wonât steal your things.â Thatâs exactly what it would be, theft, and it was against their Homeless Persons Charter. But he had no protection from other people stealing them.
He inclined his head. âYou donât want to lose your expense account.â
âI promise you on my meagre expense allowance that my conniving, promotion-snatching boss has to sign off, and will probably query, we wonât ever take your possessions from you.â
He stood up and turned to face her. This time he really was ending the meeting. âIt was nice to meet you, Foley.â
She stood too, picking up the rubbish from their breakfast. âIt was nice to meet you too, Drum. Is that your surname? I half expected you to be a musician.â
âItâs the only name you need for me.â
âYou donât play an instrument?â
âIâll show you out.â
She laughed again, but if he hid a smile it was under his lowered head. âIâll see myself out.â She stepped up on the first rock foothold.
âThank you for breakfast.â
âCouncilâs pleasure.â She stepped up on the second foothold and turned to see if he was watching. Heâd disappeared. There was a back way out of here.
Sneaky bastard .
4: Intimidated
Drum knew Foley would be back. She was one of those determined people, not easily put off or intimidated. Not that heâd deliberately tried to intimidate her, and he was sure that capability was still in his DNA, but he didnât want to see her again.
She was too glossy, too pretty, so bright and fresh, he had trouble looking at her. Heâd almost forgotten himself and enjoyed her company and it was more than being starved for social contact. He had plenty of opportunity to be social if he wanted it. He didnât. And he didnât want her coming back.
So he avoided her. He left home before the sun came up. He stayed out later than normal and in general avoided the cave until it was dark. She was too smart to try climbing down there at night with only her questions and her reasons. But she wasnât smart enough to give up on him. Didnât she know she would break herself on him like waves on rocks; that he wasnât worth the effort? That if she offered to give him anything in the world he wanted, it would be this: an edge to remind him to live, a hole to hide in, an existence that didnât use much, take anything from anyone, or cause anyone pain.
Still she persisted. One morning she left him a chocolate muffin and a fruit salad. The birds got the muffin, and he refused to waste the fruit. One night he got home to find sheâd brought him a bag of oranges and a big cask of spring water. Sheâd had to hump both under the railing and down to the cave. She mightâve fallen and hurt herself. He didnât want her bribes, her expense account charity. He didnât deserve it.
He was contemplating the oranges when they came. Three of them, over the top ledge, laughing and swearing, stumbling. He could smell the beer. He wasnât quick enough to extinguish his lamp. They saw its glow and like fat moths they were on it, sliding, tripping, pushing each other and jumping the distance between the two ledges, not careful of the edge, made from audacity and recklessness.
One of them tripped, landing on his knees laughing then whimpering, an elbow scraped bloody. One of them went to the edge and threw a bottle into the nothing dark.
The third said, âHey man. What is this about then?â He was cold, calm. He was the leader. He had power in his body and calculation in his eyes.
The one on his knees lay out flat with a drawn-out moan. âDo you live here?â He was the youngest of them. Heâd be the easiest. The one most at risk. âHe bloody lives here. Look, heâs got a bed and stuff.â He sat up. âThatâs mad. Are you a Looney Toon, dude? A bit Daffy Duck, eh?â
Drum had a
Marina Dyachenko, Sergey Dyachenko