Authors: C.J. Skuse
I couldn't make out all of what they were shouting, but the odd phrase was clear.
All right, retard? How's your goats doing, Fallon? Hey, ugly girl! Butterface!
Two boys and two girls, all younger than us. The eldest boy, no more than twelve, waggled his tongue at her as his bike sailed past. It was all over in seconds.
âWho were
they
?' said Max as the whoops died away in the distance.
âOh, just the Shaws. The boys go to that posh private school over in the next village. They're idiots. They shaved a couple of our goats over Easter. And they write things on the farmhouse walls sometimes. They think Mum's a witch who kills and skins people. You must have heard the rumours.'
None of us could deny it. We'd all heard the things people in Brynstan said about Rosie. The things
we
had all said. Things we'd laughed at.
âCan we go and see the Witch's Pool?' asked Corey. âJust for old time's sake?'
âUh yeah, if you like,' said Fallon. âI doubt there will be any cats up there though. Never seen any animals round there at all.'
We were all looking at Max, as though it was up to him to decide whether or not we should go. He shrugged. So we carried on walking.
What had seemed like miles when I was a kid, actually took about ten minutes. Fallon suddenly veered off to the left where there was a weather-beaten sign saying
Wit Po
and she mounted the bank where some makeshift steps
had been carved in the red earth. Max glanced at me then followed on behind her and Corey picked up the rear.
âDo people still come here?' I asked, as Fallon parted the overhanging branches to reveal a large overgrown meadow.
âI don't think so,' she said. âThe car park's just through those trees on the other side and it's all overgrown and people just tend to use it to dump old mattresses and oil drums. I don't even think the sign's on the main road any more. It's hardly a tourist attraction now.'
I felt uneasy as we walked through those long grasses. I wasn't actually scared â I guess it was a fear left over from childhood. A habit I hadn't grown out of. I had no reason to be afraid of it now. And once we had reached it, I could see the place for what it was â an algae-covered, pear-shaped lake with a small broken bridge at one end. The rockery, over which used to flow the fastest little waterfall, was now just a pile of slimy green rocks. But for the midges clouding over the surface, all was still.
âIs it really bottomless?' asked Corey, peering over the edge to look into the murk.
âOnly one way to find out,' said Max, nudging him forwards, making him stumble and grab for the ground. I pulled Corey back up, throwing Max eye-daggers.
âNo, it's not bottomless,' I said. âIt was just a story.'
âIt's based on truth, Ella,' said Fallon. âDon't you remember Jess telling us about it?'
âI do,' said Corey. âWell, some of it. I remember it was Halloween and we were sorting out all our sweets in the shed at Max's.'
âAhem, you mean my compact private members club pirate den?' Max corrected.
âYeah, and Jessica came to the window and yelled boo!'
said Fallon. âShe couldn't get inside with us because she was too tall. Oh and something about some guy in a black hat?'
âI remember it,' said Max.
âSo do I,' I said. âEvery word.'
*
BOO!
Jessica! Don't do that!
Come on then, share out your spoils. Whatcha get? Ooh, Scream Eggs, my favourite.
Where have you been? Mum said you were staying in tonight.
Dad made me work late at the garden centre. Did you have fun trick or treating? I love the outfits. What are you supposed to be?
I'm a Pirate Zombie, Ella's my Pirate Zombie Wife, Fallon's the witch from
Wizard of Oz
, Zane's Thor and Corey's Hedwig.
Oh you are a very cute Hedwig, Corey. Look at those little cheeks!
Can you tell us a story, Jess? A spooky one.
Another spooky one? You still haven't got over the last one, Zane. You just can't handle the scandal, baby.
Aww, please! Please, I promise I won't wet myself this time.
Yeah go on, Jess. Just a quick one. Tell us one about a witch!
A witch? Hmm, let me think. You live out near the Witch's Pool don't you, Fallon?
Yeah, but there aren't real witches there.
Oh but there were. A long time ago. See in the old days, like the mid-1600s, there used to be a Witchfinder who
stalked through these parts looking for witches to put to trial and death.
