"No one's home," Tom said as he used his key to let us into his house.
"Mum
and Dad are shopping and Brian's playing rugby."
He led me upstairs, and for the first time I saw the inside of his
room. Up until then, apart from my own bedroom, the only teenage male's
room
I'd
been in was Tony's, and so my judgement of what a typical teenager's
room
might
look like was questionable. However, it's reasonably safe to say
that
Tom's room was probably not typical in that it was possibly the tidiest
space
I'd ever seen.
The single bed on the far side of the room was neatly made, there were
no
posters on the pale green walls, and there was not a single item of
clothing
to be seen. On my right, underneath the window, were a bare desk
and
a chair, and against the wall opposite the window was a chest of
drawers
and another chair. The only things that indicated that the room
was
inhabited were the books and a few personal items placed tidily on a
couple
of shelves.
"You can take your coat off and grab a seat," he said, gesturing toward
the
desk and chair.
While I did as he suggested, he took a bunch of keys from his jacket
pocket
and hung the jacket in one of the two wardrobes on either side of his
bed. He then used one of his keys to open the other wardrobe, from
which he
took
a wooden box which he carried across the room toward me.
"Miss Victoria gave me this," Tom announced and carefully placed it on
the
desk. "If you want to know more about Edward and Tommy, there are some
things
in here that you might like to look at."
He selected another key from the bunch and bent to unlock the box, and
as
he did so I inspected it more closely. It was made from a dark
and
highly-polished wood with white and gold inlays, and although my
knowledge
of such things was negligible, I guessed that it might be a valuable
antique. I was much more confident of my other guess, that it was the
'box of
treasures'
that Brian had told me about.
Standing close beside me and slightly leaning over the desk, his hip
was
pressed against my arm as he opened the box and gently removed its
contents. There were several letters, mostly still in their envelopes,
some
picture
postcards, and a handful of monochrome photographs. All were very
old,
and some of the writing was so faded as to be almost unreadable.
"Recognise anyone?" he said as he placed one photograph in front of me.
In the picture were about a dozen young men, mostly in their late
teens,
dressed in army uniforms of first world war vintage. What
immediately
caught my attention was that one of those young men seemed to be Tom,
and
even in the ancient photo the unique eyes caught my attention. It
was
only on very close inspection that I could see the small differences
between
them. The person in the photo appeared to be slightly taller,
older
and bulkier than the boy standing next to me.
"It's Tommy," I said, "but it looks like it could be you in a year or
so. When your mum mentioned a family resemblance, I expected that you'd
be
similar
to Tommy, not identical."
"Yeah," Tom said and laughed without much humour, "identical twins
separated
by about ninety years!"
"Anyway," I said, finding it difficult to look away from the photo,
"are
you going to tell me about Tommy and Edward now?"
"Okay, just let me get comfortable."
He went to get the other chair, then he put it next to mine at an angle
so
that when he sat down he was facing partly toward me and partly toward
the
items on the desk. Once he was seated, he leaned forward and
rested
his elbow on the desk so that when he spoke his head was just a few
inches
from mine and his voice was quiet. This, together with his
serious
expression, gave me the feeling that he was about to tell me something
secret,
or at least confidential.
"Almost everything I know about Tommy and Edward is what Miss Victoria
told
me," he said, "though I got some more information from the things in
the
box and church records..."
"Which reminds me," I interrupted, "how did you get to be such close
friends
with someone who was old enough to be your great-grandmother?"
"Easy. She liked to talk about the history of her family and
mine,
and I liked to listen. Actually, when I was a little kid I never
even
saw her. She never left the house, and I was too scared to go
there,
even to see my mum. Then one day, when I was eleven, she was
looking
out of her window and saw me working in the garden, and because I
reminded
her
of Tommy she asked my mum to bring me to see her. At first I
refused,
but Mum eventually persuaded me."
"And you hit it off?"
"No!" he laughed, "I was so scared of what I thought was a weird old
woman
that I didn't say a word to her. But a few months later my
nightmares
started, and a bit later Mum happened to mention them to Miss Victoria,
who
more or less insisted I go and tell her about them. Eventually, I
went
to see her and over the next few months I found that talking to her
about
Tommy and stuff was interesting, and I didn't get nightmares so often."
Then Tom went on to tell me about Edward and Tommy:
oo00oo
When Victoria was growing up, her father, Albert Armstrong, was a rich
and
influential landowner who also owned several mines and factories. He
had inherited much of that wealth from his father, Henry, who had built
Prospect
House, but Albert moved even higher in the social hierarchy by marrying
the
daughter of a minor aristocrat. Albert had four children but only
two
survived infancy: Edward and Victoria, who was seven years younger
than
her brother.
The Crawford family had lived in the local village for centuries before
Prospect
House was built, and after that many of them had ended up working
either
in
the house or on the estate. Tommy's parents lived in the gate
house,
and by the time he was born the two families, though of very different
social
status, had developed a sort of symbiotic relationship.
Edward was born a few months after Tommy, and for the first few years
of
their
lives, though their houses were separated by just a few hundred yards,
they
were in very different social circles and rarely even caught sight of
one
another. As the two boys got older it happened that they both
developed
a love of the local woodland, where they could get away from their
respective
families. Among the trees Tommy could escape from his crowded
house,
where there were always chores to do, and Edward could escape from his
overbearing
and domineering father.
When Tommy was ten and Edward was nine, they often met in the woods and
formed
a friendship, but both boys knew that they had to keep that friendship
secret.
They had been friends for less than two years when Edward was sent away
to
boarding school and Tommy finished school to become an assistant to the
head
gardener, who also happened to be one of his uncles. For the next
few
years the two boys saw one another rarely, when Edward came home from
school. During that time Tommy became a skilled gardener and found
great joy in
growing
plants.
Victoria was only a small child when Edward first went away to school,
but
although she didn't know her brother well, she looked up to him and
admired
him. Similarly, although she didn't know Tommy well, she saw him
often
when her nanny took her walking in the gardens. As she grew up,
she
got to like Tommy, not only because of his striking good looks but
because
he was so gentle and treated her like an adult, especially when he
patiently
answered her questions about the plants and flowers.
