She lay on her side. She had been awake for some time and was trying to take in every feature of the as yet unfamiliar bedroom. Through a chink in the yellow curtains sunlight was streaming in and the room looked warm, pleasant and cosy. There was an oil painting of a woman by a modern Chinese artist on the wall, in reds and yellows, and there was a low cupboard that probably housed clothes.
There was an arm around her waist. A hand had cupped her right breast and its middle finger was tentatively doing things to her nipple. She put her hand on his and pressed it. The finger got the message and continued. She tried to press herself harder against him, and to wiggle her bottom to see if she could get any reaction there.
Then the bedroom door burst open and a little girl dashed inside, wearing a flowery dress and an old pullover.
"Mummy," she said, "can we go and play in the wood?"
The woman turned around to look at the owner of the hand, and questioningly raised her eyebrows.
"Of course," the man said. "But don't forget to put on your rubber boots. It's rather wet in places."
"Kim has already gone to collect them," the girl said.
"But you haven't got any," her mother said.
"She will wear Kim's spares," the man said. "Behave and have fun, girls."
"I see," the woman said as the girl ran from the room, leaving the door open. She looked at the man who grinned at her, a little apologetically. Kim and Josie were about the same height, but Kim's shoes were at least one size smaller than Josie's, if not one and a half. Spares, she thought. "Liar," she said with a smile and bent over to the man to kiss him.
Medbh Marsh, who disliked the spelling of her name a little, although the sound was fine with her, was a single mother. When she was twenty-five, she'd been on holiday when the heat of the place and the attraction of one of the local boys, who was really charming and very good-looking, had led her into a short-lived love affair. The boy eventually turned out to be fairly shallow, and they broke off. She never knew an address. They'd used protection alright, but obviously one of the rubbers must have given way, and some time after the holidays she realised she was pregnant. Josie was a beautiful baby, and she had a little of her father's swarthiness.
Medbh was very fond of her. They had been in love, after all, even though it had been short-lived, and Josie was very welcome to her.
The environs were very negative. Medbh was cold-shouldered by the ladies that dropped their offspring at the same infant classes, and, when she got older, at school. Two of them passed the time of day with her, for propriety's sake, but the others could not be bothered. There were only two parents that were different, Janice Bond, who decidedly was no lady, and a tallish man whose name she didn't know. Janice, whose dresses made the ladies either raise their eyebrows or look away, took her son to school accompanied by a bewildering assortment of boyfriends, and rumour had it that she didn't even know who the father was. The tallish man kept himself rather distant. Medbh knew he had a daughter; he was never seen with a woman. No one seemed to know if there was any with the exception of Mrs Mills, Josie's teacher; she knew there wasn't.
What hurt most was the fact that Josie did not get asked to come and play; nor was she present at the birthday parties of her class. And it was with a glad heart that Medbh eventually saw Josie come home with a small, hand written invitation to come to Kim's birthday party, one Saturday in early May.
"Who's Kim?" she'd asked.
"Kim is my friend," Josie had said. It transpired that Kim was the girl she played with in the schoolyard, and that Kim was often dressed a little scruffily, but that they had no end of fun, and Kim was not stuck up at all. Kim was cool. She was a bit of a tomboy, she had auburn hair and freckles, and she lived in the country near the small wood. And they would pick her up from school and bring her back at eight.
Josie went, of course. The two girls had a wonderful time. They went to the wood, picked flowers in the meadow, overate on birthday cake and chips, and Josie returned with too much to tell her mother to be really coherent. They had asked her over for the following weekend, too, she said.
Medbh worked in the local library, and she had been collecting books that she found in charities and car boot sales for a long time. She intended to start her own second-hand bookshop and spent her evenings cataloguing her finds in an excel file on her laptop. When she felt everything was ready she spent two long weekends doing up the shop she'd rented and the Friday after that she opened the place. She sold a good many books that first day. The tallish man came along and bought two books, an old copy of "La flute de jade," Chinese poetry in a French translation, and Origo's "Vagabond Path". She found that he knew about books, and obviously liked them. She had taken French at school, and she had read a couple of the poems. She asked him if he read French, and he said that yes, he did, although he needed a dictionary now and again. He had friendly, grey eyes, she thought. She liked the way he wandered about, and he had nice hands. Another man who bought some books immediately asked her out for a date. She declined the invitation a little brusquely, since she neither knew him nor liked his face and manner.
Then, about a fortnight before the summer holidays she developed acute appendicitis. She was taken to hospital straight away. The hospital informed Josie's school. The teacher told Josie and Kim immediately said, "Oh, she can stay with us!"
The teacher tried to arrange things for her. She did not think it meet to have Josie stay with a man, so she called a few of the ladies, to no avail. Eventually she decided to try Kim's dad after all, and he immediately agreed to put Josie up for the duration.
Mr Auld collected the girls after school. Mrs Wills was glad to find they obviously knew each other. Josie seemed quite at ease with Mr Auld. She took his hand and asked him if they could go to the hospital, and he replied that yes, of course they would.
Then he asked the teacher for all the information she could give, put the two girls in his old Vauxhall and drove to the hospital.
It took some coaxing before they were willing to accept him as an interested party, but eventually they relented and he was told Miss Marsh was still under sedation, but that she would come round soon. If he could take care of clean clothes and take the washing along? He wanted the key, he told them, and had to sign a paper before the hospital parted with it; they provided him with a list of what they wanted.
"Alright, girls," he said. "We will go to your home first, Josie."
They went there and Josie, who knew where everything was, collected the necessary things for her mother and those she herself would need for her stay at the Aulds', and put them in bags. Kim went with her and her father stayed downstairs. He looked at the bookcase in the living room and tried the piano for a moment. It was obviously played on regularly, and there was a Schubert song on the music stand.
When the girls came down he read out the items on the list; they had found every single one and he said they'd done great. The two of them beamed.
Back at the hospital he told Josie to go in and talk to her mother. After Josie returned he went in with Kim.
"So you're Kim's father," she said with a tired smile.
He told her that they'd arranged to have Josie at his place until she would be able to have her around again. "But that's probably quite soon. She seems quite a reliable young woman," he said.
Medbh tried to say thank you.
"Oh, nonsense," he said with a smile. "It's no more than natural. Besides, Kim loves having Josie around."