Reversed Forecast (7 page)

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Authors: Nicola Barker

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Literary

BOOK: Reversed Forecast
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He returned to the kitchen and inspected the cupboards to see what food Ruby had in. Tinned stuff, dried stuff. He’d cook something.

While some beans were soaking he tidied up the living-room and then moved into Ruby’s bedroom. Her carpet was knee-deep in pieces of clothing. He kicked these into a large pile and then sorted out what was clean and what was dirty. He sniffed, looked, fondled.

He liked it here. He’d stay for a while, but he wouldn’t ask. If you asked, people said no. Even soft people. Eventually.

 

Ruby pressed the buzzer and listened out for barking, but could hear none. The building was a mixture of grandeur and dilapidation. It was built in a square around a tarmacked courtyard. The entrance was barred by a large, black, metal gate.

After several minutes a tiny old man staggered across the courtyard towards her. He looked like Mr Punch, all nose and chin with eyes like sultanas. He reached the gate, puffed out, and gazed through it at her. ‘You’ve come to get the bitch?’

Ruby nodded and said, ‘I’ve seen you at Hackney before, haven’t I?’

‘Could’ve, but I’m usually at Walthamstow.’

He started to unlock the gate before adding, ‘That bitch of yours wouldn’t run on the Walthamstow track for love nor bloody money. They’ve got a McGee hare there. You familiar with it?’

Ruby frowned. ‘It’s smaller, isn’t it?’

‘Smaller than the Outside Sumner and doesn’t make so much
noise. Stupid bitch wouldn’t run for it. Trap opened and she didn’t come out. Nice grass track but she wouldn’t have any of it.’ He shook his head. ‘Racing manager was about ready to kill me. Punters weren’t happy either. There again, she was still a novice, so she probably only had about fifty quid on her.’

He pulled the gate open. Ruby stepped inside and he closed it behind her, then turned and led the way across the tarmac. She followed him, watching the back of his yellowy kennel coat, into the main building, through an unprepossessing passageway, which smelled of detergent and dog, and into a large, square, brightly lit kitchen.

He pointed towards the big pine table that filled the centre of the room. ‘Sit down while I go get her. I’ll bring her registration booklet too.’

Ruby sat down and rested her elbows on the table. The room felt airless, she felt aimless. Why was she here? She thought, I won’t think anything. Not anything. Nothing.

When he returned, she said, ‘Don didn’t get around to telling me your name.’

He grinned. False teeth. As straight as a die. ‘Stanley. Stan. I’m seventy-four and he still has me working a seven-day week.’

Ruby pushed herself back on her chair and peered over at the dog. Stan was holding a lead and the bitch stood at the end of it, looking tense. She couldn’t help thinking how large the animal seemed. Not fat, just big.

Stan leaned against the table and got his breath back. The dog stood still, not pulling on her leash, but managing to look on edge, padding from foot to foot. He stared down at her. ‘I like black bitches. This one’s related to Dolores Rocket. Won the Derby. Won the Puppy Oaks too, twenty-odd years ago.’

He jerked the lead and brought the dog’s head up. Her face was skinny, scraggy and strangely petulant.

‘I’ll get a muzzle on her.’

‘Do you have to?’

‘She’ll chase anything if she feels the urge.’

‘Anything but the McGee hare, eh?’

Stan fitted the muzzle over the dog’s face. ‘Well, they’ve all got
coursing in their blood, but these dogs …’ He slapped her lightly on her rump and she stiffened her legs to take the slap. ‘These dogs were bred from strains of dogs that didn’t so much care what they chased, they’d run for anything.’

He brought the bitch around the table and handed Ruby her lead. Ruby hesitated and then took it. She felt a dart of terror in her chest that started between her breasts and shot up to her throat. She tried to swallow it, to keep it under.

Stan looked down at her for a moment, then said conspiratorially, ‘How much is he asking for?’

Ruby felt the leather of the lead between her finger and her thumb. ‘Nine hundred.’ When she said it, it meant nothing.

He burst out laughing. ‘I’ll tell him you’ll give him seven. He had her down at Swaffham in Norfolk on Friday. Check her toes.’

Ruby picked up the dog’s right foot. The pads all seemed fine. She picked up the left and he interrupted her, taking hold of the paw himself and parting the front pads. ‘Third pad’s slightly swollen.’

‘Is that a problem?’

She knew it was. I know all this, she thought, I know this stuff.

