The light was beginning to fade. Hunter retrieved the rucksack from the Mini and locked it up. There was no sign of the scratching stranger. Hunter didnât look too long for him. She re-entered the hotel and barricaded the main door with a few chairs and a desk. She spent a few minutes searching for food, returning from a deserted kitchen with a few tins of beans and some dry crackers. She also recovered a handful of Cokes and a six pack of bottled water along with some chocolate that was still in the vending machine. MacGregor waited as Hunter prepared another of the self-heating ration packs. This time it was Chicken Curry, or smelled something like that.
âThese arenât that bad,â Hunter commented.
âThey got better, I suppose,â MacGregor replied. âSo whatâs the light like outside now?â
âGetting dark.â
âStill think its springtime?â
âApril,â Hunter nodded. âThat gorse is beginning to flower. That happens in spring, I think.â
âStill feels a bit cold,â MacGregor observed. âSo maybe youâre right.â
âSo do you think we should spend the night here?â
âYes Thereâs not all that much of a hurry to get to Glasgow, do you agree?â
MacGregor nodded soberly. It was the first time Hunter had voiced the suspicion that he knew they both shared.
âI hope weâre wrong,â MacGregor said, finally, âbut if we are spending the night here, Iâm going to need a few more beers.â
âIâll bring back some more. Grolsch?â
âOh, yes.â
She left him alone again. He continued to eat the hot meal, nibbling on the salty crackers that tasted like Tuc biscuits but were some cheaper imitation. Hunter returned clinking and heavy-footed. She closed the function room door behind her and thumped the bottles down on the bar.
âIâll need a torch next time I go out of here,â she stated, âit is getting darker. Thereâs a storm coming, but Iâm sure the sun is going down.â
âAre you eating? Youâve got to eat something.â
âIâm eating. Iâm very good at looking after myself, John.â
âAlright,â MacGregor shrugged.
He wanted to ask about her partner, her home in Glasgow. But he realized that all conversations led in one direction. Her partner was dead. Everyone was dead.
âI donât think heâs still alive,â she said suddenly, almost reading his thoughts. âI have a feeling this is . Whatever the SOD did, it spread much further than just this little town. Otherwise there would be radio stations. There would be people somewhere.â
MacGregor tried to think of a counter argument, some way to bend reality so that her partner could still be alive. But then Hunter was talking again.
âWeâre not really a couple anymore. We havenât been for a long time. Weâre just two people sharing a mortgage, seeing each other at the end of the day. Sometimes. Sometimes we donât see each other at all. It sounds sad, but itâs been this way for a long time. Since we lost the baby. Since I lost the baby, which I suppose is more accurate.â
âOh shit, Iâm so sorry,â MacGregor said reflexively. âI didnât know.â
âHow could you know,â she said almost cruelly. âIt was a long time ago. Sorry, I donât mean it like that. The babyâs name was going to be Ewan. But he was never born.â
MacGregor hesitated before speaking.
âWhat happened?â
âIt was a plane crash. I had fourteen hours flight time under my belt. Somehow, I crashed the Cessna,â Hunter said, unaffected by her own words. âI donât remember even getting into the aircraft. The instructor told me that I didnât maintain airspeed. He thought I was going to correct it, but apparently I hadnât noticed. He took control, but it was too late. I woke up in hospital and they told me that my baby was dead.â
âIâm really sorry,â MacGregor said. âHow⦠how long had you been pregnant for? I mean, when was the baby due?â
âFive months,â Hunter replied. âThey delivered him by C-section, but he didnât live. He didnât take his first breath, Hamish told me. What a strange thing to tell me, I thought. But thatâs what he said.â
Hunter stopped talking. MacGregor waited. He was sure there was more she was going to say, but there wasnât.
âIâm sorry,â he repeated. âThat must have been so difficult.â
âYes, it was.â
She was still drinking the wine. MacGregor thought that sheâd started a second bottle, but he couldnât be sure. She lifted the glass and took a long pull from it.
âNothing was ever the same between Hamish and I after that.â Hunter sighed loudly. âWhatever weâd had between us just faded away.â
âBut youâre still married?â
âWe were married. But weâre still together. Still living under the same roof, that is.â
Again, he waited for Hunter to say more. It soon became evident that she wasnât going to. He listened to her eat for a few seconds. She drank from the heavy glass of wine, emptying it quickly. She refilled it. He emptied his second bottle of Grolsch. The window rattled. MacGregor could hear rain pattering against it.
âBlack clouds,â Hunter commented. âItâs getting dark outside. Itâs not as late as I thought.â
MacGregor nodded only. He wondered if Hunter was watching him.
âHow much light is there?â
âThe roomâs fairly well lit. The weatherâs turning bad, but it feels like it might only be six or seven oâclock, perhaps earlier than that. We need to find a watch.â
MacGregor was about to ask if she had one, but it was a stupid question. Still, it seemed strange that she didnât.
âDonât you have a watch?â
âNo, John. I havenât worn one for a long time.â
He laughed.
âHow do you know when youâre supposed to be somewhere?â
âI set alarms on my iPhone. If I need to know the time, I look at my phone screen.â
âFair enough,â MacGregor thought her tone seemed defensive. He decided to leave the subject.
