Ride On 8

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CHAPTER 8
“Yeah, I know, but I don’t know about the rest. We’re going to finish up here, and after the wine is done we shall have some frozen yoghurt, to which my lover here is very partial.

Then I shall stretch my legs for a while, if you want, with Ginny”

Straight into things, then, and I wondered exactly how close the friendship was between Kate and Sally. Just a few phone calls, and husband and wife were already knocking at my door. There was something else there, something that pushed them, and I almost smiled at myself as I realised we were both in a dance. She knew I was hiding something, and I knew that she was too.

The door shut behind Stewie and Virginia as he said something about the Red Lion, and Sally turned to me, face carefully neutral.

“Nightmares, Adam. Talk to me”

“Nothing much to say, Sal. It sort of goes with the job. Had a few incidents, a few fatals, and I decided to sort of drop off the front line for a while”

“Bollocks. You don’t sell your house and change jobs just because you fancy a bit of a change.”

Did she just say ‘bollocks’? Was she channelling Ginny? She was still talking.

“You have almost doubled your weight and stopped seeing any of your friends. You don’t go out apart from when absolutely necessary, except when your arm is twisted, and when you do you sit by yourself. You talk to a rag doll. So it’s bollocks.”

Her tone softened. ”I have had my own share of shit, Adam, so please do your best not to mess me about. Come on, bring your glass”

She led me to the sofa, and settled down into it with her wine and me.

“What are the nightmares, Adam?”

I waited for a while, as images flickered over my eyes, and then started in, trying to put order into them.

“I was rammed by some thieves when I was on the bike. I got away with the impact, but they lost it and hit some street furniture and a wall”

Breathe, sip….

“There was a fire…..”

Breathe. Breathe again. As long as you are breathing….

“I stay away from roasts now. It’s the smell. Ginny is educating my tastebuds, now, and I can’t complain about what she does. Some meat in it might be good, though”

“Stay on plot, Adam. You are doing well.”

“There are---were---three of them, and the oldest was only sixteen. I couldn’t get them out, then the car blew up”

Blew me half way across the road, my jacket on fire, visor part-melted.

“Ah. Were you injured?”

“I fractured my arm when I landed after the crash, and got a couple of burns”

“But you blame yourself for not getting them out before the explosion”

I couldn’t help it then, I was crying. “One of them was only twelve, Sally!”

She waited for a little while, and then started to talk through some of the others, and I told her about the baby, still in its seat, the car seat that Mummy hadn’t bothered to secure to the car itself, that had come past her when she drove into the back of the van. The child still sitting upright in its little seat, on the road, on the dirty tarmac, eyes open but absolutely lifeless while the mother sat by the ambulance screaming as I laid a blanket over the tiny corpse..

The Rover, the old Rover 3.5, on the mountain road. Not children, this time. I had to pause a lot in that one. The details….the details never got any less sharp, the smell, coppery, rich, of so much blood, as the rock outcrop had sheared the bonnet’s front-set hinges and driven it back through the windscreen, and as the engine met their legs, so the edge of the bonnet met the necks of the old couple, and the sound that lives in my mind is a steady slow drip of their life draining out of a partly open door.

Sally handed me a tissue. “There are more, aren’t there?”

“Yes. That’s enough for now, please.”

“So you looked for a new start, a new place?”

“Yes. I got my sergeant’s, and decided to try another force”

“Did you go indoors straight away?”

“No. They put me on a foot patrol for a while, get to know the place sort of thing”

“Did you enjoy that?”

“I did, proper policing”

“Did you not miss the bike?”

Yes. No. “Sort of, but one too many incidents, you know”

“Were you having visions, flashbacks, when you rode?”

Fuck aye. “Yes….”

“Why did you move off foot patrol, Adam?”

Dark. Trying to get the lane markers out as the traffic wouldn’t fucking slow down, apart from the two cars that had pulled up as their drivers were trying not to be sick, or cry, and failing on both counts. Sarge, you’ve done traffic, you can mark where the body parts have gone. Sarge? Sarge?

“It was that jumper, a couple of years ago, Sal, by Worth. I had to help clear it up and I sort of broke down”

I looked round from my nightmare to see a complex of expressions hit her face and then Sally was crying. She held a hand up as I moved towards her.

“It’s OK, just a memory of my own. Melanie Stevens”

“You knew her?”

“She was a patient, and a friend. She was Stewie’s best mate.”

Sally got her own look on, just then, her own sight of things past, just as Ginny had. She took a couple of very deep, measured breaths, and then continued.

“Who is treating whom, here? We were at her funeral, and at the trial. It’s where we met. How bad was your own breakdown?”

That was either a slip, or a deliberate hint. Was she talking about herself, or Stewie, or the dead woman?

“I was sent home on gardening leave for a week, then the boss asked if I wanted to take a slot in Custody.”

“And you started drinking”

I continued the process, Sal, just in a higher gear. “Yes, I started drinking”

“Adam, can you do me a favour?”

“What?”

“Can you just answer the questions without having a discussion with yourself first?”

“You are a bit good, Sal. Thought of trying my job?”

“I don’t distract easily, Price, so don’t try it on. Now, you mentioned something else to Ginny. What is it, Adam?”

“Just that I was feeling a bit lacking in confidence now, being so fat”

“Bollocks again, Adam, obesity isn’t congenital unless you are a walrus. Who s Tabitha, Adam?”

“A friend. I talk to her, like I would a pet. I can’t keep a dog or cat on my shifts.”

“Or you think you might injure one if you were pissed?”

No, it would need rehoming when…when I am no longer around.

The door rattled at that point, and the two strays were back, letting me off the hook on that one. The smell hit me as the living room door opened.

“You bastard, Ginny, you got chips! That is not fair!”

“I’m not the fat fucker, am I? How you doing, Sal?”

“Patient-doctor confidentiality, Ginny”

I caught Stewie looking at me, and I suddenly realised that there was indeed someone here who understood my problems, at least one of them, as the others couldn’t.

“I was right, wasn’t I? How do you do it?”

He gave me a wry grin. “You’ve met the wife properly now, so you know the answer to that one. Ginny, stop teasing and give him a chip”

I thought it through for a second, then–

“Stewie, can I have a word please, in the kitchen?”

Sally gave me another of those quick appraisals, then nodded to him as we stood together and went out.

“What do you want to ask, Adam?”

“Melanie Stevens. I helped pick her up...afterwards”

I was trembling as I spoke, but he went absolutely rigid.

“What do you know about Melanie?”

“Only what came out at work, and what Sally said, that she was close to you. I was a bit self-absorbed back then. Sal said she was your best mate”

“Oh yes, she was. She told me she loved me once….”

That look, just like Ginny, just like his wife, as the past played across his inner eye. If Sally was doing anything for me, anything at all, she was letting me see that the nightmares weren’t mine alone.

“Did you…you know?”

“Oh, fuck no, Adam. Mel wasn’t into men in any way at all, she’d have given Ginny some competition on that front. Anyway…she was called Mike at the time. People would have stared.”



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