Tuesday, 31 May 2022

MISS ELAINEOUS VISITS DARLING DARLINGS CAT LOUNGE...

 During our recent trip to Great Yarmouth we popped into Darling Darlings Cat Lounge, on Marine Parade, for a cappuccino.
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The place is super-kitsch and opened in 2017; its mission to provide trained therapy cats, as it's known that spending time with our domestic feline friends is a great way to reduce stress and anxiety.  As cats of any kind are my favourite animal I just could not resist coming in here, and it didn't disappoint. 
Here is the till area...

The vintage/ retro decor has thingumajigs which span from the 1950s to the 1990s, and there are plenty of pussycat-themed items splashed around.
This photo was taken whilst me 'n' the SuperDean were seated at our table...

To the right of this photo is the main door, which is a locked grille, very wisely situated so that the pussies cannot run out onto the road and end up as flat cats.
That's what happened to our little ginger and white cat when I was a kid.  After that my mother refused to have another cat, as we lived on a main road and she didn't want the heartbreak again.

The back end, down by the kitchen is a 1980s time capsule lounge, playing fantastic songs from that area.  We only had our coffees and a sausage roll to eat, although the cakes on display did look tasty...

Dance Yourself Dizzy, a 1980 hit for Liquid Gold was thundering through the speakers as I passed through, en route to the human litter trays at the back.
It was one of my favourite records from that era and took me right back...😁

Leopard print abounded, and thankfully I wasn't wearing any on this day, otherwise the pussies might not have interacted with me!😉
I love, love, LOVE this chair!
*WANT*
I did keep referring to this place as The Pussy Lounge, which is something entirely different...😉

The oldest is Coconut, who is a British Blue of seven with lovely yellow amber eyes.  He is a tripod, having only three legs- one of his hind legs had to be amputated after it was caught in an illegal trap in someone's garden.
I have to say, I only saw him seated- he was Dean's favourite puss and, in true cat character, he was busy resting...

Funnily enough, Kim, the British Blue who lived next to us when I was a kid survived the main road (maybe because she was a large cat who didn't care to roam too far away from the fridge- at Christmas time she would meow at its door constantly, as she knew there was a turkey inside...😁)
The day we moved in my mum said, 'Oh look- they've got a lovely grey cat next door.'  Then she placed our open fish tank, with Cleo the goldfish on the ground, and we went away to collect more stuff from the old house.  When we came back the fish was nowhere to be seen, and Kim was sat atop her wall, licking her paws.  She was a hungry puss, who once caught a seagull!

Teddy, the beautiful green-eyed tabby is five and he was my favourite.  He has hydrocephalus and epilepsy, so is on medication for life.  He is also visually impaired.  Photography is allowed but not with a flash, as that can trigger seizures in both humans and animals alike.
Here he is, in his egg chair.  He did bother to wake up and give me some attention, but he snores when he's asleep (a bit like me...)

He- along with his siblings- was destined to be used as dog bait until he was rescued (I just don't get the mentality of some people...😒)
He was the first cat to be trained as a therapy cat, and has made visits to schools, care homes and private houses.

Stanley is the grey and white fur bundle between the white railings and is two-years-old, and his mum was feral.  He is quite a tiny cat and has a wheat and gluten allergy. 

He is in what, in cat terms, is his adolescent period.  He spent most of the time we were there just staring out at the food being prepared in the kitchen.  Another typical moggy!

Maverick and Ernie, the hairless pussies, are both Sphynx cats.  Their baldness is a naturally occurring genetic mutation and here (or should that be hair?!) they are, huddled on their favourite chair.

Ernie is the youngest, at ten months old, and here he is enjoying the cat run.  His breed is also known as the Canadian Hairless, and he's the more commonly known type of Sphynx...

Maverick is the Donskoy variation of a Sphynx (also knows as a Russian Hairless), and he's the white fella at the top.  On this day he wasn't as playful as his hairless mate.
Both cats were beautifully soft when you stroked them...💓

Cartoon cat plushies also live here, and Garfield is sitting behind the keyboard.  I think my favourite cartoon cat is probably Top Cat, although I reserve a special ball of love for Tom...

