The car drifted to an agonisingly near-silent halt, engine quiet, brakes noiseless, and even the gearbox making no more sound than a breathless hiss of slowing mechanical motion. The tyres created the only real noise, crunching through the light gravel as the vehicle came to rest.
Alone in the normally reliable old Rover, Abigail Worthington closed her eyes and tired her hardest not to scream with rage. That she succeeded in repressing the building clamour deep inside her spoke more of her self-knowledge at her culpability in this disaster than of her self-control. Of course she had seen the petrol gauge reading -- shouting -- 'near empty' at her a few miles back as she passed the BP station and of course she knew that electronic needle was occasionally far from accurate... but surely, it had only been a few miles more? Surely she had enough fuel to last until the service station near her local supermarket -- which offered a saving of almost 2p for every litre?
She opened her eyes and pointlessly looked down at the softly glowing lights along her dashboard, her focus coming to rest on the fuel gauge blinking redly in the mid-morning sunlight.
"You are one stupid, stupid, stupid woman!"
She shrugged, accepting her own blame and her own accusation. She could hardly deny it, after all.
Abigail Worthington was a resourceful woman, though, this bout of stupidity notwithstanding, and she turned her mind away from the cause of the calamity towards the solution that she now needed. Turning awkwardly in her seat, she reached across to the empty passenger foot-well and retrieved the Gucci handbag that had caused such a pleasant furore when she had swung it through her office that very morning. It was a deliberate move to cause deliberate jealousy among her co-workers, and she would chalk up her success with a most un-Abigail-like smile of contempt.
Now she delved into its luxurious depths to retrieve her mobile phone -- the latest Samsung model, of course -- and pulled it free with a smile of control and triumph. The mid-morning sunlight sparkled in multiple reflections from her polished lips, and from the artificially whitened teeth that flashed briefly behind the scarlet shimmer.
But then Abigail Worthington snarled a curse. "No fucking signal?"
She shook the small device in what she already knew to be a pointless, fruitless exercise designed to somehow appease the god of small electronic gadgets. This could not, she thought, be happening.
All she needed to do, her solutionising brain had already decided, was call her local mechanic and tell him to bring more petrol for her. To tell him that the gauge must, of course, have developed a fault -- she would find the offending fuse later and ensure that by breaking it then, it would certainly appear that she was a victim in this disaster and not the stupid cause. But if there was no phone signal, there would be no simple call.
Abigail's head snapped up and she peered through the windshield at the view before her.
The car had come to its premature halt on the gravel at the edge of a rural road that was both remote and seldom-travelled. She, herself, had never ventured this way before and now that she came to think of it, she didn't recall its presence on any of the electronic maps she often consulted when searching for the shortest passes between her destinations. It had seemed so convenient, though. Clearly a track that must curve around the busy town she had been approaching, a route designed to simplify an often hectic journey through the small metropolis. It had seemed ideal.
Now she was faced with terrain that was as alien to her as any vista she might have stared upon from the summit of a Martian peak.
And she did appear to be on some peak or another, vast forest stretching out in all four directions at the foot of her current path. Surely being so high above the trees ensured that she was exposed to a microwave signal? Surely her fucking telephone shouldn't be showing no reception?
Abigail Worthington released the door-locks and slid gracefully from driver's seat to standing in a motion so fluid that a supermodel would have cried with envy to have witnessed it. Out of pure habit, she patted the tight bun of her hair, smoothed the creases in her short business skirt and straightened her blouse, fingers skipping on auto-pilot across its many buttons to ensure that everything was secure and well-ordered. To ensure, in fact, that she was as composed and controlled as she could possibly be.
No matter that she was starting to feel like the most pathetic and chaotic example of female humanity.
She held the telephone in front of her and cursed when it still glowed a smug 'no reception' message in her direction. She held it above her head then, trying her hardest not to acknowledge the stupidity of the hope that an extra two feet of elevation when she was clearly already two hundred feet above the treeline would make any difference. It did not, of course, and the message now hung in the air like her personal halo of inanity.
With a gesture that would have surprised those of her colleagues who had only ever witnessed Ms Worthington's cold control she threw the gadget into the Rover's interior, her swearing covering the noise of plastic fracturing in a copious and expensive shower of shards.
She turned away from the stricken vehicle, taking deep, calming breaths, fighting to regain her centre and her image. She stood as still as a store-front mannequin, letting the summer sun bathe her and warm her, permitting it to highlight the smartness of her blouse and skirt, and granting it this one rare chance to toy with her blonde tresses.
Abigail Worthington gradually reasserted herself, and slowly became, once again, the epitome of control and power.
That woman, a director of her own legal company, no less, stood no more than five feet four inches tall in her bare -- more often, stockinged -- feet, but of course she was seldom seen without the precipitous heels that she wore right then. The extra four inches seemed to bring an extra megaton of power with them, and her slight, spare frame wore it well.
A surgeon with a magical touch and an endless supply of plastic and botulinum toxin had ensured that the image was near-perfect, but no one would ever find out that her breasts remained untouched from her pre-surgery days -- the one and only one of her womanly wiles that had ever pleased her with their earlier perfection. But lips, nose, cheeks, chin, arms, thighs, buttocks, fingers and even toes had flourished at the surgeon's plastic touch. Abigail Worthington was truly a new woman for a new age.
Nothing of which seemed to help her now, though. Control once more firmly in place, she scanned the forest below her from both sides of the narrow lane, walking precisely and neatly both backwards and forwards to gentle bends in the tarmac where she could see behind her and ahead as well. She could see nothing but trees. Not even a glimmer or hint of a pathway, let alone another road.
She wasn't scared -- she never allowed that, of course -- but she became less comfortable with her plight. In the few minutes she had been stranded there, she had yet to hear even the most distant rumble of a passing engine, and now that she strained her ears for the mechanical comforts of civilisation, she realised that there was nothing but birdsong for company. It began to grate on her auditory nerves.
Abigail Worthington looked down at her shadow, stretching starkly and blackly along the tarmac ahead of her -- she was no country girl, and she was stupid when it came to fuel, but she wasn't stupid enough to look up at the brilliant sun to determine which way she faced.
In truth, her shadow wasn't long -- shapely, certainly, but not long. While no rustic maid, her education -- private, of course -- had taught her well enough to understand that this indicated that midday loomed, and that she was facing almost directly west, her destination surely no more than a handful of miles in front of her.
Beyond the trees.
Although it was only June, many of the leaves down below her were dappling towards the golds oranges and browns she might have expected a few months hence -- an early autumnal show. But the trees were thick with cover and the wretched wildlife seemed copious as well as ear-gratingly loud.