âSo weâre holed-up for the night. In this room, or do we look for something with some beds?â
âDefinitely beds,â Hunter said. âThatâs the second reason Iâm not keen on pushing on this evening. My back is killing me from last night. Isnât yours?â
Sleeping next to Hunter had been uncomfortable. It had been cramped inside the crumpled mess of a tent. MacGregorâs neck was still stiff and his old shoulder injury was beginning to play up. Heâd ignored all of that during the night. It had been easy to do so. Being close to another warm body had felt so good that none of the aches and pains had registered.
âIâm sore,â MacGregor admitted. âItâll be good to get some proper sleep. Do you want to sort out the rooms now? Before it gets too dark?â
âIâve a feeling nobody else is here,â Hunter said. âBut youâre right. I should go and check out the rooms.â
He heard her get up.
âHey,â he said quickly, âcan I come, too?â
She kept walking. For a moment he thought she was going to leave the room without answering. Finally, she turned round briskly. Her hands slapped down by her sides.
âItâll be quicker if I do it alone,â Hunter said sharply.
âI want to come,â MacGregor said. âJust donât let me walk into anything.â
âAlright.â
âAre you taking the gun?â
âNo.â
âTake the gun,â MacGregor said, âTake the pistol at least.â
âI donât know how to use that. Iâll take the machine gun.â
He hadnât finished eating, but neither had Hunter. Her tone did not suggest that he should argue with her, but he didnât know why she was upset. She was moving out of the door before he got there.
âJesus, youâre leaving me behind,â his voice was nervously irritable. âWait up, Hunter.â
âItâs getting dark,â she said. âHere, take my arm. Or do you want me to take your arm?â
âIâll take your arm,â MacGregor said. âWhatâs wrong? Did I say something to upset you?â
âWhat would you have said?â Hunter grabbed his hand and placed it only his elbow. âCome on. Iâve got a bad feeling about the upstairs. I want to have a quick look so I can see for sure.â
âSee what?â
She didnât say anything else. He found himself practically dragged across the thick carpet.
âStairs,â she said, coldly. âLook out.â
She dragged him up a long flight of heavily carpeted stairs. The hotel had smelled not unlike the Albert bar in Glasgow, but there were new odors beginning to invade his senses.
âDeath,â MacGregor said.
âYes.â
They were at the top of the stairs. The unmistakable smell of dry decay. An old body â or bodies â somewhere not too far away.
âOh fuck,â MacGregor said. âWe canât spend the night up here. You can smell that, canât you?â
âOf course,â Hunter said. âOkay. Wait a minute.â
There was a rattle. She was trying a door handle. Wood creaked as Hunter threw her shoulder against the door.
âShit.â
Another door handle rattled, then another. Then, there was a click.
âI must be going senile,â Hunter said.
âWhy?â
âI didnât try the room I was staying in last night.
âLast night?â
âYes, last night. However long ago was. Itâs still empty. Judging by the smell up here, Iâd say that some of the other rooms are occupied. The doors are locked and I donât think we should try to unlock them.â
MacGregor sniffed the air.
âOkay. Do you want to stay up here?â
âDo you?â
âYes. Iâve got a little trick up my sleeve.â
He heard a hiss. Moments later, there was a strong smell of lavender.
âAir freshener,â MacGregor commented. âNice one. Thatâll take the edge off the smell a bit. So, are you ready to sleep now? Whatâs the situation. Two single beds, or am I on the floor?â
âItâs a double bed,â Hunter said, âand we can share it.â
âOh.â
There was a long, uncomfortable silence. MacGregor heard the air freshener tin hiss a second time.
âItâs not an invitation, John,â she said simply, âso you donât need to worry.â
He frowned, not understanding what she thought he needed to be worried about. He nodded his head slowly and breathed softly.
âOk,â he said.
The room still held evidence of Hunterâs occupancy. The bedsheets were disheveled and unchanged. The plastic bag filled with her sandwich wrappings and two empty bottles of Volvic mineral water were still apparent.
âSandwich,â Hunter muttered.
âWhat?â
âNo rats, mice or insects,â she said. âI didnât realize before. I left some of the sandwich behind and itâs still here. Dried up and rotten, but in a building like this there have to be mice or rats.â
âYouâre right. So what does that mean? The SOD killed the mice too? Maybe it killed everything. Or all the animals at least. But I havenât seen an insect either.â
âThere must be insects,â Hunter said, âI just canât remember seeing any. But those thorny bushes had flowers and I remember seeing dandelions and other flowers. You canât have flowers without insects.â
âI know,â MacGregor said. âJason knew all about that. Butterfly Jake, they called him. Without the pollinators there wouldnât be any flowering plants. In fact, there wouldnât be any people or animals, either. I remember Jake telling me that 80 percent of the worldâs plant life are flowering plants. And that includes rice, grains, wheat, fruit and vegetables. Most of the stuff we eat, if not all of it. Not to mention the livestock we eat, too.â
âBut there are insects,â Hunter said. âIâm sure I saw some. I just canât remember when. But I definitely saw flowers, so that means there must be insects.â
âYes, there must be. But no mice or rats if youâve got a bit of sandwich lying there.â
âPerhaps there are mice,â Hunter sounded tired. âLook, John, I donât know. Itâs getting darker outside. Iâve had too much wine. Iâm going to sleep now.â
âRight now?â MacGregor said. âWhat about the gear downstairs?â
âWeâll get it in the morning,â Hunter said. âI donât think itâs going anywhere.â
Heâd left half a bottle of Grolsch downstairs, but Hunterâs tone didnât suggest that he argue with her.
