Incident at the Library

She looked innocent.  Of course she did.  My aunty often told me that once a woman is over 50 she becomes invisible.  So how much more invisible is a little bent over old lady pulling one of those tartan shopping bags on wheels.  Nobody ever thought anything of her.  Nobody ever imagined what she might do.

So there we were that Thursday afternoon after school, Billy and me, just hanging out like outside the library.  Not because we’re into reading or anything, just because it’s a nice shady spot in summer and there are steps and a wall to sit on, and nobody bothers you so long as you don’t make too much noise.  And sometimes you can chat to some girl from another school…well, you know how it is.

Anyway, as I said, we were just hanging out and this old lady, all bent and bundled up, even though it was summer, came around the corner of the library building pulling this thing behind her.  It looked kind of heavy and like something was pushing out the sides of the bag at the bottom.

She was struggling with the door while holding onto her bag, so Billy jumped up to help her.  She sort of grunted and nodded at him but he said he couldn’t see her face because her head was so far back in the hood she was wearing.  He said she had a funny smell too, but that’s not unusual with old people is it?

Anyway, a few minutes later there was like ‘boom’ and all the glass in the library windows shattered and the doors blew open.  Then there was a huge sound like wings flapping and page after page from the library books flew out of the windows and through the doors.  Strings of words slid off the pages and landed in the street where they shrivelled up.  Others landed in the library garden and burrowed into the ground like so many worms.  And then all the blank pages just took off like so many birds with white wings.  Up and up they went into the sky which was so bright with the sun that you could hardly look.

And then there was another sound: ‘whoosh’ and would you believe it?  The little old lady flew out of the doors on a something like a broomstick, although it looked more like one of those old-fashioned mops.  She threw back her head and her hood blew down, long wild wispy hair went crazy around her head.  ‘Free them, free the words!’ she screamed, cackling as she circled once around the library building then headed off over the cars and taxis down Victoria Street.

The library’s been closed for two months now.  We still hang out there, but now we’re watching for the word worms to come up.

©2018 Chris Hall

Shoot!

10:15. I’m late.  I grab my camera bag and run.  The whole world seems to be out, all converging on City Hall carrying flags and banners: some in support, most in dissent of our ‘glorious leader’.  I’m in the dissent camp. I’m also a correspondent.

I mustn’t blow it.  I clutch the camera bag to my hip and put on a burst of speed.

I’m opposite City Hall but I can’t get the shot.  There are too many people in the way.  The motorcade swings around the corner.  I have to hurry.

I jump onto the perimeter wall of the building behind me and scurry along, closing in on the action.  As I unpack my camera I see that the motorcade has come to a halt.  Military and security service personnel are much in evidence.  Assorted dignitaries line the red carpet which runs down the City Hall steps to the presidential limo.  The limo door opens and the man for whom the masses have gathered, steps out flanked by his guards.

I focus the camera, holding my breath.  If only those two security serviceman in their dark suits and darker glasses would get out of my line of sight.

Shots ring out.  One of the servicemen drops to the ground, bright blood staining his shirt.  The crowd surges.  I leap down from the wall, fighting my way through the confusion.  More gunfire comes from within the fleeing crowd.  But I’m already behind the car doing my own shooting.

A bullet whistles past my shoulder.  I spin round, eye to the viewfinder.  The assassin moves in, weapon in outstretched hands.  The barrel is pointing directly at me.

Another shot.  The assassin crumples.  Blood streams across his face from the single head wound.  Blood pools on the tarmac. My camera whirrs. Snick, snick, snick.

©2018 Chris Hall

Mind Mess

“I thought you said this was a good one.  Ordered mind packed with information, experiences and emotions?” Probe Agent Delta-Zero-Four turned to her colleague, the scales on her forehead raised. “We’re not going to learn much here.  Look!”

Probe Agent Beta –Two-Two peered over her shoulder at the screen, “When tested the subject scored exceptionally well,” he read.  His forked tongue flickered.  “Mmm, does look a bit of a mess.”  He jabbed a manicured claw at the bottom of the screen. “What are those?”

“Initialising visual brain-image enhancer,” she tweaked a knob on the side of the monitor.  “Thought-debris, mind-rubbish, emotional nonsense…I don’t see much else.”

