Thirty Seconds Before Midnight – Chapter 1

PART ONE

CHAPTER ONE
‘THE GRASS MAY WELL BE GREENER’

Digby clattered his little red hook of a beak on my shell the morning that I first saw the dominoes of my life topple. Over one went, tipping into another, knocking it onto the next. Several had gone already, escaping my notice, and though I was unable to see where they led, my instincts told me that at the end of them there was something thrilling: a climax of sorts, fireworks perhaps.

The Source, She who sparks all life, had been up and shining for a while. She had gone to bed late the evening before, leaving me to wander the Her lazy heat she left behind, browsing and grazing. I’d fallen asleep in a long grassy clump, letting its cool fronds drape over my tucked up self.

I stuck my neck out and opened my dew-glazed eyes. I was rather chilly since although the air was warming, the clump had kept me in the shade. Ambling out into the rays I rolled my eyes at Digby, who now bounced about in front of me, hopping from foot to foot.

‘Herbert!’ he squawked. He did have a terrible habit of squawking. It was most noticeable when he was a tad overexcited. I had a feeling he’d been at it for a while. He was sounding rather hoarse. ‘Phew! You’re awake.’

Digby was a parakeet, he would inform me. Incessantly. Very proud he was too. And ever so exotic, apparently. His feathers were the colour of the newest tastiest grass, although, in fact, they had very little flavour themselves and did tend to stick to my tongue. Digby did not like me nibbling on him but since he used to stand a bit too close he really only had himself to blame. He did like to perch on my shell. And he did like talking. He was a veritable stream of consciousness, Digby was.

‘Digby… you weren’t being sort of… hmm… hysterical again, were you?’ Digby regularly thought that I had passed away in the night and would spin into panic. It was because I am a cold thing and all of my breathing gear’s tucked neatly inside out of sight. All quite unnecessary but he was not the brightest of buttons my little Digby. Still, it was sort of nice to know he cared.

One of my favourite games when I was bored and I hadn’t seen him for ages because he was, no doubt, off doing something far more interesting far, far away was to wander over to the Wall and crawl up it just enough to tip myself backwards and land upside down on my back on the grass. I’d wiggle my legs around for a bit and then, when that became tedious, I’d fall asleep with all four of them and my neck splayed out. I have no idea how long it took him to find me. I just used to snooze. But when he did find me, he created the most dreadful palaver, flapping about screeching and tugging at his plumage. I just lay there, chuckling to myself silently. He’d usually attract the attention of the zookeeper or the zookeeper’s daughter and they’d come and flip me.

‘No, no. No, absolutely not. Not at all! Not even a tiny teeny bit!’ A kind of mania was enveloping dear Digby. ‘But, please, get moving now! Something strange and very exciting is happening. You must see it! Now or you could miss it!’ At this point ennui and anticipation-disappointed washed over me. Digby had only hatched the last but one Awakening so had only lived through a single Hibernation. I, on the other hand, had seen (well slept through) a grand total of thirteen Hibernations by this point in time. Digby tells me they are super cold and sometimes white and he becomes quite hungry, so I am glad that I tuck up, unnatural as it might be for my particular species, evolved in the tropics.
Apparently I am likely to have another hundred and twelve Awakenings to come, a fact which some days delights me and on others sends me directly to the doldrums. I have been told that Captain Cook gifted the Tongans a tortoise that lived for one hundred and eighty eight Hibernations. Poor soul. Although it’s possible that Tonga was somewhat more interesting than Bestwood, where we live and breathe.

Regardless, this made me a baker’s dozen times older and generally better than Digby and that’s not even taking into account the millennia of memory and knowledge passed on to me by my ancestors in my carapace, something that Digby sadly lacks. He has no encyclopaedic exterior packed to the brim with history. History admittedly limited to the direct experience of my bloodline, therefore mainly that of a small crop of volcanic islands cluttered around the equator. Nonetheless, we are hatched with an education, of sorts. Some creatures are and some aren’t. Some, like bats, need their mothers to teach them to fly. Woe betide them should they fall as babies whilst clinging to their mater’s wing. Most beasts instinctively know their predators and their food sources. But no creature, I believe, is born or dies wiser than the tortoise, no matter how much cramming they might do.

