Stone Bruises

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Authors: Simon Beckett
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prickle upright. I turn and look at the statues. They haven’t moved, but now their blind scrutiny seems unnerving. Then the shriek comes again, and my nerve breaks.
    All thoughts of the lake are forgotten as I lurch back up the shadowed track. My breath rasps in my ears, blood thumping as I struggle on the single crutch. Up ahead I can see the moonlit field through the trees, impossibly distant. Christ, have I really come so far? Then at last I’m out in the open, and orderly rows of vines replace the dark trees. I lumber on, panting for breath, until I reach the sanctuary of the barn once more. Gulping for air, I stop to retrieve the lamp and look back towards the wood. The track is empty, but I don’t relax until I’m in my loft again with the trapdoor shut behind me.
    I collapse onto the mattress, chest heaving and legs like jelly. I’m drenched with sweat, as wet as if I’d actually been in the lake. The idea of going down there, as if I could swim with my foot bandaged up, seems ridiculous now. I don’t know what I was thinking.
Don’t you? Really?
    All I want to do is sleep. But before I do I go back over to the trapdoor and slide a chest of drawers on top.
    Feeling safe at last, I go to bed and sleep like the dead.

London
    CALLUM WAS STILL ranting when I came back from the bar.
    ‘Oh, come
on
! Did we see the same film? Tell me, did we? I was watching
The Last Detail
, what were you watching?’
    ‘All I’m saying is it’s still reinforcing character stereotypes. You’ve got the, uh, the hardened wiseguy, the rookie, the token—’
    ‘They’re archetypes, not stereotypes! I can’t believe you missed the entire fucking point of the—’
    ‘I didn’t miss anything, I just think it’s, uh, I don’t know—’
    ‘Exactly!’
    ‘Callum, why don’t you shut up and let Jez finish?’ Yasmin cuts in.
    ‘I would if he wasn’t talking shite!’
    I put the drinks on the table. Beer for Callum, Yasmin and me, orange juice for Chloe, vodka for Jez. Chloe gives me a grin as I sit down.
    Yasmin turns to me. ‘Sean, tell Callum it’s possible to object to aspects of a Jack Nicholson film without being burned at the stake for heresy.’
    ‘Sean agrees with me,’ Callum cuts in. Raw-boned and shaven-headed, his piercings add to the faintly pagan image he likes to cultivate. ‘Nicholson is the finest actor of his generation, bar none!’
    ‘He was a jobbing actor who got lucky,’ Chloe says. She darts a quick look at me to show she’s deliberately baiting Callum. As ever, he bites.
    ‘Bollocks! I’ve got one thing to say to you, Chloe.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
. That’s it.’ He sits back, crossing his arms as if the argument’s won.
    ‘That was a dream role. Any halfway decent actor could have run away with it,’ Yasmin says, rolling her eyes. Her hair is tied back tonight, and she’s wearing the loose dark clothes that Chloe once confided show she’s feeling self-conscious about her weight.
    ‘Oh, come on! What about
Chinatown
? Or
The Departed
?’
    ‘What about them?’ Chloe begins ticking off on her fingers. ‘
Witches of Eastwick. Mars Attacks. Batman
. Best actor of his generation? Sure.’
    Jez furrows his brow. ‘
Batman
was OK. Not as good as
The Dark Knight
, though.’
    No one takes any notice of him. He’s been drinking all night and looks even more crumpled than usual, which is saying something. Like Callum, he’s a teacher at the language school in Fulham where I’ve been working for the past few months. Yasmin, his girlfriend and Chloe’s best friend from art college, used to work there as well before she got a better-paying job at the university.
    I love Friday nights. Classes finish early, and afterwards a group of us will go for a drink before heading for one of the independent cinemas that are within a few tube stops of the school. Callum is passionate about film but blows hot and cold about his favourite actors, writers, directors. Not so many weeks

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