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Information Aber Zombie and Finch
Posted by: Frenuyum - 11-14-2025, 06:05 PM - Replies (1)

Finch stopped to admire herself in the mirror. Her new wire-style haircut was a perfect match for her conservative witch’s hat and long, angular nose—complete with wart, of course. If there was one thing that Witch Finch liked about herself, it was her adherence to tradition.
She scowled at the thought of the latest fad amongst young witches of actually trying to look beautiful. If she wanted to look pretty, she had a spell for that. In her opinion, there was no point wasting time, effort, and magic on looking good all the time.
Finch checked herself one more time in the mirror and gave a toothy smile at what she saw. The mirror cracked.
After an almost absentminded wave of her hand to repair the broken glass, she turned and headed towards what passed for a kitchen in her small, but elegantly disgusting, abode. “Aber! Where the hell have you gotten to, you miserable boy?”
She entered the kitchen and found her assistant sitting on the floor eating. “There you are. Now I’ve got a job…” Her high-pitched scratchy voice trailed off as she first smelled, and then saw, what Aber had been up to. “What the hell have you done? Is that the new delivery boy from Hun, Won & Lo?”
“Er…” Aber Zombie looked around. He crawled over to the pile of discarded clothing nearby and started searching. He found the shirt that his latest conquest had been wearing and peered at the logo. He looked up at Witch Finch and smiled. “Yes.”
Finch scowled. “Do you have any idea how much delivery boys cost? I don’t mind the fact that, given the chance, you’ll fuck anything male that moves, but do you really need to eat their brains afterwards?”
Aber looked confused, which admittedly was one of his most common expressions. “Er…brains taste better after sex.”
“Is that because you’re hungry afterwards?” Finch lost her scowl as an interesting thought crossed her mind. “Or is it because sex alters of the taste of the brains?”
“Fresh brains taste better. After-sex brains taste better. Fresh, after-sex brains taste the best!” Aber grinned at what was, for him, a long speech.
Finch’s scowl returned at the sight of delivery-boy brains stuck between Aber’s poorly preserved teeth. “They’re also hideously expensive! You’ve got a supply of frozen brains in the fridge. Why can’t you eat those, instead?”
Aber Zombie stood up. “Don’t like frozen.”
“Too bad. That’s all we can afford on a regular basis.” Finch’s gaze couldn’t help but wander down Aber’s body to his groin area. “I still don’t know if that’s rigor mortis or a side-effect of that entire cauldron of sex-appeal you drank thinking it was dishwater, but doesn’t it ever go down?”
Aber glanced down his partly decayed but otherwise trim, taut, and terrific body. “Er…no. Should it?”
Finch wrinkled her nose, making her wart vibrate. “If you weren’t the animated favourite nephew of my step-sister’s twice-resurrected, great-grandfather’s adopted daughter’s son-in-law, I’d’ve gotten rid of you years ago.” She sighed. “But you’re family, so I’m stuck with you.”
Aber Zombie smiled. “I’m family.”
“Don’t remind me.” She waved a hand. “Now clean up this mess and do something about that stench. This place smells like a male bordello. Once you’re done, I’ve got a job for you to do.” She smiled, causing the polished bottom of a nearby saucepan to crumble. “I’ve finally managed to get the second cousin of the Duke’s gardener to agree to a date. This is our chance to make a connection with nobility—our first step to a secure future—but there’s lots of work to be done.”
“Er…work.” Aber Zombie sighed.
“Yes, work. Now get this cleaned up and then meet me in the study. I need to make sure I get the next set of enchantments just right.”
* * *
Aber gave the delivery boy’s lips a final delicate kiss before taking a bite out of the boy’s tongue. He then dropped the corpse into the waste bin. Aber was fastidious, at least for a zombie. He always opened the back of the head of his meals to preserve their face for as long as possible. He liked to give them a final kiss goodbye and to take a piece of them for a snack afterwards.
After mopping up the last of the blood and other bodily fluids, Aber started one of Witch Finch’s cauldrons bubbling. He wasn’t sure, but he thought it was the one with her ‘delicates’ that he had been about to wash when the delivery boy had arrived and distracted him from his task. Regardless, the foul odour that arose masked the heady scent of male-on-male sex that pervaded the kitchen. Personally, Aber preferred the smell of sex, but Finch was his boss, and she outvoted him.
His immediate chores completed, Aber plodded down toward Finch’s study. He paused along the way to scratch the back of Scalder, the witch’s familiar. He was rewarded with a loud purr and then the weight of the cat as Scalder leapt up onto his shoulder.
“She seems excited,” Scalder said as he wrapped his tail around Aber’s neck.
Aber smiled. “Pretty cat.”
“I’m not just a cat, Aber.” Scalder sighed. “I don’t know why I try to discuss anything with you. You never remember what we’re talking about, and the conversation always ends up being about sex.”
“Hmm…sex…”
“See what I mean!” Scalder jabbed his claws into Aber’s shoulders. “Now, don’t keep the witch waiting. She’s got some big plans afoot.”
“Er…what?”
“Just go into the study.” Scalder settled himself back into place. “You’ll find out soon enough.”
Aber continued on his unhurried way to Finch’s study. It was supposed to be the indoor lavatory, but Finch had nixed that idea when she moved in. As a traditionalist, an outdoor toilet was what she wanted and what she got. Not that she ever used it—one of Aber’s many chores was to take the Finch’s chamber pot and empty the contents into the pit behind the outside lavatory—but it was there for visitors, if they ever had any.
“About time.” Finch scowled, which perversely made her look nicer. “I need you to run down to Hun, Won & Lo for a few things.” Her expression hardened, causing Scalder to drop off Aber’s shoulder and scoot under the witch’s chair. “One of which is to pay them for a new delivery boy.”
Aber frowned. “Don’t run.”
“I know you don’t run. You never move faster than a…” Finch shook her head. “Why do I even bother trying to explain? Anyway, you need to go now, because you have to be back before sunset. Scalder will go with you to make sure you don’t wander off or forget.”
“Me?” The cat peeked out from his hiding place. “What did I do to deserve this?”
“Nothing, but I can’t go myself, and that means sending Aber. He can’t be trusted alone, so that means you have to go, too.” She picked at her nose while staring down it at her familiar. “Any more stupid questions, or should I turn you into a cockroach to make it easier for Aber to carry you?”
“Hmm…cockroach.” Aber smiled. “Crunchy.”
Scalder gave Aber a nervous glance before settling back onto his hindquarters and smiling up at the witch. “What do you need?”
“That’s a question, but I suppose it’s a reasonable one.” She preened her wiry hair. “While I’m making some last-minute beauty adjustments, I need you to get the last ingredients for my love potion.”
Scalder hesitated. “Love potion?” He knew those potions never worked as planned, but that hadn’t stopped witches throughout the ages from making them.
“That’s right.” She smiled, waving a hand negligently to fix the nearby mirror that cracked in response. “While my scintillating good looks have captured the attention of the Duke’s gardener’s second cousin, I need to make sure he doesn’t get away. The drinks with dinner tonight will be spiked to ensure that a good time is had by one and all. Especially this one,” she said, indicating herself.
“Your good looks. Right…” Scalder gagged for a moment and then sat back on his haunches. “A fur ball. Sorry. What do you need?”
Finch frowned but didn’t make any comment. “I’ll write you a list.”
* * *
“Well, there’s my day gone,” Scalder said from a perch on Aber’s shoulder as the zombie strolled down the country lane on the way into town. “I had it all planned. A nice little playdate with that cute mouse on the third floor and then living life on the edge with the wild minxes in the forest. Instead, I have to go shopping in yet another vain attempt by the witch to get ahead in life.”
Aber frowned. “She’s got one.”
“Got what?”
“A head. She needs another one?”
“No, not literally. What I meant…” Scalder sighed. “It would’ve been much nicer if you’d drunk a cauldron of intelligence instead of one of sex appeal, but then again, the witch could do with that, too. The only problem is that you have to be smart to create a potion for intelligence, which rules out anyone who needs one from making one.”
“Er…”
Scalder glanced back the way they’d come. “You might want to move to the side. There’s a wagon coming.”
Aber looked over his shoulder and smiled. He licked his lips as he listened to the expletives being yelled at the ox pulling the farm cart. There was something about a muscular, tanned, young farmer that made Aber hungry in more ways than one.
The young man glared at Aber. “Out of the way you long-dead piece of worthless shit!” A moment later, after he got a better look at Aber, his expression transformed into one of uncertainty. “You! You’re in the way.”
Aber glanced down at his feet and back at the cute farmer. “On way, not in way.”
The young man pulled back on the reins and was completely ignored by the ox as the wagon continued to roll slowly towards town. “Stop, you miserable lump of pot roast!” He licked his lips and smiled tentatively at Aber. “Hey, sexy, why don’t you climb up here and I’ll give you a ride?”
Aber smiled back. Ever since he’d drunk that cauldron, he kept meeting the nicest guys. He pulled himself onto the wooden seat next to the young man. “I’m Aber Zombie. I like you.”
“I’m Col. I…I like you, too.” He bit his lower lip for a moment and then visibly forced himself to look down the road they were travelling. “I hope you enjoy the ride.”
Aber always enjoyed a ride with cute guys. All that was needed was to find out what sort of ride Col had in mind.
It didn’t take long to find out. As they reached the edge of the forest, the young man pulled off his tunic. “Gee, it’s hot. Maybe we should rest in the shade for a bit.”
Aber grinned and took off his own top. He knew what was going to happen next. “You’re hot.”
“So are you…” Col divided his focus between directing the ox and staring at Aber’s body, with the body winning most of the attention. “Why don’t we…?”
Aber removed his shorts. It was what the guys usually wanted him to do after he’d removed his top. Col’s gaze was stuck on Aber’s groin area. “Oh, shit… I think that’s bigger than our prize bull’s.” He looked up for a moment and held up a finger in warning. “But no eating my brain, okay! I’ve heard about your sort.”
* * *
Col gave Aber another kiss. “I’ll drop you off now, and you can walk into town. I’ll be heading back later today, so if you’d like another ride, wait for me here.”
Aber grinned at the invitation. He’d had a lot of fun riding Col.
Scalder rolled his eyes. “Any reason for picking this particular copse of conifers? Could it be that it’s the last chance to drop us off before someone sees you?”
Col glared, though his face was red. “It’s not that. It’s…”
“You don’t want to be seen in the company of a zombie.”
“Fine!” Col grabbed the cat off Aber’s shoulder and tossed him off the side of the cart. “I just offered you a ride back, but you can walk for all I care.”
Aber frowned. “Col unhappy?”
“Not with you!” Col glanced around nervously. “But I have to go. I hope to see you again sometime.” He grabbed Aber for one last hug and then gently pushed him away. “Bye.”
A couple of minutes later, Aber was plodding his way towards the town. Col’s cart was almost out of sight, which made Aber sigh.
“You know, I don’t get it,” Scalder said from his usual perch on Aber’s shoulder. “Why didn’t you eat his brains afterwards, like you usually do?”
“Told me not to.”
“That’s it?” Scalder’s tone was one of disbelief. “After all this time and all those delivery boys, all that was needed was for them to ask you not to eat their brains?”
“Not nice eating brains if they don’t like it.” Aber thought for a moment, which for him lasted five minutes. “Finch says do what I’m told.”
“Hmm… That raises some interesting possibilities for the future.” Scalder peered ahead. “But that will have to wait. Look out, Aber, I think there’s trouble coming.”
A small mob, all men, was approaching. From the sounds, several, if not most of them, were drunk. As they came closer, Aber and Scalder could see that a small man in torn but bright and garish green clothing was being pushed ahead of them. His arms were chained behind him, and he had numerous cuts and abrasions. As they watched, he fell face first onto the dirt road and was immediately kicked by two of the men behind him.
Another man pointed towards Aber and Scalder. “Hey, there’s one of his friends. Let’s have a little fun!”
Scalder leapt off Aber’s shoulder. “Oh, look, a mouse! Bye, Aber,” he called out as he disappeared into the grass at the side of road.
Aber smiled at the mob. “Fun? I like fun.” He then frowned at the man in the bright green clothes. “But he not friend.” Aber cocked his head to the side and smiled. “Not yet.”
The mob’s aggressive demeanour faded as they stared at Aber. Most of them muttered to each other, but one stout guy in a leather apron, leather trousers, and not much else, stepped forward. “He’s sick in the head. He keeps going on about how great zombies are.”
“You haven’t been listening to me!” The man on the ground rolled over and pulled himself into a sitting position. “I’m a campaigner for equal rights for the undead. Do you know how much discrimination there is—”
He was cut off when the leather-clad man kicked him in the mouth. “We don’t want to hear that rubbish around here!” He wiped his hands on his apron, glanced at the other men around him, and then looked back at Aber. “We’ll leave him with you. We don’t want to see him in town again.”
With scattered mutters that Aber couldn’t make out, the mob headed back to town, though many of the men kept glancing back over their shoulders at Aber as they left.
Aber reached down and pulled the green-clad man to his feet. “You okay?” Aber stroked the attractive young man’s arms and shoulders. “Not hurt?”
“I’ll survive.” He smiled at Aber. “Thanks for your help. You’re a shining—and incredibly good-looking—example of what I keep telling people about. Undead are people, too! Did you know that in some places, the churches refuse to allow undead to marry?” He rolled his eyes. “They claim it messes up the accounting in the afterlife if someone who isn’t alive gets married — or some such rot.” He glared in the direction of the town. “It’s discrimination, pure and simple! There’s nothing wrong with zombies, skeletons, ghosts or ghouls. Even vampires aren’t too bad if you’ve got lots of tomato juice for them to drink. Why do people hate them?” He smiled back at Aber. “I’m Kalvin, by the way. People tell me I talk too much, but I can’t help it when it’s on a subject I’m passionate about. Injustice makes my blood boil!”
Aber frowned. “Vampires like boiling blood?”
Kalvin’s brow wrinkled. “You know, I really don’t know.” He smiled and turned around. “Say, I know it’s a dreadful inconvenience, but could you get these chains off me? It’s really hard to do much with your arms stuck behind your back all the time.”
Aber stared at the chains. They were thick and held together with a large padlock. “Got key?”
“You know, that’s something they forgot to leave with me. But I’ve got an idea.” He looked over his shoulder at Aber. “If you could maybe bite off part of one of my hands, I’ll be able to slip out of the chains. Don’t worry,” he added quickly. “I’m a quick healer. It’s my secret talent; I can regrow body parts.” He chuckled. “That’s come in really useful at times, like when the captain of the Duke’s guard caught me in bed with his niece. I thought he was going to kill me, but instead he just cut off a rather important part of my body and laughed at me.” Kalvin chuckled. “The laugh’s on him, though. Three days later, I had her again. He never knew. He still thinks I’m safe around his niece. By the way, what’s your name.”
“Er…Aber.”
Kalvin snorted. “You’d think I’d’ve learnt by now to not talk so much. Not everyone is able to keep up with me when I’m on a roll. Those cretins in town are a good example. I was explaining calmly and patiently the injustices heaped upon those who are privileged to keep going after they’ve been killed, and they just didn’t get it. Instead of trying to appreciate the finer points of educated logic, they grabbed me, tore off my cloak, and then wrestled me into these chains. So…could you get them off me, please?”
“Er…” Aber stood there, confused.
“Just bite off parts of my hand until I tell you to stop.” Kalvin gritted his teeth. “Go!”
“Okay.”
A few minutes later, Aber was licking his lips, enjoying the taste, while Kalvin was shaking off the chains.
“Thank you!” Kalvin stroked the side of Aber’s face with what was left of his right hand. “I’d love to stay and get to know you better, but I have things to do, places to be. I’m sure you understand. The campaign for equal rights must go on!” With a wave that threw a few droplets of blood around, Kalvin strode off back the way that Aber and Scalder had just travelled.
Aber stared after him, feeling a strange sense of disappointment. It wasn’t often Aber experienced a one-on-one situation with an attractive male that didn’t result in sex.
Scalder peeked out from behind a nearby bush. “They’re all gone?” He sauntered out before climbing his way up Aber’s body to his usual spot on Aber’s shoulder. “I’m amazed that your unnatural sex appeal is able to calm angry mobs, but there’s no denying the evidence. However, we’re now late, so it’s time to get our shopping trip out of the way.” He jabbed his claws into Aber, which had no effect on the placid zombie. “Let’s get moving.”
It was another twenty minutes before Aber had plodded his way through town to the majestic emporium known throughout the area as Hun, Won & Lo. As was the norm, he attracted a good deal of attention from the locals, though no one interfered or did more than stare and whisper. Several teenage males licked their lips as they watched, but Aber was used to that and thought it was normal.
As he entered the aging building, a single chime rang out. A wizened gentlemen in a long, flowing red robe approached. “Ah, Master Aber. One of our most favoured customers! It is our distinct pleasure to see you again.”
Scalder snorted. “That’s because he keeps your delivery-boy line turning over.” The cat smiled. “A word to the wise, Won; that may not continue. I have reason to believe that your delivery-boy business may be entering a quiet period.”
