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Authors: Mari Strachan

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BOOK: Dead Man's Embers
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Wil turns the book around in his hands. ‘It's lovely, Meg. It must have taken you a long time to do this.' Wil smoothes the cover, until his rough palm snags the threads on the embroidery. ‘Thank you.'

Below Wil's name Meg has sewn a ship in full sail, sitting tipsily on the waves beneath it where fish of all colours swim and leap. Non had not known that Meg was capable of making such a lovely thing. What talented children she and Davey have – though, of course, none of the talent comes from her. But she cannot help agreeing with Catherine Davies that these are not quite the kinds of gifts Wil would best like. She feels reluctant to give her own offering, but after pointed glances and nods from Meg, she hands Wil the copy of Joseph Conrad's new book, which she has only read once since she bought it last year, so it is very nearly new. She had thought reading it would help fill his lonely hours at sea.

‘Well,' Catherine Davies says through a cat's bottom of a mouth, which Non is pleased to see Wil has not missed, ‘I've never known Wil to be a great one for reading, either.'

‘It's a sea story, an adventure,' Non tells him. ‘Look at the ship on the cover, Wil. D'you think the David Morris will look like that in full sail?'

‘Thank you, Non,' he says. ‘But, you know, I'm going to have to work much harder on board the David Morris than you all
think. There won't be much spare time to write and read, so I may not fill Meg's notebook or finish . . .' He glances at the cover of the book. ‘
The Rescue
all that soon. But I shall treasure them.'

There is a small silence as Meg looks at Non, and Non shakes her head at her. They have got this wrong. How could they have done that?

‘Maybe Gwydion will give you something you really like,' Meg says despite Non's head-shaking. ‘What have you got for him, Gwydion?'

‘I'm afraid mine's a book, too, Wil,' Gwydion says.

This is Wil's largest parcel so far, square and bulky so that everything else has to be moved aside to make room for it, and not as meticulously wrapped as Meg's parcel, so it does not take Wil a second to find out what the book is. ‘The Times Atlas,' he reads, and begins to leaf through it. ‘A map book.'

‘But he's travelling on the sea, not on the land, Gwydion,' Meg says.

‘Ah,' Gwydion says, ‘so, see what the map on pages seven and eight shows, young lady.'

Wil has already found the pages. ‘Look, it shows the routes that ships have to follow to get across the Atlantic Ocean. The David Morris used to sail to Newfoundland.' He traces the journey with his finger. ‘It looks no distance at all on here, but it takes weeks to get there and back. I didn't know where it was, though, Gwydion. This is good – thank you very much.'

‘And look, Wil,' Gwydion says. ‘Go back a page – see, it tells you how deep the water is everywhere in the oceans and seas. Can you see those measurements?'

Wil looks down at the page. His lips move slightly as he reads the figures. ‘It's very deep in some places,' he says. ‘I didn't know
it was so deep. I didn't know there was so much water in the sea.'

‘That's a lovely present, Gwydion,' Non says.

‘Davison's selling a lot of his books,' Gwydion says. ‘This was one of them. I thought it'd be just the thing for Wil.'

‘It is, it is,' Wil says. ‘I just had no idea . . .'

‘You'll come safely home with this, Wil, however deep the waters you sail on.' Davey takes off the charm he keeps around his neck on a leather bootlace.

‘Your lucky charm?' Wil says. ‘The one Taid gave you?'

Catherine Davies rounds on Davey. ‘And look what happened to him the minute he gave it to you.'

There is no need for any of them to look at William Davies to see what has happened to him. They all know that over the years and months and days he has removed himself to the land of his childhood.

But Davey will be fine, Non thinks. He no longer needs the charm. Davey the stranger has almost gone and Davey her husband has returned. It does not matter that bits of his memory are missing, they are not likely to be things he wants to remember. He has remembered the important thing, and he will be fine. They will be fine. Sometimes, it may be best not to know everything. Curiosity has its dangers, as she has discovered.