A duck and a pigeon at the Venetian Waterways, taken another day.  I love the way the azure dye in the water gives the place an authentic, elegant ambience...

 I have blogged about the regeneration of the waterways before.  This post shows them during 2018, as a work in progress:-

The duck decided to pose for me...

A swan and a pen with the water in the background.  You can hire pedalos on this boating lake if you want.  We didn't- imagine paying to hire a boat and then having to pedal it yourself- on yer bike!  Give me something with an engine!

Swans mate for life.  This was the last day of our holiday and possibly the most relaxing.  We also took a carriage ride down the seafront 💓 (a first for me) and the weather was really nice.

Looking back whilst standing on the final (and I think highest) bridge on the way out.
I have included some details and photos of the redeveloped waterways here, in my largest Great Yarmouth blog:-

I took this as photo of Vauxhall Bridge as we walked into town one day.  It's right near the railway station and dates back to 1850, being rebuilt in 1887.

Looking the other way, down the River Yare...

We stayed at Vauxhall Holiday Park for the first time.  It is beautifully tended, and here is the cute fountain which sits by the entrance gates.

We popped into the town centre (our holiday park was walking distance from the town centre, so therefore easily accessible for those like us who don't drive) one evening.  We had hoped to catch the illuminations, but were a tad too early.
You can make out some of the different colours going down the seafront, though...

On the way to Great Yarmouth we were lucky enough to end up on a train that took the Berney Arms route.  It is a request stop, and the train stopped long enough for me to take photos...

Berney Arms consists of a windmill and a pub.  The pub closed in 2015, and reopened in 2020 as a bistro...

Here's a cropped view.
The area is part of The Broads, and is close to Breydon Water...

The area is only accessible by foot, bike, rail or boat, and here's a different angle as we passed around it.
We have seen it before, when we visited Burgh Castle a few years back.  Here is my blog link:-

Great Yarmouth (and Darling Darlings Cat Lounge) I will return.

Until then...

Meow!

The Miss Elaineous

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Sunday, 1 May 2022

MISS ELAINEOUS VISITS MIDDLESBROUGH...

I recently visited Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, for my much-delayed graduation ceremony, having gained an MA in Creative Writing with Teesside University as a distance learning student.  I hadn't been to Yorkshire since 1979 when I visited Butlin's Filey as a kid, so I was a tad excited.
 
On the way, high on the hill near Thirsk, is the Kilburn White Horse (I only realised this when I heard the guy sitting in the seat behind me mention it to his friend).  It is the white blob in the centre of the photo.
It is said to be the largest and most northerly hill figure in England, and is 318 feet (97m) long by 220 feet (67m) wide.  It was created in 1857, by exposing the underlying sandstone base and covering that with white limestone chips.

Here's a PDF of what it looks like when it's properly photographed...

The pleasant view from our hotel window.
This area was once well-known for its steel production, until that industry (and British manufacturing in general) began its sad decline in the 1980s.  Way in the distance you can see a chimney gushing out smoke.  There are still some factories, producing various goods, operating in the area.

The Riverside Stadium, the home of Middlesbrough FC, is visible in the centre of the photo.

The low afternoon light was really interesting in this part of the world- moody skies with shafts of brilliant late afternoon sun...

Look at the way the sun gives this reflective road sign a ghostly glow!

This resulted in this ethereal reflection on our hotel room ceiling.🌈

I love the iridescent rainbow colours.🌈

The view from outside the railway station, and at the end of the road veering off to the right of the building is Port Clarence, which is on the banks of the River Tees.

Looking north from the station, and this was a rather elegant part of the town.  From 1974-1996 the town was considered part of Cleveland, until that county was abolished.  You still see references to Cleveland across the town. 