“Surely not! Young Master Aber will always need fresh supply of brains to keep up his robust and almost healthy vigour. What better source than our delightful and not overly bright collection of delivery boys?”
“Hmm…you’ve got a point.” Scalder looked at Aber. “How long can he go without brains before something dreadful happens?”
“Indeed, Master Scalder.” Won smiled, a flash of light beaming off his supernaturally white teeth. “One might even say that something dreadful has already happened because he’s been without brains.”
Aber sighed. “Don’t have brains. Love brains. Don’t have any.”
Scalder laughed. “Very true. Anyway, Won, I apologise for cutting short the playful banter, but Witch Finch has a shopping list that she needs filled quite urgently. Like now.”
“We will do our very best, Master Scalder, but as you know, the magic-supply business is very fickle, and we may not have everything in stock.”
“I don’t think any of these should be difficult for you. To start with, we need three pickled bull scrotums, the pubic hair of a pregnant, unmarried maiden, and a half pint of fresh virgin’s blood.”
Won, who had been nodding slowly as Scalder read out the shopping list, stiffened. “She’s making a love potion?” He visibly made himself relax. “As she is a faithful customer, I must in all honesty point out that they never work as intended. Witches around the world may keep trying, but none have managed to make a love potion that does what it’s supposed to do.”
Scalder sighed. “I know that, and you know that, but we both know that after Romeodo’s great revenge curse of ’79, no witch can be made to believe that. She wants to make a love potion, and that’s what her shopping list is for.”
“If that’s the way it is to be…” Won sighed. “Any particular type of virgin’s blood? The price varies considerably.”
“It does?”
“Certainly. The magic of rarity affects the price of all things. Prepubescent virgin’s blood is cheap and readily available, but it becomes more difficult to find from the late teens onwards, especially if you’re after virgin-male blood. By the time they reach their early twenties, virgin males are a scarcity. Virgin females aren’t cheap either, though not quite as rare. Now, once you get past thirty, the price goes down. The number of virgins is low, but if they’re still a virgin by then, there’s a good chance they’ll stay a virgin for the next thirty years, so if a supplier has one of those, they are guaranteed to always have virgin blood on hand.” Won coughed apologetically. “If you’re not fussy, we have a plentiful supply of vintage virgin’s blood in stock. Otherwise, I’ll have to see who’s available.”
Scalder snorted. “Vintage sounds fine, since the witch didn’t bother specifying. Exactly how vintage are we talking about?”
Won clapped his hands three times. An elderly hunchback woman with hair going white with age shuffled out. She was dressed in a formless, grey, one-piece dress that did little to hide her sagging breasts and wrinkled skin. As she approached, her shrouded white eyes indicated that she was blind. “Yes, you old fool. What do you want?”
“Madonna, dear, we have an order for fresh virgin’s blood. Can you please arrange for half a pint to be made ready?”
She cackled. “Ready? I’ve been ready for years. Too many years. One day soon, I’m going to find myself a nice man and quit. Until then, though…” She turned to a nearby desk, fumbled for a moment, and then pulled out a small flask. She pushed up the sleeve of her dress to reveal a small tap in the middle of her forearm. Holding the faucet over the flask, she started bleeding into the container.
Won turned back to Scalder. “While our dear Madonna is preparing the virgin’s blood, do you have anything else you need?”
“Besides a frisky minx and a witch who is competent?” Scalder sighed. “The rest of the list is…”
* * *
“About time!” Finch scowled at Aber and Scalder as they entered the kitchen. “Our guest will be here soon, and there’s still plenty to do.”
Aber sighed. “No ride.”
“What?”
Scalder jumped in. “What he’s saying is that someone offered us a ride back, but then he didn’t show up. That’s why we’re late.”
“And pussycat.” Aber smiled. “Cute pussycat. Scalder had fun.”
“What’s he talking about?” Finch asked.
“Never mind,” Scalder said quickly. “Aber, unload the shopping, and let’s get dinner started.”
Finch decided to focus on the task ahead. “I’ve already made the first two courses, so you only need to cook the next four while I prepare the potion.”
Scalder stared. “You cooked?”
Finch glared at her familiar. “Yes, I cooked. I’ll have you know that when I was in school, I was a top-notch cook. Only six people have ever died from eating what I made, if you exclude the rugby team that was downwind even though they were warned ahead of time, the convent of nuns that fainted at the smell and never woke up, and the five fishermen that ate the dead fish they found in the stream after the leftovers were tossed away, but since none of them actually ate my cooking, they don’t count.”
“If that’s what you think…” Scalder turned to Aber. “Time to get to work. Let’s see what we can do to prepare something that will match the quality and glamour of what our dear witch has concocted.”
“Er…”
“Start cooking, Aber.” Scalder glanced up at Finch. “How much time do we have?”
“Hopefully at least half an hour, since it’ll take most of that time to get the potion made.” She gathered up the supplies, popping one of the pickled bull scrotums in her mouth.
“Don’t you need that for your spell?” Scalder asked.
Finch snorted as she headed out the door. “I only need one. The other two are for me while I’m working. I’ve always had a thing for pickled balls.”
Scalder waited until she had disappeared before he headed for his basket in the corner near the stove. “Start cooking, Aber.”
“Cook what?”

Continue reading..

Information Hypothetical Kid
Posted by: Frenuyum - 11-14-2025, 06:03 PM - Replies (1)

After watching a dozen midterm review Extra History videos from YouTube, David King asked the study group: “Is everybody confident about your history midterm?”
LJ, Rowdy, Travis, Rebel, and Willie all raised a thumb.
David, addressing the whole group, asked, “All right, folks, for extra points, what did the thumbs-up from the Roman emperor at the Coliseum mean?”
Rebel enthused, “It was in that Gladiator movie. It means mercy.”
“If you’re anything but a teacher, David, it’ll be a waste,” Travis said. “Thanks for working on this with us.”
Willie stood and clapped David’s shoulder, “Thanks man. My dad loves these grades. Home is a whole ’nother world now.”
Rebel stuffed his notebook in his backpack, stood, gave LJ a one-armed hug, and said, “Thanks for having me, bro.”
LJ smiled and said, “Anytime, Reb. It’s almost twelve, and the bus comes early. Go away now!”
Before January, no one would have bet anything the friendship between LJ and Rebel would have ever happened. Rebel had been a jerk to everybody, especially the smaller LJ. In an astonishing turnaround, Rebel had apologized to everyone in his class for being a jackass. While many kids held grudges, LJ had invited Rebel over, and the two boys had become fast friends. Everybody packed up, and a general exodus began. Rebel took a leak in LJ’s bathroom and accidentally left his phone behind. He was almost home when he missed the bulk of the phone in his pocket.
Once the crowd had disappeared, David returned to LJ's room.
LJ was stripped to his boxers and said, “It’s my turn, and it’s late. We’ve got to hurry. One power blowjob coming right up.”
 
Rebel used the emergency key in the secret stash near the Grants’ mud room to let himself in. He wasn’t sneaking. He wasn’t making much noise either, to avoid disturbing anybody. When he arrived on the landing, it sounded like porn was on LJ’s DVD player. When he looked through the partially open door, David was lying across the bed, getting what looked like an incredible blow job from LJ.
The sight riveted Rebel to the spot. David’s back was arched, and LJ pulled out all the stops. Rebel’s cock ballooned to alarming proportions in his sweats. He couldn’t look away.
In the next thirty seconds, David came, bucking and holding LJ’s head. LJ let David blow in his mouth, then in his face, and nursed David’s cock.
Although Rebel considered himself straight, seeing his two friends in such a loving moment was the most erotic thing he had ever seen. It was… beautiful.
LJ looked up and saw Rebel staring wide-eyed.
Rebel, trying to make this not quite a complete disaster unconsciously did what David had done earlier and slipped into the hall bathroom for him to depart to get to his phone. A few minutes later, from where he was standing, he heard David tell LJ that he loved him and that it was his turn tomorrow night.
David departed, and Rebel heard the kitchen door close downstairs.
Laughing, LJ said, “Rebel, you might as well come on in.”
Sheepishly, Rebel went into the room, sweatpants stretched alarmingly, where LJ was sitting on his couch in his boxers laughing, and said, “Uhhh… I’m sorry. I left my phone. I didn’t mean to interrupt you guys.”
LJ said, “The expression on your face was priceless. I’m sorry we shocked you.”
“I wasn’t shocked,” he mumbled. “I was surprised; it was one of the hottest things I’ve ever seen, including porn.”
LJ moved over on the couch and said, “I’d be afraid to let you outside in that condition. Have a seat.”
Rebel groaned and said, “How can I be straight, and that… looked like so much fun?”
LJ asked, “Maybe you’re bi?”
After considering the question, Rebel admitted, “Probably. Seeing it made me so hard it hurts.” He looked toward LJ soulfully and said, “Please?”
LJ laughed, scooted over, put an arm around Rebel, and said, “Mercy?”
Rebel raised his thumb.
“It’s only fair to tell you that Dave, Rowdy, Travis, and I have all discussed this.”
“What?” Rebel blurted.
LJ calmly said, “The four of us are two couples. You and Willie are new to our group, and we assumed you were both straight. David said this temptation might arise because you and Willie are cute, and boys will be boys.”
Sheepishly, Rebel asked, “What did you guys decide?”
“We were all in agreement,” LJ replied. “The most important thing is we all want to stay friends. Sex can make things… complicated. David has been really understanding about this. We’re all kids having our first relationships, but we’re not married, understand?”
Rebel nodded, hoping that meant something good.
“We all decided it wasn’t unreasonable for us to have fun, but we’re going to be honest with our partner,” LJ stated.
Rebel asked, “Does that mean we can?”
LJ said, “Yes, but not tonight. I want to talk to David first, and I need something from you.”
Blushing, Rebel imagined LJ could ask anything, and he was so horny he would probably go for it. He asked, “What do you need?”
LJ said, “Would you mind telling me why you were so pissed off this fall?”
Rebel nodded and exhaled explosively. “Plenty of bad things happened last summer, and it wasn’t the divorce as much as all the bullshit surrounding it.”
LJ asked, “Want to talk about it?”
“No, but I probably should. I can only talk about this hypothetically speaking, understand? If I talked about family business outside the family, I’d be in big trouble.”
“Okaaay,” LJ replied. “I think I understand.”
Rebel said, “Hypothetically speaking, let’s say there’s this thirteen-year-old kid whose family is involved in a messy divorce. Things have been going downhill for a few years. Both sides of the family are squabbling, it’s a real shitstorm, and hypothetical kid is right in the middle between two sets of angry grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins. With me so far?”
LJ said, “No wonder you were pissed at the world.”
Rebel said, “It was a shit sandwich with horseradish sauce, hypothetically speaking, of course.”
“Oh, of course,” LJ agreed affably.
“Anyway, hypothetical kid is pissed and really tired of grownups acting more immature than he is. He emails his parents he’s camping out to fish for his birthday so he can skip a little of the crazy. He packs his tent, sleeping bag, and fishing pole, and he’s out. Things are peachy for a few days. He’s on state park land, pitches his little tent out of the way, and eats fish over a campfire.”
LJ said, “There was an amber alert in July for a kid named Theodore!”
Rebel rolled his eyes and said, “Please don’t tell anybody my real name! I’d much rather be called Rebel and warn everybody I’m a handful than be called Theodore. Yuck!”
LJ laughed and said, “OK, hypothetical kid. Your secret is safe with me.”
Rebel said, “Thanks. Hypothetical kid is in his tent. Strangers with dogs and flashlights wake him up in the middle of the night, and he freaks the fuck out. He runs as fast as he can and gets snatched by a state trooper.
“They arrested hypothetical kid for being a runaway and resisting arrest, and he ended up in jail. They sent in a fat lady from CPS to interview the kid, and he told them he just went fishing and left an email at home. Then she asks why he went fishing, and he tells them about the family feud and that he just needed a vacation. No, he’s not being abused. No, he’s not suicidal. He just went fishin’ for his birthday, damn it! He was planning on going home soon, anyway.
“The fat lady from CPS decides he needs to be put in a group home for an investigation that would last as long as it takes. Bitch.
“He ends up in a group home and is the oldest kid there. Anyways, this hypothetical kid is in a big room with five other kids and three bunk beds. The other kids are ten up to hypothetical kid’s age, who has just turned fourteen. He’s the biggest and oldest by at least a year. All the kids are happy hypothetical kid isn’t an asshole. Things are tolerable. Everybody’s happy, even the house parents.
“The next day, the fat lady from CPS takes hypothetical kid to a child psychologist’s office, and he wastes an hour and a half telling the shrink the exact same story. Finally, they cut to the chase. It’s an ugly divorce, and someone has made an allegation hypothetical kid’s father was molesting him. He tells them, nope, it’s not true, and the fat CPS lady buys him Wendys on the way back to the group home.
“They go back to the group home, and hypothetical kid has a great time with the other kids. The kids have fun, the group home is peaceful, and Mrs. Wilcox, the house mom, is so happy she makes them her best spaghetti dinner.
“That night, they sit up after lights out and talk. Hypothetical kid gets a real education. Real fucked-up things can happen to kids when things go wrong. He understands. Hypothetical kid was a federal case cuz he went fishing.”
LJ laughed and said, “It doesn’t sound horrible.”
“That’s just it. Hypothetical kid wanted a vacation from the family feud, and he was having fun playing with the kids in the group home. It was better than fishing.”
LJ said, “I’m guessing something went wrong?”
Rebel went quiet and said, “Things got weird, and hypothetical kid ain’t real proud of it. It wasn’t hypothetical kid’s idea at all. There was a twelve-year-old in the bottom bunk across from me. A while after the farts and giggling ended, Marcus slipped out of his bed and got in my bunk beside me. I thought we would talk, but he put his finger over his lips. He went under the sheet and gave me a blowjob.
“Uhh… uhh… hypothetical kid was going to stop him. Honest. He just didn’t want to wake everybody up. Then… it was too late to stop.”
LJ was rolling on the sofa, laughing so hard he was covering his eyes.
“Hypothetical kid was shocked, but his willing accomplice had made a great start. He didn’t really say yes, as much as he was hanging on. Marcus went to town and blew me, like he enjoyed it as much as I did.”
LJ put his hand on Rebel's shoulder, drew him into a hug, and whispered, “Careful, Theo. Hypothetical kid is slipping there.”
Rebel whispered back, “Please don’t call me Theodore.”
Smiling, LJ whispered, “I didn’t. Never in front of anybody else, and I’ll only gig you a little with Theo.”
Rebel whispered, “Rat.”
LJ replied, “You don’t get a nickname until we love you, bro.” Then he hugged Rebel fiercely and kissed him on the cheek.
“You kissed my cheek,” Rebel whined plaintively.
LJ said quietly, “What I think you want me to do is much more intimate.”
“Does David have a nickname for you?” Rebel leaned over and kissed LJ in approximately the same spot and leaned back on the sofa.
LJ leaned back on the couch and said, “Yeah. He calls me Fatty. So, what was it like to be the boss of the cell block?”
Rebel blushed so brightly that he glowed. “It was so embarrassing… and wonderful. I had been nice to them, and they were expecting somebody who would push them around and force them to do stuff. They liked me and wanted to do it anyway, just for fun. I learned to like some things.”
LJ asked, “Hypothetical kid was there until your folks went to court, wasn’t he?”
Rebel nodded. “It was almost three weeks. Then they took me to court. Big mistake!
“The judge asked me why I ran away. I told him I didn’t. The adults were fussing and fighting, and I got sick of it. I wrote my folks an email saying I was going fishing for my birthday.
“The judge said that was the first he had heard of an email. I pulled it up on a laptop, and we caught both sides in several lies. The sex abuse lie, the kidnapping lie, and some legal stuff that really honked off the judge.”
Laughing, LJ interjected, “Oh shit, Rebel.”
“Yeah. Then, Judge Lewis asked which parent I wanted to stay with. I floored everybody when I asked to return to the Wilcox house because they never fight there.”
“Jesus, Rebel,” LJ laughed. “It sounds like you caused a riot.”
Rebel grinned and said, “It helped that Judge Lewis liked me. He takes me fishin’ sometimes. Anyways, I stayed at the Wilcox house until school started while we had family counseling. Mom has custody and Dad’s in Georgia. The shrink said all the fussin’ and fightin’ messed with my head. I love the kids at the Wilcox house and still get to visit on weekends.

Continue reading..

Information Eyes of Darkly Blue
Posted by: Frenuyum - 11-14-2025, 06:02 PM - Replies (1)

“When I was fifteen, Saint Michael looked me straight in the eye.”
There was a pause as the Colonel General regarded me calmly, almost with disinterest. He was immaculately turned out in the undress uniform of a Guards Colonel. I knew that he was Colonel-in-Chief of one of the Household Regiments and I made a mental note to find out which one. The Swords and Eagle of a Knight Imperial glittered at his neck; otherwise, he wore only a miniature of a youthful Tsar Alexei lower on his tunic. He wore no other decorations or orders, though I knew that he had many.
