Sunday, 20 December 2015

Qwerty: Adela's Story (extract)

I had a night in last night and whipped up this little chapter, after drinking almost entire bottle of my favourite wine (J.P. Chenet, Merlot, if you are looking for inspiration). It's fresh and unedited (story, not wine), but I thought you may like it (also, it's more adult content...). This is a part of Adela's tale (Qwerty's aunt). Just to give you some context: Qwerty Seymore has just been kicked out on the street by uncle Gibble, Adela's husband, for arguing with a teacher. This is the night the boy meets John White and finds out he is a telekinetic... (see the book: "Qwerty: The History")


Donald & Adela Gibble, Picture by GINO



*
            The main door slammed behind the boy.

            ‘He’ll be back,’ said Donald and saw his wife’s look. It spelled trouble.

            Adela took a deep breath, feeling like she was sinking. The boy was a Seymore, a wretched Seymore, like Matt and David, combined. He wouldn’t be coming back, she knew. And if that wasn’t enough, he may not be able to come back for completely different reasons than the Seymores’ stubborn character.

            ‘He may not,’ she said, firmer than she expected.

            ‘Where else would he go?’ Donald shrugged his shoulders, trying to dismiss the whole thing. ‘He’ll have a walk around, and will be knocking to this door in half an hour…’

            ‘No, he won’t be!’ Adela screamed, almost hysterically, and quickly composed herself, as much as she could. ‘Why didn’t you let me deal with him?’ she asked her husband, less heatedly.

            ‘He deserves a good –,’ he started, but she wouldn’t let him finish.

            ‘It’s not up to you!’

            ‘It is my house! Of course it’s up to me…,’ Donald tried to defend himself, but it was too late. It was one of those things his wife wouldn’t let go. Actually, that little brat was the only thing she wouldn’t let go off. It was terribly frustrating.

            ‘Your house?! It’s our damn house, Donald Gibble, and he lives here!’ Adela put both of her hands on her temples, like she was trying to prevent her head from splitting into half. Donald sighed. He was annoyed and was beginning to think that he had bitten off more than he could chew. No money was worth it. But then… He valued a certain harmony in this house and he needed to maintain it.

            ‘Come on, come to the living room, Adela, and calm down. The little bastard will return after he’s had a good think about stuff. Insulting teachers! And neighbours! He needs a good spanking, if you ask me…’

            Adela Gibble opened her mouth to answer, but at that moment the door opened and Sebastian walked inside. He looked at his parents with a surprise; they were both standing in the hallway, looking like someone had just thrown a bucket of icy water over their heads. That sobered Adela up.

            ‘Go to your room,’ she said to Sebastian, and, like in a dream, followed her husband to the living room, thinking fast.

            Only when the door closed behind her, she allowed herself a quiet outburst.

            ‘You shouldn’t have done it, Donald!’ she let out, almost whispering, agitated. ‘How could you just… just throw him out? I told you I would deal with him!’ she said frantically, almost crying.

            ‘What’s the big deal…?’ started Gibble, but stopped, seeing his wife in such state.

            ‘You don’t get it, do you? You get nothing! He… he may do something… He’s alone… He could…,’ she didn’t finish, pacing up and down the room. Donald watched her with his eyebrows raised; this was new. Adela never lost her nerve like that…

            ‘What is it, Adela? He’ll be fine…’

            ‘No, he won’t  be!’ she yelled again.

            ‘And why do you even care?’

            She looked at him, now taken aback, like he presented her with a red crocodile for dinner.
            
         ‘What? Why do I care?! Because he’s family! He’s my brother’s son! And you kicked him out!’

            ‘Serves him right, and he’ll be –,’

            ‘Back?!’ Adela raised her voice again. ‘Back! He won’t! Oh, my God, he won’t…,’ she said, quieter, slumping on the sofa, now biting her nail. Donald felt things were getting out of control; his wife’s behaviour was a first. All because of that goddamn, little…

            ‘I need to go,’ she said, suddenly getting up. ‘I need to find him!’

            ‘What?! No way! You’re not going to be chasing after him!’

            ‘Yes, I am!’

            ‘No!’

            Adela faced her husband; suddenly her eyes were piercing through his and she seemed… tough.

            ‘You’re not going to tell me what I can and cannot do, Donald Gibble,’ she said quietly; her voice was like a purr of a furious lioness and Donald had to stop himself from taking a step back.

            ‘Adela…,’ he started, but she just waved him off.

            ‘I’m off,’ she said, storming out of the room before Donald was able to stop her. Frenziedly, she searched for her keys, her hands shaking. He followed her back into the hallway.

            ‘Adela, stop!’ he tried to be decisive; for the first time ever he did feel like using force. He fancied locking her up in that living room and, to be perfectly honest, he would prefer the little bastard to never come back. None of it was going to happen, though…

            She must have known what he was thinking somehow, because she paused in her search for keys and once more confronted him. This time he cringed.

