HONOUR AMONGST THIEVES
By
Ranger
"Nicholas. Tell me you put the circuit breaker on in the kitchen."
Oh heck. I winced as he straightened up and started towards the open
kitchen door.
"Damien- I MEANT to- I put it out-"
He'd found it. It was swiped up off the draining board and held out
to me accusingly.
"NICK. Come here."
I got up off the grass without hurrying. Damien waited, the circuit
breaker still extended.
"Show me how that works."
"I know how it works…"
Hazel eyes fixed me where I stood. "Just for fun," Damien said gently,
"Lets pretend you haven't just crucified the lawnmower cable and show me
you do actually have some idea of how NOT to be electrocuted. Humour
me."
Oh I hate that tone. I took the circuit breaker and fumbled the plug
out of the wall, fingers trembling a little as he watched me, his hands
planted on his hips. I set the circuit breaker, put the plug into it and
watched that horrible little dial click over to TRIPPED.
"Bang, you're dead." Damien said politely. "HOW many times have you
run over that cable so far this year?"
"The mower's heavy." I pleaded. "And it's uneven out there, you said
so yourself-"
"Five?"
"Four!" I said indignantly. Damien lifted an eyebrow at me.
"Four. What do we have the circuit breaker for Nicholas? Do you remember
that part?"
"So the mower cuts out when the cable's broken." I mumbled. Damien gave
me a friendly smile.
"Exactly. And how much protection do you think the circuit breaker is
going to afford you when it's sitting on the draining board three feet
away from the plug socket?"
I flushed, darkly. Damien shook his head at me.
"This is the end. You are banned from the lawn mower, you have nothing
further to do with it. My blood pressure won't stand it. I'll repair the
cable, I'll do the rest of the mowing, and while I do it you can find yourself
a quiet corner and stand there until I'm finished. THEN we'll talk about
how many times I need to tell you about basic safety before you pay me
any attention."
There are certain expressions and tones of voice with Damien that you
DON'T argue with.
I left him to cable and mower and headed for the relative safety of
the landing, muttering. He gets neurotic enough when I run over the cable
with the circuit breaker in, so I had no idea what he was so aeriated about
this time. Nothing ever did blow up. And while in theory I had no serious
objections to the mowing being his sole responsibility, the sheer number
of household tasks that were becoming off limits to me were starting to
get embarrassing. After my single, abortive attempt to bleed the radiators,
Damien informed me I was not allowed near water in any shape or form when
he was out of the house. Which was as unreasonable as it was silly. Sweet
as he was, I sometimes wondered if Damien realised how lucky he was that
I was prepared to put up with his various quirks and neuroses…. I heard
the crash from the top of the stairs. Quiet but distinct. The sound of
something being knocked off the sideboard.
I wouldn't have minded, except I could hear the coughs of the mower
from the other side of the house where Damien was trying to get the motor
started again. This house ought to have only two occupants, and I knew
where we both were.
Our room was nearest. I slipped in and grabbed the nearest thing to
hand which happened to be the cricket bat lying in Damien's open kit bag
behind the door. He'd been muttering for days about oiling it, despite
the fact that the cricket season was some weeks off yet: it was heavy,
solid and more than reassuring as I made my way softly downstairs.
The man was standing at the sideboard, rifling quickly through the drawers,
tossing contents on to the floor to get them out of his way. It was the
despatch with which he did it that really annoyed me. I moved across the
carpet directly behind him, just as he found Damien's passport. That was
a little too much. I raised the cricket bat and cracked him smartly across
the back of the head with it.
It was the sort of follow-through I've seen Damien make on several cricket
pitches over the years. The man rose upwards onto his toes with the force
of the blow and then pitched forward like a felled tree, hitting the carpet
hard. I dropped the bat and grabbed him anxiously. He lay face down and
moaning. About my own age, scruffy, denim jacketed and with oil stained
jeans.
"Urrghh…."
"Are you allright?" I pulled him over onto his side, trying to see if
there was any blood. It was a heavy bat and I had hit him rather hard.
He fended my hands off, flinching when I touched the rising lump at the
back of his skull.
"Ow! God, could you have hit me any bloody harder?"
"You shouldn't have been going through those drawers!" I said indignantly.