So, having foolishly fallen prey to Digby’s enthusiasms on previous occasions only to discover that his heightened state of vitality was attributable to something as starkly unmomentous as the popping out of yet another meerkat kitten or the sight of a newly sheared alpaca, I think I can be forgiven for not immediately jumping to attention.

‘Quick! Quick!’ He fluttered round my head leaping about in the air, frantic. ‘Hurry! Please Herbert! You might miss it and you won’t see any of it from here!’ He flapped up the Hill and landed on a clump, his twitching head beckoning me to follow. ‘Come ON!’ he clamoured.

Two thoughts rumbled through my brain at this point. One was what precisely did he mean by “Quick”? And the other was actually less of a thought and more a pervading sense of suspicion since Digby had his own games he liked to play with me. One of which was to inform me I was not witness to something utterly thrilling. He would then lure me up the Hill a bit in order to view said extraordinary spectacle, and then up a bit further and then tell me to come up the Hill a little bit more and again and then again until I finally reached the very top entirely breathless. Then, barely able to speak such the extent of his humour, he would gasp that it had now gone. And hilarious Digby would laugh so hard that he would fall backwards off the Wall in a guff of down. I am ashamed to admit that I had been a dupe for this gag more than several times during our acquaintance, mainly as a result of there not being a lot going on.

However, on this particular morning, suffering twinges of overnight cramps and also spotting a rather glorious pool of Sourceshine just yonder, I decided a stretch and pre-prandial stroll were in order, so I put suspicion aside and I played along with Digby.

My Family and me lived on the Hill within the Wall. The Wall was mid-thigh to a grown human and made of flint. None of us really knew how far the Wall rounded although we did conduct several measuring experiments over the Baskings, mainly on my say-so since the others seemed so unutterably content with lying about generally, but I think it was about three hundred and twenty nine Gramps (he’s the biggest in the Family). The others tended to become distracted or fall asleep during the experiment so we never fully completed it. They say that it is my youthfulness that imbues me with heightened activity and improved wakefulness. I just think I am different. I do not anticipate my curiosity to decline as my age soldiers on.

Gramps is, I was told (although I have to say having seen the Family’s antics post-Awakening that it’s anybody’s guess) the sire of my sire. Apparently I am expected to sire one day. This task does not appeal. I feel none of the required attraction to the ladies in the Family. Perhaps this is a fault of a lackadaisical adolescence or maybe it’s attributable to my never having met my mother. Was she supposed to enlighten me as to communications with the female of the species? I am not sure since my relations with all of my relatives are strained at the best of times, irrespective of their gender.

My mother failed to survive the Hibernation during which I hatched. She laid me late in the summer, her clock befuddled by the weather of this small island, so unlike the steamy consistency of the archipelago of our evolution where the easiness of our being allowed us to develop gigantism.
Now that I think about it though, it’s not unusual for tortoises not to know our mothers. I have met all of my Family but that’s because of the restrictions of the Wall. Were that not the case, we might have chosen to roam free of each other. We are not a pack animal, after all. And our mothers do not wean us as babes. We are weaned inside our eggs, our shells forming within a shell. We break ourselves out, taking responsibility for our own delivery. Our close cousins, the sea turtles, lay their eggs in nests dug into the sand. Once these young are deposited off the mothers swim, not interest in being party to the self-extraction of their young from their soft, leathery cases. They provide no protection against the predators on the beach, the birds and crustaceans that do not see a newly formed creature on the threshold of their life but rather, a tasty snack.

