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Clay

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by Melissa Harrison




  Contents

  Prologue

  1 St Bartholomew’s Day

  2 Michaelmas

  3 Dog Whipping Day

  4 Hallantide

  5 Martinmas

  6 Midwinter

  7 Plough Monday

  8 Candlemas

  9 Shrovetide

  10 Winnol Weather

  11 Lady Day

  12 Hock Tide

  13 May Day

  14 Pag Rag Day

  15 Oak Day

  16 Haymaking

  17 Midsummer

  18 St Swithin’s Day

  19 Dog Days

  20 Lammas

  21 St Bartholomew’s Day

  Acknowledgements

  A Note on the Author

  For Anthony

  Prologue

  The little wedge-shaped city park was as beautiful and as unremarkable as a thousand others across the country, and despite the changing seasons many of the people who lived near it barely even knew that it was there – although that was certainly not true of all.

  Once much larger, it had been designated common land back in Victorian times, a place ‘for the enjoyment of all’, but had been eaten into and built upon over the years, as is the way with land not seen to earn its keep. Now it was more like a very wide verge which followed the long, unlovely high road for much of its length, interrupted here and there by side streets and a few grander buildings which had fenced off their own stretch to make a private garden in defiance of planning laws nobody seemed willing to enforce.

  The Plestor Estate formed its westernmost boundary and the bus-thundered high road its east. Along the high road were shops: nail bars, chicken parlours, newsagents, mobile phone unlocking, cheap calls to Africa, launderettes, cab offices and discount booze. Further out were street after street of terraces, some Edwardian, set on wide, tree-lined roads, some narrower and more crowded. There were tall housing blocks, too, and more estates, and to the east there were sidings and sheds and acres of shining track.

  A few streets to the north-west were the broad open spaces of a common, many times bigger than the little park and bisected both by the railway line and a road. Its grassy acres were big enough for football pitches and stately plane trees and shabby tennis courts and some surprisingly old oak woods that ran along the embankment on both sides.

  The park, the common, the high road: it wasn’t an area you could give a name to, or even a postcode; its borders were too intangible for that. Thousands passed through it every day with barely a glance, their lives intersecting in ways that they would most likely never come to know.

  It was the rough territory of a dog fox; the distance an old lady with a stick could cover in an afternoon; the area a small boy could come to know and call his own.

  1

  St Bartholomew’s Day

  The room was square and beige, with posters of lakes and snowy peaks on the walls and a box of old toys in the corner. There were two sofas with ill-fitting blue covers, and a rectangular table, bare except for a box of tissues and with two plastic chairs facing each other across it; two more were stacked in the corner. In the door was a window set with reinforced glass; the only window, in fact, in the whole room. Below the ceiling hung two small cameras with glowing red eyes.

  A boy sat on one sofa holding a toy dog like he didn’t know what to do with it. It was clear somebody had put it into his hands. Somebody well meaning; but he was ten now, too old for soft toys. He put it gently on the floor by his feet and pushed his hands between his knees. Kept his eyes on it.

  On the other sofa was a young woman with large gold earrings and folded arms. She looked towards the boy, but not at him. Her expression, her posture, gave very little away. An older woman sat at the table, sorting through some papers in a folder. She looked up at the boy and at his mother, then put the folder away, down by the side of the table, as though there it might be somehow defused.

  ‘All right then, TC,’ she said. ‘It says here that’s what you like to be called, is that right?’

  The boy glanced up at her briefly, then away.

  ‘TC. Now you know you’re not in any trouble, don’t you? You’re not in any trouble at all.’

  The boy nodded.

  ‘Good. And you understand I’m not a policewoman?’

  Again, he nodded. ‘You’re the social.’

  ‘I work for social services, yes, that’s right. Now, what I want to do today is find out a little bit about your friendship with Mr Lopata – with Jozef. Is that all right?’

  ‘Is he in trouble?’

  ‘Let’s not worry about him for now, OK? For now I just want to build up a picture of what life’s been like for yourself, OK, TC, and about how you came to know Jozef. Now, I understand that last September, soon after you started Year Five, you started missing school, is that right? Can you tell me why that was?’

  It was hard for TC to remember everything that had happened a whole year ago. Such a lot of time had passed. He tried to think back to last September, before his mum started seeing Jamal, before he found the secret garden. Before he met Jozef.

  TC had taken a book into school on the first day of Year Five. It was one of only two books he owned – although the other one was a secret.

  This one he had stolen from a plastic crate outside a charity shop during the summer holidays. It was called The Supernatural and was full of grainy black-and-white photographs showing pots and pans sent flying through old-fashioned kitchens by poltergeists, cheery adventurers waving from the steps of planes that had later disappeared into thin air and religious statues weeping tears of human blood. Once he got it home he’d found he could not escape from its terrifying pull; that night it was as if all the terrors on its pages might burst out of it and fly howling around the room.