This man, after all, has been the faithful intimate of Tsar Alexei from the rescue of the Imperial family at Yekaterinburg, through the restoration, the conclusion of the Great War and the prosecution of the Second Great War. This was not the sort of thing you would expect to hear from such as he; I looked up quickly though I strove to keep any expression from my features.
“You don’t believe me, of course, but that’s of no concern to me.”
His tone dismissed me, but his eyes twinkled, and the smile lines around his mouth and eyes did not suggest contempt. He was a striking man: clean shaven, silvery at the temples but with a full head of vaguely rumpled, graying, light brown hair; his nose was straight and formidably sharp, perfect for looking down. He was looking down at me now, sharp eyed, down that straight edged nose, from a position both serene and impregnable.
“Well. His Majesty has asked me to spend time with you, has asked that I answer all of your questions. If necessary, I may decline to answer some of your questions until His Majesty has reviewed them, but still, I think this narrative is important to him. Should you do anything to cause him displeasure, well.” His pause was promising rather than just threatening; he quirked an eyebrow in question.
“Yes, then Your Excellency, where is the beginning for you? Where is the place to start?”
“When I turned fifteen.” He looked off into space. “It was 1917. And many things were happening to me. And all around me. It was sometimes hard to keep everything sorted out. Surely you remember what its like to be fifteen. You’re closer to fifteen now than am I. Some of these changes happened within me, and I think some of these things happened because Saint Michael looked me straight in the eye.
“Like most of us, I was raised in the True Faith. I attended church regularly, but not necessarily because I felt any deep spiritual motivation. I attended church regularly because my mother or my aunt made sure that I did. There was no discussion of the matter. Certainly, there was no vocation. I had no desire to be a monk or a priest, or to serve the church in any way.
“And then one day, after services, I happened to look up at the beautiful sculpture of Saint Michael in our cathedral. I saw that he was looking straight at me. Straight in the eye: deep into my heart, I think.”
There was a long pause, as the General seemed to withdraw into himself, as one does when one is recollecting deeply. I waited, then prompted him gently, “If you please Your Excellency, how can I describe Saint Michael looking you ‘straight in the eye’? How can I say that so a reader might make sense of it in a hundred years or so?”
“Ah,” he paused almost as if for effect and his lips quirked into a hint of a smile. “Well for one thing, his eyes were blue.
“Now you should know, young scrivener, that I really do not care in the least what you might write or what you might quietly think of me. But so that the narrative will be right for the archive, and because it is His Majesty’s wish which settles it, I will tell you. Go and look at the statue of Saint Michael in the Novosibirsk Cathedral. It is now, as it has always been, pure white marble. It is not hollow. No one looked through eyeholes or any such rubbish as that. Can you imagine anyone going to the trouble of hollowing out a statue so that they could look at the humble son of a railroad man? Not likely that! No, that one time, in 1917, Saint Michael looked down on me from his statue on the wall with clearest eyes of blue.
“It even took a few seconds before it struck me. I’d walked on several steps and then I stopped and looked back, and his eyes had followed me in that cold marble face. I thought I might have imagined the whole thing.
“So now you might think, well he was fifteen with an active imagination.
“Well, that night Saint Michael came to me in a dream for the first time. As I said, I was fifteen. Most of my dreams were anything but holy; those that involved Nikolas, then as now the love of my life, were, well - let’s just say they were rousing. Dreams of love at that age almost always are.
“That night, though, Saint Michael the Archangel came to me in all his grandeur. It was as if he stepped down off the wall. Only he was not cold and marble. He was warm and flesh, his hair was blond and fell to his shoulders and his eyes, as I said, were blue: blue to an unfathomable depth. He is, as you know, the Patron Saint of soldiers and healers, so his shoulders were broad and his arms were powerful. Unlike the statue in the cathedral, no cloth draped his great physique. The blade of his sword gleamed stronger than steel and richer than silver. The sword’s golden hilt was vibrant with gems that glowed from within. In the dream, he had no wings, although he has them in the cathedral. I’ve always remembered this. I’ve always thought about this; I think it proves my dream was real; I don’t think that the Archangel and Taxiarch Michael has any need of wings at all.
“In the dream, he was holding the sword above his head as if preparing to strike at some unseen evil. But then he saw me. He slowly lowered the sword so that the point of the blade touched the ground before him. He took the hilt in his left hand and leaned lightly on the sword. He looked deep into my soul reaching out to me with his right hand. He looked directly at me and smiled ever so lightly. I felt as if I am moving with him, drawn into the loving blue of his eyes. I am safe in the love of his smile. I knew that he loved me and that I should follow him. Then he faded. I think that I always wake when I had this dream. Good Saint Michael knows I’ve not had it since the end of the Great War. Still I know that he will come again if I’m needed. I know beyond doubt that I am loved and I know that Alexei is loved.”
There was a pause while the General waited for me to catch up. Or at least I think that’s why he’s paused; I was using the latest shorthand method so I was right with him.
“The Tsar. What I meant to say, was that His Imperial Majesty, Alexei, is loved.” He glowered at me as though the informality were mine. And now I knew how he addresses the Tsar when they are alone. Even though appearing to glower, the twinkle in his eyes came through.
“So! Well, that should do it then!” His smile was broad and winning, but he was just playing with me, for he did not stand up. Just testing me a little. I knew my cue.
“But surely, Your Excellency, there is more to the story than that. I mean, all that’s happened so far is: you went to church then had a dream. But it’s a long way from Novosibirsk to Yekaterinburg.”
He sighed and collected himself. “Well, 1917 was a terrible time. You weren’t there, nothing like it has happened since, so you’ve no way of really understanding what it was like. You can thank God and the Tsar for your good fortune. But then, the war was not going well, the filthy Bolsheviks had fomented revolution, and the world was coming apart: everything was in short supply, we were never really warm that winter, we never had enough to eat; there were no young men about, they’d all gone for soldiers. My mother and I hadn’t seen my father for almost three years. He was a railroad man. He had been mobilized first thing in the war and was trying to keep our armies in the west supplied. When the revolution came, we stopped receiving his pay allotment. The post was erratic even before the revolution. Once, we received two letters from him on the same day. One wasn’t even a week old; the other was two months old. Now it didn’t seem to work at all. We’d not had any word from him in months. We were very proud of him. He was a Reserve Lieutenant in the Transport Corps. Not exactly the Life Guards Preobrazhenski Regiment, but still he was the first of our family to be commissioned by the Tsar.
“Now you need to know about Nikolas. He was the one who really organized the rescue and recruited our little band of Alexei’s men. Men? I say ‘men.’ Well we did a job for men even if we were mostly in our teens, but for the one grandfather amongst us. Nikolas and I were the youngest.
“He is also the love of my life: we discovered love together, we explored passion together, we have never had a secret from each other. In my eyes, then and now, Nikolas is beyond beautiful. His hair, I suppose, is a rather nondescript brown; his sister infuriates me when she calls it ‘mousy’, she does that, even today, when it’s more like sterling silver; she does it just to get me going. His eyes are gray-blue and sparkle with humor, or with passion when we make love. His eyebrows have a gentle arch and seem to think they’d like to join across his nose, but they just can’t quite make it. His nose is pert and pug. His lips are narrow. Normally, they angle just ever so slightly down, and give him a solemn expression; but it only takes a heartbeat and up they go, and his joy and humor are obvious to all. We were both skinny then, but that was the war. I don’t guess you’d call us skinny now. He’s a Field Marshal you know. Not on active duty any more, but neither of us will ever retire from the service of our Tsar.”
The General swiveled in his chair and rang for an orderly. The response was virtually instant and he ordered tea for us.
“So that brings us back to February, 1917. It was a bitter winter and, as I said, nothing seemed to be working right, which just seemed to make the winter even colder. Saint Michael, by this time, had visited my dreams several times, but hadn’t really told me what I was to do. So I was trudging home from the bakery with our meager bread ration when I heard a feeble mewling and saw a kitten in the snow next to the storefront. The poor thing was abandoned, bedraggled and injured. Hell, the poor thing was dying! I tucked the string bag with the bread up under my coat, pulled a mitten off, and knelt beside the kitten. I presented my hand for inspection by the poor thing before attempting to offer any comfort. It sniffed me gently without suspicion or concern; I was approved, so I gently touched its head. That’s when I knew that Saint Michael had marked me out for something. For when I touched the kitten’s head, it was as if I had immersed my hand in a running stream of water. It was as if there was something flowing between us, something that felt like water, but was invisible: certainly not water. It’s virtually impossible to explain. I do not understand it myself.”
The General applied himself to one of the raspberry tarts that the orderly had brought with our tea. He smiled and gestured amiably with the tart. “Not skinny anymore.
“Before my eyes the kitten was regaining his health. I knew that the kitten was a tom, though I’d not looked. I knew that the kitten had a broken leg, for I could feel it mending; his coat was growing lustrous before my eyes and I could suddenly hear him purring above the clatter of the street. I gently picked him up and we went home.
“It was then that Nikolas came down with pneumonia. As soon as I’d regained my composure after healing the cat, for that is what I’d done, I went to talk to Nikolas about this miracle. But his Mother had put him to bed and wouldn’t let me in to see him lest I too, fall ill. She loved us both.
“Now you’ll think I’m mad, but it seemed the most natural thing in the world to discuss this situation with the cat. Mostly he’d purr and doze. But sometimes he’d look up, attentively, as if what I’d just said was just exactly the right or wrong thing to say, or think, or whatever. Somehow, I knew to introduce him to others as ‘Defiance’, but I always called him Kiki. He’d come when I called him; he liked to ride around on my shoulder. He was very comforting. I told him that I must get in to see Niki and he seemed to approve and agree. We both seemed to agree that pneumonia could kill and that Niki was way too important to risk.
“‘I’m off to see Niki.’ I told Mama what I was about and she told me to keep warm and dry, just as she always did. Kiki rode under my jacket, across my chest with his head peeking out between my lapels; he appeared to find this perfectly normal.
“When we get to Niki’s flat, his sister Kristina (her of the ‘mousy’ hair effrontery) opened the door to my knocking. ‘Oh you’ve a kitten,’ she exclaimed as she opened the door, ‘what’s her name?’ I explained that his name was Kiki if you wanted to be his friend, but otherwise you must call him Defiance.
“Kiki had got us right into the flat. I handed him to Kristya (I really do love her) and gave her a quick kiss. She took him eagerly. He purred mightily and was petted and made much of as they sat together on the divan.
“Kristya, I’d like to look in on Niki if that’s all right.” She looked around Kiki who was nuzzling her and told me to go in. “He’ll be happy to see you if he’s awake. He’s in the second bedroom,” she assures me. I left her and Kiki on the divan and stepped right into the bedroom.
“Very quietly I slipped into the bedroom and gazed worriedly on my beloved. He was pale and his breathing was shallow and raspy with a horrible liquid sound that was very wrong. I was terrified for us: for him as he was very sick, and for me from the fear of losing him. I knelt beside his bed. When I touched Kiki on the street I felt this flow between us, but I had no idea what the flow was, what caused it, or how it worked. But Kiki began to heal before my very eyes. Would the same work for Niki? I paused to pray to God. I visualized Saint Michael. But was not like the dream. All I saw was his face and those eyes of darkly blue.
“I mustered my courage and my love and finally resolved on a tiny touch to see if anything happened. Having decided, I hesitated, and said another prayer.
“I wonder, my young friend, if you can imagine what it is like to be fifteen, in love, and faced with the most terrible unknown. A terrible unknown that effects the one you love, and thus also you. If you’ve not known love, my young friend, you cannot possibly know just how terrible this feeling can be.”
The General regarded me with leveled eyes. It is truly a terrible question to have to face and certainly, nothing in my life has come close to such a moment. One can only shake one’s head and wait for him to continue.
He closed his eyes and started, “I reached slowly for him with two fingers. Just a touch: just a touch whilst I prayed to feel that flow that brought Kiki back from the edge of this world.
“But there was no flow. It was a sharp jolt that caused me to jerk my hand away. It was a different feeling than when I touched Kiki, and yet is was the same, for I had this sense of Niki. With Kiki, I knew that he was a tom, and I knew that his leg had been broken, but now was mending. But with Niki, I had this sense of a rising cloud of angry congestion in his chest that was threatening and growing. I reached for him again and took his hand. Again I felt that horrible congestion, but now I could also feel the flow, only it was much stronger. I sensed the cloud was smaller, or rather dissipating a little, and I knew that I was helping. It was a sort of battle. Niki and I were pushing through the cloud as if we were the morning’s sunshine. We were gaining strength and brightness while his illness was fading. I brought his hand to my lips for I knew that I was doing it, I was somehow breathing life and strength into Niki and helping him to repel the pneumonia that sought to steal his life in Novosibirsk in February.
“I released his hand and tried to understand what had been happening. Niki had some color back in his cheeks. Seconds before he was ghastly pale. His cheeks were always rosy. More so, of course, when we were outside playing ball, or sledding, or planning some kind of mischief. It was a great relief to see a hint of roses back in his cheeks. His breathing was easier now, too. He was not laboring and his breath, while still a little raspy, no longer had that scary liquid gurgle that I’d heard at first. I reclaimed his hand and lay down beside him for I was suddenly very tired. I kissed him. There was a surge of love and hope and joy. I saw Saint Michael and fell deeply into the pool of his eyes. Unconscious of all else.
“You know,” the General regarded me calmly, “I’ve spoken to priests and doctors trying to understand what this is and how it works. The priests, of course, call it a miracle and are content with that. Some of the doctors say the same; other doctors want to start doing experiments with their ‘scientific method,’ whatever in the hell that might be. Fortunately, they can’t catch me.” He smiled winningly and I had a sense of what it might be like to know him as a friend.
“I’ve even asked Alexei. He said that the Starets Rasputin could ease his pain, but could never keep it away.
“I don’t guess we’ll know in this life. Anyway, the next thing I knew was Niki’s voice from afar. ‘He’s waking-up, Babka.’ Almost lazily I became aware. I was in bed, safely enfolded in Niki’s embrace, warm throughout, with a purring warmth at my feet. I opened my eyes to the smiling approval of Niki’s Grandmother. I could feel her love and I knew it was for me as well as for Niki.
“‘Ah Paisii,’ she said, ‘beloved grandson. I know you now for an Old Soul my dear. You’ve done a miracle just now.’ She smoothed my hair and stroked my cheek; she told me that I was ‘from beyond the steppes, from before the ken of man or priest.’ She fixed us both with a formidable eye and asked us if we’d prayed to learn our challenge. ‘You must you know, both of you, for you surely have one and it must be met. Such gifts are not given idly away. Tea, I think,’ and she left to fix it for us.
“Now you need to know that Nik is a hopeless romantic. Oh, not in the falling in love sort of way; he fell in love with me and that was that; but in the sense of faithful knights and boyars, loyal Cossacks, great feats of derring-do in the service of a loving Tsar—a Tsar who loved all and was loved by all in turn. With that in mind, it should come as no surprise to learn that within two days he came dashing to our apartment and announced that he knew what our ‘challenge’ was and I must come with him at once. So we went, he and I and Kiki. When we got to his home, Babka was there, visiting with a man about her age. They were enjoying tea.
“‘Dedushka Konstantin,’ Nik announced. Here is Paisii who’ll be coming with us to rescue the Tsar.
“I was stunned, but Kiki wanted down, and, when released, he walked over to Konstantin and jumped into his lap. ‘Grandfather,’ I said, and bowed slightly to him. All this time my mind was whirling with this ‘rescue the Tsar’ business.
“A great discussion now ensued. Basically, Babka stated we knew what our challenge was and we must proceed. Nik, of course, agreed with her. But Konstantin said it was impossible and pointed out that the Tsar was miles away in Yekaterinburg, was doubtless well-guarded, and that the problem of moving the Tsar, Tsaritsa, Tsarevitch, and four Grand Duchesses would be a nightmare even if it were possible. And finally, glancing around in sad triumph, Konstantin pointed out that he was ill and could not help, and, far more importantly, that the Tsarevitch Alexei was sick almost to the point of being crippled.
“‘No problem,’ Nik said pulling me forward. ‘Pai is sent by Saint Michael. He’ll know what to do.’
“So I went to Konstantin, who was seated in the good chair. I knelt in front of him and looked into Kiki’s eyes where I sensed approval. I looked up to Konstantin who was smiling bemusedly, and said my prayers. I carefully put one hand on each of his knees at exactly the same time, and I could feel the flow pulsing strongly into Konstantin. This time it was different again. I could sense that Kiki was with me, seemingly helping to direct the flow. And the sickness was different too. With Niki, it was as if I were dispersing a viscous cloud. But with Konstantin, it seemed almost like his body was trying to devour itself, so I must focus on stopping that. I was concentrating on that when I felt Nik’s hands on my shoulders. Nik’s presence gave me additional strength and I sensed that the disease was losing strength just as a sandbank can be washed away as the river flows on. Yes, like a river. That’s a better description. You can look out upon the surface of the river and everything seems calm and placid. Beneath the surface though, the current can be strong as the river sweeps away.
