Read The Changes Trilogy Online

Authors: Peter Dickinson

The Changes Trilogy (3 page)

They went so slowly that Nicky decided she could afford a few minutes more on the bridge; she would be able to catch them without hurrying. The river was beautiful, full from bank to bank as high tide began to ebb unhurriedly toward the sea. A sailing dinghy fidgeted around at its moorings as the water changed direction. Something about the river's calm and shining orderliness washed away all Nicky's resolution—the river ran to the sea, and over the sea lay France, and that's where Mummy and Daddy were, and a little boat like that couldn't be hard to sail. She could swim out to it and row it ashore, and then stock it up with pretzels and lemon soda and sail down the river, around the coast and over the Channel. And then it would be only a matter of finding them, among all the millions of strangers. They
must
have left a message, somewhere. Sailing would be nice—alone, but going to meet the people who were waiting for you, who would kiss you and not ask questions and show you the room they had kept ready for you.…

Nicky's whole skeleton was shaken by a tearing shudder, like the jerk of nerves that sometimes shocks the body wide awake just as it is melting into sleep, only this shudder went on and on. Nicky knew it well. It had shaken her all that first nightmare morning, and once or twice since. It was a sign that somewhere a hellish machine was working.

She looked wildly about for a few seconds, not feeling how her mouth and lips were pulling themselves into a hard snarl like a dog's, nor how her legs were running down the street called Castelnau faster than they'd ever run when she'd asked them, nor how her hand was groping in her satchel for the hunting knife.

A bus towered in the road; the strange people crowded around it, chattering again. Nicky jostled between them and hurled herself at the young man who stood smiling beside the vile engine which churned its sick stink and noise into the air. Her knife was held for killing. The young man was the only person looking in her direction. He shouted before she was quite through the crowd, and started to back away around the bus. A hard thing rammed into her ear and cheekbone, jarring her head so that for an instant she could not see. In fact she could not remember falling, but now she was on her hands and knees groping dazedly for the dropped knife, not finding it, then crawling toward the drumming engine and feeling again in her satchel for a bottle to hit with.

The world seemed to be shouting. Tough hands gripped her arms and hoisted her up. She struggled toward the bus, but the hands held her, hard as rope. The young man was climbing again through the door of the bus. She lunged at the hands with her teeth, but the men who held her did so in such a way that she couldn't reach.

All at once the foul drumming stopped, and only the stink of it hung between the houses. A voice croaked an order. They all moved on, up Castelnau.

Slowly, like the panic of nightmare dying as you lie in the half-dark and work out that you really are in your own bed between safe walls, the lust of hatred ebbed. She felt her neck muscles unlock. Her hands and knees, where she had fallen, stung with sudden pain. She was so tired that she would have dropped but for the hands that gripped her. She let her head droop.

It might have been a signal for the others to stop, and for the clatter of arguing voices to break out again. Most of the voices were men's, but sometimes a woman joined in. At last something was settled.

“Are you all right now, miss?” said a man.

Nicky nodded.

“Why did you do that?” said the man.

“Do what?”

“Try to kill Kewal?”

“He made the thing go,” she said. “He mustn't. I had to stop him.”

“Who told you to?”

“I don't know.”

“Do you want to kill him now?”

Nicky looked around the dark, silent faces. The young man she'd charged at stood directly before her, smiling, his small teeth brilliant amid the gorgeous beard. Only one of his eyes looked directly at her. The other one squinted crazily over her right shoulder. “No,” she said.

“But if he tried to make the bus go again?” asked the man.

“Yes,” she said.

The hands let go of her and she swayed. An arm curled round her shoulders to stop her falling—a woman's arm this time.

“You will come with us,” said the man. It wasn't a question. Now, at last, she looked up and saw that the speaker was the big man who had been pushing the old woman on the cart. A woman in a blue dress, the one who'd answered the question about the sickness, knelt down in the road and started to sponge Nicky's bleeding knees.

“Yes,” said the young man, Kewal, smiling and squinting. “You will be our canary.”

“Kaya?” said one of the women.