            ‘Don’t you try and stop me, Donald, or you will regret it,’ she told him and there was something in her voice that appealed to his deepest instincts. Like he was facing a docile predator, which was now waking up from a hypnotic séance…

            She stared at him for a moment, which seemed to drag into eternity, and then – finally – found her keys somewhere on the bottom of her bag, with a triumphant little cry. Then she grabbed a jacket and ran out quickly, into the night.

*

            John White returned from the Sandbankses’ house a little more shaken than he cared to admit. He knew the boy, of course, he watched him. But seeing and talking to Matthew’s nephew for the first time was difficult. The boy was… He was so normal. Like every other kid. The fact that Matt had fooled everyone and raised him as an ordinary person… This was wrong, and yet…

            However, John had no time to think about it in more depth, because a doorbell rang twice, like someone was in a hurry, pressing it to tell him to move his ass and open the door RIGHT NOW. He wasn’t expecting anyone, though…

John moved like a cat; he soundlessly tip-toed to the nearest window and cautiously glanced outside. When he saw the familiar figure, his big, bushy eyebrows crawled up his forehead, like two old, hairy, wise caterpillars. A thought zoomed through his brain like a cow with a jet engine in its backside – could it be a trap? But he knew this person too well; there was no mistake, alright.

            He opened the door and found himself in front of Adela Gibble, who was standing on his doorstep. That was a sight he never thought he’d live to encounter, although sometimes, even know, he imagined it in the middle of cold, sleepless nights. Not that often these days, true, but still.

            ‘Adela,’ he said, but had no time for anything else.

            ‘May I come in?’ she asked, like it was just formality. He swung the door wider and stepped to the side, letting her in.

            ‘Of course.’

            ‘Where is he?’ she asked; he realised she was shivering.

            ‘Where is who?’

            ‘John,’ she said, in a tone that was too level. ‘I know very well you are involved somehow. Otherwise why would you live here? Tell me where he is. Please.’

            John sighed.

            ‘He’s few houses away, at my friends’ place. The Sandbanks family. He’s alright.’

            ‘What’s the house number?’ she asked, looking even more worried than before.

            ‘He’s fine where he is. I suggest he should stay the night.’

            ‘No, John. You don’t understand. He’s danger to people. He shouldn’t be friends with that girl. He must be –’

            ‘He’s no danger to anyone,’ John interrupted sharply, but then, seeing her expression, he continued in a lighter tone. ‘Besides… They know how to deal with him, if you get my meaning.’

            Adela nodded slowly and then, like something cracked inside her, she hunched slightly. Blinking fast, she moved towards the sofa and sat down heavily, her jacket unbuttoned, her hands trembling. She’d spent last hour and a half driving up and down the estate, trying to find Qwerty, feeling panic gripping her tightly by the throat. Knowing the boy was safe, with people who could control him, was a sudden relief. But it weakened her, and she needed something to get her normal composure back. She needed a fag, badly.

            ‘Could I please have a cigarette?’ she managed, in the end.

            ‘I don’t smoke, Adela,’ reminded her John, coldly.

            She looked up and looked him straight in the eye.

            ‘John White, I know very well that you have a pack of cigarettes stashed somewhere in this house. You will give me one now. Please.’

            John winced a little, but he left the room for a short moment. Adela could hear a drawer in the kitchen sliding. He returned with a pack and offered her a white stick. She accepted it, without giving him another glance. He then produced a lighter and lit it for her.

            She took a deep drag; her fingers shook a little, but it seemed the deep breath, along with tobacco, calmed her down.

            John sighed once more and sat in the armchair, in front of her.

            ‘Do you want something to drink? Water? Coffee?’ he asked, not knowing what else he could say.
            She waved him off, similarly as she had Donald earlier and put the cigarette back in her mouth. John, despite himself, thought she still looked very sexy doing that, but that was a very uncomfortable thing to think, and he tried to focus on the current problems.

            ‘So…,’ he started, but didn’t finish, because she glared at him in such a way that the words refused to come out any further.

            ‘I know what you’re going to say. How could I, and so on. Save it.’

            ‘I wasn’t gonna say this. But since you’ve brought it up… You could be a little nicer to him, you know. And he definitely shouldn’t be alone on the streets…’

            Adela looked around, searching for an ashtray. One materialised in John’s hand and Adela pulled a face, but in the end disregarded it, like it didn’t matter, and dropped some ashes into the dish.

            ‘Donald… kicked him out. He hates him. Just like he did Dave…,’ she said, but with the last word her voice broke slightly, and she cleared her throat, at the same time taking the last, deep, long drag.

            John said nothing, because if he did, he’d make a snarky comment about Gibble and that was not going to lead this conversation anywhere good.

