by Lynn Clement
cider
Petey snuggled up next to Mae’s
skirt. She stroked his soft brown hair.
‘Thanks for coming,’ she
said.
The shouting continued outside
and Mae heard a crash.
‘So how’s your day been?’ she
asked him.
Petey was quiet. They sat in
silence for a while.
‘I’ve had another crap day,’
Mae eventually said. Petey sat back and looked at her.
‘Yeah, late again and a
detention for not having the right coloured shoes on. They’re all full of bull
at that school. What do they know about shoes? My black shoes pinch my toes and
my trainers are the only other ones I’ve got.’
Petey looked at his own un-shod
feet.
A bottle hit a wall and it
sounded like a thousand pieces fell on the tiled floor. Petey sniffed. Mae could
smell the gin.
‘Not nice is it? I tasted it
once, it’s rank. Gave me a headache in the morning but I slept well. Missed
school that morning too.’ She laughed, ‘I’ll stick to the cider I
think.’
Mae was cold so she pulled the
blanket over her arms. She was glad she’d remembered to bring it this time. She
tucked the threadbare cover around Petey. He looked up at her with shiny
eyes.
‘Ok?’ she
asked.
Mae opened her book and
adjusted the torch so that the words were illuminated. She read Petey a chapter
from The Amber Spy Glass by Philip Pulman.
It was about 10 o’clock by the
time the noise had subsided. She had learnt to judge the time by the silence.
They’d be asleep. Mae would be sure to creep up to her room avoiding the creaky
stair.
Petey had long gone. He’d taken
the cheese and gone back through the hole to feed his
family.
Mae stretched herself through
the open door and stood up. She winced and twisted her back, left and right.
Picking up the blanket, she quietly closed the cupboard door and headed up to
her room, stepping over the tell-tale stair.
About the author
Lynn has now been writing for pleasure for five
years. She particularly enjoys writing flash fiction with a twist or a
slant.
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