Authors: Deborah Moggach
He pointed into the water. âThis one's got your friends in it.'
âWhat friends?'
âFrogs and toads. Plus newts, all three species â common, palmate and greater crested.
Triturus cristatus.
'
She stood her distance and vaguely looked in. âWhere are they?'
âHibernating.'
Suddenly he felt deflated. The afternoon had defeated him;
he wasn't up to it. She stood beside him, shivering. He led her into his largest shed.
âIt's nice and warm in here,' she said.
âEach shed's got its climate â tropical, desert, temperate.' He pointed to the electric heater. âIt's thermostatically controlled, at thirty degrees C.'
âHuh,' she snorted. âLucky for some.'
âI'm sorryâ'
âIt's OK. So what's in here?'
This shed was his pride and joy. He had wired it up with ultraviolet lights, on timers. They hung from the ceiling, illuminating his rows of terrariums. Each tank contained a midget sandy desert, a micro-world in which he had placed twigs and stones in artistic arrangements. He pointed to a tail protruding from behind a rock. âThat's a Sudanese plated lizard.' He pointed to another tank. âThere's a couple of Berber skinks in there, just under those leavesâ'
âChrist! What's that?' She pointed to a saucer. Its contents were moving.
âMealworms. That's their tea.'
âThey eat
maggots
?'
âNo â maggots are softer and whiterâ'
âAll right, all right,' she said.
He moved her to the next tank. A leather whip was lying languidly on the sand. Its tail trailed in the water bowl like a starlet's fingertip in a swimming pool. Natalie's presence made him think of things like that. He opened the lid and lifted it out. Natalie yelped.
âWhat is it?'
âMy garter snake,' he replied. âIt's all right, she's a pussycat. Do you want to hold her?'
Natalie, backing against the wall, made a small noise in her throat.
âJust stroke her head,' he urged.
Tentatively she put out a finger, hesitated, and withdrew it.
âSorry,' she said. âI love all snakes except small ones. I forgot to tell you that.'
âThat's all right then. Wait till I get my python.'
There was a silence. It was suffocatingly hot. Colin felt a failure. His collection of reptiles was a disappointment to her. To him, in fact, now that she was here. Today they all seemed hidden or hibernating or torpid with antibiotics. He felt like a father who wants to show off his children and all they do is sulk. Come out from under your pebbles! he urged them. Show her your paces! She would clap her hands in delight and be at one with him in his passion. Here she was, a confessed reptile-nut, and his had failed to rise to the occasion.
He decided against taking her into the other sheds. They stepped outside, into the biting wind. It was dark in the garden, but the light from the kitchen illuminated her face.
âOh Colin, that was great!'
The way she said his name,
Colin
, made his heart lurch. There, in full sight of the kitchen window, she pulled him to her and kissed him on the cheek.
Colin's legs buckled. Suddenly, everything was all right.
That evening was a momentous one in Colin's life. He did something which, until that weekend, would have been unthinkable. In doing so, he stepped into another universe, that of the law-breaker, and was changed for ever. It might not have been a big deal, to the world, but it was for him, because he had lived a blameless life.
He drove his van to Natalie's flat. It was nine o'clock, he had left his mother dozing in front of the TV. He drove down into Leeds, down Hall Road and through the centre, across the river and south to where the tower blocks rose up into the starry sky. It was a beautiful evening, crisp and thrilling to him.
The intercom at Meadowview was broken and the door hung ajar. He walked up the stairs. When Natalie opened her front door â she looked surprised, as well she might â he heard the closing music of his mam's TV show in her lounge. It seemed
scarcely believable that the same quiz was playing when he himself had travelled so far, across the canyon that separated his former life from this.
Natalie must have been washing her hair. This time a towel was wrapped around her head; she wore a black top thing and black leggings, she looked as sheeny as a seal. Exuding an exotic scent, she was utterly new to him, all over again.
âI've come to reconnect your gas,' he said, boldly stepping into her hallway. âBugger the lot of them.' He didn't swear as a rule but
bugger them.
