It took less than a minute for the Mini to reach the A9. Hunter said that she could not see any more people, even though sheâd avoided two crashed and abandoned cars. Hunter was driving slowly. MacGregor guessed that they were doing less than twenty miles per hour. He wasnât worried. He felt safe inside the car. And it was warm. He felt that he would fall asleep.
âIâm going to take it easy,â Hunter interrupted his daydreams. âJust in case there are problems on the road. I want to see them before we run into them. Is that, okay?â
âThatâs cool. Iâm quite happy here.â
âOkay, so Tain here we come.â
âHere we come, for what itâs worth.â
âI heard that you were with your friend Fraser in the Army. Where were you stationed?â
âBelfast, mostly, and a few months in Portadown. Some other wee places in Northern Ireland.â
âWere you in the Army long?â
âNo. Army was a long, long time ago for me now. I should never have joined up. I didnât belong there. Fraser didnât either, but not for the same reason. I only joined up because I thought Jason would have been proud of me. I never really figured out why Fraser joined up.â
âWhoâs Jason?â
âJason was my oldest brother. He was killed in a motorcycle accident when I was thirteen years old. I really looked up to him. For a long time his death really screwed me up.â
It had been some time since MacGregor had thought about his brother. He almost felt guilty, but then he remembered what Carol Anne had said to him a long time ago.
Youâve already grieved for him. You joined the Army so heâd be proud of you. You honor his memory in everything you do. Itâs alright to live your life. Thatâs what he would have wanted. He loved you just like you loved him.
He pictured her now in the window of his mind. The bright, caring eyes filled with a love and hope that had slowly turned into confusion and anger. He closed his eyes, as if doing so might squeeze her image from his brain. But it was burned there.
âAh fuck,â MacGregor whispered.
âWhat?â Hunter said. âWhat, âMemories,â MacGregor muttered.
He missed Jason, but he missed Carol Anne more. For a long time heâd avoided thinking about her altogether, just like heâd avoided thinking about his brother before heâd met Carol Anne. Sheâd gently coaxed the tears and the pain out of him and sheâd held him when heâd cried. Carol Anne had healed a heart that had been broken even before it had fully formed. Heâd fallen in love with her. The love between them had soared and swelled like an out of control fire. And heâd pissed all over it. Sheâd healed his heart and heâd destroyed hers.
âYou must have loved your brother very much.â
âI did,â he said, âWhen I was a kid growing up, I was his shadow. I annoyed him so much but I know he enjoyed having me attached to him. Wherever he went, Iâd go too. When he died⦠I didnât know what to do.â
âGrieving is difficult.â
MacGregor barely registered Hunterâs words. He was lost in thought, in memory.
âI was fifteen years old when the recruitment guys came to school. It had been two years since Jason was killed. Iâd lost my best friend and my role model. Iâd been living in a daze for all that time, I suppose. Iâd fucked up all my exams, purposefully failing a lot of them. I donât even know why. School, friends, life and everything. All of it just flew past me. I was just drifting through, getting by from day to day.â
âYou took his death really badly? Did you ever see a grievance counsellor? What about your parents? Didnât they⦠did they try to help?â
MacGregor laughed softly, shaking his head.
âIâm sorry. We just didnât do that kind of thing,â he said. âMy dad didnât even talk about it. In fact, I canât remember talking to my father about Jason. Is that strange? We were all just angry and sad and confused. And we were all in own little bubbles, suffering alone.â
âAll families are different,â Hunter offered. âEveryone has their own baggage, their own way of handling things. Your father must have found it extremely difficult.â
There was something in the tone of her voice. He noticed it, but was too lost in his own thoughts.