"What do you think you're doing here anyway? How did you get in?"
"Can I have a glass of water?"
"No you can't! I'm going to call my partner and then I'm calling the
police!" I scrambled up with every intention of shouting for Damien and
letting him deal with this intruder. The man stopped me with the most plaintive
look I'd encountered from anything other than puppies or kittens.
"Don't. Please. I didn't mean any harm, I was only looking for …."
"For what? Cash? You broke into my home!"
"You'd break into mine if you were desperate enough." The man dragged
himself upright, rubbing at his head. "God. You could have cracked my skull
with that thing. Do you know I could sue you for assault?"
"Damien!" I yelled at the top of my lungs.
"WHAT?" my friend and lover shouted back from the garden, sounding anything
but encouraging. The man on the floor pleaded with his eyes.
"Don't. Don't call him. Please."
"Nicholas WHAT?
"Nothing." I called back. "Thought I could hear the phone."
Silence. Damien had gone back to the mower. The man and I looked at
each other, then he warily got to his feet. "Can I have that water now?"
I glowered at him. Inimically we headed into the kitchen and I passed
him a glass of water. He stood rubbing the back of his head while he drank
and watched what he could see of Damien now mowing the far end of the lawn.
"Is he the gardener?"
"No. That's the owner of the cricket bat. And he knocked up half a century
against the county team last year, so I wouldn't risk him using the bat
on you personally." I said coldly.
The man looked at me, more or less under his eyelashes.
"Look. This was a big mistake. I really didn't mean to do any harm,
I'll just take off now and we'll call it quits-"
"You broke in here, you think I'm not going to call the police?" I demanded.
Again those soft eyes pleaded with me.
"You didn't call him…" the man nodded at the garden. "Please. Please,
I won't do this again. Just let me slip quietly out and I won't bother
you again, I swear. This is the first time I've done anything like this-
why do you think I'm doing it all wrong? I just thought it'd be easy to
slip in, pick up any cash I could find and head out again with no harm
done. It was just a temptation, that's all."
"How do I know that?"
"Come on. I'm hardly a professional!" the man gave me a faint smile
that turned into a soft, heart rending appeal. "Please? I'll go now, you
won't see me again."
I glanced out to where Damien was mowing around the trunks of the elders
at the foot of the garden, and swearing as he did so. The grass around
there isn't easy.
"Okay." I said at last. "But if I see you anywhere near the house-"
"Granted." The man headed for the door, fast. "Thanks mate. I mean it.
And I won't sue you for assault either, I promise."
I opened my mouth. He shut the door behind himself fast and I saw him
sprint out of sight down the road, moving like a bat out of hell.
"Bastard." I said to the closed door.
"Excuse me?" Damien said grimly from the doorway. I pulled myself
together, fast.
"I- er- nothing, I was talking to myself…"
"If I remember rightly, I asked you to find a corner." Damien advanced
on me, and paused to pick up the scattered articles from the ransacked
drawer. "What ARE you doing?"
"It just suddenly occurred to me," I said, lying frantically, "Your
passport must be out of date- it needs renewing at once, it won't get through
the office before-" I trailed off under his eye. "Sorry."
Damien pointed at the stairs and clicked his fingers. I rapidly withdrew
back towards my corner, aware of him shaking his head behind me as he rearranged
the drawer. As I passed the table at the foot of the stairs, I glanced
down and realised with a horrible jolt. The burglar had taken my car keys.
There was not much I could do about it now, as I reflected somewhat
desperately in the corner of the landing. I could hardly explain to Damien
that I had not only kept from him the fact that we'd had a break in, but
that I'd let the intruder leave along with my car keys. That was too much
to confess, I would be dead. Plainly and simply. I would just have to get
the locks changed on my car immediately, before the burglar returned and
took it as he must be intending. And I'd have to do it discreetly too.
Damien had one of those evenings where he seems determined to circumvent
every idea I have. He COULD have gone back out to the garden to finish
the chores we'd been doing. And I could have phoned for the AA. Instead,
he cooked. When he called me out of the corner half an hour later, it was
to sit down to eat immediately. As soon as we were finished and we washed
the dishes, he planted me at the table with a pad and the instruction pack
for the circuit breaker, with a polite request that I transcribe the entire
set of instructions no less than twenty times.