One afternoon during the school summer holidays when Victoria was
eight,
she followed her brother out of the house and into the woods. She
just
wanted to be near her hero without bothering him or risking his anger,
and
she didn't intend to be sneaky or spy on him. Having managed to
cross
the stream without messing up her dress, she saw her brother disappear
between
two trees. Peering through that narrow gap, she saw that Tommy was
already
in the clearing, apparently having been waiting for Edward. The
two
boys hugged briefly then sat down on the grass, talking. She
couldn't
hear what they said, and she was just beginning to get bored and was
considering
going back to the house, when Edward took hold of Tommy's hand, raised
it
to his lips, and kissed it.
This, especially after she saw them hugging, surprised her
greatly. Of course, at her age and in those days she had no idea of sex
or
sexuality,
but she was totally unused to seeing such physical affection.
Occasionally
her nanny, or more rarely her mother, would hold her hand or even give
her
a brief hug, but she thought that such things were reserved for
children. As far as she knew, even her parents never hugged one
another. Once the
initial
surprise wore off, however, Victoria found that she was quite pleased
that
two people she was fond of were being so nice to one another. In
fact,
the only negative thought she had was a twinge of jealousy because
neither
of them ever hugged her. One thing she was old enough to realise,
however,
was that her parents would not approve of their son being so familiar
with
a gardener.
Just then she heard her nanny calling her name, and she knew she'd be
in
big
trouble if she was caught in the woods because she was under strict
instructions
not to go near the stream, much less cross it. Panicking as she
began
to turn away from the clearing, she broke a small branch and caused the
leaves
to rustle. This noise attracted the attention of both boys, and
the
last thing she saw before she fled was Edward's face looking in her
direction.
Unfortunately for Victoria, she was just crossing the stream when she
was
caught by her nanny, who dragged the girl by her ear all the way back
to
the house. There the nanny gave Victoria's mother a full
report
of her daughter's transgressions. Had Victoria been a boy, she
would
have been soundly beaten by her father, but as it was she was confined
to
her room for a week, the first two days of which her diet was to be
just
bread and water.
Late that evening, Edward sneaked up to her room with some cheese and
fruit,
but kindness was not his only motive. He also wanted to find out
what
she'd seen in the clearing, and when she told him he begged her not to
tell
anyone. As well as admiring her brother and being fond of Tommy,
she
also felt very proud of being part of the big boys' conspiracy, so she
readily
promised to keep their secret. From then on Edward, who had
previously
not paid much attention to his little sister, became a much more caring
and
considerate brother.
Over the next few months, whenever Edward was home from school she
noticed
that the two boys would often go missing at the same time, and she
guessed
that they were meeting in the woods. She also saw the looks and smiles
they
exchanged when they thought no one else was around, though they didn't
seem
to mind her seeing these exchanges. In fact, when Edward noticed
she
was watching them he sometimes gave her a conspiratorial wink, which
pleased
her tremendously.
oo00oo
While Tommy had been recounting this tale he'd leaned closer and his
voice
became quieter, and that made me feel that he was sharing something
very
private with me. Occasionally, I felt his knee brush against my
thigh,
and sometimes I felt the merest touch of his breath on my cheek. All
this, together with the intimate tone of his voice sent delicious
tingles
along my spine. However, his next words changed those warm
tingles
to a cold shiver.
oo00oo
One unusually mild night in the spring of the following year, 1917,
Victoria
was
unable to sleep, and through her open window she heard a tapping
sound. At first when she looked outside she didn't see anything except
the
outline
of the tree, whose upper branches were just level with her room.
Then
she heard the sound of an opening window, Edward's window, which
was
immediately below hers. Peering down, she saw a large shadow move
from
the branches of the tree and into Edward's room, and then she heard the
window
close again.
The next day Victoria mentioned her observations to Edward, who with a
worried
look apologised for disturbing her and begged her not to tell
anyone.
Now that she was aware that something was going on, each night when her
brother
was home she tried to stay awake long enough to hear the noises
again.
Several times she succeeded, and one moonlit night she caught a clear
view
of Tommy climbing from the tree into Edward's window. Although
she
stayed awake as long as she could, she didn't hear him leave.
Toward the end of Edward's Easter holiday, Victoria was awakened in the
early
hours of the morning by loud shouts and banging from below. She
couldn't
make out many words, but it soon became clear that her father was doing
the
shouting and that most of the noise was coming from her brother's
room.
Eventually, after more shouting and banging of doors, the house became
quiet,
though as she fell asleep Victoria thought she could hear someone
crying.
The next morning neither Edward nor their mother came down for
breakfast,
and everyone seemed angry or sad or both. All the information she
could
get from her nanny was that her mother was ill and that Edward was
being
punished for something. Her father was even more ill-tempered
than
usual, and so she knew better than to ask him any questions. After
a
couple of days, her red-eyed and obviously unhappy mother appeared in
public
again, but Edward was not allowed out of his room until the day he
returned
to school. She never saw Tommy again.
Over the next few months she managed to find out a little of what had
transpired
that night, but it was only after her father's death, some years later,
that
she managed to piece together the events leading to the later family
tragedy.
Eventually, by the time she was in her late teens, Victoria had
something
like a complete story, gleaned from her mother, old letters, and some
of
the
more talkative Crawfords.
On the night Victoria heard all the shouting, her father had burst into
Edward's
room and found the two boys in bed together. She never discovered
what
caused her father to do this, but perhaps Tommy had been seen climbing
the
tree, or maybe the boys had made too much noise. Whatever the
reason,
her father, shouting curses at both boys, punched and kicked Tommy out
of
the room, down the stairs and out of the door. The only options
open
to Tommy were to fight back or to flee, and he chose to flee.
Having thrown Tommy out of the house, her father returned to Edward's
room
and beat his son with a stout cane kept specifically for that
purpose. Throughout the prolonged beating, Edward was subjected not
only to a
deluge
blows but also to a torrent of shouted abuse and threats. Her
brother
was so badly hurt that for several days he couldn't move from his bed.