“When the miners go into the coal mines,” explained the young man importantly, “they take a canary with them; if there is firedamp about—that is carbon monoxide, you know—the bird feels it before the miners. Just so this girl … what is your name, miss?”

“Nicola Gore.”

“Just so Miss Gore will be able to warn us of dangers which we cannot perceive.”

“You are willing?” asked the big man.

“Most people call me Nicky,” she explained.

“Good,” he said, as if she had answered “Yes.” She had in a way.

“Our names are easy too,” said Kewal. “All the men are called Singh and all the women are called Kaur.”

Several of the group laughed in a fashion that told Nicky that it was an old joke. A high, imperious voice croaked from the handcart.

“My grandmother does not speak English,” explained Kewal as the big man turned and began a conversation in the strange language. The woman who had been dabbing at her knees rose and took her hand and started to clean the grazes.

“How is your head?” said a voice at her side. “I regret that I had to hit you so forcibly.”

She turned and saw the fat man who had first spoken to her. He was smiling nervously. His eyes had the look of a dog's which thinks it may have done something bad but doesn't want you to think so.

“My uncle is very quick and strong,” said Kewal. “Although he does not look it.”

There was another little laugh among the group. Nicky felt her cheek.

“It's all right,” she said. “It's still a bit sore but it's all right. It doesn't matter, Mr.—er—Singh?”

Her voice turned the last two words into a question. She knew that Kewal had been joking, but she didn't know what the joke was. However, the fat man smiled and nodded. The old voice creaked another order. You could hear it quite plainly through the chatter of the rest of the group.

“Come,” said Kewal. “My grandmother wishes to speak to you.”

The old woman was still just as terrifying as before. She lay on her elbow on the cushions and stared. She wore about five necklaces, and every finger of her left hand had at least two rings on it. Nicky wanted to propitiate her, to make her less fierce and strange, so without taking her eyes from the many-wrinkled face she began to grope in her satchel. The old woman spoke two sentences and the big man laughed.

“My mother is pleased with you,” he said. “She says you fight well, like a Sikh. But now you must fight for us, and not against.”

Nicky's fingers found what she wanted. She walked right up to the cart.

“Would you like this?” she said, giving a little half-curtsey: the old woman might be a witch, but she was a queen too. Nicky put the gold and coral necklace down on a blue satin cushion. The ringed claw picked it up and the bright eyes examined it, stone by stone. The old woman clucked, spoke again and put it down on the cushion.

“My mother is grateful,” said the big man. “She says it is good gold and well-carved beads, but you must keep the necklace. You are to help us and we are to help you, so there is no need for an exchange of gifts. We will protect you, and share our food and drink with you. In return you will warn us if we seem to you to be embarking on anything which is dangerous or wrong. Things like Kewal starting the engine of that bus. Do you understand?”

Nicky tore her eyes at last from the old woman's.

“Yes, Mr. Singh,” she said, more confidently this time.

The big man's lips moved into a smile under his dark-gray beard.

“You will have to learn our other names too, you know,” he said. “Now we must march on. You will walk with my sister's family. Neena!”

Nicky picked the necklace off the blue cushion. She was glad she hadn't had to give it away.

Chapter 2

FIRST NIGHT

Neena, the big man's sister, was a dark little woman, only two or three inches taller than Nicky.

“You can put your satchel into my pram,” she said. “I expect you're pretty tired.”

She spoke so softly that Nicky could hardly hear her. She looked tired and worried herself. A sulky baby sat in the pram, almost hidden by a hill of bundles.

“Thank you,” said Nicky, and propped the satchel on the handles of the pram, leaning it against the bundles. Then she found she was still holding the soda bottle which she'd taken out to fight with, so she unscrewed the top and started to drink. The lemon soda was nastily sweet and warm, and very fizzy with the shaking it had had, so that the froth bubbled back into her nose and made her sneeze; through her snortings she heard the boy in the pram begin a slow wail.

“Oh dear,” said Nicky, “is that my fault?”

“He's thirsty,” said Neena, “and we cannot spare much water because we have to boil it all.”