That took all evening.
I had NO chance to get near the phone. No sooner was I done with
the lines than I was dragged upstairs, policed through all the evening
medications and we got ready for bed. Damien seemed absolutely determined
I was not going out of his sight. No we hadn't left any lights on downstairs.
Yes both doors were locked. If I'd left my watch in the kitchen it wasn't
going to go anywhere, I could get it in the morning. If I HAD to know the
news headlines, I could put the TV on in here. I ended up lying with my
head on his shoulder, watching the news in bed which I always find terribly
depressing, with no idea of what to do to protect my car or to deal with
the problem at hand without confessing everything to Damien. Once I did,
the explosion would probably register on the Richter scale. Damien flicked
the tv off and leaned past me to turn the light out, glancing at me as
he lay down.
"What? You're not still worrying about the mower are you? You and machinery
don't mix, it's a fact of life."
"I can mow." I said with all the indignation I could muster in my current
state of anxiety. Damien turned over, wrapping his arms around the pillow.
"Not until someone prescribes me tranquillisers you can't. Go to sleep."
The way he said it, it sounded easy. I lay and bit my nails, imagining
the burglar waiting outside for the lights to go out. At the first cough
of the engine outside, I nearly jumped through the roof. Damien who had
been mostly asleep, jumped with me and grabbed for me as he relaxed.
"Nicky! It's just next door. You scared the living daylights out of
me!"
"Sorry, it made me jump."
"You're a bag of nerves."
He wasn't wrong. I waited until he was still again, then gently slid
the covers back and padded to the window. Both cars were still on the drive.
"What's the matter?" Damien muttered from the bed.
"Too hot. I just wanted to open the window."
Silence. He drifted back to sleep again. Very quietly I slid out of
the bedroom and down the stairs. Somewhere in the garage was a steering
lock. It wouldn't STOP a theft but it would certainly slow one up- might
disconcert him, might make him take enough time to make noise… I unlocked
the front door and found a coat, then hunted for the garage key. The hall
light snapped on above me.
"What do you think you're doing?"
That was a good question and one I had no answer for. Damien, wearing
boxers and nothing else, surveyed me without any amusement whatsoever.
"Where exactly are you going at this time of night?"
"There's something in the garage…?" I said helplessly. Damien's hands
went to his hips. Never a good sign.
"Nicholas. Put the key back, take the coat off and come up here. NOW."
I had very little choice as he was standing, watching me. He waited
at the top of the stairs until I joined him, saw me back into bed and turned
the light out once more.
"What's going on?"
"Nothing…"
"Except?" Damien said wryly. "Come on Nicholas, spit it out. There's
some natural disaster hovering around here, I know the signs."
Silence. I stared up at the ceiling. Damien's arm hooked around me and
pulled me against him.
"Nicky. You'll feel a lot better once you've told me."
I doubted that. I shut my eyes, prayed for a voice filled with conviction.
"I think I left my headlights on."
"Is that all?"
"You said if I flattened the battery one more time-" I protested. I
felt Damien's smile against my neck.
"Well you didn't. I walked around your car when I put the mower away,
I'd have seen it. Now will you relax?"
No. Except we were now entangled and his arms were too firmly around
me to be able to slip away once he dozed off. I was here now for the duration.
Once I was certain of that, no matter how I tried, I didn't stay awake
long.
Damien was still asleep when I woke shortly after six. We'd separated
at some point in the night: he was doing his four point sprawl, draped
over his pillow like a jaguar draped out over a branch. Usually I would
have settled down to admire him, particularly with his shoulders bare,
relaxed and beautifully displayed, but I had other things on my mind this
morning. The car- miracle of miracles- was still on the drive. I snatched
at the first clothes I came across, realised half way downstairs I'd picked
up Damien's sweater instead of mine and it was about four sizes too big,
and grabbed the phone out of it's cradle with sleeves trailing in all directions.
The AA promised a locksmith within an hour. For safety's sake, I filled
two buckets with water, went outside and started slowly to wash both the
cars.
I knew where the spare set of keys to my car were kept. I had the bonnet
up and the radio on when Damien appeared in the doorway, dressed but still
tousle haired and sleepy.