Of course, Tommy was immediately dismissed from his job and banned from
the
estate, which effectively meant that he could no longer live with, or
even
visit, his family in the gate house. Ideally, Mr Armstrong would
have
wanted Tommy to be thrown into prison for corrupting his only son, but
he
couldn't make any official complaint without risking a scandal. So,
while Edward was recovering in his room, his father hatched a plan with
which
he intended not only to punish Tommy but also to keep him as far away
from
Prospect House as possible. Years later, when Victoria discovered
this,
she became quite sure that her father also hoped that the plan might
ensure
that Tommy could never return.
Mr Armstrong summoned Tommy's father to his study and instructed him to
pass
on an ultimatum to his son. Either Tommy immediately joined the
army
or Mr Armstrong would dismiss all of the Crawford family and throw them
all
off the estate. This, of course, meant that those living in the
gate
house and other tied accommodation would become homeless. Furthermore,
if Tommy didn't join up then no member of his family would be allowed
to
work in any factory or mine owned by Mr Armstrong.
Although Tommy's father wasn't completely sure exactly what his son had
done
to deserve this, there were enough clues to support his own suspicions,
and
he thought that it was likely that Edward had corrupted Tommy. However,
he had no choice but to pass the ultimatum on to his son, and two days
later
Tommy enlisted with the Northumberland Fusiliers. No one was
allowed
to mention Tommy again if there was even a slight possibility Mr
Armstrong
might hear it.
Edward, still covered in bruises, returned to school, and Mr Armstrong
probably
hoped that his son would forget this childish aberration and become a
respectable
citizen of the British Empire. Victoria had no idea what Edward
was
like at school, but she could see that from that time onwards, whenever
he was at home he was a
totally
different person than the brother she'd previously known. He
seemed
to have no interest in anything, he never smiled and he spent much of
his
time alone in his room. Although he obeyed his parents, his sullen
attitude
earned him frequent beatings, but he didn't seem to care whether he was
punished
or not.
Despite what had happened, Tommy was still very popular with many of
his
large extended family, and Victoria suspected that they may even have
passed
on news of him to Edward. However, none of the Crawfords ever
admitted
this to her, and she knew they would never have dared pass on any
direct
communication. Then, the following year, Victoria heard from one of the
servants that
Tommy
had been killed during a German counter-attack at Cambrai.
After hearing this news, Edward became even more sullen and solitary,
and
Victoria hardly ever saw him, even when he was home for the long summer
holiday.
Early one morning, shortly before Edward was due to go back for his
final
year at school, she heard a commotion outside her bedroom window.
Looking
out, she saw two men standing at the base of the tree and another lying
on
a sturdy branch cutting through a piece of rope. The leaves
obscured
whatever was suspended from the rope, and before she could get a
clearer
view, her father appeared at the foot of the tree and yelled at her to
get
away from the window and draw the curtains. Knowing that her
father
demanded instant obedience, she quickly did as she was told and sat on
her
bed, hoping someone would tell her what was going on.
The maid who normally woke her and set out her clothes arrived tearful
and
late, and told her that Mr Armstrong had given instructions that
Victoria
should have breakfast in her room. At first Victoria wondered if
she
was being punished, perhaps for looking out of her window, but the maid
just
said that there had been 'an accident'. A couple of hours later,
her
father came to see her. Normally he was so controlled and
reserved
that the only real emotion he displayed to her was anger, so on this
occasion
she was shocked to see him so agitated.
He told her that Edward had been playing in the tree when he fell and
broke
his neck. Her first reaction was disbelief because as far back as
she
could remember her brother hadn't played in any tree. Apart from
anything
else, he knew his father would disapprove, and if he were to go against
his
father's wishes, she thought, why do it in a tree so close to the
house? When Victoria tried to voice her doubts, her father silenced her
and
told
her that whatever she thought she might have seen that morning, she
must
never mention it to anyone.
When she realised that Edward was indeed dead, the initial shock gave
way
to grief, and she cried all through the funeral which took place three
days
later. Two days after that, the tree was chopped down. The
following
week Victoria was walking in the formal garden and passed close to two
of
the under-gardeners, talking quietly together while they worked. As
soon as they noticed she was there, they looked guilty and greeted her
respectfully. However, before they noticed her, she'd overheard a few
words.
"...why
Master Edward killed himself?"
oo00oo
There Tom finished the story and sat back, assessing my reaction. I
don't know what he expected and I don't even know what my expression
showed,
because I was too busy absorbing what he's told me. As my mind
processed
the information and linked it to my own experiences, some things seemed
to
fit together like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle.
"So, what do you think?" Tom asked, sounding a little disappointed at
my
apparent lack of reaction.
"Very interesting..." I replied, still distracted by my own thoughts.
"You
think Edward killed himself then?"
"Miss Victoria was certain that he hung himself from the tree."
"And she believed your nightmares were Tommy's last memories," I said
pensively.
My brain was still putting various bits of information together, so
those
words were really my thoughts spoken out loud, rather than a statement
addressed
to Tom. However, he must have interpreted them as a criticism of
his
elderly friend.
"You think she was just a crazy old woman!"
"No," I said, anxious to rectify the misunderstanding. "I was just
thinking
out loud... trying to get everything straight in my head. Some of
the
things you said were quite scary."
"Scary?"
"Yeah, cos if you've been having some of Tommy's memories, I think I
may
have been picking up some of Edward's... Remember I told you about the
sadness
followed by choking in my nightmares? Maybe that's what Edward
felt
when he hanged himself."
Tom considered this for a moment and then frowned doubtfully, so before
he
could voice any doubts, I told him about the tapping I'd heard and,
with
a
blush, I even briefly mentioned the erotic feelings. However, I
did
not mention the subsequent frenzied wanking sessions.
"Hold on, though," he said after a few moments thought, "maybe my
nightmares
are linked to Tommy because we're from the same family, we look like
twins,
we both fancy boys, we were brought up in the same place, even lived
the
same house. But look at this."
He picked out one photographs that he'd taken from the box and showed
it
to me. It was clearly a portrait of a family dressed in formal
old-fashioned
clothes, with a teenage boy and a younger girl positioned between their
parents. The boy was tall and thin with high cheekbones and dark,
possibly
black,
curly hair."