‘I’ll tell Don you thought it was.’

She smiled gratefully and stroked the dog’s back. ‘How did she do at Swaffham? I didn’t even know Don raced in that part of the country.’

‘How do you think she did?’

He passed Ruby the registration booklet. She opened it.
Little Buttercup. Black bitch
… When she was born, where, the names of her parents, the size of the litter. Physical description. Tiny details. Times of her races, places.
Swaffham
- the latest entry.

‘Sixth.’

‘She’s got a race lined up at Hackney on Thursday. You’d better have a chat with the racing manager, though. He’s not happy with this bitch. Did Don tell you she’s in the E grade? Her actual running time at 525 yards was 30.40 on her last night out.’

Ruby verified this in the booklet. It wasn’t a good time.

‘Just the same,’ he added, noting her expression, ‘there’s
nothing wrong with her physically. The toe’s no problem. You’ve obviously got a good eye. She’s a fine-looking bitch.’

Suddenly, at last, she remembered. A month ago, Hackney Wick, the traps were loaded. Six dogs. The hare, starting, the squeal of it. Some dogs, barking, whining. And then. She remembered it. Her trap. Number six. A tail, sticking out through the bars at the front.

‘She turned around!’ Ruby said. ‘In the trap. She turned around in the trap, and I thought …’ Ruby had thought, That’s only logical. She turned around because that’s the direction the hare’s coming from. And Don was furious. He said … and I said … and he said … and I said, ‘But she’s a fine-looking bitch.’

Stan was staring at her, nervously.

‘Sorry,’ she said, almost laughing with relief, ‘I just thought of something.’

‘Don didn’t say what you were planning to do with her.’

‘I don’t know. He said she had a couple of races lined up.’

‘One race on Thursday.’

Ruby was thinking now, planning. ‘I’d better get a licence.’

He stared at her blankly. ‘She’s not your only dog?’

‘My first.’ She liked this idea. She’d been sloppy, before, admittedly.

‘Have you got kennels?’

‘No.’ She said this with great certainty, as though only saying it this way would mean it didn’t matter.

‘You won’t get a licence then. Not without proper kennels. Anyway, when the racing manager at Hackney finds out Don isn’t training her any more, he’ll drop her from the card. If she doesn’t get a place in her next race, he’ll drop her for the season anyway.’

Ruby stared at the dog. The dog’s expression was docile but furtive.

‘You,’ she said, with sudden fondness.

The dog licked her lips. Her whiskers stuck out of her cheeks - silver against her black fur - like needles in a pincushion.

After a while Ruby said, ‘There’s no law against being too keen.’

‘There should be, though.’

Stan leaned against the table. ‘You could run her at an independent track and you wouldn’t even need a licence. Swaffham’s a permit track. You could run her there for fifty quid. Or you could even breed from her.’

‘I could,’ she said. ‘I could, but I don’t want to.’ She was making decisions now. She could make them. ‘I want to run her at Hackney.’

‘You can’t.’

‘I can run her on Thursday.’

‘He’ll drop her if he finds out Don’s sold her.’

‘What if she got a place?’

He laughed. ‘She won’t.’

‘But what if she did?’

‘He’ll drop her anyway.’

‘She deserves a chance.’

Stan thought about this, looked unconvinced, but said, ‘If I come down on the day, and anyone asks, you can say you’re with me.’

Ruby smiled. ‘I’ve got plans for her.’

Stan stuck his hands deep into his pockets. ‘You’ll find out soon enough she’s got plans of her own.’

 

Vincent scowled at the dog. ‘Where did that come from?’

Ruby closed the door behind her and unclipped Buttercup’s lead from her collar.

‘She’s a bitch. I just bought her.’

‘Why?’

She sat down. ‘I don’t know.’

He stared at the dog as she walked around the room, sniffing furniture and poking her nose into corners.

‘Black’s a good colour. She matches everything,’ he said.

‘Yeah. I really needed to hear that.’

‘I made dinner.’

‘I thought you’d be gone.’

‘Sorry to disappoint you.’

He went into the kitchen and dished up the food he’d prepared.

‘Don’t give any to the dog.’

‘I wasn’t planning to.’

‘She’s on a diet.’

Ruby took the plate he handed her and started eating. Tuna, rice, sweetcorn, beans. The dog smelled the food and walked over. She sat next to Ruby, staring at the plate, her tail making a slight swishing sound against the carpet.

‘Does she bite?’