"Hello. What brought this attack of efficiency on?"
It was too early to be worrying about neighbours twitching at net curtains.
I hooked a forearm around his neck, careful of my wet hands, and kissed
him.
"Hello. Couldn't sleep."
"You ought to get insomnia more often on weekends, I like it." Damien
pushed my hair back. "Coffee?"
I went back to the cars. A minute later he reappeared in the doorway,
looking bemused.
"Nicky? The AA say they'll be ten minutes. Does that mean anything to
you?"
Ouch. I straightened up, surreptitiously sliding a hand under the bonnet.
"I called them. My car wouldn't start this morning."
"What's the problem?" Damien started down the drive towards me. I had
little to no choice. In the split seconds I had left, I located the spark
plugs, picked up a sponge full of water and drenched them. Damien had headed
for the driver's seat and didn't notice. The car coughed weakly when he
turned the ignition over and refused to start. Damien got out and peered
over my shoulder.
"Plugs damp."
"Really?"
"You ought to park nearer the fence at night while the weather's bad.
Better still, you need to turn this junk heap in for a decent car."
"It just needs wiping out and spraying." I said hopefully. Damien moved
back with a gentle swat to my rump.
"Are you coming in for breakfast?"
Fate was on my side. After breakfast he dived straight into some files
he'd brought home from the office and left me to meet the AA serviceman
on the doorstep. He took no further notice of us. The AA man grinned when
I explained my problem, dried the spark plugs and changed the lock. I tried
not to cringe too much at the bill he handed to me, just swore to castrate
the burglar should I ever see him again. As the AA van pulled off the drive
I knew at least that this particular crisis had blown over without leaving
damage in it's wake.
Damien pulled off his glasses and dropped them on his files to smile
at me as I came in.
"Is it sorted?"
"He's got it going again." I put the new keys away and came to look
over his shoulder. "Are you planning on doing that all afternoon too?"
"We've got to be at the Green Man in an hour. Didn't you remember?"
"Oh Lord. Yes. Batman and Robin."
"Allan and Robin." Damien corrected, getting up. "You'll like them.
I promise."
"Whatever." I said under my breath. Damien grinned but didn't argue.
Robin was a colleague of his, some new junior director we were supposed
to be having dinner with. His partner, Allan, I knew less about. I'd never
met either of them, but Damien liked them and I usually tried to get along
with anyone he liked.
The Green Man was one of the more presentable pubs on the edge of Burstock
village, a couple of miles out of town. The part of it that was Tudor had
been left un mucked about with, which made it one of the few pubs we could
go to without Damien muttering savagely about poor conversions and extensions
and unreclaimed wood. We took one of the low tables near the open fireplace
and I leaned on the bar, waiting patiently for the elderly landlord to
catch on that I could do with serving. I saw Damien get up behind me and
glanced around at the couple he was shaking hands with. A heavily built,
dark man who I assumed from his age, was Allan. And a younger man in a
red jacket who….
Who was the burglar.
I turned back to the bar, not believing my eyes.
"Nicky." Damien said cheerfully. I fought my face into a frozen smile.
"Allan. Robin."
The burglar went bright scarlet. "Nice to meet you."
"The pleasure's all mine." I said flatly. Robin swallowed.
"Were you getting drinks-"
"Oh please allow me." I headed back to the bar. Robin followed me, leaving
Allan to sit down with Damien.
"What the HELL are you doing here?" I demanded as soon as we were out of earshot. Robin scowled.
"I couldn't talk Allan out of it. I did try. Anyway, we were bound to
have met sooner or later."
"You WORK with Damien and you burgled our house last night-"
"It was a JOKE!" Robin hissed under his breath, glancing back at Damien
and Allan. "It just went wrong, that's all!"
"You broke into our house!"
"Does Damien know?"
"Of course he doesn't! Nor does he know you swiped my car keys! Do you
know how much it cost me to get the locks changed?"
"I'd have given them back to you."
"I didn't know that, did I?"
"Nicky?" Damien said, slightly puzzled at why we were still standing
at the bar. I grabbed the tray and took it across to the table, letting
Robin follow me. Allan gave me a warm smile and accepted his pint. I handed
the other one to Damien and buried myself in cider, leaning back into the
heavy, sagging couch.
