Read Escape from Shangri-La Online
Authors: Michael Morpurgo
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Also by Michael Morpurgo
Arthur: High King of Britain
Friend or Foe
The Ghost of Grania O'Malley
Kensuke's Kingdom
King of the Cloud Forests
Little Foxes
Long Way Home
Mr Nobody's Eyes
My Friend Walter
The Nine Lives of Montezuma
The Sandman and the Turtles
The Sleeping Sword
Twist of Gold
Waiting for Anya
War Horse
The War of Jenkins' Ear
The White Horse of Zennor
The Wreck of Zanzibar
Why the Whales Came
For Younger Readers
Conker
Mairi's Mermaid
The Best Christmas Present in the World
The Marble Crusher
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For Conrad and Anne
6Â Â Â Â And all shall be well
I WAS KNEELING UP AGAINST THE BACK OF THE sofa looking out of the window. Summer holidays and raining, raining streams. âHe's been there all day,' I said.
âWho has?' My mother was still doing the ironing. âI don't know why,' she went on, âbut I love ironing. Therapeutic, restorative, satisfying. Not like teaching at all. Teaching's definitely not therapeutic.' She talked a lot about teaching, even in the holidays.
âThat man. He just stands there. He just stands there staring at us.'
âIt's a free world, isn't it?'
The old man was standing on the opposite side of the road outside Mrs Martin's house underneath the lamppost. Sometimes he'd be leaning up against it, and sometimes he'd be just standing there, shoulders
hunched, his hands deep in his pockets. But always he'd be looking, looking right at me. He was wearing a blue donkey jacket â or perhaps it was a sailor's jacket, I couldn't tell â the collar turned up against the rain. His hair was long, long and white, and it seemed to be tied up in a ponytail behind him. He looked like some ancient Viking warlord.
âCome and see,' I said. âHe's strange, really strange.' But she never even looked up. How anyone could be so obsessively absorbed in ironing was beyond me. She was patting the shirt she'd finished, sadly, her head on one side, just as if she was saying goodbye to an old dog. I turned to the window again.
âWhat's he up to? He must be soaked. Mum!' At last she came over. She was kneeling beside me on the sofa now and smelling all freshly ironed herself. âAll day, he's been there all day, ever since breakfast. Honest.'
âAll that hair,' she tutted. âHe looks a bit of a tramp if you ask me, a bit of an old goat.' And she wrinkled up her nose in disapproval, as if she could smell him, even from this far away.
âAnd what's wrong with tramps, then?' I said. âI thought you said it was a free world.'
âFree-ish, Cessie dear, only free-ish.' And she leant across me and closed the curtains. âThere, now he can
look at the back of our William Morris lily pattern to his heart's content, and we don't have to look at him any more, do we?' She smiled her ever so knowing smile at me. âDo you think I was born yesterday, Cessie Stevens? Do you think I don't know what this is all about? It's the “p” word, isn't it? Pro . . . cras . . . tin . . . ation.' She was right of course. She enunciated it excruciatingly slowly, deliberately teasing the word out for greatest effect. She was expert at it. My mother wasn't a teacher for nothing. âViolin practice, Cessie. First you said you'd do it this morning, then you were going to do it this afternoon. And now it's already this evening and you still haven't done it, have you?'
She was off the sofa now and crouching down in front of me, looking into my face, her hands on mine. âCome on. Before your dad gets home. You know how it upsets him when you don't practise. Be an angel.'
âI am not an angel,' I said firmly. âAnd I don't want to be an angel either.' I was out of the room and up the stairs before she could say another word.
I was ambivalent about my mother. I was closer to her than anyone else in this world. She had always been my only confidant, my most trusted friend. Whatever I did, she would always defend me to the hilt. I'd overhear her talking about me. âShe's just going through
that awkward prickly stage,' she'd explain. âHalf girl, half woman. Not the one thing, nor the other. She'll come out of it.' But sometimes she just couldn't stop playing teacher. Worst of all, she would use my father as a weapon against me. In fact, my father was never really upset when I didn't practise my violin, but I knew that he would be disappointed. And I hated to disappoint him â she knew that too.