"That's Edward," Tom said, pointing at the boy. "See, you don't look
anything
like him, and you don't have anything in common. Your family
isn't
from around here, you've only just moved into the house, and... and
you're
not gay. How can you have a link to Edward?"
I sighed, realising that an important decision had to be made. I
could
either just shrug and accept his points or I could expose my secrets,
showing
him the same trust he'd shown me. At that point I wasn't too
concerned
about revealing my sexuality to him, but I was very worried about
admitting
that I believed that I'd inherited some sort of 'sensitivity' from my
mother. Because I so desperately wanted him to like me as much as I
liked him,
I
was terrified that he'd think I was crazy. With another sigh, I
made
my decision.
"Actually," I said, "I am gay, so at least I have that in common with
him. Also, I've been sleeping in Edward's bedroom, I have the same
birthday,
and
I don't think I need a genetic link to, well, feel things."
For a moment his face lit up in a smile, then his brow furrowed.
"Feel things?" he asked. "What sort of things?"
Although I'd felt comfortable enough with Tom to mention my sexuality,
I
wasn't yet ready to tell him about my mum and about some of my
own
strange experiences, especially since my first visit to Prospect
House.
My friendship with Tom was going so well that I didn't want to give him
cause
to think that I was mad or a freak. Thinking quickly, I looked at my
watch.
"Damn!" I announced, standing up. "I'm late for lunch!"
My attempt to avoid his question was crude and probable obvious to him,
but
if he suspected that I was just making excuses then he was polite
enough
not to show it.
"You can have lunch here if you want," he offered as he got to his feet.
"Sorry, but I told Dad I'd be back to have lunch with him, and I
should've
been there about forty minutes ago."
Actually, it wasn't a complete lie. Dad had in fact been due to
arrive
home about half an hour earlier, and although we hadn't made specific
plans
for lunch, we did always eat together when we were both home. Tom
escorted
me downstairs, and as he reached over to open the door for me, he
leaned
in
and briefly touched his lips to mine. He blushed and I felt my
own
cheeks flush, then before I could react, he opened the door
fully.
"Thanks for telling me that you're gay too," he said as I stepped
across
the threshold.
Embarrassed, I raised my hand in acknowledgement and trotted up the
slight
slope to Prospect House. The kiss had been the lightest possible
touching
of lips, but I could still feel it as I made my way home, and although
it
had lasted for no more than a second, in my mind I had no doubt that it
had
definitely been a kiss. That was the first time I can remember
anybody
apart from Mum kissing me on the lips, and I will remember it forever.
oo00oo
When I went to bed that night I was half expecting and half hoping to
hear
the tapping, followed by an erotic episode, but nothing unusual
happened. That isn't to say that nothing happened at all, but it was
just my
usual
bed time wanking as I remembered how close I'd been to Tom that
day. As I moved my foreskin back and forward in a leisurely fashion I
recalled
the feeling of his knee on my thigh and lips on mine.
The next day I moped about the house, hoping that Tom would visit and
maybe
invite me on another walk, but he never came. Of course, I could
have
gone to see him, but I didn't want to get in the way if he had other
plans,
and I didn't want him to think that I was chasing after him. As the
day
wore on, I mentally kicked myself for not making specific arrangements
to
see him again. By the time I went to bed that night, I was
miserable
and wondering if my talk of being 'sensitive' had put him
off.
As I lay in bed my heart was so heavy that I couldn't even work up
enough
enthusiasm for a wank, and I fell asleep consoling myself that at least
I'd
see Tom on the way to school the following day. Perhaps
surprisingly,
it never occurred to me that he had been at home all day, hoping that
I'd
contact him and that he was afraid to come to see me in case I'd been
freaked
out by his little kiss.
In the middle of the night I woke up, and it took me ages to get back
to
sleep
because I couldn't stop thinking about Tom and how we seemed to have
suddenly
become so intimate. I'd never admitted my sexuality to anyone
before,
not even Tony, who'd been my best friend for years, yet I'd shared that
and
other secrets with Tom. As I considered things further, I realised
that
I had very strong feelings for Tom, though I couldn't yet allow myself
to
describe those feelings as love. At first, I felt guilty about my
feelings
for him, not because of the sexual overtones but because up until then
I'd
only ever felt that way about Tony. In a strange way, it's almost
as
if my emotions were being unfaithful to Tony. However, the guilt
was
considerably decreased when it occurred to me that although I still
fancied
Tony and loved him as my best friend, my feelings for Tom were
different
and unique.
When I turned up at the gate house to meet with Brian and Tom the next
morning,
Brian was his usual cheerful self, but both Tom and I were
subdued. We were both trying hard to pretend that nothing was
different, and I
was
determined not to let anyone suspect the way I felt about Tom. However,
our caution must have made our behaviour seem unusual, because at the
bus
stop Chris frowned at me, and Brian actually asked if Tom and I had had
an
argument. With sheepish expressions on our faces, Tom and I both
denied
any form of disagreement or altercation.
That afternoon Tom, Chris and myself were on the same bus going home
from
school, Brian having decided to stay in Moreton with a couple of his
friends. Tom and I walked home from the bus stop together in silence,
and I
really
wanted to ease the uncomfortable atmosphere between us. Unfortunately,
I couldn't think of a convincing way to break the ice, so when we
reached
the gate house and were about to go our separate ways, my desperation
made
me say the first thing that came into my head.
"Erm, do you want to come up to the house for a Coke or something?" I
said,
my heartbeat speeding.
Tom, who'd been gazing down at the ground as we walked, looked up at me
with
a slightly startled smile, which quickly faded to be replaced by a
frown.
"Sorry, I promised Chris I'd go round to his place and do some homework
together
before dinner."
"Oh, okay," I said, unable to hide my disappointment.
Avoiding meeting his gaze, I began to turn away from him to carry on up
the
drive toward home.
"Hold on a sec," he said before I could turn away completely. "What
about
tomorrow? I could come up after school... if that's okay?"
"Yeah, great!" I said. "I'll look forward to it... see ya tomorrow
then!"
"Okay," he replied with a grin. "See ya tomorrow!"
