Chapter Eleven
During my lunch hour on the same day, I decided to revisit the school to see whether I could persuade the Headmaster to employ me as the sports master. I was beginning to miss watching teams play football and cricket... even netball would have been something to feast my eyes on. As entered the school hall, I could feel that something was wrong. I looked into the first classroom to find it empty. It was lunchtime and there was every reason for it to be so but there was not a child to be seen in that classroom or in any other one. I went to the end of the hall and turned right to go into the playground, halting just inside the doorway. All the children were sitting in a circle on their haunches discussing something that was clearly important to them.
‘I say we should revolt,’ declared on young boy at the top of his voice.
‘You’ve got my support,’ exclaimed Robert vehemently.
‘And mine,’ came the agreement from a young girl, to be followed by a whole cacophony of positive responses.
I edged forward to enable me to hear their comments more clearly.
‘What do we do about it?’ demanded one schoolboy.
‘We already burned down the village hall, ‘ boasted another boy audaciously.
‘That’s all very well,’ called out one of the girls. ‘We can do as much damage as we like but we’re not getting our message over to the oldies.’
I shuddered as I realised that my earlier prediction was correct. The children were responsible for burning down the village hall. I knew it in my bones but no one had bothered to talk to any of the children about it.
‘That’s right,’ called out another boy. ’We need to get our point over or we’re wasting our time.’
‘They’ve got to understand what it’s doing to us,’ cried out another girl.
They talked in general terms about rebelling but came to no conclusion at the end of the luncheon period.
‘Let meet again and talk about it in, say, two day’s time,’ suggested Robert who appeared to have become the leader of the group. ‘By then we should have some more ideas to discuss... ’
He was so eloquent that I could hardly that I could hardly believe my ears. He was more like a man of forty-two than a boy of eleven. As they climbed to their feet, I raced back along the hallway, hovering until they had returned to their classrooms. There was mutiny in the air and I did not know the reason for it. It was quite apparent that the children were highly dissatisfied with their lot in the village. I didn’t know whether they had a strong desire to venture out into the outside world or whether they wanted to take command of the village. I hoped it was not the latter because the economy of the village was so perfect that anyone meddling with the system might ruin it.
The Headmaster came into the hallway at that moment to check that the children had returned. I collared him quickly and followed him back to his room.
‘Headmaster,’ I began tiredly, knowing from the start that he would turn me down again. ‘I ask you to review your studies so that football or rugby can be introduced to your curriculum. It is important, you know.’
He shook his head with a slight smile touching his lips. ‘Mr. Ross,’ he returned. ‘These children do not wish to play your football or rugby. Can’t I get you to understand that. They’re not fit any more to do so.’
‘Not fit any more,’ I echoed. ‘What do you mean?’
‘It’s something you don’t appreciate but I’m sure you will in time... However, I do admire your persistence but it won’t influence me in changing my mind.’
‘Then tell me what’s going on here,’ I advanced sharply.
‘What do you mean?’ He was really naïve concerning the attitude of his pupils.
‘There children have been meeting in your playground discussing something that dissatisfies them. They’re at breaking point. So I ask you what’s going on?’ I told him bluntly.
‘Come now!’ he chided gently. ‘They’re only children. They’re simply having fun.’
‘One of them admitted burning down the village hall. Do you call that fun?’ I felt it was time someone lambasted him.
‘You must have misheard them,’ he laughed easily. ‘Children make up such strange stories but many of them are untrue. If you had children of your own you would understand.’
‘Okay,’ I spat angrily, washing my hands of the whole business. .‘If something goes wrong, it’s your funeral. I mean they’ve already smashed up the chairs and desks in one of your classrooms. There has to be a reason for their bad behaviour. It’s up to you to find out what it is!’
‘That was the result of a misunderstanding,’ he informed me weakly. ‘All the furniture’s intact now.’
‘Well you’ve been told,’ I concluded. ‘As I said before, it’s your funeral.’
I left the Headmaster who was clearly in denial about everything relating to the children. He must have know that they were discontented but preferred to hide his head in the same regardless of what they were capable of doing. After all, in his opinion, they were only children!
***
I considered my duty as a security guard as optional with regard to time. Relatively speaking, I could come and go as I wished without needing to ask anyone’s permission. It was an ideal kind of employment for anyone who wanted to slow down their nerves from a long-term session of patrolling the borders of Basra with factions ready to fire machine-guns or throw hand grenades at you at any time. And there was also the danger caused buy buried mines. I returned home early one day having been bored to tears waiting at the entrance to the village. With nothing else to do, I sat in the lounge in a comfortable armchair sipping a cup of tea. I had been thinking about my next move for quite some time It was personal and unpleasant but I felt it had to be done if I was to fathom out the truth of the secret of the village.
Bridget kept a wooden chest under the bed which was her personal property. I had never considered delving into it as it contained all her private papers and sentimental gifts or personal mementoes which she kept for herself over the years. Privacy was paramount to the individual but I was on tenterhooks trying to unfold the secret of the village. Consequently, I threw caution to the winds and decided to rifle through her belongings to see whether there was anything that might resolve the problem.