“Very well, are we agreed Delta-Zero-Four?”

“Agreed, Beta-Two-Two.”  She said, pushing a red button in the centre of her console.

The screen went blank for a second, then a message flashed up: “Mind-wipe activated, click on the tab for next subject.”

Delta-Zero-Four clicked on the mouse.

©2018 Chris Hall

 

The Chosen One

The Chosen One lunasonline

From my Flash Fiction collection

Moonlight shimmers on Jenny’s dress. It is the winter solstice and the night is clear, the bright white moon surrounded by velvet blackness.  Jenny is the Chosen One. Her long golden hair crowned with a mistletoe and ivy garland cascades over her shoulders. Tall and slim, she holds the silver chalice aloft

She must be so cold, Cal thinks.

The villagers stand in a circle holding blazing torches, their faces reflected oddly in the flickering flames. The priest throws back his head and starts to chant. The gathering echoes his words of power. The spell reaches a climax and suddenly there is silence. Jenny puts the chalice to her lips and drinks. It falls to the floor and rolls away as the trance takes hold of her.

The chalice stops at the edge of the circle by Cal’s feet. He picks it up feeling the warmth where his sister had held it.

The priest lifts Jenny onto the stone table. A woman comes forward and takes the garland from her hair, replacing it with a delicate silver circlet. The priest starts to chant again and the woman returns to the circle. The transformation is about to begin.

As the villagers depart, Cal slips away and hides behind the old oak tree. He watches as the priest raises his arms and performs a final incantation before following the line of villagers back down to the valley.

Jenny is alone on the hilltop now. Cal shivers although he is dressed in his warmest clothes.  How can Jenny stand this?

Something rustles in the undergrowth beside him. Cal looks down. A small furry creature looks up at him with bright black eyes. More rustling: a rabbit, now a fox and a fawn.  Forest animals gather around the stone table. The smallest ones climb up and nuzzle up to Jenny. Soon she is covered by a living blanket of fur.

Out of nowhere, thunder; sounding like galloping horses. The noise reverberates around the hilltop. Clouds cover the moon. Cal cowers.

Then a column of the brightest light that Cal has ever seen strikes the hilltop. The creatures scatter leaving Jenny exposed on the stone table. The beam glows and throbs, alive with energy. Cal watches open-mouthed as Jenny’s body is lifted up.

The transformation, Cal thinks. No one has ever witnessed this.

*          *           *

The following morning the priest walks up the hill to bring back the Chosen One. As he looks around to check he is alone he notices something at the foot of the old oak tree. He hurries over. It is the boy, Cal, who picked up the chalice last night. The chalice is still clutched in his hand, but the body is lifeless. The priest shakes his head.

He walks over to the table. The girl is sleeping peacefully, covered in a shiny silver blanket. As he removes the strange material, she stirs and opens her eyes. Bright turquoise: the transformation is complete.  She is truly the Chosen One.

©2018 Chris Hall

Close the Window

 

Close the Window lunasonline

From my Flash Fiction Collection

Charles stared at the message on the screen. The web page you are viewing is trying to close the window. Do you want to close this window? He moved the cursor between the two options in the dialogue box: ‘yes’ or ‘no’. Charles wasn’t sure. He had a number of windows open. There was one he didn’t want to close just now. He was in the middle of something.

The message repeated. Do you want to close this window? Charles rubbed the grey stubble on his chin. ‘Okay, okay,’ he muttered.

Janet peered over the partition at him. ‘You all right there, Charles?’ He looked back at the bright young woman who sat opposite him. ‘Er, think so.

She nodded and continued tapping away on her keyboard. The younger generation, he thought, it’s all so easy for them. He turned his attention back to the screen and frowned. It seemed to have been busy all on its own and now there were a string of dialogue boxes all overlapping each other, all asking the same question. The question buzzed in his head: Do you want to close this window?

Another message popped up: The program you are using needs to shut down. He glared at the screen. The American spelling irritated him.

He moved the mouse slowly, checking each of the boxes.  Which one? His fingers rubbed his temples. Charles felt the panic rising. He stared out of the window across the college lawns, breathing deeply.

Oh, to hell with it, he thought. He clicked.

Are you sure you want toClick.

Are you sure you want to delete this student?Click.

Warning! Please do not press this button. Charles lost it…Click.

