By David Gower
A large gin and tonic!
The spinning coin rose into the
air, the light catching it as the eyes of its owner followed. It slowed, the
battle between the initial upward force and gravity would turn into the
overwhelming, inevitable victory of the latter. In moments like these time
seemed to freeze. It could not be more than a second, two at the most between
the flick of the thumb which had launched it into the air and the smack of it
landing on the hands below.
When it was uncovered the
decision would be made. Whether heads or tails showed would decide the fate of
the two individuals that were the latest acquisition for Lewis.
‘How did they get here? They have
to go. Where are they?’ Sarah had said when first her brother, Lewis, had told
her of his experiment.
‘I want them. I want to keep them
forever. They’re just things, like little pets,’ Lewis had replied firmly
showing steeliness in his eyes that Sarah had seen many times over the years.
‘No. It's cruel and they don't
belong here. They should be free. Forever, is a long time and they will die.
What will you do then?’
She wanted to use emotion and
logic with Lewis. Sometimes, reason would bring him round to her way of thinking
and draw him away from his selfish, immature, short term desires.
‘They are mine. I want them and
you can’t make me let them go.’ Lewis stiffened in his resolve to have his own
way regardless of anyone else.
‘You'll get into trouble.’
Sarah’s voice implored her brother Lewis to reason.
‘I don’t care, let me show you
them. Then you will see what I mean. They don't know that I want to keep them
for ever and ever.’
Lewis seemed to be willing to
talk. A good sign.
‘Why not toss a coin and see what
happens? Heads you keep them forever and tails we let them go.’ Lewis always
liked the randomness of tossing a coin or leaving the outcome of events to some
‘other’ power. It allowed the blame to be placed elsewhere
sometimes.
If Lewis left the fate of his
latest prisoners to the coin he could save face. Sarah would also have a 50/50
chance of resolving the issue without the argument escalating.
‘All right, have you got any
money?’ Lewis never had any money but Sarah had a shiny pound coin in her purse.
She had confidence in her ability to spin the coin high and whilst Lewis watched
she could make a swift movement and release the captives.
Lewis caught it and shrieked with
glee. ‘Heads. Heads, I win and keep them forever. Come and look.’
Lewis lifted the glass tank lid.
Inside was a branch and some leaves. Two dried husks of what Lewis had wanted as
pets lay on the floor of the old aquarium. He had expected to see two figures
encased in silken wrappings but now two butterflies jinked this way and that
past his face. Lost forever.
Sarah explained to him that
caterpillars change into butterflies and then have very short lives. The larvae
had been hedge browns, also called gatekeepers, and they had entered a new phase
of consciousness flying off for the next stage of their short lives. They were
free of the dastardly Lewis – aged seven years – whose older sister Sarah had
battled yet again to keep him out of trouble before Mum got home. School
projects always seemed to be more trouble than they were worth.
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