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The Dinosaur Feather

The Dinosaur Feather

Titel: The Dinosaur Feather Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Sissel-Jo Gazan
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also speed. Rarely more than fifteen minutes would pass from the time they found, or killed, an animal before Jack would have dissected it. Clive ruffled the boy’s hair.
    Clive watched Jack’s mother from his window. She had four children, of whom Jack was the youngest. She worked at the checkout in the local supermarket, but she never seemed to recognise Clive when he did his shopping. She had bags under her eyes, she smoked too much and yet there was something attractive about her. She had slim tanned arms and a narrow back. Not that Clive had any desire to take on another man’s children. Thanks, but no thanks. Jack, of course, wouldn’t be a problem. He was a good boy, Clive’s boy, but Clive found the other children irritating. The oldest one was a young man of sixteen–seventeen years, an apprentice mechanic somewhere. Clive would see him come home in the evening, hearhim argue loudly with his mother and watch him tinker with a car in the front yard, chucking beer bottles on the grass as soon as he had emptied them. One evening, he came home late and Clive heard a violent row erupt inside the house. ‘Whore,’ the young man shouted. Jack’s mother howled and something got broken. After that night Clive rarely saw him, and Jack told him his big brother had moved out. The middle children were fourteen-year-old twins. The girl was pretty, but had already acquired the same slutty appeal as her mother. From his window, Clive would watch her smoke furtively, put on make-up and change into high-heeled boots behind the hedge when she went out in the evening. She would end up like her mother, anyone could see that. Have too many kids she couldn’t support when her boyfriends walked out on her. Her twin brother was no better. He looked like a mini version of his older brother and when he was home alone, he would sit in a deckchair in the garden and masturbate under a blanket. Clive could see from far away what he was doing, he could see what kind of magazines were lying on the grass next to the deckchair. Clive’s throat tightened at the thought of what Jack had to look forward to.
    Clive started buying Jack presents. New scalpel blades and a pair of binoculars with Jack’s name engraved on them. He gave him reference and activity books, he let Jack have his scientific journals when he had finished with them. When they were out in the woods, Clive looked after Jack. He would help Jack across the stream, he would lend him his hat if the sun was blazing and Jack had forgotten his own; he only ever gave the boy challenges he could meet, and helistened to his answers. The boy deserved to be looked after properly when he was with Clive. Once in a while, he would clutch Jack’s chin and turn his face to his to emphasise something it was important for Jack to understand, or grab his arm if Jack was fidgeting and losing concentration. Obviously Clive never hit him, but it was essential that Jack stay focused or he would never find the strength to break free from his background.
    ‘Would you like to dissect a larger animal?’ Clive asked. Jack was now so skilled at dissection that hares and hedgehogs no longer represented much of a challenge. It was early one Sunday morning and the mist lay thick under the rising sun. Clive carried a spade and he had a flask of hot chocolate and some sandwiches in his backpack. Jack nodded unconvincingly. They began by building a trap in a clearing. Clive concentrated on the construction of the trap, and how they would lift up the animal once it had fallen in. Suddenly he became aware that Jack had stopped. He was standing a little distance away and he didn’t look happy.
    Clive went over to him and knelt down on the path, making their eyes level.
    ‘What’s the matter?’ he asked, softly.
    ‘I don’t like always having to kill the animals,’ the boy said. Clive embraced him.
    ‘But nature’s like that,’ Clive said into Jack’s hair. He smelled innocently of forest and sweaty child.
    ‘Then why don’t you do it?’ Jack said, wriggling free. Clive let go of him.
    ‘We’ll do something else,’ he said.
    ‘Okay,’ Jack said, relieved.
    They walked further into the woods.
    ‘I wish you were my dad,’ Jack said out of the blue.
    Clive smiled.
    ‘Well, we can always pretend,’ he said, lightly.
    The weekends passed and weeks became years. When Jack turned thirteen, Clive’s present to him was a tree house in the woods. Clive had built it in secret and, on

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