A small plume of smoke rose up in a distant part of the campus.

Task completed successfully.

 

©2018 Chris Hall

Brief Encounter

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Steenbok ©2015 Nigel Whitehead On-Safari Wildlife Photography

The sun is low in the sky, but the baked-on heat of the day throbs out of the concrete stoep.  The bush sings with insects.  I sip my sundowner slowly, the sharp, grassy taste lingering on my tongue, the liquid cool in my throat.  Condensation beads on the glass and drips drops of fine rain on my bare knees.  Wood-smoke from someone’s early evening braai wrinkles my nose.

The thicket rustles and a tiny antelope appears in the small clearing beyond the stoep.  He sees me and freezes.  I keep still-still not wanting to frighten him.  We stare at each other.  I hardly dare breathe.  He is so close, so wild and timid.  Motionless, our eyes locked together, a minute passes, two…

‘Top up?’ a large hand holding a green bottle accompanies the question.  The little animal starts and skips off into the bush.  The spell is broken.

©2018 Chris Hall

A new friend for Henry

Henry was a big, old tabby cat who had lived with Annie since he was a tiny kitten.  Henry liked his life with Annie, which was cosy and secure, with few upsets or nasty surprises.  What Henry liked best was curling up next to Annie after tea with his head resting on her knee, while they watched television or she read a book, while stroking him absent-mindedly.

One Saturday morning Annie came downstairs carrying Henry’s travel basket.  Henry felt the fur on his back start to stiffen with fear and worry.  The travel basket always meant something horrible was going to be done to him.  Perhaps they were going to see the vet; that place with all those other animals and smells and being picked up and pulled about by a strange person who smelt of chemicals and stuck needles and worse in you.  But, no, surely it wasn’t time to go back already.  He was pretty sure it that it hadn’t been a whole year ago since they last went, and it wasn’t as if he was sick or anything.

Then Henry had another scary thought.  Perhaps he was being taken away to the animal prison, where cats and dogs were locked up in cages while their owners went away.  This hadn’t happened for ages, as since the time when he’d got the sneezes after being locked up, Annie had arranged for that nice girl, Louise to come and feed him.  That wasn’t so bad, even if Annie wasn’t there, Louise would talk to him and stroke him when she came to feed him every day.  Anyway, Annie would have put lots of her clothes and things in a big bag by now if she was going anywhere for long.

But none of this happened.  Annie put on her coat, grabbed he handbag and picked up the basket without putting him in it.  As she went through the front door she said:”I’m bringing back a surprise for you, Henry!”  Henry didn’t like surprises.  He wandered over to his favourite chair by the radiator next to the French windows and settled into a slightly disturbed nap.

About an hour later, Henry was woken by the sound of Annie’s key turning in the lock of the front door.  As soon as she opened the door, Henry could smell something strange and definitely unwelcome.

“Here we are little Luna, this is your new home!” Annie said to the cat basket.  “Come and meet Henry.”

Henry stood up in his chair and stretched.  He eyed the basket as Annie put it on the floor in the centre of the room.  He could see through the mesh at the front of the basket that something was moving inside.

“Come on Henry, come and meet you new little sister,” Annie called to him.

Henry jumped down from his chair and approached the basket.  There was a small black and white cat inside.  He looked from the basket to Annie.  “Luna’s coming to live with us.  She’ll be company for you when I’m out.”

Henry stared at the small black and white cat through the wire mesh.  The small cat stared back with beady black eyes.  Henry approached the cage and sniffed delicately.  The little black and white cat arched her back at him.  Henry stepped back warily.  He wasn’t happy at all.  He didn’t want ‘company’, he didn’t want this strange little cat invading his home and he didn’t want to have to share Annie with it.  Perhaps if he ignored it, it would go away.

He turned his back on the basket and sat there for a moment.  Annie was crouching down making crooning noises.  “Shall we let you out so you can meet each other properly?”  This was too much.  Henry got up and stalked into the kitchen.  Pausing briefly to check his food bowl, he put his nose to the cat flap and stepped out into the garden.  Ignoring Annie calling him back, Henry strode purposely down the path to the bottom of the garden, where he jumped onto the wall and settled down for a good long sulk.