She stood behind him as he opened the boiler cupboard. âA knight in shining armour,' she said. âSuch a rare sight nowadays.'
âStuff the lot of them.' He placed his tube on the meter's u-gauge, for the soundness test. âShouldn't be doing this,' he said gruffly. This was something of an understatement. With his spanner, he wrenched off the cap and reconnected the pipes, a surprisingly easy operation if people knew how. Yesterday's procedure was undone, as it might be when a man who has fallen suddenly in love has his vasectomy reversed. His heart swelled as he tightened the nut.
Behind him he heard the pop of a cork. He squatted down, struck a match and lit the pilot light. It, too, popped, though more discreetly. âThere you are,' he said, straightening up. âBack to normal.' Which was the last thing he felt.
âColin, you're a star.'
He turned round. She was pouring wine into two glasses.
âI never drink when I'm on duty,' he said.
âBut you're not on duty now.' She looked at him. A tendril of wet hair had escaped and was stuck to her forehead like a question mark. âIsn't that the point of what you've been doing?'
They stood there, listening to the murmur of the boiler as it sprang into life. âWant me to t-turn up the thermostat?' he asked.
âCome here.' She moved out from behind the table. âKnow something, Colin?' She laughed softly. âYou've turned
me
on too.'
Colin snapped shut his toolbox. âGot to be going,' he muttered and scraped past her, heading for the hallway. âI'll let myself out.'
He clattered downstairs. Outside, in a doorway, a group of youths huddled together in a cloud of strange-smelling smoke. Colin beamed at them; they, too, were up to no good. He had stepped into a world of criminality, a world fraught with danger, and all because he had fallen in love.
â
Hi, I'm not here but leave a message, OK?
'
For three days Colin flunked it, putting down the phone. Her voice was so breezy; somehow it seemed addressed to anyone but himself. Natalie must have hundreds of friends; a whole teeming life. She was way out of his league; she was an angel, how could he presume to touch even the hem of her garment?
And then he remembered her smile.
You've turned me on too.
The invitation had been unmistakable. Was it just gratitude for reconnecting her gas supply?
Colin was in turmoil. There was nobody to whom he could turn for advice. Not his mother, that was for sure. A glint came into her eyes when Natalie's name was mentioned. Nor could he talk to his mates, whose crude jokes would trample over the rarefied sensations he was experiencing. Colin stood for long periods in his shed looking at the rows of terrariums. Bathed in the glow of his lamps they offered up microcosms of domestic contentment: his pair of blue-tongued skinks, lounging side by side as they sunbathed; his garter snakes coiled so tightly around each other that you couldn't work out where one ended and the other began. Their embraces rebuffed him. They remained motionless, their black tongues flicking in and out. Ever since Sunday he had felt let down by them. They no longer gave him that old sense of fullness, of a solid centre in his life.
On Thursday evening Colin plucked up courage again. After all, he had phoned girls before. Hannah something, whom he had
met on a rock-climbing weekend, he had taken her out on several occasions. He had held hands with girls from his class at school and sometimes kissed them in bus shelters â a cautious, experimental activity which, though stirring, had somehow left them even more unknowable than before. On two occasions, in fact, he had actually gone all the way, but both times proved to be ultimately dispiriting, as neither girl, being drunk at the time, had remembered a thing about it. No, he wasn't entirely a novice; just shy. Besides, there were so many other things to do. How did people find
time
for all that? And then there was his mam.
This time Natalie answered. âI thought I'd scared you off.'
âWant to come for a walk with me, up in the Dales?' He said it like that, bold as bold. His stutter had gone.
âI'd love to,' she replied. âI love walking.'
They fixed it up for Sunday.
All his life Colin remembered that day. When he was an old man he looked back on it as one of unclouded happiness. Nothing that happened later, none of the terrible things, could spoil his memories, for it remained inviolate.