âYou can sit up for a while if you like. If youâre not tired. Or you can join me in the bed.â
He swallowed hard. He could hear Hunter removing an item of clothing. Sheâd left her jacket downstairs with his. She was unbuttoning her shirt.
âJust relax,â she said, âweâre just sharing a bed. Like brother and sister. Now, Iâm tired. Iâm going to sleep. Thereâs an en-suite bathroom. Iâm assuming that the water will still be running just like the gents downstairs. Itâs the door on the wall to your left.â
MacGregor moved across to the wall. He found the door almost immediately with his improvised cane. He went inside and did what he had to do there. Hunter was right. The toilet flushed, albeit weakly. He returned to the main room, confident that Hunter would have finished undressing and would be inside the bed. He was right.
âAre you staying up, or are you joining me?â
Heâd felt tired, but the sudden thought of sharing a bed with Hunter had brought him fully awake again.
âIâm tired, too,â he lied. âIâll join you.â
âThereâs lots of room,â she said. âGet in on the left side. Iâll sleep on the right.â
He was still wearing his shirt and trousers. He took them off, tossing them to the floor by the side of the bed. He started to climb in.
âYou sleep in your underpants?â
âYouâre watching me undress?â
âRelax, John. There isnât much light. I can just about see the outline of your body.â
âOkay, well maybe thereâs certain outlines that I wanted to spare you,â MacGregor said. âYes, I sleep in my underwear.â
He wasnât sure if her playful comments were leading him on. Heâd never been particularly good with the opposite sex. Hunterâs comments, although personal and playful, were delivered in a tone that sounded irritable.
âOkay.â
He got into the bed. It was a good size - a King or Queen sized, he guessed. There was a thin sheet and a reasonable soft duvet on top of it. The sheets didnât smell of anything besides a very faint musty odor that was not altogether unpleasant. He was able to avoid touching Hunter as he climbed in. There was enough room that sheâd been able to leave a gap in the middle of the bed.
He lay there in silence for a while, listening to the sound of her breathing. It was a sound that made him feel warm inside. He began to listen to the pattering of the rain against the window and the wind outside.
Hunterâs voice woke him up. âAre you asleep?â she asked quietly, without moving.
âNo,â he whispered.
She exhaled slowly. âI could have cancelled the flying lesson. Iâd had a busy day and I was running late. I was always running late, always running from one place to another. It all seemed so important. Perhaps it really was all as important as it seemed. I donât really remember anymore. I left the school at around five thirty. I was already late, but I should have known better. There was a bake sale taking place at the weekend. There was a lot of preparation taking place, even though there were a few days to go. Some of the yummy mummies were getting more and more carried away with it all. Of course, I didnât want it to look like I needed to get away. You understand how that would look?â She shifted beside him, suddenly restless. MacGregor listened to her take another deep breath. Then she continued to speak. âHamish had tickets to an opera. Iâd always wanted to see the Bolero, but there was never the time. I wanted to get my pilotâs license even more than I wanted to see the Opera.â
She laughed quietly. The sound was hollow and flat.
âIt really was all my fault,â she said. âItâs strange, that. Hamish was finishing his second degree at Edinburgh University he was still working his day job at the printerâs, somehow. But he still managed to find time for⦠for . For me, it was a struggle. I seemed to be filling my life up. Every time there was a little bit of free time, Iâd find something to consume it.â
âBut you were working in a school,â MacGregor said. âI know how that goes. A little bit, at least. Jackie worked as a teacherâs assistant. She would tell me how busy some of the teachers would get. Some of them wouldnât get home until eight or nine oâclock at night.â
âOkay.â She seemed to ignore or not hear the words heâd said, âI wanted my pilotâs license. I was determined to get it, really. I didnât want my life to be all about being a mother.â
The rain hammered against the window. MacGregor heard thunder, low and distant. A rumble that gently vibrated the windows. Hunter was holding her breath, but the bed trembled with the tiny shivers of her body. She breathed out, shaking. Her breath was catching in her throat. She was struggling to contain something. Tears, anger, frustration - he didnât know what.
âHamish told me it was my fault when he saw me at the hospital, of course. It was the first thing he said to me. I mean, after heâd told me weâd lost the baby.â
MacGregor moved in the bed. First, he shifted a little closer to Hunter. Then he moved away again. Something in her tone seemed to be pushing him away and drawing him towards her all at once. âIâm so sorry,â he said. âI wish I knew what to say.â
âYou donât have to say anything.â Hunter shivered. âIâm telling the story, John. You just need to listen.â
He felt nervous. He had to fight the urge to tremble himself. Hunterâs tone was icy, almost frightening. âOkay,â he said.
âI was unconscious when Ewan was born. I didnât get to see him. Hamish told me that he didnât see Ewan either. The doctorâs said that the body was too badly damaged for them to attempt resuscitation. They said that we shouldnât see the remains.â She coughed and sobbed at the same time, âThe remains,â she repeated, âThat as how they referred to my son. My unborn son. The remains.â
The thunder was getting closer. The rain was falling quite heavily, but the wind wasnât rattling the windows like MacGregor imagined it would have done the previous night. He felt awkward beneath the duvet. Hunter was an armâs reach away, but the tension between them was a solid barrier of confusion and fear he didnât want to delve into.
