– Holly –
She busied
herself with some admin, though she had no desire to read any more paperwork
today. The ageing computer hadn’t even been good when the museum opened, and
nearly a decade of updates to both operating system and programs had brought
the thing to its knees. Holly hated it. She didn’t care for computers or phones
or most other modern technology, really, and avoided them unless she had to use
them. Only insofar as it was useful to her. Or, in the case of this blasted
machine, if duty required her to. The radio programs chattered away harmlessly,
and she barely heard the brief news bulletin at the half hour. There was
something about a small earthquake in East Yorkshire, but it made little
impression on Holly.
She made
another cup of Early Grey and turned the heater up a notch. If this was to be
the end of all she had worked for, she’d make sure Mr Aaron Adams, senior
partner of whatever the fuck they were called, had a very hefty electricity
bill to settle by the time she was fired. She was also determined not to
quibble with the decorator’s invoice.
Catching
sight of Liam’s desk again, she felt the sadness return; it threatened to
overwhelm her. She knew there was nothing else he could do in Frampton. There
was only one shop left, and that was hanging by a thread. That was the worst
thing about the last few years, she thought. Everybody started looking out for
themselves too much.
Around 7,
she got up and took a walk through the exhibits. Though most were covered with
dust sheets, she knew where each piece was. She had placed them all herself,
planned the route, and written the text for every one of the explanation
boards. Holly lingered briefly at the photo wall, where images of the dig and
the team had pride of place. There they all were, Howard, Peter, Jacquie, and
Holly herself, standing beside the trench that had contained the four broaches.
Lisa had found the first, and she lay across their arms, grinning as if she’d
just been crowd surfing, holding the ornate piece of gold up to the camera. The
keys were in her hands before she knew what she was doing; the lock was stiff
from lack of use. The plastic cover swung back, and she gently pried the
picture free. She took several more for good measure then, catching herself in
the act, realised the gaps were now quite obvious, so she took a few moments to
rearrange the remains.
She returned
to her desk, took and piece of paper from the draw, found a working biro and,
without really planning to, wrote her letter of resignation.
Beginning
with ‘Dear lady Eastley,’ she finished the short note with, ‘yours sincerely,
Holly Prentice.’
Holly let it
dry, folded it into thirds, and sealed it in a plain, white envelope. She
addressed it to Lady Eastley and placed it in the middle of the desk.
The milk in
the fridge had turned to cheese, so she made the quick round trip to the
village shop, only to discover they had not had their delivery this week. She
made do with what they had and was soon back, armed with one pint of joyless
skimmed milk and a box of Frosties. Undeterred, she poured a very large bowl
and sat on the windowsill in the now rather warm little office until the sun
was properly up. It was very pleasant, and she dragged her comfy chair over,
sank into it and put her feet up on the ledge. She switched the radio over to 6 music and began to sing along.
It was in
this position, at a little before half past seven, that Liam Hogan found her.
‘Morning, Holly,’
he said, nodding to her and hanging up his coat.
She looked
round, still humming along to Perfect Day
Elise by PJ Harvey. ‘Liam! Why are you here today? You know we’re not open.
I gave you the week off.’
‘Yeah,
well,’ Liam sighed, turned back to face her, ‘our net’s out again at home, and
I’ve got stuff I need to do. Alright if I use your pc for a bit?’
‘It’s all
yours,’ she replied kindly. ‘It’s slower than steamroller these days, but take
as much time as you need.’
‘You sure?
Thanks!’
She noted
Liam had not asked why she was in work today. It was as much closed for her as
for him. ‘Net out again? How many times is that this month?’ Holly asked.
‘I’ve lost
count,’ Liam replied. ‘This letter for Lady Eastley… Want me to post it?’
Holly looked
over abruptly. ‘Oh, just leave it there.’
Liam nodded.
‘Just gonna grab a cuppa while it boots up. You want one?
‘I’m good,
thanks.’
He bustled
off to the kitchenette and Holly watched the birds flying outside. There were
rather a lot of them, she thought, and a curiously mixed bunch – gulls and
crows, and she didn’t know what else. ‘Did you bike in?’ Holly called, not
moving from her chair. Liam called back that he had, then returned just the
jingle announced the 7.30 news.
‘What was
that?’ Liam asked, sitting down and reaching to turn up the volume. The
computer was still not ready. ‘Earthquake?’
‘Oh, yeah…’
Holly said absently. ‘Yeah, I think they said something about that earlier?
