Darkness
124 pages
English

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124 pages
English

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Description

Dan is a man for whom life has lost all meaning. Now nothing more than an unwanted burden, it is empty, shorn of love and full of sour thoughts. But a chance meeting with a stranger offers him hope to find a new purpose for his life; a purpose that will take him on a unique odyssey.With the help of others, Dan embarks on a journey that takes him into the very heart of Africa to a place that is only rarely visited and largely unspoiled. His journey is guaranteed to test his resolve and endurance, exposing him to a whole series of challenges he has never had to face before.Can Dan overcome the darkness and find his longed-for release?

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Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 20 août 2019
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781838599980
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Copyright © 2019 David Fletcher

The moral right of the author has been asserted.


Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside those terms should be sent to the publishers.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.


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For Fran and Jim
Contents
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one
Monique was all too aware of the waistband of her skirt. It was not what she needed: yet another reminder that her latest diet, just like all those before it, was proving completely ineffectual. She would just have to accept that it was odds-on that she had only a fatter future to look forward to – whatever she ate. This unavoidable realisation, on top of having to deal with this flight to Brazzaville, made her feel suddenly very despondent and very tired.
She’d been an air stewardess with Air France for nearly fifteen years now, and there were some of its routes she enjoyed and other routes she did not. This Paris to Brazzaville haul was one she simply detested. The plane was always jam-packed with passengers, and all too often these passengers came equipped with too many possessions and too many unreasonable demands, demands that were all the more difficult to deal with when one was despondent and tired. And there was more. Many of the passengers also had some distinct “attitude problems”; they showed barely any respect for the cabin crew. Indeed, as she’d gradually sloughed her youth, these attitude problems had seemed to get worse, and to be a noticeably aging stewardess didn’t appear to entitle you to any respect whatsoever – especially if you were working in the business-class cabin. Here the predominantly male occupants tended to celebrate their government sinecures either with outbursts of arrogance or with displays of simple, old-style misogyny, and if you were a lowly stewardess you just had to take it. It was part of the job. Just like the God-awful safety briefing, that slightly embarrassing prelude to every flight that gave all the punters a chance to parade their insouciance by studiously ignoring it, or, for those so inclined, an opportunity to ogle the briefer. As Monique had often observed during this ritual performance, a close-fitting blouse, particularly when put under strain, appeared to be able to cast a spell over many men and to hold their unblinking gaze for the entire length of the performance.
Well, it was now show-time. The announcement had been made, and Monique, more conscious than ever of her waistband, positioned herself in the aisle of the business-class enclave and waited to engage autopilot. She had done this stuff so many times before that she now reckoned she could do it in her sleep. It was certainly so automatic that she could now use it as an opportunity to conduct an initial assessment of her charges and work out which of them was likely to be the most trying.
It would be the really fat guy, the one with his stomach trying to push past the buttons of his shirt. He had “bastard” written all over his face, and he had already decorated the aisle with a discarded magazine. But at least he wasn’t staring at her blouse. Not like the guy just behind him, undoubtedly another state employee, who was not just staring but also grinning obscenely and chewing – vigorously. Him, she would have to watch, particularly when she was within his reach.
The other passengers were more difficult to read – with one exception. This was an oldish guy who was attempting to show some interest in her demonstration – but failing – and instead was just radiating weariness and an unmistakable sense of sadness. He, she knew, would be quiet, undemanding and polite. What she did not know, of course, was why he looked so inwardly distressed. And she was very unlikely to find out.
– o –
Dan looked towards the stewardess. He knew it was rude to ignore these demonstrations, but at the same time he had now witnessed them so many times before that he could no longer absorb them. So it was just a case of lending his support to the charade and, as far as possible, putting the poor woman at ease. After all, it must, he thought, be a terrible trial, and particularly if your audience won’t even recognise your presence. Furthermore, this stewardess must have put on this performance thousands of times before. And whilst she was still attractive, her youthful figure had abandoned her, and having to stand there in a uniform designed for a twenty-year-old… well, it would have to make matters even worse.
Thankfully, the demonstration was soon at an end, and Dan’s mind turned to the task of enduring an eight-hour day-time flight. He didn’t do in-flight movies or games and preferred instead to read a book. Accordingly, he had equipped himself with a copy of Graham Greene’s A Burnt-Out Case. It was a book that had been sitting in his house in England, unread for more than twenty years – as was evidenced by the vaguely nicotine hue of its pages – and he knew nothing of its plot. He was therefore amazed when he read its back-cover synopsis to discover that its story took place in the Congo, and it was therefore one of the very few English novels to be set in that Francophone country, and of course the country where, within just a few hours, he would be landing. He could only think that his random choice of such a tome was simply an extraordinary coincidence or an example of remarkable serendipity. However, six hours later, when he had read the story, he thought it was something more. What it was he could not define, but it did make him smile. And it also made him want to be there – so he too, like the principal protagonist of the book, could taste the air of that country and begin his own expedition into its empty interior.
Nevertheless, he would have to be patient. There were two more hours of flying to endure, and that meant two more hours in the company of strangers, a couple of whom had been rather inconsiderate in their behaviour to the cabin staff, and a couple of whom had been downright offensive. At one point, he had even considered intervening. It was when the stewardess who had conducted the safety briefing had been abused by a fat guy. He had been complaining vociferously about his brandy – as far as Dan could tell, just so he could be vociferous – and he had been treating the stewardess appallingly. However, heroics were not required. Another stewardess hurried to provide support to her companion, and within seconds she had been joined by a fairly beefy steward from the economy cabin, and the ogre piped down. Then, for the rest of the trip, he just slept, snoring loudly and with his belly exposed. He was, Dan decided, the archetypal business-class slob, albeit he would never be aware of this himself.
Dan wished he’d brought another book. He also wished he didn’t feel quite so responsible for the poor behaviour of his fellow males. But he couldn’t help himself. Indeed, when just minutes before their approach to Brazzaville’s Maya-Maya Airport, offensive passenger number two rubbed himself against that same long-suffering stewardess as he passed her in the aisle, Dan felt distinctly uncomfortable. Fortunately, the assaulted stewardess had in her armoury the sort of withering look that could deflate even the most outrageous of unwanted suitors, and she deployed it – with stunning success. The creep returned to his seat looking hurt, confused, and very stupid.
Dan felt a little wave of admiration for the stewardess – and a little wave of relief. He could now relax and maybe indulge in a further contemplation of Mr Greene’s A Burnt-Out Case , and then maybe a further contemplation of his travelling brethren, and in particular the behaviour that two of them had displayed in the latter part of the flight. It is interesting, he thought, how some on-board alcohol or just a misplaced belief in one’s importance can cause the mask to slip. How it takes so very little for some humans to reveal their true identity. Not, of course, that he hadn’t witnessed far worse behaviour than this, and behaviour that hadn’t required the contents of a bottle or a dose of hubris to foment it. Indeed, he’d witnessed infinitely worse behaviour, nothing less than evil behaviour. And wasn’t that why he now trailed about him that heavy cloak of weariness? And w

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