âI was so frightened about what going into labor would be like. Iâd often spoken to Hamish about it. He was so good. He was so, so good about it all. So encouraging, so sensitive to my fears and needs as a pregnant mother-to-be. He was always able to say the right things. It was like he always knew what to say to me. I was worried about the pain of going into labor, about losing control and screaming my heart out in front of strangers. Hamish convinced me to ask for an epidural. I hadnât wanted one.â
âIâm sorry,â MacGregor interrupted. âI donât know what that isâ
Hunter sighed loudly. âItâs an anesthetic procedure, John. It would mean that delivering the baby would be completely pain-free.â Hunter rolled over in bed. He felt movement in front of his face, like she was about to touch him. But she didnât. She laughed quietly and he felt her breath on his face. âI remember the first Antenatal class we attended together. There was a lady there who got on her high horse about having a drug free birth. This was her second baby, apparently. First time round it turned out that the hospital staff had just rushed her through the whole experience. Those were the words she said.
. Sheâd wanted a birthing pool, no pain meds. Sheâd wanted to it.â Hunter laughed again. âShe didnât come to the next class, but everyone talked about her and her very presence helped break the ice between the couples and single mums in the room. The Antenatal nurse told us the same thing that our GP told us.â
âWhich was?â
âTake everything they offer you,â Hunter said, âpain meds, Entonox, epidural and the works. Because if youâre in the middle of labor and you change your mind? Well, itâs just too late. You havenât got a choice at that point. Besides that, the whole is about bringing a new life safely into the world.â
She drew a quick breath.
âI killed Ewan,â she said. âI killed our unborn son.â
âJesus Christ. It was an accident. It could have happened to anyone, Hunter.â
She shifted closer to him. He could feel her bodyâs warmth now. âPerhaps if Iâd been giving my full attention to the baby Iâd have stayed on the ground. Thatâs what he said. Those were his exact words. If Iâd been giving my full attention to the baby, Ewan would have lived.â
She was so close to him now. Somehow, he wanted to move away. He felt cold and afraid. He didnât know why. Hunterâs tone was soft, but there wasnât any emotion in her voice. She was delivering her story in a forced monotone, like she was holding herself together tightly. The trembling of her body betrayed the emotional turmoil that the tone of her voice did not convey. Had he not been lying so close to her, he might not have been able to tell.
âHamish had never wanted me to fly. It was the biggest mistake in my life. He never let me forget it. We stayed together, of course. I didnât know what else to do. I suppose he didnât either.â
âIâm sorry.â
âI know. Everyone always is. He would have been ten years old this year. Ewan would have been ten years old. If heâd lived, that is. As it is, he didnât have a birthday. We donât celebrate⦠well, we just donât think of that date.â
âI donât blame you at all,â MacGregor said. âIt sounds awful. It just sounds terrible. A terrible accident. Iâm sorry.â
âI know you are.â She made a sound like she was licking her lips. âEveryone always is.â
The thunder had moved further away, but it was still there. A low rumble that slowly moved around the empty countryside like a cautious, prowling wolf.
âIt was the airbag,â Hunter said. âThatâs what killed him.
. It wasnât my fault. The airbag was faulty. It⦠well, it was overpowered. There was something wrong with the charge. The entire batch had been recalled, but the Cessna used by my school had been slipped through the system.â
âI didnât know small airplanes like that had airbags,â MacGregor commented. âBut I suppose it makes sense.â
Thunder rattled the windows. It was louder than it had been the previous night. The rain was stronger, too. MacGregor sensed movement. It felt like Hunter was reaching out to him. He didnât know what to do. He stayed still, not wanting to make a mistake. He felt her fingers touching his left eyebrow. Light, inquisitive touches.
âHow did you lose your sight?â
MacGregor didnât answer immediately. There were several versions of the story and most of them were false. It took him about five seconds to decide that he wasnât going to lie to Hunter.
âI usually lie about that. People are always expecting an interesting, colorful story. The truth is really, really stupid. I was in a car crash. I was knocked out. Concussed for five days. Five days of dizzy vomiting and feeling like I just wanted to die. I was too out of it to wonder why I couldnât see. It was all I could do just to survive the nausea and the endless retching. But thatâs the story. I lost my sight. Just like that. The specialists said it was a brain injury. Strange thing is that I always felt they didnât really know exactly where the damage was or how I came to be blind. I was driving like an idiot. I drove into a wall. Literally, right into a wall. And I lost my sight. So, I suppose I deserved it.â
âNobody deserves something like that, John,â Hunter said. âWhen did this happen?â
âAugust 2010,â he said. âAnd after a year of absolute hell, Carol Anne left me forever. I never saw her again.â
âWait a minute. The bridge in Portadown. That happened in nineteen ninety something? You met Carol Anne then, didnât you?â
âNineteen-ninety two,â MacGregor said. âI remember it well. Whitney Houstonâs I Will Always Love You. Wet Wet Wetâs Goodnight Girl. Dr. Alban. Itâs My Life. Some of Carol Anneâs favorite songs â and mine.â
âYou were together for almost twenty years?â
He laughed quietly. âNo, thatâs not right,â MacGregor said. âI never saw her again after that meeting on the bridge. Not until about two years later. Iâd left the Army by then. I couldnât stop thinking about her.â
âOkay,â Hunter said, âyou were fixated on an Irish girl you met for⦠how long?â
âTwenty or thirty minutes. She led me through the backstreets and alleys until she said it was safe for me to make my own way. I asked for her number. She gave me her number. She gave me her address too and the name of the hospital where she worked. Oh, and the hospitalâs phone number, too.â
âI like that,â Hunter said, âshe wasnât leaving anything to chance.â
âSo many numbers and so much information.â He laughed softly, âI was sure that it was all genuine.â
âThey werenât?â
âNope. The home phone number didnât answer and the hospital said theyâd never heard of her. I couldnât believe it. I called the hospital about three more times, hoping to find someone who knew Carol Anne. No luck.â
âSo strange. Then how did you meet her again?â
MacGregor felt Hunterâs fingertips, again. They were touching his right eyebrow, flattening the hairs there.
