Ash & Bone

Ash & Bone by John Harvey

Book: Ash & Bone by John Harvey Read Free Book Online
Authors: John Harvey
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of her head, the warmth of her hair.
    As the bells chimed the quarter hour, a man crossed towards where Katherine was sitting.
    Instinct prickled the skin on Elder's wrists and the backs of his hands.
    He was not a big man, around five seven, slightly built, denim jacket, jeans, check shirt, basketball boots, fair hair flopping forward over his face. He spoke to several of the small group gathered round the bench, stepping back a pace or so to talk to the pony-tailed man, who had wandered off earlier and then returned. Katherine he ignored, but Elder had noticed the way she had become more alert at his approach, her back more upright, fingers combing through the rough shag of unkempt hair.
    Five minutes, more, and as if noticing her for the first time, he offered Katherine a cigarette and lit it from his own. Another few minutes and she was standing at his side, both of them talking now, quite animatedly. Three buses went past in slow convoy, hiding them temporarily from Elder's view, and when he saw them again they were walking towards the fountains, passing in between, his hand coming to rest across the top of her shoulders as they moved past one of the stone lions guarding the Council House before turning right into Exchange Arcade.
    Elder picked them up again as they emerged.
    At the foot of Victoria Street, the man reached for her hand and she pulled it away. Down through Hockley not touching, side by side. Coffee shops, bars, hairdressers, retro clothing, Indian restaurants. Goose Gate into Gedling. Waiting for a gap in the traffic on Carlton Road, his arm went round her shoulders again and she did nothing to resist.
    Now they were in Sneinton, short rows of narrow streets, terraced houses, back-to-backs, some with brightly painted front doors and patterned blinds, others with makeshift curtains at the windows, broken glass. The house they stopped outside was midway along, a fading 'Not in My Name' poster alongside one more recent, 'War Criminal!' writ large above a photograph of George W Bush.
    A cat, ginger and white with a white-tipped tail, jumped up on to the window ledge and rubbed its head against Katherine's arm as she stood waiting for the man to unlock the door. Running between their legs, the animal followed them into the house and the door closed behind them. Though it was yet the middle of the day, he glimpsed Katherine for a moment, standing at the downstairs window, before she pulled the curtains closed. Whether she saw him or not, he did not know.
8
    He stood there for five minutes, ten, fifteen.
My father. He thinks he's my father.
There was still time to walk away. Elder walked, instead, across the street and, seeing no bell, knocked on the door.
    The music playing as the door opened was loud, rhythmic and fast, nothing he recognised.
    'Yes?'
    'Rob Summers?'
    'Depends.'
    'On what?'
    Summers smiled. The check on his shirt was mostly shades of green and grey; his eyes a pale, watery blue.
    Elder looked past him into the narrow hall. Coats hung, bunched, along one wall; a strip of carpet, worn but clean, along the floor.
    'Police, right?' Summers said. 'You're not selling something, not religious. You must be the police.'
    'Not exactly.'
    A smile of understanding passed across Summers's face and, relaxing his shoulders, he leaned sideways against the wall. 'Katie,' he said, putting a little singsong into his voice. 'Your old man's here.'
    After a moment, Katherine appeared at the end of the hall, waited long enough to recognise her father's face, then turned away.
    'I suppose you'd better come in,' Summers said.
    The room was small and dimly lit, a small settee and two unmatched armchairs taking up much of the space. Shelves either side of the empty fireplace were filled with books, videos and DVDs, crammed in this way and that. More books and magazines lay in piles upon the floor. In one corner was a small TV, video recorder alongside, DVD player on top. More shelving stretched along the back wall, what

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