‘I don’t think so.’

‘Why’s she wearing that muzzle?’

Ruby closed her eyes, stopped chewing and swallowed. ‘At Tottenham Court Road tube she chased a woman wearing a furtrimmed jacket up the escalator.’

He laughed. ‘Did she get her?’

‘She caught her but she didn’t bite her. She was wearing her muzzle.’

‘You should’ve had her on a lead.’

Ruby dropped her fork and showed him her hand. ‘Leather burns.’

She continued eating. ‘This is nice.’

‘I trained as a chef. In Dublin. They had a big dog track there. Shelbourne Park. I went once but I never won a penny.’

‘There are always plenty of jobs for chefs up west. Imagine what you could earn. You could pay me back in no time.’

‘I don’t think so.’

He stood up and went to turn over the record he’d been listening to earlier, then ran some water into a pan and put it down on the floor for the dog.

‘Can she drink through that muzzle?’

‘Yeah.’

He returned to the sofa, noting Ruby’s miserable expression. ‘I get the feeling you didn’t really think this through.’

‘Story of my life.’

She continued eating, then added, ‘But there was a great moment back then when it really did seem like a good idea.’

‘She’ll chew this flat to pieces.’

‘I’ll keep her muzzled.’

‘What will you do with her when you’re at work?’

The dog, suddenly, inexplicably, started to bark. Vincent jumped and dropped a forkful of rice on to his lap. He scooped it up with his fingers and crammed it into his mouth. Ruby craned her neck and stared over the back of the sofa towards Buttercup, who was still standing next to her bowl of water.

‘What’s up?’

She called out her name but the dog didn’t respond, so she put down her plate and walked over to her, squatted down next to her and tried to attract her attention. The dog continued to bark, loudly, bouncing forward on her front paws. Ruby tried to force her to sit by pushing down her rump but the dog wouldn’t oblige. She tried talking sternly and then, finally, shouting.

Vincent put down his plate and walked over. ‘What’s she barking at?’

‘I don’t know. She was fine when she came in.’

The dog fell silent. They both stared at her, surprised. Then, after a five-second hiatus, she started up again.

Ruby swore.

‘If the bloody neighbours find out I’ve got a dog, I’ll be evicted.’

‘Follow her eyes.’

‘Why?’

She peered into Buttercup’s face. The dog’s eyes were glazed and purposeful. Her breath was bad.

Vincent bounded over to the stereo and lifted the stylus. The dog stopped barking. He dropped it again. She barked.

‘She doesn’t like Kraftwerk, so she’s barking at the speakers.’

He squatted down, took the record off and threw it on the floor, then put another one on.

Ruby’s eyes widened. ‘Be careful. You’ll scratch them.’

He turned the volume up and waited for a song to start. As soon as it did, so did the dog. He laughed and switched it off. ‘She doesn’t like Inner City either.’

He took out a Ray Charles album and slung it on. It began to play. The dog cocked her head, listened intently and then sat down.

‘Look at her! She’s an old crooner.’

He was preparing to change the record yet again when Ruby crawled over to the socket in the wall and pulled out the plug. She glared at him, still on her hands and knees. ‘If you’ve scratched any of my records you can pay me for them.’

‘I won’t scratch them.’

‘I bet you already have.’

He picked up one and inspected the vinyl. Ruby squatted down next to the dog and stroked her. She said, ‘She’s all upset. Her heart’s beating like crazy.’ After a few seconds she added, ‘You can tell everything you need to know about a dog’s condition when you stroke it. She’s got strong, wide shoulders, a good, firm back …’

I’ll get him to stay, she thought, at least for tomorrow. He can look after her while I’m out, until she gets used to this place. He can take her to Hyde Park.

She continued to stroke the dog, who rested her chin on the carpet and closed her eyes.

Vincent watched this. He realized something. They wouldn’t get around to sex now. That’s what the dog meant. He hadn’t really considered sex, planned it, wanted it. Even so.

He snapped the record he was holding in half. It was a sharp, clean break. They both stared at him: Ruby, the dog.

‘You’re going to replace that record.’

He smiled. Of course he would. He studied the two halves to see what it was.

Ruby picked up the dog’s lead and attached it to her collar.

‘Where are you going? You haven’t finished eating yet.’

She ignored him, pulled on her jacket, checked for her keys and then opened the door. He was a bastard. She wanted to punch him. She stepped out into the hallway, the dog at her heels.

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