by Alison Whitehead (c) 2003
      
Goodbye
      
"Hello. I've come to say goodbye." Hamish was
      standing on the doorstep.
      
Emma stared at him and stepped back with a sigh of
      irritation.
      
"You'd better come in."
      
He stood nervously on the tiled floor of the big hall.
      Sunshine picked out the patterns in the tiles and emphasised the colours
      of the flowers on the table. He looked at the girl.
      
"I'm going away tomorrow."
      
"Yes."
      
"I thought I'd better say goodbye." It was the
      first time he'd seen her since the evening, half a year ago, when he'd
      asked her to marry him.
      
"Arthur's not here."
      
"It was you I wanted to say goodbye to, not - your
      husband." He still had difficulty accepting that she was a married
      woman, settled in this big house.
      
She was watching him. He was embarrassed and had to drop
      his gaze. That was more embarrassing because her body was as fascinating
      as ever. Her perfect breasts were lightly supported so their shape was
      evident beneath the heavy silk blouse. The gold stripes framed the imprint
      of her nipples. He was thankful that the long skirt concealed her legs.
      
He swallowed and said, "You've got your hair pinned
      up." The fatuousness of this remark made him blush.
      
She smiled and touched the plaited crown of silver-gold
      hair. "Arthur likes me to be tidy."
      
The last time Hamish had seen it, her hair had been free,
      tangled by the wind. It had framed her face as she raged at him. Now she
      was tamed, her lips and eyelids touched with make-up.
      
The light in the hallway changed as a cloud passed over
      the sun. Shadow washed the colour from her face and from the blouse, and
      then she blazed in splendour as the sun came out again. He saw her blink
      and screw her eyes against the light. She turned as though to lead him
      from the hall into some room more suited to a social visit. Then she
      turned back, as fierce as she had been six months before.
      
"Why couldn't you keep away? There's nothing more to
      say. It's finished. Can't you understand?"
      
"I felt I ought to say goodbye."
      
She was so close to him that he could smell her perfume,
      light and fragrant. Her face was ugly with anger. "You're always so
      bloody correct! Doing what you ought to do! Your whole family's the same.
      Duty! I didn't want to fall in love with some kind of machine that simply
      did its duty."
      
He felt the blood drain from his face and the pain of her
      condemnation gouge at his stomach. He should never have come, like a moth
      to a candle, to have his wings scorched once again. He stepped back,
      turning, seeking the door and escape.
      
"I did love you. I still do," he said.
      
She cut him off before he could move more than a couple
      of steps.
      
"You didn't love me enough to stay," she said,
      bitterly. "Your bloody duty - your career came first. That's not
      enough for me. I want a man who'll live with me and love me - not some
      untouchable hero, off exploring the Empire. I can't make do with loving a
      photograph on a piano."
      
The injustice triggered his anger. "It's nothing to
      do with heroism or Empire. You knew I was going on this expedition.
      Geology's not something you do in an office - not the sort of geology I
      want to do. I thought you knew how I felt and were prepared to share it
      with me?"
      
"How can I share? You're going off for three years
      in the Antarctic - men only. No! Boys only, playing boy's games. And you
      expected me to wait for you. Doing what? Living in a nunnery? I'm
      twenty-one and I need love - the love a man can give me."
      
Now, the justice of her attack made him feel guilty and
      he tried to hit back. "I thought you felt the same about wild places
      - loved the open air." He gestured round the grand house. "Emma
      - this isn't you."
      
She was contemptuous of his pathetic retort. "You
      forfeited any right to criticise me. I'm married now. We've both made our
      choices."
      
Then he saw her anger crumple and she looked down at the
      patterns of sunlight on the tiles. "It's all too late. You should
      never have come here."
      
He saw a tear slide down the flat curve of her cheek.
      
"Why didn't you just fuck me?" Her voice was
      bleak. "I wasn't a virgin. It would have solved everything if you
      had. I'd have had to wait then - or you'd have had to stay. But your
      bloody sense of honour got in the way." She turned away and he saw
      more tears follow the first.
      
Her sudden coarseness and the tears shocked him. He
      realised that her pain matched his own and he wanted to comfort her.
      Instinct made him reach out as she turned away in despair. Her breasts
      suddenly filled his hands. They stood, frozen, shocked at the intimate
      contact. He felt her nipples stiffen against his palms. Horrified, he felt
      his penis stiffen against her thigh.
      
"Hamish!" It was a groan of despair mingled
      with desire as she turned against him, grinding her belly against his
      arousal. Her cheeks were blushing and, glancing at the open neck of her
      blouse, he saw the spread of colour darkening her chest. Fascinated, he
      reached to touch her throat and see if the heat of her skin matched the
      rising flush. Her fingers brushed his as she released the top button. The
      white edge of her bra was thrilling in contrast to flushed skin and the
      sumptuous colour of the blouse. Her fingers undid a second button and his
      control broke. He forced fingers beneath white lace, desperate to feel the
      solid curve of naked flesh and the thrusting nipple. The blouse yielded
      and a button rattled across the tiles, emphasising their silence. Her
      fingers finished undoing the buttons and she wriggled blouse and straps
      from her shoulders. As she bared herself, he bent her back so his lips
      could join his excited fingers to learn the shape and texture of those
      exquisite breasts.
      
Her ragged breathing revealed her abandonment to his
      will. It was as if the last six months had never been. As his fingers
      sought for more, she whispered, "Upstairs!"
      
