The Train by Sarah Bourne (fiction books to read txt) ๐
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- Author: Sarah Bourne
Read book online ยซThe Train by Sarah Bourne (fiction books to read txt) ๐ยป. Author - Sarah Bourne
โSo, Liam,โ said Trevor, and stopped. He couldnโt ask the thing he most wanted to know: How did you get sick and are you going to go in and out of madness all your life? Which was shorthand for Will you weigh my daughter down, or lift her up?
โMr Jackson, itโs so good to meet you at last. Iโm sorry about my father earlier โ Fliss phoned and told me what happened.โ
He spoke like he couldnโt move his tongue very well, so his vowels were flat and his consonants too soft. Trevor wondered if it was the drugs or if he always sounded like that. He didnโt like this boy apologising for his father either. Mr Lawrence Kelly was, undoubtedly, racist, but he had only been doing what Trevor himself wanted to do โ keep these two apart. They were allies, of a sort. He decided to ignore the comment.
โTell me, Liam, what it is you do?โ
โIโm studying photography and working in a photographic shop. I hope to be a freelance nature photographer but Iโll do weddings and other things too โ the bread-and-butter stuff.โ
โI already told you that, Dad,โ said Felice from the kitchen.
โSo you did, Sweetpea, so you did.โ Trevor wondered if Liam ever called her Sweetpea or Starlight, or any of the other names he had for her. He drummed his fingers on the table, unable to think of anything else to say.
โTa-da!โ said Felice, setting a casserole dish down on the table and going back to the kitchen to collect a salad. โLetโs eat.โ She looked at him and then at Liam. Trevor suddenly had no appetite and no energy for this dinner. It didnโt matter whether he liked this boy or not, or if he was sane or mad, rich or poor. His daughter had made her choice, just as he and Frostie had done all those years ago and there were plenty of people telling them they were making a mistake. He loved his daughter and had to try and trust she knew what she was doing. What goes around comes around, he thought, and almost laughed.
โIt smells good.โ He managed a smile.
Liam nodded and took a deep breath. โFliss is a great cook.โ
Trevor knew that. He didnโt need this stakki boy to tell him. He bit his lip to stop himself from saying anything. This Liam was a hard boy to like. Or was it that his own prejudice was too great an obstacle to see past?
Liam looked at him. โIโm sure you want to know why Iโm in hospital and what will happen in the future. I would, I suspect, if I were in your shoes.โ He looked into Feliceโs eyes as if for support.
โYes.โ Trevor didnโt trust himself to say anything more.
โI am ashamed to say it was all my own fault. After university I was rather rudderless. Iโd done a course I loved but it led to nothing I wanted to do. My father was pressuring me into making decisions about a career. He wanted me to go into law, like him, and I suppose I rebelled. I drank too much and smoked too much weed โ marijuanaโโ
โI know what weed is.โ
โOf course.โ Liam nodded but didnโt look Trevor in the eye. โIt went on for a few weeks. When Flissโ โ he looked at her and took her hand in a gesture that was reassurance and apology โ โand my friends tried to stop me I felt they didnโt understand, that they were against me somehow, so I smoked more. I had a psychotic episode and was sectioned. I realise now how stupid I was and my doctor reckons that as long as I stay off the weed, itโll never happen again.โ
โAnd can you โ stay off the weed, I mean?โ asked Trevor.
Felice gasped and he realised he had sounded aggressive but he had to know.
โYes, sir,โ said Liam. โI wouldnโt want to go through it all again, for my sake or Flissโs.โ He looked at her and smiled.
Trevor felt angry. This Liam had been a self-indulgent fool. If it was only his life he was messing up, fine, but Trevor knew that even if he never smoked again, there were no guarantees he would stay well โ his cousin back in Jamaica had never been the same after his first ganja-induced episode.
The evening didnโt go well. Trevor would start to say something and hear the accusation in his voice โ you are not good enough for her โ and stop. Liam feigned interest in his half-statements but was defensive and didnโt offer anything more of himself. Felice tried to introduce non-controversial topics but the air was so heavy with the things none of them were saying that the conversation fell between them and settled into a congealed mass that, in the end, none of them could find the energy to wade through.
Trevor made his excuses and left soon after nine, seeing the accusation in his daughterโs eyes: You didnโt try.
He shook Liamโs wet-fish hand, tried to hug Felice, who stiffened in his arms, and went out into the night. Two young boys who should have been tucked up in bed were lighting cigarettes, shading the match with their hands, heads together. Trevor wanted to tell them to stop now, to go home and stay safe. But home wasnโt always safe as well he knew, and anyway, who was he to tell anyone else what to do with their life?
He walked slowly towards the station, hands in his pockets, trying to breathe
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