A Funny Thing Happened.... Caroline Anderson
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She wasn’t, though, so she didn’t.
Nor did Sam, and, casting him a quick look, she thought that left alone he’d probably want to do the same!
‘You’ll be stiff in the morning,’ she warned.
‘Tell me about it. Anything else to do tonight?’
‘Only eat, if I can find anything worth cooking.’
‘Shall I nip out for a Chinese?’
She met his eyes, and was amazed to see humour lurking there still, after all they’d done. All he’d done, and him just a city boy.
‘Good idea. I’ll have special chow mein.’
‘OK. I’ll have rice and lemon chicken—fancy a spring roll?’
She looked round the barn one last time, took the lantern down and glanced at him. ‘Oh, yes—and prawn crackers.’
His stomach rumbled loudly, and she gave a quiet, weary laugh. ‘Come on, cowboy, let’s go and raid the larder.’
Sam was dog-tired. He didn’t remember ever being so tired in his life, but he supposed it was possible. His hands hurt from carrying so many buckets, his back and shoulders ached with the unaccustomed exercise and he was so hungry he had the shakes.
‘Anything I can do?’ he offered, hoping to speed things along.
‘No—there’s some bread and cheese and there’s some soup left in the fridge—I’ll heat it up. Wash your hands, but be frugal with the water, the tank won’t refill—in fact, use my water, here.’
She shook her hands off and picked up the towel, and he went over to the sink and looked down into the bowl of water. The bar of soap was streaked with red, and he looked over his shoulder and watched as she pressed the towel against her fingers cautiously and winced.
He scrubbed his hands clean, wiped them on the towel and then went over to her, taking the cheese from her and putting it down, then lifting her hands in his and turning them over.
They were cracked and ingrained with dirt, the skin rough and broken although it had stopped bleeding, and she stood there with her eyes closed and said nothing.
‘Jemima?’ he murmured.
‘The dirt won’t come out,’ she said defensively. ‘You can get your own supper if it worries you.’
‘It’s nothing to do with that. Have you got any cream?’
‘I want to eat.’
‘Have you got any cream?’
‘I’ll put it on later. I want to eat first so my food doesn’t taste of gardenias.’
He let her go, and she bustled about, cutting bread, laying the table, feeding the dogs, making tea—
‘Jemima, come and eat.’
She plonked two mugs of tea on the table, sat down and attacked the cheese. He ate his way through a bowl of chicken soup and two doorsteps of bread with slabs of cheese, and watched as she ate at least two bowls of soup and three chunks of bread.
‘Where the hell do you put it?’ he asked in amazement as she started on a slab of fruitcake.
‘No lunch,’ she said round a mouthful of cake. ‘Have some—your grandmother made it.’
He did, and it was good. Very good. He had more, with another mug of tea, and wondered if the cold or the exercise had sharpened up his appetite.
Finally he ground to a halt, and his hostess took the plates and stacked them by the sink.
‘Hands,’ he said to her, catching her on the way back from her second trip to the fridge.
‘OK.’ She reached for some handcream by the sink, ordinary handcream that wouldn’t cope with a good bout of spring-cleaning, never mind what she’d been doing, and he took it from her and put it down.
‘Antiseptic?’
‘What?’
‘Antiseptic cream—the sort you put on cuts.’
‘Oh.’ She opened a cupboard and took some out, and he sat her down, pulled up a chair opposite and spread some into her hands. ‘Why are you doing this?’ she asked.
He wasn’t sure. He didn’t tell her that. He didn’t say anything, just rubbed the cream gently into the sore fingers until it was all absorbed, then put more on. ‘Got anything tougher than that?’ he asked, tipping his head towards the handcream.
‘No. Well, only the bag balm that we use for cracked udders. It’s in the barn, on the shelf by the door. That might do something.’
‘I’ll get it.’
‘Tomorrow will do—’
He stood up and put her hands back on her lap. ‘I’ll get it,’ he repeated, and pulled on his coat and boots. He took the torch, leaving her with the lantern, and went across the yard to the barn. The snow was still flying horizontally, but whether it was fresh snow or just drifting he couldn’t tell. Whatever, it was freezing and he was glad to reach the shelter of the barn, cows or not.
It was warm inside, comparatively, warm and full of soft rustlings and sleepy grunts, and the grinding of teeth as they chewed the cud. One of them—Bluebell?—came up and sniffed at him cautiously, and he held out his hand and she licked it, her tongue rough and curiously gentle.
Perhaps cows weren’t all bad, he thought, and scratched her face. She watched him for a moment before backing off and rejoining the others, and he thought her eyes were like Jemima’s—huge and soft and wary.
He found the cream on the shelf where she’d said, and went back across the Siberian wasteland to the welcoming light from the kitchen window.
It really was bitterly cold in the wind, even colder than it had been an hour before, or perhaps it was because he wasn’t working. He went into the lobby, shucked his coat and boots and opened the kitchen door.
She was asleep, curled up in the chair by the fire, Noodle on her lap, Jess at her feet, and he stood there for a moment enjoying the warmth and watched her. Did she need her sleep more than the cream? If she did, would she even wake up if he just put it on?
He unscrewed the lid, eased one of her hands out from under the little white dog and smeared a dollop of cream onto the palm of her hand. She mumbled something in her sleep, and then went quiet again, and he massaged the cream into the cracks and fissures of her hands while Noodle sniffed the cream and went back to sleep.
She didn’t move again, just lay there with her head on one side, propped against the wing