She nestled against him as he carried her. Only the
      hollow clack of one of her shoes and then the other falling onto the tiles
      marked their progress.
      
He laid her on her married bed, still unmade and marked
      with the imprint of two bodies. Intimate possessions were everywhere,
      intimidating him. She raised her hips and pushed skirt and underclothes
      into an untidy heap on the floor. Glancing round the room as she wriggled
      out of blouse and bra, she said, "Get undressed. Don't worry about
      anything else. There are only the two of us here now."
      
The unguarded declaration and her dazzling nakedness
      sparked him to action. She laughed as he struggled out of his clothes.
      
"I won't run away," she giggled and his heart
      lifted at her gaiety. Her beauty made him forget guilt and honour and
      duty. His irresistible desire drove him into her body without
      preliminaries.
      
"Wait! You're so big." She moved beneath him
      and he felt her moisten and then liquefy.
      
"Now!" She placed his hands on her breasts.
      "Fuck me!"
      
Her body was an enchantment for his hands and eyes and
      penis. He'd had no woman since he met her and wanted her a year ago.
      Enchantment became concern and then alarm, as he doubted his ability to
      keep control. Emma seemed unmoved, her eyes closed, not responding to his
      urgent thrusts. At last, she seemed to sense his crisis and her hands
      tensed on his back. She opened her eyes, smiled and then breathed,
      "Don't stop. Oh, please don't stop. Oh, Hamish!"
      
She arched to meet him, holding herself rigid while her
      hands urged him into her. He almost forgot himself as she cried out and
      writhed against him, using legs and arms and fingers to urge and control,
      to hurt and to soothe. His own climax was the most intense he'd ever
      known. As he spent and spent again, groaning with effort, she met him with
      her own small cries, encouraging him to one more effort and then more. At
      last, they finished and lay, shaking and exhausted among the tangled
      sheets.
      
It was half an hour before he felt her move, rousing them
      from a blissful drowse. Propped on her elbow, she looked down at him, her
      breasts hanging in perfect tantalizing curves. Strands of hair had come
      loose and he reached up to unpin the rest. Together, they spread it over
      her shoulders and breasts. As he looked at her, he realised at last, all
      that he was giving up.
      
"I love you," he told her.
      
"Enough?" She was very solemn, looking down
      into his eyes.
      
"Enough?" he echoed, puzzled.
      
"Enough to take me away from here. Will you do that?
      We can go away and be together all the time."
      
He didn't believe her at first. He thought of his family
      and hers. Her husband and his family. And friends and ...
      
"No! Emma! How could we?"
      
"Easily. I've got a car. We could simply go. Why
      not?"
      
He looked at her in horror. She had pitched him from the
      comfortable aftermath of his most profound sexual experience into some
      bizarre gypsy escapade. It would have been terrifying if it hadn't been so
      ludicrous - a musical comedy pursuit by her outraged husband.
      
He got up and searched vaguely for his clothes. "I'd
      better go."
      
She slipped the blouse on and pulled it round her. Her
      hand cupped her chin and she shook her head slowly. "Hamish, if you
      weren't such a simple idiot, I wouldn't love you so much." She stood
      close to him, her eyes bright with tears. "Would you really run away
      with me?"
      
He hesitated a little and then said, "If you really
      wanted. Yes!" He dropped his shirt and pulled her against him. The
      hard points of her breasts stabbed him and her round thighs pressed
      against his. "Oh yes!" he breathed and kissed her for the first
      time that day.
      
"And how long would you love me - your runaway? A
      month? A year? Your sense of duty would tear you apart - me with it."
      She pushed him away and stared through the window. "Why is it so
      impossible? If only things were different. I wish I'd never met you!"
      
"Emma, I'm sorry."
      
She came back to him, smiling a little. "Are you?
      I'm not really sorry. And I don't really wish I'd never met you, but I
      think you'd better go."
      
She stood by the door watching him dress. He came to her,
      carrying his jacket, his face pale. He was very close to tears. She
      reached out to tidy his hair and his resolution fled. He took her in his
      arms and they struggled to disentangle the blouse. At last she was naked
      again, his hands moving urgently on her waist while she fumbled with his
      belt.
      
"Again!" she demanded, finding him hard and
      ready.
      
"Yes!" He lifted her on tiptoes so he could
      enter her. They stood locked together, grinning.
      
"How?" she wanted to know.
      
He pushed her shoulders back against the door, placed his
      hands beneath the firm mounds of her bottom and lifted. Her legs stretched
      round him and she locked her ankles.
      
"Like that?" He looked down at her swollen
      lips, parted to enfold his penis.
      
She followed his stare and giggled. "That's good. I
      feel wanton and very sexy. Can you push?"
      
He pushed.
      
"Gently," she begged. "This door's
      hard."
      
He padded her shoulders with his arm and began to thrust.
      She pushed her hands beneath his shirt to hold herself against him. Her
      arousal mounted quickly and she encouraged his efforts with moans and
      kisses and sharp fingers until she writhed against him, begging, "Let
      me down. Please, I can't stand any more."
      
She slid through his arms until her tiptoes reached the
      floor. Reaching down, she slid his penis from her. He felt bereft until
      she turned and put her hands against the door. Her bottom wriggled as she
      spread her legs and the pink opening among pale hairs invited him to
      enter.
      
The heat and slippery tightness of her vagina and the
      feel of her firm buttocks beneath his hands excited him to a groaning
      climax.
      
