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Artefacts and Other Stories
Artefacts and Other Stories
Artefacts and Other Stories
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Artefacts and Other Stories

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That dandelion. A flash of stubborn yellow in a dark box of space. It had promised sunshine but had tasted sour. Artefacts. A dandelion. A mayfly. A family, bereft. Items and mementos of a life, lived hard and with love, or long, empty, bitter. In these sharply drawn and unflinching short stories, Rebecca Burns unpicks the connection between the lives we live and what we leave behind.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherOdyssey Books
Release dateSep 30, 2017
ISBN9781925652109
Artefacts and Other Stories

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    Artefacts and Other Stories - Rebecca Burns

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    The Dandelion

    Do you know they are talking about digging a tunnel?

    Monica had not realised she had been asleep. She straightened her back against the hard seat. Outside, fields and farms flashed by, green upon green. Rows of pea pods and onions shone in the heat. What did you say?

    A tunnel between England and France. Maggie met Mitterrand.

    The train trundled on, and a parallel line of panic arrowed across Monica’s belly. For forty years the world had been ordered in a certain way, with water and sea in their place, checkpoints and a wall in Germany. She didn’t like this talk of tunnels. The thought of one country bleeding into another unnerved her.

    Earlier that week she had tried again to persuade Rachel to stay or, at least, choose somewhere else.

    Why does it have to be France? she asked, the words falling hard as pebbles as Rachel leaned over the list of host families sent by the language college. You know they don’t like us.

    Don’t be ridiculous, Mum, rolled Rachel’s eyes.

    When there was an article in the paper about the disappearance of a tourist in Normandy, Monica snipped it out and put it inside Rachel’s text book. She found it in the bin when she retrieved the vegetable peelings the following day.

    Then, as the departure date loomed, Monica resorted to sulks and silence: the old weapons. It was easier than trying to find words. When Rachel talked brightly about the food she would try and the choice of restaurants in Paris, Monica turned towards the television and ignored her. A slightly drunk, well-spoken man was cooking outdoors, in a vineyard in Spain. These programs, with their extravagance and wasted food, fascinated her. Monica turned up the volume and nodded pointedly at the screen. Why don’t you want to learn Spanish instead?

    They had docked at Calais just after noon and caught the overland train towards Gare du Nord. Rachel found them a quiet carriage away from the inter-railers and they sat next to each other as the train shuddered and pushed through the countryside. Rachel’s suitcase rattled in the rack overhead; she had spent the last week packing and repacking. As the south of England boiled and the clouds gathered together like black coral, Rachel washed her skirts and vests. I can go on my own, she had offered, not really meaning it, but the thought of watching her child slide away from her on a train had sent splinters into Monica’s heart.

    They’d been travelling for two hours when the train pulled into a little station, just north of Paris. Hanging baskets crammed with yellow flowers swayed as the train eased by and Monica leaned her head against the dirty glass. She thought she could smell oats and raw potato, though they hadn’t packed food and hadn’t eaten since the ferry. Monica sniffed. She must have been mistaken; the breeze held only the tang of fuel and hot metal. But then a yellow petal drifted by the window and Monica remembered a dandelion, forty years old.

    That dandelion. A flash of stubborn yellow in a dark box of space. It had promised sunshine but had tasted sour.

    Do you think I’ll like them? Rachel asked again, bringing her mother back. She held her notepad and was tracing the language college’s address. I’ve heard that host families can treat boarders like servants.

    Then you’ll just have to come home, Monica said, without looking round. I hope they’re horrible to you.

    But they probably wouldn’t be. Rachel had been cautious in her selections and refused the first two families the college had suggested. Children too young, she’d said about the first. I’ll become their babysitter. She rejected the second family because the father was too young; she’d muttered something about needing a lock on her bedroom door. At a loss as to where this sudden assertiveness had come from, Monica had said nothing. Her daughter’s suspicion, though, she could understand.

    A guard looked in and punched their tickets. Monica looked at the purple stubs in her palm, resenting again that such small pieces of paper cost so much. Rachel had been saving and the college paid for half her fare – but Monica’s decision to join her daughter had been sudden. She had paused when the travel agent totted up the cost, hating the assistant’s bright red lipstick and blue eye shadow. You look like a clown, you know that? But Monica had sighed, said nothing, and resentfully counted out her pound notes.

    The guard left and then another passenger, just boarding, appeared in their carriage door. A tall, thin man wearing brown trousers, shiny at the knees. He carried a briefcase and stood for a moment. Monica held her breath, waiting for him to make his decision. The train throbbed in the midday sun. Heat suddenly funnelled the air around Monica into a rushing swoop.

    Except it was not air, it was the sweep of a coat and the rush of a shutting door on runners. Monica’s calves were not pressed against a plump seat; she was eleven years old, tall for her age, and she was standing as she had done for the last three days, legs weak, trembling and so, so cold. She could smell oats again; husks crunched under her feet as she shuffled towards where there might be warmth. Someone beside her passed over half a raw potato and she ate it. And then, miraculously, there came a dandelion.

    A noise in the carriage doorway and Monica, old Monica, mother Monica, orphan Monica, got up, was suddenly up, moving with such haste that she knocked Rachel’s notebook from her hands.

    Mum?

    You can’t sit in here! the voice was high and Monica realised it came from her. Not enough room! No space.

    The man paused in the doorway, eyes wide. He opened and closed his mouth, casting about at the empty seats.

    Mum, what’s wrong?

    Not enough room! No space! A tiny part of Monica realised she was now almost screaming.