I hauled the chest out slowly from under the bed and stared at it, trying to expunge the guilt which flowed through my brain. It seemed comparatively light and I was delighted to discover that it wasn’t locked. I opened it carefully intending to replace anything I removed back into its original position so that she wouldn’t notice that anyone had tampered with it. As I looked through them, the contents appeared to be quite innocuous. There were some gifts which had no value at all, such as a rabbit’s foot, a scent spray, a milk bottle for a child, a saucer bearing the figure of Queen Victoria, a small red bow and a figurine of Mary and her little lamb, There was nothing there of any singular importance to me. At the bottom of the chest there were some letters and documents stuffed into a large leather wallet. I removed them with excitement building up inside me. I sat back on the bed making myself comfortable, tucking the pillow against the headboard, before opened the first letter. It was from her late husband, Richard, who wrote in endearing terms how much he loved her and how he wanted to marry her. In his second letter, he reiterated his love for her., telling her how beautiful she was, saying that he wanted to stroke her golden hair, adding a short poem by Christina Georgina Rosetti, the well-known poetess. The third letter was written the day before their wedding, rambling on about how her beauty embellished the world, sending him into delirium, and how he could hardly wait to hold her in his arms and marry her. Richard was clearly a man who was deeply in love with her and that marrying her and living with her had made him very happy. After having read his letters, I could only wonder what had happened between them especially as he deliberately ended his life by refusing to take his tablets. Or was that the real reason for his death. The letters that he wrote certainly caused me to think about the situation more deeply.
I soon came across some birth and marriage certificates which had been signed by the priest. A sepia wedding photograph of him performing the marriage ceremony was there as well as another one showing all the villagers standing with them outside the church after the ceremony. Even though the photographs were in sepia, I was not necessarily concerned until I opened the marriage certificate. The information set out set my mind racing. The date was boldly written as the eighth of September. 1940, I paused to blink, staring hard at the document for the second time believing that my eyes had failed me but it was plain for all to see... the eighth of September, 1940. My God, I thought to myself, that’s almost seventy years ago! I recalculated the time before picking up Robert’s birth certificate. I closed my eyes in horror after reading the date... the fifth of April, 1968. This meant that he was really forty-two years of age... but how could that be? He was only eleven! My hand began to shake as I picked up the next document. It was Bridget’s birth certificate. I stared at it with trepidation noting that the date of her birth was the fourth of November, 1922. She had been telling me the truth when she had told me that she was eighty-seven years of age. Now I had it all in black and white. It was becoming a nightmare. It was so stunning that I couldn’t get my mind around it. The details were far too much for me to take in at once. Robert, her son, had been born almost twenty years before me. He could have been my father instead of the other way around. What was going on here? Robert was a typically eleven year old boy in terms of height, and size and weight; Bridget was a twenty-seven year old woman... or at least she looked to be! How could they hold their looks and age for such a long time? It was as though they froze at a certain time. I thought about the love-making with Bridget in that she was so lithe, so athletic, so young in action. If she was eighty=seven, how could she perform so well, so actively, practicably wearing me out some nights? It just didn’t make sense! I examined the photographs again with my mind in a spin. Was it any wonder that the priest turned me down when I asked him if I could marry Bridget? And what had actually happened with regard to her late husband’s death. The story didn’t sound right.
It then came to mind that Obadiah Numbwinton was a very clever chemist who had stumbled on to something quite unusual. He had not only created a village which remained exactly the same in the effluxion of time which was self-sufficient, independent and peaceful but had obviously discovered a panacea to defeat age and looks. I now understood why I had sat alone in the doctor’s surgery that day wondering why there were no other patients. I had discovered the fact that the Founder had discovered a way to prolong life and allow people to retain their looks from a very early age provided they continued to take the tablets. It had to be the element P13... whatever that was! At last I had stumbled across the secret of the village although it didn’t do me much good. I was facing a population of aged people who all looked relatively young and who were extremely virile. It was the reason why there were no old-looking people in the village... everyone who lived there was actually old which was why the latest epitaph in the church graveyard, with the exception of Richard McBain, was dated 1963. Suddenly everything began to fall into place except for the fact that my head was spinning. Now I knew for certain that Bridget was actually eighty-seven years of age. How could I rationalise my relationship towards her... sexual and otherwise. I was seducing a woman well into her eighties. It was inconceivable... practically immoral! And how should I treat her son, Robert, who was almost twice as old as me. And thee was one more thing I needed to consider... if I took the tablets myself over a long period, I would also remain looking young in my old age. Was it an advantage or not? At this moment in time, I could not come to a conclusion. 1t was something I needed to think about carefully.
I replaced the documents into the wallet and placed them back in the bottom of the chest. I then pushed it back under the bed. She would never know that I had intruded into her private papers and now it was necessary for me to settle my mind rather than to do something stupid. I would carry on as normal but could I continue to make love to such an old woman. It haunted my mind because she looked so young and beautiful. It was a case of mind over matter and I needed to accept things as I saw them day after day and not as they actually were. Subsequently, when she returned later that day, I smiled at her lovely, kissed her on the lips and the neck, and hugged her warmly. I idolised her youth, her beauty and her virility, and what’s more I was in love with her. What more could a man want in a woman!