"Come back to bed," he urged, as they stood,
      panting.
      
"No!" Her eyes were wide with panic. "The
      vicar was supposed to be coming ... what time is it?"
      
The distant crunch of tires on gravel confirmed her
      alarm.
      
He watched in astonishment as she whirled round the room.
      Her fingers fastened the blouse, hesitating at the place where he had torn
      a button loose. She shrugged and went on to the next button. Her
      underclothes flew in all directions as she shook her skirt free and
      stepped into it. Her glorious hair resisted the hasty strokes of the brush
      and she straightened it with her fingers. Breathless, she stood before him
      for approval.
      
"Will I do?"
      
"Just about." He pulled her blouse closed.
      
They stared at each other for a moment, hesitating on the
      shore of separation.
      
"Remember me," he told her.
      
"Remember me to Santa Claus! Go down the back
      way."
      
He stood at the top of the stairs and watched her run
      down. She paused twice in the hall to step into her shoes and then she
      clacked across the tiles and vanished from his sight. Voices echoed up to
      him, but she was gone.
      
 
      
Christmas Eve
      
"Bye you two. I'll see you again in six
      weeks." The pilot slammed the door of the bright orange ski plane.
      
They had to turn away and shield their faces from the
      snow blown up by the propellers as the aircraft gathered speed down the
      glacier and soared into the pale blue sky.
      
"Alpha-Papa is airborne," Ian reported to base.
      "He should be with you in two hours."
      
Hamish waited until Ian packed the radio set away.
      "Let's sort out these supplies before we settle down to read our
      mail."
      
Ian looked regretfully at the packet of letters, weighted
      down with a large rock. "I suppose I can wait another couple of
      hours, since I've been waiting for nine months already. You haven't got a
      fiancee waiting."
      
Hamish was already moving the first box from the untidy
      heap in the snow onto the edge of the rocky nunatak that stuck out from
      the glacier. Ian reluctantly picked up the next box and followed, his
      boots sinking deep into the soft snow.
      
The worked in silence for an hour until at last, Ian
      piled the last couple of rocks onto the heap of boxes. He wiped sweat off
      his face and said, "There you are. Six weeks rations for men and dogs
      in the depot."
      
"We'll finish loading the sledges, then you can read
      your mail," Hamish said. "We can have tomorrow off, though it
      doesn't feel like Christmas Day."
      
"It'll seem strange to be idle when the weather's
      good. The dogs'll be pleased though. They haven't had much rest these last
      six weeks." Eighteen Husky dogs lay tethered in two long lines,
      content to be idle.
      
An hour later, it was still light enough to read, but the
      cold had driven them into the faded yellow pyramid of the tent.
      
"Fancy a concert?" Hamish passed an advertising
      flyer across the tent to Ian.
      
The mail was spread around the cluttered space, competing
      with sleeping bags and food, clothes and geological specimens, notebooks
      and a plane table, cameras and the radio.
      
"Mozart's not my cup of tea - and this was six
      months ago. Haven't you got anything more exciting?"
      
"My mother's keen to keep me informed of all the
      family doings." Hamish sighed. "Seven letters, averaging about
      twenty pages each. They'll keep me going for a bit. Father sent me a
      couple of notes to tell me that mother's writing. My sister's been to
      Venice - if her postcard is to be believed. How about you?"
      
"About the same, though Mum and Dad have been taking
      it in turns. Marion's written a couple of letters..."
      
"Oh. Is she coping?"
      
"I suppose so. I wonder if we should have got
      engaged. It seemed rather important at the time. But now..."
      
"I know how you feel. I asked someone to marry me.
      But she wouldn't wait. She's not even written."
      
"You never told me." Ian was startled. They'd
      told each other most of their life histories in six months of sledging
      together. In this harsh Antarctic world, their lives depended on mutual
      trust.
      
Hamish shrugged and opened one last letter without much
      interest. It was in a large brown envelope with a typed address and
      contained two sheets of plain card and between them, a photograph.
      
"What's up?" Ian was concerned at the startled
      cry from across the tent. Hamish was sitting up, straining towards the
      light to see a photograph more clearly.
      
Hamish passed the black-and-white studio photograph
      across. "Don't get dirty marks on it."
      
Ian whistled in awe. The girl had been photographed
      seated, her hair loose down her back and shoulders, a striped blouse
      subtly revealing a delightful figure. "Bee-you-ti-ful. That hair!
      Those ... Ahem. Is she - a friend? Oh! The one who wouldn't wait?"
      
Hamish took the picture back and turned it over.
      "Emma," he said. "She's called Emma. Yes."
      
Ian was concerned at Hamish's distraction. "The
      baby's pretty too." He wasn't good at sexing babies, but the one in
      the girl's lap looked no more ugly than any other. He guessed that made it
      female. Personally he preferred Husky puppies.
      
"It's a boy, called Michael." Hamish was
      looking at the back of the photograph where the name was written with a
      date. He was counting. It was hard for anyone as sunburned as Hamish to go
      pale, but he did.
      
"You OK?"
      
"I think so."
      
"I'll make some cocoa." Ian was out of his
      depth. A hot sweet drink was the best that he could think of in the
      circumstances.
      