Why?
Well people just didn't like witches. They thought they were evil. Any woman caught doing sorcery or something that couldn't be explained, it meant they were probably a witch. And so people like the Witchfinder General who was this big tall man in a wide black hat and cloak, used to round up these supposed witches, put them into cages on the back of his wagon, and take them out to places like the Witch's Pool at Cloud and test them in front of a crowd of witnesses, usually villagers and members of the church.
How did he test if they were witches?
He'd test their honesty. He'd tie a woman up inside a sack and attach a rope to it, then he'd throw her off the bridge into the water. If she bobbed back up to the surface, it meant she was a witch and so she was hauled out and burned alive or hanged. If she was struggling, he would realise she was telling the truth
â
she wasn't a witch so she could go free.
Didn't it just mean they were good swimmers if they came to the top?
Probably. Witchfinders didn't really bother with little things like common sense.
Did any of them just drown accidentally?
Oh yes. Lots of them did. The Witch's Pool is said to be bottomless, and many of the drowned ones were never found. That lake is said to be full of female skeletons. Their ghosts haunt it at night.
Zane's scared.
I'm not, Fallon. You're lying.
So if somebody's lying, does that mean they float on water?
So the Witchfinder said, yeah. Why, Ella? You're not lying about anything, are you?
No.
Are you sure?
Yeah. I always tell the truth.
Better not jump in the pool then or else we'll find out, won't we? Liars always float to the top.
*
It was a throwaway comment that hadn't meant anything, I realise that now. But I remember my face went bright red. And, after that, I never went swimming again, just in case.
It was magic hour by the time we'd walked the length and breadth of the old railway line, searching for Mort but there was no sign of him. We decided to head back to the farm and see if Rosie was home â our last hope was finding him in the day's truck haul of stray animals. My legs were tired as we crossed the last paddock and arrived back at the field with the trolleys at the entrance. The scorch had gone out of the day, and there was a warm, peachy sweep across the sky. The four of us walked in a line. And though Max hadn't reached for my hand all afternoon, I kind of didn't need him to with Corey and Fallon there. It felt like it used to.
I pulled my phone out of my pocket. âWhat time was the second bus?'
âThere isn't one,' said Corey.
Dread filled my chest. âWhat? You said there were two buses a day. One at lunch and one at tea-time.'
âYeah, but not on a Sunday. Reduced timetable.'
âHow are we supposed to get back?' said Max. âAnd we still haven't found his cat.'
âIt's all right,' said Fallon. âYou can all stay at mine tonight.'
âNo, it's OK,' I said. âWe'll get a taxi back.'
âIt's fine,' said Fallon, flapping her hand. âThere's tons of sleeping bags and duvets. You don't have anything to get back for, do you?' She seemed slightly desperate.
We actually didn't. Corey's grandparents were still on holiday and my dad wouldn't be back for another couple of days.
âMy parents will go spasmodic if they know I'm out here,' said Max, all twisty-face. âI should get back.'
âYeah,' I said, âwe don't have any of our stuff. Toothbrushes. We need to go.'
âOh please stay,' Fallon begged. âWe've got spare toothbrushes somewhere. And blankets and sleeping bags. And more alcohol.'
âI could text them and say I'm staying at your house, Ells,' Max suggested.
âYeah!' said Fallon. âAnd we could get a takeaway too. I think the pizza place delivers out here, though I've never tried it. We get the leaflet though. We could have a picnic in the lounge and play Monopoly like we used to, what do you say?' Then she turned to me, all serious-faced for a moment. âI'm
always
the boot though.'
âVery
Famous Five
,' I said. âApart from the booze.'
âYeah! Do you remember Jessica reading the stories to us? She gave me all her books the last⦠time I saw her.'
Max smiled. âShe knew how much you loved them.'
âI always thought we were just like them,' she said with more than a note of sadness in her voice, âthe five of us. Max was like Julian, the eldest and wisest.'
I snorted. âI didn't know Julian was a pot head.'