âYes, Jason was the oldest. He was twenty one years old when he died. At the time I didnât think about how it must have affected my parents. I blamed dad. He and Jason were always fighting. My dad was a bully. He had a quick temper and was quick to use his hands on all of us kids. Jason was always getting between my dad and the rest of us. At least, once he was old enough to stand up to dad. I first remember him getting between dad and my sister when he was about fourteen or fifteen. For some reason, Avaline seemed to wind dad up more than any of us. I guess she stood up to him more, or tried to. Geoff and I used to just take it, mostly.â
âThatâs terrible. But your brother must have loved you all very much to protect you.â
âI idolized him. Jason was popular, brave, kind and gentle. And he was smart. I mean, properly smart. I just wanted to be like him. He was working towards joining the air force, but I couldnât even contemplate that. So I went with theâ¦â
âHold on,â Hunter said. âWait a minute.â
âWhat is it?â
The car was slowing down. MacGregor could hear the voice ahead.
âAnother shouter?â
âYes,â Hunter said. âIâll wind the window down.â
The car was still moving forward, but only slightly. There was a strained hum as the window lowered itself on its worn mechanism.
âShit, heâs coming closer!â
âThat was wrong,â the voice was sincere and steady. âIt was the wrong thing. Thatâ¦
was wrong.â
Hunter reversed the car rapidly, surprising MacGregor.
âSorry, I got too close to him. Weâve got some distance now.â
âHe said something about it being the wrong thingâ¦â
âHeâs got some clothes on, too, which is a bonus.â
âAlways,â MacGregor said. âWhatâs he wearing?â
âIâm not sure. Something like a⦠workmanâs outfit. You know those one piece suits. A boiler suit, I think. Itâs a strange color, too, like a sort of pinkish grey. Like salmon colored. A really sick salmon.â
âShoes?â
âHmnn, letâs see,â Hunter moved the car closer. Again, MacGregor heard the stranger repeat his curious assortment of words.
âIt was the wrong thing,â he spoke slowly and solemnly.
âWhat was?â Hunter shouted back. âWho are you?â
âThe wrong thing,â was the response. MacGregor hadnât expected anything else.
âTheyâre like broken records,â MacGregor suggested. âSaying the same thing over and over.â
âShoes.â
âWhat kind?â
âReally strange shoes.â
âAre we going to go out and talk to him?â MacGregor asked.
âAbout what?
I donât even know what that means.â
âIt the wrong thing!â
âShit, he heard me. I got him excited,â Hunter whispered. âHold on, weâre getting out of here.â
MacGregor didnât want to argue. The whole situation was completely unnerving, but the zombie-esque individuals scared him. Hunter had already been forced to kill one of them.
âAlright.â
They left the man in the boiler-suit man. The drive to Tain was otherwise uneventful. MacGregor tried the walkie-talkie several times, but there was no response. Likewise, the car radio failed to lock on to any kind of radio signal. There were no more people, naked or otherwise, wandering around. The only animals Hunter saw, she said, were dead sheep and the remains of a few unfortunate horses. There were, in total, eight dead bodies lying on or around the A9. Hunter suspected that the people had left their cars when the engines had stopped working, only to die when the SODâs secondary effect had spread outwards.
Tain, in itself, was unremarkable. MacGregor had never been this far north before, but Hunter had shared a drink here with Braverman and Simard before travelling to the Southern Markerâs original position about thirty miles north of where it had moved to.
âThis is Tain,â Hunter said. âThere isnât much to it. And now, thereâs even less. I think everyoneâs dead.â
âSo what now? Glasgow?â
âHow about a drink?â Hunter suggested. âI could really use one.â
âWhat about Glasgow?â
âWeâll get there,â she said. âI donât think thereâs any need to rush.â
Hunter kept the Heckler and Koch with her as she exited the Mini. She led MacGregor up three low stone steps to the front entrance of a hotel. The door was locked, but there were glass panes on each side of the door. Hunter asked MacGregor to stand back and then she used the submachine gunâs metal stock to break open the thick glass. It gave on the third strike, breaking into heavy pieces that fell around MacGregorâs feet. Hunter guided him round the glass as they entered the building. The air smelled damp and musty, but there wasnât the foulness of death that MacGregor had expected. Taking his elbow, Hunter eased him across the reception area towards the bar.
