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Authors: Tim O'Rourke

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BOOK: Moonlight
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Without even noticing her arrive, Winnie had crept up beside him.

"What time does our train leave?" she asked him.

He smiled with his eyes and replied, "Seven-thirty."

Winnie stood, arms wrapped about her fragile frame which she hid beneath the same dirty sweater. She also wore the same faded denims as the previous
night, which were
covered from thigh to calf in grime and dirt. Her feet were clad in worn trainers
,
which flopped loosely about her feet, due to oversize and lack of laces.

Thaddeus could see at once that Winnie appeared disturbed in some way, and he wondered if she was going to turn and run at any minute. “Are you okay?” he asked her.

Winnie
thought of Ruby, the last she had seen of her was being slid into the back of the hearse, zipped tight in a black plastic body bag. The police officers had asked her questions, but not many. It was
obvious what had happened. Winnie
didn’t want to think about that - that was in the past now and she didn’t want to go back there.  So brushing aside her long, unruly fringe, she looked at Thaddeus and said, “I’m just a bit nervous, that’s all.”

“You have nothing to be nervous about,” he smiled. “I promise.” Then, picking up the carrier bag in a quick movement, he handed it to her.

Winnie looked confused.

"It’s okay, I bought you some new clothes to travel in,” he explained.

"Look, I ain’t
no
charity case. I got my..." she started.

Thaddeus cut across her wi
th a gentle smile dancing over
his lips and in his eyes, and said, “Call it an advance on your wages."

Winnie looked
down, and pulling open the bag
, she peered inside. She raised her eyebrows, and
closing it
she looked up at him.

"You were that sure that I'
d come, you went and bought
these clothes?"

Without taking his eyes from her, he said, “I wasn’t sure you would come, but I kind of hoped you would.” He then took a metal comb from his back trouser pocket and handed it to her. “Go freshen up.”

W
ithout looking back, she headed across the concourse in the direction of the female bathrooms where she could have a wash and put on the clean clothes. She had
be
come used to washing in public bathrooms, but at least now she had some decent soap and shampoo to do the job properly. Winnie
had
also
become accustomed
to the stares that you got, but today she didn’t care. Today she would leave the bathrooms looking as good as any of the other women who stood and preened themselves in the long mirrors above the sinks.

Winnie found the cubicle for disabled people and slipped inside, closing the door behind her. She chose that particular cubicle as they were bigger than the others, and they had their own sink and hand dryer. She could wash and change without others looking at her. Filling a basin with warm water, she leant forward at the waist and wetted her hair the best she could. Winnie squirted some of the shampoo into the palms of her hands and then massaged
it
into her hair. Leaning forward again, she washed the white foamy suds away. The smell of the shampoo was sweet and almost intoxicating and at once she started to feel better about herself. Then stripping down to her grey underwear, she refilled the sink with clean water.

She washed as best
as
she could, splashing her arms, legs, and face with water
and soap. I
t felt as
if
she was washing away the last few years from the pores of her skin. Turning on the automatic dryer, Winnie angled the nozzle so as to dry her hair, face, arms
,
and legs. Then snatching up the bag of clothes Thaddeus had given her, she pulled them out and dressed.

 

Alone again, Thaddeus purchased Winnie a ticket from the automated machine. He knew the bag he had given to her contained one of the violet tops, with the black jeans and boots. A fire burnt in his stomach with anticipation as he waited for her to return. He wanted to see if she would look as good as he hoped. After waiting patiently for some time, Thaddeus looked up to see Winnie appear from the ladies
bathroom. She came towards him, and his heart beat loud and fast in his chest as he looked on in wonder at the transformation. She was going to be perfect, he thought secretly to himself. The top hung loosely about her frame, shifting and whispering like a violet haze as she moved towards him. He figured her height to be about five-two without the boots, but now she appeared to be much taller. That was good
,
he thought - it was perfect. He noted that she had put his comb
and the shampoo
to good use, for her hair now hung in thick
,
fiery locks about her face and shoulders.

Winnie reached him, feeling fresh and excited in her new clothes. She couldn’t remember feeling so good about herself. It was as if she was a person again.

"How do I look, Thaddeus?" she asked.

He knew exactly how she looked, and it was better than he could’ve ever imagined when he first caught sight of her a week ago, begging outside the Embankment Tube Station. Then as coolly as he could, and wanting to hide his own excitement, he looked at Winnie and simply said, "You look okay." He then turned, snatched up his case and made his way across the concourse towards the platform where their train waited.

They boarded a first-class carriage and took their seats. Winnie excitedly sat in the window seat, as Thaddeus took the seat beside her. The train pulled effortlessly out of the station
at
dead-on seven-thirty in a cloud of oily blue diesel smoke. Winnie reclined her chair and relaxed, letting her heavy eyelids slide shut. Thaddeus turned slightly in his seat
and studied her profile for the briefest of moments, then turned away, and as he did, his eyes turned black with horror. Across the gangway sat a man, the Evening Standard newspaper held up before him
. Thaddeus read
the bold black headline splashed across the front:
“Female student found savaged in bedsit.”

Chapter Five

 

Their journey to the south west of England passed with little conversation. Winnie had slept most of the five hours away. She found the soft reclining chair just too comfortable. It was the nearest thing to a bed she had slept on for a very long time. She awoke occasionally as the train drew into stations along the route, and she would throw sidelong glances at Thaddeus. He seemed to be restless, strumming his long
,
slender fingers on the table before them. He stared deeply through the window and out into the night. The window threw back his own reflection, and he seemed to be staring back into his own dark eyes.