The Albert Bridge was designed by William Peachey, North Eastern Railway's chief architect.  Apparently it has "N.E.R. 1874" inscribed somewhere on it, although I didn't see this.

It's not to be confused with the Royal Albert Bridge, which was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, and which spans the River Tamar from Plymouth, Devon to Saltash, Cornwall.

On our initial walk to find out where my university is we came across this brilliant bottle sculpture.  It's by married couple Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen and is called Bottle of Notes, and was unveiled in 1993.  The bottle is designed to slant; as if it had become stuck in the sand after a wave had struck it and receded.

It is crafted in steel, reflecting the area's rich steel production and fabrication heritage, and stands outside the Middlesbrough Institution of Modern Art (MIMA).

These crystal clear fountains are behind Middlesbrough Town Hall.
It's funny the way the mind can resurge memories- when standing by these and breathing in their chlorine smell, I couldn't help but be reminded of the lovely fountains which stood sentinel at both ends of the outdoor pool at Butlin's Filey.  It was 1979 when I visited there, and the holiday camp's long gone.  But its location was further down the coast in Yorkshire, so maybe it's that association which triggered my nostalgia...

The Middlesbrough Empire sits near the town hall, and is a theatre which opened in 1897.  It's also the official venue of Teesside University, which is very close by.

Middlesbrough Town Hall, and this version was opened in 1889.  Part of the building is given over to municipal functions and the other part is used as an entertainment venue.

Approaching the town hall from the town, and the building is lit up at night.  But the evening photo I took came out blurry (I may have been a tad tipsy, following celebrations...😉)

Street view, and this town has bid- and failed- twice to gain city status, but has applied again, to win this accolade as part of a competition to honour the Queen's Platinum Jubilee.  The results are to be announced in the Spring of 2022 (so, very soon.)  In the media it often refers to itself as a city anyway.  Good for Middlesbrough!

Appealing lit-up trees, and Middlesbrough was pretty good for illuminations.

This was only ever going to be a small blog, as we only stayed two nights, and it was essentially a business trip.

I thought the gloaming sun was causing the glow on this church, then I realised that it was an electric light.  This is what I mean by this town being quite considered when it comes to illuminations.

The frontage of this distinctive building is grade 2 listed.  Once the Masham Hotel, it is no longer a pub but is now used as exhibition space.

The Shakespeare pub has similar frontage, and looked very much closed down.

Teesside University was very near our hotel (Premier Inn, which I picked partly due to its great, central location). 

The campus is quite large and it looks like everything you need (library, student services, halls of residence, etc.) is on this site.

This honestly and truly had to be one of the best days of my life!💓

Striking a pose...💓

And another...💓

My last graduation ceremony was 25 years ago, but I no longer have any photographs of that day.
I have to say, the academic robes make me look the size of a house!💓

But so what?  I was ecstatically happy and so proud of myself on this very special day.💓

The lovely spiral staircase in The Resolution, the pub where we ate most of our meals.  It takes it name from the flagship of Captain James Cook (1728-1779) when he embarked on his voyage to the South Pacific; between July 1772 and July 1775.  Born in the area, he is Middlesbrough's most famous son and was an explorer, navigator and cartographer.   

The Pig Iron, where we had a couple of glasses of celebratory vino on the evening of my ceremony.  Reasonable prices, too.
Pig iron is also known as crude iron, and is an intermediate product of the smelting process.  The name comes from the shape of the moulds used for the ingots, which are cast in sand (I remember doing something like this using aluminium in metalwork at school.)  The way the channels of molten metal run into the branching moulds resembles a sow with her suckling piglets.

The Tees Transporter Bridge (which is also known as the Middlesbrough Transporter Bridge), taken from the train.  It is a suspended ferry which carries a carries a travelling car- or "gondola" across the River Tees.
Could I live in Middlesbrough?  Yes, I think so, although the climate (generally about 6°C colder than London) is a tad off-putting. 

