found himself starting to hum along with it and his two hands dancing about as if conducting an orchestra and chorus comprising large, perfumed silken female bilgesnipe, each one with a song of welcome on her lips.

‘Be warned, Stort,’ said Barklice, ‘and you too Jack, especially as you’re spoken for. Before you know it you’ll have lost your soul to them.’

‘Never!’ cried Stort happily and unconvincingly.

‘Never,’ said Jack.

The music grew louder and more seductive still, lights danced among the trees, figures, some diaphanous, flitted before them and behind them until, quite suddenly, they found themselves upon the river bank with lights drifting past them on bark and slivers of wood, candles perhaps, oil lamps maybe . . . drifting by, some fast some slow, some across and others towards, entwining, entangling.

‘Be careful, Stort,’ warned Barklice again, ‘we’ll be there in a trice and then . . . then what?’

‘Then . . . then . . .’ whispered Stort, for anything louder than a whisper seemed a kind of sacrilege, ‘then . . .’

‘Welcome.’

A voice. Laughter.

‘Welcome one and all.’

Stort looked around but could not see anyone near, not even Barklice.

‘But where—?’

The verderer ran straight into him, panting, ‘I thought I’d lost you, I couldn’t see you, you seemed to drift in and out of the trees and I . . . I . . .’

They saw a great fire ahead, sparks rising with its smoke into the night.

They heard song.

They were offered mead, which they took, and food, which they ate.

‘Welcome, Mister Barklice.’

They turned, but in the shadows of the people, and the barges on the river, and the tented humbles all about, it was hard to say who was quite where, and who might have spoken.

‘So she bain’t here then natterway, Mister Jack?’ said a voice out of the gloom.

‘Who?’

He turned, unsure who had spoken, shapes of people all about.

‘That girl o’ your’n who be a maid worth seein’ this night I’d say, i’ the cups o’ the moon, wouldn’t you?’

‘You mean Judith, I’m afraid she—’

‘Welcome, Bedwyn Stort . . .’

Stort stopped still and grabbed Barklice’s arm and Jack’s.

‘We have work to do, an appointment to keep and my task is to see you keep it. Now let us explore this . . . this Paley’s Creek and find your son!’

‘How?’ said Barklice, not unreasonably, since whichever way they looked a pathway went, picked out by stars, turning through firelight, and faces hard to see.

‘Where are Arthur and Margaret?’

Stort shrugged, as did Barklice, with other things on their minds. Jack shook his head and followed on, or thought he did, until he realized they were following him.

‘I thought we’d lost you,’ he said when he saw Arthur.

‘You did, you have, but that’s what must happen in Paley’s Creek and Margaret’s having the time of her life. Where’s Stort?’

Jack turned in the flickering dark but Stort was not there, and when he turned back to Arthur he had gone too.

So he stood still and let himself be right where he was as present, past and future whirled around in his mind and the music entered his head and he began to smile.

‘I wish,’ he said, ‘I’d found the words to persuade Katherine to come here and then Judith would have had to and we’d be here together like everyone else.’

‘You did, Jack, you did find the words; you did, my dear . . .’

Her voice was old, old as darkness itself, and he could feel the touch of her hand on his arm.

‘Did I?’

‘I know you did,’ the crone said, taking his arm.

‘Mum?
Mum!?

They were in bed and Katherine was asleep.

She woke instantly.

‘What’s wrong?’

‘Nothing. Listen!’

They could hear the music of the night.

Judith got out of bed, grabbed Katherine’s leg and pulled.

Katherine’s body actually moved to the edge of the bed.

‘Judith, stop it.’

‘No. I want to go to Paley’s Creek.’

‘No.’

‘It’s maybe scary but Bedwyn Stort said they’d cure my pain.’

‘Who would?’

‘Doctory women with balms and erm . . . erm . . .’

‘Embrocations.’

‘Yes.’

‘No.’

‘Dad wanted you to. He was sad that you didn’t. He thinks it would do you good.’

‘What did he say?’

‘That you’ve lost it.’

Katherine smiled.

‘Lost what?’

‘Joy, whatever that is.’

‘When did he say that? And who to?’

‘Let’s go.’

‘Don’t be ridiculous, Judith, we can’t now.’

‘I can take you there.’

‘How?’

‘Let me show you. You might enjoy it. Dad would be pleased. Everyone else has gone.’

‘It’s too late.’

She looked at the time but the time seemed strange and not quite itself.

Judith grabbed her leg and pulled again.

Katherine half fell out of the bed.

‘Judith!’

‘Come on, Mum, you’re not that old. Margaret went.’

‘I thought you didn’t want to go because you have no clothes.’

‘I don’t, but Dad was sad and you are too. Have you any ribbons?’

‘Yes.’

‘Get them.’

‘Please.’

‘Please get them, Mum, there’s no time to lose.’

Katherine turned on the light, went and found her mother’s old sewing box.

‘These were your grandmother’s, she bought them for me, but we never had time for that sort of thing . . .’

‘You can wear anything at Paley’s Creek, but if you’re a girl you need ribbons.’

‘We’re not going, we can’t go; we won’t even try to go.’

‘Hold still, Mum, I want to tie ribbons in your hair.’ And Judith did, sitting on the bed. ‘And you can tie some in mine. Red, green, really nice.’

Their eyes concentrated on each other’s hair, their arms intertwined as they tied the ribbons.

‘Mum, you look pretty.’

‘Judith, you look beautiful.’

They looked at each other with happiness.

‘Mum . . . let’s go . . . I’ll show you the way.’

‘But—’

‘Paley’s Creek is special.
Please . . .’

‘We’ll have to hurry.’

‘Come on!’

They dressed and Judith led Katherine downstairs and out into the garden.

‘We’ll have to lock up . . .’

‘It’s all right tonight.’

‘Where do we go?’

‘We dance,’ said Judith, showing Katherine how, because no one ever had.

‘Where?’

‘Over here,’ she called, ‘this way, dancing to the music you can hear when you listen to the flow of time.’

‘Who told you that?’ called out Katherine, as the ribbons in her hair began to stream behind her in the wind and she tried to keep up with her daughter the Shield Maiden.

‘Bedwyn Stort.
Come on!

It turned out, then, that Paley’s Creek was by no means what it at first seemed. There was not one fire, but many; not one river, but several.

The site was large and confusing and linked by planks and small bridges that seemed never to go in quite the same direction. One way and another it was girthed by water on all sides, interspersed with coppices, making it impossible to get any general sense of things.

As for the fires, they were the focus of different groups. Around some were singers, others attracted players of bulpipes and the tuble, while still more food was being prepared: brots of many kinds, pasties, graddles and broad scones, and the many-seeded baggot, shot through with moist peppers and pimento.

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