The rest of my short journey home was completed with a smile on my face
and
a warm happiness in my heart. As I dug the house key out of my
pocket,
I reflected on the fact that just a few words from Tom had raised me
from
depression to euphoria. No one else, probably not even Tony, could
effect such a profound
and
rapid change in my emotions, and I found the thought of him having this
power
over me was scary, but it was also strangely elating.
oo00oo
Three times during that week Tom came around to my house after
school. Although he brought his homework with him, mainly to help
justify his
visits,
neither of us actually did much studying, apart from one occasion when
I
helped him with a maths problem. Most of our time together was
spent
just chatting, mainly about ourselves, and I even talked about my mum,
but
never once did we mention our sexuality or 'the kiss'.
We told one another about our respective pasts, and discussed the
relative
merits of growing up in the city and the countryside. We talked
about
our current interests, school, and family, and we shared our hopes and
plans
for the future. Never had I been so open with anyone, not even
Tony,
and never had I been so excited about exploring and discovering another
person.
Up until then I'd never had any interest in gardening, but Tom's love
of
growing things was infectious. Also, I enjoyed being with him so
much
that in order to spend more time in his company I would have gladly
shared
any of his interests.
That, however, was how I felt when I was with him. When I was
alone,
especially lying in bed, my feelings were more sombre. For years,
ever
since Mum died, I'd been emotionally independent and had held myself
aloof
from everyone except Dad, Elaine and Tony, and even with them I always
kept
a large part of myself private and reserved. When I was with Tom,
however,
it was much more difficult to maintain this reserve, and I was scared
of
this
threat to my emotional independence.
At the weekend Tom gave me a guided tour of his walled garden,
entertaining
and amazing me with his horticultural and botanical knowledge. He
also
took me on another walk, and although on that particular walk we didn't
go
to either of his special places, he did show me several parts of the
estate
that I'd not seen before. The reserved and taciturn Tom I'd met
when
I first arrived at Prospect House had become a lively, amusing and
totally
engaging companion.
Of course, the two of us didn't exist in a vacuum, and probably others
observed
this change in our relationship. However, at that particular time
everyone
apart from Tom existed like shadows on the periphery of my
consciousness,
so it really didn't occur to me wonder what they were thinking. What
I did know was that those few days were the happiest I'd been since Mum
died.
Then, as if to punish me for being too happy, in the middle of the
following
week I had another very bad nightmare.
oo00oo
The nightmare started off as usual, with the deep sadness and sense of
loss,
but this time instead of being crushed by a weight on my chest, I felt
that I
was
being suffocated. All the air seemed to have been sucked out of
my
room and I was overwhelmed with a need to escape. However, I
couldn't
move and didn't have enough breath to scream. Somewhere in the
distance
there was a crash and then a wave of freezing coldness washed over me.
"Mark! What's happening?"
Suddenly, my breathing became a little easier, but my screams were
still
silent, and I still couldn't move my body or even open my eyes.
"Mark! Mark! Wake up!"
Someone grabbed my shoulders and shook them, ending my paralysis, so I
opened
my eyes and I tried to sit up. At first I was terrified because
the
grip on my shoulders was holding me down on the bed, but then I relaxed
when
my eyes focused and I saw Dad's worried face in the light from my
bedside
lamp. Seeing that he was sitting on the edge of my bed, I allowed
my
body to go limp and took a huge, deep breath.
"What happened?" Dad asked.
"Bad... dream..." I replied, hyperventilating.
"But it looked like you were choking!"
"I'm okay now," I said, still a little breathless.
Dad looked at me doubtfully and released his grip on my
shoulders. Feeling a chill, I shivered and looked down to see I was
lying
uncovered,
having apparently thrown off my duvet. Embarrassed at being seen
naked
by my dad, I moved my hands down to cover my crotch, trying to seem as
casual
as possible, despite the fact the reaction to the nightmare was making
me
tremble.
"And what about the window?" Dad asked.
"Window?" I echoed, having no idea what he was talking about.
"Yes, what broke the window?"
Looking over my shoulder, up at the wall next to my bed, even in the
dim
light
I could see that the lower half of the window was broken. The
cold winter air was blowing into my room, and that obviously explained
why
I was so cold.
"I don't know," I said, shivering. "Where's my duvet?"
"It's here on the floor," he said, looking down toward his feet.
"Well, can I have it please?" I asked, a little irritated that he
hadn't
already picked it up and covered me with it.
"Better not, there may be broken glass on it..." he said pensively,
looking
up to the window then back down at me. "Actually, I'm surprised there
isn't
any glass on you or the bed."
Having just woken from the nightmare to be questioned about a broken
window,
I was confused, and all I could think about was how cold I felt.
"But I'm freeeeezing!" I said, whining a little.
"In that case," Dad said, standing up, "we'd better get you out of
here."
He leaned over, and with surprising ease he picked me up in his arms,
demonstrating
that he retained much of the strength he'd built up when he used to
play
rugby. Now I was embarrassed not only by my nakedness but also by
the
fact that I was being carried like a child. He took me into the
adjacent
spare room, placed me on the bed, turned on the light and then covered
me
with the duvet.
"How're you feeling now?" he asked.
"Better... still cold."
"How about I bring you a hot drink then? Milk? Tea? Hot
chocolate?"
I chose the hot chocolate and curled up under the duvet while he went
downstairs
to prepare it. A few minutes later, he returned with a mug for
each
of us and, still keeping myself wrapped up, I sat up and sipped my
drink. Dad sat on the edge of the bed and gazed at me thoughtfully,
then he
gave
a little smile.
"I remember sitting like this quite often when you had all those
nightmares
after your mum died," he said. "You used to wake me up with your
screams...
but this is different. Tonight I didn't hear any sounds at all,
apart
from the breaking window, and you seemed to be having difficulty
breathing. So it's just as well that I still hadn't gone to bed, as I
doubt I'd
heard
it if I was asleep in my room."
"I didn't break the window," I said.
"I know that. When I got to your room it was just seconds after I
heard
the glass breaking, and you were lying on your bed and obviously having
a
nightmare... so there was no way you could have done it."
"Maybe someone outside threw something?"