“It took me two days to wash away the sickness from Konstantin. Most of that time, to be sure, was spent asleep. I can only maintain the flow for a short period and then I must sleep and regain my strength. Babka understood this. She made Konstantin sleep on the divan, and she had Niki take Kiki and me to bed with him in the second bedroom. Somehow, despite all of the shortages in the city, she, with a grandmothers wiles, contrived to feed me until I was full.
“When Konstantin was well, he looked ten years younger and he was convinced that we could, should, and would, rescue the Tsar, the Tsaritsa, the Tsarevitch, and the four Grand Duchesses. While he’d been recuperating, Niki had been busy. He’d recruited four of our friends and two of his cousins to our mission. These were important additions to our crew. Two of them were talented thieves whose skills had been honed by the adversity of our world. We now had four rifles, three pistols, a half dozen cavalry sabers and shashkas as well as some explosives and lots of ammunition.
“Konstantin urged us on. He’d been in the Horse Guards in St. Petersburg and was an intelligent and well-read man. He told us that it was not unusual for the previous rulers to be executed after a revolution. He feared the dirty Bolsheviks would kill the Royal Family, as they must know that loyal Russians would try to rescue them just as we were preparing to do.
“I arranged transportation on the railroad. My father had been well thought of and there would be no trouble getting on an empty boxcar when it was time to go.
“And so, on the 15th of June, 1918, we set off in a boxcar for Yekaterinburg. We were now ten teenagers, a grandfather, and a cat.
“They wouldn’t let me do much when we got there. We found a camping spot deep in the beech forest well outside of town. Konstantin organized a thorough reconnaissance of the city and the Ipatiev House, the mansion whose owner had been dispossessed to make a prison for the imperial family. They set about locating horses, tack and all the essentials. And then we started hammering out the plan.
“First we had to know what Alexei’s condition was. This was my contribution. I emphasized that I wasn’t sure what his affliction was and until I knew this, I could not be sure that I could cure him. If I couldn’t cure him, our escape was going to be much more difficult.
“‘If you cannot cure him,’ Konstantin interjected, ‘we might as well go home now and give no one false hope.’
“We were shocked into silence. ‘Listen,’ he continued, ‘Tsar Nicholas is doubtless a fine man and would have made an excellent squire on his country estate. But he’s not been much of Tsar. Has he? He glared at us. Well, has he? He’s done aught but lose wars, give his God-given authority to grasping nobles, letting his people be trod into the mud.’ We were spellbound. ‘And I remind you all that we are here because Saint Michael came to Paisii here and gifted him and charged him and Niki with this mission. Nicholas is no longer the Tsar. He himself set aside his crown with his own hands. The rightful Tsar is Alexei and we must cure him and take him to Admiral Kolchak so that Alexei can unite the loyalists and restore Mother Russia. Only Alexei can do this. Saint Michael did not come to Pai so that we could go to Nicholas and say, gracious me, you’ve made an awful mistake old boy, so now you must get back on your throne!
“‘Here’s our plan.’ He said. Tonight Pai and Niki will sneak into the Ipatiev House and go to Alexei’s room. We know he has a room to himself because of his illness. They will begin his cure. If he can be cured, then it will begin.
“‘They’ll return to us and let us know. If a cure is possible, tomorrow we will enter the house and liberate the royal family. Some of us will take Alexei to Admiral Kolchak. The rest will go deep into the forest with the rest of the family where they will stay hidden until the army can come.’
“So that night, having entered that gloomy old pile, Nik and I hid in the fusty gloom behind heavy drapes as we waited for the household to settle down. We could hear some of the guards in the rear getting drunk and playing cards. Alexei, our Tsar, was in the next room. Soon, Nik and I would be able to slip into his room and talk to him. Soon, as soon as the healing can be completed, Alexei Nikolayevich Romanov would emerge from the Ipatiev House to renew and resurrect Mother Russia just as his ancestor, Mikhail Fyodorovich Romanov, emerged from the Ipatiev Monastery to become the Saviour of Russia three hundred years ago. Yekaterinburg will be the new Kostroma. So, at least, I pray.
“The drunken talk and laughter became drunken muttering. It was time to go to the Tsar. In sock feet, we crossed the hall to the door. It wasn’t even locked. The guard was confident of its ability to keep the household immobilized. Stinking Bolsheviks! With my next thought I thanked Saint Michael for their overconfident incompetence. We entered and moved quietly toward the slight figure all but engulfed by the bed. We stood beside him. Even in the gloom of the room he looked sick.
“He awoke. Startled, he rose on his elbows and started to open his mouth. I made a shushing gesture. But what quieted him was Kiki leaping onto the bed and moving quickly to nuzzle his chin with the top of his head. I’d no idea Kiki was even with us but I can’t say that I was surprised. I took Niki’s hand and we went to our knees beside the bed.
“‘We are your men, Majesty,’ I whisper. ‘We are your men in your service. Here to promise that help is coming.’ Keeping Niki’s hand in mine, I rose slightly and took his hand to kiss. When we touched, I was almost staggered by the intensity of the touch. He was in great pain. Oh Good Saint Michael and Sweet Jesus, Lord, would I be able to do this?
“Alexei was wide awake and staring. Holding tight to Niki as a ship does to an anchor, I tried to drive his pain away; I tried to direct this torrent of healing and find out what, exactly, was wrong. This was far worse than pneumonia or cancer. There was something fundamentally wrong. His blood seemed weak. I concentrated on driving off the pain and fortifying the blood. He did not resist as I held his hand more firmly and rested my forehead on his hand. There! I sensed Kiki, also in contact. Alexei seemed to be bleeding from bruises. There was only so much that could be done with the energy that Nik and Kiki and I had that night. So I concentrated the healing forces on easing his pain. It was the bruises! That was what was causing the pain. That made it easier. That was way easier than a broken bone. Now, enrich the blood. I could do that! It was almost as if I were strengthening the body to defeat a cancer, but very different too.
“I was starting to learn a bit about how to do this. So when I felt myself come close to passing out, I kissed his hand and released him. I sagged back down on my knees with my head on the feather bed. I heard Niki whisper.
“‘I am Nicholas Ivanovich Kotlyarovsky,’ I felt his hand rubbing my shoulder as if to ease any pain I might have. ‘This, Majesty, is Paisii Timofeyevich Chalikov. The Good Lord has sent us to ease your pain. We’ll be back tonight. Please Majesty, say nothing to no one; you must say nothing at all about our visit. Paisii must eat and sleep to regain his strength if he is to help you.’
“He nodded and whispered, ‘the pain is gone. Completely gone. I feel alive.’ He stroked and scratched Kiki between his ears.
“‘Come Pai’, Niki whispered, pulling me up. ‘Morning is nigh. The servants will be about soon.’

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Information ARMISTICE
Posted by: Frenuyum - 11-14-2025, 06:00 PM - Replies (1)

In the summer of early 1918, as a great war raged in Europe, and citizens of the Empire struggled with the sacrifices being made for the greater good, life on the shores of Thompson Lake went on, much as it had done for the hundred or so years since it had first begun.
On the lone dirt street that led in and out of the town, a row of merchants still plied their trade. There was a general store, a butcher, two publicans, a pharmacist and a baker all catering to the basic needs of the small population that called Thompsonville home. There were other establishments as well, like the tea house, which looked out over the smooth waters of the lake, the newspaper, which kept the locals informed with both news and gossip, and others also, some of which the good, god-fearing folks of this place dared not acknowledge.
There was also a school, and a church, and a village green, near to the shores of the lake. Life was simple, and life was good… for most people at least…and yet even though the townsfolk wanted for very little, they had not been left untouched by the events occurring across the globe.
That was because there were husbands and sons and brothers who were still fighting for the cause, trying to ensure the freedom of the citizens of the British Empire and prevent the Kaiser from overrunning all of Europe.
This task had taken its toll, and there were many from these fair shores who would never return, having paid the ultimate sacrifice for King and country, forever to remain entombed in foreign soil, and leaving their families back home forever grieving their loss.
For the younger generation of boys, especially those teenagers nearing that certain age where they were able to go off to fight, they lived in a strange world, a twilight world of mixed emotions. For most, they were filled excitement and were actually looking forward to the challenge, desperately wanting to take their chance and don the uniform, to do their bit. Indeed, there were those who were so keen for adventure that they changed their ages and stepped up to serve anyhow; yet even for these adventurous souls there were still thoughts in the back of their minds which sowed doubts. Would they ever return? Would their sweethearts wait for them? Would the war even last long enough for them to get to see some action?
And then there were those who dreaded the thought of it all. They had heard all the stories about the horrors of war, relayed to them through the local newspaper. The stories about the deaths, the maimings, the sickness, the living hell that the soldiers were made to endure … or at least those lucky enough to have survived to be able to tell the tale of how they endured it all… they had heard it all. Just as they had heard of places such as Gallipolli and Flanders and The Somme, and what happened there. They knew that war was a killer, and that only pain and heartbreak could come from it, yet even though they may not have liked the thought of it, they knew they would have to go if called upon, for that was what simply had to be done.
And it was especially so for two such sons of Thompsonville.
*     *     *
‘But Jack, you know that it’s expected of us all… I don’t really have a choice. You know that,’ one boy said to the other.
‘But that’s just it, Davy… you do have a choice!’ his companion replied. ‘We could always go up river somewhere, right away from it all.’
‘You know I couldn’t do that,’ Davy replied. ‘There is a job that needs to be done… I will have to go… I need to go.’
‘Yes, I know, Davy,’ the other boy sighed. ‘But that doesn’t mean I have to like it,’
They were lazing by a creek which fed into the Thompson River, well upstream from the township and far from prying eyes. It was a place that was special to them both, a place where they could retreat from the world around them, where they could simply be themselves, without fear of discovery or persecution.
Above them the lazy branches of a lush willow cast a cooling shade, sheltering them from the summer sun with its lazy branches drooping down to the water’s edge, creating a hidden den. Beyond the veil of green that protected their secret there was a languid waterhole, deep and clear, where the two young neighbours had swum and played for half of their young lives, and into which they could often be found divingand frolicking, naked and free, while filling the air with the sound of youthful laughter.
It was a place that Davy Thompson, the older of the two, had discovered as a boy, and so it followed that his faithful younger sidekick, Jack Henderson, from the neighbouring dairy farm, would also be introduced to its beauty.
Its location was their secret, and as they grew from the cheeky pre-pubescent boys that they had been when they had first met, into the strapping and handsome lads they were now, it had been the first of many secrets they would share in this world.
But now that world was changing, as Davy’s eighteenth birthday approached. It was a promise he had made to his parents… that he wouldn’t enlist until after that day … and it was a promise he was going to keep. After that date the tall and handsome, dark haired farm boy would pledge himself to King and country, at least for the duration of thisGreat War which was being fought. After that date he would pull on a uniform and be sent to far off places, first to be trained to fight, and then to be thrust into battle, not knowing if he would live or die, not knowing if he would ever see the boy he loved again.
‘But aren’t you scared?’ Jack asked his partner, as he gazed up into the handsome face.
They were in their shady nook, both naked after having enjoyed a morning swim to wash away the sweat and dirt of their earlier farm work. Davy leaned back against the trunk of a tree, while cradling the head of Jack in his lap, looking down upon the muscular figure, hard from his years of growing up and working on the farm, and gently running his hand through the other boy’s light brown hair.
‘I’m scared like I have never been before, my love. But it is something that must still be done.’
‘They say the war shall be over soon anyhow, so perhaps you won’t have to fight after all? Perhaps it will be over even before your birthday… and then it won’t even matter.’
‘Or perhaps it will go on for another four years…’ Davy sighed.
‘Please don’t say that… I couldn’t bear to not see you for …’ Jack began to say.
‘Sshhhh…’ Davy said, trying to reassure the other. ‘I’ll wager that it’ll be over before the year is out. You just wait and see.’
‘And then you’ll come home to me?’
‘I promise, my love,’ Davy replied, before leaning down and placing his lips upon those of Jack, just as he had been doing, whenever they were alone, for almost four years now.
It had all started innocently enough. At that time the two boys had been friends for more than five years, having lived on neighbouring farms. A friendship had been quick to form, and as the two boys grew older, that bond only grew stronger.
One day, however, while they were skinny dipping at their favourite place, on the creek that ran between the two farms, something happened to change things. Something that hadn’t happened before.
As Davy emerged from the water, his friend noticed that Davy was hard. His lithe body, tanned and firm from their daily work, had shone in the morning sun as they swam and played.They had been wrestling in the water and Jack had thought he had felt something firm brush against him, but hadn’t been sure. Now he knew what that was, and that thought began to excite him in a way that he hadn’t been excited before. He too was hard. He could feel it without even having the need to look down at himself, or to touch himself, which was what he most often did at night when alone in his bed and images of his friend would constantly dance in his head.
Emboldened by the thought that he wasn’t the only one, he followed his friend from the water and into the shade of their tree. The thirteen and fourteen year old boys looked each other up and down, then smiled.
Nothing was said. Nothing needed to be said.
As they came closer together, it was as if each seemed to know just what the other was thinking.
*     *     *
The town of Thompsonville was built upon the availability of the precious natural resources that were in abundance around it.
There was the timber that came from the upper reaches of the Thompson River, which was floated downstream to the mill that had been established by old Cecil Thompson, Davy’s great-uncle, on the northern edge of the lake.
There were thehandful of small dairy farms on the lush rolling hills to the north of the town, which supplied milk not only to Thompsonville, but also to the nearby township of Macquarie Harbour, which was itself rapidly expanding, even in these troubled times.
And there was also a small fleet of fishing boats, which used the beautiful and sheltered waters of the natural harbor as their base.
It was the family of Davy Thompson who had first settled the area. His great-grandfather, to be precise, settling upon the lake when there was nothing but scrubland and natives, and so it wasn’t surprising that the area became so named.
Soon afterwards more family members arrived, once news of Cecil’s good fortune began to spread, and so it wasn’t long before land was cleared, buildings went up, and a settlement began to emerge.
As the years passed the small town continued to grow. Others came and went, but the Thompsons remained. Or at least most of them did.
That was when the timber mill and the dairy farms came into existence, which required workers to manage them. Pretty soon the hovels that had been built by the original Thompson settlers were replaced by neat and tidy cottages and shops, and the beginnings of a real town on the shores of Thompson Lake began to take shape.
Of course it wasn’t always smooth sailing for the struggling township, with fire and flood making themselves known from time to time, just to ensure that the locals stayed wary of mother nature, but by and large things were good, and the town was continuing to grow.
By 1918 the town was a quaint little settlement, but one that was thriving, at least when compared to those early years. The needs of the townsfolk were well catered for, despite the war going on in Europe, and apart from the fact that there was a shortage of younger men, as most of these were off fighting, there was little evidence of that eventhaving any major effect onthe lives of the residents. Everybody was doing the best they could, and life went on.
*     *     *
It was in March of that year when Davy Thompson came of age, celebrating his eighteenth birthday, and thus becoming old enough to be able to fight – and die if need be – for his country. While others of his age may have changed their dates of birth to be able to go earlier, Davy had resisted any pressures applied to do so, and he had good reason to.
Firstly there was the fact that he was in love, although nobody but his lover knew of this for sure (even if some may have had their suspicions); then there was also the fact that he was an only child, and with aging parents he knew that they would struggle with the farm on their own, so his desire was to stay and help for as long as he possibly could. He had even asked Jack to look in on them and help them out if the need arose, to which Jack willingly agreed, but secretly hoped he wouldn’t have to, as he was sure that sooner or later he would let slip something of his true feelings for their son.
As the weeks to Davy’s birthday were counted down the pressure being applied to him to enlist and be a man began to mount, even though there had never been any doubt in his own mind that he would be going. Conscription had been on the mind of the entire country in recent years, with two separate referendums on the topic being held, and with the Australian people twice voting against its introduction.
This didn’t stop some people from pushing that barrow, however, and one such person to constantly remind the local lads that they should be doing their duty was the postmaster, old man Simpkins. He personally saw to it, as he would deliver the mail to outlying areas in the old fashioned way, using his pinto pony and buggy, despite the fact that those newfangled motor cars were now a common sight around Thomsponville. He saw to it that leaflets promoting enlistment were handed to every eligible young man in the district, especially those he knew to be approaching the age of eighteen.He saw it as his duty to tell all of the young men of Thompsonville that they should be heading off to war, and neither Davy nor Jack could escape his haranguing of them, even though he knew that it would be almost a full year before Jack came of age.
‘They can have you when you’re eighteen, and not a day sooner,’Davy’s father gravely swore, while Davy’s mother could only nod in agreement.
For Davy that meant he had just a few weeks grace, a few more weeks that he could spend in the company of Jack, and he had full intentions of making the most of that opportunity.
When his father complained of the amount of time he had spent with his friend he gently reminded him that they may never see each other again.