When Henry returned to the house, the little black and white cat was still there.  Worse still it was on his couch playing with Annie.  Henry stared at them in dismay.  “Come on Henry, come and say hello,” Annie patted the couch next to her.  Thinking it part of the game, the little black and white cat jumped onto her hand.  Annie scooped her up and held her close to her face, peering at the little cat: “Funny little thing, aren’t you?” she said lovingly.  Poor Henry, he slumped off back to his chair, where he sat paws curled under him glaring at Annie and the little cat.

Henry nodded off.  When he woke, the little cat was nowhere to be seen and Annie was in the kitchen making her tea.  He wandered into the kitchen, looking suspiciously behind the door and under the cupboards.  “Looking for Luna, are you, Henry?  Well, she’ll be sleeping in the spare room until she settles in.  I’ve put her in there now, so you’ve got me all to yourself this evening.”

At least Henry would have Annie to himself in the evenings, Henry thought.  However, the following day, when Annie had let the little black and white cat out into the garden under her watchful eye and she’d skipped around and whooshed in and out of the cat-flap a few times and nothing bad had happened, she was allowed to come and go as she pleased, just as Henry was.

The trouble was that Henry had his routine.  After breakfast he would go out and patrol the garden, taking in new sounds and smells.  This done he would return to his favourite chair and doze the day away until Annie came home and it was time for supper.  But the little black cat was young and curious and keen to play.  Although she had started to spend quite a lot of time trotting round the garden, when she came in as soon as she’d had a brief nap, she wanted to play.  And when Annie wasn’t about, she wanted Henry to play too.

Her favourite game was to start a pretend fight.  She would pounce on Henry when he was snoozing calmly and start to wave her little white paws in his face.  Sometimes Henry would chase her away, which of course she thought was part of the game.  Other times, Henry would simply hold out a front paw and place it on her chest and because his legs were so much longer than hers, she couldn’t reach him with her little flailing paws and before long she would give up and find something else to do.

The evenings were just as bad.  Rather than being allowed to cuddle up quietly on the couch with Annie, the little black and white cat would be jumping about, asking to be stroked and generally trying to win Annie’s attention.  Poor Henry was fed up.

Over the next few weeks, Henry tried to get Luna into trouble with Annie by knocking things over, spilling the food and water bowls and even bringing a live mouse in from the garden.  But even though Annie believed that Luna was to blame for these things, including one of her favourite vases being broken, she just laughed, called Luna a ‘funny little thing’ or a clumsy little cat’ and blamed herself for not moving things out of Luna’s way.  And although she was obviously a bit cross about the mouse, all she did was look at Henry saying: “I’m sure she’ll grow out of it, like you did,” with a fond little stroke under his chin.

The little black and white cat didn’t seem to understand that Henry was trying to do, or even think that he didn’t much like having her around.  Henry did his best to discourage her, but he was too much of a gentleman to actually hurt her, although he had resorted to snapping at her and giving her a cuff over the ear with his claws carefully sheathed.  She still seemed to think it was all a game.

Henry took to sleeping in parts of the garden where the little black and white cat wouldn’t find him.  It wasn’t as comfortable as his chair by the window, but at least it was peaceful.

One day, Henry was snoozing behind a large overgrown plant pot which was set against the wall at the bottom of the garden, when he suddenly became aware of a very unwelcome presence.  It was the big scary white cat from a few gardens down.  Henry had fought with him a few times in the past and once been badly bitten on the leg by him.  The bite had been so bad that Annie had to take him to the vet to have the wound stitched up.  Henry hadn’t seen him for a while but he was afraid of facing him again after the last time.

Henry kept very still.  He knew his tabby coat would disguise him well, but he also knew that if the white cat got close enough he’d be able to smell him.  Henry tried to calm himself, but the pads of his paws were sweating and his little heart was hammering in his chest.  The white cat paused and slowly turned his head towards Henry’s hiding place.  His golden eyes narrowed as he stared into the undergrowth.  The white cat crouched down and slowly started to creep towards Henry, moving around to the side of the pot, cutting off Henry’s escape route.  Henry was trapped!

Suddenly, Henry heard the sound of the cat-flap opening.  The white cat heard it too.  He turned his head to see Luna scampering across the grass, with her ‘play with me’ look on her little black and white face.