The Family told me that food had rotted inside my mother and poisoned her blood as she slept. My predominant emotional response to this was disgust, but of course I was never attached to her. I never had the opportunity. Not like Stella, the zookeeper’s daughter, and her mother were. They had seven Hibernations and Awakenings together where I had none with my mother. I was born alone.

Anyhow, the Hill looked out to many more hills that rolled over one another. Sometimes they were deep green covered with thick, wet grey but more often they danced a chaos of bright yellow splashes and dustiness striped with many verdant hues. At their horizon was a sea, to me the most glorious Glittering that reflected the colour of that day’s sky. The hills and the Glittering were connected by a strip of sand, a beach, which shrank twice a day to a sliver then stretched far with the outward-bound tide.

Stella informed me that the rolling hills were the Downs (but they looked more like Ups to me) and that the Glittering was a part of a sea that they, the humans, called the Solent. I perceived the word ‘Solent’ to be ugly, when what it described was very much the opposite and so I renamed it for my own entertainment. For me it was the Glittering and the pinnacle of my visual pleasure.

There was also an enormous grey Spike poking up through the treetops, soaring towards the sky, that Stella called the Cathedral. She described the building to me, and its functions, but I could not comprehend any sense in them (religion consistently baffles me) and besides, from my viewpoint I could only spy the Spike. I could not see any of the vestries and chambers she described. Digby said that the Peregrines inhabited the Spike. Sometimes he tried to point them out, suspended on the air, but they vanished in a blink. He was very much in awe of them and would bleat on and on about how they were the very fastest thing on Earth and ate at least a pigeon a day. Monstrous carnivores. I, myself, had reservations as to how and why such a record breaker would choose to inhabit a place of such little consequence.

As I turned towards where the Source rose each day I was faced with a big bush shaped like a cockerel. Once, I imagined, it might have been neatly trimmed. Today its feathers were ruffled. Beyond the cockerel there was a bronze statue of Atlas, unclothed, his rippling muscles buffed by the elements and heaving the celestial sphere upon his broad shoulders. Then, majestic, was the Big House. It was flanked to its left by the fishing lake. The fishing lake was fringed by willows weeping into its water and prim silver birches fettered with catkins at Awakening. A decrepit rowing boat was moored against a rickety pontoon.

The Big House was white with a porch that was itself the size of the whole Gate House where Bob the zookeeper and Stella lived. A drive lined with sea worn pebbles ran between them. At the highest curve of the Wall, where the honeysuckle rambled and scented, I could survey all of this and if the air were clear, the wind would bring me sound, clear as a bell, too.

The Big House was three windows tall and nine wide and had a copper roof that was a weathered green patina. Just after Awakening the vine that clad the porch dripped pale purple flowers whose sweet fragrance clambered up the Hill and played in my nostrils. On the side that faced the Glittering leaned a glass Orangery, its doors opening wide to a large patio, squirts of weeds spurted out of the cracks in the square paving slabs. Behind it I had a glimpse of a stagnant swimming pool that swam, out of my sight, around the back of the Big House.

Behind me was the forest, a rustling thicket of oak, beech and hazel, a feast of nuttiness as the Baskings played themselves out surrendering to the incoming cold.

The Arnolds inhabited the Big House and it was their bloodline that was responsible for its construction hundreds of Hibernations before. They were a vision of tweed and shotguns, rusty and rosy and rarely seen. We, the menagerie, were the brainchild of a different generation and our continued existence was the product of sloth and inattention rather than that of solid intention or ambition. It is also possible that nobody wanted to upset Bob the zookeeper. He was a man defined by a sporadically boisterous temper and extensive tattoos. He had been in the Navy since boyhood until he married Beryl and Stella made her appearance when he came to Bestwood as Groundskeeper. As the grounds diminished, sold piece by piece to the encroaching farms, the estate shrinking ever closer to the walls of the Big House, the menagerie became Bob’s domain. When he wasn’t here, at Bestwood, he was on the Glittering or in The Ship.

