“So
how are you feeling, Sarah?”
Becky
was sitting at a table in the window of well-known coffee shop in
Larksborough. She wore a look of
practised patience, but she fiddled with her wrist band – one of those
Christian ones asking ‘Who Wants Jammy Doughnuts’ or something like that. It was a habit which always made Sarah feel
uncomfortable, so she stared out at the street instead. It was raining, thick
clouds making the already brief day seem even shorter. Neon lights declared the time of year,
having just been put up the week before.
It was only the beginning of November, but the Larksborough Retail Association
and Larksborough County Council seemed to conspire to bring the date forward
every year. The sooner the ‘Winter
Festival’ began, the sooner people started spending, or so, Sarah supposed, the
theory went.
“I
mean,” Becky prompted, trying to regain her friend’s attention, “are you
coping?”
Sarah
sighed and looked away from the window.
“I’ve
been better,” she replied honestly.
“Well,
you know you can talk to me, right?”
“Of
course I do.”
“It’s
just that,” Becky fiddled with her wrist band once more and Sarah fought the
urge to look away, “you’ve been really distant the last two weeks and-” she
began to talk quicker, as if she feared she would be misunderstood if she
didn’t get all the words out of her head, “-and I know that that’s kind of
normal given the circumstances but-” the wrist band spun once, twice around her
slender forearm “-I thought you would want to confide in me and I’m just – just
worried about you, Sarah.”
Sarah
sighed again. It was easier just to
exhale and put all her frustration into that cloud of gas than to try to find
the words she wanted to say. She
realised that this time she would have to make the effort.
“I
feel guilty,” she managed.
A
moment of silence passed across the table, cooling their lattes.
“It
wasn’t your fault,” Becky said, “how could it be?”
“It
can’t just be a coincidence that I have an argument with Ellis – the worst
we’ve ever had – and the next day he goes missing.” Sarah scrubbed her hands through her hair and gazed down at the
table. “Did I scare him away? Was I too cruel? I said some pretty horrible things that night. I was just so… so angry that our
relationship was going nowhere and he… he didn’t seem to care.”
“I’m
sure he did care, Sarah, but I’m just as sure that whatever has happened to
Ellis, you can’t be to blame.”
“How?”
Sarah looked up and stared at her friend with a gaze so piercing and direct it
might have been weaponised, “How can
you say that? How do you know?”
“Because
Ellis had more to lose than just you.”
Becky took a deep breath before continuing. “As I said, I’m sure he cared about you, but you have to
understand that you weren’t the only important thing in his life - to think
that, it’s kind of arrogant, sorry.”
Sarah
dropped her gaze again. Her face
flushed.
“He
wouldn’t leave his mother behind, for a start, and what about his brother? Do you remember how inseparable they were
when they first got here?”
A
slight smile twitched at the corners of Sarah’s lips as she remembered her
first meeting with the strange Graves boys and the look in Ellis’ eyes as he
watched her. The memory made the smile
flee as quickly as it came.
“So
why did he leave?” she asked. “Where
did he go?”
“If
we knew that, we wouldn’t be here, would we?
But you can’t blame yourself. We
all do stupid things and, yes, we all have to pay for them at some point too,
but that doesn’t mean that everything that happens is about us and us alone.”
Sarah
sighed again, “You’re right, Becky, of course, but I just don’t know what to
do.”
“Have
you tried praying?”
Sarah
laughed despite herself, apologising quickly when she saw the hurt look on her
friend’s face. “I’m sorry, I didn’t
mean that. I appreciate your prayers, I
really do, but it’s just not me.”
That
was the understatement of the season.
Sarah had been brought up in what could only be described as a strictly
secular and rational household. Her
mother, a Psychology lecturer at the University of Derby, had been very
protective of her with regards to any kind of religious exposure. When she had had to take part in nativity
plays at school she had learnt very quickly that her mother was most proud of
her, not when she got to play the ‘Virgin’ Mary, or sing as an angel, but when
she performed whatever role she was given with as much disdain as was possible
for a child of her age. She was soon
excused from all such activities.
Her
mother would have disapproved very strongly of her friendship with Becky, in
fact, if she had been allowed to know of the girl’s Christian upbringing, but
Sarah liked her because of their mutual love of camping and hill walking and
the times they spent together in the Peak District completing their Duke of
Edinburgh awards. Sarah had told
herself that, really, she had the moral high ground to be so tolerant of other
people’s beliefs. But praying? It really was difficult not to laugh.