Henry seized the moment and shot out from behind the plant pot, bounding down the garden towards the house, almost knocking Luna off her feet.  Henry stopped and turned to face the white cat, but Luna trotted on curiously stopping just short of the white cat’s reach.  Luna sat down in front of him, head on one side regarding him inquisitively.

The white cat arched his back, his mouth forming into a snarl.  Henry forgot his fear and charged towards the white cat, just as the white cat launched himself at Luna.  There was suddenly a whirlwind of screeching cats, paws and claws spinning and fur flying over the lawn.

It was all over in seconds.  The three cats sprang apart.  Head down, the white cat sprinted away across the garden and over the wall.  Henry and Luna watched him go.  Henry slowly stalked back to the house, through the cat-flap and up onto his favourite chair.  Luna trotted after him.

When Annie came home, both cats were curled up together on the couch.  Bending down to stroke them she saw that Luna had a scratch on her little black nose and Henry had another lump missing from his ear.  Annie was puzzled; surely they hadn’t been fighting each other?  But when she glanced through the French windows and saw the clumps of white fur blowing gently across the garden, she understood.  Henry stirred under her hand.  He lifted his big, soft stripy head and tenderly licked Luna’s little scratched nose.

From that day onwards Henry and Luna lived together happily.  Henry would play with Luna for a little while every morning and Luna would let Henry sleep undisturbed in his favourite chair every afternoon. They never saw the white cat in their garden again.

©2018 Chris Hall

The day the soldiers came

I smile as I watch my mother play with my little brother Tommy on the hearth-rug.  My father sits in his chair, still but alert.  Suddenly, out of the corner of my eye I detect a movement in the yard.  I turn to look.  Soldiers, four of them!  By the way they are dressed, I know them instantly as ‘the enemy’.  My father has followed my gaze as I gasp in fright and immediately he’s on his feet, sweeping up Tommy in the same movement and shoving him in my direction.

“You know what to do Annie,” he says quietly.  He nods urgently at me and I grab Tommy’s hand and propel him through the kitchen.  I look through the window, checking our route to the barn.  It’s clear, so I open the door and we slide through and dash into the slatted wooden building.  Behind us, I hear the soldiers hammering on the front door, shouting.

Although Tommy’s only little he knows what to do.  Just as we’ve practiced so many times in recent months, I help him up the ladder to the hayloft.  He doesn’t make a sound as we creep across the creaky boards and hide ourselves in the straw behind the loosely baled hay.  We lie there, waiting.  We haven’t practised what happens next.  Then I hear a scream; I know it’s my mother, although the sound is like none I’ve ever heard her make.  Her pain and terror flood my head.  I grip Tommy tightly; he’s trembling and sobbing silently.  The minutes tick by; I wonder what’s happening in the house.  My father is shouting, but I can’t make out what he’s saying.  The shouting stops abruptly and I hear the back door slam against the outside wall of the kitchen.

Heavy boots march towards the barn; I bite down hard on my knuckles.  A cold fist contorts my stomach as I suddenly realise I forgot to drag the ladder up behind us.
I hear the soldier’s heavy breathing down below.  He’s pulling things over, searching.  He approaches the ladder and in my mind’s eye I see him grab the ladder and place his boot on the first rung.  Sweat runs down my back.  Tommy is rigid in my arms.

There is a loud call from the house: “Move on!”  I hear the sound of the ladder clattering to the floor.  It settles and there is no sound apart from the blood pumping in my ears.  Slowly I get up, my legs are shaking.  I grab the rail at the edge of the loft and feel for the rope which we use as a swing when it’s too wet to play outside.  Telling Tommy to stay where his is, I let myself down and run quickly towards the back door which is gaping off its hinges.

Inside the house furniture has been overturned and one curtain has been ripped from the window.  My mother cowers in a corner.  Her blouse is torn and there is blood on her skirt.  Father’s face is bruised and bloody.  He reaches for her, but she turns her face to the wall.

©2018 Chris Hall

Dying with determination

Susan’s mother looked up at her from under the rose-patterned duvet.  “I want you to help me to die.”  Susan stared blankly at her mother.  “Did you hear me?  I want you to help me put an end to all of this.”

Grace had been in the hospice for nearly two months now and both of them knew she would not be coming home.  The cancer had spread and it was just a matter of time, managing the pain and waiting for the inevitable.  The progress of the illness leading to eventual death would not be pleasant.