  Since then he had allowed himself to look at it only in daylight, and he always made sure to close the covers firmly and hide it away before dark. Nevertheless, when he woke in the night his mind was often drawn back to the lurid pictures and the chilling text; he both wanted to know, and didn’t want to know, how the world worked and whether it really was so treacherous.

  He took it to school because he’d wanted Year Five to be different. He’d thought the book might bring him kudos of some kind, and pictured himself besieged by curious and admiring children, but as he stood in the playground with it on the first day of term, held mutely open at the most terrifying page, he found it earned him only mockery and jeers. He should have known better, he thought; as if that was ever going to work. Why did he have to keep on trying, why did he have to keep making it worse?

  His other book had been bought for him by his father, although you could say he’d stolen that one, too. TC had not seen his dad for nearly three months, not since his mum kicked him out just before his ninth birthday, which wasn’t fair. After all the shouting, after the sound of his feet on the echoing stairwell had died away – as it turned out for the last time – TC had watched from his bedroom window as his mum took everything to do with his dad out to the bins far below, even the presents left wrapped and ready for TC’s birthday. They were for him – for him; and he knew he would never forgive her.

  That was the first time he left the flat at night by himself, creeping down the four flights of stairs with their buzzing, unreliable lights and overcoming untold horrors to reach blindly into the bin’s black maw. There was only one present he could reach, and he opened it in secret in his bed that night – not that the secrecy was warranted, looking back, because from what he could tell his mother had hardly been into his room since then anyway.

  The book was a guide to tracking wild animals, and since then TC had looked at it every single day. As well as the prints animals’ feet left in mud and snow, it showed how to tell if a hazelnut had
been nibbled by a squirrel or a mouse, what sorts of animals lived in what kinds of homes, and how to recognise different types of animal droppings. Instantly, TC knew why his dad had chosen it for him: they had watched survival programmes together, and his dad was going to teach him bushcraft. He’d been in the army – well, the Territorials, which was the same thing – and he knew everything about survival. They were going to go camping in the summer, although that would never happen, now.

  His dad had chosen well, despite it really being a book for grown-ups. The parts TC didn’t understand he pored over endlessly, and by the start of Year Five he knew what a herbivore was, if not the difference between ‘your’ and ‘you’re’; and he could roughly describe the distribution of water voles across the country, although he did not yet know where any major cities were on a map.

  Not that it counted for anything. The teachers weren’t bothered if you knew about stuff like that, and the other kids certainly didn’t care; they were all into football and Wii games and stuff. So at lunchtime on that first day back, having understood how it was to be, he did what he had been doing all summer long and simply took himself away: away to the little park where only the magpies scolded him from the trees, away to the common’s grassy acres and the friendly oak woods at its margins; away to where he felt less alone. In the weeks without his father those few nondescript city acres – the park by the Plestor Estate, the common and the few godforsaken corners of scrub between the estate and the high road – had become overlaid with the landmarks of all his solitary imaginings, until every tree and fence post and path and thicket was charged with an almost mystical significance. The book had been the key: it showed him a secret world that existed alongside the daily, humdrum one, but that seemed invisible to most people. The birds weren’t just things flapping about in the background; they had lives, just like people did: they got married, had families, fought each other and died, and so did the foxes and the squirrels and everything else. And it was happening all the time and all around him, not just in TV programmes, or in Africa or wherever. It was all going on, secretly and without anything to do with people; and TC longed, longed, to belong to it all.

  And so, when the school bell rang for the end of lunch on the first day back, he was more than a mile away on the common, high in the branches of his favourite oak. It had a friendly lower branch, then a satisfying scramble to the next level; then a choice: he could either sit with his back against the rough, reassuring trunk, or further out, in the crux of two tortuous branches, where dog walkers would often pass directly below, never suspecting the small boy sitting quietly above them. There, TC had carefully tied one slim twig in a loose knot. One day it would be a proper branch, and only he would know how it had come by its odd shape.

  It didn’t feel like autumn yet, it still felt like summer. The oak’s leaves were still green, although some of the horse chestnuts were starting to turn; TC looked around and tried to imagine the thick canopy down on the ground and all the branches bare, but it didn’t seem possible.

  He thought about when his dad would come back, and how he could tell him everything he had learned. He would show him the bent grasses and scuffed earth that marked the place where a fox pushed its way under the fence by the station sidings night after night, or the empty, teardrop-shaped nest of a long-tailed tit, painstakingly woven from cobwebs and lichen and hair. Or perhaps by then he would have found his holy grail: an owl pellet, packed with fur and feathers and tiny bones that could be picked out and sorted to show what the owl had eaten. The tracking book said there weren’t any owls in the city, but it also said there weren’t very many foxes, and that definitely wasn’t true. After all, there was a date in it telling when it had been published, and it was back when TC was just a baby, which left lots of time for owls to come. Perhaps one day he would hear one, and follow the sound to its roost, and below the roost would be the dry, regurgitated pellets: little gifts for his father, when he came home.

