Authors: Clare Carson
Jim emerged from the tent with a bottle in his hand.
âOK, where next?' he said as he approached.
She noticed his face cloud, but she ignored his changing expression â she was used to his mercurial temperament â and surveyed the trestle-tables furthest away from the dancing girls â a tombola, jam and cakes, bric-a-brac. She turned to tell Jim she wanted to try her luck with the tombola. He wasn't there. In the twenty seconds she had been looking away, he had disappeared. She must be mistaken. She gripped George's lead and cast her eyes around, certain he was somewhere nearby. He wasn't. Her stomach tightened. She looked again, scoured the cape wearers, bikers, golfers, Bromley Contingent safety-pin punks, everybody the worse for wear. No trace of Jim. Where was he? Perhaps he had dropped something in the beer tent and gone back to look for it. She yanked George's lead, stepped over to the marquee, peered inside. She couldn't see him. She retreated to the spot where she had been standing when Jim disappeared. Still no sign of him. She had a sick feeling in her gut. She had to think. He had done this before, the disappearing act. He sometimes vanished when he spotted somebody from his shadow life because he was worried about being seen with his family, blowing his cover and jeopardizing the safety of his wife and kids. So he would melt away, leave them to carry on as if nothing had happened. But every other time he had vanished, she had been with Liz or one of her sisters. And now she was alone. Or, at least, alone with the dog. Had he seen somebody dangerous who knew him? She glanced nervously around the fairground, searching the crowd not for Jim this time but anybody who looked shifty. Everybody seemed sinister right then, red faces leering, bellowing voices, beer-bellied sweaty men. She was alone in the jostle, enclosed yet exposed, sensing danger all around but unable to pinpoint its exact location. She was starting to panic. Her breath was coming in short gasps, and when she tried to catch it she couldn't, she only made the lack of oxygen worse.
She squatted beside George, put her arm around his neck for comfort. The dog panted too, meaty breath stinking in her nostrils. âWhat shall we do?' she asked. The dog whimpered. Her eyes were welling. She was confused. Should she wait for her father to reappear or was it safer to move? She couldn't call her mum from a phone box because Liz would still be at her friend's house and she didn't know the number. Should she walk home? It was about five miles along a main road. Perhaps it was better to catch a bus â she had enough change in her pocket. She wavered. The waltzer switched to âThat's the Way I Like It'. She decided to do a circuit of the fairground to see if she could find Jim.
She picked her way across the tangle of waltzer cables, bypassed the Maypole, peering into the crowds. No joy. She headed toward the trestle-table stalls. There were fewer people here, but still no sign of Jim. She skirted the tombola, came to a stall piled with cellophane bags that she thought contained sweets until she saw the
Herbal Remedies
sign taped to the table top. The woman with dyed green hair sitting behind the table waved one of the bags at Sam.
âHere, take it. It's willow bark. Bitter withy.'
Sam didn't want to stop, but she was too polite to ignore the stallholder so she took the packet, eyed its brown fragments.
âBitter withy?'
âThe weeping willow, or withy as it used to be called, is the tree of death and grief. It's cursed. The bitter withy is the only tree to perish from the inside out, heart first.'
Sam shuffled awkwardly.
âAccording to Culpeper,' the woman continued, âthe bark can be used to stop bleeding, and when mixed with vinegar it takes away warts.' Sam was wondering how she could end the conversation when she noticed the woman's face harden, her mouth pulled taut and thin. âDon't look now, but there is a man standing behind us by the Candy Man Can candyfloss stall and he's staring at you.'
Sam twisted round, assuming it must be Jim, but was caught by the gaze of a stranger, colourless eyes locking hers. She tried to look away, frightened by the intensity of the man's icy stare, but could only shift her gaze down and found herself transfixed by a crescent-moon scar on his cheekbone.
The woman's voice pulled her back. âWhere are your parents anyway?'
âI came here with my dad, but he's disappeared.'
âDisappeared?'
âHe went off somewhere.' Her neck prickled. She wondered whether she should explain the problem â Jim's vanishing act possibly to avoid the scar-faced man â but her family had a strict code; she should be careful what she said about her father. Talking was dangerous. Anyway, she wasn't sure what she thought of this woman. The stallholder leaned forwards. Sam caught a whiff of patchouli oil and tobacco.