Becky
tightened her lips, but said nothing, choosing to take a gulp of her lukewarm
drink instead. A second gulp followed
the first and soon the latte was no more.
As she placed the mug back on the table she said, “I was going to start some
Christmas shopping tonight, do you want to come?”
“I’m
not really in the mood – besides, I’m more of a last minute person.”
“Oh.”
It was Becky’s turn to sigh, although hers was more wistful than frustrated.
“Well, that’s alright, but I better get a move on. The shops are only open for another hour or so. What are you going to do?”
“I
guess I’ll just walk home.”
“In
this weather?” Becky asked, gesturing out the window at the dismal evening
which had been growing steadily darker throughout their conversation and which was now painted glistening
orange-on-black by the rain. It
reminded Sarah painfully of the night she had last seen Ellis, only with cheery
Christmas lights pasted over the top.
“You should probably get a bus, or treat yourself to a taxi, even,”
Becky continued, bringing Sarah back to the present once more.
“Yeah,
probably,” she replied half-heartedly.
“Okay,
well, look after yourself, Sarah,” Becky said, bending down to offer her friend
a hug. Sarah obliged weakly, then pulled
back quickly. “If you want to talk some
more, you know where to find me, if not I’ll check up on you next week, maybe,
and of course I’ll keep praying that they find Ellis.”
“Thanks,”
Sarah replied with as much sincerity as she could muster.
Becky
waved her goodbyes as she wrapped her scarf around her neck and picked up her
umbrella and Sarah watched as she made her way out into the street to face the
glorious English winter. Once Becky was
out of sight she finished her own coffee and stood to leave, fumbling for her
purse and then checking the change inside to see whether or not the joys of
public transport were to be hers for the evening. Signs did not point to yes.
Closing
her eyes she gathered up the strength to move and then pulled on her coat,
flipped up her hood and rushed out into the night.
It was
wild. Rain plummeted from the sky as if
poured out deliberately from some endless celestial cistern, bouncing off the
pavements nearly a foot before joining the puddles and streams which ran where
once there was a cobbled street. Neon
Christmas lights were reflected, refracted, bisected and subtracted by the
movement of the waters. The world was
filled with primary colours and yet still dreary. Being mid-November, the Christmas shopping buzz had only just
begun and few people thought it was worth braving weather like this just to get
the job done early, so the street, still straining desperately to be festive,
was almost deserted save for a few other lost souls dashing between sheltered
doorways, or nearly diving into shops and cafés.
Sarah opened
her umbrella and huddled beneath it as she began to walk as quickly as she
could down the high street. She pulled
her coat up tighter around her neck as the temperature had dropped considerably
in the last few hours. The morning's
weather reports had suggested snow by midnight, but Sarah wasn't
convinced. As a general rule she
expected the weather to behave tangentially to whatever was forecast. She wouldn't go as far as to say she
expected the opposite - that would be far too predictable for British weather -
but she knew it wouldn't quite behave the way the Met Office hoped.
She had barely
walked five metres before her shoes were drenched through and her toes began to
feel the icy chill of the night soaking into them. The only response was to try to walk quicker, but she was
stumbling over her heels already. Why
did I think that these would be a good idea to wear today, she wondered,
resisting the urge to swear at herself.
She didn't live very far from the town centre, less
than a mile and a half, in fact, but it was all downhill as the main shopping
area and all the municipal buildings were at the top of Larch Hill, where the
ruined castle which gave the ancient town its name also stood, so she was
accompanied on her journey by sluicing streams of rainwater.
The rain only
seemed to get heavier and about a third of the way down the hill, near where
Ellis' family lived, Sarah decided she would be better to try and find some
shelter and see if she could wait it out.
She was already drenched, but she just couldn't bear another twenty
minutes of pounding rain without some kind of break. A small churchyard broke the monotony of the terraced houses and
the church itself had all its lights on making it look warm and inviting. She hurried across the street, doing her
best to avoid being swept away and ran beneath the shadows of two great
gargoyle statues into the shelter of the vestibule.
Sarah stood
there for a moment, just dripping, feeling miserable, as she stared out into
the night she had temporarily escaped.