As I valiantly scaled the Hill, there was no evidence of tweed. There was instead a vast cacophony that seemed to eclipse even Digby.
It was rambunctious, a seething mass of shouts and swearing and music. Its loudness was such that the leaves on the Oak visibly vibrated. There was a bass note of machinery, the steady low thumps of powerful beasts beating their metal hearts.

Looking down the Hill I saw what Stella later told me was a limousine, slick and long. And four very startling human beings stood around it. Excitement indeed. The parakeet was right. We didn’t have many visitors other than Bob the zookeeper and his daughter, Stella and her own Digby, an overly plump girl we had nicknamed Fat Hannah. Apart from the odd school trip in the Baskings, the Hill was mind-numblingly quiet.

‘SEE!’ Digby very nearly took an eardrum out.

‘Digby, please… turn it down a bit,’ I firmly instructed.

‘What are they?’ he whispered, gratifyingly. He had his limitations, Digby, but I will say this about him. He was obedient.

‘They are… humans… you numpty,’ I replied, superciliously.

‘But where are the Arnolds?’ he goggled at me.

‘They’ve gone,’ I said, with an absolute certainty of which the origin I was unable to place.

‘Are you sure? But the Arnolds have been here for, like, forever!’ His volume increased with his incredulity. I wasn’t completely sure, actually, since I had no evidence to support my hypothesis. However, what intuition told me was that the likelihood of these two sets of humans inhabiting the same space in any kind of harmony was considerably less than slim to none. Plus, elusive as the Arnolds had always been, I racked my brains and couldn’t really remember when I had last seen them.

What I could see now was a man wearing what looked like white pyjamas rather late on in the day. His head hair ran down his back to his waist, streaky like Roger the gregarious badger’s fur. His face was rubbery and lined. It had a fuzziness crawling upon it like Bob the zookeeper’s when, after a three-day stint in The Ship he reappeared all fumy. Shouting at him there was a phenomenally tall woman who was all limbs and the colour of the beech leaves as they fall before Hibernation. Her hair was a buzz of white. She was carrying a creature in the crook of her arm whose size approximated that of a rat but it was fluffy and white like her hair and it appeared to be wearing jewellery. There were couple more of these yapping around her teetering ankles.

And there was a pair of most intriguing young men, smoking and leaning against what I recognised as a VW camper van, because Stella had one too. She had painted hers a pale rosy pink, reminiscent of the flamingos, but this one was a deep metallic purple and had the word “Throbbing” stencilled down the side in luminous green.

What was most fascinating about these two young men was that they were the spit of each other. I blinked a few times but there were definitely two of them. Twins. Scarce in the human world. They were the same height, the same weight and had the same hairless heads. Their shoulders were the same breadth and their bottoms equally perky. They were both dressed in black and wearing shades lodged on their shaven pates. They watched the argument between the tall woman and the man with the long hair with matching wry smiles on their identical faces.

The man with the long hair took a step towards the tall woman, his palms outstretched to the sky as her mouth alternately stretched and puckered. I caught the few of her words that won the war over the musical dins emanating from the camper van and the limousine. Amongst them were ‘Dave, you are a useless knob-head’ and ‘pair of wasters’ and ‘where are the fucking keys then?’

Digby and I looked at each other sideways. It would have been fair to say that she was a touch livid. She was using language that previously I had only heard spill from Bob’s mouth, although I had been told that fish wives and harlots were fond of tasting these sounds too and it wasn’t a dialect unique to our keeper.

A rumble began to conduct through my claws and soon enough five large lorries each with ‘Bust A Move’ printed on their sides began popping up at the bottom of the Hill. One by one they turned in, passed by the Gate House and made their way up the pebbly drive. The man with long hair crossed his arms in a manner that closed the subject under discussion, smiled serenely and nodded slowly at the tall, foul-mouthed woman, knowingly. The two young men laughed and she stomped a foot, turned on her heel and swallowed herself into the limousine in an evident hump.