"So." Robin said brightly, taking the chair opposite me. "Has the cricket
season started yet Damien?"
Damien gave him a look of faint surprise. "Not for another month or
two. Do you play?"
"No. I thought you might."
I glowered at him.
"I do actually." Damien admitted. "Mostly for the village teams."
"And what about you Nick? Do you handle the willow at all?"
His blue eyes were round and malicious with none of yesterday's appeal
in them. I looked dislike at him and wished for spontaneous combustion.
"Nicky regards a cricket pitch as something to read beside." Damien
said easily, shooting me a What's The Matter look. "Actually when I can
prise the book out of his hand, he's a demon bowler."
"Not a batter at all?" Robin said sweetly.
"When he has to." Damien looked from him to me. "Why?"
"Oh just interested. Funny how apparently fragile men can pack such a powerful punch."
Allan stepped into the breach.
"We're more walkers. Mostly hiking, although you have to drive a fair
way to get up on to the moors around here."
He and Damien started talking about their favourite moorland sites.
Robin and I sat and covertly glared at each other over the table.
"What about running?" I asked him unpleasantly. "I bet you can manage
a good turn of speed when you have to?"
"How's the car at the moment?" Robin gave me a saccharine smile over
his drink. "My locks just keep freezing up at the moment…"
"Excuse me." I said politely. Damien frowned at me. Robin was following
before I was half way across the pub. I led him out of the heavy front
doors, into the carpark and well out of earshot before I turned on him.
"LOOK-"
"Are you going to keep on and on about it?" Robin said furiously, "It
was just a JOKE!"
"YOU were the one who was going on about it!"
"You socked me with a cricket bat!"
"You broke into my home! You were going through the damn cupboards!"
"Do you WANT your keys back or not!"
"Are you threatening me?" I demanded. "If you don't return those keys
AND cough up for the locks being changed, I swear-"
"You'll what? Damien told me, you're not exactly the - physical- type.
Unless you've got a cricket bat in your hands."
That was it. I stormed away towards the edge of the carpark. Robin laughed
behind me.
"Going home? Damien won't be too thrilled about that will he?"
I spun to face him. Robin smirked at me.
"Better think twice, Nicky boy. If you don't want to be sleeping face
down tonight."
That was about the end. I don't remember exactly what happened next.
Just that we were struggling and jammed up against the wheels of a Volvo
with it's alarm screaming when a hand closed over Robin's wrist and hauled
him away. Damien's arm hooked around me and hoisted me to my feet. I knew
it was Damien even before I heard his voice, low and sharp in my ear.
"What the HELL is going on here?"
Robin stood panting, his shirt pulled out, his tie askew. Damien hung
on to me. I could feel his breathing, calm and deliberate, his chest against
my back.
"I think," he said eventually, very coolly, "Robin, you had better go
inside."
I couldn't see Damien's face. I saw Robin's though and it paled at Damien's
tone. He moved at once, heading back towards the pub. Damien held me until
the door shut, then took my hand and pulled me with him into the privacy
of the pub garden. There he took my chin and turned my face up to his.
"Are you allright? Nicky? What the devil happened with him?"
"It's okay." I mumbled, wincing as he touched what had to be a split
in my lip. Damien shook his head, refusing to let me turn away.
"I've never seen anyone make you angry enough to shout, never mind hit
out. What did he do?"
"I really don't want to talk about this." I said under my breath. Damien
shook his head.
"That's unfortunate, because we're going to. Nicky what happened?"
"We just had an argument."
"Since when do you argue with anyone?
My voice cracked. "Did you tell him I was a wimp as well as everything
else?"
Damien's hand on my wrist stopped me making a break for the open gate.
I struggled and only succeeded in letting him get both arms around me,
which actually helped quite a lot.
"What IS all this?" Damien said firmly against my ear. "What do you
think I've told Robin?"
"You work with him." I said into his neck.
"I do. He's good fun and I like Allan. Now what did he tell you?"
"NOTHING." I said, nearly in tears. Damien sighed.
"Darling. We're going to get to it eventually if I have to sit you and
Robin down and wait all night. It would be ever so much easier if you'd
just-"
"Damien?"