Will I ever return to this area?  Oh yes!  I'm hoping to visit the holiday park which now stands on the site of the once-great-but-now-demolished Butlin's Filey.  It's further down on the coast.

Until then...

TTFN

The Miss Elaineous

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Sunday, 10 April 2022

PRIDE AND PREJUDICE by JANE AUSTEN

PRIDE AND PREJUDICE
BY JANE AUSTEN


THE BLURB:-
There wasn't one...

But let us defer to what's on the back of other efforts (no, I don't have a first edition- rather a 2003 hardback...)

The below is courtesy of Amazon:-

First published in 1813, the story follows the main character, Elizabeth Bennet, as she deals with issues of manners, upbringing, morality, education, and marriage in the society of the landed gentry of the British Regency. Elizabeth is the second of five daughters of a country gentleman living near the fictional town of Meryton in Hertfordshire, near London.

Set in England in the early 19th century, this tells the story of Mr and Mrs Bennet's five unmarried daughters after the rich and eligible Mr Bingley and his status-conscious friend, Mr Darcy, have moved into their neighbourhood. While Bingley takes an immediate liking to the eldest Bennet daughter, Jane, Darcy has difficulty adapting to local society and repeatedly clashes with the second-eldest Bennet daughter, Elizabeth.


THE REALITY:-

Why am I reading this now, and why haven't I read it before? Yes, you may wonder. Well, the truth is that I've read most of Jane Austen's novels (usually charity shop finds, read during my twenties) and have seen more than one film/ TV adaption of more than one book. I am revisiting this as the Jane Austen Literacy Foundation have announced that their annual short fiction competition is looking for work based around the theme “Inspired by Jane Austen,” so I took it upon myself to refresh myself with regard to her style. This little beauty is a permanent fixture in my bookcase, and still does not fail to entertain as I finished it in three days.
Incidentally, I made their long list with my story, named For Glory! in last year's competition.  Here is the link:-

Pride And Prejudice is a study in the style of writing known as free indirect discourse; which is thought to be like a camera seeing everything, but honing in- when it's required- to an individual character. It offers insight into individual characters whilst allowing for the narrator's voice. In this it is unlike omnipresent narration; which is all seeing and all knowing, with occasional views into others' minds. The difference is the former can roam from viewpoint to viewpoint, whereas the latter is determined by the narrator. Jane Austen was one of the first novelists to use this technique constantly, although I did see her tip into second person narration.

Enough of the lesson! One thing I did notice was overuse of the words “felicity” and “alacrity” (although I didn't count how many of each), so for my short story I'm going to be a bit sarcastic and tongue-in-cheek and name my main character Felicity. But that's really a compliment rather than an insult to Jane Austen, as that kind of cleverly observant wit and understanding is exactly what she's about; satirizing society's expectations during her time on this planet very subtly, so as to entertain rather than exclusively belittle.

The characters were all very well depicted and individual, and all played an important role in the story- there was no one superfluous to requirements and indeed, no flummery of description. This book defines relationships- and not just those of a romantic nature- but also cleverly observes familial connections, and doesn't shy away from what we all know to be true, such as favouritism. If I hadn't have known the story I would have wanted Elizabeth to end up with her Mr Darcy, as they seem perfect together, and was glad that happy endings abounded for those who deserved them, and controversy sat upon those who didn't (incidentally, I'm glad the book wasn't one-dimensional, and that some silly people and rogues popped up amongst the good and the great.)

A great study of expectations of the time, cleverly and concisely written by one of the greats of her time, and an inspiration to women as well.  Not many chose a career over marriage, and her reasons for this have been mentioned before- you may want to check out this Lucy Worsley study on her life:-

I shall keep my eyes peeled in charity shops for more Jane Austen to re-visit...

Wednesday, 30 March 2022

WHAT'S WILD IS WILD

 I entered a story into the Anansi Archive Winter 2021/2022 Short Fiction Competition.