âIs your dad in the beer tent?'
âProbably.'
The woman was scrutinizing her face, making her feel self-conscious.
âAre you OK?'
Sam hesitated. âI'm fine.'
The stallholder was still staring at her face. âYou've got a birthmark on your cheek.'
Sam lifted her hand without thinking to the lumpy brown splodge shaped like a cat's head. She tried to keep it covered with her hair, especially when she was at school, because her classmates called her bogey face when it was visible.
âCouple of hundred years ago, people would have thought you were a witch if they saw that mark.'
Sam laughed nervously. She couldn't tell whether the woman was joking.
âWitch?'
âWitch isn't necessarily an insult. It was often clever women, cunning folk, who knew about herbs and plants who were accused of witchcraft.'
The stallholder waved her hand across her cellophane packets, gave Sam a meaningful nod. Sam was desperate to escape now, find her father. She checked over her shoulder; a small queue had formed in front of the candyfloss stall, the flustered black-aproned stallholder was bent over the silver drum, whirring sticks around to collect the sugar wisps. The scar-faced man was nowhere in sight. She clocked the crowds surging towards the roped area to watch the girls prancing around the Maypole, âJake the Peg' pumping through the tannoy. The leering carousel horses were chasing round and round. She had a sudden idea about where Jim might have gone: if he was trying to avoid being seen by somebody â the man with the scar â he could have slipped away and walked back to the Cortina. It was the one place where he knew Sam might look for him.
âI'd better go and see if I can find my dad in the beer tent,' Sam said. She was still holding the cellophane packet. She didn't want it, but she thought it would be less hassle to pay for it than to hand it back. âHow much is the willow bark?'
âTake it. It's yours for nothing.'
âThanks.'
Sam pulled George's lead and made her way through the jostle around the roped-off area. A policeman was jigging along with the girls in floaty dresses; the lairy bystanders egged him on â guffawing, cameras snapping. The Morris dancers were warming up their instruments â a violin, an accordion, a penny whistle and drum. The green-cape wearers were huddled in a corner behind the Maypole. One of them lit a bulrush torch, leaned back as it ignited, jabbed the burning wand down his throat and exhaled a leaping flame. Petrol fumes filled the air. The dancing girls shied away from the fire-eater, startled.
The policeman stopped being jolly, shouted, âOi. Enough of that.'
The fire-eater shouted back, âFuck off. I'll do what I want. It's a free country.'
âThis is my fucking patch. You do what I say here.'
The fire-eater's mates jeered, closed ranks. The audience surged, eager for a fight, bored with the waltzer, little girls and Maypole dancing. Sam pressed against the flow, dragging George. As she reached the beer tent, a bunch of stick-wielding men with blackened faces burst out through the open flap â ragged black cloaks flapping from their shoulders and top hats decorated with pheasant feathers. Crow-men, she realized with alarm, dancers from the darkness, birds of death. The crow-men hurtled into the crowd, barged over to the Maypole. Sam heard a shout behind â âlet's get âem' â quickened her pace and headed to the gate, George straining on the lead. She had almost reached the exit when a man clutching a stick of candyfloss stepped into their path. He turned to face her and she saw his colourless eyes, the scar. She gasped, inhaled the sickly sweet smell of spun sugar. Her gut dropped, her legs tensed for flight, certain now this was the man Jim had been trying to avoid. What was he? A murderer? A terrorist? He smiled.
âYour dad gave me a message for you,' he said.
His words caught her by surprise â his voice calm and reasonable. She edged back. Noticed a badge pinned to his windcheater, a peace symbol. CND. She stalled. Her aunt was in CND, she was always going on about Aldermaston, the dangers of nuclear proliferation. She liked her aunt. Harmless commie, according to Jim. Could this man be dangerous if he was wearing a peace badge? Maybe he wasn't so bad after all. Maybe he wasn't the person who had prompted Jim to disappear, perhaps he was a friend of her father's. Up close he seemed quite normal. Tall, not broad. Mousey hair. Anorak and jeans. His stare made her nervous, and the scythe-shaped scar was scary, but she had a marked cheek too and the bogey-face comments upset her. It was wrong to judge people by their looks.
