kettledrum. Or an artillery barrage.
âItâs just rain, boy.â Kieran heard the tremor in his voice and grimaced in disgust. Some reassurance he was, sweating and quaking like a leaf. Pathetic. Making an effort to steady his hand, he folded the sandpaper and set it on his worktable.
But even if he could make his hand obey, he had no command over his knees. When they threatened to buckle, he staggered two steps to the wall and slid down with his back against it. He felt as if the very air were a massive weight, pressing him down, squeezing his lungs. Finn nuzzled him and climbed half into his lap, and as he wrapped his arms round the dog, he couldnât tell which of them whimpered. âSorry, boy, sorry,â he whispered. âItâll be okay. Weâll be okay. Itâs just a little rain.â
He repeated to himself the rational explanation for his physical distress. Damage to middle ear, due to shelling. Swift changes in barometric pressure may affect equilibrium. It was a familiar mantra.
The army doctors had told him that, as if he hadnât known it himself. Theyâd also told him that heâd been heavily concussed, and that heâd suffered some loss of hearing. âNot enough,â he said aloud, and cackled a little wildly at his own humor. Finn licked his chin and Kieran hugged him harder. âIt will pass,â he whispered, meaning to reassure them both.
The room reeled, bringing a wave of nausea so intense he had to swallow against it. That, too, was related to his middle ear, or so theyâd told him. An inconvenience, theyâd said. He slid a little farther down the wall, and Finn shifted the rest of his eighty-pound weight into his lap.
So inconvenient, along with the shakes and the sweats and the screaming in his sleep, that theyâd discharged him. Bye-bye, Kieran Connolly, Combat Medical Technician, Class 1, and hereâs your bit of decoration and your nice pension. Heâd used the pension to buy the boatshed.
Heâd rowed at Henley in his teens, crewing for a London club. To a kid from Tottenham whoâd stumbled across the Lea Rowing Club quite by accident, Henley had seemed like paradise.
It was just him and his dad, then. His mum had scarpered when he was a baby, but it was not something his dad ever talked about. Theyâd lived in a terraced street that had hung on to respectability by a thread, his dad repairing and building furniture in the shop below the flat. Kieran, white and Irish in a part of north London where that made him a minority, had been well on his way to life as a petty thug.
Kieran stroked Finnâs warm muzzle and closed his eyes, trying to use the memory to quell the panic, the way the army therapist had taught him.
It had been hot, that long ago Saturday in June, just after his fourteenth birthday. Heâd stolen a bike on a dare, ridden it in a wild, heart-hammering escape through the streets of Tottenham to the path that ran down along the River Lea. And then, with the trail clear behind him, his legs burning and the sun beating down on his head, heâd seen the single shells on the water.
The sound of the storm faded from his consciousness as the memory drew him in.
Heâd stopped, gazing at the water, all thought of pursuit and punishment gone in an instant. The boats were stillness in motion, graceful as dragonflies, skimming the surface of the mercurygleaming river, and the sight had gripped and squeezed something inside him that he hadnât known existed.
All that afternoon, heâd watched, and in the dimness of the evening, heâd pedaled slowly back to Tottenham and returned the bike, ignoring the taunts of his mates. The next Saturday heâd gone back to the river, drawn by something he couldnât articulate, a longing that until then had only teased the feathery edges of his imagination.
Another Saturday, and another. He learned that the boat place was called the Lea