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Authors: Rohan O'Grady,Rohan O’Grady

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BOOK: Let's Kill Uncle
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‘I’ll file a report with the child welfare department.’

Sergeant Coulter stared over Mr Brooks’s head, to the
Haida Prince
, as the ship neared the dock.

Mr Brooks cleared his throat meekly.

‘The lawyer suggests – he – he almost implores, that Mrs Brooks and I see to the lad until his uncle arrives.’

‘Is that agreeable with you and Mrs Brooks?’

There was a pause.

‘Mrs Brooks and I have talked it over, Albert. We hate to think of the little fellow being knocked about from pillar to post, and now that— ’ a look of self-pity came to Mr Brooks’s eyes, ‘and now, of course, our own boy being gone, well, we’d be only too glad to do what we can for this little fellow. It may be lonely for him here, with no children left on the Island, but – but – Mrs Brooks and I would like to do what we can for him.’

As the expression on Mr Brooks’s face softened, the expression on Sergeant Coulter’s hardened.

‘Very well, Mr Brooks. If you’ll give me the address, I’ll see that the lawyer is notified.’

Sergeant Coulter stared at the ship without seeing it. Was he to be always silently reproached for being the only one to return? He came back, the son of the poor addled old Sergeant-Major Coulter. The sons of admirals were coral in the briny deep, the sons of generals had little white crosses over them in all the graveyards of Europe, and the young eagles, like old Brooks’s son, Dickie, hardly through school, they had flown back to the motherland. Like glorious phoenixes, they had plunged flaming to earth and burned, young and pure and untouched. Only the son of the old Sergeant-Major had returned.

He glanced up at the war monument in the center of the village square. A tall, plain granite shaft. ‘To the Memory of our Island Boys’ and then the long list of names, his own the only one absent.

No, there were no children left on the Island. The widows and their young broods had moved away, to the cities, and it was no wonder. There was no electricity on the Island, no doctor, no dentist. There was a church but services were held only a few times a year, when the minister came over from the neighbouring island of Benares.

Two world wars had bled the Island white. Now only a few farmers and the old people were left. The old people, remittance men, aged pensioners, ancient exiled aristocrats, living in sweet and poor gentility.

On rare occasions American tourists and summer visitors came. Sometimes commercial fishermen and Indians tied their seiners and gas boats at the wharf, but apart from them, the Island was as silent as a tomb.

‘Ah, there’s the goat-lady.’

A middle-aged woman came heavily down the wharf and scanned the decks of the
Haida Prince.

‘Good afternoon, Mrs Nielsen. Are you expecting someone on the
Prince
too?’ Mr Brooks was at her side.

She nodded and craned her neck at the sightseers hanging over the rails of the boat.

‘Yes, a little girl. Her mother worked in the ward of the hospital when I was in two years ago.’

Her eyes flitted over the passengers.

‘She’s coming for the summer. It’s the first time I’ve had anyone to board with me, but I thought I’d try it. It’s lonely now Per’s away fishing.’

She turned to Mr Brooks.

‘I don’t see any little girl. I hope she isn’t lost. She had to get on the boat by herself because her mother was working.’

‘She’s probably inside,’ said Mr Brooks, and then his face brightened. ‘A little girl? How nice! Mrs Brooks and I are
having a young lad with us for a few weeks. They’ll be company for each other.’

He paused. ‘It’ll seem strange, children on the Island again.’

The goat-lady nodded, but said nothing.

Sweating deckhands heaved lines to the wharf and the ship, like a big horse backing into a stall, shuddered against the pilings. Finally the gangplank was shoved across and freight was hoisted to the dock, swinging dizzily. Winches groaned, commands were shouted, Mr Brooks and Mrs Nielsen strained their eyes and Sergeant Coulter stood lordly and impassive.

A bent old gentleman, carrying a knobby stick and followed by two border collies, came slowly down the gangplank.

‘Oh, Mr Allen,’ shouted Mr Brooks, ‘how did you do in the sheep trials?’

The old man fumbled in his shabby overcoat and brought out a blue satin ribbon.

‘Good! Very good indeed.’ Mr Brooks gave him a friendly wave. ‘Oh, Mr Allen, you didn’t see a young boy on board, did you? Or a little girl?’

