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Bridge of Clay

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Of course, Hector went on being Hector, purring and ball-tearing through summer, and watching bathroom-work from the cistern.

“Oi, Tommy!” I’d often call to him. “I’m trying to have a shower!”

The cat sat like an apparition, in the steam room haze around him. He’d stare and somehow smirk at me:

And I’m tryin’ to get a schwitz!

He’d lick those tarmac paws of his, he’d smack his tire-black lips.

Telemachus (whom we’d already reduced to T) marched inside and out of his cage. Only once did the Trojan strike at him, and Tommy had told him no, and Hector went back to sleep. He likely dreamed of the steam.

Then Rosy, and Rosy still ran, but when Henry brought her a beanbag, which he’d found in a council cleanup (he always had his eye out), we loved how she’d cast it around. In the moments when she actually did lie down, she preferred the open sunshine; she would pick it up and drag it along, following the path of the light. Then she’d dig to make herself comfortable, which could only have one result:

“Hey, Tommy! Tommy! Come have a look at this!”

The backyard was covered in snowfall, from the beanbag’s Styrofoam balls. The most humid d

ay of the summer so far—and Rory looked over at Henry.

“I swear you’re a Goddamn genius.”

“What?”

“Are you kidding me? Bringing that bloody beanbag home.”

“I didn’t know the dog would destroy it—that’s Tommy’s fault—and anyway…” He disappeared and came back with the vacuum.

“Oi, you can’t use the vacuum for this!”

“Why not?”

“I don’t know—you’ll wreck it.”

“You’re worried about the vacuum, Rory?” This time it was me. “You wouldn’t even know where to switch the bloody thing on.”

“Yeah.”

“Shut up, Henry.”

“Or how to use it.”

“Shut up, Matthew.”

All of us stood and watched, though, as Henry finished the job. Rosy leapt forward and sideways, barking and carrying on, and Mrs. Chilman, grinning, at the fence. She stood on her toes on a paint tin.

“You Dunbar boys,” she said.

* * *


One of the best parts of the anniversary was the great bedroom swap, which we did after moving her books, and the dress inside the piano.

First we dismantled the bunk beds.

They could each be made into singles, and although I wasn’t overly keen, it was me who moved to the main bedroom (no one else wanted anything to do with it), but I took my old bed there with me. No way would I sleep on theirs. Before any of that was dealt with, though, we decided it was time for a change—for Henry and Rory to disband.

Henry: “Finally! I’ve been waiting for this my whole life!”



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