She leaned her light weight against the handles to get the pram going as the rest of the group moved off. Nicky, walking beside her, felt in the satchel for another bottle and handed it to Neena. The baby was watching; its wail softened to a snivel.

“No,” said Neena, “it's yours. You will need it.”

“I can easily break into another pub,” said Nicky. “That's how I got these.”

Neena looked at her doubtfully for a moment.

“Thank you, Nicky,” she said. “Push the pram please, Gopal.”

A boy about Nicky's size took the handles and started to shove while Neena rummaged in her bundles for a mug; she filled it from the lemon soda bottle and tilted it carefully to the baby's lips. The baby put up a hand to steady it, but did not help much; still, Neena managed very cleverly despite having to glide beside the pram.

“My brother is nicer than this, really,” said Gopal, “but he knows that something is wrong and that my mother is worried.”

“Are you really all called Singh?” said Nicky in a half-whisper.

“Yes. It was an order of the guru three hundred years ago that all Sikhs are called Singh. It means ‘lion,' and we are a soldier people.”

He spoke very proudly and seriously.

“What are Sikhs?” said Nicky.

“We are Sikhs. My people are Indians—Indian Indians, of course, not American Indians—but many of us came to England, especially after the Hitler war. We have a different religion from you and from other Indians, and we carry five signs that we are different. Other Indians wear the turban, for instance, but we do not cut our hair or beards at all, ever; we carry a sword, to show we are soldiers; we wear a steel bracelet; we …”

“I can't see any swords,” said Nicky, who had been puzzled by the explanation. She felt that she ought to know about the Hitler war, and about Indians, just as she ought to have known about turbans, but she'd forgotten. She was irritated by being forced to recognize another of those moments when she saw or heard something which felt as though she'd dreamed it before, but had forgotten the dream.

Gopal laughed and felt in the back of his turban. From it he produced a square wooden comb to which was fastened a toy scimitar two inches long.

“You can't wear a sword if you are working in a bank,” he said, “or driving a train in the underground. Not a real killing sword. So we wear our swords like this, but they are still a sign of our faith and a sign that we are a soldier people. We are a very proud race, you know. When a man joins the Sikh religion he becomes taller and stronger and braver. It has often happened. I've read it in my history books.”

“How old are you?” said Nicky.

“Thirteen.”

“I'm twelve. Shall I help you push the pram or are you too proud?”

He laughed again, as though he was used to being teased and didn't mind. His face was thin and his skin looked silky soft; he moved his brown eyes about a lot when he spoke or listened, in a way that was full of meanings. Nicky decided that she liked him, but that he was a bit girlish. It was only later that she found he was a true lion, worthy of his name.

“You can help me up the next hill,” he said. “We'll give my mother a rest.”

Neena—Mrs. Singh or Mrs. Kaur, Nicky decided she ought to call her—turned her weary face to smile at her son, then started to arrange the bundles on the pram so that the little boy could sleep.

In fact the next hill was a long time coming.

Castelnau is a flat mile from end to end, between friendly Victorian mansions; then it bends and becomes Ranelagh Gardens, quaintly ornate red houses with little unusable balconies crowding all down one side, and on the other a six-foot wooden fence screening Barn Elms Park from the street. Ranelagh Gardens twists to cross the miniature scrub desert of Barnes Common. Here a bedraggled horse stumbled out of the bushes and followed them, until one of the rear guard tried to catch it and it shied away.

On the far side of the common the road humps itself up over a railway. Nicky fulfilled her bargain by toiling beside Gopal to heave the pram up to the ridge of the hummock, but she could only just manage it, so much of her strength had the rage of her fight taken. On the bridge some of the children crowded to the wall and gossiped in English about the odd little station with its lacelike fringes of fretted wood, until angry voices called them back to the line of march. Down the far slope a pram ran away from its pusher and was caught amid excited shouts by the advance guard. It seemed to Nicky that the shouting and the excitement were much more than were needed for an ordinary pram trundling downhill with nobody in it, only bundles and cardboard boxes.

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