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She walked towards the door but I grabbed her arm. My heart nearly broke when she shied away from the sudden movement, a stark reminder of her recent captivity.

“Don’t go outside love, not while it’s raining.”

“Why not?”

I sighed and looked at Emily, who came to the rescue.

“Melody, how much do you know about radiation?”

“What, you mean like nuclear bombs?”

She nodded. “Yes, that’s right.”

“We did Hiroshima in history, it was horrible.”

Emily nodded again. “Well there was an accident, and radiation like the bombs might be in the rain, so we have to stay out of it. It’s why we had to change our clothes.”

“Oh, ok.”

I blinked, expecting an argument, and smiled gratefully at Emily.

“But we do need to get out to the garage,” I said, “Emily, if I cover myself with something waterproof do you think I’ll be ok?”

She shrugged uncertainly. “Maybe, maybe not. We should stay out of it as much as possible if we can.”

She left the room and I followed her into the lounge, taking Melody’s hand. Her small fingers in mine were a gift that I would never take for granted again.

Emily strode to the window and eased the filthy net curtains aside, looking up at the grey clouds that filled the sky.

“It doesn’t look like it’s going to let up anytime soon though,” she said, “and we need to get out of here as soon as we can.”

I thought about it for a moment, then decided that the risk was worth it. The side door to the garage was only half a dozen steps from the patio doors, and I knew from experience that Frank left it unlocked.

“Let’s see what we can find to keep me dry,” I began to look around for something that might work, “something waterproof.”

We turned the house upside down, piling everything that might be useful in the centre of the lounge. Emily sorted through the pile and selected several items, then began to dress me as if we were playing some kind of bizarre game.

A few minutes later, I stood by the patio door wearing a wax jacket that came to my thighs, my lower legs wrapped in layers of clingfilm while one of the two pairs of marigolds we’d found covered my hands. Over my head I wore a large plastic washing bag in bright tartan. I felt like an idiot but I couldn’t argue that I would be dry.

“Melody,” Emily said as she put a hand on the door handle, “just in case I want you to go into your bedroom and shut the door until I tell you, do you mind?”

Please at being asked like an adult, Melody nodded and left the room.

“How are you feeling under there?”

“Stupid but dry.”

“Right. Just remember not to touch us when you come back in, I’ll use the washing up gloves to take the outer layers off and then we’ll stick them in the washing machine where no one can touch them by accident. Oh, and Malc?”

“Yeah?”

She lifted the bag and kissed me, just a brief peck on the lips but it was enough to set my heart racing.

“You’re a good man.”

I could only nod as she dropped the bag back over my head, reducing my visibility to strip of floor a few inches in front of my feet. I heard the snick of the lock turning and then the rasp of the door as it was pulled back on its runners.

“Go.”

And I stepped out into the rain.

Chapter 49

The grass was slick under my shoes as I tottered unsteadily towards the garage, concentrating on keeping my balance with only a few inches of garden visible. Anyone watching probably would have been howling with laughter, particularly when I walked head first into the garage wall and nearly brained myself, but I found the door with groping hands, feeling the cold metal of the handle through the rubber gloves.

I tugged hard, feeling the warped wood protesting as it refused to budge, but I pulled again, harder this time, and it finally popped open with a speed that nearly took me off my feet.

I stepped inside, pulling the door shut behind me and took the bag off my head, careful to touch only the outside.

It was dark in the garage, but I could make out the dim shape of something large covered by a dust sheet just in front of me.

Scanning the shelves, I saw an old torch that had seen better days in the seventies, but to my surprise it came on when I flicked the switch, the feeble beam just enough to see by.

I pulled the gloves off as well, leaving them on top of the bag just inside the door, and tugged the dust sheet aside to see what was beneath.

For years now, I’d know that Frank was working on a ‘project’ in the garage, with the only sight I’d ever had of it being the occasional engine part he’d brought into the lounge to work on over a sheet of old newspaper while the rest of us sat there in front of the TV. I’d often thought it just an excuse, a reason not to have to talk to his confusing southern son in law, but as the dust sheet came free I realised just how wrong I’d been.

I saw wood first, clean, polished lines over long windows that stretched back for half the length of the car, and then smooth, green steel that curved gently towards the front.

Gleaming steel, polished to perfection, wrapped the headlights, the grill and formed the bumper that curved around the front of the car, and through the window I could see that the keys were in the ignition.

“Well that won’t have any processors in it,” I muttered to myself as I opened the door and leaned in to turn the keys.

The ignition clicked, but no sound came from the engine.

Wishing Emily was here with me, I pulled what I hoped was the bonnet latch and was rewarded with a click. Lifting the bonnet, I found an engine so clean I could see my reflection in it, but even to someone with my limited mechanical knowledge the problem was clear. There was no battery.

I shone the torch across the cluttered shelves that lined the walls, moving around the garage with a sinking feeling as no battery immediately made itself obvious.

Then, just as I was about to give up, I found a large, plain cardboard box and opened it to see a brand new looking battery, plastic covers still over the terminals.

Pulling them off, I took the battery in shaking hands and slotted it into the compartment under the bonnet, then attached the leads. Dropping the bonnet, I headed back round to the driver’s door, careful not to drop on the inside of the car, and turned the key.

The engine coughed and spluttered but didn’t turn over. Cursing, I tried it again but got the same thing. Worried that I might drain the battery without ever starting the car, I decided that Emily’s deft touch was needed.

Putting the gloves and bag back on without getting my skin wet was one of the hardest things I’ve ever done, but after several minutes of swearing and tugging I finally got myself ready and headed back out into the garden. I made a beeline for the patio doors as rain hissed and pattered off the bag, frighteningly close as I realised that the only thing between me and a potentially lethal dose of radiation was a washing bag.

I heard the door slide back as I came close, stumbling over the step and nearly falling into the lounge, the door closing behind me the second I was through.

“Well?” Emily asked as her gloved hands pulled the bag from my head.

I smiled. “Ever wanted to drive a Morris Minor?”

“You’re shitting me.”

“Nope. Looks like he completely rebuilt it. Only problem is that I couldn’t get it to turn over.”

“Did you use the choke?”

“What choke?”

“How old are you?”

“Thirty seven, why?”

She shook her head. “Never mind. So it’s working?”

“I guess. I had to put the battery in, it was on a shelf in the garage, but if you think you can get it started then we’ve got a way out of here.”