It looked like the world was trying to wash itself away. She flicked water off her umbrella and
folded it up, took off her jacket, despite the cold, to see if she could wring
any water from it and then she started on her hair. The umbrella had clearly done a miserable job. Once she had succeeded in making a very
large puddle around her feet, and felt no less wet, she turned her gaze back to
the drowning night and let her mind wander.
It didn’t have
far to go to find something to latch on to.
Being in Ellis’ neighbourhood naturally led to thoughts of Ellis and his
family. When it had become clear that
Ellis wasn’t answering her texts the day after he had disappeared she had paid
them a visit. It had been exceptionally
brief. Ellis’ mother was completely
distraught, to the point where she was no longer capable of forming complete,
coherent sentences and Ellis’ brother, Dylan, had just remained standing behind
her, glowering in almost statue-like silence.
Sarah had made hurried apologies and then left; clear in her own mind,
despite any direct confirmation, that Ellis had gone missing.
She had tried
visiting once again since, but there had been no answer, only some eerie
flickering lights from the living room suggesting a TV left on. She had left pretty quickly after that visit
as well. Something about the place just
hadn’t seemed right and it had felt - though she could account for no reason
why this should be the case - it had felt like she was being watched. She had left feeling particularly paranoid,
in fact, and as she hurried away from Ellis’ cul-de-sac, it had seemed to her
almost as if there were shadows moving just out of sight, following her. She hadn’t gone back since. The church was the closest she had come in
over a week.
The rain began
to die down and for the first time she noticed that there was faint music
coming from within the sanctuary. It
sounded like a CD recording of ‘In the Bleak Mid-Winter’, one of the few carols
she could remember from her pre-nativity-ban days. She could just make out some of the words - …Heaven cannot hold him, nor earth
sustain… - but her familiarity with the carol wasn’t all that great and she
soon lost track of them.
As she stood
there, straining to hear, she spotted a notice-board on one of the walls of the
vestibule advertising service times and outreach events on brightly coloured
pieces of paper. She walked over to it
and scanned the various notices, desperate for something to do whilst the rain
trailed off. One boldly declared on an
A5 piece of fuchsia paper that ‘Christmas comes early at St. Stephens’. There was an explanation beneath which read,
‘Christmas on the High Street seems to come earlier every year, so at St.
Stephens we thought we’d bring ours forward too! Pop in after your Christmas shopping from the 15th
November for mince pies, carols and an opportunity to learn what it’s REALLY
all about.’ She glanced over at the
heavy door to the sanctuary and at the glow seeping out where it had been left
slightly ajar and wondered if it would be worth having a look around whilst she
dried off, but the impulse quickly left her - she didn’t feel ready to step any
further into a church, and, really, what would her mother think? - and
instead she turned back to the darkness.
It had gone
silent. The rain had stopped and there
was even a hint that the sky was starting to clear. She could see the faint glow of the moon behind some clouds to
the south. Taking a deep breath she prepared
herself to head back out into the night, rearranging her coat and tidying her
hair, when suddenly she heard a scurrying, scraping sound on the roof of the
vestibule. She froze, wondering what
might have made such a noise and imagining all the terrible, impossible
possibilities. She stood there for a
couple of minutes, feeling the time drag on beyond any mere scientific
measurement of the concept, until she realised she was behaving like a child
who still believed in monsters under the bed.
I don’t have time for this, she thought, though she was in no
great hurry to do anything once she got home, and took another step towards the
door.
It was then
that the stone face of one of the huge gargoyles dropped down from above the
door, its beak-like face sculpted into a cruel and hungry expression, its eyes
orbs of hellfire. Sarah did the only
rational thing she could do. She
screamed.
AUTHOR COMMENTARY: It was difficult to come up with a suitably Christmassy scenario for this story, especially given the relatively short notice I gave myself, however I find the bleak, rainy November atmosphere of this actually works quite well with the contrast of Christmas lights and the Christmas story to come. I think it's an experience many of us can relate to - the winter blues seeming to jar with the cheery decorations which have, of course, appeared far too early.
ReplyDeleteI've just read the first bit of this blog and think it's very good. You are an excellent writer who deserves recognition. I love it.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I'm glad you enjoyed it. Feel free to read more and tell you friends! 😅
Delete