Spill
By Giles Ward
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About this ebook
"A small glass bottle is filled with thick, yellowing liquid – something like melted butter. In amongst the clouding viscous, a jellied hand pushes from the inside. The fingers spread like an accidental spill."
This short story compilation ranges from heart-warming comedy to ruminations on existence: from the bizarre to the eerily macabre. See weird and wonderful preserved exhibits in a dusty old museum, immerse yourself in the conversation at a dinner party, or step foot into Dr Grost's office. This remarkable, thirteen-story collection, introduces a huge variety of engaging characters and showcases Ward's trademark style and humour.
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Spill - Giles Ward
Shelf Life
May 1949
If she closes her eyes she can see the front of the bookshop clearly:
The building is beautiful blood-red brick with stately pillars rising from the pavement to touch the edge of the sky. It has giant plate glass windows that at Christmas are dressed with piles of books laced up with red, green and gold bows beneath loops of ivy and spruce. The hand-painted sign above the door is the emerald green of her favourite Sunday shoes. The door at its mouth sits on large brass hinges. It is so heavy that she needs to lean the whole weight of her shoulder against it to ease it open.
Briefly, her fingers touch his. They step on to the red tongue of carpet at the entrance and are swallowed inside. He blushes and pulls his hand away. She feels crushed and elated. It is a meaningless thing that means so much.
They are teenagers with heads stuffed full of silly adventure. In the shop there is a sombre, studious calm. It takes willpower not to laugh out loud. Mannequins bow their heads deep in the creases of open books, fingers slide and ponder along the edges of spines. They stroke and massage leather and paper. Their expressions are knowing and proud. The couple slip like silent shadows along the edges of the bookshop walls. They curl and fold along the trim of shelves and disappear unheeded into ‘Foreign Worlds’. They sit on the floor with their chins to their knees and thumb through annuals full of amazing pictures of glaciers and mountains, deserts and seas.
Flapping hands and hissed threats send the boy and girl running from the shop. They gasp for breath and steady themselves against the iron railings that trim the finely manicured town square. A light May Day drizzle dampens the air and they find cover beneath a rowan tree. He hands her a daisy head and she picks it apart. He takes a pen from one pocket and a book from the other. It is a slim paperback with orange bands top and bottom and a simple black and white woodcut illustration in its middle. ‘Just borrowed it,’ he says in response to her wide questioning eyes. She looks urgently about them, but nobody sees the young couple beneath the arms of the tree. He opens the cover of the book and for a moment considers the naked white page. At last he slowly writes on the waxy paper. He hands her the book and shows her what he has written.
They chase the double-decker heading north out of town and scramble on board just as it makes to pull away. The conductor is lost in deliberation about a return fare. He has broad black shoulders dusted with flakes of white skin like talcum powder. His fat hands twist the handle of his clipper and he thrusts little pink tickets into willing palms. The couple scurry up the stairs and crouch near the back of the bus. They can hear the click-clunk of his clipper getting closer. They hold their breath but it is not enough. The conductor points a stubby leather-gloved finger in their direction. They spring to their feet and sidestep his windmill arms. Holding hands, they leap like lovers from a cliff edge onto the pavement, and in a laughing ball of arms and legs they watch as the bus grows smaller and smaller, the conductor’s voice a tiny squeak on the wind. They have a long walk ahead, but they also have all the time in the world.
She notices the book has slipped from her pocket.
The conductor picks the book up, gives the cover a brief glance and slips it inside the folds of his uniform.
February 1950
The conductor’s wife doesn’t read. She likes the comfort of what she knows, not what others think. She lives in the here and now. She takes the book from the sideboard draw where it has gestated for the past nine months and hands it to her sister. She is the dreamer. She might make use of it, she scoffs. The conductor’s wife’s sister slips it into her bag absent-mindedly. It doesn’t look like her kind of thing. She likes romance and adventure and stories that take her somewhere she’s never been, with people she’ll never meet. She is in no rush to return home. Home is a humourless black hole of grey stone and stale air. She carefully turns the key in the front door. Her fingers move with the sleight of a clockmaker. She bites her lip and the lock slides back. She pushes the door and holds her breath as she awakens its hinges. They are tired and worn and they screech in protest. She pauses and considers a retreat. But it is too late; the first punch catches the edge of her jaw, the second the side of her temple. Her head is full of glue and light. There is sticky liquid flowing from her lip. She can taste the iron. She falls against the door jamb, begging and contrite. But he’s not interested in the why, just the what, and he sends a swift metal-clad toe to her ribs that sends her and her bag skittering across the floor. The bag vomits bread, eggs, apples and the book. The book is like a pebble on the stone floor and slips beneath the pine settle against the wall.
December 1961
The landlord shrugs his shoulders with indifference. He waves at the contents of the small terraced house. ‘Matchwood wood as far as I can see. Do as you please.’ The new tenants strip it to plaster and wood. It takes an age to clear the air of disappointment. The bonfire in the yard spits ember droplets all through the night, and in the morning the couple and their two young sons drink milkless tea next to the hot ashes. The settee is made of cheap hardboard and pine and splinters apart with a single kick. The book they find beneath it is given a cursory glance and slipped anonymously onto the thinly stocked bookshelf beside the fireplace, its spine exposed for the first time in years.
April 1964
The youngest of the sons is the inquisitive one in the family. He digests books with the bug-eyed greed of a glutton. He reads stories of mystery and adventure, and the shelf above his bed bends to the weight of Tolkien, Lewis and Carroll. Even some Orwell. When he’s finished those, he scours the house for more. The book finds its way into his night-time world, illuminated by an Ever Ready torch under tented blankets. The diffused light creates a movie screen on the far wall, and the branches of the tree by his window dance finger puppets of golems and ghouls across the wallpaper, filling his real world just as he fills his imaginary one. The book lies amongst a dozen others and is soon lost to the ephemera under his bed. He sits in his room and lets his childish cotton-wool world unravel and the time pass; his parents argue, his father leaves, they divorce, a strange man warms his mother’s bed, a baby fills the house with screams. He reads college pamphlets, packs a bag of clothes, three boxes of books and travels as far from the house as he can.
August 1967
The girl rolls on to her hip and carefully places her chin in her hand. Her skin is speckled with brown flecks like the top of a chocolate drink. She watches him write at his desk by the small crescent of a green anglepoise lamp. It’s the intensity that she loves, but it’s the intensity that she knows will eventually drive them apart. She pulls the bedding around her and picks up the slim book on the table beside the bed. It has a yellow tinge to the