âWell, after I left the Army I went back to the east coast. I was hanging out with a bunch of friends Iâd made in my old hometown. Fixing cars, posing around the place in them. Just generally hanging out and wasting time. I had this old Mini Clubman. One week it was white, the next it was black. We changed the engine in it about four times. I canât believe I used to enjoy all that stuff. Anyway, suddenly one of the guys said he had tickets for this Bruce Springsteen concert at Slaine Castle in Ireland. Not Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland.â
âIâve been there,â Hunter said. âQueen, 1986. Beautiful place.â
âAye, beautiful,â MacGregor said. âWell, Terry had a friend who was working security at this event and said he could get tickets.â
âWho was Terry?â
âHe came from Ireland. He was an electrician or electronics engineer or something. I didnât know him very well. He was more Topperâs friend than mine. Topper was pretty jealous of that, I suppose. But Terry and I didnât really click. We only really knew each other for a short time.â
âTopper?â
âJohn Topp,â MacGregor laughed. âone of the car club, as we called ourselves. He worked beside Terry. We were all young guys, like in our late teens and early twenties. Terry was thirty something. Maybe forty. Iâm not sure. But he had this Morris Minor that heâd bought from someone and when Topp found that out he invited him to join the car club.â
âCar club,â Hunter echoed. âI like that. So you and Terry went to this concert together?â
âWe drove there together in my Mini,â MacGregor reminisced, âall the way from North Berwick on the East Coast to Stranraer on the west. It was just fantastic. I didnât realize that Terry actually lived about seven miles away from Portadown. Once he told me I knew I had to look Carol Anne up.
âSo you went to Ireland with Terry?â
âYes, thatâs right. His friends picked us up at Larne and we drove south to Craigavon. It was about midnight before we arrived. I was really, really tired by then. Weâd had a couple of drinks on the ferry. We arrived at Craigavon sometime past midnight. Nobody in Terryâs house was awake. I spent the night on the floor in his bedroom. In the morning, Terry had to help his friends change the wheels on a car. I decided to pay Carol Anne a call. I mean, I was in Craigavon after all.â
âSo you went to the address she gave you? Didnât you think it would be fake, too?â
âYes. I didnât think sheâd be there. I just wanted to try to find her. After breakfast I went for a walk. Terryâs parents lived about a mile from the address Carol Anne gave me. I didnât mind. I had a whole day to kill before the concert. Well, it was hardly a surprise that the address she gave me didnât exist. There was a Kiernan Lane, but no number ninety eight. I spent about ten minutes walking up and down the road. I had this crazy thought that maybe sheâd just lied about the number. I kept thinking that she might appear at one of the windows looking down at me. Of course, she didnât.â
Hunter shifted in the bed. MacGregor thought that she was rolling onto her back, but instead she shifted her body closer to his. He could feel her breath on his face now.
âSo how did you find her?â
âThe bridge.â MacGregor smiled to himself, âI went back to the bridge in the town center. Again, I had this stupid idea that Iâd find her sitting there waiting for me. So I made my way towards the Town Centre. I was on foot and didnât know the place too well, so I got a little bit lost. After getting directions a few times I got to the bridge. It was the same way I remembered it from the time weâd met there. Much quieter, of course, and nobody was shouting out for my blood. But it was the same place.â
He turned onto his back, resting his head deep into the soft pillow. Hunter didnât move beside him. He could hear her breathing, inches away from his left ear.
âI found her on the bridge. Believe it or not, she was waiting for me there. It turned out that she had lied about her address, but she hadnât been as creative as she should have been. She told me the right street name, but the wrong number. One of her friends had recognized me and had called her on the phone. She came out to see me, but Iâd already gone. We were lucky to meet at all. She knew Iâd head for the bridge and went off in that direction. But by then Iâd gotten lost. She was waiting for me for about twenty minutes before I appeared. I can picture her now. She was wearing a lemon summer dress. Her eyes⦠Well, it was just amazing.â
âThis sounds so romantic, John.â
Hunter rolled away from him. Then she lit a cigarette and turned back to face him. She seemed even closer than before. He waited to be offered a cigarette, but nothing was forthcoming.