 
      
Midwinter
      Early July was the worst part of the year. There was no
      sun even at midday. Cold and wind made any outside job a hazardous chore.
      Hamish and Doc were feeding dogs. With nearly eighty to look after, it
      took a long time, even if they only paused to throw a block of dried meat
      to each howling animal. And Hamish often stopped to fuss his favourites.
      At last they were done and paused for a moment before retreating to the
      comfort of the little hut and their ten human companions. Doc flung back
      the hood of his parka. His huge black beard was matted with frost where
      his breath had frozen. He looked across the frozen expanse of Marguerite
      Bay to the jagged mountains of Graham Land. A faint waving curtain of
      green light dimmed the stars.
      
"Aurora," Doc pointed.
      
"Aye." It was a commonplace here, but still
      difficult to comprehend.
      
The dogs had settled to gnaw the blocks of meat, which
      were as cold as if they'd come from a freezer. On a clear day like this,
      temperatures rarely got above zero Fahrenheit, even near the sea.
      
The hut door opened and a beam of yellow light from one
      of the paraffin lamps lit the snow. A third man joined them.
      
"Hello, Chey. Any news?" The regular radio
      schedule with the Falkland Islands was due.
      
"That you, Doc?" Chey peered in the gloom. The
      big black beard was unmistakable.
      
"What's up?" It must be something serious to
      bring the radio operator out of his warm shack to find them.
      
"I wanted to catch you two alone. There's a message
      you ought to see."
      
"What, an official message?" As base leader,
      Hamish was as close to authority as anyone for a thousand miles.
      
"No - its personal. A 'Dear John' letter."
      
"Oh shit! Who for?"
      
"Ian."
      
"Hell!"
      
"Bloody women!"
      
"Come on!" Hamish led the way back to the hut.
      "Let's have a look before I break the bad news." He turned to
      the radio operator. "Chey, go and dig up a couple of bottles of
      whisky - we're all going to need cheering up and Ian might want to get
      drunk."
      
------
      
The three of them packed into the little room that served
      as base office and radio shack. Even without their outdoor clothes they
      were bulky in heavy sweaters and thick trousers stuffed into boots. The
      bottles of whisky stood on the table, white with frost.
      
Hamish read the pencilled telegram that Chey had written
      down from Morse code, crackling over a thousand miles from the Falkland
      Islands - the final leg in the relay from England.
      
"Dear Ian," he read. "You will be
      surprised to hear that I am to be married. I have known Dave for several
      months and we have fallen in love. I am sure that you will release me from
      our engagement when you know how happy Dave and I are. I hope you are well
      and enjoying your time down South. Kind regards, Marion."
      
They sat in silence for a while. Doc got up and beckoned
      to Chey. They picked up the frozen whisky bottles with care. There was no
      point in getting frostbitten fingers. "Come on. We'll send the victim
      in to read his fate. At least she didn't maunder on."
      
"The cost of telegrams puts them off," Chey was
      cynical. "You'd think women would use a bit of imagination. These
      telegrams are always the same. I don't suppose they realise how many
      people read them on the way."
      
"They probably imagine they're the only ones it
      happens to," Hamish mused. "Don't be too hard on Marion. I met
      her once. She was only nineteen. I don't expect she'd any idea what it
      meant to wait for three years."
      
Hamish sat waiting for his friend, thinking about Emma.
      She'd been wise enough to know her limitations.
      
------
      
Ian took it well. Three tots of whisky stiffened him and
      ribald comments from the other two men who had suffered the same fate
      consoled him. He even volunteered for the final, purging ritual.
      
All twelve men were out on the shore, muffled in
      windproof clothes, breath steaming in the torchlight. Marion had been led
      out and propped against a boulder. Hamish warily slid three cartridges
      into the old revolver and gave it to the jilted lover. Alcohol, darkness
      and live ammunition were a lethal mixture, but the ritual was hallowed.
      The first bullet vanished without trace. The second ricocheted alarmingly
      off the rock a foot from Marion's head. Ian took a few paces forward and
      winged the girl with his final shot.
      
Hamish took the revolver. "Honour's satisfied,"
      he said. "We can't spare any more ammunition." The gun provided
      a merciful end for suffering dogs.
      
Ian retrieved the shattered photograph and examined his
      handiwork. Marion still smiled despite the hole in the frame.
      
"Sod it!" Ian observed, but Hamish didn't know
      whether he meant his marksmanship or Marion's faithlessness.
      
------
      
"He took it well." Hamish poured them each
      another tot of brandy from the medical stores. The office and radio shack
      was also the surgery - the one private place where he could talk to the
      Doc.
      
"They usually do. Not much choice is there?"
      Doc was pensive.
      
"Do you worry about Annie?"
      
"What?" Doc grinned. "Her dumping me for
      someone else? No. We've been married six years and the two girls keep her
      settled. But its times like this I miss her - and them! At least I'm only
      here for a year, not like you daft buggers, down for three."
      
They sat quietly for a while; content that Ian's crisis
      had been resolved, like a hundred others. When there was trouble they had
      no resources but their own.
      
"Doc?"
      
"Hmm?"
      
"How long's gestation?"
      
"Nine weeks," Doc's answer was pat.
      
Hamish smiled. Most of the patients here were dogs.
      
"No. Human."
      
"You don't need to know. There isn't a woman for a
      thousand miles and you've been away from any for so long that it can't
      matter now."
      
"Please."
      
"Forty weeks. But two weeks either way is normal
      term." Doc was suddenly alert. "Why do you want to know?"
      
Hamish unlocked the filing cabinet and took out the
      photograph. Doc looked at it with appreciation for a while, then turned it
      over.
      
