leaving, but something about Captain Mack told him that he should stay. Something sad and desperate, like the frustration Ellie had described as theyâd waited at the traffic lights. So he went into the little lounge-room, which despite having the curtains pulled wide open for once, seemed very dark.
Captain Mack slumped into his chair and stared straight ahead. It was as if Danny wasnât even there. Danny sat nervously and watched him, saying nothing.
âAre you all right?â he asked again, after theyâd been that way for what seemed like hours, sitting like statues on opposite sides of the dim room.
âNo, Iâm not all right,â Captain Mack answered without even looking at him. âIâm nothing like all right.â
âWhyâs that? Have you had some bad news?â
âYe could say that.â
âWhat sort of bad news?â
At last Captain Mack turned his head and looked at Danny. His eye was red and full of tears. âItâs my son William,â he said at last. âYeâve not met him, have ye?â
Danny shook his head.
There was another lengthy pause. Again Danny waited.
âYe see this gown?â Captain Mack said finally, plucking harshly at the plush red fabric. âDo ye like it?â
âItâs very nice,â Danny answered. âHow about you?â
âItâs meant to be a peace offering,â Captain Mack said, disgust thick in his voice.
âI donât ⦠For what?â
Captain Mack raised his head and looked straight at Danny, and his voice shook slightly as he spoke. âTheyâre moving me. They say Iâm too old to stay in this unit, which might well be true. Theyâve been saying it for a while, but then when I took that bump the other day they made up their minds. I donât even remember doing it, to be honest.â He lifted a hand slowly, gently touching the small white dressing on his forehead with one finger. âSo theyâre moving me into a proper home across town, like a hospital for useless folk.â
Dannyâs protest sounded weak and pathetic. âYouâre not useless,â he said.
âDonât ye be patronising me, lad. I am useless.â
âBut they have a hospital section here, where Ellie works,â Danny said. âMaybe you could ââ
âYe donât think I told him that? He said they canât afford it.â
âBut donât you get a say? I mean ââ
âNo, I donât, lad. I told William, âThis is where all my friends areâ, and do ye know what he said?â
Danny shook his head.
âHe said, âYeâll make new friendsâ. Can ye imagine? Iâm eighty-four years old, and he talks to me like Iâm a child.â His eye was streaming with tears now, and he had to stop speaking. He felt about in one of the pockets of the dressing gown, pulled out a hanky, blew his nose loudly and tucked his hanky away. âLike a child,â he said again.
Danny didnât know what to say. He wasnât sure whether to make Captain Mack a cup of tea, or give him a hug, or just sit quietly. So thatâs what he did, just waiting for the old man to go on. It took a while, and the heavy awkwardness grew.
âThen he gives me this.â Captain Mack pointed at the gown again. âDid ye see the tartan, lad? He probably thought it was a grand joke. My own son doesnât care about where his father comes from. He gives me a tartan gown as if to say, âThere ye go, Da, thereâs something to remember Scotland by, to make up for putting ye in a home for reject folksâ. I ⦠I canât talk about it any more, lad. Iâm sorry ye have to see a grown man weeping like a weeâun â¦â
âItâs okay,â Danny said quietly. He couldnât think of anything more comforting, and he felt stupid for saying it at all.
âNo, itâs not all right.
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