âUm, I was a bit spaced-out actually. Mainly, I was thinking that the numbers I was hearing were more money than Iâd ever seen in my life, and half of it was mine. All I had to do was keep my nerve for a week.â Then I falter. âThat all seemed pretty reasonable until Richard told me what happened to that other girlâ¦.â
He slips his hand over mine.
âWhy did you come back to us, Charlotte? You went through that, after everything that had preceded it, and then James and Iâ¦. Weâ¦. You had the money. You could have started your life over, and never had to set eyes on us again, but you came back. Why?â
âBecause I wanted to. Because both of you were honest about it; about what you wanted, and that you were paying me, very well, for it. The things we did⦠you were both so gentle, and kind, and careful with me. You never forced me into anything. I chose all of it.â
âAlright, so we didnât hurt you. but that doesnât answer the question. Why did you come back?â
âI came back, at first, because I simply wanted more, of both of you. Later, I realised Iâd fallen in love.â
His face twists. âWith James, not with me.â
âIt took longer with you, thatâs all. And itâs different with the two of you. It was only meant to be for a week, but later, the more I thought about what had happened during that week, the more I wanted to be back with you both. The two of you were my Master and my Golden Lover. Iâd never had anything like it.â
âIt didnât bother you that we were fucking you for money? After what had happened to you in the past?â
âBut it wasnât like thatâ¦. Yes, youâd paid, but you never treated me like I was someone youâd paid. And you helped me. You gave me ways of helping myself, and then, later, after I knew Iâd fallen in love, somehowâ¦. there was never the chance, the right moment.... Michaelâ¦?â
âMmm?â
âDid you pay? Was it both of you?â
âNo. James made the purchase. But I joined in. Iâm not feeling proud of myself.â
He looks pensive, drawing invisible doodles on the table surface with his finger.
âCharlotte, have you never had someone to talk to? To confide in?â
âWhen I was at the farm, there was a teacher at the school, Mr Kalkowski. He was wonderful. He taught me so muchâ¦. He let me use the school library, then he gave me the run of his own library. He let me use his telescope, showed me how to use it, taught me the constellations. And when I wanted to know more about it, he said he could only teach me so much, that I needed to go to college for moreâ¦.â
Michael is listening intently, with a silence that swallows my words.
ââ¦. He told me about his past life. He wasnât young. I think he was supposed to have retired years ago, but they didnât have anyone to replace him, that far out from the City. But.⦠he told me how heâd escaped his old country when things got bad and made a new life for himself. And I realised that, if heâd done it, so could I. He showed me that education is freedom, and if I wanted to make my own way in the world, I needed to learn as much as I could.â
âHe sounds a good man.â
âYes, he wasâ¦.â My voice breaks upâ¦. âAt Christmas, I went back there to see him again, to tell him that Iâd made it to university. I wantedâ¦. I wanted him to be proud of me.⦠but he was so oldâ¦. when I got there, they told me heâd died.â
My eyes flood.
âOh, Charlotte.â Michael shakes his head. âOh God, Iâm so sorry.â He hugs me, kissing the top of my head. âJeez⦠what are we going to do?â
*****
I wake to the smell of coffee. My Master is there, sitting on the end of the bed with Michael, talking quietly with him. I donât move, trying to pick out the words, but their voices are a low murmur, and I canât hear what they are saying.
I stir, and they both turn to look at me, Michael smiling at me, my Master sombre.
âGood morning, Charlotte. How are you now?â says my Master.
My stomach churning, âWhatâs happening?â
He chews his lip for a moment. âIâm not going to tell you exactly until we have some final information come in, but I will say, that Haswell has worked tirelessly on your behalf, over the last day or so andâ¦.
itâs going to be alright for you.â
âReally?â
âYes, really.â The words sound as though he should be pleased, but his expression, his body language, says otherwise.
Michael: âCoffee?â
âMmm, yes, please.â
âBreakfast?â
âUm, no. Donât think I could hold it down.â
My Master again, âTake your time. Have your coffee, take a bath, whatever. Then come down to the study. Iâll be in there.â
Iâm baffled. âHowâ¦â
âCharlotte, please trust me. Just this once. Weâre waiting for some documents to come in, for final confirmation, then weâll tell you.â He snorts a laugh, but there is no humour in it. âYou chose the right place to finally make your confession. Haswell is the kind of man who can pull a lot of strings, very quickly, when he wants to.â
âWeâre going to his office?â
âNo, heâs here, downstairs.â
*****
Bathed and dressed, I go down to Richardâs study, Michael holding my hand. It smells a little musty in here. Of course, the room has not been used all summer.
As we enter, my Master, seated in an armchair, stares out of the window.
Richard is speaking on the phone, but seeing me, he smiles and points to a chair. Amazingly, he winks at me.
?
âYes, thatâs just what I need,â he is saying. âYes, yes, that too. Can you scan them and send them straight across to me⦠Oh, you have? Hang on a minute.â
He taps at his keyboard. âYes, itâs coming in now.â He peers at the screen. âYes, thatâs just what I need.
If you find anything else, please send it across, but this will do for now. Thanks, Will. I owe you one.â
And he hangs up.
âSit down, Charlotte.â
I donât. On tenterhooks, I dance from one foot to the other, unable to settle. Irritably, he waves me again to the chair, by his desk, âPlease, sit down, before you fall down.â
Glancing across at me, he jabs keys on his laptop, then spins it, so I can see the screen. There is an old photo, the image of a face; a face I recognise. Even across the years, and knowing he is dead, my stomach churns.
âThat him?â
I nod.
He taps at more keys and a printer whirrs into life, spitting out documents at high speed. He catches them as they emerge.
âYou might be interested to know that you made the papers at the time. Even if no-one told you about it, you were briefly famous. It probably saved your life. The publicity meant that they couldnât simplyâ¦.
lose you. You were fostered out instead, well away from the City.â
He pushes papers at me. âYou didnât kill himâ¦.
I stutter. âButâ¦. I stabbed him. They told me he was deadâ¦â
âHe died, yes, but not of a stab wound. He was chasing you, and it sounds as though you gave him a good run for his money. He followed you halfway across town, over the old river bridge, and died nearly two miles away. He chased you through the traffic and went under a truck, a twenty-wheeler. It dragged him some distance before the driver managed to stop the vehicle.â