4 Time
Across the road, down the cul de sac and through the little kissing-gate into the park, the young mother jogged along her regular route. She had taken up jogging to tighten her tummy muscles after Maisie was born, to get her shape back. A wry smile at the thought -- she so wanted to lose that flat shape now and feel and see her tummy just grow and grow. But the last month had come around and, again, no luck. Perhaps this month would be different.
She smiled at a robin redbreast watching her with its shiny and beady eye as she toiled up the hill past park benches, some with people seated, alone or together and some evident lovers. Up and up she went, seeing more and more of the city, feeling the exhilaration of the run and the climb, her legs pumping until, at the top, she paused and looked out over the city, her chest rising and falling.
She could not be out too long. Though she felt like running for miles and miles. Such a lovely day. If only time could pause and leave her free to run. Where would she run? London had park after park. Green space after green space. Better in the countryside. She had suggested to Benjamin they move out, but he was a city dweller through and through. There were pluses and minuses. They had made their choice.
What a view of London from the top of Primrose Hill. She stood gazing, looking across at the spires and domes, the tall new buildings. The day was clear, she could see a long way. Gone the smog and yellowness of a hundred years before. Below her a gravelled path led towards the great city -- or cities indeed! She was not going that way. She needed to turn.
The sky so blue yet, in the distance was that a hint of cloud?
"A fine day."
She had not heard him approach but there he was right behind her. That man - Harris. Dark blue blazer, fawn trousers, a neat tie and a carefully positioned hat at a rakish angle. Even a silver topped cane. He regarded her. A gaze that almost seemed to undress her, but he had seen her naked before -- many times -- and perhaps her running gear did not leave too much to the imagination. "A bit too energetic for me. A brisk stroll as a constitutional I find more to my liking."
She had not the time to... surely, he was not thinking of... there were people around. It was not as if they could hide away in long grass or go somewhere hidden. It was not that sort of place at all. The thought of it -- copulation with Harris -- not unpleasing, but nowhere to do that; not even somewhere she could drop to her knees and take his cock in her mouth until he released.
"I haven't the time. I've got to get back. The time is not my own."
Harris looked at the watch upon his wrist. An elegant timepiece, as she would have expected. Rose gold with a tooled leather strap. The dial showing Roman numerals -- that oddity of IIII not IV. "More than enough time," he remarked. "You have plenty enough, plenty of time."
"How do you find me the time? I need to be back. How do you find me, time after time? How did you know I was out running today? How..."
Harris, dropped his head fractionally to one side and smiled his thin smile, but did not answer. That was not in his nature, it seemed. They stood looking at the view. She standing a little to Harris' front. It came to her that the man was somewhat like P.L. Travers' Mary Poppins. After all, 'Mary Poppins never told anybody anything...'
"I wonder," he said behind her, "could you find me? Now there's a question for you. If you had the time?"
Would she want to? Strange meetings, strange happenings, would it lead to her being with child? She turned and he was not there. Not there at all. But it was not just that. Silence had descended. As she rotated on the ball of one foot, she could see no movement. In the air in front of her that robin redbreast which had followed her, was paused in its swooping flight not six feet from her. Her mouth fell open. What had happened? No sound and no movement. Time itself for her seemed to have stopped. Harris' words still in her ear 'More than enough time. You have plenty enough, plenty of time.'
She did not need to return home straightway. She could jog for longer, but how long? She had all the time in the world -- it seemed. What had Harris meant about her finding him?
A turn upon her heel and she was not there at all. Not on Primrose Hill, not outside but inside. A wood panelled corridor, a marbled floor in black and white squares leading on to what? Her footsteps loud on the floor, the sound of a ticking clock coming to her as she walked forwards to where the corridor widened. Pictures hanging in a hallway all around her. Paintings of men and women all finely dressed from ages past, looking down on her in her running clothes, as the clock she could hear ticked faster and faster. Was time now running at speed, like a clock whose hands are sweeping past the minutes of its face, whirling faster and faster? She turned a corner and there it was, a tall, so tall 'grandfather' clock, all wooden and heavily carved. The sun shining out of the window of the moon dial. The phase of the moon correct but the hour and minute hands and the ticking just going far too fast and then slowing back, the tick too slow, two seconds a tick, three seconds a tick.
Where was she? Where was he? What was happening?