Batman's voice. I glanced up and pulled hastily away from Damien, thoroughly
ashamed to be found in his arms and in tears. Batman had Robin firmly by
the wrist and had my car keys in his other hand.
"I wondered if this might explain anything?" Batman said reasonably.
"Robin seems to have them in his pocket for some reason."
Damien frowned across at Robin. "What are you doing with those keys?"
I looked at the ground. Robin looked at the trees in the middle distance.
Batman reached across, took Robin by the shoulder and pulled him closer.
"Young man, you have exactly three seconds to start explaining, or you
and I are going to take a short walk into the nearest copse and I am going
to explain a few things to you in CLOSE detail."
Robin flushed scarlet. Which made me feel distinctly better.
"They're Nick's keys." Robin said unwillingly. "I found them-"
"Where?" Damien demanded, shaking two sets of keys out of his pockets.
"I've got Nicky's keys here with mine."
"My spare ones." I muttered. Damien looked from one to the other of
us.
"Robin…." Batman said grimly under his breath. Robin shot him a brief
and apprehensive look.
"I sort of picked them up in your house last night-"
"When were you in the house?" Damien said blankly. Robin flushed darker.
"It was a joke. You were talking about how front entrances were too
open to allow break ins when we were doing the West designs, I said anyone
could slip in and do what they wanted- so I did. I was just going to take
something you'd recognise and give it to you on Monday, but HE caught me-"
"Nick saw you in the house last night?" Damien interrupted. Robin shot
me a look of mild triumph.
"He damn well laid me out."
"I didn't know who he was!" I said furiously. Damien put an arm around
my shoulders.
"Wait a minute. Go on Robin. You'd forced entry, met Nick, apparently
failed to identify yourself, what next?"
Batman folded his arms. For a placid looking man, he could make surprisingly
menacing faces in private. Robin swallowed.
"I er- picked up the car keys on the way out-"
"Why?" Batman inquired. Robin winced.
"Just- I don't know."
"In other words he won the fight so you thought you'd pay him back."
Batman said quietly. "That's a familiar story, Robin Porter."
"You didn't know who he was?" Damien said to me. I shook my head.
"Not until he walked in this afternoon."
"So you confronted a burglar, saw him off the premises and forgot to
mention it to me?"
"You were already annoyed." I said plaintively. Damien closed his eyes for a few seconds.
"Nicholas. You disapprove of simple insurance salesmen so strongly that
you have been known to imprison them."
"ONE." I said stung, "I imprisoned ONE!"
Robin's eyes widened. Damien shook his head at me.
"And yet burglars you engage in free fist fights, then release them
back into the wild."
"It was a cricket bat!" I argued. "I didn't punch anyone-"
"You hit Robin with a cricket bat?" Batman said with interest. I stopped
and thought about that one for a minute, eyes on Damien. He was looking
at me with a rather strange expression.
"Across the back of my head." Robin confirmed without tact or diplomacy.
"He laid me out cold."
"For about four seconds." I snapped back. Damien's hand closed gently
over mine.
"Allan I think we need to continue this discussion somewhere fractionally
less public? We're beginning to attract an audience."
"Do we have all the facts of the case here?" Batman asked us both. Robin
nodded. I thought for a minute, then added a second, reluctant nod. Batman
dropped a hand on Robin's shoulder.
"In which case I'll abandon dinner with your permission, Damien? I make
sincere apologies to you both for Robin."
Robin looked anything but apologetic. Damien steered me towards his
car. We drove home more or less in silence.
"Upstairs." He said the minute the door shut behind us. I fled. He wasn't
angry- Damien is never angry- but I could sense a lecture boiling up. Standing
on the landing, forehead pressed against the usual corner, I could hear
him muttering to himself downstairs.
"Would you explain to me," he said eventually from the foot of the stairs,
"Why you found it necessary to brain Robin with a cricket bat? That's the
part I'm really curious about. Is that how you handle all intruders?"
"There's only ever been the one." I pleaded. Damien sat down on the
bottom stair.
"You know you could have killed him?"
"If I really thought I'd hurt him I would have called you."
