to come a long way to see it. They walk up these stone stairs towards that abbey, and they feel theyâre literally following in the footsteps of medieval monks and ancient kings. They see those turrets poking up over the headland, and it takes them back eight hundred years â¦â
âAh, but that thing up there isnât the real Whitby Abbey, is it? Itâs a reconstruction: some tourist bodyâs idea of what a medieval abbey should look like.â
âThatâs not true.â
âDidnât it all fall down ages ago, and they built it up in completely the wrong shape?â
âNo, thatâs not true,â she insisted, feeling herself tempted to argue heatedly with a complete stranger â something she hadnât done since Patrick. She ought to dismiss his ignorance with the lofty condescension it deserved, but instead she said, âCome up and Iâll show you.â
âWhat?â he said, but she was already quickening her pace. âWait!â
She stumped ahead, leading him past Saint Maryâs churchyard, past the cliffside trail to Caedmonâs Trod â the alternative path back to the town below, along which heâd meant to run with Hadrian. Teeth clenched with effort, she stumped up another flight of steps leading to the abbey.
âItâs all right, I believe you!â Magnus protested as he dawdled in her wake, hoping sheâd come round, but she led him straight on to the admission gate. He baulked at the doorway, only to see his cheerfully disloyal dog trotting across the threshold.
âBastard,â he muttered as he followed.
Inside, there was a sign warning visitors that all pets must be on a leash, and there was a man at the admissions counter waiting to be handed £1.70. Siân, so used to wandering freely in and out of the abbey grounds that sheâd forgotten there was a charge for non-archaeologists, paused to take stock. Mackâs running shorts, whatever else they might contain, clearly had no provision for a wallet.
âHeâs with me,â she declared, and led the hapless Magnus past the snack foods and pamphlets, through the portal to antiquity. It all happened so fast, Hadrian was dashing across the turf, already half-way to the 12th century, before the English Heritage man could say a word.
Siân stood in the grassy emptiness of what had once been the abbeyâs nave. The wind flapped at her skirt. She pointed up at the towering stone arches, stark and skeletal against the sky. The thought of anyone â well, specifically this man at her side â being immune to the primitive grandeur and the tragic devastation of this place, provoked her to a righteous lecture.
âThose three arches there,â she said, making sure he was looking where her finger pointed (he was â and so was his dog), âthose arches are originally from the south wall, yes, and when they were reconstructed in the 1920s, they were propped up against the northern boundary wall, yes. Rather odd, I admit. But itâs all the original masonry, you know. And at least those arches are safe now. Weâd love to restore them to their original position, but theyâre better off where they are than in a pile of rubble â or donât you think so?â
âIâm sorry, Iâm sorry!â he pleaded facetiously. âI didnât know I was treading on your toes â¦â
âI have some books and brochures that explain everything, the whole history,â she said. âYou can read those â Iâll give them to you. A nice parcel. Loggerheadâs Yard, wasnât it?â
âOh, but no, really,â he grimaced, flushing with embarrassment. âI should buy them myself.â
âNonsense. Youâre welcome to them.â
âBut ⦠but theyâre yours . Youâve spent money â¦â
âNonsense, Iâve got what I needed from them; theyâre not