Even as I said it I wondered who it could be. It surely wasn't
any
of the Crawfords, and it was a long way for anyone else to come just to
break
a window. Also, of all the windows in this large house, why
choose
mine, especially as only the Crawfords and Chris knew which room was my
bedroom.
"That did occur to me," Dad said, "but there didn't seem to be much
glass
inside your room. I'll check outside in the morning and see how
much
glass is out there."
I'd watched enough TV detective stories to realise the implication if
he
found most of the glass outside.
"Anyway," he continued, "while we finish our drinks, why don't you tell
me
more about your nightmare? I'm concerned that you seemed to be
choking."
From the expression on his face and the tone of his voice there was no
doubt
that he was genuinely concerned, so I described the nightmare to him.
"This isn't the first time, is it?" he asked.
His question took me by surprise and I wondered if he knew or if he was
just
guessing. I was reluctant to lie, but maybe he'd think I was
crazy
if I told him the truth, especially if I included my speculations about
a
link to Edward. While I was considering how to respond to his
question,
he spoke again.
"Sometimes, especially before we got married, your mum had really bad
nightmares
and they were rarely just one-off events. You're very like your
mum
in lots of ways... and I thought..."
"You thought I might be mentally ill like her!"
I don't know why I said that just then, especially in such an angry
tone.
The words just burst out without any forethought, rising up from deep
inside
me and spewing forth uncontrollably. I was shocked by my own
words
and Dad looked as shocked as I felt. As my shock turned to
embarrassment,
I also experienced a sense of relief, as if the expression of my inner
fear
had released a pent-up pressure inside me.
"I... I never thought that!" Dad said, then with a hint of anger in his
voice
he added. "And who said your mum was mentally ill?"
Only then did I realise the implications of my outburst. I'd
trapped
myself into an extremely uncomfortable situation and I couldn't see an
easy
way out. Even if I wanted to lie to my dad, which I didn't, I
couldn't
think of any credible lie to tell him. Telling the truth would
mean
breaking my promise to Gran, but there seemed no viable alternative.
"Gran told me. But she didn't want to... I just kept on at her
till
she gave in."
"Your gran told you that your mum was mentally ill?"
"Well," I said, trying to remember Gran's actual words, "she told me
mum
had been in a psychiatric hospital."
"Not everyone in a psychiatric ward is crazy. Your mum wasn't, and
I
don't think you are."
"But Gran said that Mum saw things... heard voices that weren't real."
"They were real experiences for your mum..."
"But if no one else saw or heard those things, that's got to mean she
was
crazy," I muttered.
Dad frowned and I detected an increasing annoyance in his face, then he
paused
to think and his expression relaxed. After taking a deep breath,
he
spoke again.
"Look, if you lived in a country where no one could see colours and you
started
talking about green leaves or a blue sky, would they be right to think
you
were crazy? And if people kept denying that colours existed and
kept
telling you that you were crazy, don't you think that you might get so
frustrated
that you might begin to show signs of mental illness?"
"Maybe," I said, shrugging my shoulders.
"Your mum was never crazy, and so she didn't 'get better'. She
just
realised that she had to keep her experiences private. But
locking
them away inside herself gave her some really bad nightmares."
We both sat in silence for several seconds, and while I tried to
assimilate
this
information, Dad waited for my reaction.
"You said she didn't have so many nightmares after you got married?" I
asked,
hoping that maybe Dad might have some way of stopping the nightmares
I'd
been having.
"Yes, over the years they became less frequent and less severe until
eventually
she rarely had any."
"Just because she talked to you about being able to see and hear
stuff?"
I asked, doubtfully.
"And because when she talked to me she knew that she was talking with
someone
who believed that her experiences were real."
"But... but you're a scientist!" I protested incredulously. "How could
you
believe what no one else can see?"
"People do that all the time!" Dad said and laughed gently. "People
believe
in love and even scientists believe in subatomic particles that no one
has
ever seen. You can't see the love that other people feel for you,
but
I hope that from the way they behave you can believe that they love
you."
I blushed when he said that, because I realised that he was referring
to
himself
when he said 'other people'.
"There were so many times that your mum's feelings about a person or a
place
turned out to be true," he continued, "and so many times when her
experiences
mirrored real events, so eventually I couldn't help
believing. And then when she talked about her experiences, I always
believed they
were
real, though I didn't always agree with her interpretation of them."
While he was speaking I began to see my dad from a different
perspective,
and the mental model of him that had developed during my childhood
seemed
to be crumbling away. It was all very disconcerting and
unsettling,
and as if trying to steady itself, my mind grasped upon one word.
"Interpretation?" I asked.
Dad looked startled that I should have chosen that particular question
out
of all the possible things I could have asked.
"Er, yes," he said, gathering his thoughts. "For example, sometimes
we'd
go to a place and she'd see and hear people that no one else could
see. Occasionally they were dressed in old fashioned clothes, or maybe
we
found
later that they seemed to be linked to the history of the place and
were
no longer alive. So your mum, who believed in spirits, thought
they
were ghosts...."
"But you didn't?" I interrupted.
"Let's say that I had my own explanation that I thought much more
likely."
"Which was?" I prompted.
"Well, we know that the brain produces electrical signals, so maybe
extreme
emotions, especially if they continue for a long time, can produce
strong
signals that are imprinted on a particular location. My own
interpretation
is that you mum was somehow able to detect and decode those signals so
they
appeared to her as sights and sounds."
"And you think I'm like Mum?" I asked after a long pause for thought.
"A bit, yes. But probably your sensitivity isn't as great."
There was another long pause as I absorbed the implications of what
he'd
told me. I began to understand why he'd told me that I mustn't
tell
anyone about my 'mini-visions', but there were several other things
that
were
still unclear. However, before I could form my thoughts into
specific
questions, Dad spoke.
"I know you've got a lot to think about, but you didn't really answer
my
question."
"What was that?" I asked as I mentally tried to backtrack through our
conversation.
"This isn't the first nightmare here is it?" he asked, then when I
shook
my head he added. "Did they start when we moved here? Are they
getting
worse?"
When I began to answer, I intended only to address his specific
questions,
but it needed only a couple of gentle prompts from him before I found
myself
pouring out everything, including how I felt it might be linked to the
story
of Edward and Tommy. The only things that I kept back from him
were
Tom's nightmares and my feelings for Tom.