âYes, everybody said that.â He smiled. âAny chance of a smoke?â
âSure.â
She lit a second cigarette and took his hand in hers. Her fingers were light and her hand was warm. He held the cigarette for a moment, considering. Then he said, âJust make sure I donât set fire to the bed. Iâve got a talent for that, Iâm afraid.â
âAshtray,â Hunter said, dumping a heavy object on MacGregorâs chest.
âThanks.â
âSo you met on the bridge. But it wasnât happily ever after? What happened?â
âFirst time round or second time round?â MacGregor breathed the smoke deep into his lungs. âWell, I just didnât go back. With Terry, I mean. I stayed in Northern Ireland. I stayed withâ¦â
âYouâre telling the story wrong, John,â Hunter whispered. âWhat happened on the bridge?â
âOh that,â he sighed, âthat was just⦠well, that was just fucking amazing. She was sitting there exactly where Iâd seen her that time Iâd jumped out of the Pig into all that⦠chaos.â
âWhat did she do when she saw you?â
MacGregor smiled, reminiscing. âShe didnât even say a word to me,â he said. âShe just walked right up to me. I can still remember the look on her face. It looked like she was mad at me. I was sure I was going to get a slap.â
âWhy?â Hunter laughed.
âI donât know. I knew that her being at the bridge wasnât a coincidence. Sheâd heard that I was looking for her and sheâd come to see me off.â
âSo what happened?â
âI was just mesmerized by her long, auburn hair dancing around her shoulders in the morning breeze. And her eyes. She always had these⦠sad eyes. No, thatâs not right. They were eyes.â
âHopeful eyes, John?â
âIâm not sure thatâs the right word. She was a believer in the goodness of the world, you know? She was kind to the bone and she believed in the kindness of everything else. It shone through in her eyes. An almost frightening innocence, I guess. I was falling into her eyes and then⦠well, then she just wrapped herself around me,â MacGregor sighed, âlike a snake. It was amazing. Iâd never felt anything like it before. We were just kissing and holding each other. It was just really emotional.â
He went quiet. He closed his eyes and relaxed his muscles. He felt his body sinking deeper into the worn out mattress. He inhaled the cigarette smoke deep into his lung, savoring the smoke as he savored the memory.
âThat is romantic, John,â Hunter said.
âAye,â he breathed, âI suppose so. I never thought of that at the time. I just remember it feeling really, really amazing.â
âTrue love,â Hunter said.
âAye.â
Crash!
It was the sound of glass breaking. Somewhere in the building a window had been broken.
MacGregor sat upright, his shoulder colliding with Hunter. âOh shit! What the fuck was that?â he whispered, trembling fearfully.
âA window,â Hunter said. She left the bed, flicking on one of the torches. âStay here. Iâm going to go and look.â
âFuck no! Iâm coming with you,â MacGregor said. âJesus, it canât have been far away.â
âWe have to be safe, John. Iâll take the gun.â
âIâm coming, too.â
He almost panicked when he realized that Hunter wasnât waiting. He heard her opening the door.
âFucking hell,â he hissed, âhang on!â
He followed after her, listening to her charge the Heckler and Koch submachine gun. As he exited the room he could feel the wind blowing through the hallway on the second floor.
âIâm here,â she whispered, âdonât panic.â
âIâm not panicking. I can feel the wind. Whatâs happened?â
âThere are two small windows at the end of the corridor. One of them has been broken,â Hunter said, âLooks like somebody threw something at the glass.â
âHow big is the window? Big enough for someone to get through?â
âNobody came through,â Hunter said, âthe windowâs too small for that. Wait. Let me see this. Stay where you are for a second, okay? Thereâs broken glass on the carpet.â
MacGregor didnât move. He was standing in his underpants and nothing else.
âWellâ¦â Hunter whispered, âwell, fancy that.â
âWhat?â
âItâs a folding white stick. Like a blind personâs cane.â
âLet me have it,â MacGregor said. âLet me feel it Eilidh.â
âJust a moment. Itâs got glass on it.â
She moved to the wall. He heard the movement of heavy fabric curtains. Then she took a deep breath and blew whatever remained of the glass away.
MacGregor felt something very familiar touching against his right hand. âHere,â Hunter said, âshould be safe now.â
MacGregor weighed the object in his hand. âThis is my cane,â he said, âThis is my white stick. How is that possible?â
âI donât know.â
âShould we go outside? Investigate?â
âItâs dark now,â Hunter explained, âI donât think thatâs a good idea.â
âDefinitely not.â
Hunter walked past him. He felt her hand on his shoulder.
âCome on,â she said, âwe can lock the door from the inside. Weâll be safe inside. Safer than wandering about in the dark.â
âOkay,â MacGregor wasnât so sure. âWhatever you say.â
She locked the door behind them both. The air in the room smelled much better. The broken window had allowed the gusting wind to clear away the odor of decay and death. Some of the lavender still lingered, but it had now become something MacGregor might almost consider pleasant.
âCold,â Hunter said. âGet back into bed. Youâll catch a cold running around in your pants.â
MacGregor felt marginally self-conscious. He wondered what Hunter looked like in her underwear. As he climbed into the bed, he found himself building a picture of her in his mind. She was about the same height as himself, if not slightly taller. Her arms and legs were long and lean. He remembered that from the previous night as theyâd huddled together for warmth under the collapsed semi-tent.