‘And what of your parents? Might you also never seen them again?’ his father had asked.
‘But father, I see you and mother first thing every morning. I work beside you every day, while mother prepares lunch for us each day. And I see you every night. Is it so terrible a request, before I must leave and head off to face whatever it is that my fate is, to spend some time with the one other person in this worldabout whom I care almost equally?’
His father looked down his long nose at his son, studying him carefully. For a long time neither Thompson man spoke
‘No, I guess not, lad, if that’s how you feel,’ the elder man eventually said, while wistfully recalling his own youth. It seemed the Thompson blood was strong in this boy, he thought.
*     *     *
When the date of Davy’s birthday finally arrived, March twelfth, there was little to celebrate, and these three Thompsons all knew it.
As they did every morning they rose and went about their daily business, pausing only briefly to wish their son a happy day and present him with his gift, a new safety razor with an ivory handle, to mark his becoming a man, before all three carried on with their morning chores.
It wasn’t until they had gathered for breakfast, some while later, that Davy took down the dreaded leaflet from the mantelpiece above the stove, where it had been sat not long after it had arrived.
Davy read it again, even though he knew every word upon it by heart.
‘Are you sure you want to do this, Davy?’ his mother asked him.
He looked up at his parents, who both expressions of worry. Slowly he nodded.
‘I have to,’ he said to them. ‘We must all do our bit.’
‘And what of your friend, Jack? Will he do his bit?’ his father asked.
‘He has almost a year before he needs to decide that. I know he hates war, but if he has to go he will. In the meantime he’ll still be doing his bit here… I’ve asked him to help you, if you need it, and he has agreed.’
‘That’s very sweet of him, Davy. With any luck the war will be over by the time he needs to consider going,’ his mother added.
‘That’s what I’ve been telling him,’ Davy remarked, before looking down at the leaflet once more.
As the emotion welled up inside him he thought he was in control of himself, that he was able to disguise the genuine fear that he was now beginning to feel, but his parents both saw the trembling hands with which he held the leaflet. They said nothing, though, for they knew his mind was made.
‘Mr Simpkins said I am to report to the barracks in Macquarie Harbor, just as soon as I am able following my birthday,’ he said to his concerned parents.
‘Well, boy, we knew this day would come,’ his father said. ‘We may not like it, but we know you’ll do us all proud, son.’
‘Yes, papa,’ Davy replied. ‘I will.’
‘It is quite a trip from here. We will leave in the morning,’ his father stated. ‘I suppose you must visit your friend to let him know.’
‘Yes, I should,’ Davy responded, as he tried to think of just how he would be able to break the news to Jack, the boy who was more than just his friend… he was also his brother… his lover… his everything, and he knew it was going to break both their hearts to be apart.
After breakfast, Davy set out across the paddocks on horseback in the direction of the Henderson farm. He didn’t think that Jack would be down by the creek, so he rode for their home instead, wading through the creek at the shallow crossing well downstream from their swimming hole and then cantering along the well-worn track toward where the small timber cottage was situated on a lush green hill, and surrounded by Jacaranda trees, with their beautiful purple flowers, and silky oaks.
In his own mind he had rehearsed over and over what it was he was going to say, but when he found Jack waiting for him at the gate into the yard around the house, there were no words that came to mind.
The two boys looked at each other glumly. There was nothing that could be said. They both knew that this was it.
‘You’ve made up your mind, then?’ Jack eventually managed to ask, as Davy climbed down from the back of his mare, nodding, though not wanting to say anything lest he lose his self-control.
Jack had known what was coming. They had discussed it often, and even though theyhad disagreed, he had still expected this news. He had even discussed it with his own parents and theyall agreed that Davy must make up his own mind. All that considered, it didn’t make the likely news any easier to swallow.
‘W-w-where are your parents?’ Davy cautiously asked.
‘Gone into the town,’ answered Jack. ‘They will be there for much of the day. What are your plans?’
‘I am to report to the barracks in Macquarie Harbour, just as soon after my birthday as practicable,’ Davy gloomily replied. ‘We shall be leaving in the morning.’
‘Just like that?’
‘It seems so. I’ll come back to see you again before I have to leave, I promise.’
‘You had better… or I shall never talk to you again,’ Jack declared, pouting slightly.
‘I promise,’ Davy said gravely, before taking Jack in his arms and burying his face against the younger boy’s neck.
The two boys spent much of that day together, not knowing if it might be the last time they are able to do so. Neither said anything about the immediate future, they were living in the here and now, and as they slowly undressed each other that afternoon, in the small nook off the back verandah that Jack called his room, drinking in the sight of each other’s nakedness, their only thoughts were on loving the other in a way they hadn’t done so before; perhaps for the first and last time.
*     *     *
As they lay together afterwards, Davy said, ‘At least you’ll still be here, all safe and sound,’
‘That may be true, but that will only be until the end of the year… until my own …’
‘Sshhh… It’ll all be over by then. I’m sure.’
‘How can you say that?’ Jack despaired. ‘You don’t know that… the war could go on for years yet. And if I don’t go, then I shall be shunned by everyone. I’ve heard of men even being beaten up for not going.’
‘We have to have some faith, my love. We have to trust that sooner or later it will all end… and when it does, we shall be together again… I promise you. I make this vow to you that I will return and we shall meet at that favourite place of ours, where our love will once again be able to flourish.’
Jack wished he could have the confidence that Davy had, but he knew there was no use in pointing out the obvious… that there was no way that Davy could make such promises as those he had made today. He knew that Davy would be clinging to the hope offered by those promises just as much as he would himself, so in return he promised himself that he wouldn’t say anything.
A short time later, as Davy rode away, heading for his home after sharing one last kiss across the back gate, Jack could only watch, his heart breaking, tears making their way down his face, as he wondered if this would be the final time he would ever see his love.
For Davy too, the tears were flowing, but he dared not look back. The sight of Jack that he wanted to carry with him into the months ahead was not that of a tearful boy, but that of a beautiful young man, firm and strong and loving. What he wanted to rememberwas the sight and scent of his youthful body, the feel of his lover as Jack enteredhim for that first time, and the expression on his face as he reached that climactic moment. It was a wonderful experience … however anyone could say something that beautiful was a sin he had no idea… and he felt certain that it would be the memory of this afternoonthat would be what would sustain him over the dangerous months to come.
When he reached his own home, after taking some time at the creek crossing to recover himself and wash the tears from his face, Davy was ready to face his own future, whatever that may be. His mother watched him from the verandah of their home, leaning against a post with her arms crossed in front of her and looking concerned, as he unsaddled his horse and then let her out into the small paddock where she was kept.
He wasn’t sure where his father was, but he fully expected to receive some sort of a tongue lashing for having been away for the best part of the day and neglecting his duties. When his father emerged from the shed moments later he was rather surprised that nothing was said, other than his asking after Jack.
‘Do they know of our love?’ he fearfully wondered.
‘How did he take the news?’ Davy’s father enquired.
‘We all knew it was coming,’ Davy replied. ‘I am sure that Jack will survive without me,’ he added, with just a hint of a smile on his face and in his voice.
‘Ahhh, yes, but will you survive without him?’ his father asked, while slapping his son on the back, before heading toward the house, and leaving Davy staring at his back.
*     *     *
Several weeks after Davy had gone, leaving Jack heartbroken after he hadn’t even returned to say goodbye, Jack received a letter. He knew the hand of the writer, perhaps better than that of anyone else in the world, and when his mother handed it to him that night, after he had come in from doing his chores, his heart skipped a beat, while at the same time he felt the blood drain from his face.
‘If you like, take it to your room to read,’ his mother had said, and for the first time he knew that someone else had some idea of his feelings for Davy. He looked at her inquisitively, as if trying to read her thoughts. ‘It’s all right, dear. I understand,’ she added, while briefly holding her son’s hands in hers, before then shooing him away with her hands.
Suddenly free of the fear he had secretly harboured for years, Jack kissed her on the cheek, then took off for his room, eagerly ripping the envelope open and finding not only a letter, but also a sepia toned photograph of a handsome young soldier in uniform, complete with his slouch hat and Enfield rifle.
Those two items would be what would sustain Jack for many months to come.
Dearest Jack,
I hope this finds you well, and that you have forgiven me my abrupt departure, without having said a proper goodbye? You will talk to me again, won’t you?
Things moved so fast after seeing the enlistment people in Macquarie Harbour and I’m afraid that I was unable to even return home. I hope that mother and father had let you know of that?
Unfortunately I cannot say where I am right now, apparently regulations forbid it, but rest assured I am still in our own country, for the time being at least. It is hot and dry where we are, and our regiment is training very hard. They are a companionable bunch, all from around Macquarie Harbour and towns such as ours, and so that makes it a little easier when I start to miss all my family and friends from home, as I know that they are feeling much the same.
When I feel particularly down in the mouth I only have to think about that place on the creek and all the fun that we had there whilst growing up. Such thoughts of home, of what we did and what we shall do again, shall be what I will carry with me throughout this journey, and into whatever battles I may face, and that is what will sustain me in the months, or even years, ahead.
The officers say we can expect to be going to Europe, but just where in Europe, or when, we do not know. It is all something of a guessing game, and some of the lads have started a book. My money, what little of it I have, is wagered on France, but we will just have to wait and see.
I must go now. Please be sure to give my fondest regards to your parents and our friends. I am counting the days until I can see the smiling faces of all those I love so much, the shores of our lake and our small town once again.
Sincerely yours,
David Thompson
Jack read it, and read it again.
To him, the letter seemed somewhat formal and even a little impersonal, not what you would expect to see written between two people in love, and at first he was a little disappointed. But then, as he thought it over, he realised that it was foolish of him to have expected anything different. Davy had said that he couldn’t say where they currently were, which to Jack at least, meant that the mail was likely being watched by the army, and if that was the case, then how could Davy say anything about loving him, or about what they were both wanting, or about what their future might hold.
When he re-read through it he focused on the paragraph which mentioned the fun they had had, and the fun they would have again. Then he read the final sentence once more… I am counting the days until I can see the smiling faces of all those I love so much.
That gave him hope, and for now at least, that was enough.
*     *     *
In the months that followed, thoughts of Davy were constantly on Jack’s mind. There had only been one more letter after that first one, within which Davy told Jack that they were about to be shipped out, but he still knew nothing of to where.
After that, there was nothing more.
With each passing week Jack was becoming more and more anxious, and being starved of any news or information regarding Davy, Jack took to visiting his lover’s parents, pestering them for any news they may have had, but they too had scarcely heard from their son.
He had promised Davy that he would look in on them anyhow, and help out wherever may be needed, and was only too pleased to honour that promise, especially if there was the hope of hearing some news… any news, of his love. He toiled in the paddocks beside Davy’s father, often ate meals with them, and got to know them in a way that he had never expected.
From the time Davy had left them all, which had been many months ago now, summer had given way to autumn, which had in turn given way to winter; a particularly wild winter which saw the coastal areas being lashed by storms. By the time spring had arrived, for which they were all extremely grateful, so too had news of losses on the battle front, and in particular those suffered by the regiments that had originated from Macquarie Harbour and surrounds.

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Information Clouds of Glory
Posted by: Frenuyum - 11-14-2025, 05:57 PM - Replies (1)

The town of Blaenau Ffestiniog — may it ever flourish — is no fiction, nor are the places which surround it. It is therefore all the more important to stress that the characters who inhabit it in this story in no way reflect its real inhabitants past or present, or for that matter anyone anywhere. And within the town I have taken slight liberties with its geography.
Edward FitzGerald’s Rubáiyát was first published in 1859 and over the next thirty years went through five editions, each different from the last. I have quoted verses in the form which pleases me most, regardless of which edition they appeared in. I have also ventured to modernise their archaic thou, thee, didst, etc.
A word about Calvinistic Methodists. It would be quite unfair to tar them all with the same brush. Like most sects they have their fundamentalists, such as those portrayed here, but they have their moderates too. The same of course holds true, in reverse, of the Anglicans.
In what follows, everything spoken or written in Welsh has been translated, except for exclamations and endearments whose exact meaning does not matter. Various drafts have been read by Hilary, by Grasshopper and by Neea, and I am hugely grateful for all their criticisms.
We are born, it seems, with our souls empty, naked and asleep. Their awakening and clothing and filling entails a long journey, which can be especially arduous in adolescence as sexuality emerges. It is perhaps most arduous of all for boys who are gay. They have to work harder to discover who they are, and to come to terms with the answer. The effort of concealing a significant part of themselves often makes them loners, in desperate need of a friendship more intense than straight boys require: not necessarily a sexual relationship, but a communion of souls which at that age is all too rarely found. The story told here is of such a boy, and of a crucial stage in his soul’s journey.
2 Rhagfyr 2002
Although the events chronicled here took place half my lifetime ago, the time has come, quite unexpectedly, when I need to set them down in black and white. To recover the detail, I have had to delve deep into memories that I have not visited for years, and in doing so I have understood much that I did not understand before. The reason for bringing it all to the surface now will become clear when I have finished.
When I was thirteen, we had moved from south-eastern England up to Llanberis in North Wales, where Dad had landed a job as an engineer at the Dinorwig power station. Nestling at the foot of Snowdon, it was a good place to live. I necessarily learnt Welsh at school and had reached the stage of being able to hold my own, but I was not confident in it and much preferred my mother tongue. Mum and Dad picked up no more than a smattering, and we spoke only English at home.
Then in 2002, after two years of Llanberis, Dad was promoted to a better job at the Ffestiniog pumped storage power station. It was unreasonably far for him to commute — well over an hour’s drive away by slow and circuitous roads — so we moved again, to the former slate-quarrying centre of Blaenau Ffestiniog. There was not much for youngsters to do in the town. It was commonly condemned as grey and wet (which it was) and depressing (which, being surrounded by mountains, it was not). But it was depressed, and had been ever since the quarrying industry had collapsed. Houses were dirt cheap, and we found a splendid one, at the end of a terrace and flanked on one side by a square which pretended to be a public garden, with a few bedraggled shrubs and flowers and a bench or two.
Our house, alone in the street, had a loft conversion, with big windows projecting from the roof both front and back. It was allocated to me, and I was in heaven, for it offered superb views. In front it looked out over the roof of the house opposite and down the valley beyond, and diagonally to the mountains on either side. At the back it looked up at the precipitous crags of Carreg Ddu which beetled above the High Street. My hobby was birds — of the feathered kind, I hasten to add — and there promised to be a good variety visible from my eyrie, from the humble sparrows and blackbirds and occasional tits of the square to the hawks and falcons and buzzards of the crags.
Mum found a part-time secretarial job at the plastics factory, and we moved at Easter, ready for the summer term. School was handy, little more than a hundred yards away. For an ordinary kind of boy who was neither macho nor a complete wimp, neither an extrovert nor a hermit, I found my feet readily enough. Some of the kids there were pretty rough, and some were none too tolerant of the English. I soon learned to steer clear of both sorts, and got on reasonably well with the rest.
Yet there was a snag. I was gay. One part of me had to be hidden behind a screen, where it skulked in stifled isolation. My unfulfilled cravings of the flesh were one thing. My loneliness of soul was quite another. I could not turn to Mum and Dad for support. Don’t get me wrong — they were great parents, fun, easy-going, and generous with the understanding and trust and love which I badly needed. They gave it cheerfully to those parts of me which they could see and approve. But their simple philosophy was anchored to some deep-seated prejudices, and I knew that it would mutate, should they glimpse behind my screen, into incomprehension and disgust. That being unthinkable, I longed all the more for a companion with whom I could share my real self, for a soul-mate to understand and trust and love me on a different plane.
I had already come across a number of boys I found attractive. I had lusted after their bodies and yearned for their souls. All in vain. No fish rose to the few very cautious baits which I dangled. I dared try nothing more. The climate at school, both at Llanberis and Blaenau, was not encouraging. For straight kids there was no problem — you could be as promiscuous as you liked. The message for gays was equally clear — one false move and most of the kids, not to mention the staff, would be down on you like a ton of bricks. All I could do was look, and lust, and yearn, and hope.
From the very first day at my new school, one boy in particular caught my eye. We were the same age, fifteen and a half. But while I was below average in height, English-fair and young-looking, he was taller, with dark hair, strong regular features, an austere but gentle manner and, I noticed the first time I saw him stripped in the changing room, a body to die for. The sight of him, the thought of him, stirred my young hormones as they had never been stirred before.
His name was Isaac Evans. He was very Welsh, hailing from South Wales as his accent told even me, but perfectly tolerant of incomers and entirely ready to talk in English, his being vastly better than my Welsh. He lived directly opposite us in Ty Capel, ‘Chapel House,’ and next door to it was the chapel where his father was the minister. I had already brooded on its bleak architecture, and the plaque on the gable frowned its curt statement at me whenever I looked out of my front window:
TABERNACL  M. C.  ADEILADWYD 1867
Tabernacle, Calvinistic Methodist, built 1867.