  Apart from the time his mum dialled 999, it was TC’s first real brush with the police. Hunger drove him down from the oak but he hadn’t thought how it would look, a boy wandering around in uniform on a school day. When the two policemen called him over on Leasow Road he didn’t even think to run away.

  ‘How old are you, son?’ asked the taller of the two.

  ‘Nine.’

  ‘And is that an Elmsford’s uniform?’

  TC’s chest thumped, and his stomach dropped like a stone.

  ‘And why aren’t you in school today?’

  He didn’t have any answers; yet there was something about the man’s hand on his shoulder as they steered him towards the high-rise blocks that felt almost like relief.

  The coppers didn’t like the lift not working. TC had to follow them at their pace up the stairs, their shoes black and ugly on each step, their trousers shiny and ill-fitting as school uniforms. They spoke to one another on the way up as though TC wasn’t there.

  At the fourth floor they stopped. ‘This it, then?’ TC wasn’t even nervous now, not really bothered about what she might say. Something to get through, that was all. And then he could go to his room and look at his book.

  But when she answered the door there was someone standing behind her – a man was standing behind her. TC thought for one heart-thudding moment that it was his father, but that was stupid, this man was taller and darker, different, this man was not his father, not his father at all.

  2

  Michaelmas

  In the mornings she would sit by the kitchen window and watch the early-morning dog walkers not picking up after their dogs. Then would come the commuters on their way to work and the parents taking their kids to school, using the little park outside her window as a short cut to the bus stop and dropping cigarette ends into the grass. All so young, and no idea of it! Still, she wouldn’t want to be their age again. Too much to worry about. All the wrong things, too.

  It was the end of September, and autumn was in the air. It had been a crisp weekend, brisk breezes chasing clouds across a blue sky and sending sycamore leaves down onto the grass where they would scud about for weeks, eventually forming a dry tide against the chain-link fence through which Sophia now looked and which marked the back boundary of the park. The Plestor Estate had been smart in the sixties and was ugly now, rain and grime staining its white render like tears, but her view of the trees was worth every deprivation that had befallen it since she and her late husband Henry had bought their ground-floor flat, brand new, in 1961.

  How wonderful it had seemed when they had first moved in, with its clean white planes, the park next to it like the neat green swathe around an architect’s model, studded with foam trees. They could hardly believe they could afford it. Henry worked in a factory that made transistors and semiconductors; the company was on the up, buying other firms, and they were both optimistic about his prospects. The Plestor had represented a dream, a bright, modern future far away from the bomb sites and empty buildings of their childhoods. Michael was just a baby when they put their money down, another baby on the way; what they were buying into was something neither of them could have articulated, and so the disappointment that attended its failure to materialise – marked by the closure first of the nearby swimming baths, then the art deco cinema, the proliferation of pound shops and the gradual descent of the doctor’s surgery into grimy disorder – had been impossible to talk about either.

  Although it was the little park to which Sophia would have said she was most attached, the flat itself had become, over long years, a perfect reflection of the old lady’s spirit. Despite her growing stiffness, and her hip, Sophia kept it spotlessly clean, and light flooded in for most of the day, filtering through the leaves in summer and lending the well-proportioned rooms a cool, almost underwater feel.

  The parquet in the hallway was patinated to a deep shine, and in the kitchen a brown teapot, six mismatched mugs and a Cornish striped milk jug gleamed on the dresser. Everything in the flat had a story
to tell: some of the furniture had belonged once to Sophia’s mother; some she and Henry had bought second-hand and, together, restored; he had been a practical man who hated to see good things go to waste. The sun-faded curtains and cushions she had made herself; over the years the print had passed in and out of fashion more than once, but Sophia had loved them when she made them, and she loved them now. The other flats in the block – sublet, divided into bedsits, thumping with music – may have descended into relative disorder, but Sophia’s remained a haven of tranquillity. The only note of untidiness was the kitchen windowsill, where stones, pine cones, honesty seeds and dull, wizened conkers spoke of a habit that may have formed when Sophia’s two children were small, but had continued long after they were grown up.

  Monday morning had dawned damp and chill, and now she wiped the condensation from the inside of the kitchen window with her sleeve, the better to see if it was a stormcock singing so loudly from the top of the rowan. Its brave red berries made it one of her favourite trees in the park, especially in a breeze when its leaves would flicker to show their silvery underneaths. In truth, though, she loved all of them, and knew them all, too: which of the horse chestnuts unfurled its acid-green leaves first each spring, where the squirrels had a drey in the holm oak and whether the young cherry, its bark stripped by dogs one hot night in June, was likely to survive the coming winter, or was dying already, its sap unable to reach up past the wound.

  Today’s main job was to go to the post office and pay some bills. By about ten o’clock the paths that criss-crossed the grass were mainly free of charging dogs, pushchairs and other irritations; ignoring the sensible shoes her daughter Linda had bought her, Sophia Adams, seventy-eight and a half, thrust her feet into the too-big brogues she still could not bear to throw out after fourteen years of widowhood, took up her ash stick and set out.

 

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