Wil puts the charm around his own neck, and tucks it under his shirt. ‘It brought you safely through the War, didn't it?' he says to Davey.

‘It brought me home,' Davey says.

‘But it's a disgusting thing.' Meg makes a moue of distaste. ‘Made out of bone like that. I wouldn't let it touch me.'

‘Bone?' Gwydion says. ‘Let's have a look, Wil.'

Wil pulls it out from beneath his shirt. It is yellowed and the shape is difficult to discern. ‘It's a hare,' he says, ‘made from the
leg bone of a hare. It's really old. Taid told me the story of it once, his own Taid gave it to him. Hares are lucky.'

‘It does look old,' Gwydion says. ‘But I don't think whoever made it was as good at carving as Osian.'

‘It should have gone to Billy. He was the eldest.' Catherine Davies snuffles into her handkerchief.

‘But Uncle Billy wasn't going to the War,' Wil says. ‘Thank you, Tada. I'll keep it safe.'

‘It's meant to keep you safe, Wil,' Davey says. ‘And when the time comes, you can give it to your own son.'

His own son! Non can hardly think of Wil being old enough to have a son of his own. The boy that she brought up and cherished – a father!

‘It's your turn, Nain,' Meg says.

Catherine Davies seems to take an age to put away her handkerchief in her sleeve. She bends from her chair to lug her voluminous handbag from the floor. They are holding their collective breath as Catherine Davies rummages in the bag. There is no knowing what she will pull out. Here it comes – it is a small round tin, which she hands to Wil.

Wil turns it around to look at what it says. ‘The original and proven glucose travel drops,' he reads aloud. ‘They're mints. I like mints. Thank you, Nain.'

‘They are to stop you being sea-sick, Wil,' Catherine Davies says. ‘I have never, myself, travelled on water but I understand that it is treacherously . . . unstill. I trust you will find them a great deal more useful than books and paper and pens.'

‘Well, I hope I won't need them for that, Nain,' Wil says. ‘But I do like sweets.'

‘And,' Catherine Davies says, ‘once they are finished you will be able to use the tin to keep things in.'

‘Tiny, small things,' Meg says, under her breath. Non sends her a warning look and she jumps from her chair. ‘Why,' she cries, ‘this is better than a birthday, or Christmas, Wil. And I helped Non to make your favourite pudding.'

As Non rises to her feet to fetch dishes and spoons, and the bread-and-butter pudding from the warming oven, old William Davies stirs in his chair and produces from his pocket a leather drawstring bag. He leans across the table to give it to Wil.

‘What's that you're giving him?' Catherine Davies tries to snatch it from her husband's hand, but William Davies manages to evade her grasp.

Wil opens the bag and spills its contents onto the table. They all count the golden sovereigns that lie there, glittering in the lamplight. Twenty! Twenty golden sovereigns.

‘I can't take so much money from you, Taid,' Wil says. ‘It's a fortune!'

‘You keep it, my boy,' old William Davies says. ‘You might be glad of it one day. And good luck to you on that ship.' He nods at Wil, and then winks at him. ‘Just one bit of good advice, Wil. Don't let your hair get wet in winter.'

‘What do you mean, Taid?'

‘Oh, Wil, when I was a bit older than you are now I was courting the prettiest girl in Ll
n – I was the lucky one then! I was going to see her one evening, January it was, bitter cold, and I was running late because we'd had a big blast at the quarry that afternoon and my hair was full of dust, so I had to wash it. But there was no time to dry it by the fire, see, because if there was one thing she didn't like it was anyone being late. So, I jumped on my bike, wet hair and all, and off I went. But my wet hair froze and gave me the most unbearable pain in my head, Wil, and I had to turn round and go home. She never spoke to me again. Broke my heart.'

They all laugh, because the heartbreak was a long time ago, and not a fresh pain. All but Catherine Davies; she glowers at her husband. But even as they laugh and William Davies laughs with them, a vacant look begins to steal into his eyes, like a mist settling on the sea, and then – he has left them. He rises from the table. ‘Thank you for the meal,' he says. ‘I have to be getting home, Mother will be wondering where I am. She worries, you know, since David my brother was killed. She thinks the rock face is going to fall on me, too.'