Susan had been dreading this moment.  Her mother had suggested this to her before during her father’s illness, as he became increasingly unable to manage to do things for himself.  Grace had been adamant, although she was quite prepared and able to care for her husband, there was no way in which she wanted to be left in a ‘state of indignity’ as she called it.  If Grace was unable to put an end to her life when she deemed it time, she would ask Susan to help her.  The subject was not discussed again and Susan had tried to push the memory of the conversation as far to the back of her mind as she could.  However, Grace’s determination and her certainty that Susan would comply with her wishes, despite her objections, had haunted her ever since.

Grace broke into Susan’s thoughts.  “Please, I want you to help me.”

“But Mum, how can I?”

“I need you to do this for me, Susan.  I can’t stand this any more.  We both know what’s going to happen.  I just want it over with, quickly, tidily.”

Grace was a highly intelligent, practical woman.  She had had a career which she had pursued throughout Susan’s childhood, but she had ultimately given it up to nurse Susan’s father through a prolonged and painful illness which had ended some fifteen years previously.  Grace looked after her husband, not out of a sense of duty, but out of love and lack of faith in the medical care which the National Health Service could offer.

Susan could see the anguish and frustration in her mother’s eyes.  It was dreadful for her mother, the pain and above all the indignity associated with the personal care she now required.  It was hard for her too, watching her mother’s decline and the daily visits were taking their toll, the time spent away, when she needed to be around supporting her husband who was fighting his own battle to keep his faltering business afloat.

“We’ll think of a way.” said Grace, almost cheerfully.  She closed her eyes, satisfied, a weak smile on her face.  Her breathing slowed as she slipped into a drug-induced sleep.

Susan tiptoed away and out onto the terrace overlooking the steep, tree-lined driveway which lead up to the building.  What was she going to do?  He couldn’t possibly do what her mother had asked.  It was unfair of her to have done so.  How could she murder her own mother, even if it was her mother’s wish?  It was illegal and she was bound to get caught…and then what would Gerry do?

A woman, about Susan’s age, joined her on the terrace and lit a cigarette.  They stood in silence, regarding the view over the treetops to the town below.  “I don’t know why they don’t just put them out of their misery like they do with animals.”  The woman said, turning to Susan.  “It’s no life for them once they come in here.  Only way out in a wooden box and all the wires and pipes and drugs, even if they do hide them under the bedclothes.  Then there’s the visiting, day in, day out.  Mostly she hardly knows who I am.  Don’t think she cares if I visit, but you have to, don’t you?  But I tell you, I’ve had enough of it.  I’d put a pillow over her face if I thought I could get away with it!”

Susan was taken aback.  How could she say this so glibly?  “Do you really mean that?” Susan asked.

“Sure!  Make my life a whole lot easier.”  She dropped her cigarette end on the stone floor of the terrace and ground it out with her foot, obliterating it.  “Couldn’t of course.”  She turned to go.  “But we all think like that, don’t we?”

Susan smiled weakly in an attempt at agreement.  The woman seemed so callous, so selfish in the way she had said what she’d said.  The force with which she’d ground out the cigarette, as if she was grinding out her mother’s life.  No, the whole idea was impossibly wrong.

She looked in again at her mother, she was still sleeping.  Glancing at her watch, she realised she was running late.  She didn’t want to keep Gerry waiting for her; he was worried enough without indulging some irrational fear that something might happen to her on the motorway.

Later that evening, she related the afternoon’s events to Gerry.  “Selfish bitch!” he said rubbing his hand across his grey, lined face and over his thinning hair.  “As if we didn’t have enough to deal with.  She can’t ask you to do that, even if it would make things easier in some ways…you’re not considering it are you?”

“No, of course not.”  Susan said quickly, although, “it would make things easier”, echoed in her mind.

As she lay in bed that night, listening to Gerry snoring softly, she thought again about what her mother had asked her to do for her.  The coming months were going to be so hard.  The pain, the drugs, their side effects and most of all, not being able to wash herself or anything would be almost too much for her mother to bear.  Wasn’t it she, Susan, who was being selfish?  How difficult would it be, just to place a pillow over her mother’s face?  Could she bring herself to do that?  Hold it there whilst her mother quietly suffocated?  Or maybe she could slip her a hefty dose of paracetamol?  She’d have to find out how much she’d be likely to need and make a few trips to different chemists.  And what if she was found out?  When was the last time anyone was sent to prison for helping a terminally ill person to die?