"Ah! I see." He turned it back and studied the
      girl and baby again. "Forty plus or minus two doesn't help much, does
      it? I see from the ring that she's a married woman. But if you're counting
      weeks then there must be a possibility?"
      
Hamish blushed.
      
"I've misjudged you, Hamish," Doc grinned.
      "You're a better bloke than I thought."
      
"What? Because I once took advantage of Emma?"
      
"No, because you never boasted about it. I used to
      think you were a cold fish, entirely dedicated to your career. But maybe
      there's hope for you after all."
      
 
      
Funeral
      
The church had been so full that Hamish had not tried to
      get inside. The first time he caught a glimpse of Emma was when she
      followed the coffin to the grave. A small veil concealed her face and her
      hair was shorter, but the body looked disturbingly unchanged by thirty
      years. He stayed half-hidden against the church wall while the obsequies
      were carried out at the graveside.
      
Arthur's obituary in the Times had been the spur for his
      presence, but he had no idea how he was to get a moment with Emma. He only
      knew that he had to see her.
      
His hip was painful with standing and he found a seat on
      the lid of a lichen-covered monument. From there he could see in the
      distance the back of Emma's house, and the gate through which he'd escaped
      after their last fleeting farewell. The sun was warm and he felt content
      to wait upon events.
      
"Are you Hamish?" The child's silvery hair
      reminded him of Emma's, long ago. She was a beautiful thing, about six or
      seven years old, half buried in a coat for mourning.
      
"That's me." He clambered down and bowed.
      
She curtsied back and grinned. "I'm Jennifer,"
      she disclosed. "Grandma sent me to make sure you came back to the
      house. There's lot's to eat."
      
"Thank you." A possibility stunned him.
      "Who's your daddy?"
      
She stood on tiptoe to find him among the crowd. A crowd
      besieged the tall figure that she pointed out.
      
"What's your daddy's name?"
      
She was puzzled for a moment, but then she understood and
      offered, "He's called Michael Frith."
      
He wanted to take her in his arms - but then, she might
      not be his granddaughter.
      
"I've seen your picture in the papers. Grandma has a
      book with cuttings in it."
      
"Are there many pictures?" It was flattering to
      think that Emma had followed his career. But he felt guilty too. Although
      he'd often thought of her, he'd never tried to find out what she was
      doing.
      
"Lots. She says you've been everywhere in the
      world."
      
He smiled at her. "Quite a few places."
      
"Will you tell me about them?"
      
He was touched. "If you want."
      
"They're going now. If you come with me we can cut
      through the fields to the house."
      
He hesitated, gauging the distance.
      
"You had an accident." She was sympathetic as
      he limped alongside her. "It was on television."
      
It had been a dramatic three-day wonder when he had
      smashed his thigh and been rescued from the mountain in the full glare of
      television. The news had gone by satellite link, but his broken body had
      taken two weeks to get to hospital and they had taken three months to bolt
      him back together. Now his adventuring days were over and he could barely
      keep up with a little girl in a walk across a meadow
      
------
      
The house was crowded and he tried to make himself
      invisible, nursing a drink and hoping for a glimpse of Emma. It was
      difficult not to overhear conversations.
      
...
      
"Arthur died of a heart attack in bed with one of
      his mistresses."
      
"No!"
      
...
      
"Emma's taking it very well."
      
"Glad to be shut of the old goat, I expect. He led
      her a merry dance. I don't know why she stayed."
      
"All the money was his."
      
"He used to spend a fortune on his other women. She
      deserves all she can get."
      
...
      
"Grandma's in the study. She'd like to talk to
      you." Jennifer startled him with a small hot hand in his. She led him
      through the multitudes of relatives and friends, across the tiles of the
      hall and into a quiet panelled room.
      
Emma was alone. "Thank you, Jenny. Will you go and
      find your daddy? Tell him where we are."
      
The torrent of emotion left Hamish weak. It was
      impossible that he could feel like this after thirty years, but in this
      light she seemed unchanged.
      
"You've cut your hair."
      
She smiled and touched the grey curls that fell against
      her shoulders. "Arthur liked me to be tidy. It was easier this
      way."
      
Sunlight flooded through the window as a cloud passed. He
      saw her blink, and screw her eyes against the light.
      
"I'm glad you didn't keep away. We've got a lot to
      catch up on, haven't we?"
      
"I felt I ought to come." He grinned at her.
      
"Your bloody duty, I suppose," she teased him,
      smiling. He was delighted that she remembered their last conversation as
      well as he did.
      
"I still love you."
      
"And now you can't go away," she indicated his
      leg. "Sit down."
      
He sat in the settee opposite her chair.
      
"And then, I said something about the choices that
      we'd made." Emma pulled a wry face. "We neither of us seem to
      have made a great success of marriage. Things were difficult with Arthur
      these last ten years."
      
"And I found out on three occasions that women
      didn't like being left at home while I went adventuring."
      
"Three times?" Emma wrinkled her brow. "I
      knew you'd been divorced twice."
      
"I count you in the three."
      
She laughed out loud. "I knew my limitations. But
      your career was a great success."
      
"I suppose so, but I'm a fossil now. I'm a low-tech
      man in a high-tech world, becoming an embarrassment to the youngsters.
      After my accident they can put me out to grass with a clear
      conscience."
      
"And I'm the grass you're to be put out to? Is that
      the idea? I think we'd just come to the matter of fucking in our previous
      conversation."
      
