Itâs terrible, lad. Donât ever treat your da like that, ye understand? Itâs not right.â
âI wonât,â Danny said in a voice almost too quiet to hear.
âWhatâs up?â Ellie asked as soon as she saw Dannyâs face.
âItâs Captain Mack,â he said. âHeâs really upset.â
âOh, the move.â She felt in her purse for the car keys.
âYou knew about it?â
âI found out today. Heâs going to Redgrange.â
âWhereâs that?â
âA few kâs from here. I know some people who work there.â
âWhatâs it like?â Danny asked, hoping sheâd say that it was really good, top notch, the best.
âItâs a hole,â she said, buckling her seatbelt and starting the car. âTheyâre cost-cutting all over the place. Itâs a lot cheaper than here, though, and I guess thatâs the main reason.â She shrugged. âThis place is pretty pricey, you know. To move him into the hospital wing wouldâve cost them a lot of money. I guess theyâre doing what they have to do.â
âBut itâs not fair,â Danny protested. âHeâs got friends here. He knows all the nurses. Heâs got me. Heâs happy here.â
Ellie reached over and squeezed his knee. âI know, Danny. Iâm disappointed too. But thereâs nothing you or I can do about it. Iâm sorry, but there really isnât.â
A week later Captain Mack was gone. Ellie told Danny across the fence between their front gardens as he arrived home after school. He dropped his bag and sat on the doorstep, resting his chin in his hands. He felt a strange emptiness in his chest.
âItâs not all that bad, is it?â she asked, pulling off her gardening gloves.
âI guess not. I just feel bad for Captain Mack, thatâs all. Heâs going to be so unhappy.â
âHe might surprise you.â
âWhatâs the name of the new place heâs at?â Danny asked. âRed-something.â
âRedgrange. Itâs not that far. Are you planning to visit him?â
âSure, why not?â
Ellie smiled. âHeâd love that.â
The Redgrange receptionist with the heavy eyeshadow didnât know who Danny meant when he asked for the tall Scottish man with the eye-patch.
âDoes he have a name?â she asked, chewing her gum loudly. âBecause if youâve got a name to give me â¦â
âUm ⦠Iâve always called him Captain Mack. McAlly or McAully or something like that.â He felt his face going red. Some visitor, he thought â doesnât even know who heâs come to see.
âHang on,â the receptionist said, flipping through a green folder on her desk. âMcAuliffe? Is that him?â
âYeah, I think so,â Danny said.
Her phone was ringing. âRoom 5,â she said as she reached to pick it up.
Danny didnât know where to start looking for the room, so he waited until the girl had finished dealing with the call. She looked at him curiously. âWhatâs up now?â she asked.
âWhereâs Room 5?â he asked.
She rolled her eyes, just a tiny bit, enough to make Danny feel like a pain, like a pesky kid. âDown that hall and take a left. Itâs about halfway along on the right.â
Danny stopped in front of Room 5, in a corridor smelling of too-sweet citrus and air-freshener. He peeked cautiously in.
There were six beds in the room, four of which were empty, their sheets and blankets rumpled. Over by the window an old man in a dressing gown and slippers was lying on top of his covers with his back to the doorway, a small black transistor radio murmuring thinly on his locker. Captain Mack was sitting on the edge of the bed opposite. He too was facing in the other direction, staring through the barred-up window at a brown brick wall a couple of metres
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