When the first lorry braked to a stop in a burst of dust, the matching young men opened its back doors. A tiny woman with dark blonde hair curled up into a tight chignon, wearing a black trouser suit and crisp white shirt, jumped out. She had a clipboard clutched to her chest and a phone glued like a wart to her left ear. She landed her kitten heels perfectly.

Out of the cab of each the lorries piled three burly men in orange boiler suits and a procession of objects streamed into the house, carried by the Burlies. Chignon directed the procession with much waving of arms and reference to clipboard. The whole thing reminded me of the leaf cutter ants. I wondered where they had gone. For a time they had been spotted crawling all over the Hill, after Bob had left the lid of their vivarium off one day and never replaced it. I had not spotted one passing by in a long time, now that I considered it.

We saw: a sofa sporting the hide of one of our pair of aging zebra sisters, (Daisy and Dolly), a massive silver sleigh bed, a total of twenty-three guitars. There was one of every colour in a rainbow, and one of them was all of them at once. There was a stuffed grizzly bear, the appearance of which triggered a further tantrum in the tall woman. There were chairs that looked like eggs and a huge piece of glass that may have been a table. And there were boxes, so many boxes.

Digby was, refreshingly but a little disturbingly, struck dumb. Actually, while we were watching this I was mildly concerned that he might inadvertently spontaneously eject his eyeballs as a result of over goggling.

There was a mannequin bent like ‘The Thinker’ made of tiny square mirrors, a cerise felted snooker table, more brown boxes with room names scribed on them in perfect capitals that could only have been Chignon’s; KITCHEN, BEDROOM one to eight thereof, BATHROOM one to nine, DINING and bizarrely, SNUG, CINEMA, RECORDING STUDIO and BAR. And POOL ROOM. I was sure the Arnolds never had those rooms. I remembered mention of a ballroom and a drawing room.

There was a white lacquered grand piano, an ebony harp at least the height of the tall woman and five keyboards. A four foot white china poodle, a
totem pole and a leopard skin loo seat. Every now and again one of the mirror image young men, I couldn’t tell which, would appear with a tray carrying fifteen mugs of steaming milky tea and the orange Burlies would take time out slumped against the wheels of their lorries, slurping so hard that Digby and I fancied we could hear it from where we were up at the top of the Hill.

When this spectacle ended and Chignon checked her last box and the lorries crawled back down the driveway, the Source was dipping and Her rays were easing off.

The smell of sweating onions was in the air and then the piquance of tomatoes blubbed with an overcoat of garlic and for a while all was still. The Family had somehow slept through all of this. As the Source made Her bed, one by one the windows in the Big House began to glow. A quiet, gentle music squeezed out hinting up the Hill. A voice like vanilla caramel swang with it, wafting through the now abuzz menagerie.

I could see Dolly and Daisy and the Alpaca tribe with all of their necks hanging over their fence, peering, having spent the Arrival nonchalantly grazing and taking surreptitious glances over at the Big House. The flamingos were a juddering pink blancmange of feathers quivering with questions as to the meaning of it all. The mob of meerkats, all forty-two of them (I liked to keep count) were stood in a line from biggest to smallest, from right to left facing forwards but occasionally turning their heads to consult with one another. Their noses twitched. Digby was in the Oak preparing to roost with the flock of parakeets who had one by one swept in during the course of the afternoon, called to return by their unique messaging system back to base camp. Brian the gibbon, silvery grey, was hooting and swinging from his ropes trying to gain enough momentum to launch himself over his moat and the giraffes were flashing their lashes. Roger the gregarious badger pottered out of the forest flanked by a team of loose deer. Rabbits were scrambling everywhere and the pipistrelle bats were sonically swooping over and over the roof.

But Bob the zookeeper was nowhere to be seen.