"Emma! You shocked me then, you know."
      
"Shock didn't stop you putting your hand down my
      blouse."
      
"I've never forgotten. Did you ever find the
      button?"
      
"From the burgundy blouse? No."
      
"Burgundy? It was green. Chartreuse. I used to joke
      about your boozy blouses."
      
"Nonsense. I wore the green one the day you wanted
      to marry me. You tore the burgundy one off me the day we fucked. I've
      still got it." She got up and opened a drawer in a tall cabinet.
      Tissue paper scattered from the box as she came to sit beside him. The
      blouse smelled a little musty as she shook it out and held it against her.
      "There," she said. "I replaced the button. I couldn't find
      a match."
      
"It was the third button that I burst. I remember
      you undoing two. You drove me wild! But you've replaced the second button
      on this blouse. Did you keep it to remember me?"
      
"I didn't need a blouse to remember you with. But I
      kept it anyway, for sentiment. There's never been a day when I didn't
      think of you."
      
"I still feel the same about you."
      
Her hand lightly brushed his trousers. "So you
      do." She took his hand and cupped it to her breast. "I want you
      too, just as I did then. Odd, isn't it, after thirty years."
      
He kissed her, feeling her nipple stiffen. Her perfume
      was the same light flower scent, triggering memory. His desire rose and
      her tongue responded.
      
"Emma?"
      
"Where are you staying?"
      
"The Izaak. But..."
      
There was a knock and they sprang apart as Michael came
      in.
      
"Excuse me, Mum. Jenny said you didn't want to be
      disturbed, but people are beginning to go and they want to say
      goodbye."
      
"Jenny is wise beyond her years. This is
      Hamish."
      
Michael shook hands, looking puzzled. Then realisation
      dawned. "Of course. I don't think I've ever seen your picture without
      a beard. It's very nice to meet you. I didn't know you were a friend of
      father's."
      
"I'm an old friend of your mother's."
      
Emma stood up and shook Hamish's hand. "It's been
      lovely to meet you again. I must go and do my duty."
      
 
      
Revelation
      
Michael watched the old explorer limp down the drive. He
      was curious about his presence at the funeral. He'd seemed so intimate
      with mother.
      
"Come and see!" Jenny tugged at his hand.
      
"What, dear?" He was distracted, but his small
      daughter was urgent. She led him back into the little room off the hall
      that was mother's private study.
      
"Grandma was showing me a story about that man who's
      just left." She tugged at a drawer then looked at her father in
      frustration.
      
He turned the key and lifted out the book. He squatted so
      that Jenny could turn the pages. "See!" she said. "I
      remember it on television."
      
She prattled on while he leafed through the pages,
      dumbfounded at the quantity of paper. Newspaper cuttings, magazine
      articles and even papers from scientific journals had been gathered here.
      But why?
      
The heavy book slipped from Jenny's small grip and he
      caught it awkwardly. An envelope slipped from behind a cutting and
      fluttered to the floor. As Jenny gave it to him, he saw that it was
      unsealed, dusty and spotted with small marks of age. 'My Darling Hamish,'
      he read.
      
"Go and find your Auntie Marjorie. See if she needs
      you to help her with anything." Jenny was awed by her father's
      seriousness and left without protest.
      
As he read the thirty-year-old love letter it seemed that
      his whole existence was being delicately rearranged. He needed to escape
      from the house and the responsibility of pretending grief for his father's
      death. He could abandon that duty to his sisters. At least their grief
      seemed real and Arthur was their father.
      
 
      
Escape
      
The light was fading in the hall, and the gay pattern of
      the tiles merged into obscurity. Most people had gone, content that the
      conventions had been observed and that Arthur had been delivered to the
      afterlife of memory.
      
Emma was restless and irresolute. The brief meeting with
      Hamish had left her desperate to be with him again and continue where they
      had left off. The intervening thirty years seemed an irrelevance, except
      that Arthur's preoccupation with order and the observance of convention
      still kept her chained. Her two daughters were their father's children and
      would never understand a violent desecration of his standards. Michael was
      far more intelligent, but even he might have his limits. She loved him so
      much that she would never dare to risk losing his affection. But, on the
      other hand, she could not let Hamish forgo the acknowledgement of his only
      child.
      
She bit a nail in frustration. There were even practical
      problems. She could hardly walk into the local hotel where she was known,
      ask for a man's room and spend the night with him. It would certainly
      excite some comment, especially on the night of her husband's funeral.
      
"Mummy, there's a very odd thing in the donations
      tray - just a business card without a cheque - from someone called Hamish
      McLeod belonging to some Antarctic thing." Her youngest daughter
      turned the card over. "It's got '204' pencilled on the back. Do you
      think he means to donate two hundred and four pounds?"
      
"I doubt it, Celia. Throw it in the bin. It must be
      a mistake."
      
"Where are you going Mummy? There are still heaps of
      people about."
      
"Look after them for me, dear, please. I really must
      go and lie down."
      
"Oh, all right. It's been a beastly day for
      you." Celia bent to kiss her. "Where did you find that blouse,
      Mummy? It smells a bit musty and one of the buttons doesn't match."
      
"Oh, it'll be all right. I won't keep it on for
      long, I expect."
      
"Will you come down for dinner?"
      
"I won't bother. Make my excuses, please. Tell
      everyone I've gone to bed."
      
