Fell of Dark. Reginald Hill
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‘Marco, can’t you organize something that makes sense out of this chaos?’
Marco’s underlip suddenly shot out and he began to gabble in Italian, lowly at first, but soon swelling in volume till everyone in the room was looking at us. Ferguson and his daughter, I noticed, had just come in and were standing by the door openly observing the scene with great interest.
Marco reached some kind of climax and halted. I thought of applauding, but a look at his face made me think again. He was very angry. Peter still sat there holding the tablecloth like a bridal train.
Ferguson moved over to us and spoke sharply in Italian. Marco caught the remnants of the egg up in his hand, flung it on to the plate and strode away to the kitchen.
‘Thank you,’ said Peter, releasing the tablecloth and standing up, partly to avoid the last oozings of the egg yolk, partly in acknowledgment of Miss Ferguson who was hovering behind her father. ‘That was kind. May I introduce my friend, Harry Bentink.’
‘Hello, Bentink. We have met in a manner of speaking. And I heard a great deal about you last night.’
‘How do you do,’ I said, half standing up with a bit of fried bread impaled on my fork which I waved nonchalantly at the girl. The bread fell on to the table.
‘You’re not having much luck with this table, are you?’ said Ferguson. ‘Come and share ours.’
He did not stay for an answer but moved across to the corner where he had been sitting the night before. We followed.
‘My daughter, Annie,’ he said. The girl smiled politely but said nothing. I got the impression she was scrutinizing me very closely behind her impassive façade.
‘Are you here on holiday or business?’ I asked.
‘Bit of both,’ he said. ‘Never know what you’ll see on the mountains.’
‘That’s true,’ said Peter in what I recognized as his facetious tone. ‘We saw a blue and a white tit only yesterday, didn’t we, Harry?’
He kicked my leg gleefully under the table. I lashed back and caught the girl’s ankle. She drew away in greater unease than I felt the situation warranted.
‘Sorry,’ I said.
‘That’s all right,’ she said. ‘Will you excuse me?’
She rose and left. She’d only had a thimbleful of grapefruit juice. I let my practised eye recreate the limbs under the skirt as I watched her go through the door and smiled approvingly.
She did not come back and we finished the meal practically in silence.
Replete, Ferguson folded his napkin neatly, looked at each of us in turn and asked, ‘What are your plans today?’
‘We’re going to see the sea,’ said Peter. ‘But first we’re going on a mysterious train journey.’
Ferguson laughed.
‘Oh, Lile Rattie,’ he said.
‘What?’ said Peter.
‘The miniature railway. It’s great fun if the weather’s fine. And it runs to time.’
Peter looked across at me and raised his eye-brows apologetically at having spoilt my surprise. I grinned back and looked suggestively at my watch. He nodded.
‘Well, Mr Ferguson, thank you for the use of your table. We must be off, however, while the day is young.’
We all stood up and shook hands.
‘Enjoy yourselves,’ said Ferguson.
‘You too.’
As we went out of the dining-room I looked at Peter curiously.
‘Why didn’t you answer Marco?’ I knew he spoke excellent Italian.
He shrugged.
‘He was just being rude.’
‘What did Ferguson say to him, then?’
Peter laughed.
‘He told him to bugger off or risk losing his unmentionables!’
Half an hour later we were striding down the road into the railway station. More than a station, it is a terminus and the incongruity of both setting and proportion have always endeared the place to me. Peter looked without comment at the narrow track and the low platform. There were not many people around at this time of the morning, I mean not many waiting to catch the train to Ravenglass, though when the train itself arrived it was quite full of trippers and hikers. They got out and dispersed. We put our knapsacks in one of the tiny open compartments and walked up the track to inspect the locomotive. Peter examined everything very closely, full of amused delight.
‘It’s marvellous, isn’t it?’ he said. ‘It’s not an intrusion into the place. Not like all those bloody motor-cars you find parked all over the place. You could run up Helvellyn in something like this and even Wordsworth wouldn’t object.’
The exhilaration of feeling the rush of air on your face, of being able literally to lean out and pick flowers as you pass is almost indescribable. Perhaps the sense of inhabiting in reality for a while the imaginative world of childhood has something to do with it. Certainly the (so it seemed) inevitable sun, the royal blue sky, the smell of things growing, to which the occasional whiff of steam or smoke seemed a natural addition, all these contributed to the enchantment of the moment. Peter looked like a child on a perfect birthday.
‘Thalatta, thalatta,’ he murmured softly to himself, eyes straining ahead to take everything in. ‘Soon we will see the sea.’
I nodded happily, acquiescingly. Soon we would see the sea.
Beckfoot came and went. Then Eskdale Green, Irton Road and the descent down the flank of a wooded fell to Muncaster. All too soon it seemed our journey was over and the sturdy little engine pulled us round an easy bend into the Ravenglass terminus.
I sat back for a few seconds, reluctant to move. But Peter was already on his feet.
‘Come on,’ he said. ‘I can smell it.’
‘All right.’ I took my knapsack and we walked slowly up to the small booking-kiosk and the exit.
There were two men standing by the gate. They were dressed in rather shabby grey suits cut in a style that was archaic by London standards and must have been a bit behind the times even for Ravenglass.
One was reading a newspaper. The other, a smaller, altogether less restful-looking man, registered our approach and touched his companion on the arm. I was reminded of the Fergusons when we came into dinner the previous night.
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