Damien shook his head. "Much as I appreciate your confidence in me,
my ingenuity falls short of disposing of dead bodies. Have you any IDEA
of how serious this could have been?"
"I just wanted to stop him- he was going through that drawer-"
"Common sense must tell you, a heavy bat swung at someone's head is
likely to prove damaging. For Pete's sake Nick! You know those things are
dangerous, you've seen accidental injuries, what on earth possessed you!"
"I didn't stop to think…" I said helplessly. Damien twisted around to
look at me.
"Nicholas. If you are seriously telling me I cannot trust you to exercise
any form of rational judgement without my supervision, I'll see to it you
never ARE out of my supervision. And that'll mean I take you to and from
work and you stay in my sight at ALL times. Is that what you're telling
me?"
"No." I said miserably. Damien shook his head.
"So I'll assume while you were swiping Robin around the ears with a
seven pound bat, you had some little inkling it wasn't a good idea?"
"I didn't KNOW it was Robin."
Damien muttered something about needing a drink and disappeared towards
the kitchen. He returned a few minutes later with a glass in hand, came
half way up the stairs and once more sat down.
"I begin to see why you wanted to clobber Robin in the carpark."
"I didn't know who it was, I just thought it was a burglar." I pleaded.
"I just wanted to make him stop."
"Exactly. First you go dealing with intruders alone and unaided AND
forget to mention it to me, then you start using offensive weapons-"
"It was the first thing that came to hand!"
"Nicky, you don't accost intruders!" Damien sounded increasingly exasperated.
"For all you knew, he could have been armed! No matter what, you DON’T
start fights with criminals in the act, it's about the most dangerous thing
you can do and it's very unlikely you'll win. We have phones! You could
have dialled 999, slipped out the front door and called me."
"What good would the police be? They'd have been about half an hour
too late."
"Any police involvement would have put the fear of God up Robin for
a start." Damien said darkly. "Although you probably would have been charged
for aggravated assault yourself. What was it he said to you in the carpark
that started the fight?"
"He was going on and on about cricket."
"And?"
I didn't answer. Damien glanced up at me.
"Gave you the impression I'd been telling him a little more about us
than you were happy with?"
I didn't answer that one. Damien held out a hand to me. I moved silently
down the stairs and sat next to him. Damien put an arm around my shoulders,
pulled me close and kissed my forehead.
"I suppose it's fairly apparent now that Robin and Bat- Allan- have
a similar relationship to ours? Although I can't say I envy Allan much.
Nicky, what do you think I'd say to anyone behind your back?"
"The man is a bastard."
"He has his good points." Damien said mildly. "He's slightly better
on the days when he isn't concussed."
"That isn't funny."
"What did you do about the- oh. The AA changed the locks I take it?"
"And the plugs."
"Which you sabotaged of course." Damien said mildly. I winced.
"I promised not to tell you."
"Promised Robin. An anonymous burglar. Nick, if there was an ounce of
malicious intent in you, you would be lethal."
I didn’t feel up to answering that. Damien pulled me to my feet and
pointed upstairs. My heart sank.
"I didn't MEAN-"
Damien waited. I trailed ahead of him, near tears. This was a familiar
point in our discussions and it tended to be the point of no return: it
wasn't often I managed to sway Damien from here.
"Look, I only meant to stop him, not hurt him, it was only-"
Damien passed me, opened the wardrobe door and my knees started to shake
as he took down the eighteen inch rattan cane from the top shelf.
"Oh no, Damien DON'T- please- I swear I didn't mean to hit him with
it, I just panicked-"
"This is beyond the shadow of a doubt a caning job." Damien said firmly.
"Someone could have ended up dead because you chose to pick up that bat.
Robin OR you- you had no way of knowing he was safe."
"It was a mistake, that's all!"
"It was a very bad choice and if I have anything to do with it, you'll
think twice before you make another decision like that one." Damien said
frankly. "Over the end of the bed please."
In skilful hands, no cane requires the removal of any clothing to make
it's presence felt. My boy is ex public school, well practised and well
trained, and I was all too familiar with his expertise. The number of times
he's taken that cane down I can count on my fingers, but every single time
has been an experience I NEVER want repeated. My mouth was dry and my stomach
already starting to hurt.