âWhoâs outside then?â he asked. âWhy did they throw my cane through the window?â
âI donât know,â Hunter replied. âI really donât know. But weâre safe in here. The doorâs locked. Itâs an old building. The lockâs not just a cheap Yale thing. Itâs heavy. We have the gun. If somebody disturbs us here weâll hear them at the door.â
MacGregor still had the folded cane in his left hand. He searched for the bedside cabinet and placed the cane there, tentatively.
âI lost this in the helicopter crash,â he said. âI didnât have it at the Southern Marker. When we went on the horse together, I didnât have it. Did you?â
âNo.â
âWhere did it come from?â
He felt Hunter shivering. She moved closer to him. âI donât know. Perhaps it isnât your cane at all. Perhaps itâs just one that looks the same and feels the same.â
He pulled the duvet over his body, careful not to bump into Hunter. The bed felt soft and good. He closed his eyes.
âWhat happened after the bridge?â Hunter asked softly, her voice almost a whisper.
âI missed the concert altogether. I spent all my time with Carol Anne. Terry was really pissed off, but he went back without me.â
âYou stayed in Ireland?â Hunter laughed. âThat is romantic.â
âI know it sounds like it,â MacGregor said, âbut I didnât have anything going on back home. Sure, I was hanging out with the car club. But they werenât real close friends. Dad and I werenât getting along too good then either. Mum was getting on at me to leave home.â He shrugged, âSo I didnât really have any connections. Or, at least, I didnât think that I did.â
âItâs still romantic either way,â Hunter said. âIâm sure Carol Anne would have been impressed that you were leaving everything behind for her.â
âI didnât leave anything behind, and she knew that. I told Carol Anne in the first day together. I was always surprised that she didnât just make a run for it.â
Hunter was closer to him now, her body almost touching his. He could feel her body heat, inches from his. Then her fingers touched his face, again. This time, there was something different. No more exploring. Now her fingers caressed his body, invited him to caress her own. He hesitated, turned to stone by self-doubt and confused anxiety.
âJust relax now, John. You know, you can touch me if you want,â she said quietly. âIf you feel like it.â
Again, her breath was so close to his face. Her fingertips touched his eyes again, gently stroking from his temple to the top of his left cheek. He felt his heart quicken. All of a sudden it seemed that his heartbeat was so loud. Surely Hunter could hear it.
âItâs been a stressful day,â she said. He felt her hand on his, guiding him to her body. He didnât resist. He felt his own body begin to react. There was a sudden warmth. Heat so delicious and familiar that he recognized immediately. An instant later, she pressed his hand against her heavy left breast. âWe need to relax now. You can touch me if you want to,â she repeated. âI feel like it.â
He realized that she was completely naked in the bed. Sheâd been naked as theyâd investigated the broken window, he realized. Her nipple was hard between his fingertips, almost poking right through. As her lips began to explore his right hand gently began to explore between her legs. She rolled onto her back, pulling him on top of her. He felt her tugging at his underpants. Her movements were almost beyond insistence. Somehow, they seemed desperate. In a moment his underwear was past his knees. He kicked them out of the bed.
âEilidh,â he whispered, âI⦠I donâtâ¦â
âHush,â she breathed. âOh, fuck me, John. Just fuck me.â
His body tensed instantly. Those words. In this context, he despised them. He always had. The coarseness of those words. Or maybe it was the intensity of them, or the animalistic loss of inhibition that they represented. He felt Goosebumps on his arms, his body trembling. Hunter pulled away from him, but only for a moment. Then she kissed him lightly on the cheek. Suddenly, her mouth was covering his. Her hand brushed against his abdomen, reaching for his manhood, her fingers gentle and probing.
âIâm sorry,â she said, âmake love to me.â Her tone was much softer, âJust do what you want to.â
He was on top of her now, inside her. Sliding deep and hard into her delightful center.
âOh fuck,â he gasped. âOh fucking hell.â He laughed, nervously.
âItâs alright,â Hunter soothed, âjust do what you want.â
He began to thrust. They ground together beneath the duvet and the crisp white sheet. At first MacGregor controlled the pace, moving his hips in semi circles as he slowly ground Hunter into the bed.
âOh fuck,â he gasped, âEilidh⦠condoms? What aboutâ¦?â
âI canâtâ¦â she said. âWe donât need them. I canât get pregnant.â
Her statement killed his ardor momentarily, but Hunterâs hand on his buttocks spurred him on, again. He tried to control the pace, tried to control his passion. But Hunter was kissing his chin and then his neck. Her lips continued down to his chest. He felt her breath there, rapid and hot. He began to lose control of his rhythm, his hips gyrating now beyond his bidding. Then, as she began to kiss his left nipple, they were just a single creature struggling together on the bed.
The morning arrived like a shock. It was a soft hand gently pushing at his shoulder, then a slap against the side of his naked buttocks. His mouth was dry and there was a bad taste in his mouth. His eyes felt crusty. There was a new smell in the room. Some kind of perfume. He didnât recognize it at first. Then it was obvious. Imperial Leather.