âElla was George, the tomboy. Zane was Timmy the dog, strong and reliable. I was probably Anne.'
Max laughed. âYeah, and Corey must be Dick.'
If Corey was offended by Max's remark, he didn't say. âJessica called us the
Fearless
Five. That was our name.'
âHey, he's right!' said Max. âI'd forgotten that. Christ, that's a blast from the past.'
âYeah well,' I said, âwe've all grown up a lot since then.' I almost felt insulted by it. We weren't little kids any more â we couldn't play those kinds of games now. She was dangling memories before my eyes like gold stars I couldn't reach.
âWe could be the Fearless Five again, now,' said Fallon. âOnly we're four. We don't have Zane.' We looked at each other and smiled secretly, not knowing if she was joking.
âI know!' she cried. âThe baby can be Timmy! Then there's five of us again! Yay!'
âWhat baby?' said Corey.
âMy baby,' she said. And that was the moment Fallon lifted up her vest to reveal a small, but definite, bump.
âSo that's when you found out about Fallon being pregnant?'
âW
hat?' we all cried. It was like in
Scooby Doo
when they see the monster for the first time; only we didn't yell
Zoinks!
and drop our sandwiches.
Fallon looked around at all of us. âWhat?' The stretchy band of her denim shorts was holding her in at the waist, hiding much of her neat belly like the sea hides an iceberg. But, even in the dimming light, we could see she was
well
pregnant. She even had silvery stretch marks across her belly to prove it.
âHoly shit!' cried Corey.
âYou're
pregnant
?' I said.
âYeah. That's why I've got such a big tummy. I thought you all knew.'
âWe just thought you were fat,' Max laughed.
I felt a rush of something weird â disgust? Jealousy? I didn't know. âYou're our age!'
âHow far gone are you?' asked Max. âI mean, how long till it comes out?'
âFour weeks yesterday, the doctor said.' We looked at each other in silence. âIt's all going well though, so don't worry. Mum's been to all my antenatal classes with me and
got the nursery ready and everything. The heartbeat's been really strong on all my scans.'
âWhose is it?' asked Max.
âIt's
mine
,' she said, wonderingly.
âNo, I mean, who's its dad?'
âOh!' She laughed, so much that we all laughed too. âYou don't know him. Come on, help me find the Monopoly board. I think I've still got all the pieces.'
Rosie wasn't home yet but she called while we were there. Fallon grabbed us some spare sleeping bags and duvets from the airing cupboard and told us her mum was going to be late â a baby giraffe had died suddenly at a zoo on the outskirts of Bristol. We wouldn't see her until nine at least. There were no cats on the lorry either.
Fallon brought down the light display from the nursery and put it in the middle of the lounge floor, to âcreate an ambulance'. We all sat round it as it chirruped âTwinkle Twinkle' while suns and moons danced around the dingy ceiling. Max fetched out his packet of weed, showing off now he didn't have to hide it from me any more. Mixing it up with his Golden Virginia, he showed Corey how to roll a spliff, and then offered it around. I refused, pointedly.
Eventually, fed up of being left out, I tried the Acid Rain. It was like strong lemonade tinged with spice and, as I drank, I started to feel warmer from the inside out. Soon we were all giggling.
Fallon wasn't drinking or smoking, but if she felt left out she didn't show it. Soon, Max, Corey and I were all in various states of undress from Strip Monopoly, and so pissed or stoned that none of us cared about anything. Corey had been to jail six times already, so he was sitting in just his pants. We'd eaten a feast of triangular cheese
sandwiches, Wotsits, yoghurts, Cheesestrings, Maoams and Penguins on the rug in front of the fireplace.
Max shuffled up beside me on the carpet and put his chin on my shoulder. âI've been a cock today, haven't I?'
I smelled the familiar scent of fuzzy peach shampoo on his hair. âI guess that makes me Mrs Cock.' He laughed, toothy and exaggerated; the Acid Rain was beginning to reveal its full effects.
âI've never seen you this out of it,' I said, stroking his cheek.