One evening very soon after we arrived, Isaac was in his bedroom, which faced mine across the street, when he saw me leaning out, binoculars to eyes, trying to identify some distant birds of prey that were wheeling against the backdrop of Moel yr Hydd. He called over, asking what I was watching. When I told him, he said that he knew a bit about birds, and because he could not see them from where he was, I invited him to come up. He brought his own binoculars, and took a look.
“Ah, yes. Peregrines. They nest in the cliff above Wrysgan quarry. You can tell from their flight that they’re not merlins.”
That led on to a discussion about the difference between the various falcons, and it soon emerged that he knew more than a bit. I showed him my books, which interested him because he did not have many, and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds website, which fascinated him because he had no computer. So began our friendship, and so my hidden hopes were fed.
Thereafter, many an evening and weekend day we went out together, watching choughs in the old quarry pit up at Rhosydd, buzzards on the moors above Maenofferen, tree-creepers in the ancient forests of the valley side, waders on the Dwyryd estuary. Once, having taken the Sherpa bus to Nant Gwynant, we saw red kites, which were beginning to move up from the Berwyn and to re-colonise Snowdonia.
Isaac was a serious boy, much more serious than me, with a strange wry humour but little chit-chat and no sense of mischief at all. He welcomed me, it seemed, for my company, for my computer which gave him access to ornithological websites, and because I took him seriously and could meet him on his own specialist territory. I liked to think he welcomed me for other reasons too, but I feared, even at the time, that I was being over-optimistic. He seemed to have no other friends. The kids at school did not pick on him but, while treating him respectfully, kept him at arm’s length because of his religious views. These I found puzzling and difficult. He never tried to force them unsolicited down my throat, that I will say for him. He only talked about them if asked, or if the subject cropped up of its own accord.
The first time it did, very shortly after we met, we were walking home from watching wagtails in Cwm Bowydd when Isaac asked why I was interested in birds.
“Oh, all sorts of reasons. Their variety. Their habitats. Migration. How they communicate. They live in our world, but yet in their own, if you see what I mean. Just a wonderful part of nature. Why do you like them?”
He gave me a considering look, as if weighing up my limited ability to understand.
“Much the same as you, and more. Because, as a wonderful part of nature, they’re part of God’s creation. You know about Genesis?”
Condescending, I thought, and I was a trifle miffed. I may have read precious little of the bible, but I was just about up to the creation story. I nodded, but he still spelled it out for me.
“On the fifth day God made the fish and the birds that fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven. All creation is good, and we should praise it. And, as far as it can, all creation should praise the creator.” There was more than a hint in his words of what I guessed was pulpit-talk. “Know Psalm 148?”
Er, no. I couldn’t run to that, and had to shake my head.
“Part of it goes: ‘Praise the Lord on earth’” — he was clearly translating in his head as he went along — “‘you dragons and all deeps, fire and hail, snow and mist, stormy wind fulfilling his word, mountains and hills, fruitful trees and cedars, wild beasts and all animals, reptiles and winged birds, young men and girls, old men and boys, praise the name of the Lord.’ Everything that God created is good, and everything that praises the Lord is good — just listen to that chaffinch, Tom. And all God’s goodness deserves studying. But a single person can’t study the whole of creation. So I’ve chosen birds.”
Oh Lord, if that wasn’t the wrong phrase. Agreed, studying birds was a large enough hobby, or duty if you had to call it that. On top of studying boys, in my case. But that chaffinch, I reckoned, wasn’t praising the Lord. It was chatting up a lady chaffinch, with rather different motives. Mind you, if God really had created birds and boys, not to mention all the rest, he had also created sex, and that was good. He must surely have considered less enjoyable alternatives, and rejected them. So I would happily praise the Lord through sex, given the opportunity. But I did not know Isaac nearly well enough to say so, and strongly suspected he would not see it in quite my flippant way.
Meanwhile, I found his assurance hard to swallow.
“You go along with everything the bible says, then?”
“Yes, of course. It seems you don’t, Tom. But it’s God word, so it must be true.”
“Literally?”
“Literally.”
I had heard of people like him, especially in the American south, but I had never expected to meet one. I recalled that he was not doing biology or geology or anything at GCSE that might prove contentious. Deliberately, maybe. I was already embarrassed and out of my depth, but I had enough spark in me to stand my ground and protest.
“No, I don’t go along with it. But you say it’s God’s word. You can only believe that. You can’t know it.”
“Oh no, Tom. I do know it.”
It was the first time I had met that certainty which goes beyond logic.
“But what about Darwin, and evolution, and fossils, and the Big Bang fifteen billion years ago or whatever? How do you explain them away?”
“Tom, can you prove Darwinism, and that the universe started with the Big Bang, and all those things? Prove them?”
“Well, um, no, I suppose not.” I would be a Nobel prize-winner if I could, but I was reluctant to admit it.
“So they’re only theories, not fact. You can only believe in them. You can’t know them.”
He was throwing my words back at me, and I felt as if I was banging my head against a brick wall.
“But the bible proves itself,” he went on. “One day I’ll show you how, if you really want to know, but there isn’t time now.”
Just as well, perhaps. We were already in our street, and there outside Ty Capel was an ancient Cortina with his Tad and Mam climbing out. Isaac introduced us. His Tad was a wiry man, bible-black, dour, lantern-jawed, with thin lips barely covering the large teeth behind. His Mam seemed wispy and ineffectual, definitely second fiddle to her husband. We had already heard about them from Rhiannon our next-door neighbour, who from the moment we arrived had been joyfully putting us in the local picture and keeping us there. She called Isaac’s father the Parch, short for Y Parchedig, the Reverend. So, therefore, did we. She had no good word for him.
“That old vulture! He was at the back of the queue for the milk of human kindness. Not a patch on the vicar, or old Glyn Williams up at Moriah. And his poor asen! What she has to put up with!”
The Parch fitted my stereotyped image of the killjoy fundamentalist. He had other MC chapels on his beat, and on Sunday afternoons and evenings he would be off in the battered Cortina to keep them in line. So there was usually only a morning service opposite, and from my window I had already watched the small band of elderly worshippers filing in and, much later, out, looking as dour and killjoy as their minister. Congregations were rapidly falling off in those days, and chapels were being demolished left and right, or converted into garages or supermarkets. It did not look as if Tabernacl would last much longer.
I had just experienced Isaac exuding a temporary aura of righteousness. The Parch, I found, exuded a much stronger one, full-time. On this first meeting he was as gracious as an iceberg might be, and looked at me with that pitying smile which the man who is convinced he is heading for heaven reserves for someone who he is convinced is not. Accuse me of giving a dog a bad name, but I never found cause to change my opinion.
To jump ahead, although Isaac was quite a frequent visitor to my room and my computer, only once did he eat with us. No more, because I think he disapproved of our family frivolity. Laxity, he would probably have called it. A meal not preceded by grace, and accompanied by open laughter, affronted him. Once, in return, I was invited to tea at Ty Capel. It was a poor house. I do not mean that disparagingly. The Parch’s stipend, I gathered, was microscopic, the house was shabby and the furniture threadbare. No blame for that, only sympathy. The sole luxury, if it deserved the name, was an aged TV set on which the Parch watched rugby. Out of character, an outsider might think, but to the Welsh rugby is almost a religion: the one religion which unites them all. What the household was missing was humanity and fun. It gave off a miasma of pious rectitude which I found stifling.
But in this realm, I had to admit, I was in totally foreign territory. I was not religious or churchy in any sense at all. We were an ordinary family, lower middle-class if you insist on labels, which just did not talk about such things. They all seemed irrelevant to Mum and Dad. I was an ordinary boy, and they had never seemed remotely relevant to me either. Except for occasional family weddings or funerals, I had never set foot in a church, or a chapel. Until Isaac, I had never met anyone who professed strong views either way. I had come across some church- and chapel-goers, of course, but they did not wear their beliefs on their sleeve. Isaac’s defiant certainty was evidently a hallmark of the Calvinistic Methodists. What was so special about them? What made them different?
That evening, with Mum and Dad, I raised the subject, not very hopeful of an answer because they closed their minds to things they disapproved of or did not understand.
“I’ve been wondering about all these chapels. Why are there so many of them in Blaenau? What’s the difference between them?”
“Search me,” said Dad. “Not my cup of tea. They’re for people who don’t like the ordinary church. But what the difference is between Methodists and Baptists and things I’ve never fathomed. Remember Tegid at Llanberis? That mechanic with pierced ears who was a damned queer? A year or so back I was out with him in the van, sorting out a transformer, when we saw another chapel biting the dust. So I asked him what happens when a chapel closes down. Does the congregation just shift lock stock and barrel to the next one down the road? ‘Oh, good heavens, no,’ he said. ‘Can’t do that. Different God.’ But he didn’t explain any further.”
“Hmmm. Then you don’t know anything about Calvinistic Methodists in particular?”
“Fraid not, except they seem to be the most common sort round here, and they’re strict, I’ve heard. If you want an insider account, you’ll have to ask Isaac or the Parch, though you’ll probably get a sermon you didn’t bargain for. If you want an outsider’s view, well, I dunno.”
“Tell you what,” said Mum. “There’s the old professor. Wil Davies, next beyond Rhiannon. Were you there when she was telling us about him? He’s over eighty, lives by himself, a tiny little man. Rhiannon does for him, and she says he knows everything worth knowing. I gave him a hand with his shopping back from the Co-op today, and we talked about the history of Blaenau. Or rather he did, and I listened. He’s a lovely old boy. Ask him, Tom. He’ll be able to tell you. You’d like him, and I’m sure he’d like you to talk to. I think he’s lonely.”
*
I had not seen him so far. But next Saturday afternoon I was going up into town when he came down the other way, carrying a couple of Co-op bags which, in combination with his walking stick, made an awkward burden. There was no mistaking him. He was indeed tiny. His face was very Welsh: straight steel-grey hair flecked with silver, bushy black eyebrows, and a wrinkled leathery complexion. His brown eyes were small but alert and twinkling, his nose was beaky, and his wide mouth was mobile with humour and wit. Unusually for a boy who was not particularly outgoing, I had no hesitation in starting a conversation. His eyes were on the ground as he navigated the rough paving stones, and he did not see me until I stopped beside him.
“Let me carry your bags for you, sir.”
I was not sure why I said ‘sir.’ I never said it to anyone else, not even at school. In his case, it simply seemed right.
As he looked up at my face, his eyes widened and he swayed visibly. I was concerned, and reached out a hand to support him.
“Clouds of glory!” he exclaimed under his breath.
I did not understand, but was visited for a fleeting moment by a faint and elusive memory.
“Let me help you home, sir. I know where you live. Next door but one to us.”
He gave up his bags without protest and, carrying them both in one hand, I put the other round his arm and walked him slowly for the last hundred yards to his house. On the doorstep he scrutinised me again, for longer this time, his mouth slightly open.
“Thank you, ngwas. Thank you very much.”
He fumbled in his pocket for his key, and tried without success to put it in the keyhole.
“Let me, sir.” I got the door open and stood aside to let him in. “I think you ought to sit down.”
“Yes. I do believe you’re right.”
He turned in to the front room, and I dumped the bags in the hall and followed him. It was a study with a large desk in the window and, most extraordinary to me, every wall was lined with laden bookshelves: a hundred times as many books, I guessed, as we had in our whole house. The mantelpiece carried a number of framed photographs of people, one of whom, to my passing glance, rang a faint bell. He sat down heavily in the leather chair at the desk.
“Sir, may I suggest a cup of tea?”
He gazed at me again, and nodded. “Please, yes. And one for yourself too. You will find milk in the shopping bag.”
“Would you like me to put the rest of your shopping away?”
“That would be very kind.”
Picking up the bags on the way, I found the kitchen. The layout was the same as in our house. I filled the kettle and plugged it in. Mugs were on a shelf, sugar and a carton of tea-bags were on the working top, spoons were in the obvious drawer. No problem. While the kettle boiled, I stowed away his purchases in the fridge and cupboards. Again, all pretty obvious: there was no great variety there. As I made the tea, there were sounds of movement from the study, but when I carried everything through on a tray I had found, he was back in his chair. He looked better, and after a few sips of sweet tea looked better still.
“I’m very grateful to you, my boy. I’m sorry about that, I had … a bit of a turn. Tell me, is your name … Tom?”
“That’s right, sir. Tom Robertson. My mother helped carry your shopping the other day.” She had talked about our family, presumably.
The old man nodded as if he had been proved right.
“And how old are you? When were you born?”
“1986. I’m fifteen.”
“And when’s your birthday?”
“The 17th of September.”
His face dropped, I could not imagine why. Then his fingers moved as if he was doing sums in his head, and the answer seemed to cheer him up.
“Yes. So tell me about yourself, Tom,” he said. “You’re clearly not local. Where do you come from? What about your family? What are you doing at school?”
An outline of my uneventful life, my small family, my scientific bent, did not take long.
“And what are your hobbies? Your interests?”
I could hardly say boys, or Isaac, but I did tell him about ornithology. The bushy eyebrows rose. He asked where I had been bird-watching locally, and was impressed.
“You haven’t been here long. That’s a very good start.”
“Well, I’ve made friends with Isaac Evans from Ty Capel” — I nodded across the road — “and he’s well genned up on the birds round here. He’s taken me to most of these places.”
“Ah! I see. I wonder if he knows about the ravens on Craig Nyth y Gigfran. Yes, there really are ravens there” — the name means Raven’s Nest Crag — “but they’re difficult to see close to. Let me show you the way I used to get there.”
He got up creakily and moved behind the desk into the bay window, where I followed him. The crag loomed in full view over the town to the west, and with a claw-like finger he pointed out his recommended route. Then for a moment his gaze swung to the left, to the diagonal prospect of the Moelwyn.
“My favourite mountains,” he said softly. “They lived in my mind’s eye all the years I was away.”
He came back to birds. “And then there are the red grouse beyond Cnicht, round Llyn yr Adar. I’ve not been up there for years — it’s hard work to reach it — but I expect they’ll still be there.”
He rummaged for an old 1:25,000 map, and showed me where. I was grateful, and said so.
“But I’m afraid I’ve got to go now, sir,” I went on. “It’s nearly our tea time. Will you be all right by yourself?”
“Thank you, Tom, I am all right, and I will be all right. Thanks to you.”
“That’s OK, sir. I’ll just wash these up.”
I picked up the tray, and as I left the room I noticed that the photograph which had caught my eye was no longer there. I rapidly rinsed the mugs, and stuck my head into the front room again to say goodbye.
“Just before you go, Tom, two things. First, you call me ‘sir.’ Don’t you think that’s a little formal? I’m all for informality.”
“Well, what should I call you? I mean, ‘Professor Davies’ is quite a mouthful, and I can’t possibly call you, er, by your first name.”
I couldn’t, not possibly.
“No? Well … plain ‘Professor’ sounds very dry and academic. Ah! I have it! A compromise, but tending towards the informal. What about ‘Prof’?”
He grinned at me, almost like a boy, and I grinned back. I liked it. “Right. Prof it is.” And so it remained.
“The other thing is this. We still have much to talk about, so I hope you’ll come back to see me.”
“So do I, sir, I mean Prof.” He had already captivated me, I could not say why or how, and I would not dream of letting him go. “Anyway, there’s something I wanted to ask you. If I may.”
“Of course. Do you have anything on tomorrow morning? Do you go to church or chapel?”
I shook my head, rather more vigorously than I had intended, and he smiled at me again.
“No more do I. And you won’t be going out after birds with young Isaac either, because he will be in chapel. May I suggest eleven o’clock? That’s when I have a little tipple, a naughty survival from my Cambridge days. A glass of madeira, you know. Would your parents allow you that?”
“I expect so.” They were pretty laid back in that sort of way.
“Well, make sure you check with them. I’d hate to be accused of leading youth astray. Thank you, Tom. You’ve given an old man a new lease of life today. Excuse me if I don’t get up to see you out. Till tomorrow, then.”
“Goodnight, Prof.”
I was only seconds late for tea, and told Mum and Dad all about it.
“You’re right, Mum. The Prof is a lovely old boy. There wasn’t a chance of asking him about chapels, but I’m going to see him again tomorrow morning. And he says, am I allowed to have a glass of madeira, whatever that is?”
“Don’t see why not. It’s a fortified wine, bit like sherry.”
“And Mum, Dad. I had an idea. Could we ask the Prof in for lunch tomorrow? He seems to cook for himself, and he hasn’t got much in his fridge or cupboards.”
“That’s a good idea, Tom,” said Mum, looking at Dad for confirmation. “Yes, do that. It would be nice and neighbourly. One o’clock, as usual.”
*
Next morning I presented myself at the Prof’s on the stroke of eleven.
“Good morning, Tom. And do have you permission to join me in my tipple?”
“Morning, Prof. Yes, I have.”
“Good. Come you in, then.”
“But before I do, Mum says would you like to come to lunch with us today?”
“That’s a very kind thought, Tom. Well, if your mother’s quite sure, yes, I’ll be delighted to accept.”