At Exeter, Winnie woke with her bladder pleading to be emptied. She pressed the flat of her hand against her tummy in fear of peeing herself. Thaddeus had gone from beside her, and she peered along the gangway in search of him. The aisle disappeared narrowly away in both directions, but she couldn’t see Thaddeus. She spied his suitcase above her on the rack, and guessed he couldn't be far. Air whistled through her teeth, as she sighed and got up from her seat in search of the bathroom. The train seesawed back and forth as she passed amongst the rows of seats. There were only several passengers remaining in the carriage. Most were asleep, one or two were reading, and another sipped from a steaming cup of coffee.

The door which separated the carriages slid effortlessly open for her as she passed through. The bathroom door was showing the
engaged
sign and she waited patiently outside, her hand pressed flat against her stomach. Her need to go was desperate now, as she squeezed her muscles tight and pressed her legs together. She bit into her lower lip, draining the blood there. Not knowing for how much longer she could hold on, Winnie inched forward and rapped on the door with her fist, then tugged at the handle.  As she pulled, the train lurched, throwing her forward as the toilet door was opened from the inside. Winnie tumbled into the waiting arms of Thaddeus.

"Steady," he whispered, holding her tightly by both shoulders with his hands.

"Sorry, I thought the door was jammed and I'm bursting...." she groaned, her pale cheeks flushing scarlet.

"Well I won’t hold you up any longer," he smiled, releasing his grip on her. He slid past, then
turning
,
he smiled back at her and said,

"Would you like a coffee, Winnie?"

Returning his smile, she nodded. "That would be great, thank you."

He turned away from her and she closed the door. Winnie yanked down her jeans and
panties, and hitching her top
up about her waist, she sighed. Once finished, she pulled up her jeans and rearranged her top. She squeezed some soap from the container on the wall, and washed her hands in the warm water which tossed and tumbled from the tap. Winnie towelled her hands dry and turned to the mirror to straighten her hair,
and paused. Several small drops of what looked like blood stained her top across her right shoulder, where Thaddeus had gripped her only moments ago. She dabbed at it with a wet towel, but the blood was sticky, and it just looked worse where she had tried to wipe it away.

Raking her fingers through her hair, she tried to hide the spots of blood which covered her shoulder. Satisfied that they were hidden, she left the bathroom. Returning to her seat, she found Thaddeus with two small cups of black coffee. Once she had sat down again, Winnie glanced down at Thaddeus’s hands. He had tied a white-coloured piece of tissue around his right thumb.

“Have you hurt yourself
?
” she asked, taking a sip of the hot, sweet coffee.

“My cigarette case,” he said, placing his hand beneath the table and out of sight.  “One of the edges is slightly serrated. I’ve been meaning to replace it for a while now, so it is my own stupid fault.”

“Does it need sti
t
ches?” Winnie asked, thinking of the blood that was now on her top. 

“It's just fine. I've covered it for the time being. I shall patch it up when I get home.” Then, noticing the blotches of blood, he added, “I'm sorry for ruining your top.
You look really pretty
.”

The sudden compliment surprised Winnie, and although it was nice to hear - after all, who didn’t like to hear compliments - she felt awkward and didn’t know how to respond.

Watching her, Thaddeus said, “Don’t worry about the top, I shall replace it.”

Then breaking his stare, and feeling her cheeks flush red again, she turned to look out of the window and said, "You don’t have to replace it, you've been too kind already."

 

They arrived at St. Erth Railway Station just after midnight. The bitter night air engulfed them like an icy blanket as they climbed from the train.

They found a taxi easily enough, and it whisked them through the night to their final destination of St. Ives. The taxi driver pulled up short, just before the turnoff where the main road ended and petered out into a narrow, unruly lane. Thaddeus paid the fare as they clambered from the car
with their luggage
. They stood before the lane as the taxi's taillights disappeared into the distance.

"The cab driver won’t take us any further. The lane is too narrow and the wild bracken scratches the car. I can't blame him, the uneven road doesn't help the suspension either," he remarked as he picked up
his case
and guided her up the lane, leaving the main road and the warm, orange glow of the street lights behind them. Winnie stayed close behind him, then
pausing;
she looked back at the road. If she was going to back out now, this was her last chance.
W
here was she to go? She didn’t know this part of England. She had neve
r been to Cornwall before. W
hat did she have to go back to? Winnie had come this far. Turning away from the
road, Winnie was faced with the total darkness and silence that lay before her. It was in complete contrast to London at night, which had been bright and full of noise, people, and traffic. She had never known such silence and her new surroundings unnerved her. Thaddeus continued to move briskly ahead
. Winnie could barely make out his form before her.
Guided by the sound of his footfalls on the stony ground beneath them, she stepped forward into the dark and followed him.

Winnie tripped
and stumbled in the dark, and she winced o
ut loud as thorns and wild ivy
clawed at her like greedy hands. Not once did Thaddeus trip himself up or snag
his clothes on the undergrowth, which grew in
a frenzy
on either side of them.
Winnie guessed that they must be climbing up, because her legs began to
tire and her calf muscles ached. They must have been walking for twenty minutes
or more, her labouring behind, as Thaddeus
strode
out ahead.  She was just about
to cry out and plead for a rest, when Thaddeus came to an abrupt halt. There was a sound in the darkness as she heard
him loosen a bolt and swing open a gate. Winnie passed through
behind him. Thaddeus closed it, and then strode out in front again.

BOOK: Moonlight
13.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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