Susan pictured the scene: her mother lying calmly in bed; Susan bending to kiss her, then taking a pillow, placing it gently over her mother’s face and pressing down; listening to her mother, unable to draw breath, holding, holding the soft downy pillow over her, waiting until she was still, silent, limp.  What if she cried out?  What if she suddenly changed her mind?  How would she know?

If Susan gave her pills, she thought, at least she’d just slip away in her sleep.  But how would her mother manage to take enough, it was getting harder for her to swallow now.  Perhaps she could crush them up into some soup or something.

The night wore on.  Susan fell into a fitful sleep in which images of her standing over her mother, poised to kill, came and went; each one wrenching at her heart and her conscience.  On waking to the bright dawn sunlight, Susan’s mind was made up.  She knew she lacked the courage to go through with it.

That afternoon, her mother asked the nurses if Susan could take her out into the grounds to get some air.  It was a lovely bright spring day, and she wouldn’t see many more of them.  The nurses thought this a splendid idea: it would do both of them good.

When Susan arrived she was surprised to find her mother sitting in a wheelchair, tucked around with blankets, with an expectant look on her face.  “I want to see the gardens.  It’s such a lovely day,” she announced brightly.

Susan smiled uncertainly.  What exactly did her mother have in mind?  Get away from the watchful eyes of the staff to give Susan the opportunity to do away with her?  “Ok, mother, why not?”

The grounds of the hospice were pretty and well-kept with a long, smooth pathway around a rose-bordered lawn which led from the sunny lounge at the back of the building around to the main entrance.  At the far side of the lawn, Susan parked the wheelchair next to a wrought iron bench which offered a view through the trees to the town below.  Before she could speak her mother said: “it all right love, I understand, it’s too much to ask.  I’ve been looking back at these.”  She handed Susan a small, well-thumbed photo album, which Susan knew contained pictures of happier times when her mother and father where first married.  “He would be horrified at the thought.”

Grace took Susan’s hand.  “It’ll be all right, don’t worry.”  They sat in silence for a while.  Then Grace said, “I’m getting tired again, push me back; we’ll go through the grand entrance.”  Susan took the brake of the wheelchair.  As she bent down, Grace slipped the little album under the bench.  “All set now?”

At the top of the drive, at the front of the building, Grace started fumbling with her blanket.  “Oh dear, silly me!”  She exclaimed.  “I think I must have left my photos on the bench.  Be a love and run and fetch them.  I wouldn’t want to lose those!”

“I’ll just be a minute then.  Will you be all right here on your own?”

“Of course, I will.  I’m not going anywhere and the staff are just inside.”

Susan hurried back to the bench.  Sure enough, the little album was lying under the bench where it must have fallen from her mother’s lap.  She opened it.  “Thanks, Dad,” she said softly.  Smiling, she retraces her footsteps along the rose-lined path.

Suddenly, there was an urgent cry: “Help!  Stop her!”  Immediately, Susan broke into a run.  As she rounded the corner of the building, she saw her mother in the wheelchair gathering speed towards the busy road at the bottom of the drive.  There was no way anyone could stop her.

©2018 Chris Hall

The spotless bathroom

The bright autumnal sunlight arched through the tall windows of Howard’s new third floor apartment in the recently refurbished Georgian building just offEdinburgh’s Royal Mile.  As well as being his new home, this was Howard’s showpiece, the pinnacle of his career in interior design.  Howard busied himself putting the finishing touches to the preparations for the soiree he was holding for a few close friends, one of whom, Sally, was bringing a potential new client, an American woman called Sandra.

His guests were not due for more than an hour.  Howard drifted into the bathroom.  Howard smiled contentedly at the effect he had achieved in this his favourite room, with its glossy black and white tiled floor, its grand, gilded fittings and glass brick shower.

Suddenly Howard noticed some brown-coloured staining around the golden clawed feet of the roll-top bath.  He rubbed at the mark with a flannel, failing to make any impression on it.

