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Malin Head (standard:romance, 1605 words) | |||
Author: KShaw | Added: Jul 21 2005 | Views/Reads: 3482/2424 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Sailors will go where sailors go...an almost true story. A love story with a difference. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story Jimmy beckoned me closer with a cobwebbed spiny hand. I felt uneasy, almost afraid of his weakness. “Not one of us has ever taken a risk,” he said in a whisper, just before the nurse returned with a clean bowl. “Jimmy, why don't you let me clean you up some,” she pleaded kindly. “Cos I ain't dead yet, you useless bloody cow,” he croaked. She removed the bowl of bile and placed a clean one at his side. “You need more oxygen, Jimmy, it's time your friends were leaving.” Jimmy, in irritation, spat and coughed and gasped but couldn't find the breath to speak. With one momentous effort, his chest awash with flem and his heart clogged with spleen, he managed to splutter just two words. The expression on the nurse's face will never leave me. Jimmy had managed to couch his anger with the merciless efficiency of a monofilament net containing just two words. That night Sid and Cecil showed up at the harbour carrying axes. Harry, who owned the Bedford dormobile, was sat in the drivers seat in the car park with the lights off. Together we walked towards Harry who, seeing all three of us walking toward him, leapt out of the van and took Sid and Cecil aside. When they turned back toward me Cecil instructed me to remain here and keep tight hold of the axes. I did as I was told. It was after one in the morning when the van turned, headlights out, into the car park. The rear doors were opened and all three lifted Jimmy out of the back and over to the wharf. Jimmy must have spluttering blood over the back of Harry's shirt, and it blossomed like a rose in the moonlight. They managed to lay him in the hull of the old Viking. Sid, Jimmy's brother, and Harry remained in the boat while Cecil climbed out, took the axes from me and handed them down to the others. The old Viking's engine started and the boat bobbed gently away from the berth, the calm waters slapping against the bow. “Com'on, lad, you'll come with me,” Cecil ordered. Together we walked over to Harry's dormobile, and when the rear doors opened I could smell Jimmy's clothes, his old clay pipe, and something else, excrement and piss. “We'll burn these later,” he said. We gathered them up and walked towards Cecil's Raven 26, moored to the jetty. He backed the launch away from its mooring and the small diesel Perkins droned us slowly out between the harbour walls. It took all the strength I had to help Harry into the boat. Cecil struggled with Sid till me and Harry helped haul him over the side. We all lay there, breathing like fish fighting for their lives. A couple of days later, a fatter, greyer, but still kindly Jack Rafferty came to the door. “Hello Jack,” mum said, what will you be doing visiting?” “I'd like a word with your lad, Marion.” He took off his helmet as she beckoned him through the door. “I hope it's not trouble, Jack.” “It's just a couple of questions, Marion. I've heard that your lad has been mixing with some bad sorts lately.” “Bad sorts, Jack?” “Harry Spokes, Cecil Bannister, and Sid Cullen, our three town misfits, now that Jimmy has disappeared.” “But I thought Jimmy was in the cottage hospital, Jack.” “He was, but appears to have miraculously recovered and left in the middle of the night, and taken his boat out of the harbour.” “Never! My goodness, I believed he was close to death. Peggy Shaw was telling me yesterday that Social Services had removed him from his house for his own welfare, saying the house was too damp.” “True enough, the doctor's and the nurse on duty say he was physically incapable of leaving the hospital on his own. Suspicion surrounds Cecil, his brother, and the nurse told me that your lad had visited Jimmy last night and was possibly one of the last people to see him, along with Sid and Harry.” Mum looked round at me. “He looked kind of okay, I mean he was coughing, but that's all.” I said. Mum looked back at Jack. “No one spoke to you about removing Jimmy from the hospital?” “No.” “And you don't know anything about Jimmy's disappearance?” “No.” “You're not keeping good company, lad, not with the likes of those fellows. You'd be wise to keep your distance.” Jack trawled the town for informative gossip for the next few days. I grew up among sea folk where rules are made according to wants, and where social workers don't always know what's best. The pubs to this day still ring with rumour. Cecil and Sid, too, have been laid to rest, taking their truth with them. Harry still gives me the odd wink, and a smile, his old rheumy eyes seeing everything. Sometimes, less often now, I sail 'Paladin' out into the dark waters, and when the forecast is for storms across Malin Head, I know it's just the wheezing of an old man who knew where his heart should be. Tweet
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KShaw has 33 active stories on this site. Profile for KShaw, incl. all stories Email: Kelly_Shaw2001@yahoo.com |