"I'm worried about the choking part of your nightmares..." he said when
I'd
finished talking, "and that broken window. I'll have to look into
that
in the morning, and we'll talk more about all this tomorrow, but for
now,
I think we should both try to get some sleep. "
He stood up then leaned over and kissed me on the forehead.
"G'night, Mark," he said softly.
This was the first time since I was twelve that he'd given me a
goodnight
kiss, and I was so taken aback by it that it took me some time to
respond.
"Night, Dad," I said as he left the room.
oo00oo
My sleep was undisturbed until I heard Dad knocking on the door and
telling
me it was time to get up. In the grey dawn light I dragged myself
wearily
out of bed and went to my bedroom, which because of the broken window
was
bitterly cold. I went in as quickly as possible to grab some
clean
clothes, then got dressed in the bathroom. When I went down to
the
kitchen the lights were on and the kettle had just boiled, but Dad was
nowhere
to be seen, so I began to prepare breakfast. A couple of minutes
later,
Dad came down the stairs from the hallway.
"I've just been outside to look at the glass from your window," he said
in
response to my questioning expression. "As I suspected, there's a lot
more
out there than there was in your room, so it was most likely broken
from
the inside."
I was just about to protest my innocence when he raised his hand and
spoke
again.
"Don't worry, I know it wasn't you," he smiled and then frowned in
thought. "The odd thing is that the pieces are really small, as if the
glass was
almost
pulverised rather than just broken... Anyway, I'll try and get
someone
to fix the window today."
He joined me in getting breakfast ready and nothing more was said until
we
sat down to eat. This early morning silence was quite usual for
us,
mainly because I'm not usually fully awake until after my morning cup
of
tea.
"You know, Mark," Dad said as I began eating my croissant, "even when
the
window's fixed, maybe it's best if you move into a different
room. If your idea that the nightmares are linked to Edward is correct
then
maybe
they'll stop if you sleep somewhere else."
"I don't think it's as simple as that," I said. "I had a really bad
nightmare
when I slept in the old guest room during Tony's visit. And it's
harder
for me to get to sleep in the guest room than it is in my own room."
Dad's concerned expression became one of real worry.
"The nightmares would be bad enough on their own," he said, "but they
would
be even more of a problem if the broken window is somehow linked to
them."
"Maybe it's just coincidence," I said without much conviction.
"Maybe it is. I've been thinking about that. It was very
cold
outside last night... maybe that and a fault in the glass caused it to
break,
especially if there was a drop in outside air pressure. We'll
probably
never know. But if it is linked to your nightmares I don't want
to
risk anything happening to you."
"I'm sure I'll be okay," I said confidently. "Anyway, there's not much
we
can do about it."
"Actually, I was thinking about that as well. Perhaps we should
think
about moving..."
"No!" I protested loudly. "No way! I like living here!"
The idea of moving, especially of moving away from Tom, filled me with
panic.
"You've spent a fortune on this place," I continued, "and in any
case
it would take ages to sell the house and find somewhere else."
"Mark," Dad said earnestly, "your safety is more important than money
and
inconvenience, and you could stay with Elaine or Gran until we find a
new
house."
His words and obvious sincerity touched me deeply, and they even cut
through
my panic at the idea of leaving Prospect House.
"Surely there's something else we can try," I said in desperation,
"less
drastic than moving?"
"What, you mean like an exorcism?" Dad asked doubtfully. "I really
don't
think that would have any effect on your nightmares."
My mind went into overdrive as I desperately tried to think of a way of
allaying
Dad's fears and staying in the house. After a couple of minutes
an
idea surfaced.
"Last night you said that Mum's nightmares gradually went away after
she
started talking to you about things... well last night I talked to you,
and
last week I mentioned them to Tom, so maybe mine will go away as
well."
"I don't know..." Dad said doubtfully, "it may not be the same. After
all, nothing ever got broken during your mum's nightmares."
"We don't know what broke the window," I replied, then had another
idea.
"You said you thought Mum could pick up signals of strong emotions
recorded..."
"Imprinted, not recorded," he interrupted.
"Imprinted then," I said, mildly irritated and not seeing any
difference.
"Imprinted on places. Maybe those recordings, or imprints, or
whatever
can be erased or covered over by the emotions of people who live there
later. Maybe if I stay here the bad recordings will fade away."
Dad looked even less convinced by that idea than he'd been by the
suggestion
that talking about my nightmares would make them go away. Before
he
could voice his doubts, I spoke again.
"At least let's give it a chance," I pleaded. "Before we make any
drastic
decisions, let's see if the nightmares fade like Mum's did. Please?"
He considered my plea for a few seconds, then sighed.
"Okay," he said. "We'll wait and see how things go, but you must
promise
to tell me if you have more nightmares or if... well, if anything odd
happens."
With a sigh of relief I eagerly nodded my agreement to his conditions.
"I promise," I said.
oo00oo
The conversation at breakfast put me behind schedule, so I had to hurry
to
get down to the gatehouse to meet up with Brian and Tom. As Tom
had
recently been having nightmares on the same nights as I had, I thought
that
he might have a migraine, and so I was a little surprised as well as
very
pleased
to see him that morning. In fact he looked very well and
completely
rested.
On the way to school there was no opportunity for us to speak
privately,
so I didn't mention my nightmare until he came up to my house late that
afternoon. He informed me that he'd had an undisturbed night's sleep
and asked me
for
details of my experience. When I told him about the broken window, his
brow
creased into a worried frown.
"It's just as well your dad heard it," he said, "or you might have
frozen
to death in your sleep."
"I'm sure the cold would have woken me up if Dad hadn't," I said,
making
light of the matter.
He didn't look very reassured by my assertion, so I continued in an
even
more cheerful tone.
"Anyway, look on the bright side. At least it means that your
nightmares
aren't caused by mine."
"Is that what you thought?" he asked, looking mildly surprised. "When
you
told me we'd been having them on the same nights, I was a bit worried
that
you were somehow picking them up from me. Still, even if we don't
have
them on the same nights every time, it's hard to believe they're not
related
at all."