I didn't win but I gained a Highly Commended recognition, and my work is going to be published by Amazon in their second anthology.
Here is my proudly-displayed certificate... 😀

They described my story as "wonderful and suspenseful," and it's a murder mystery inspired by me getting lost in a certain place (more than once!)
Here it is for you to enjoy.

WHAT'S WILD IS WILD

I don't take the short cut specifically to be murdered- although that welcome relief briefly crosses my mind- but I don't expect to get hopelessly lost either. In my mind's eye it's easy- just a clear diagonal path from one gate to the next, with the opportunity to partake of some much-needed calorie burning and stomp my impotent frustration into raw earth. A third interview with no semblance of a conclusion is about as much procrastination as I can take, and I scowl and claw forward.

Summer is almost spent, but the sun seems way too high for this time of day, sitting there all defensive and white hot, as if refusing to bow down and conform. I briefly close my eyes yet it infiltrates like an x-ray. It hasn't rained for weeks and it shows in patches of pockmarked humus, exposed and flaky like dead men's eyes, and frazzled grass tufts. I pick my way around coconut gourds festooning this rustic carpet. They tell of a festival but this surprises me- after the woman was found dead in here I thought events had been cancelled. Obviously I am wrong. I plough on and the landscape quickly becomes untamed and organic; movement rustling at my toes near the supine remains of a tree trunk. I see the shadow of something alive and kicking within its hollows- maybe a mole or a vole; a dense, squirming black oval. My platform raffia wedges are killing my feet so I take my them off, using their ankle straps to tie them to my huge shoulder bag, cursing the heavy art portfolio weighing it down. I pull a grimace of a smile. Timmy hates me dressing like this, in a floral dress with free-flowing hair. He's all chrome and cream, and blacks and whites, like the girls at my call centre job.

'You can do more than three days a week,' Timmy had reprimanded.

'Yes, but I don't want to. It's not my career, and I have to get a proper job.'

'I don't like your silly flower paintings anyway. That's what I call art.' He pointed to his Mark Rothko print on the wall; dual midnight squares over a madder background.

'There's room for modern art too,' I'd said. 'Just not coming from my paintbrush.' I'd leant forward to attack the sunflowers I was painting, wanting to be done with this useless symposium, anger adding sudden character in furious red fronds delineating the petals.

'Artists only make money once they're dead.'

I need that job. A year out of art school- with a first- and it's the only opening I've had. Assisting in a small gallery, with time to paint and exhibit, the description seemed like the culmination of a dream. They mentioned that there was an attic room available to rent, and I couldn't believe my luck. They took me up crochety stairs and yes, it was tiny, but the skylight let in just the right portion of daytime. I'm also aware that I need to leave Timmy. I only moved in because I had nowhere else to go- I'd been staying in halls of residence, and they're never available after graduation.

Trees are silhouetted in silver curiousness, and I drop my bag onto the ground, fiddling for my camera, as I like to photograph then work back in the comfort of the studio. I'm no al-fresco artist, so I take some time with my newfangled digital gadget, attention drawn by a livid squawk to an exotic bird high up in the tree; pungent yellow with a red necklace. It must be introduced, rather than native. I manipulate the shutter, look down and smile wryly. My feet are absolutely filthy now, despite the dryness of the ground, and a push forward out of the denser trees finds me in a meadow. Totally surprised, I bend down to pick a poppy, a daisy, a couple of forget-me-nots and some buttercups, winding them into the hair clip taming my tresses. Papaver, bellis perennius, myosotis and ranunculus- a keen gardener once taught me their Latin names. I remember a poem I'd read and bite my lip: “What's wild is wild and can't be caught...” I'm not sure I should be picking flowers but there's plenty more, they will regrow and besides, I haven't been excessive. It strikes me that this wildness is contrived, and I think that an odd thing to do. This place must have been totally wild once- that's the way of the world, nature always wins. But then to try and tame it into civilisation, and then recreating man's ideal of a wilderness? It seems a convoluted way to carry on.