âI expected bodies,â MacGregor said.
âMe too,â Hunter replied. âBut they were refurbishing and most of the rooms look like they werenât in use. Perhaps the place wasnât open when it happened.â
âThereâs nobody here at all?â
âNot that I can see. But this is the bar. Take a seat and Iâll get you a drink. Bottled beer? Spirits?â
He reached behind himself and found the chair sheâd led him to. It was a wooden chair with padding and some kind of cloth covering.
âBeerâs fine,â he said.
âWonât be cold,â she said.
âFeels cold enough in here, anyway. Still think itâs springtime?â
âYes, definitely. Late April or May. Itâs still cold, though. American beer? German? Alcohol free?â
âNow I know youâre joking me,â MacGregor laughed. âAnything but the alcohol free beer.â
He listened to the sound of glasses clinking. A cork being pulled.
âRed wine?â
âWhite.â
âNot a fan,â he said.
âThis is Grolsch,â she said, âwill it do?â
âOh yes,â MacGregor said, âGrolsch will do nicely.â
It had been a long time since heâd enjoyed a Grolsch, but he hadnât forgotten how to open the unique swing bottle top. The beer was even colder than he had expected.
âDo you know wine?â
âI like Chardonnay, Sauvignon blanc,â Hunterâs voice was indifferent. âPerhaps a French beer if Iâm at a barbeque. Those little bottles of beer, you know?â
âI know them,â MacGregor took a long drink from the cold bottle. âThatâs good.â
âSo tell me how long you were in the Army for?â
âLong enough to know it wasnât for me. Basic training was six weeks of boot polishing, bed making and trying to avoid getting to know anyone else in the squad. Of course, Fraser wouldnât have any of that. He thought I was just one of those people who think theyâre too good to get along with anyone else. You know the type? It doesnât matter, but Fraser just wouldnât quit. During basic he was always ragging on me and provoking me. Trying to wind me up like it was going out of fashion. Eventually I lost my temper and just let him have it. And then, for the first time in about ten years, I was rolling about on the floor of the barracks and fighting someone.â
He laughed out loud and shook his head to clear it. But he kept grinning broadly, unable to shake the heady emotions that were attached to the memory. Grappling with the pushy Northerner had been somehow cathartic. Theyâd become friends thereafter. The only friend MacGregor would ever really have since the death of his brother.
âYou served together in Northern Ireland?â
âYes. After training we were stationed there. But I was already sick of it by then. Being told what to do. Being shouted at. It wasnât for me. I think I knew that in the first week of basic training. I really should have quit when I had the chance, but I didnât want to go home. I didnât feel that I could.
âWe lost a rifle during an exercise one weekend. Thatâs when the shit really hit the fan. We were sent to the military prison. It wasnât as bad as it sounds. But a whole bunch of people interviewed me about my attitude. My home life came up. My brother. I canât remember exactly what they were getting at. I just remember trying to shut it all out.â
He took another long drink. He was emptying the bottle quickly. He wondered if Hunter was drinking with him.
âAre you drinking?â he asked. âI canât hear the glass.â
âIâm drinking,â she said softly. âListen.â
There was a quiet thud of glass against wood.
âIâm pacing myself,â she said.
âOkay. I just feel weird about drinking if youâre not drinking.â
âIâm not guzzling it down, John, but Iâm having a drink. Iâll probably have about half this bottle. Now, is that enough for you?â
Her tone was irritable, he thought. But there was something else he couldnât identify.
âSorry,â he repeated.