Catherine Davies takes hold of his shirt sleeve and pulls him down into his chair where he sits with a slight smile on his face.

He seems to be happy, wherever it is he has gone, Non thinks. It was nice to have a rare visit from him to see Wil on his way; Wil will always remember that.

34

Non is tired of train journeys and this is one she does not want to make. She glances away from the fields and trees and hedges that race by and looks at Wil sitting opposite her. He, too, is watching the passing fields, the sheep-filled meadows and the streams as they journey. She wonders if he is storing them up in his memory so that when he is far away he can take them out, as he would photographs, to remind himself of what he has left behind. Or is he thinking of all the new countries he will see as he sails the oceans, and how different they may be from all this? He is just a boy, she thinks, his cheeks still smooth and a little plump. And then he turns to look at her and she sees the man in his eyes.

Yesterday she spent hours preparing everything for Wil's departure in the morning. Socks were darned, shirts washed and starched on Monday were ironed, new patches were put on jersey and jacket elbows, trouser hems were let down – when did he grow that extra inch? – buttons were double-sewn on everything that had buttons, pots of salves and dark bottles of tinctures for this and that were packed around the clothes into the corners of the old canvas bag
found for him by his father in William Davies's garden hut. The bag had held old William's quarrying tools and was full of granite dust, but Davey had shaken it out and scrubbed it thoroughly and laid it out in the sun to dry. They were all surprised to see the bag was coloured green, not grey, a green not unlike the colour of the sea in the bay on sunny days.

When they waved him off this morning Meg had insisted that everyone call out Farewell to him, because, she said, it was less final than goodbye. It was one of those rare times when Non wondered if the County School was entirely good for Meg. She had also read a poem she had written for the occasion, and Wil had turned scarlet and looked at her in horror when she insisted he take the paper it was written on and stick it into the notebook she had given him, which she now called his journal. Non wishes they had been more successful in their choice of going-away gifts for Wil – but this morning she had tucked into his canvas bag the pen, the notebook, and Catherine Davies's tin of mints, which might yet prove to be the most useful.

Wil had asked Davey to take care of old William Davies's money, with instructions that his grandparents were to be given it back if they were in need. He said he treasured Taid's advice about not getting his hair wet much more. It had been a great deal of money, and a shock to them all for they had not dreamt that William Davies possessed so much. It would be a long time before Catherine Davies gave up demanding its return.

‘Your father will be sure to keep his eye on Taid and Nain's finances, Wil. You know that, don't you? He won't let them want because Taid gave you the money.'

‘I know, Non. But he helps them so much already with all that money for Billy's mistakes. It's not fair, is it?' Wil is indignant on behalf of his father. ‘I don't understand why Nain is so . . . nasty
to him. You'd think she'd rather he was dead and not Billy.'

Non has thought the same thing herself often and puzzled over why it should be so, when everyone else likes and respects Davey so much and never has a good word for his brother Billy. ‘I don't know why she's like that, either, Wil. I'm sure there is an answer, but I don't know it.'

Wil smiles at her. ‘But he's looking happier – Tada – isn't he? Don't you think so, Non? He was even making silly jokes in the workshop yesterday.'

‘He's relieved that he's remembered what was in some of the gaps he had in his memory. Things are coming back to him slowly.' Davey wants to remember everything that happened to him. He has experienced so much relief from remembering that he had not been unfaithful to Non, he told her, that he would be able to deal with whatever he remembered. He wants to know what and when and why. Especially why. Non understands, her own nature is a curious one, her father brought her up to be inquisitive, but . . . but . . . She is not certain that knowing everything will help Davey, although she cannot explain why she feels this so strongly. Especially when the discoveries she has recently made about her own past have planted her feet more firmly in the present.

BOOK: Dead Man's Embers
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