I nipped home to tell Mum, and came straight back. He had put out two glasses and a decanter of dark brown stuff, which he poured out. We sat sipping it: smooth and sharp at the same time, and rather good.
“Well, Tom, what was it you wanted to ask me?”
“It’s about all these chapels. I’ve talked to Isaac, who’s a Calvinistic Methodist of course. But I don’t begin to understand the difference between them. Why are there so many, and so many sorts?”
“Well now. That’s a very large question. It’s a matter of history, and of human nature. Even a modestly detailed account would take a week. Where do we start? Yes, you’re right, there are a lot of places of worship in and around Blaenau, and there have been many more. About forty altogether, they say, twice as many as there were pubs. All for a population of eleven thousand or so, at the peak a century ago. One denomination might have several chapels, simply serving different parts of the town. That’s straightforward enough.
“But why so many denominations? Well, you understand the difference between Roman Catholics and protestants? How the Church of England, the Anglican church, was established at the Reformation, breaking free from Rome for political reasons as well as religious ones?”
I nodded. I did know that much, if only in outline.
“In Blaenau, the Anglicans are still around, of course, though here they’re now called the Church in Wales. And there’s a Catholic church which is fairly new, set up mainly for the Irish navvies who built the pump storage and the nuclear, and stayed. That’s fairly straightforward too.
“Now. After the Reformation, as time went by, some people became disenchanted with the Church of England, for various reasons. Splinter groups sprang up which developed into full-blown churches in their own right. They’re called nonconformist because they didn’t conform, or dissenters because they dissented. Thus you have the Bedyddwyr, the Baptists. The Annibynwyr, the Independents or Congregationalists. The Wesleyaid, the Wesleyan Methodists. And the Methodistiaid Calfinaidd, the Calvinistic Methodists — the MCs as we call them for short — who parted company from the Anglicans only in 1811, and despite the name they’re poles apart from the Wesleyans. Some of these churches broke away mainly for organisational reasons. The Baptists and MCs broke away more for doctrinal ones — let’s not go into that, not yet, anyway.
“They’re all represented here, and elsewhere there are many more varieties again, and there have been even more in the past. Splinters of splinters, and splinters of those. Set up when someone had a slight difference of opinion with his original church, often because he thought it too soft, and who peeled off with his followers to start a new one. Everybody thought that he alone had the true answer and that nobody else did. Nowadays, things are simpler. Fewer and fewer people feel that religion means anything, so the denominations are all shrinking. They tend to amalgamate now, not multiply — the Wesleyans and the Anglicans, for instance, may soon reunite. There’s more tolerance, on the whole. But there are exceptions who retain all the fervour of their ancestors. Like some of the MCs. So, does that answer your question? Or begin to answer it?”
“Yes, thanks. It’s clearer now. I’d no idea it was so complicated.”
“I hope I’m not disillusioning you. You don’t belong to any church, do you?”
“No, I don’t. Do you?”
He smiled gently. “No. I did once, but not now. The more I thought about it, and the more I talked to ministers and theologians and suchlike, the less sense it all seemed to make. Do you know that lovely verse of Omar Khayyám’s?
Myself when young did eagerly frequent
Doctor and saint, and heard great argument
About it and about; but evermore
Came out by the same door where in I went.
“I was actually brought up as an MC — here at Tabernacl, in fact. When you’re a child, you don’t question. But when I was a young man, I had a … crisis. I was in a quandary, and the MCs rejected me. Even today they’d reject a young man in a similar crisis. My only complaint about this house is” — he gestured abruptly over his shoulder — “that it faces Tabernacl. I tried other denominations, but it was the Anglicans who offered me a refuge, though I didn’t need it for long. For many years now I haven’t subscribed to any creed. Not even the Anglican.
“But when I go, I’ll be buried by the Anglicans. They seem to me the least intolerant of them all. And intolerance is so demeaning. Do you remember what the Wee Frees did to Lord Mackay?”
I was lost, and shook my head.
“No, silly of me. Of course you wouldn’t, you’re too young — it must have been ten years ago. Let me explain. The Wee Frees are a Presbyterian sect which splintered off from the Church of Scotland. Their views are extreme. To them, the pope is antichrist. Lord Mackay was the Lord Chancellor — you know, the senior legal eagle in the government, and speaker of the House of Lords. He was a Wee Free. One day, as in duty and friendship bound, he attended the funeral of a legal colleague. No harm in that, you say. Every harm, said the Wee Frees. This colleague had been a Catholic, and his funeral was in a Catholic church. For that … sin, they expelled Lord Mackay.”
“But that’s … obscene.”
“And that’s intolerance, Tom.”
There was a pause as I absorbed it. “But you’ve finished your madeira, Tom. Would you object if we adjourn to the square and continue our discussion there? I like to sit in the sun whenever it’s warm enough.”
We walked the fifty yards to the nearest bench. I still had another part of my question to put to him.
“Prof, Isaac was telling me that the MCs believe the bible is true. Literally true. And therefore evolution is wrong. That God did create the world in seven days, just as it says. In fact he said he didn’t believe it, he knew it. How can he know? I don’t understand that.”
“No more do I, Tom. Well, perhaps I do. Yes, the MCs — these MCs — are creationists and yes, they know they’re right. In the sense that they won’t admit that other people are entitled to different views. In the sense that their own beliefs are so ingrained that they can’t conceive they might be wrong. But they can’t prove that they’re right, any more than I can prove them wrong. So creationism is only a theory. An opinion, to which they are entitled. You, in contrast, are a scientist. You know all about the theory of evolution. That is only a theory too, isn’t it?”
“Oh yes.” I was much happier to admit it to the Prof than to Isaac.
“And as a scientist, what do you do when confronted by rival theories?”
“Well, I look at them, and see which is more, um, likely. And I try to think of experiments to test it. To prove or disprove it.”
“Exactly. And evolution looks vastly the more likely to you. Who knows, one day you may contribute towards a proof that it is correct. Tell me, do you believe in God, at all?”
“Well, no, I’m afraid not.”
“That’s nothing to be ashamed of. And you never have?”
I shook my head. “No, never.” 
“I did believe, once. But my faith changed. First to doubt, and then to what the MCs would call perversion and heresy.” The Prof’s face was not exactly bitter, but definitely sad. “I came to believe not that God created man, but that man created God. Voltaire said that if God didn’t exist, it would be necessary to invent him. That was centuries ago, and it was probably true then, and always had been. Man was still wallowing in the dark and needed light. Man needs to be able to explain what goes on around him, and the notion of a mysterious all-powerful God was an easy and satisfactory way of explaining what he couldn’t understand.
“But science has now shed so much light of its own. It can’t explain everything yet, not by any means, and some scientists do believe in God. But God isn’t a necessary factor in any scientific explanation. Not yet. But he might be, one day. One of the largest questions, I understand, is what triggered the Big Bang. At present nobody has any real clue, but one day a clue may emerge. And, who knows, it may be a clue that surprises science. What does all that say to you, as a scientist?”
I thought very hard. “That I don’t believe in God,” I ventured, “but I admit he might exist. But that there’s no need to assume he does exist until there’s some evidence for it.”
The Prof beamed at me. “A man after my own heart. A logical and open mind. Whereas young Isaac’s is closed.”
I had to give acknowledgement where it was due.
“Prof, if it is open, it’s because you’ve opened it. I’ve never thought about things like this before.”
“All I’ve done is introduce you to a new concept. Your mind was already open, or opening. Scientists can’t afford to have closed minds, can they? You’re at the age, Tom, where childhood’s acceptance gives way to manhood’s questioning. For the most part, children accept what they’re told. But they can’t grow into fully-fledged human beings if they’re not encouraged to question. So keep your eyes and your mind open, Tom. Open to everything. Don’t be like Isaac. Keep asking questions. I suspect his parents don’t allow him to.”
I pondered on what I knew of them, and agreed. About the Parch, anyway. Isaac’s Mam probably didn’t get a look in. Which reminded me …
“Prof, when Rhiannon was telling us about them, she called him the Parch — I understand that — and called her his poor asen. What does that mean?”
“It means a rib. A facetious word for a wife.”
“Oh. Why?”
“That takes us back to creation. Look, Tom, run to my study and get a bible.”
He told me where to find it, and gave me the key.
“There are two different accounts in Genesis,” he said when I got back. “Two different creation myths. The MCs must accept both of them as true, by definition, but I don’t recall how they reconcile them. In the first chapter — look, here — on the sixth day God created both man and woman. ‘Male and female created he them.’ But in the next chapter it’s different. At first only Adam was created and put to live in the Garden of Eden. But he was lonely, so God took out one of his ribs and from it ‘made he a woman, and brought her unto the man. And Adam said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh.’ Hence Eve. Hence wife.”
I had not heard of that one. “How gross. Makes me think of those manky spare ribs from the Chinese takeaway. You know, sweet and sour.”
“Oh yes.” The wrinkles on the old face deepened as he smiled. “Yes, I did try those once. Never again. Red dye, tasting of nothing but monosodium glutamate.”
Mention of ribs had put me in mind of lunch, and I looked at my watch. Nearly one.
“We’d better go and eat, Prof, but I’ll just take the bible back first.” I was still feeling mischievous. “Do you think God created monosodium glutamate at the same time?”
The Prof’s small frame rumbled with laughter. “Now, now, Tom, you’re being naughty. What would the Parch say if he heard you?”
He almost had. As I passed Ty Capel, the Parch himself came out. He gave me a glacially condescending smile, which slipped ludicrously into surprise when he saw the very obvious bible in my hand. Pink with suppressed laughter, I restored it to its shelf, returned to collect the Prof, and told him. Giggling like children we went to my house, where he sobered down with an effort. Mum and Dad welcomed him, and installed him at the table.
“I do confess my diet is a trifle monotonous,” he said to Mum, “so your invitation is even kinder than you imagine.”
“Not our invitation, really,” replied Mum, “though we should have thought of it. No, it was Tom’s idea.”
“Yet another feather in his cap, then. I’ve already discovered quite a number. Like punctuality. He made sure he was home in time for tea yesterday, and that we arrived on time today. I approve of that. Has he always been punctual?”
“Oh yes, nothing to complain about there.”
“So he was punctual even in arriving in this world?”
Mum and Dad both laughed. “He arrived on the dot,” said Dad. “It was a joke between us. Tom, I don’t think we’ve told you this before, but you’re plenty old enough to hear it now. When your Mum found she was pregnant, it was pretty obvious you’d been conceived on Christmas Day. I was on a temporary job up in Scotland then, and only had Christmas Day at home. So I told Mum that if you didn’t arrive on the dot, I’d know she’d been having an affair with the milkman.”
“Get away,” said Mum, laughing. “The milkman had red hair and looked like Lance Percival. Wouldn’t have touched him with a bargepole. Anyway, you don’t look in the least like him, dear. Not that you look like anyone in our families either. We sometimes call him the changeling,” she explained to the Prof, who was comparing our faces with interest.
I had long been aware that I was different. Where they were both quite tall, I had always been short for my age. They both had curly dark hair, but mine was straight and fair. Their eyes were brown, mine blue. Our faces were utterly different. I was totally unlike either of them, or my grandparents or great-grandparents. It did not bother me a bit, being called a changeling. I knew Mum and Dad were my mum and dad, I had always loved them, and they had always loved me, so what did it matter?
“Tom the changeling,” said the Prof, savouring the name. “And may I ask why you called him Tom?”
“Well, that’s an odd thing,” replied Dad. “He should have been Peter. When we first decided to go for a child, we’d agreed on that, if it was a boy. But once he was on the way, we changed our minds. Dunno why. Tom suddenly seemed the right name, to both of us. Didn’t have to argue about it.”
I had not heard that either. But I approved. I liked being Tom.
Talk turned to Welsh names, and then to the Prof himself. He was a native of Blaenau. He had attended the local school — mine — and in 1938 had gone up to Cambridge with a scholarship, in those days the only possible way in for the child of a poor family. After a year, the war broke out and he was called up, serving mainly in Egypt. On being demobbed, he finished his course and progressed from fellowship to lectureship to the chair of English Literature. He had published many books and articles, but his real joy, he said, had been the company of the young men and women he had taught. Like most Welsh expatriates, he had never forsaken his roots. When he retired in 1985, Wales called him home again, back to his old house which he had kept on when his parents died. He had never married, and was now eighty-two. Rhiannon next door went in once a week to do his cleaning and washing, but he remained fiercely independent in everything, like shopping and cooking, which he could still manage.
I was able, as the weeks went by, to flesh out those bare bones of his present life. He spoke his native Welsh by preference, but he always used English with me because I found it easier. He was well respected: as he sat in the square or did his shopping, older people would pass the time of day with him. But they rarely called at his house and, to his disappointment, the generation gap and his long absence meant that he knew few youngsters. So he lived a solitary existence, and I began to see why he relished my company. But in one sense he had never retired. He continued to write, and he remained in touch with his academic colleagues. He had a computer and knew how to use it, and he had what sounded like a large email correspondence.
In other respects he was quaintly old-fashioned. Whatever the weather, his dress was the same: black shoes, grey trousers with turn-ups, baggy tweed jacket, velour or knitted waistcoat, and tie. For reading, he used heavy horn-rimmed glasses. He was old-fashioned too in the breadth of his knowledge. He could talk about anything, at the drop of a hat. He was informed, but not opinionated. He had his own views, and he would spell them out on request, but he was expert at making you think for yourself. It was all enlivened by a gently sparkling wit. Kids of my age tended to see the elderly as boring and condescending old farts, at best to be humoured, and I was hardly an exception to the rule. Now I saw how wrong I had been. The Prof astonished and delighted me. Mum’s phrase ‘a lovely old boy’ might be very simple, but it was spot on.
*
Lunch over, the Prof thanked us nicely and excused himself, saying it was time for his nap. When I had cleared the table, I crossed the road to collect Isaac. I was surprised that he was allowed out at all on a Sunday, but he was. Presumably he was not profaning the Sabbath because he was praising the Lord through his works, namely birds. In that case I was not profaning the Sabbath either. I was doubly praising the Lord by studying not only birds but Isaac too. He seemed particularly attractive today.
I passed on the Prof’s recommendations about interesting bird habitats. Isaac gave me a sharp look.
“Have you been talking to him?”
“Yes, what’s up? He’s great.”
“My Tad told me never to speak to him.”
“Why ever not?”
“He didn’t say. But he must have good reason.”
“Well, you’re missing out. He knows a thing or two about birds.”
But Isaac was ready to accept his advice at second-hand. Because Llyn yr Adar involved a whole day out, we plumped for Nyth y Gigfran today. We tackled it by the direct route from below, an inordinately hard slog in the hot sun up the interminably long incline. Above the old quarry shelf we zigzagged upwards as the Prof had suggested. The ravens’ nest was clearly visible, its tall stack of twigs whitewashed with droppings. The birds were disturbed by our presence, but we found a point where we could look down on the ledge with their nest and its chicks, and by lying very still we calmed the parents’ fears and they resumed feeding their young. We could not talk, but Isaac was clearly delighted, and threw me smiles of pleasure which made me cross-eyed with desire.
To distract my thoughts, I turned my binoculars on the town spread out in front of us and inspected our street, a good five hundred feet below. As I watched, the Prof came out of his house carrying his stick and a newspaper, and a moment later the Parch emerged from Ty Capel and got into his car. The Prof reached the road round the square, looked left and right, and began slowly to cross. As he did so, the Parch drove towards him, screeching to a halt with only feet to spare and blaring his horn. I could hear it from my perch nearly half a mile away. Not just bad driving, I thought, but deliberate intimidation. The Prof ambled on, to all appearances unfazed, and installed himself on the bench.
I was disturbed, but Isaac, his binoculars still on the ravens, was blissfully unaware of the little drama. When he had had his fill, we carried on upwards as being easier than climbing back down, and on reaching the ridge we cut round to the left and descended fairly gently into Cwmorthin. As we walked back through the square, we found the Prof still sitting on his bench, reading the Observer. He raised a hand to both of us impartially, but Isaac walked straight past him with a muttered “See you tomorrow, then, Tom.” Ashamed of him, I slumped down beside the Prof. Gratefully, too, for I was sweating and knackered.
“Prof, Isaac says he’s not allowed to speak to you, but doesn’t know why. Do you?”
“Oh yes. His father’s never spoken to me either. It can only be because of the MCs’ … let’s call it … disagreement with me. Wil Davies is persona non grata to them. The message must have been passed down from minister to minister for the last — what? — fifty-seven years.”
“But that’s … sad.”
“Isn’t it? Both in the sense you mean, and in the other.”
“Prof, I saw the Parch nearly run you over.”
“Not for the first time, either. Don’t worry, I’m sure he wouldn’t really. But how …? Oh, of course, you had a bird’s eye view from Nyth y Gigfran. How did it go with the ravens?”
I reported, and he was pleased. But I did not linger. I stank to high heaven and needed to get home for a shower.