Somewhere up in Yorkshire, I think.’ They listened to the report, about how eye
witnesses said they say tiles and chimney pots falling down, and the way it had
woken people up. ‘Doesn’t sound like it was too much to fuss about,’ Holly
concluded when the music returned.
But no
sooner were the words out of her mouth, when a low, bass tremble suddenly
coursed through the office and everything was shaking. Alarms all through the
building erupted into life.
‘What on
earth?’ She sprang up, knocking the chair over with a clatter. Liam hung onto
the desk, but the rumble gave out a second later. ‘I thought they said
Yorkshire?! We’re miles away from Yorkshire!’ Liam, both hands held over his
ears against the roar of the alarms, looked nonplussed. ‘Right, you’re right,
Liam. Come on, alarm boxes,’ and they ran out into the lobby. ‘We’ve got to
turn these off fast. The police get called after sixty seconds!’
The building
shook again; the decorator’s ladder tipped and crashed to the floor. Two tins
of paint fell off the bench and their contents burst over the floor. Holly and
Liam jumped back, just in time. It subsided again, the building was still.
Holly and Liam stared around. A deep crack had cut through the opposite wall
and bits of plaster was pitter-pattering onto the tiles floor.
‘Sod the
alarms, Holly, we need to get out of here!’
He didn’t
need to tell her twice. They ran pell-mell through the door and out into the
little high street of Frampton village. It seemed everybody was outside, most
still in their night clothes, gowns wrapped and feet slipper-shod. The chatter
was worried, punctuated by shrieks whenever another tremor struck.
‘Did you
hear the news?’
‘But we’re
miles away from that earthquake. What’s going on?’
‘There’s no
fault lines anywhere near us!’
‘Has anyone
called the police?’ someone asked, but a neighbour laughed them down.
‘What are
they going to be able to do about this?’
‘They’ve
just said on the Today programme!’
someone called, running out of a nearby house. ‘It’s shaking in London, too!’
‘All the way
from Hull to London?’ someone exclaimed in shock.
When someone
else said he didn’t think there had ever been an earthquake in Britain, people
laughed him down and listed half a dozen examples. The earth rumbled again. Car
alarms were joining the clamour still echoing from the museum.
‘Holly,’
Liam asked her, and leant a little closer so he could lower his voice. ‘What do
we do about the stuff in the museum?’
‘Well…’
Holly began, but they both backed away slightly to continue the conversation,
though people around them were fixated on the woman now spouting the news
channel from phone. ‘I mean, we have to lock it up, but what if this gets
worse?’ On cue, the village shook again. Fresh shrieks rang out from the crowd.
‘Well, the police should be on their way, anyway,’ Holly said, hoping she
sounded more reassured than she felt. ‘I mean, they’ve been going for about two
minutes by now, so the call will have gone through automatically…’
Liam looked
at her, frowning. ‘But…?’
‘Well, what
if they’re not coming?’ she said, in an even lower voice. ‘If this is happening
right the way down the east coast… if this is happening in London!?’
‘I know what
you mean,’ Liam confided. ‘But d’you think it’s safe to pop back inside? I
should get my stuff.’ Holly raised an eyebrow, but the discussion ended at
once, as a police siren blared, and the squad car turned into the high street.
– Alice –
Alice had
one rasher of bacon and one egg left, and enough oil for one pan. Enough
granules for a weak mug of coffee. No sugar. Well, she thought, you can’t have
everything. Fishing a spoon from the cupboard (her landlord had not thought it
worth fitting draws in her kitchen), she stirred the mug and with her free
hand, kept the frying pan just over the ring. As the bacon sizzled, she
wandered around, looking for things to tidy up. She had no desire to clean when
she was home; she was doing overtime this evening as it was, and would be home
well after dark. If there was time, she was planning a quick food shop, since
she had just used the last of her breakfast ingredients. And, she remembered,
there was the call from the landlord…
But the bed
was already made, and her duvet lay folded behind it. She zapped the telly on
and cast half an ear towards the breakfast news as she fried the egg. The
reporter stood in Hull, so Alice took rather more interest. She had almost gone
to university in Hull, but instead chose Birmingham. It wasn’t a choice she
regretted, but she had been taken with Hull when she did the rounds of cities
on her application list.
