ruffling the animalâs ears, pulling the furry face towards his. âI didnât like our dad much, did I, hmm? Grumpy old man, wasnât âe?â
Siân noticed the size of the manâs hands: unusually large. A superstitious chill tickled her spine, like a tiny trickle of water. She distracted herself from it by noting the estuary twang of the manâs accent.
âDid you come up from London?â
âYeah.â He frowned a little, intent on proving he could please the dog as much as the next pair of hands. âTo bury the old man. And to sort out the house. Havenât decided what Iâll do yet. Itâs in Loggerheadâs Yard, so itâs worth a mint. I might sell it; I might live in it. As a building, itâs a hell of a lot nicer than my flat in West Kilburn.â He cast a deprecating glance back at the town, as if to add, Except of course itâs in bloody Whitby.
âDid you live here as a kid?â
âMany, many, long, long years,â he affirmed, in a querulous tone of weary melodrama. âCouldnât get out fast enough.â
Siân puzzled over the two halves of his statement, and couldnât help thinking there was a flaw in his logic somewhere.
âI like this place myself,â she said. It surprised her to hear herself saying it â given the nightmares and the insomnia, she had good reason to associate Whitby with misery. But it was true: she liked the place.
âBut youâre not from here, are you?â
âNo. Iâm an archaeologist, working at the dig.â
âCool! The sixty skeletons, right?â
âAmong other things, yes.â She looked away from him, to register her disapproval of his sensationalist instincts, but if he noticed, he didnât give a toss.
âWow,â he said. âGothic.â
âAnglian, actually, as far as we can tell.â
Her attempt to put him in his place hung in the air between them, sounding more and more snooty as she replayed it in her head. She returned her attention to the dog, trying to salvage things by stroking the parts the man wasnât stroking.
âWhatâs his name?â
He hesitated for a moment. âHadrian.â
She snorted helplessly. âThatâs ⦠thatâs an exceptionally crap name. For any dog, but especially this one.â
âIsnât it!â he beamed. âMy dad was a Roman history buff, you see.â
âAnd your name?â
Again he hesitated. âCall me Mack.â
âShort for something?â
âMagnus.â His pale blue eyes narrowed. âLatin for âgreatâ. Grisly, isnât it?â
âGrisly?â
âSounds like Iâve got a big head or something.â
âIâll reserve judgement on that. Itâs a fine, ancient name, anyway.â
âYou would say that, wouldnât you?â
The familiarity of his tone worried her a bit. What delicate work it was, this business of conversing with strangers of the other sex! No wonder she hardly ever attempted it anymore â¦
âWhat do you mean?â she said.
âYou know, being an archaeologist and all that.â
âIâm not actually a fully-fledged archaeologist. Still studying.â
âOh? I wouldâve thought â¦â He caught himself before he could say âat your ageâ or anything like that, but the implication stabbed straight into Siân â straight into her innermost parts, so to speak. Yes, damn it, she didnât look like a peachy young thing anymore. What sheâd gone through in Bosnia â and since â was written and underlined on her face. âIt pleased the Author of our salvation â¦â Pleased Him to put her body and soul through Hell. In order that her strength might be made perfect in weakness. In order that people sheâd only just met would think she was awfully old to be studying for a degree.
âI