------
      
It was almost dark when Emma sneaked towards the garage.
      Rhododendrons screened her from the house. Her heart was pounding with
      excitement.
      
She skipped a few steps, singing, "Hamish,
      Hamish."
      
"Going somewhere?"
      
"Michael! You scared the life out of me. What are
      you doing, lurking out here?"
      
"Waiting for you."
      
"What for?"
      
"Jenny showed me your book of cuttings about
      Hamish."
      
"I like to interest her in things."
      
"There are a lot of cuttings - a biography. There
      was a letter too."
      
"An old letter to Hamish?"
      
She could make out his nod, but not see his face well
      enough to know his mood. "Come in the light where I can see
      you."
      
He chuckled and she sagged against him with relief.
      "I wouldn't want to delay you. But you might want to give him the
      letter. It's very loving."
      
"I never dared to send it. I sent him a photograph
      of you, sitting on my lap. Are you all right?"
      
"I'm getting used to it. It's a shock. Did father
      know? I suppose I'll have to stop calling him 'father'"
      
"He'd never have forgiven me. It was all right for
      him to fuck around, but I had to stay faithful. I had you, to make up for
      everything." She hugged him.
      
"Am I going to get to know Hamish?"
      
"You certainly will, unless you avoid me completely.
      I'm not going to let him go this time. You'd better like him!"
      
"Marjorie and Celia won't appreciate this behaviour
      at your age. You'll practically be dancing on father's grave."
      
"Arthur's in the past. You'll get on far better with
      Hamish than you ever did with him. I've sometimes regretted ... No! I do
      not regret anything. You especially. But I've got a lot of catching up to
      do. And Hamish seemed quite ready to continue where we left off."
      
"I'd better let you get started. When will we see
      you again?"
      
"We're not as young as we were. I doubt we'll be
      able to keep going beyond daylight. So I'll be back for lunch."
      
He closed the garage door after she drove away and
      laughed out loud as he walked back to the house.
      
 
      
Hello
      
The door to room 204 was ajar. Emma slipped inside and
      paused, dizzy with relief and with excitement. He was waiting for her and
      she felt his hands cup her breasts. She turned into his arms and he kissed
      her.
      
"Now," he said. "I want to count the
      buttons on your blouse."
      
She felt him touch her collarbone and she reached up to
      undo the top button of the burgundy blouse. Her fingers trembled as they
      brushed his.
      
"One," he counted and his fingers followed hers
      as she fumbled for the second button. Her breathing was already ragged and
      her will was giving way to his. The button came free.
      
"Two." His strong fingers slid beneath her bra
      and found the tingling nipple. Her fingers fluttered for the next button,
      but the distraction of his hand on her breast delayed her. His urgent
      fondling strained the cloth and the ancient thread parted. The button
      landed silently on the carpet.
      
"You see?" he said.
      
Her shaking fingers managed the other buttons. She was no
      longer supple enough to shrug off the bra straps but his fingers helped.
      She leant back as he bent to kiss her breasts.
      
She was almost too breathless to speak. "I hope
      you're not disappointed. I'm not the firm young thing I was."
      
His hand supported her breast and she felt his warm
      breath on the nipple as he said, "They're still beautiful."
      
She stood spellbound as his lips and fingers explored the
      shape and texture of her breasts as they had done once before. The tingle
      of desire spread as his free hand slid beneath the blouse to knead its way
      up her back and shoulders. The feeling was so intense that her knees
      weakened and she began to sag. She heard tendons in his shoulders creak as
      he bent and picked her up. She sighed against his shirt as she abandoned
      herself to his authority. "Last time, you carried me upstairs,"
      she murmured.
      
"Thank God the bed's here. I'm not the firm young
      thing I was, either."
      
As he laid her on the bed and began unfastening her
      skirt, she reached out to touch his trousers.
      
"That feels firm enough."
      
He laughed. "That bit's all right - especially when
      you're around."
      
She lifted her bottom and let him pull her skirt and
      underclothes into an untidy heap on the floor. She flung bra and blouse to
      join them.
      
"Get undressed," she said. "I won't run
      away."
      
He undressed slowly, unable to keep his eyes off her
      nakedness.
      
"Is there anything you don't remember?" he
      asked, as he lay on her.
      
She drew in her breath, "I'd forgotten how big you
      are - wait!"
      
"Now!" She placed his hands on her breasts.
      "Fuck me!"
      
She lay beneath him, passive as he made love to her. She
      was astounded by her rising emotion. Even without physical participation,
      her love for him was enough to impel her up the slopes of ecstasy. With
      her husband she'd always had to struggle for her pleasure. With Hamish,
      she could lay in an expectant trance, letting him lead her to delight. For
      the second time in her life her body and her brain combined to create an
      overwhelming climax.
      
"Emma - are you with me?"
      
"Miles ahead! Don't stop. Oh, please don't stop. Oh,
      Hamish!" She arched to meet him, holding herself rigid while her
      hands urged him into her.
      
He was with her in her long ecstatic rapture and she
      sensed that pain was mingled with his delight. She did her best to control
      her writhing, but when his climax came there was nothing she could do to
      lessen the violence, not least because her body welcomed the fierceness
      that she had roused in him.
      
They lay shaken and exhausted among the tangled sheets.
      
"I hope our neighbours don't mind the noise,"
      she stretched herself against his chest.
      
"I love you when you're noisy," he sighed.
      
"Enough to run away with me?"
      
"I can't run. It'll have to be your car."
      