It always looks simple on the map- cross over the bridge and them I'm halfway there, but I seem to be stuck in a corner, and panic flows though me when I see five fountains, contained and landscaped, with spiky reeds controlled within a metal mesh and carefully maintained lily pads. I realise that I've made a mistake- this place is rhombus shaped, and I've walked along the back, having not navigated a deep enough diagonal. I turn back on myself in a zigzag, licking my lips, grateful that I thought to bring water- being murdered might seem like an answer to my troubles, but committing suicide is not an option.

As I veer south the ground becomes flatter and I think, from left-field, of calling someone to ask where I am. But the idea is absurd. Who would I call? I'd called Timmy from the landline, leaving a message about my impromptu interview and besides, there's no juice left in my cell phone. It's the way I like it. I hate the damn things, and didn't want to accept it off Timmy.

'It's so I can know where you are.'

'I don't want you to know where I am,' I'd said, and a horrible moment had passed between us.

He wants to control me and I don't like it. That flaming sun feels hotter than ever, and I feel my thighs starting to chafe together. That's another bone of contention between us- Timmy thinks I'm too big.

'Too big for what?' was my tart answer, but I have enough problems dealing with my sluggish metabolism and don't need his input. I was shocked- he's a giant of a man, and although he's not unattractive his long hair is seriously balding at the front and he has quite a gut on him. I crave a cigarette, and wish I had some on me. Timmy doesn't like me smoking. In fact, we were in a bar only three days ago when I accepted one his friend offered. Timmy squeezed my hand under the table, crushing it and digging his nails in. I look down at the marks and impulsively stroke their ridges- little half moons along my thumb knuckle.

'I'll bloody make you good. I'll make you respectable.' His answer only strengthened my resolve to leave him. I didn't want to walk his version of me. He'd held me in that intimidating way he did, where his hands were on my shoulders but... slipping too close to my neck.

The sun was a blood orange now, seeping like osmosis into a lilac sky. I pass the nursery; masses of window and chrome, thinking how Timmy would love this, knowing his adoration for the man-made. 'People need somewhere to live,' he always tells me when I question this continuing obliteration of photosynthesis, of our vital oxygen.

I walk on tiptoes to see clearer through a window, and tobacco plants- nicotiana- peer back at me. I know what it is- the man who'd lived next to the children's home I was brought up in had grown it in his expansive garden. The soil here looks a different colour- all dark and peaty, as if it's been transplanted. I think back to Timmy some weeks back, scraping black soil from the hefty boots he wears with his business suit. He's always picking something off them- be it sods of earth, concrete or cement, depositing chunks into the kitchen bin.

'Being a property developer is not all about making money,' he'd shook his head.

'You've done well enough from it.'

'Yes, but sometimes you have to spoon-feed these bloody builders.'

There are uniform stake holes in the ground, and it dawns on me that this is where the murdered woman had been found, over a month ago. The police have finished their investigation but the evidence is clearly there, in a trampled section of grass beaten bald, ripped yellow cordoning tape trodden in. I shudder, almost at a run now. I remember that they were linking this murder to a similar case that had taken place over three years ago, and that both woman had worked in property, like Timmy. He'd thrown his leonine head back when I'd told him to be careful.

'Caitlyn, I'm six foot four! I can kill a man with one hand!'

This place is too damn quiet. It's because the police have advised people against coming here. In fact, I haven't seen anyone out, although I glimpsed a body working in the greenhouse, and the sound of a saw drones from far off. I plod on, bitterness in my mouth, determined to get to the sanctuary of home.

From literally out of nowhere a man appears, jogging and gasping. Is he the murderer? Tall and as slim as a reed, he advances towards me with purpose.

'Excuse me,' this willowy human says. 'I'm lost. I'm on a fun run and need to find the boat house.'