âYou were thrown out of the Army?â
âNot in so many words,â MacGregor said. âAfter we left the prison we were separated. Both of us sent to different places. I stayed in Northern Ireland. Fraser was sent to West Germany. And that was about it for me. I knew I was going to be getting out of it. So I just kept my head down and went through the motions. And then I met Carol Anne.â
He made a face, almost growling to himself. He regretted mentioning her name, realizing immediately now that heâd have to talk about her. He also realized that he wanted to talk about Carol Anne.
âShit,â he said, âI mentioned Carol Anne.â
âI saw you make a face,â Hunter spoke softly. âSheâs obviously someone very special.â
MacGregor nodded. He finished the beer. Hunter left to get another without asking if he wanted one. She opened the second Grolsch for him, disappointing the tiny part of him that liked the old familiar feeling of popping the unique stopper on the bottle.
âIt was a little place called Craigavon not far from the barracks at Portadown. It was the third of July. There was a mini-Twelfth and, as usual, both sides were kicking off.â
âThe mini-Twelfth is like a smaller version of the big Orange marches on the twelfth of July. Is that right?â
âSomething like that. The Orangemen go for a march through the town. Put up banners, sing songs and all that. The Catholics donât like it so they come out, too. And weâre in the middle, making sure both sides donât tear each other apart.â
âSo which side was Carol Anne on?â
âNeither,â MacGregor protested. âShe wouldnât have anything to do with any of that old bollocks. She was a protestant, sure, but her dad had worked with a private security company and had lost a hand.â
âHe lost a hand? How did that happen?â
âA long time ago. He worked with sheet metal when he was younger. Got too close to one of the machines, he said. Anyway, I remember seeing the spare rubber hands poking out of this wicker umbrella stand so I asked what they were for. Stupid, I know, but it didnât occur to me they were prosthetics. Her father had a good enough sense of humor about it.â
âAbout what?â
âAbout me not realizing that he was missing an arm! I hadnât noticed that his left hand was artificial until I saw the spares poking out of the rack with the umbrellas and his cane,â he laughed drily. âBut Hector was a good sport.â
âHow did you meet Carol Anne?â
âOh, sorry. Yes, how did I meet her. Well, I was in full uniform coming out the back of the pig. Sorry, the pig is like a light armored vehicle. Think of something like a big land rover with heavy metal armor all round it. A big square box of a beast.â
âPig?â
âHumber Pig,â MacGregor shrugged. âA really old post World War II armored personnel carrier. Anyway, four of us are piling out of the pig in riot gear. Helmets, plastic shields and batons. And it was a really hot July. The mini twelfth had started up and the usual trouble was starting up on Craigavon Bridge. The Orangemen were trying to get across and, of course, the Catholics had come to confront them. The RUC were right in the middle, but they needed back-up and there we were.â
âI canât remember being afraid, but I would have been now. Back then, I didnât seem to have any fear. It was almost like I was living inside a shell of myself, peeking out, like my whole body was the armored vehicle and I was riding deep inside it, protected from everything. So I wasnât scared even when the crowd started to swarm around the pig. And when they started to rock us back and forward, it was like something that was happening to someone else.â
âIt sounds quite terrifying.â
âIt was. I just didnât really register it. Not really. But when the back door opened and we were told to get out, I felt afraid then. The noise was incredible. Shouting, screaming, swearing. Pushing and shoving. The odd fist punching against the riot shield. All I could think of was that a petrol bomb was going to hit us. That I was going to burn alive.â
âWere there any petrol bombs?â
âI didnât see any, but it was always a possibility. The RUC had tried to maintain a line, but obviously it had gotten out of hand. It was the Orangemen, I think, whoâd broken through. And not the ones in jeans and T-shirts, either. The real instigators were the ones in black suits and bowler hats. They carried these long black umbrellas that theyâd use as pretty effective striking and stabbing weapons. I never understood why we didnât ban them from carrying those fucking things.â
âDanger, lethal umbrella,â Hunter commented. âSorry.â
âItâs okay,â he smiled. âYes, it is a bit ridiculous. But those guys were the ones that started it all off. I had quite a few blows on the helmet from the steel tip of those damned umbrellas.â
MacGregor took another long drink from his bottle. He was feeling the beerâs influence just a little too much. He realized that he hadnât had enough to eat. He made a mental note to remind himself to ask Hunter for some food once heâd done with his story.
