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Rock Paper Scissors(39)

Author:Alice Feeney

The handle turns very slowly. When they discover that the door is locked, they try again. More aggressively this time. I feel like I’m in The Shining, but the only window in this bathroom is made of stained glass – even if it did open, I’d never fit through it, and the fall from this height down onto the ground below would probably kill me. I search for a weapon, anything to defend myself with, but find little comfort in my Gillette Venus razor. I hold it out in front of me regardless, then press myself up against the wall, unable to get any farther away. The tiles on my bare back are icy cold.

Everything is quiet for a few seconds. Then the silence is smashed by the sound of a fist banging on the door. I’m so scared I start to cry, tears streaming down my cheeks.

‘Amelia, are you in there? Is everything all right?’

My husband’s voice confuses and calms me at the same time.

‘Adam? Is that you?’

‘Who else would it be?’

I open the door and see him standing there in his pyjama bottoms, stifling a yawn, with his bed hair sticking out in all directions. The light from the old-fashioned candlestick holder he is carrying casts ghostly shadows around the bedroom, so that now I feel like I’m in a Charles Dickens novel.

‘Why are you crying? Are you OK?’ he asks.

My words trip over themselves in my hurry to say them. ‘No, I’m not. Something woke me, I heard a noise downstairs, the lights wouldn’t work, then I heard someone coming up the stairs and—’

‘It was just me, silly. I was thirsty and I went to get a glass of water. But I guess all of the pipes must be frozen because none of the taps work.’

‘There’s no water?’

‘Or power. The storm must have out taken out the generator. I tried to find a fuse box while I was down there – just in case I could fix something – but no joy. Good job we have these creepy candlesticks!’

He holds the flickering flame below his chin and pulls a series of silly faces, like children do with torches at Halloween. I start to feel better. A little bit. At least there is a rational explanation. Then I feel foolish…

‘I thought I heard a noise downstairs. The sound of someone creeping around. I was so scared—’

‘Me too, that’s what woke me,’ Adam interrupts.

After a brief absence, my terror returns. ‘What?’

‘That was the other reason I went downstairs, to check everything was OK. But the main doors are still locked, there is no other way in or out, this place is like Fort Knox. I had a good look around, no burglars – or sheep – have managed to break in and everything is fine. Just as we left it. Besides, Bob would have barked if a stranger had let themselves in.’

That is true: Bob does growl if a stranger comes to the front door at home, but only until we open it. Then he wags his tail at double speed and rolls over to show the visitors his tummy – Labradors are too friendly to be good guard dogs.

We climb back into bed and I ask a question he never wants to answer.

‘Do you ever wish that we’d had children?’

‘Not really.’

‘Why?’

I expect Adam to change the subject – that’s what normally happens next – but he doesn’t. ‘Sometimes I’m glad we don’t have kids, because I’m scared that we might have fucked them up somehow, the way our parents fucked us up. I think maybe our line came to an end for a reason.’

I think I preferred it when he didn’t answer. I don’t like him describing us like that, but part of me does wonder whether he might be right. I’ve always felt abandoned by people I was foolish enough to care about, including my parents. Yes, they died in a car crash before I was born, but the result – me growing up alone – is the same as if they deserted me deliberately. If you don’t have anyone to love or be loved by as a child then how do you learn?

But then, isn’t love like breathing? Isn’t it instinct? Something we’re born knowing how to do? Or is love like speaking French? If nobody teaches you, you’ll never be fluent, and if you don’t practise you forget how…

I wonder if my husband really still loves me.

‘I don’t like it here,’ I confess.

‘No, me neither. Maybe we should leave in the morning? Find a nice hotel somewhere a bit less remote?’

‘That sounds good.’

‘OK. Let’s try to get some sleep until it is light outside, then pack up and go. Maybe take another sleeping pill, it might help?’

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