    Rachel was up, at her elbow, and both women clashed together as the train set off, jerking into the countryside. Rachel’s arm snaked around her mother’s waist and Monica felt the girl’s warm skin against her flesh. Monica sagged. But she did not take her eyes from the man’s face and watched as a finger, her finger, jabbed towards the open carriage door.

    The man cleared his throat and held up a hand. Submission. His confusion was clear – and was that a little anger? Monica could not be sure – and he turned and left. They heard him stumble down the corridor towards the other carriages, briefcase banging against the sides of the train.

    Mum, sit down. Rachel helped Monica back into her seat. The girl’s face was pink, eyes bright. Are you feeling ill? She reached into her suitcase overhead and pulled out a bottle of water. You’ve barely eaten since last night.

    We had breakfast on the ferry. Monica took a deep drink of lukewarm tap water.

    Coffee and a biscuit doesn’t count. And it’s so hot. Rachel tipped some water onto her handkerchief and wiped her mother’s forehead. Better?

    Monica leaned back. Perhaps a nap.

    Rachel stashed the bottle again and opened the window further. The air was moving freely now that the train had picked up speed, but it was arid and suffocating. Monica squeezed her eyes shut, tasting lemons again. She felt her daughter sit beside her.

    But Rachel could not settle. She twitched and moved and sighed. Monica waited, knowing a question would come. As a child, if they were unhappy with each other, Rachel wouldn’t sleep but would slip down the stairs to sit on her silent mother’s lap until the hugs came easily.

    When Rachel spoke, she stumbled over the words. Mum, I didn’t know you could speak French. I mean, you started off telling that man he couldn’t sit in here, but then the rest...the rest was French, Mum. Why didn’t you tell me?

    French? Monica felt a shift within her, like the swoop that comes when falling off a cliff. It was there, then, after all these years.

    Just the same words, over and over. ‘No room. Not enough room.’ Rachel’s face was stricken. Can you really speak it? Mum?

    But Monica said nothing. Instead she turned to look out of the window, back towards the station and the yellow flowers, and thought of an old, old dandelion.

    The Last Game, August 1914

    A small gathering of men, brilliant white cricket flannels glinting like metal in the heavy sun, stride out onto the vivid green. Purposeful, some of them, marching out chest first, laughing brazenly; others, less so, walking slowly, casting looks back over their shoulders at the small pavilion. Yet, by an invisible and indestructible thread, they are all connected, these men; they know their place and purpose in this team. They look at their fellows with trust and a feeling close to love. The leader of the charge holds a bat, swinging it carelessly like a weapon in the direction of the opposing team, who stand silently at the crease. A shout and a wave from the captain, and the walkers all break into a trot, heading towards the small, yellowing patch of grass that will be their arena of conflict.

    In the glorious August sun, a crowd settles down on the grass to watch. Picnic hampers are opened, jugs of cold cider uncorked, pickles and cheese set out on crisp, clean tablecloths. Families sit together, but the groups are fluid and bodies move like a sea; in the closeness of a small village, ties are deep and children, relatives and friends ebb back and forth from picnic hamper to picnic hamper. A pie is shared, a cake is crumbled into tiny hands. A rattling chatter descends comfortably on the spectators.

    This should be over quickly, one father says to another.

    Our boys know what they are doing, the other agrees.

    They watch the home team scamper to the slips, paternal pride turning their gaze inward; he runs like me, one thinks. I was strong like that once. Despite their boasts, the fathers wring their hands together anxiously.

    Standing alone, a mother cranes her neck, squinting into the sun. Her boy is also out there, dressed identically to his friends in white. He’d insisted on joining the team as soon as he was old enough for the seniors. Cricket bores her terribly, though she bleaches his whites on washing day without comment. Finally she can contain herself no longer. Adam!

    Shock-haired, bones too big for his skin, her son turns and waves. Then attention back to the game, before his friends can snicker.

    A woman friend arrives at his mother’s elbow and they link arms. The summer warmth turns their stays and long skirts into hot sheets that seem to burn their skin. Did he go? the friend murmurs.

    The mother knows what her companion means. This morning. With the rest of them, I suppose. I couldn’t stop him.

    The women sniff together and look at their boots.

    A shout and a knock of cork on willow, and a ball flies high into the air, arcing over the heads of the in-fielders and out towards the boundary. A mutter breaks from the spectators; not a good start.

    Keep your shape! shouts a man sitting apart. A fashionable moustache covers most of his red, ruddy face. He pounds a fist into a palm. Edward! Use your brain!

    A young man looks once over his shoulder towards the shouter, lips pursed into a tight line. He mumbles to himself, and his friends watch on with sympathy. One of them says something and they all laugh, the mood lightening. The scarlet-faced parent frowns and drinks deeply from a cask of cider.

    How can they enjoy this game? a thin woman asks, sitting on a tablecloth with a friend. She has long blond hair piled high on her head, and she curls a stray wisp around a finger, over and over. She watches one of the players intensely.

    Her friend shifts next to her. It’s not so bad.

    The woman bites her lip. All they seem to do is stand still, and occasionally run after a ball. They look like white statues standing there in the sun.

    Her friend, used to these curious pronouncements, hums her agreement and tries to move the conversation on. Did he ask you then?

    He’s going to speak to Father tomorrow. After church.

    They huddle up, giggling, seriousness forgotten.

    The game goes on. Shouts, cries, applause render the sky and, out on the horizon, dark clouds gather. Parents and siblings shuffle close together in the cooling breeze. The older spectators watch the boys carefully, knowing that a few miles away, on a neighbouring village green, a similar game is being played. Beyond, out in the county, other families will watch their boys

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