âI had my helmet knocked off,â MacGregor said. âI canât remember how. Iâd lost my shield by then and was just holding onto my baton for dear life. More than anything else, I was worried that if I let it go someone else would batter me with it. I didnât think to hit back at the crowd. After all, it wasnât like I was under any kind of specific attack. It literally felt like weâd opened the door of the armored vehicle into a wave of snarling faces, flying fists and shoving bodies.â
âThatâs terrifying. But you werenât scared?â
âYes,â MacGregor said, âI was. I was almost shi⦠Well, I was pretty scared. In all honesty, I felt almost⦠hysterical with it.â
âWhat about your commanding officer?â
âNowhere to be seen. His vehicle never made it there. By then the road weâd gone through had been blocked by an overturned milk float. The crowd was growing by the minute. The Royal Ulster Constabulary had about thirty guys there, but theyâd fallen back to their Land Rovers. The barrier on the bridge was intact, but only because the RUC Land Rovers were all jammed together with about twelve officers still outside, filling the gaps between the vehicles.â
âBut you were the only soldiers?â
âThatâs right. Eight of us. Six in the back and two up front. The ones up front got out quick. They made it to the RUC line and were safe there. The others took a bit of a beating. I was the lucky one. Carol Anne was sitting on the wall along with two of her friends. They were sitting eating ice-cream, like they were watching a show. I canât remember how, but I fought my way through the umbrellas and bowler hats and all the orange sashes until I was running right up to those girls and shouting at them to help me. I remember seeing Carol Anneâs face for the first time. Her friends were running in different directions, but she just sat there holding onto her ice-cream.
âThe first thing I noticed were her eyes. The color, yes, but there was something in the set of them that I just⦠well, I just kind of fell into. Thatâs really corny, isnât it?â
âNo. What do you mean, though, about the set of the eyes?â
âThe way they were looking at me. They were kind of⦠dreamy. Oh shit, now that does sound fucking lame.â
Hunter was laughing.
âYes, that does sound lame. She had dreamy eyes. Excellent. But what does even mean?â
âCanât believe weâre laughing about shit in the middle of the fucking end of days!â MacGregor said. âI donât know how to describe it, really. She had those eyes that looked right into you, you know? Like she was seeing everything there was of me without even trying. Like I didnât have to say a word to her. She could tell I was terrified. And I mean like new-born baby terrified. I felt like it was the first time Iâd ever been afraid. And next thing you know, Iâm running towards her.â
âOh wow, now that is romantic and intense. Iâm guessing that you ran right into her arms and she led you to safety. Oh, Iâm sorry. Iâm ruining your story.â
âItâs alright,â MacGregor said, âbut thatâs what happened. She ran away from me, back across the bridge.â
âOh shit, what did you do?â
âI chased after her. I donât know why. And I was shouting after her to stop. Like, really screaming at her. Thereâs me in my boots and fatigues, chasing this poor civilian over the bridge and down a side street. And about a dozen people chasing after me, too. She went down one lane and crossed over into another. By then, Iâd lost about all the people chasing . But Carol Anne couldnât outrun me. I was always a good runner back then. Not fast, exactly, but I could just keep on running all day long. So I caught up with her and cornered her in this sort of drying green place. She was out of breath. I was a bit too, but not too much.
âWhy are you chasing me?â she asked.
âI can remember that moment really vividly, like it was yesterday,â MacGregor said. âI didnât know what to tell her. I didnât know why Iâd chased her down the alley. I was just running and it seemed as good a place to run to as any.â
He stopped talking, took a long drink from the bottle and started again.