Howard hurried into the kitchen and armed himself with bleach and floor cloth.  Returning to the bathroom, he began to scrub at the stain, but there it wouldn’t budge.  Howard’s brow furrowed; he had a potential client coming in half an hour and everything needed to be perfect, however, fearing that he might damage his beautiful tiles with further scrubbing, he artfully draped a towel over the side of the bath so that it spilled onto the floor obscuring the stain.

An hour later, the evening was getting into full swing; Howard’s friends had complemented him on every aspect of his new apartment and Sally’s friend Sandra, a rather over-bearing American woman (weren’t they all), was particularly taken with the bathroom, gushing compliments, like one of his gilded taps.

“I just love these old buildings, Howard,” she drawled.  “I’d just bet they’re full of phantoms and ghouls.  Do you know any ghost stories about the place?”

Howard didn’t.  The thought hadn’t really crossed his mind.

“I know, let’s have ourselves a séance!”  Sandra announced with great enthusiasm.  Before anyone could object, Sandra was clearing the polished mahogany dining table and directing the rest of the guests to sit around it, telling Howard to turn off the music, dim the lights and bring more candles.

Sandra took the high-backed seat at the head of the table.  She stretched out her hands taking those of the guests on either side of her and indicating that everyone should do the same.

“Now we will summon the spirits!”  Sandra winked at Howard who was sitting opposite her, before lowering her head and beginning to make a series of loud ‘omming’ noises.

“Omm”, she intoned, “make yourselves known, spirits of James’ Court.”

Howard looked around the table; everyone seemed to be taking this seriously.  All his guests were staring down at his beautiful polished table, as Sandra chanted on.  He thought the whole thing rather silly, but it was well worth humouring her if there was money to be made.

Suddenly Howard felt a chill rush through him, then a warm sensuous feeling, as if he was being borne away in the folds of a huge eiderdown.  Then there was a jolt and he found himself standing in the bathroom.  All his senses were alert, but he was unable to move anything except his eyes.  He could feel the hard, cold tiles under his feet and a soft fabric against his skin.  He noticed that he was wearing a cream silk robe.

The bath was filling up; the water foamed with rose-scented bubbles.  Howard felt his arm stretch out across the bath and turned off the taps.  He noticed that the arm was pale and smooth and the long, delicate fingers of the hand were painted with dark red nail varnish.  He felt the robe slide to the floor as trancelike, he stepped into the hot, fragrant water.  The arm reached out and took a glass of champagne from a little side table which had been set alongside the bath.  As he picked up the glass he noticed a small silver box.  He sipped the cool liquid which fizzed lightly on his tongue.

Setting the glass down, his hand picked up the silver box and with elegant, carefully manicured fingers picked out a shiny new razor blade.  In one swift movement the fingers drew the blade across the slender wrist of the left arm.  Blood dripped into the water.  Switching hands, the vein in the right wrist was also severed.  A second rivulet of blood ran down the other arm.  With a graceful red-toe-nailed foot, he turned the hot tap back on and settled back into the steaming tub.

Howard watched in calm fascination as the blood mixed with the scented water.  He was floating again.  Blood-stained water started to spill over the rim of the bath, pooling on the tiled floor around the golden clawed feet.  Howard drifted on.

Then Howard felt himself being shaken vigorously; someone was slapping his cheeks.  “Howard! Howard darling, wake up,” a voice seeped into his consciousness.  Then louder: “Howard!”

As his eyes flickered open, Howard experienced a rushing feeling, a chill wind rising up through his body and out of the top of his head.  His eyes focussed on a sea of concerned faces crowding over the chaise-longue on which he was resting.

“Shit, Howard, mate, you gave us a fright!”  Jim, Sally’s husband gently helped him into a sitting position.  “We thought you’d left us for a moment there.”

“Lucky I’m safety trained.”  Sandra’s face came into focus.  “I wouldn’t want to lose my new interior designer before he’s even started work on my place.”  She threw her arms around him and hugged him warmly.

Howard disentangled himself and made his way to the bathroom.  He pushed open the door, fearing what he might find.  But the enamel surface of the bath gleamed and the towel which he’d carefully draped over the side was hanging neatly on the towel rail.  The black and white floor tiles shone immaculately.  There was a faint scent of rose petals.  The brown stain had gone.

©2018 Chris Hall