            ‘I know what you’re thinking, John. And you’re right,’ she sighed, and she reached for another cigarette. John knew to leave the pack on the table, close to her. It saved her asking. ‘But I can’t…,’ she had some difficulty with words now, like the right ones were deliberately hiding in a deep, black forest. He passed the lighter to her again and the tip of the cigarette shone red. ‘It’s difficult, John,’ she stated in the end.

            All he wanted was to come closer and wrap his shoulder around her, but then remembered how she’d treated him, and that she’d married Gibble, and how he was still angry with her.

            ‘And yet you agreed to take him in,’ he said, perhaps harsher than he wanted. ‘You know where he’d be otherwise.’

            ‘He’s not going to join you and your precious Brentwood,’ she replied immediately, now completely composed, her hand steady, a steel gleam in her eye. That was exactly how Matt had looked like at times…

            ‘Keep him in, then,’ he answered, without thinking much.

            ‘I intend to. But he’s… he’s like Matt,’ she said angrily; she couldn’t help herself. She knew John was judging her, and she knew he condemned her for everything that happened tonight… She had no right to be here, sitting on his sofa and smoking his cigarettes. But she needed to talk to him, regardless. She needed someone who knew about stuff, even if it meant John White.

            ‘Not sure. And even if that’s true, is this such a bad thing?’ he asked.

            Adela pursed her lips and, ignoring his remark, said:

            ‘He needs to be under control. My family… They’re not safe anymore.’

            ‘You and your family are safe. I guarantee it,’ said John, as politely as he could. But she just scoffed in his general direction; the second cigarette he’d lit for her was now considerably shorter.

            ‘It was going fine, until he arrived. I know what’s going on, John. Tell Collard I expect him to stick to his part of the deal. And if he doesn’t, there will be consequences. For all of us.’

            This time John looked surprised.

            ‘How do you know about Collard?’

            Adela smiled bitterly and stabbed the second cigarette in an ashtray, now containing a fair amount of grey ash. She was going through them like it was ice dropped into a volcano.

            ‘You didn’t think my father, and then Matt, left me with no means to protect myself and my kids, did you?’ she stood up, straightening her jacket. She pulled herself together now, enough to confront her problems. ‘If you say my nephew’s safe, I believe you. He is fine for tonight, isn’t he?’ she looked at him expectantly and he nodded. ‘Fine. Donald or I will pick him up tomorrow after school…,’ she paused and frowned more than before. ‘It’s so… overwhelming. Even though he doesn’t know of his… curse,’ she added and John moved uncomfortably, also getting up, trying to mask his uneasiness.

            She noticed immediately.

            ‘John White?’

            ‘He does now. We told him,’ he admitted, glancing at her, expecting an explosion.

            ‘You did what?’ she didn’t exactly snap; it was worse. She was staring at him like he was the worst person in the world, which, really, was totally unfair, given that it was Donald Gibble who had kicked the boy out on the street. 

            ‘He would've found out soon anyway. We told him. He needs to defend himself and –’

            ‘Son of a bitch,’ said Adela to the world in general. She wanted to do worse, but refrained from shouting; it was all her fault, of course. She should’ve never let Donald deal with the boy. On reflection, she shouldn’t have even told him about the whole episode… But Donald would've found out sooner or later, and then he’d freak out anyway…

            ‘I don’t think I deserve –,’ started John, but she only gave him another hot look and he closed his mouth. When she spoke, her voice was cold like an iceberg. He’d never seen Adela like this.

            ‘I hope, for all our sakes, that he can control his temper,’ she said slowly. ‘And that you, Collard and the rest of your band can keep those damn bastards at bay. I swear to you, John White, if my children, my husband or my nephew as much as lose a hair because of the old fucker, there will be trouble. Do you believe me, John?’

            He nodded. He did.

            ‘Good,’ she exhaled. ‘Look after him, your way, and make sure he doesn’t do anything stupid… And I shall never use my… inheritance. You can pass it on to Collard, if you wish,’ she added. ‘I’ll walk myself out,’ she said, now rushing towards the exit.

            John looked at her, stunned. He’d never expect… this. And he wasn’t exactly sure what she was talking about. Inheritance?

            ‘Adela, wait…,’ he said, wanting to say something comforting, but this was no use. She only stopped in the door and added firmly, in a quiet tone, so only he could hear her.

            ‘Oh, and tell Collard… Tell him arrangements have been made, for all eventualities. I was once a Seymore, after all …,’ she added, and, without a good-bye, she slammed the door in front of his face and rushed to her car. John watched her through the window and waited until she drove off, unable to react any other way.


            ‘You still are,’ he said in the end, turning to look at the ashtray.

"Qwerty: The History" is now available here: 

Kindle (free for Kindle Unlimited)



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