âThatâs not true. I was going to run anyway, but there was something about her. Something kind, I think. I was scared. I thought sheâd help. Itâs not very masculine, maybe, butâ¦â
âYou were getting chased by a gang of lunatics, John. I donât think that would be the best time to assert your masculinity.â
âOkay, well there she was with her back up against the concrete wall with all this laundry flapping about in the wind right in front of her. I could see that she was frightened. I knew Iâd scared her. And that was what brought me back to Earth. I canât explain it. My fear just disappeared. Just like that. And I felt sorry that Iâd frightened her.â
âAnd then?â
âI told her I was sorry. I told her that Iâd never been scared like that before. I also told her that I thought she had the most beautiful eyes Iâd ever seen. And Iâd never used that word before, when speaking to a girl I mean. Beautiful.â
âWhy not?â
âI never spoke to many girls,â MacGregor admitted. âAnd when I did I just didnât know what the hell to say. I wasnât the most confident in my early teens. I had acne like rhubarb and custard just about as soon as I started to get my first pubic hair. It was just disgusting. And I felt disgusting. So I didnât have much confidence with girls. Sure, there were girls at school I liked. But I didnât have the confidence to speak to them.â
âSo you fell into Carol Anneâs eyes?â
MacGregor laughed inside himself. He nodded slowly.
âAye, I fell into her eyes. Terrified the hell out of her, though. She just stood there panting, out of breath. And I just stared into her eyes. I remember just staring and staring. And it was like she just melted. Or we both melted. Like we both melted together. I saw her expression change. I watched her fear fading, becoming something else. Compassion, I think. Maybe even sadness. I donât know. Then she was reaching out to me. Her right hand at the end of a long, slender wrist. She had a charm bracelet on. Dark red painted fingernails to match the rubys on the bracelet. Her hand was so warm. So soft. Her palm and her wrist were red from the running. I didnât take her hand right away. I just stood there breathing hard, staring at it.â
He lit another cigarette. Hunter asked for one and he handed it over. He lit a second one for himself. His hands were shaking. He didnât know why.
âThen I heard the shouting. Far away, but not far enough. I realized that they were looking for me. The Orangemen, Loyalists, Catholics. I donât know who the hell was chasing us. It didnât matter. I looked into her eyes again and I saw she was questioning herself. She was confused. Then her eyes got all kind of angry and se⦠and just really kind of cute.â
âSexy?â
MacGregor felt himself redden.
âYeah, sexy,â MacGregor smiled, enjoying the cigarette. âYep, she looked really sexy when she was angry. Anyway, I took her hand and she told me that we needed to get away fast. I wasnât going to argue. So I took her hand and we ran away together. I didnât know where she was taking me. I didnât care. But you know the funny thing? I just felt like I was floating, like in a dream, you know? It even occurred to me that she might even be about to lead me right back to the mob. I couldnât have cared less. I would have welcomed it then, somehow. I was feeling totally upside down inside my head. Iâd have followed her anywhere.â
âWhatâs that?â Hunter asked.
âWhat do youâ¦â
âShh, listen.â
MacGregor stopped talking. He strained his ears to hear what Hunter was referring to. Then he heard it. A scuffling sound, like a dog trying to open a door.
âWhatâs that?â MacGregor whispered.
âShhâ¦â
The sound was coming from somewhere not too far away. Inside the building, if not the bar itself. MacGregor had no idea how large the room was, but he guessed that this bar was larger than the Albert bar in Glasgow.
âA dog?â MacGregor whispered. âThatâs a dog. Those areâ¦â
âShhh! John, He shut up once and for all. He heard the familiar sound of the submachine gun being lifted up, the metallic clicks as Hunter checked the safety catch and prepared the weapon for firing. He heard the scratches now, louder. He dropped his cigarette to the carpet, twisting the sole of his boot on it to extinguish the last embers.