The timbre of his vowels is so delicate that it calms me, and I can sense his panic, although my heart still clatters. 'It must be near the lake. That way, I suppose.' I point in the direction I'm going and he falls into step beside me. Any minute now he'll jump on me, I think, eyeing him as if being a perpetrator's a requirement. But he just gulps at the air, trying to align his breath. I'm on concrete now and pick my way gently over hard ground. He doesn't notice my bare feet, and we pass a drain cover and I'm surprised to hear a swooshing sound.

His perception is astonishing. 'That's the River Westbourne. It used to be visible but the evolving population forced it underground.'

'That's interesting,' I say, although it worries me that I cannot see his eyes. Why is he wearing dark sunglasses? They wrap around his head and can't allow any light to infiltrate.

Sensing my confusion, he tries to mollify me. I think it a weird thing for a stranger to do, but he continues. 'There used to be a cheesecake house where the boat house is, serving syllabub and cakes to the gentry. It didn't serve what we call cheesecake, though. In those days it was more like a custard tart.' He unclips his phone from his waistband and pushes it right close to one eye and tuts. 'I wish Google would hurry up and put their maps onto phones.'

I have no idea what he's talking about, but the greenery empties out and I can see the khaki lake glistening as the sun bears westward, and the boat house. I point, and a couple of people within a huddle appear to be waving back, shouting. The man peers myopically and they gesture more energetically.

'Can't you see them?' I frown. They're not exactly quiet.

He takes off his glasses as if to explain himself. 'Not well. I'm very visually impaired. My group is for blind people.' His eyes are a soft honeysuckle, but I can see a translucent white veil coating them and one iris clearly has a chunk missing from it, as if it's an apple and someone's taken a bite- an Apple Mac eyeball. 'See you around.' He runs to be with his people and I head for the bridge, relieved, knowing where I am now, shocked that I could think a blind person a murderer!

I pass a man who points at my mucky feet and barks, 'Lady, where are your shoes?' in heavily accented English. I point to them, hanging off my bag. Is he the murderer? But no, he leaves me alone as I cross, my shoulder nearly cracking from the weight of my portfolio. I see the exit from Hyde Park and smile. London has the opportunity to go from untamed to tamed in just that one turn.

Achy now, I don't bother replacing my shoes as I head down the street, and the newsagent's board outside the shop screams: LONDON MURDERS- MAN QUESTIONED! I whoosh through the gates of our apartment compound, old grey walls offering a masculine sense of protection.

Timmy is furious. 'Where have you been?' He advances, aghast at my messy feet. 'And why the hell are you barefoot? Sort yourself out, woman.'

'I left a message,' I say, defiant. 'My cell phone ran out of gas.'

'You look a right old state. And what are these?' He yanks the flowers out of my hair but continues, 'Some woman called, about a job. You're to call her back. She'll be there all evening.'

I don't bother hiding my conversation from Timmy (from out of nowhere thinking; what kind of grown man calls himself Timmy?) I accept the job. I can start immediately and I can move in tomorrow. I turn and try to do this gently. This setting myself free has to be done in stages, to appease him.

'We can still see each other, but... my independence... I need it...'

He pushes me against the wall oh-so-gently by the shoulders, as is his way.

'I was worried about you...' he supplies.

I laugh, breathing in day-old, expensive cologne. 'Don't worry about me being murdered. He's been caught.'

'That's if they've got the right man.' Timmy says it slowly and stares right through me, animated, and in that few seconds something horrific passes between us, and I see a glimpse of ruthlessness and pure evil darken his burnt chocolate eyes; eyes deeper than a rotten soul. His hands tighten towards my neck almost caressingly, and I close my eyes. I can bluff it. I can make out that I haven't cottoned on to this secret we now share. I know that someone with a background like mine is destined to be damaged. I know that he joined the army because he had nowhere else to go. And I know that he can kill. I open my eyes and that look is gone, and he's calmer, releasing his grip. I know he loves me and it might just save me.

'I'll tame you,' he says.

'What's wild is wild and can't be caught.' I make my way towards the bathroom, to wash the day off.

I'll move out tomorrow. That's if I haven't been murdered.


Copyright©Elaine Rockett