Naming the Bones

Naming the Bones Read Free Page A

Book: Naming the Bones Read Free
Author: Louise Welsh
Tags: General Fiction
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‘Murray, Jack talked to you about the show, didn’t he?’
    He knocked back the last dreg of wine and handed his empty glass to her.
    ‘I think so, maybe a while ago.’
    Lyn pushed a stray curl away from her eyes.
    ‘You’ve no idea, have you?’
    He grinned, embarrassed at being caught out.
    ‘Maybe not.’
    ‘You might find it . . .’ She hesitated, searching for the right word. ‘. . . challenging.’
    Murray laughed.
    ‘Aye, well, that won’t be a first.’
    Lyn gave a weak smile.
    ‘Just remember it was done with love.’
    ‘No blood this time?’
    ‘No blood, but it was still painful for him, so be kind.’
    ‘When am I not?’
    ‘Never.’
    She touched his arm gently as she descended the stairs to the bar.
    Jack was at the centre of a small knot of people, but he saw Murray and broke away, flinging an arm around his brother’s shoulder. Murray wondered where it came from, this physicality. He couldn’t remember them ever touching as boys except when they were fighting.
    ‘Hiya.’
    ‘Hi, Jack.’ He put his arm round his brother, feeling the heat of his body through the fabric of his suit. ‘Congratulations.’
    Jack’s face was shiny, his forehead beaded with sweat and his eyes bright. Murray could hear his brother’s voice coming from somewhere else too, a voiceover on a video installation he guessed. The words were indistinct, but Jack’s soft tones were cut through with another wilder, higher voice. The Jack in front of him looked anxious. He squeezed Murray’s shoulder and said, ‘I was keeping an eye out for you. Have you been round everything already?’
    ‘No, I just got here. All I’ve seen are those Japanese cartoon-collage things.’
    Jack gave a quick scan of the room then whispered, ‘Pile of pish, eh?’
    Murray laughed.
    ‘I don’t know about art, but I do know a pile of pish when I see it.’
    ‘Don’t let them put you off. Anyway, don’t congratulate me till you’ve seen my stuff. You might not like it.’
    ‘I’d better go and have a butcher’s then.’
    The walls behind him were lined with photos. They looked more muted than Jack’s usual sharp-focused colours, but they were too far away for Murray to take in their detail.
    ‘Wait a moment.’ Jack took his sleeve as if worried that his brother would escape. ‘Murray, it’s all about Dad.’
    Murray pulled himself gently from his brother’s grip. He nodded, not trusting himself to speak, and walked into the heart of the exhibition.
    Their father looked pretty much as he had when Murray had last seen him. He was propped up in the high-backed chair, wearing a pair of brown paisley-patterned pyjamas. His hands clutched the armrests. His head was thrown back, his old face lost in the crazy smile of another man. Jack’s camera had caught him mid-word, his mouth open, the wetness of saliva coating his lips. His eyes dazzled.
    Murray shut his own eyes then opened them again, the vision of his father remained in front of him, exposed to the wine-drinkers. He could hear his father’s voice now, chatting to Jack. He walked to the curtained darkroom in the corner of the gallery, ignoring the display cases and trying to blinker himself to the other photographs. The two long benches inside the blacked-out cubicle were full, so he stood at the end of the row of people leaning against the back wall. The close-up of his father’s face was six foot high. Jack’s voice came from somewhere off-camera asking, ‘Mr Watson, can you tell me if you’ve got any children, please?’
    Their father grinned.
    ‘I’ve got two boys, terrific wee fellas. Six and eleven, they are.’
    ‘Great ages, and what are they up to the now?’
    The old man’s face fogged with confusion.
    ‘I don’t know. I’ve no seen them in a long while.’ He was getting distressed, his pitch rising. ‘They telt me they were fine, but how do they know? Have you seen them, son?’
    ‘I’ve seen them, they’re absolutely fine.’
    ‘Are you sure

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