*
Next day, Monday, was May Day bank holiday, when Isaac and I had agreed to check out the red grouse at Llyn yr Adar, weather permitting. It did permit, and we trekked up Cwmorthin to Bwlch Rhosydd, then across country and over the Cnicht ridge to the Nanmor side, the best part of two hours. Above the lake we found a knoll where we parked ourselves to watch. For an hour we saw nothing but black-headed gulls on the water, a few sandpipers along the shore, and occasional snipe in the tussocks. Llyn yr Adar was only partially living up to its name, which means Bird Lake. We passed the time absorbing the view, a wide panorama of mountains round from Snowdon itself, via the Glyder and Tryfan, to the distant Carneddau and Siabod. Finally our patience was rewarded. Three grouse came into sight, strutting singly through the heather and pecking as they went. They were no great rarity, according to the book, but were uncommon in these parts, and neither of us had seen any before. We watched their solemn antics for quite a while.
On the way back, beside Llyn Cwmcorsiog, we lit on the partly-eaten remains of a rabbit which some bird of prey had carried up from the valley and abandoned. Maybe our arrival had disturbed its mealtime, though we had seen nothing. Isaac, though curious, knew little about the insides of animals. But I was doing biology for GCSE, and seized a good opportunity. I fished out my pocket knife, which I kept pretty sharp, and completed the dissection. I pegged back the skin with twigs of heather, opened the ribs, and gave Isaac a conducted tour of the heart and lungs, the liver and spleen and kidneys — such as had not gone down the raptor’s throat — and the stomach and intestines. Which brought us to the excretory and reproductive organs. It was a male rabbit, and I was able to give a fairly comprehensive guide to that department.
To see on this small scale, our heads were close to the rabbit, and close to each other — sometimes even touching — and I felt his warmth and his breath on my face. I was very much aroused and so, I could see, was he. To any other boy, I would probably have made overtures there and then. But not to Isaac, who so obviously lived by different rules from me. I would pave the way as best I could, but the first open move had to be up to him. Given his background, it could not be otherwise. So as I pointed out the rabbit’s testicles and sperm ducts and penis, I was careful to use those clinical words. His interest was obvious, and so too was his ignorance. Several times he started to ask a question, but dried up. His face was red, and in the end I took the bull by the horns.
“Come on, Isaac. What are you trying to ask?”
“Tom, I don’t really understand what happens when you, er … you know.”
“Hasn’t anyone ever told you? What do you know?”
“Well. My Tad talked to me about it once. But he wasn’t … um, very specific. He just said that when a man marries, he lies with his wife and plants his seed in her, and if the seed grows it becomes a baby and is born nine months later. That’s about all.” For once he had none of that slightly superior air.
Oh Lord. Would you believe such innocence, at his age? Not even the birds and the bees. I had to start at square one, drawing sketches in my field notebook or using the rabbit by way of illustration. The difference between male and female anatomy. Hormones. Ovaries, eggs, uterus, vagina, clitoris. Testicles, sperm, semen, prostate, penis. The mechanics of erection, intercourse, ejaculation. Fertilisation and what followed. I was still using clinical words, most of which were clearly new to him. So I translated, with words like cunt, prick, balls, hard-on, shag, come. He had heard some of those at school, but had not always known what they meant. I ended with contraception. Thinking that abortion might be a taboo subject with him, I omitted that. He listened intently, his eyes on my face except when I pointed to my sketches or the rabbit.
“Thank you, Tom. That’s taught me a lot. I’m glad to know all about it at last.”
All about it? That’s only the basics, Isaac. Of reproduction and, oh, let’s call it mainstream sex.”
“Mainstream? What do you mean?”
Hmmm. We were moving into even more interesting territory.
“Well, sex for reproduction. There’s sex for love and pleasure too, straight and gay.”
His forehead crinkled. His creed probably said that sex should not be pleasurable. If so, his curiosity over-rode it.
“Pleasure?”
“Well, yes. Sex ought to be fun. Isaac, haven’t you ever, er, even, er, played with yourself?” Dammit, I had no clue what words he might understand. Let’s be bold. “Masturbated, jerked off, wanked?”
He looked at me solemnly. “Yes,” he said quietly. “I know what you mean. Yes, I have, once or twice. But it was wrong.”
“Wrong? Wasn’t it, er, fun? Didn’t you enjoy it?”
“Yes.” Very quietly now. “That’s what made it so wrong.”
Oh dear. Hair shirts next?
“Well, I can’t see anything wrong with it. You’re not harming anyone. Even yourself.”
“Oh, but you are. It’s displeasing to God. Isn’t that what Onan did? Genesis 38:9. He spilled his seed on the ground, and the Lord slew him for it.”
I was flummoxed. I had no answer to that.
But he had another question. “And what do you mean, straight?”
Lord, again. What an innocent.
“Straight? It means heterosexual. Opposite of gay.”
His creed probably also said that gays were an abomination, but again he over-rode it.
“I have heard about gays. But, Tom, what do they do?”
Again I had to explain, in the clinical and the vernacular. A different attraction, gaydar. Mutual masturbation. Fellatio, blow-job. Sixty-nining. Anal penetration, fucking. Again he listened, watching me inscrutably.
“Yes, I see. That’s sodomy, isn’t it? Remember how God rained upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah brimstone and fire out of heaven? Genesis 19:24.”
I had no answer to that, either. I was utterly frustrated. I had been rock-hard for hours. So, by the look of it, had he. Did he never let his urges rip? The answer, it seemed, was no.
“Tom, how do you know about all this?”
“Oh, my parents, partly. Kids at school, partly. But mostly from the net.”
Mum and Dad were trusting enough not to monitor or block my computer, and I often visited porn sites. I was as well-educated in that respect as he was ill-informed.
“I see. And have you, er, done any of this yourself?”
“Well, no. Apart from wanking, of course.”
“But you’d like to?”
Could that be the beginning of an offer? “Yes, of course.”
“Well, don’t, Tom, please. As far as I can see, it’s all fornication. All offensive to God, except in marriage.”
I gave up. I was not going to get him. Unless I had sowed temptation enough to reap a harvest later. But not now.
Isaac came from a family where every penny mattered, and he asked tentatively if the rabbit would be all right to eat. Why not? It was fresh, and the meat had not been spoiled. So I skinned it for him, hacked off the head and feet, gutted it but naughtily left the penis and testicles in place as a reminder of his sex lesson, washed it in the lake, and crammed it into my lunch box. We left the residue as a consolation for the disappointed raptor, and walked home companionably enough. What little talk there was concerned birds.
*
Life in Blaenau rapidly settled into a routine. I would often go out with Isaac. But whereas he remained a solitary, I came to make other friends: not close friends, but a degree or two above casual ones. With them I would kick a football around on the playing field or take the bus down to the cinema in Porthmadog. Mum and Dad might help out at weekends by ferrying me, and one or two of them, to fun places like the dry ski slope at Rhiwgoch or the white water centre below Llyn Celyn. But one thing they could not understand was that all my friends were boys. I was at the age, according to their rulebook, when I should have a girlfriend, and I began to contemplate the unwelcome step of finding one as a cover. Otherwise I was just an ordinary boy, unusual, to all appearances, only in my interest in birds and my one close and very unexpected friendship.
Over the next few weeks I often saw the Prof, although we had no hugely profound conversations. We were getting to know each other, talking in his house or on the bench in the square or, occasionally, over the meal table at our place. He was patiently opening my mind to all manner of things that had never entered it before, and encouraging me to form my own opinions. Never once did he take a superior attitude. He treated me as a friend and an equal — a young friend, to be sure, but not one to be talked down to. He banished much of my mental and spiritual loneliness. He fostered my self-confidence. His sympathy and stability and broad-mindedness were a marvellous balance to my uneasily brittle and narrow relationship with Isaac. Although I barely appreciated it at the time, I know now that his gift to me was priceless.
To repeat, I was a very ordinary boy, not well-read, not well-informed, with a schoolboy sense of humour but no sparkling adult wit. What could I possibly have given him in return? Companionship, certainly, as an antidote to his own loneliness. And my own young brand of friendship which became more familiar as the days went by, and even, when the occasion was right, gently teasing. He saw me, I thought, as the son he had never had. I saw him not so much as a father figure — my own was good enough for most purposes — but as a wise and stimulating and very special friend. At all events, to put it quite simply, we clicked.
One afternoon, on the way back from school, I rang his bell and there was no answer. He should have been in, and I was worried. I made my way round the back via Rhiannon’s garden and peered through his bedroom window — he slept on the ground floor — and there he was on his bed, curled up, face screwed in pain and looking at me with pleading eyes. Urgent action was needed. The back door was locked, so I found a lump of slate and broke the kitchen window, through which I could reach to open the door.
“Prof!” I cried, on my knees beside him. “What’s wrong?”
Bol,” he muttered. Stomach — one of the few occasions he ever used Welsh with me. It was obvious enough: he had vomited and lost control of his bowels.
I flew to the phone and called the doctor, who came round commendably fast. A bug that was going the rounds, was his verdict, compounded by the Prof’s age. Not a hospital case, provided he could be looked after carefully for the next few days. Luckily it was Friday, and I was free full-time for the weekend. Rhiannon got the prescriptions from the chemist before it shut, and rustled up a commode. Meanwhile I half-carried the Prof to the bath where I cleaned him up. A foul job, but yet a privilege. He took his medicine and sat in his dressing gown while I removed the bedding and replaced it, and by the time Mum and Dad got in from work he was clean and reasonably comfortable, with a hot-water bottle for his stomach, and had been persuaded to drink. Mum, bless her, dealt with the bedding, and Dad with the broken window. Nobody questioned my self-assumed role as chief nurse.
I spent the next five nights there, in a sleeping bag on the study floor, alert for sounds from the bedroom, helping him to the commode at decreasingly frequent intervals, doing intimate things for him that he could not do himself. During the day, Mum kept up a supply of food, while I sat and watched the Prof as he dozed — and sometimes dozed with him — and talked to him when he awoke. I encouraged him to drink often if little, and he made a good recovery. By Monday morning he was safe enough to be left by himself, which was fortunate since I had to go to school. Mum, who was not at work that day, looked in from time to time, and I took over again once I was released. By the time I arrived on Wednesday afternoon he was up and more or less back to normal. I found him tapping away at his computer, catching up on his backlog of emails. He ate a reasonable tea with me, and I took the dishes back home and returned to him. He told me to sit down.
“Tom, keep my front door key.” We had commandeered it while he was ill. “I have a spare. Let yourself in now, whenever you want. Don’t ring. And Tom.” He fixed me with his beady brown eyes. “I’ve been wondering what I could possibly give you by way of thank-offering for all that you’ve done for me. No” — I had started to protest — “I know you. You’ll say you don’t want anything, because you did what you did out of fondness. And I believe you. You’ve acted entirely in character. So I’ll give you nothing. Nothing tangible. Only my thanks. And, more important, these words from John Clare:
Love lies beyond
The tomb, the earth, which fades like dew!
I love the fond,
The faithful, and the true.
“Their surface meaning is obvious, but you won’t understand what’s beneath them.” How right he was. “Don’t ask, Tom. Just remember them.” He said them again. “Promise?”
“I promise,” and I repeated the verse back to him.
It is a promise I have very carefully kept.
We sat and looked at each other in deep togetherness, the old man and his surrogate son, the youngster and his guide, philosopher and friend. Or, I wondered belatedly, were we more even than that? Were we at the soul-mate level? If so, he was wildly different from what I had expected or, more accurately, what I had hoped for. No way was he the lover with whom I had dreamed of communing. No way was he, as Isaac was, the object of my physical lust. Nor, surely, was I of his. But our meeting of minds, our mutual if utterly non-sexual love, our absolute trust — were they not enough to qualify us as soul-mates? Well, no, perhaps not quite, not quite yet. When I was with him, all the ships in my fleet flew their true colours — all except one, which was flying not false colours, but no flag at all. If my trust was to be absolute, I must unfurl that final flag and reveal to him my last secret. It crossed my mind to do so there and then, but my nerve failed.
But the thought did not break our togetherness. Neither of us said another word. In the end I put my hand briefly on his, went home, and collapsed into bed, knackered.
*
Soon afterwards, exams started and, what with all the revision, life became hectic. The Prof was more or less back to his usual self and I still saw him frequently if only briefly — he knew better than to distract me at this time. But with exams over, the pace slackened again.
Having so little common ground, Isaac and I rarely set out to discuss anything but birds. Other subjects always seemed, inexorably and uncomfortably, to lead on to religion, and one memorable Saturday proved no exception. We were sitting in the dappled woodland shade of Coed Cymerau, our backs against a gnarled oak just above the old packhorse bridge near Bryn Melyn, keeping an eye and an ear open for woodpeckers and nuthatches, amid the soporific hum of insects and the plash of a waterfall. Nearby rustlings suggested that there were little mammals on the move — voles, probably. It was blissfully peaceful.
“I’d love to do this sort of thing full-time,” I said sleepily. “Warden in a nature reserve or whatever, looking after woodlands and wildlife.”
“What qualifications would you need?”
“Well, I’m thinking of carrying on with biology at A-level, along with chemistry and maths. Then university, I hope. Biology there. Ending up specialising in conservation and environmental studies. That should be enough. What are you thinking of doing?”
“No need to think. I know. Theological college, and ordination. That’s God’s destiny for me.”
“God’s destiny? You mean he’s got it all mapped out for you?”
“Of course. God determines everything we do, good or bad. We can’t resist it.”
“Heck, that’s crazy. That means we’ve got no choice. We must have that.”
“Oh no. There’s no free will outside God. There’s no room for it, because everything happens by divine predestination.”
I was shocked, but tried to meet him on his own ground.
“But, Isaac. You’d say we end up either in heaven or hell, right?”
“Right.”
“Well, whichever we end up in, it must be decided by whether we’ve lived good lives or bad. Right?”
“Wrong. It was decided at the creation. Look, Tom. The church on earth is made up of two sorts. There are the saints who can never lose their crown.” Strong echoes of the pulpit were coming through. “They’re the elect, the predestinate, chosen by God for heaven. Grace is given to them. They can’t say ‘yes please’ to it, or ‘no thank you’. Then there are the sinners who can’t attain salvation, no matter how hard they try. They’re reprobate, not elect, damned. Salvation’s beyond their reach.”
“Then what’s the point of even trying to be good, for heaven’s sake?” I had not intended the pun, and Isaac did not spot it. Not surprisingly.
“Better to try than not. Lots of people think they’re Christians, but only a few of them are entitled to everlasting life. The rest think they do all the right things. They may feel the same way as the elect, they may find the same uplift. But their faith’s only apparent, not real. Even so, God insinuates himself into their mind, so they can still taste his goodness. That taste is a good deal better than nothing.”
“But that can’t be right, Isaac. You must have got that wrong.”
“I haven’t. You probably don’t know it, but you’re being Arminian.” Armenian? What the hell was he on about? “You’re deliberately misreading the bible’s message. Making it into an easy cop-out. Its true message was laid out by Calvin. You have heard of Calvin, haven’t you?” he asked, without much conviction.
Actually, no. The only Calvins in my experience were Calvin Klein and Calvin and Hobbes. He could hardly mean either of those, so I shook my head.
He sighed. “John Calvin. French reformer. In the Reformation. Sixteenth century. Calvinistic Methodists — right? — because our teaching is based on his. I think I can quote him word for word on this. ‘Therefore some men are born devoted from the womb to certain death, so that God’s name may be glorified in their destruction. Because life and death are acts of God’s will.’”
“Destruction?” I was horrified. “But Isaac. I thought God was supposed to be a God of love, not of destruction.”
“So he is. Love for those he’s chosen. Not for those he’s condemned.”
“But that’s not fair. It’s not … just. If you’re condemned from the word go, it makes life … pointless. A nightmare.”
“No, it doesn’t. You don’t know whether you’re elect or reprobate till it comes to the crunch. So it makes sense to hope you’re going to heaven, and act accordingly.”
“Well, it makes no sense to me. It’s against all reason. God can’t, um, discriminate like that.”
“God can’t …? Oh, Tom, sometimes I wonder why I put up with you. Look, who are you to question God? He made you. You can’t dispute with your maker. Remember Romans 9:21? No, you wouldn’t. ‘Has the potter no right over his clay, to make out of the same lump one beautiful pot and one crude one?’ If God wants to show off his power, doesn’t he have the right to put his splendid pots on exhibition, to be admired, and allow the workaday ones to get smashed?”
Hmmm. I thought I could see the point. A potter might expect some say over the fate of his own pots. But damn it, men were not pots. It sounded like blatant favouritism, cosseting a few special products and writing off the bulk of humanity as cheap crockery. Well, I did not believe in God at all, so it was an academic question. But I was still appalled at a belief which insulted reason and mankind. And I was saddened to hear it from a gentle boy like this, whom I certainly liked, certainly lusted for, and hoped I even loved.
These thoughts were very unwelcome, and they shattered the magic of Coed Cymerau. I needed, quite urgently, to consult my oracle. As soon as I could without hurting Isaac’s feelings, I suggested we should go home. Once I had got rid of him I bearded the Prof and poured out my problems.

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