One of the border collies cringed. Mr Allen gave Mr Brooks a horrified look, and motioning to his two collies, he sprinted up the wharf, pausing only once to stop and shake a crotchety fist.

Mr Brooks and Mrs Nielsen approached the first mate.

‘Did you see— ’

‘Yes! Yes!’ he said irritably. ‘Thank God somebody’s claiming them.’

Sergeant Coulter moved to the foot of the gangplank. The first mate turned to him, shook his head and wiped his brow.

‘Whew!’ he said.

‘What’s the trouble?’ asked the Mountie.

The mate gave a sigh of relief, realising his watch was over.

‘Oh,’ he said wearily, ‘I guess the girl isn’t
too
bad. But that boy!’

The burly steward in his wilted white jacket arrived panting at the top of the gangplank, a squirming child under each arm.

‘Time, ladies and gentlemen!’ he shouted with a harsh Cockney accent. ‘The end of the line for you two!’

He set the two children on their feet and gave a comic salute to the Mountie.

‘You’ll wish you was back on the quiet beaches of Dunkirk!’ he called as he beat a hasty retreat.

A smaller steward, carrying a leather suitcase and a paper shopping bag, dashed between the children, down to the wharf, dropped the bags, raced up the gangplank and fled into the bowels of the ship.

The children stood spitting at each other and refused to come down the gangplank.

‘You did!’

‘I didn’t!’

‘You did too!’

‘I did not!’

‘You’re a liar!’

‘I am not! So are you!’


I saw you!

Mr Brooks and Mrs Nielsen, with empty waiting arms, stood ignored, and the big Mountie watched with hard eyes.

‘You went in the captain’s cabin!’

‘How do you know? I did not! You must of been up there too!’

‘You dumped ink on his charts!’

‘Liar! I bumped it with my elbow!’

‘Liar! Liar! Liar!’ The girl drew back and faced the boy triumphantly. Then, as a final insult she turned and hissed: ‘And I don’t care if you are going to get ten million dollars. You haven’t got a mother!’

With this parting shot, she stalked down the gangplank.

Sergeant Coulter thought he had never seen such an unprepossessing child, not that he cared much for children in any form. They were miniature grown-ups, and as such bore careful watching.

The child, her lank, straw-colored hair hanging lifelessly about her pinched white face, looked straight ahead, and marched down like a small royal personage.

Sergeant Coulter noticed that, though her clothes were shabby, they were neat and clean, and somehow she already had the air of an indomitable Island spinster.

When she reached the waiting group she looked about, and her eye settled on Mrs Nielsen.

‘Are you Mrs Nielsen, the goat-lady?’

Mrs Nielsen nodded, unsure of how to greet the child.

‘And you are Christie,’ she said finally.

‘My mother told me you had a little house. She said you had a cow and a cat and a dog.’ She paused while she looked the goat-lady up and down. ‘Have you?’

Mrs Nielsen nodded.

The child became aware of the policeman.

‘Who’s he?’ she gasped.

Mr Brooks, with his courtly, old-world manner, stepped forward.

‘This is Sergeant Coulter of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and I’m Mr Brooks. I run the store here. Welcome to the Island.’

Sergeant Coulter did not look at all welcoming.

Christie gazed up at him and down again, from the top of his broad-brimmed hat to his polished boots. Then she smiled and her face was radiant.

‘A real Mountie,’ she said softly. She remembered her fellow traveller who still stood at the top of the gangplank, and she jerked her thumb at him.

‘Can you put him in jail? He’s a bad boy. He tells lies and he’s not nice.’

Picking up the paper shopping bag, she turned to the goat-lady.

‘Well, let’s go.’

As she and Mrs Nielsen walked up the wharf she looked over her shoulder to Sergeant Coulter and smiled again.

‘A real Mountie,’ she repeated.

The boy suddenly hurtled down the gangplank, his face sullen and his bold eyes insolent.

‘I am not a liar! I have so got ten million dollars! She threw the salt cellar at me!’ He pointed to a purple bump on his forehead, ‘and she said she’d push me overboard if I didn’t shut up!’

When the Mountie stood expressionless and silent, the boy’s outburst stopped and he looked about.

Mr Brooks stepped forward.