And then she was sobbing against him with her emotions
      running riot - happiness, relief and pity competing to release her tears.
      
"Hamish, I've missed you for thirty years. Don't go
      away again. I love you so much."
      
"Oh, Emma."
      
They drowsed until her arm was numb. She lay back,
      massaging her hand to life.
      
"Michael?" Hamish asked the question that had
      tormented him for thirty years.
      
"Of course he's yours. You've got a grandson too, as
      well as Jenny. And another grandchild on the way. That's why Becky wasn't
      here."
      
"I'm sorry, I didn't think to take care."
      
"Don't be daft! We were both beyond thinking. I
      didn't remember my diaphragm until I was talking to the vicar. The old
      fraud couldn't keep his eyes off my tits, and there was semen trickling
      down my leg. Then I thought that if I couldn't have you, I'd have the next
      best thing. I made damn sure I wore my diaphragm until I'd gone over.
      Michael's the best thing that ever happened to me. I've felt guilty for
      keeping him from you."
      
"Will you tell him?"
      
"He knows." She reached for her skirt and took
      the letter from the pocket.
      
"I wrote this to you when I knew that I was
      pregnant. Then I thought it would be better not to send it. But Michael
      was such a dear that I couldn't deprive you. I hoped the photograph was
      clear enough." She put the letter beside the bed. "Spare my
      blushes and don't read it now. It's very sentimental. Michael found it
      today."
      
"How did he take it?"
      
"Quite well. He never did get on with Arthur. You've
      got an open field with him, and Jenny loves you already. What are you
      doing, down there?"
      
"Stroking. I never told you that I love the colour
      of your hair."
      
"Don't stop! That's out of this world. Oh! That's
      even better. No one's ever done that before."
      
"They don't know what they've been missing. You
      taste delicious."
      
"Hamish! Can you get another finger in? Just there.
      And your tongue - a bit faster. Yes."
      
She ran her hands through his thinning hair, regretting
      the loss of youthful curls, but welcoming him ... Oh! welcoming ...
      
"You'd better stop that or I'll come"
      
He didn't stop.
      
"Hamish. Go on! Don't stop!"
      
When her screams subsided, he turned her urgently with
      strong hands.
      
She wriggled her bottom and spread her legs so that the
      pink opening among pale hairs invited him to enter and he plunged his
      penis into her.
      
The slippery tightness of her swollen vagina and the feel
      of her generous buttocks beneath his hands excited him to a groaning
      climax.
      
"Come back to bed," he joked, as he knelt
      behind her, panting.
      
"For God's sake lock the door," she giggled.
      "This vicar is about twenty-five and terribly open-minded. I couldn't
      look him in the eye."
      
This time, they drowsed with his head on her breast. Her
      gentle snores woke him towards morning.
      
She sighed as they rolled apart.
      
"Emma, I overheard some gossip about Arthur's
      death."
      
She stiffened. "What was it?"
      
"That he died in someone else's bed."
      
"Not true! She managed to get him to the hospital
      before he died. It saved a lot of scandal."
      
"You take it very lightly."
      
"Do I? I had to cope with open infidelity for ten
      years. I hated that. Arthur expected to fuck away from home and then come
      back to me. I found it very hard to forgive him. You won't be unfaithful
      will you?"
      
"No. Apart from a couple of youthful indiscretions,
      I've married my women - except you."
      
"Hmmm?"
      
"Arthur's infidelities were a bit too open, weren't
      they?"
      
"You heard about that, did you?"
      
"That despite all his charitable donations and his
      support for the party he only got a CBE? Yes, I heard. The whiff of
      scandal cost him his knighthood."
      
"I was sorry about that. I fancied being Lady Frith.
      And the girls would have been able to lord it over the country for miles
      around. I could have worn my mother's pearls."
      
"You could be Lady McLeod."
      
"What?" She sat up and stared down at him.
      "What do you mean?"
      
"They'll give me a 'K' when I retire. In the New
      Year's Honours."
      
"Good God! Are you proposing?"
      
"If you pass me my trousers, there's a ring in the
      pocket. I've kept it for thirty years."
      
Her naked bottom and thighs flashed in his face as she
      sorted through their clothes. Then she sat cross-legged and flushed while
      she tried the ring on.
      
"It fits!" She bent to kiss him. "It took
      me half a bar of soap to get my wedding ring off tonight. I'm glad I did.
      What time is it?"
      
"Half past four."
      
"At least no one can say that I got engaged the same
      day I buried Arthur."
      
She folded back the sheets and looked at his penis,
      curled against his thigh.
      
"Would you like to celebrate our engagement?"
      
"Yes..." He was hesitant.
      
She bent and laid her cheek against his knee. Livid scars
      disfigured the smoothness of his leg. She traced them with her tongue. The
      jagged purple blemish of the injury finished near his groin.
      
"Two inches more and this conversation might have
      been quite different."
      
"Would it have made a difference?"
      
"Thank God I don't have to answer that." Her
      lips gently enclosed his soft penis and were gratified by a swift
      response.
      
She knelt above him, hovering with the swollen tip of his
      penis brushing her swollen vulva. "Sir Hamish?"
      
"Lady Emma," he replied and she sank onto him.
      She carefully fucked him until he managed a whimpering dry climax. Her
      reward was a quiet coming that left her drained and ready to sleep till
      noon.
      
"Chartreuse," he murmured.
      
"Burgundy. I remember perfectly."
       
      
