The
knock came as Sarah was opening a can of Whiskas with the cat sitting
at her feet, desperate for his supper. Marcus, home early for once,
was upstairs getting changed out of his business suit.
“Get
that, will you?” he shouted down. “I’m not decent.”
“Sorry,
Caesar,” she said to the cat. “It’ll be one more minute.”
The
second knock was louder than the first. Sarah hurried to the front
door, the tin in one hand and a fork in the other. Outside, a woman
about her own age waited unsmiling in the rain.
“Is
Marcus home?” she said.
“Yes,”
Sarah replied. “Come in out of the wet. He’ll be down in a sec.”
She
called up, “Marcus, there’s someone to see you!”
Marcus
bounded down the stairs, then stopped, wide-eyed. As Sarah frowned
and turned to take another look at the visitor, she was grabbed
firmly by the shoulders, swung round and propelled back down the hall
towards the kitchen. Before she could catch her breath she found
herself on the other side of the closed door. The cat watched from
his position by his empty bowl.
Panting,
she stood a moment trying to understand what had just happened, but
her brain refused to engage. She stared unfocused at the pattern on
the wallpaper until Caesar reminded her he was hungry by clawing at
her jeans.
“Okay,
okay,” she whispered, lifting his dish onto the worktop.
The
fork rattled against the inside of the can as she struggled to
control her hand, which trembled violently for a reason beyond her
grasp. The murmur of voices in the hall grew louder yet more
indecipherable as she leaned towards it. Then scuffling. And
shouting. She almost dropped the fork as the front door slammed,
shaking the crockery in the cupboards. Her chest ached under pressure
from her thudding heart. Caesar miaowed and stretched up to paw at
the tin as it hung temptingly close but still out of reach.
Several
seconds passed in silence, broken by frenzied hammering on the front
door. Sarah waited, her knees weak, leaning against the washing
machine for support.
The
kitchen door opened and Marcus stood before her, pale and shocked but
avoiding her eyes. He flinched at every blow to the solid oak behind
him.
“What
the hell is going on?” Sarah managed, through chattering teeth.
She
watched his jaw working while he searched for an answer and at the
moment he opened his mouth to speak, the fog cleared. With a cold
surge of fury she realised she knew exactly what was going on.
Barely
glancing at her husband, she placed Caesar’s supper on the floor,
removed her car keys from the hook, and opened the back door. Caesar
glanced up from his dish.
She’d pick him up the following day when she came for the rest of her things. Marcus obviously couldn’t be trusted, even with feeding the cat.
She’d pick him up the following day when she came for the rest of her things. Marcus obviously couldn’t be trusted, even with feeding the cat.
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