"I s'pose not," I said.
When I went on to tell him about my dad's idea that some places could
be
'imprinted' by strong emotions, Tom was more sceptical than I had
anticipated,
but he was still concerned about my welfare if the nightmares
continued. Because I'd already dismissed Dad's suggestion that we might
move, I
didn't
mention that as a possible solution.
That evening we were both even less inclined than usual to do homework,
and
without even opening our school bags we decided to just see if there
was
anything on TV. As it turned out, there was very little that
either
of us wanted to watch, so we ended up just sitting together on the
living
room sofa and chatting, while some banal late-afternoon game show
droned
on
in the background. We both sat back, relaxed and close together,
but
not quite touching. Close or prolonged physical contact with
anyone,
even Tom, made me uncomfortable, and I think that he could sense that.
He was in a very pensive mood, and I was tired because my sleep had
been
so
disturbed the previous night, so the conversation gradually began to
fade.
However, we were both very comfortable in the lengthening silences and,
neglecting
my hostly duties, I dozed off. Not long later, I awoke to find my
head
tilted sideways and my right cheek resting on something warm but lumpy
and
not very comfortable.
There was a slight pressure on the top of my head and on opening my
eyes
I saw a pair of knees, clad in blue jeans. For a few seconds I
was
disoriented then I realised that my head was resting on Tom's shoulder
and
I lurched upright. As I made this sudden movement the top of my
head
collided with the source of the slight pressure.
"Ouch!"
Tom, more startled than hurt, was rubbing his ear, which I guessed had
been
resting against the top of my head.
"S-sorry," I stuttered, feeling embarrassed and guilty for falling
asleep
on my guest.
"S'okay," he said and smiled.
Then I noticed that there was a darker spot on the shoulder of his
mid-grey
shirt, and with shame I realised I must have drooled during my
sleep. Not only had I fallen asleep on my guest, I'd drooled on him and
then banged his ear. My cheeks burned red.
"Sorry..." I said again, then because my transgressions were too many
to
list individually, I added simply, "...for everything."
"I told you, it's okay!" he said, then with a shy smile he added in a
much
more quietly, "Actually, it was quite nice."
Now we were both red-faced, and as if by mutual agreement, we looked
away
from
one another and toward the TV.
"Anyway," Tom said in a teasing tone, "I s'pose it's my fault for being
so
boring that you couldn't stay awake!"
"You're not boring!" I protested, turning to look at him again. "I'm
just
very tired after last night."
"Yeah, I know," he said, his eyes twinkling. "I was just winding you
up."
We both relaxed back on the sofa, and this time when our shoulders
touched,
instead of moving away I leaned against him.
oo00oo
Bearing in mind how embarrassed I was at the time, it's perhaps
surprising
that the little incident on the sofa signalled the start of a new phase
in
our relationship. After that, whenever we were alone together we
were
often in physical contact. At first it was just apparently
casual,
almost accidental, brushing of hands, then later there were times we
sat
so close together that our sides touched one another almost completely
from shoulders to
ankles. How exactly it happened I don't remember, but within a couple
of weeks
we'd
progressed to occasionally holding hands.
Having privacy together in Prospect House wasn't difficult because Dad
spent
so
much time at work. Of course, whenever anyone else was around we
were
careful to maintain both a physical and emotional distance, and our
public
behaviour, even in such details as where we sat on the school bus,
remained
unchanged. From the looks that Chris gave us, it was clear that he
had
some idea about the situation between me and Tom, but his only reaction
appeared
to be one of mild amusement. This may have been because Tom had
made
an effort to ensure that spending time with me didn't cause him to
neglect
his friendship with Chris. If anyone else had noticed that Tom
and
I had become closer, they showed no sign of it.
Neither Tom nor I talked about our feelings for one another or about
the
more tactile nature of our interactions, but there was no doubt about
our
growing closeness. My own attitude to this was somewhat
ambivalent.
I enjoyed being with Tom, and now I felt comfortable when he touched
me,
but
I was still made a little uneasy by the fact that he'd infiltrated both
my
emotional and physical spaces. The possibility of falling in love
scared
me so much that I didn't allow myself to even think about it.
From
my point of view, our relationship was progressing about as fast and as
far
as I wanted. I found out later that Tom would have liked things
to
go faster and further, but he sensed how I felt and was patiently
letting
me set the pace.
As Christmas inexorably approached, my life was going smoothly and my
relationship
with Tom seemed to reach a sort of plateau. We were very
comfortable
together and our emotional intimacy deepened, but our physical intimacy
never
went beyond the private cuddles and holding of hands. A few times
I'm
sure that Tom wanted to take things further, but on those occasions the
involuntary
tensing of my body or the look of fear in my eyes must have dissuaded
him.
From what Tony and Brian had told me about their exploits with girls,
they
sometimes moved from a first meeting to snogging in a matter of
hours. Maybe there was an element of bragging in what my two straight
friends
told
me, but I believed they were being essentially truthful. Also, I
knew
that Chris, gay like me but almost a year younger, had already got as
far
as oral sex, so I began to wonder if I was odd because of my reluctance
to
go further with Tom. I hoped that Tom didn't think I was too
weird.
I wanked at least once per day with fantasies of Tom in my mind, so
there
was nothing wrong with my sex drive, and I certainly found Tom
attractive. On one level I wanted to be more physically intimate with
him, but
whenever
that seemed likely to happen in reality, I drew back in fear. I
was
afraid of making a fool of myself because of my total
inexperience.
I was afraid that if I gave in to my desires Tom might change his mind
and
reject me. I was afraid of how vulnerable I'd be if I became even
more
emotionally attached to him. I was afraid of how people,
especially
my dad, would react if they found out about us. The list of my
fears
seemed endless.
During the weeks between the breaking of the window and the Christmas
holiday,
neither Tom nor I had any nightmares and I didn't hear the tapping or
experience
any of the strongly erotic episodes. Despite this period of calm,
I
couldn't really relax because I had a strong impression that my
existence
was in a state of unstable equilibrium and that, for good or ill,
things
were
about to change. Feeling powerless and unable to control events,
all
I could do was wait with metaphorically bated breath for events to
unfold.