âTime to get started,â Hunter said. âWeâve got dry biscuits and coca cola for breakfast. And weâve got blue skies and sunshine outside. Oh, and insects, too! At least we have bumble bees. I saw one bounce against the window earlier.â
âOh Jesus,â MacGregor moaned. âEarlier? Earlier than what? What time is it?â
âIâm calling it eight oâclock. The sunâs been up for a couple of hours at least. Itâs going to be a warm day.â
âYou should have woken me up. Weâve got a lot to do.â
âI donât think it matters. Okay, cover yourself up and get washed. The waterâs cold, but the shower still runs. Itâs bracing, but I managed it.â
âJesus Christ, you washed already?â
âI washed. And you should, too,â Hunter said, âIt looks warm enough outside. We wonât get a chill.â
He kept himself covered with the sheet and searched âwith his right foot - on the floor for his underpants. Finding them, he quickly put them on. He smelled the soap again as Hunter moved towards him. There was some other odor not unlike the gorse bushes. Coconut shampoo, he guessed.
âAbout last night,â he started.
Hunter cut him off. âI feel really fresh,â she said. âYouâll feel and smell a lot better.â
He smiled, taking the not so subtle hint.
âOkay. If youâre sure the water wonât run out when Iâm covered in soap.â
âI think youâll be okay. Do you want to eat first?â
âNo, I want to get rid of my stink,â he replied. âMaybe you can help me find some actual breakfast food in amongst the ration packs. Iâm sure thereâs dried egg or something like that.â
âSounds disgusting,â Hunter said.
âIt is,â MacGregor shrugged, âbut itâs better than biscuits and coke.â
âGo get washed,â Hunter said. âIâll fix something for you to eat. Hot or cold?â
âHot, please. If you can. Iâm going to need it after freezing my backside off.â
âIt isnât that bad,â Hunter said.
He moved across to her, still wearing just his underpants. He reached out to her and felt her waist. He gently pulled her towards himself. It surprised him when she pulled away from him.
âAh... okay,â he said, âI just wanted⦠um, is everything okay?â
âSure,â she said. âGet yourself cleaned up. Weâve got a lot of ground to cover today.â
He moved in again for the kiss but she rejected him a second time. He released his gentle grip on her elbow as she pulled away roughly.
âIâm sorry about last night. It was a mistake.â
He didnât know what to say to that. âOh,â he said, âokay.â
âWeâve got a lot of ground to cover,â Hunter repeated. âGet cleaned up. Iâll have something hot ready for you when you get out.â
âAlright.â
The water was still running, but it was agonizingly cold. MacGregor rubbed himself briskly with the soap, more to stave off the terrible coldness than to clean himself. After about a minute of shivering and swearing his body began to become accustomed to the shock of the icy water. He didnât think about Hunter or the brief and almost furious intimacy theyâd shared. The coldness prevented him from thinking about . Soon heâd finished doing what he needed to do. It was not a moment too soon. The flow of the water was beginning to stutter. He guessed that it would soon stop flowing altogether.
He found a towel on the rack by the tiny window. It was unused and warm compared to the water. He dried himself briskly. There was a second towel which he now use, tossing the first one to the floor. He wasted no time getting dressed again. He exited the bathroom shivering. He could smell bacon and beans. Miraculously, Hunter had prepared coffee too.
âOh shit, youâre amazing,â MacGregor said. âI canât believe you made coffee.â
âThereâs even milk. Smells fresh enough. Iâve no idea what the shelf life is on these little hotel milk cartons, but these ones seem okay.â
MacGregor found the bed. Hunter was sitting there. He sat next to her. Instinctively, he reached out both hands.
âOkay,â she said, âwhat do you want first? Coffee beans or bacon and beans.â
âSo many beans,â MacGregor smiled. âCoffee beans, â
She handed him the coffee. It was a porcelain mug â one of three small cups beside the small plastic kettle.
âThatâs just so good,â he said. âHow did you heat it up?â
âI used one of the flameless ration heaters. It generated enough heat to warm up the bacon and beans enough water for the coffee. Thereâs another cup if you want it.â
âDefinitely,â he said.
He drained the cup about five seconds. The coffee was cool enough that he could do that without burning his tongue but not so cold he didnât enjoy it.
âSugar?â he asked.
âSorry. How many?â
âI can do it.â
âHow many?â her tone threatened.
âTwo. Thanks.â
She tore the sachets open and stirred the sugar into the cup.
He didnât like the atmosphere. The silence was uncomfortable and almost hostile. âYou sound upset,â he said. âDid I do something?â
He heard her sip her own coffee. There was the sound of swallowing, then chewing.
âAm I sitting here with my cock hanging out or something?â he said, almost irritably. âI mean, youâve got to tell me if itâs something like that.â
âJohn, are you trying to tell me that you wouldnât know if you got dressed and your⦠penis⦠was sticking out of your trousers?â
MacGregor laughed. âAye, Iâd know. I just wanted to lighten the mood. Whatâs wrong this morning?â
âIâm sorry. Itâs just that last night was a mistake, thatâs all. I donât want you getting the wrong idea about me or about⦠about our situation.â
He was thankful for the coffee. He brought the mug to his lips and sipped carefully and slowly, savoring the taste and wishing that the ground would swallow him up all at the same time. A long time passed by. He actually started to count the seconds. Hunter continued to eat. After counting a full minute and more, he decided to speak again.
âOkay, then letâs just get on with whatever the fuck weâre supposed to be doing today.â
She stopped eating, stopped moving. He was sure that she even stopped breathing. Then she sighed loudly.
âDo you want your bacon and beans?â
âFuck it, yes,â he grunted. â
.