Date: Sun, 28 Feb 2010 17:43:47 +0000
From: paxos@hushmail.com
Subject: The 16.02 from London Victoria PART ONE (m/b)

The persistent rain sleets and squalls over London.  Slick streets
reflect taxi headlights circling the railway station.  Buses lumber
through pothole puddles, sending scattering plumes of water over
the pavement.  Pedestrians hurry, heads bent, umbrellas dueling
under the grey sky.

Charles Fox steps carefully past a sheet of water, protecting his
leather shoes as best he can.  His suit trousers are wet around the
ankles from the angled rain.  He bumps into a tourist who stops
unexpectedly to consult a sodden map.

"Excuse me."

He reaches the brightly lit entrance to the station and steps out
of the rain.  He pauses for a moment, putting down his briefcase so
he can flap the wings of his umbrella.

Victoria Station seethes.  His glasses steam up as they adjust to
the warm fug.  The departure board clicks and whirs as it cascades
destinations, watched by the crowd below.

The 16.02 is not his usual train.  He checks the board.  Platform
18.  He moves briskly, in a straight line, so that others weave
around him.

"Excuse me."

He passes his ticket through the turnstile and marches past the
humming fumes of the locomotive.  First Class has seats available.
Entering the carriage the hubbub of the station is immediately
muted.  He makes his way towards the middle and selects a window
seat.

He pulls papers from his briefcase and sets a slim silver pen on
top.  He decides against the newspaper.  The briefcase joins his
umbrella and his coat on the rack above.

He settles into the upholstered seat.  A reading lamp pools a soft
light over his papers.  At this time of year dusk is still two
hours away, but the lowering sky has cast a darkening gloom.

He adjusts his cuff-links.

Outside on the platform, the passengers hurry past First Class to
try to find seats.  A whistle blows somewhere.  Doors slam.  The
lights flicker and pulse.  Two more short blows of a whistle.
Shouting.  The train tugs and starts to roll.

Charles Fox rests his hands on the table in front of him and picks
up his pen.  He taps the end against his papers as he stares out of
the window.

Outside the station the train edges slowly across the city.
Raindrops haze and streak against the glass.  The false twilight
has been met with lights from offices and goods yards.  Tail lights
pulse as traffic slows in the teeming streets below.  They cross
the river at Battersea, and above the Thames a lighter patch of
sky.

The train gathers speed and beats a familiar rhythm on the tracks.
They cross points.  They clatter and shake.  They settle.

Charles puts down the pen.  He is not going to look at his papers.
London is too mesmerising in this drab grayness.  Everywhere lights
trace the outlines of the city.  Brightly lit office workers flash
past in their boxes.  Headlights flow like blood down arteries.
The glittering darkness of the river.  Domestic life behind
windows.  Too early for curtains to be drawn.  The city
unselfconscious, and the train unnoticed as it slips through the
suburbs.

It slows.  Terrace after terrace slide by.  Each lit window
offering a glimpse of myriad lives.

Charles enjoys the casual voyeurism and from time to time turns his
head to follow a woman at a sink, a light turned on, a television
set flickering in a living room.

Charles Fox sees a naked child standing in a window.  Arms out in
the shape of a Y.
A boy.

He turns his head to follow.  The boy is looking at the train.
Turning his head as they pass.
And gone.

Charles Fox has his cheek to the cold window.  He straightens up,
putting his hand to his cheek.  The man opposite casts a glance his
way with indifference.

Charles Fox's heart is pounding.  He takes off his spectacles and
puts them with his pen.

He puts his head back against the seat and closes his eyes.

Out of the darkness and blustering rain.  Out of the pulsing city
of light.  Out of an upstairs bedroom window.  The naked Y is
etched like a tattoo on his retina.  His head is swimming.

A trolley is at his elbow.  "Tea, coffee, sandwiches, alcoholic
beverages?"

He never buys from the trolley.  He looks up at the face above the
uniform.

"Do you have a scotch?"

---

Charles Fox makes a habit of sitting on the same side of the train.
 He silently curses if all the window seats are taken.  He no
longer feels awkward to ask his fellow travelers if they would mind
swapping with him so that he can be by the window.  He doesn't care
about their mild irritation to be asked.