She sat with
the tray on her lap – the table was still covered in boxes – and watched the
updates. People were describing how the buildings shook and there was footage
of the damage to go with the odd piece if shaky footage. Alice always though
this sort of stuff looked rubbish; it was far too difficult to tell what was
going on, because whoever was holding their phone up attempted an overambitious
pan.
Teeth brushed
and hair combed, Alice pulled her winter coat from the wardrobe and turned to
leave. The street was busy with traffic, but few pedestrians, and Alice
understood why as her yawn produced a great plume of mist. She was already
tired, and there were twelve hours of office drudgery ahead, but she comforted
herself with the thought that the weekend was just around the corner. Though
her friends were mostly out of town at the moment, she already had a few plans.
It was a
bright morning, yesterday’s clouds blown clear by the night’s strong winds. She
followed the familiar route without thinking about it. Her mind was still on
the email from her mother. Alice had tapped out a quick reply, thanking her mum
for the message. She was really looking forward to the pictures and dad’s stories
from the Ashes – she would have TMS
on, of course – and that she would reply properly at lunch.
She vaguely
wondered at how few people she passed. It was a Friday, true, but the poor saps
who made this weary trudge to the soulless industrial park every day were
usually pretty regular. She passed the self-storage facility and noted that it
was not open. She glanced at her watch and noted that she was a little early;
it was not yet 7.45. She was simply early. The greasy spoon was packed with
early morning labourers and drivers, and there was a steady stream of people
emerging from the newsagents, copies of their favourite tabloid rags tucked
under their arms. She passed a line of yawning, grouchy looking people
disembarking from the shuttle bus.
As she
turned into the newest part of the estate, where large, square offices lined up
behind freshly mown grass verges, Alice stumbled, and grabbed the nearby
lamppost for support. At first, she thought the heel of her right boot had
given out – just one more bloody bill – until she realised the whole street was
shaking. Parked cars and vans rocked on their springs, and a couple of windows
in the adjacent office shattered. A van, already coming round the corner a
little too fast, teetered and fell, smashing down into the kerb.
Alice darted
between the parked cars and dashed over to the stricken van. Its wheels were
still spinning madly.
From the
adjacent street came the sounds of other accidents. Horns wailed and there was
the sound of shrill voices on the air.
‘God! Are
you okay?!’ she called to the driver, peering in through the cracked
windscreen. He looked disorientated. ‘Can you hear me? What’s your name? Are
you alright?’ She pulled herself up and tried to open the driver’s side door,
but it was jammed. The window was already broken, though, and she could see
glass powder all over the man inside. ‘Give me your hand!’ she instructed.
‘Road…
moved,’ he managed to say, but he was looking around now, and appeared
surprised that his van was lying at the wrong angle. ‘Where… who?’
‘Just give
me your hand,’ Alice repeated. Although she thought moving a man who’d just had
a crash was probably a very bad idea and her paramedic best friend Sophie would
be screaming at her to leave him alone, she could still feel the ground moving.
She did hesitate, though, and pulled her phone from her pocket. Fingers poised
over the 9 button, she felt a sudden tingle in her bones and looked up. About
twenty metres away, a tree suddenly swayed alarmingly, then vanished from
sight. Despite everything she had heard and experienced today, this was
extremely odd, and she peered over the top of the beached van.
What she saw
there made her blood freeze. The manicured verge, adjacent to the office with
the now shattered windows, was disappearing into the ground, falling in, and
the hole was expanding with mesmerising efficiency. The next second, the posh BMW
by the kerb upended and sank out of sight, then the Audi followed suit. Most of
the verge was gone now. The whole piece of pavement she had been standing on
not fifteen seconds before, had been swallowed. The corner of the office was
starting to crack Water erupted from the chasm: a main must have burst, she
thought.
She
redoubled her efforts, painfully aware of the cracking, churning sound of earth
falling away. A great chute of mains water was falling all around as a freezing
mist. Alice wiped her suddenly sopping wet hair from her face. The driver was
now alert, and had unclipped his belt. His bloodstained hands came out and she
grasped them, trying to stand on the wheel arch for balance. He was halfway
out, but the van was starting to slide; the whole street seemed to be slipping
towards the sinkhole. She toppled back, the man came free, and they landed on
the shivering tarmac as his van, with a creak of metal, wobbled and toppled
away, down into the expanding maw.
Alice barely
knew what she was doing, nor where the strength came from, but she hauled the
man up, threw his arm across her shoulders and staggered away from the swirling,
growing vortex as fast as her feet could carry her.
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