âThereâs someone outside,â Hunter spoke softly. âThereâs a shadow at the door. Someoneâs trying to get in.â
âShit, I hope they have some fucking clothes on,â MacGregor said.
The scratching at the door continued. MacGregor wondered why it was even closed. And the sound was in the wrong place. He remembered entering the bar from the other side of the room. He realized there was a second door. A side door, presumably.
âIs the door locked?â
âI donât know,â Hunter said.
âWho the fuck is it?â MacGregor whispered.
âIâm going to find out,â Hunter said. âWait here.â
âFuck, no. Iâm coming with you.â
âOkay, stay behind me.â
He followed Hunter as she left the table. The scratching continued. There were words now, too. He didnât know what they were, but he could tell that the figure outside was speaking. Hunter moved quietly towards the door and he went with her. The scratching continued. Soon, he could make out the odd word or two. Like the other people theyâd encountered, it seemed that this stranger was also speaking gibberish.
âWhatâs he saying?â
âSomething about people,â Hunter whispered back. âTwo people, or something like that. Should I open the door?â
âHe knows weâre in here.â
âDoes he?â
MacGregor thought about it. The scratching seemed insistent. Whoever was out there wanted to get in.
âHe wants in.â
âOkay. So do we let him scratch away or let him in?â Hunter mused. âHold on a minute. Iâm going to listen at the door.â
âShit, be careful.â
Hunter shuffled in to position at the door.
âHeâs saying something about two people,â Hunter said. âCome and listen. I donât think he can see us through the glass.â
MacGregor felt her pull at him. He allowed himself to be moved gently towards the door, even though the scratching and clawing made his skin crawl.
âYou and ,â the stranger spoke softly. âTwo people. Someone. Two of you. Anotherâ.
âAnother broken record,â MacGregor whispered.
âYou know, thatâs exactly what theyâre like,â Hunter said. âItâs interesting, isnât it?â
âI wouldnât have used that word, exactly,â MacGregor said. âI donât think we should open the door. I donât see the point.â
âYouâre right. But I donât want to sit in here listening to him scratching at the door. Thereâs a small function room next door. Weâll move there. Iâll try to find us something to eat.â
âOkay. That sounds good.â
MacGregor continued to think about Carol Anne. Her eyes, her smile and the touch of her hand. The square face. Her mouth. Soft lips, often slightly parted, always inviting. Hunter held his hand now as they moved through to the function room. He carried his almost empty beer bottle with him and another in each deep pocket of the jacket. Hunter closed the door behind them. She tried the light switch a few times and cursed when, of course, it didnât work.
âItâs a little bit dark in here,â she said. âIâll need to open the curtains here. Take a seat here for a minute.â
He did as he was asked. He listened to her fumbling with the stuck curtains. Her hand had felt warm and good as sheâd guided him into the room. He found himself wondering why she hadnât used his elbow, as sheâd done before. But her touch had felt good.
âWhat can I do to help?â he asked, already knowing the answer.
âNothing,â she said. âJust relax. Iâve managed to get some light in. But itâs getting later than I thought. It looks like the lightâs actually beginning to fade.â
âOh wow, I thought we had way more time than that. Should we have just gone to Glasgow then instead of faffing about here?â
She returned to the table. He heard her thump the bottle of wine down.
âI donât know whatâs waiting for us there,â she said, somewhat stoically. âAt least weâre safe here for now. This is a hotel, so there will be rooms we can spend the night in. There will be food here somewhere, too. Stuff we can eat besides the army rations. How are you doing for food? Hungry?â
âI could eat,â MacGregor shrugged. âEmbarrassingly, I need to go to the bathroom first.â
âOh,â Hunter sounded taken aback. âUmm, number one orâ¦â
âPee pees,â MacGregor said.
There was a long second of silence. Then she started to laugh. It started as a stifled, choking sound. Almost like she was starting to cry. Then the laughter exploded out of both of them, unstoppable and infectious.