He said, âYour dad asked me to keep an eye on you and make sure you didn't leave the fair until he got back.'
âDid he?'
She couldn't work it out. If Jim wanted to give her a message why didn't he just say something to her before he vanished? Why did he ask this man to tell her? But what if he was telling the truth? Jim would be angry if she didn't wait for him. Maybe it was sensible to wait.
âDo you know how long he will be?' she asked.
âNot long. Why don't you stay here with me? Here,' he pushed the candyfloss stick he was holding at her, âhave this. Your dad told me to buy you a treat while he was gone.'
The candyfloss did it. Instant reaction. There was no way Jim would have told some strange man to buy her a treat, he wasn't like that, he knew she would never accept candyfloss from a stranger. It was totally wrong. The scar-faced man was creepy. She ran. The man reached out to grab her as she passed, dropped the candyfloss on the ground.
âStop.'
He lurched at her. She dodged him, broke into a gallop. George was faster, overtook her, pelted down the road, towing her behind, her heart hammering.
The man shouted, âTell your dad he should take more care of you, otherwise something nasty could happen.'
They reached the Cortina. Jim was there, waiting in the driver's seat. He saw her coming, opened the door for her. She clambered in with George; the dog's rank smell filled the car. Jim didn't say a word, turned the ignition, accelerator, swerve. Along the bypass, white gypsy caravans huddled on the verge, tatty ponies tethered to the fence. She was still clutching the gift from the green-haired lady.
âWhat've you got in that plastic bag?' Jim asked, looking in the rearview mirror.
âWillow bark.'
âMakes a change from goldfish, I suppose.'
He was trying to be jolly. Pretend nothing had happened.
She said, âWhy did you leave me?'
He shifted on his seat. âI had to. I thought you would know I had gone back to the car. And you had George with you.'
The dog stretched his paws across her legs. âI worked it out in the end,' she said. âI was scared.'
He sniffed. âYou were safer without me.'
He said it brusquely. She went red, the tears of pent-up fear gathering. She blinked them back because crying always irritated her father, leaned her head against the side window. Watched the world go by. Eventually she sat upright again and said, âA man tried to stop me leaving.'
She noticed the veins on the back of his hand as he gripped the gear stick.
âWhat man?'
âHe was standing by the candyfloss machine and staring at me when I was looking for you. Then he tried to stop me when I was leaving and said you'd asked him to tell me to wait at the fair.'
âWhat did he look like?'
âHe had a scar on his cheek.'
âBastard. Fucking bastard.'
Jim put his foot on the accelerator.
âI hope you didn't say anything to him.'
âWell, I did because I thought he knew you and he looked normal â apart from his eyes and the scar â and he was wearing a peace badge, you know, like the one Aunty Hazel wears.'
Jim snorted, shook his head. âA badge doesn't mean anything. Appearances can be deceptive. People aren't always what they seem. You should know that by now. Anybody can pick up a badge and wear it.'
He winced when he said that; she wasn't sure why. She felt upset because it wasn't her fault anyway. It was Jim's. Why was he telling her off?
âHe tried to give me a stick of candyfloss.'
âHe what?'
âHe tried to give me a stick of candyfloss. That's when I knew he was a weirdo.'
âA stick of bloody candyfloss? Jesus fucking wept. What was he playing at?'
He shook his head, mumbled to himself. âTalk about going for the soft target. A kid. What did he think he'd get from a kid? Wanker. Well, I suppose you don't always know what you know.'
She had no idea what he was going on about.
You don't always know what you know.
She turned the words over in her mind, thought about the candyfloss, the colourless eyes, the scar face, the tightness in her stomach. She sang to herself while she was thinking, not conscious of what she was singing. âThe Candy Man Can'.
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.
âWill you stop singing that bloody song,' Jim said.
They drove on in silence, circled the roundabout, past the skinheads hanging out at the bus stop, the fairy-light-bedecked bungalow where the tattooed biker lived with his ageing mother, turned into their street. Jim pulled up, hair plastered to the sweat of his forehead, yanked the handbrake on.