It was a fresh, sunny day in mid-December; the rocks cast razor-sharp shadows. He loved the rocks, rusty-red, stained with black, breaking from their thin scalp of turf; he loved knowing that even when hidden they were just beneath his feet. He took her up from Pateley Bridge, up towards Brown Bank Head. Great patches of heather spread around them, dark like cloud-shadows. Wearing a furry coat and slip-on shoes, Natalie scampered beside him. The spongy grass put a spring into their step as he led her up the hill; she slipped her gloved hand into his quite naturally.
âLet's get lost!' she said.
âYou won't get lost with me,' he replied proudly. âI know these moors like the back of my hand.'
âI mean, let's get lost and never go home.' The wind whipped away her words.
âI'll keep you safe.'
âYou're so
nice.
You don't know what shits most men are. Lying shits with the morals of polecats.'
âI can't bear you being hurt,' he blurted out. The snow had recently melted; he steadied her as she skidded on the slippery grass.
âYou wouldn't believe the things they tell you . . .' She jumped over a puddle; it was thinly filmed with ice. âThe things they tell you, just so they can . . .' Her words blew away.
âYou can trust me.'
She was out of puff now. Leaning against a dry-stone wall, she paused for breath. Her dear nose was reddened by the cold. Manly and experienced, Colin waited beside her. They were up on the plateau now, bleak as tundra, its bleached grass pale in the wintry sun.
âI love it here,' he said. âThe Pennine Way, Haworth, that's where folk go, hiking and picnicking and whatnot, but here â it's like you're alone in the world.'
âExcept
I'm
here.'
It was then that she kissed him, full on the lips. Her nose was icy, but how warm were her lips against his, how moist her tongue as it slid into his mouth! Trembling, Colin held her in his arms. His tongue probed hers, diffidently at first and then more keenly.
Then they were hugging wordlessly, her head buried in his shoulder. Stroking her beret, he feared he would burst into tears. He looked up at the sky. Far above them, a bird circled lazily.
âLook!' He pointed.
Still in his arms, Natalie followed his gaze. âYou mean the plane?'
âNo, the hen harrier.' He pointed. âAnd there's a kestrel, look! It's hovering, ready to drop.'
She was gazing at the plane, however, high up in the sky. âJust imagine . . . Florida, New York . . .' A shadow passed over them as it crossed the sun. âWonder where they're going, lucky sods.' Urgently she gripped his arm. âDon't you long to get away from here?'
âBut it's beautifulâ'
âNot here â Leeds, boring job, no money, working for dickheads . . .' She sighed. âOh, I just can't wait for life to begin.'
Boldly, he touched her cheek with his gloved finger. âIt has.'
That evening she took him into her bedroom. It was stiflingly hot, the radiator exhaling illegal heat. Three candles sat in saucers; Natalie lit them, one by one. Colin stood there as she unzipped his anorak and tenderly, expertly removed his clothes. He was strangely unembarrassed; this day existed in a bubble of its own, separated from the timid confusions and inadequacies of his normal life.
âI've got something to tell you,' he said.
âYou're gay.' She smiled at him. âYou're married.'
He shook his head. âIt's just . . .' What could he say? That his experience was pitiful?
She nuzzled his chest. At the same time she deftly shed her own clothes, yanking down a trouser leg with her other foot.
âCome to bed,' she whispered, pulling her T-shirt over her head. Underneath she was naked.
He stood there, transfixed by her skin in the candlelight. Wonderingly, he put out his hands and cupped her breasts. They were small and firm; their hard nipples pressed against his palms. Though he was aroused, Colin didn't want to move. He wanted to hold this moment for ever.
âCome on,' she whispered. Moving away, she slipped under the duvet and held out her hand. âCome in here.'
Salamanders occasionally have difficulty shedding their skins. Place them in a container thickly planted with tradescantia and carry out frequent water changes. There they perhaps will succeed in casting the skin among the tangle of plants and roots.
If snakes have problems in shedding their skin, administer a lukewarm bath for several hours. You must ensure that they receive sufficient air through the nostrils. Weak or chilled animals should
not be subjected to such a procedure. By oiling with cod liver oil or any other oil, the skin can sometimes be softened and removed. This must be done very carefully, particularly in the head region and on the eyes.