constructors had paid my family for the contract, which meant I could make a pretty good guess just how pre-stressed that concrete was. They had to make their profit somewhere, after all...
The girders of the bridge sang to me as I crossed, high and strange and ethereal. They always did at sunset. Something to do with temperature differentials, Jamie said; me, tonight, I thought they were singing me a welcome. Welcome home Benedict, black sheep Macallan. Or a white sheep, I thought myself, from a family flock of black; but that was old imagery, a teenage habit and utterly redundant now. Bleached or blackened, I thought I was. Parade me with my peers, my kin; count the cops Iâd killed and my other victim also, a life claimed not in heat or clumsiness but in cold, deliberate justice or revenge, if thereâs a difference; look from my familyâs faces to my own, and see if thereâs a difference...
o0o
I came back into town like a bat into hell, quick no more: coasting on the updraught, very circumspect, very cautious of my widespread wings, not to flurry the sulphurous smoke and draw eyes upward, not to show my silhouette against the flames.
Something like that, at least. If Iâd gone roaring through the streets, boy in black leathers on a big black bike, even two years on someone would have whispered, the whisper would have spread, there would have been phone-calls made and â Benedict? Are you sure? No? Well, check it out anyway...â
I did not, I very emphatically did not want to meet any member of my clan tonight, nor tomorrow either. I suppose thatâs what Iâd come back for ultimately, to face the family and exorcise some ghosts, but Iâd been haunted a long time and a few days more wouldnât hurt. I wanted to ease myself back, slip in under the skin unfelt, spend a little quality time with the bones of this city and my history.
Put it bluntly, I wanted to put it off, all the hard stuff I was here for. Still running, Ben? I asked myself, sneering; and yes, still running I was, but at least I was running on the spot now. The right spot.
Actually I felt like a ghost myself, like my own ghost or my sisterâs; and I could have been taken for either as I slid the murmuring bike through quiet streets no louder for our passing, up unlit alleys where I could.
Where was I going, exactly? I didnât know, I hadnât thought; I should do that now, of course, I should make some decisions. But I felt stranded on a time-lag, Rip van Winkle in miniature. Rip van Tiddleywinks, perhaps. Iâd kept in touch with no one, this time Iâd been awayâor almost so: Iâd sent the occasional postcard, but never a return addressâand I might have no friends left here now, or none that I could find. Students move, some students graduate and move away. I might be forced to my family after all...
No. Sooner than that, Iâd try the boarding-house option, even in my own home town. Sooner than either, I put it off again. Just for an hour, just for a breath of familiar air and the touch of known ground beneath my feet.
Gravity sucked me downhill, back to the slow dark of the river. The town seemed grave-quiet; not so odd, perhaps, with the students away, though I remembered it as showing more life than this even in the long vac.
Theyâd greened a stretch of the quayside since Iâd left, made a little park of it with grass and saplings, swings and a seesaw for the kids, benches for their parents. I parked the bike on some hardstanding and stripped off rucksack, helmet, jacket; stretched and twisted for a minute against the aches and weariness of a full day in the saddle after a night of no sleep, and then walked slowly along by the bollards and chains that marked the riverâs edge.
Walked, and saw that I was not after all alone. There was a man on the furthest bench, there were sodium lights and a bright moon to show him to me: a man running to fat in middle