"Damien-"
"Now." Damien was rolling his sleeves back with a dispatch I really
didn't care for. "And you can console yourself with the thought that if
you HAD killed him, what would be happening to you now would make this
look like a chimps' tea party."
Damien's mercurial nature is part of his mystery and magic to me in
every other area of life but this one. Things I expect to infuriate him
are laughed off. Details which seem to me to be ridiculously sententious
he takes extremely seriously. Once he gets a certain look however, you
can start applying the law of the Medes and the Persians. The man does
not change his mind.
"Nicholas bend over."
He flexed the cane once or twice in his hands, a horribly business like
gesture. I gave some serious thought to being sick, but somehow turned
my back on him, locked shaking knees and leaned over the end of the bed.
The cane touched lightly across my backside, across both cheeks.
"Stand still."
I never have any idea whether it's worse with my eyes open or closed.
I stared hard at the duvet and heard the swish a split second before a
sharp, business-like crack. And a searing, blazing line lit up across the
lower curves of my rump, making me jump and involuntary tears flood to
my eyes. I just about stopped myself hissing anything indiscreet through
my teeth, coming out with some indiscriminate sound that released the breath
rushing out of my chest. Every muscle I had involuntarily clenched. He
meant business allright. Two. Three. Four. CRACK.
Sheeeeeeeiiiitt. OW. Damnit. I twisted, trying not to straighten up
and grab, a movement which would not be helpful. They used to do this to
kids; the knowledge of that defeated me. Who could do this awful thing
to a child?
CRACK.
"Damien!"
"Stay put please."
Easy for him to say. Tears were streaming down my face, a sheer physical
reaction to the blazing, appalling sting of those three lines across my
bottom. I hadn't got the breath to cry.
CRACK.
I shut my eyes and concentrated on holding my breath. For some reason
that seemed to me to be a helpful thing to do. It was about the only thing
I COULD do. If he went on beyond the usual six, I would seriously consider
dying.
CRACK.
"OW! Damien for God's sake!"
Silence. Two. Three. CRACK.
I squirmed, not able to keep myself from sobbing now, as much as I'd
not been able to cry before. Two. Three. Four.
CRACK.
The swish and snap seemed deafening, the noise was almost as bad as
the impact, the shove forward onto my hands, then the almighty sting and
blaze of the line lit up across my backside. The pause this time seemed
to go on forever, then I heard yet another brisk, swish CRACK. I hadn't
got the breath to yell. Just hiss like water off an iron and struggle,
somehow, to deal with the appalling sting of that eighth stripe.
"That'll do." Damien said from several hundred miles away. He had to
be joking, I wasn't going to be able to move this century. It took some
time to straighten up and I put my hands behind me, clutching with all
my strength at that horrible, burning sting. Damien put the cane back in
the cupboard and gently tousled my hair.
"Go and wash your face."
No, I was going to curl up and die somewhere. It hurt too much to move.
Damien relented after a minute, hooked an arm around my neck and rubbed
my back while I shook and gasped. It took a few minutes, but gradually
the sting wore off, settling down to manageable proportions. My entire
backside felt hot as fire.
"I can't believe you hit him." Damien said behind me while I washed
my face, which was almost as hot. "Why on earth didn't you call me?"
"What would you have done?" I snapped back, beyond being civil. "Held
aloft your magic sword and shouted-"
"By the power of Greyskull." Damien swatted my sore bottom gently. "I
probably wouldn't have tried to decapitate him."
"The fact that I didn't may haunt me forever."
"You'll learn to love him."
I snorted. The only thing giving any consolation at all at the moment
was the thought that somewhere on the other side of town, dear Robin was
probably just as uncomfortable as I was.
"I hope Batman breaks his neck. What's the matter with him anyway? What
did he think he was doing breaking in here?"
"He's a man of many bright ideas and not a great deal of common sense."
Damien paused and grinned. "I don't think his plans catered for meeting
you. He may actually have met his match. Which reminds me, my lad. If you’re
so fond of cricket, this year I'm signing you onto the team full time and
I'm not swallowing ANY excuses."
"You can drag me to the pitch but you cannot make me bowl." I said irritably.
Damien's bright eyes suddenly laughed at me.
"What'll you bet?"
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