The Bone Clocks

The Bone Clocks by David Mitchell Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Bone Clocks by David Mitchell Read Free Book Online
Authors: David Mitchell
Tags: Fiction, thriller, Science-Fiction, Fantasy
like a pair of total wallies from
Scooby-Doo …
    M E AND B RUBECK leg it down the lane, like we’ve escaped from Colditz. The bells sound sloshy and shiny in the blue dark. I get a stitch so we stop at a bench by the village sign. “Typical,” says Brubeck. “I want to show off my ‘How to Survive in the Wild’ skills, and it’s the Invasion of the Wurzels instead. I need a fag. You?”
    “Okay. Will they be ding-donging for a while?”
    “Guess so.” Brubeck hands me a cigarette and holds out a lighter; I dip the tip in the flame. “I’ll let you back in when they’ve gone. Yale locks are a cinch, even in the dark.”
    “But shouldn’t you be getting home?”
    “I’ll call my mum from the phone box by the pub and say I’m staying out night-fishing after all. Little white lie.”
    I need his help, but I’m nervous ’bout a price tag.
    “Don’t worry, Sykes. My intentions are honorable.”
    I think of Vinny Costello and flinch. “Good.”
    “Guys don’t
just
think ’bout getting off with girls, y’know.”
    I fire a beam of smoke straight at Brubeck’s face, so he has to squint and look away. “I’ve got an older brother,” I tell him. We’re by an overgrown orchard, so when we’ve finished our cigarettes we climb in and scrump a few unripe apples. There’s a brick wall to clamber up. The apples are tart as limes, but good after an oily dinner. Lights blink on the power station we passed earlier. “Out thataway,” Brubeck chucks an apple core in the general direction, “past them hazy lights on the Isle of Sheppey, there’s a fruit farm, Gabriel Harty’s. I worked the strawberry season there last year and madetwenty-five quid a day. There’s dorms for the pickers, and once the exams are over, I’m going back. I’m saving for an InterRail in August.”
    “What’s an InterRail?”
    “Seriously?”
    “Seriously.”
    “A train pass. You pay a hundred and thirty quid and then you can travel all over Europe, for a month, for free. Second-class, but still. From the tip of Portugal to the top of Norway. Eastern-bloc countries too, Yugoslavia and places. The Berlin Wall. Istanbul. In Istanbul, there’s this bridge, right. One side’s in Europe and the other’s in Asia. I’m going to walk across it.”
    Far away, a lonely dog barks, or perhaps a fox.
    I ask, “What do you do in all these countries?”
    “Look around. Walk. Find a cheap bed. Eat what the locals eat. Find a cheap beer. Try not to get fleeced. Talk. Pick up a few words in the local lingo. Just
be
there, y’know? Sometimes,” Brubeck bites into an apple, “sometimes I want to be
every
where, all at once, so badly I could just …” Brubeck mimes a bomb going off in his ribcage. “Do you never get that feeling?”
    A bat flaps by, like it’s on a string in a naff vampire film.
    “Not really, if I’m honest. The furthest I’ve ever been’s Ireland, to see my mum’s relatives in Cork.”
    “What’s it like?”
    “Different. It’s not all checkpoints and bombs like up north, though the Troubles are still in the air a bit, and it’s best to shut up about politics. They
hate
Thatcher ’cause of Bobby Sands and the hunger strikers. I’ve got this one great-aunt, my mam’s aunt Eilísh—she’s brilliant. She keeps hens and has a gun in her coal hole, and when she was younger she cycled all the way to Kathmandu. Really, she did. She felt that wanna-be-everywhere
boom
thing, for sure. I’ve seen photos and newspaper cuttings and stuff. She lives on this long headland near Bantry—the Sheep’s Head peninsula. It’s like the edge of the world. There’s nothing there, no shops or anything, but”—there’s not many people I’d admit this to—“I really loved it.”
    There’s a moon sharp enough to cut your finger on.
    We say nothing for a bit, but it’s not an awkward nothing. Then Brubeck says, “D’you know ’bout the second umbilical cord, Sykes?”
    I can’t make out his face anymore. “You

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