Charles Fox never takes either his papers or his newspaper out of
his briefcase.  He is irritated if the train is too slow leaving
the city.  He is irritated if the train is too fast through the
suburbs.

He is starting to learn the route.  He knows that the curving cul-
de-sac is followed by a terraced row.  That past the third bridge
there is another terrace.  He knows that there are thirty two
stretches of terraced houses that are candidates.  But he does not
know which.

He counts.  He notes with his silver pen.  He sees one woman at her
sink repeatedly.  One house where a black dog always stands at the
french windows to watch the train pass.

But there is no boy in an upstairs window.  Never.

Not on the 18.02 from Victoria.

He changes his routine.  To the consternation of his staff, he now
arrives at 6:30 in the morning and leaves promptly at 15:45.  His
PA changes her hours.  Staff who want to impress him arrive before
him in the morning.  They describe 15:45 to 17:00 as "Happy Hour".

A month after changing his routine, with his pen checking off the
rows of terraces as they pass, the train slows due to signal
failure.

The boy, naked, stands in the window.  Arms out.

The train is at a crawl.

Charles Fox is forty yards from the boy.  He has tunnel vision. He
puts his hand flat against the glass.  The boy makes an obscene
gesture.  Jumps down.  The bedroom light snaps off.

The boy's ghostly face reappears at the window.

Charles splays his fingers against the glass.

Gone.

Charles looks at his pad.  The twenty fourth block.  Three before
the bridge.  He knows where to look now.  But he has no idea where
this block is in relation to the city as a whole.

---

Charles Fox purchases an iPhone.  He keeps it in his briefcase.
His friends bore him in the pub recommending applications to him.
He has no interest in any of them.  But he has spent hours looking
at the mapping application.  He dropped a marker pin when the train
passed the twenty fourth block, the house with the window in the
twenty fourth block.

---

At 15:10 Charles Fox is parked on a terraced street in south
London.  He can hear the rumble of trains passing behind them.

In his rear view mirror he can see two schoolgirls in blazers.

At 15:23 he sees a boy in a blazer.  He recognises the shock of
blond hair.

He lets him pass the car before opening the door and stepping out.

"Excuse me."

The boy turns, surprised.

"I didn't mean to startle you."

The boy is younger than he had expected.  Thirteen perhaps?  He is
not good with ages. Twelve?

"I have a letter for you, and then I'll be on my way."

He holds out an envelope.

"A letter?"

The boy speaks with a south London accent.

The boy has swung the back-pack off his shoulder and is holding it
in one hand.  Charles thinks he is short for his age.  Perhaps his
growth spurts are to come.  The boy's eyes are green and wary.

"I've seen you from the train and I have this letter for you."

The boy's pupils dilate with adrenaline.  His hand grips the back-
pack.

"You what?"

"I have seen you from the train and I have this letter for you.
Don't worry, all I want is for you to take this and I'll leave."

"Fuck."

Charles steps forward smiling.  "Nothing to worry about.  Go on
take it."

Small fingers take the edge of the envelope as if it were about to
detonate.

"What's your name?"

The boy is looking at the envelope.  "Dillon."

"Nice to meet you Dillon.  I'm Charles.  And I'll go now.  Read
that when I'm gone."

Charles turns away and walks back to the car.  By the time he has
opened the car door the boy is gone.

---

Charles Fox knows that this is the last time he will take the
16:02.  He is half an hour early and has to wait for the platform
to open.  He is first onto the train and chooses the window seat he
prefers.  He leaves the iPhone, his pad and pen in his briefcase.
He knows exactly where to look.  He takes deep deliberate breaths.

The Thames coils around the city.  Battersea Power Station is
wreathed in darkness like an old castle.  The city slides
imperceptibly into suburban streets.

Charles Fox is counting down the terraces.

The train is picking up speed where it usually slows.

Suburban windows flash past like the frames of a movie.

His nose against the glass, Charles Fox, fixes on the light and
turns his head rapidly as it tears past.

Framed in the window: a small Y.  Clothed.  But in the shape of a Y.

"Tea, coffee, sandwiches, alcoholic beverages?"

Charles Fox exhales.

"Have you got champagne?"

----

comments much appreciated: paxos@hushmail.com