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The rain intensified. I saw them confer about taking shelter from the downpour. The man appeared to be lifting something. The three men moved towards the road, where they were screened from view by the plastic sheeting.

I was on the landing, poised to start down the stairs when I heard them come in. Boots were stamped on the doorstep.

‘We might as well wait for them here,’ I heard Uncle say. ‘Better than drowning under a tree …’

They were pushing and shoving some heavy object.

‘Yes, leave it here. That’s all right … we’re closed anyway.’

I heard them go down the passage to the kitchen. I buttoned up Uncle’s dressing gown and went downstairs.

‘Anyone for some good hot broth?’ Aunt called from the range. ‘Or something stronger, perhaps … or would you prefer a cup of coffee?’

When I came down all four of them were sitting around the table. The workman added a dash of genever to his coffee. The priest knocked back a thimble-sized glass of liquor and breathed out through clenched teeth. They had not noticed me yet.

‘So you see,’ said the priest, ‘some things are best left undisturbed …’

I saw Uncle Werner nod in agreement.

‘Ha!’ cried Aunt. ‘He’s awake. You look a sight better already. Can I get you something to eat, lad?’

I shook my head. ‘Don’t think so. Wouldn’t keep it down anyway.’

‘Bearing up all right over at the Jesuits?’ asked the priest. ‘Not the gentlest of folks by all accounts, eh?’

I shrugged my shoulders. ‘Not bad.’ Then I felt compelled to say I was sorry about the canopy, last summer.

‘Not to worry,’ he said, laughing indulgently. ‘Just a little accident, that’s all …’ He turned to face the company again.

‘It’s a funny business, though,’ I heard the workman say. ‘Not that I haven’t seen my share. Remember Richard, the old gamekeeper? Yesterday, it was. And the little girl, daughter of the baker’s brother-in-law … All look the same in the end …’

Aunt laid her hand on his arm. ‘Are you sure you don’t want some of my nice broth? Shame to let it go cold. Come on, folks, have a taste.’

She stood up and went through to the scullery.

I left the men behind and lurked in the passage.

My father. It must have been close on ten years since I had last set eyes on him. Ten years in which it was not he who tossed me in the air, nor he who took me by the hand and showed me the way along paths I have since learned to walk unaided, despite the worsening bumps and potholes in the surface under my feet.

He stood on the mat in the doorway, looking as forlorn as a prodigal son seeking refuge from the wind and the rain. Behind him, in the porch, stood a pair of muddy boots and a spade, as if he had dug a tunnel from the other side of the globe just to be here.

I heard a faint echo of his laughter, his voice, his intonations, the expressions he used, the gist of which eluded me as it had in the old days. I was not yet thirteen, but he barely reached to my calves.

I heard Aunt calling my name, and then, more quietly, addressing the men in the kitchen: ‘Where can he have got to?’

I looked down at the dark, mahogany box. She had bought him a handsome new trunk, had my mother, not much bigger than a suitcase.

I bent down, rubbed my thumbs over his shoulders of stained wood, ran my fingers over the braille of the plaque on the lid and felt the coolness of the brass handles on either side.

I heard a rushing sound, as if all the photos ever taken of him were suddenly rising from their albums and boxes and picture frames, as if he had let go of my hand to startle the butterflies that had hovered motionless over the hemlock ever since. But like as not it was only my head spinning faster and faster as I sank to my knees and laid my feverish cheek against the wood.

The dressing gown hampered me, so I untied the belt. I clenched my fingers around the handles. The box was lighter than I expected. Just as it rose up from the doorstep something came loose inside, rolled over the base and bumped hollowly against the back, followed by a dry rattle like jostling marbles.

The sound pierced me to the quick. I let go of the handles.

‘Joris?’ I heard Aunt cry.

I ran past her down the passage and up the stairs. In my room I stripped my mattress, bundled up my sheets, threw them on the floor, kicked them under my bed. I drew the curtains to darken the room. The rain had lifted to a drizzle.

I sat down on the bare mattress in the sepia light filtering through the curtains. I don’t know how long I sat there.

A car pulled up on the cobbles. Someone got out, the engine was still running. The shop’s bell tinkled.

‘Anybody in?’ someone called. And I heard Aunt reply: ‘Yes, yes, over here.’

‘Can I ride with you?’ I heard a voice ask — the priest’s, by the sound of it.

The bell tinkled again.

‘I’ll join you later …’ Uncle called.

I got to my feet, crossed to the window, draped the curtain around my shoulders and stood with my fingers pressing on the wood of the sill, which was softened by age and sudden showers and seemed to be held in place by nothing but coats of paint.

I glimpsed a figure in a dark suit shutting the back of the hearse, and then I saw the priest getting in next to the driver.

Car doors thudded. They drove off. A while later Uncle hove into view, riding his bicycle down the path.

I turned round, let the curtains fall in folds over my head, went back to the bed and stubbed my toe against the table leg on the way.

I stood on one leg and swore, holding my aching foot in the air.

All I wanted was to stop moving, to just stand there and turn to stone, even if I knew I looked stupid in my uncle’s flowing dressing gown with only a cotton vest underneath. In the commotion that morning I had forgotten to put on a clean pair of underpants.

There was a knock at the door.

Aunt said my name.

I kept silent.

‘Joris?’ she repeated.

I turned my back to the door and went to the window, where the glow of sunbeams suddenly breaking through the clouds lit up the weave of the curtain fabric.

‘Why don’t you say something, lad?’ She sounded fraught. Twisting the doorknob she said, ‘You’re not doing anything silly, are you?’

‘It’s all wet …’ I heard myself say in a small voice. ‘I’ve wet my bed.’

She let go of the doorknob.

I heard a sigh.

‘You poor thing. Never mind, it doesn’t matter. Come on, please open the door,’ she pleaded softly.

I turned the key, but first I buttoned up the dressing gown.

She entered, took my head in her hands and pulled me towards her.

I did not resist.

‘These things happen,’ she murmured in my ear, ‘what must out, must out …’

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

ERWIN MORTIER (born 1965) made his mark in 1999 with his debut novel Marcel, which was awarded several prizes in Belgium and the Netherlands, and received acclaim throughout Europe. In the following years he quickly built up a reputation as one of the leading authors of his generation. His novel While the Gods Were Sleeping received the AKO Literature Prize, one of the most prestigious awards in the Netherlands. His latest work, Stammered Songbook, a raw yet tender elegy about illness and loss, was met with unanimous praise. Mortier’s evocative descriptions bring past worlds brilliantly to life.