‘You must be Barnaby,’ he said and held out his hand.

Barnaby took no notice of the gesture.

‘Where’s my uncle? And I am not a liar! She’s a liar!’

His voice was shrill, almost hysterical.

Mr Brooks put his arm about the boy’s shoulder.

‘Of course you aren’t. Your uncle isn’t here, Barnaby. At least, not yet, so you are going to stay with Mrs Brooks and me for a little while.’

He patted the boy’s flaxen head, but the child drew away from him.

‘Won’t that be nice, Barnaby? We’re so happy to have you, we’ve wanted a little boy like you for such a long time.’

Barnaby turned to Sergeant Coulter.

‘Are you a real Mountie?’

‘Of course he is,’ said Mr Brooks. ‘He always meets the boat when he’s on the Island. This is Sergeant Coulter, Barnaby, and he was born here. Now then, shall we go up to the store and see Mrs Brooks? She’s so anxious to meet you.’

The boy ignored Mr Brooks, his admiring eyes fixed on the policeman.

‘When I grow up, I’m going to be a Mountie.’

‘Why?’ asked Sergeant Coulter, speaking for the first time.

‘Because you can put people in jail if you don’t like them.’

The policeman smiled and turned to Mr Brooks.

‘It’s not quite as simple as that, is it, Mr Brooks?’

‘Shall we go and see Mrs Brooks, Barnaby?’

‘Where’s my uncle?’

Mr Brooks and Sergeant Coulter looked at each other.

‘But I just told you, Barnaby, he couldn’t get here in time.’

‘You mean he’s really not here? He’s not playing a game?’

The child’s manner changed, his face crumpled and he looked dependent and pathetic as he gazed in a confused way from Mr Brooks to Sergeant Coulter.

‘No, of course he’s not playing a game, Barnaby. He’s been detained, but he’ll be here soon. Everything will be all right, my boy, and in the meanwhile, I know you’ll be happy with us. Now come along.’

He offered Barnaby his hand again, and this time, looking dazed, the child took it.

They walked together for several yards, then the boy pulled away from Mr Brooks and ran back to the policeman.

‘But if he isn’t here, where is he?’

His face was desperate.

The Mountie pointed to Mr Brooks.

‘He’s in Europe. Mr Brooks will explain everything to you. Go with him like a good boy. We’ll get in touch with your uncle. Don’t worry, we’ll look after you.’

The boy stared up at him.

‘You mean you’ll really look after me?’

‘Mr and Mrs Brooks will.’

‘And nothing will happen to me?’

Puzzled, the Mountie stared down at the boy.

‘No, of course not. You run along with Mr Brooks now. Mrs Brooks is waiting to meet you.’

Barnaby returned to Mr Brooks, and as they walked up the wharf he turned and shouted: ‘I’m going to be a Mountie. Just like you.’

Sergeant Coulter sat in the police launch, pondering. One small boy unmet by uncle.

He was a precise, dedicated man who rarely made snap judgements, but he felt that there was something very much the matter with that boy.

He leaned back and lit a cigarette. When you stopped to think of it, there was something the matter with most children these days. They needed more discipline. Take that boy, rude, spoiled, private-school brat. ‘I’ve got ten million dollars!’ Imperious little devil. A good hiding was what he needed. But that sort of treatment was considered old fashioned today. It worked when he was a boy, though.

Well, the boy was, after all, only a child. Frightened when his uncle wasn’t there to meet him. Left stranded on the dock like a lost puppy.

Sergeant Coulter, smiled as he remembered the admiration in the boy’s eyes. They all wanted to be Mounties.

But the smile faded. There was something the matter with that boy. He was more than frightened. He looked almost insane, and that expression on his face when he asked about the uncle …

What was it? Where had he seen that expression before? The policeman’s mind couldn’t let it go. Then things clicked into place and he remembered. The prisoner reprieved from the gallows.

Oh, no. He was imagining things.

Sergeant Coulter put his fountain pen away and brushed a speck of dust from his hat. The old people of the Island weren’t used to boys. Especially bad boys. He’d be breaking windows and cheeking the old birds.

That boy needed a firm hand. Yes, he’d watch that boy.

BOOK: Let's Kill Uncle
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