'Really?'
'Vast. And when you get across it - it's weird - but there's a different attitude. Different values.'
'Isn't that what everybody says about the place they were brought up?'
'Do you?'
She thought about this.
'No,' she said. 'Maybe not.'
The world outside was a finite place in the thickening snow. Matt was somewhere far inside himself. Across the Moss.
She glanced at him quickly. Thickset guy, coarse-skinned. Nobody's idea of a musician. Brooding eyes the colour of brown ale. Most times you thought you knew him; sometimes you weren't so sure. Occasionally you were damn sure you didn't know him, and couldn't.
After a while she said, 'What's it called? I forget.'
'Bridelow,' Matt said in a deliberate way, rounding out all the consonants. 'Bridelow Across the Moss.'
'Right,' she said vaguely.
'Dramatic place. To look at. Never saw that till I started going back. I take the little lad up there sometimes, of a weekend. When he's older we're going to go hiking on Sundays. Over the moors.'
'Sounds idyllic. Like to see it sometime.'
'But mostly I go alone.' Matt pulled up under the streetlamp in front of the Victorian villa where Moira had her apartment.
'Me and the pipes.'
'You take the pipes?'
Bagpipes. The Northumbrian pipes, played sitting down, had been Matt's instrument. Then he'd started experimenting with different kinds of bag, made of skins and things. He called them the Pennine Pipes, claiming they'd been played in these parts since before the Romans came to Britain.
The Pennine Pipes made this eerie, haunting sound, full of a kind of repressed longing.
'Releases me,' Matt said.
She didn't want to ask him what it released him from.
'Takes it away,' Matt said.
She didn't want to ask him what it was that piping took away.
'On the Moss,' Matt said. 'Only on the Moss.'
The tips of her fingers started to feel cold.
'The Moss takes it away,' Matt said. 'The Moss absorbs it.
He switched off the engine. Snow was settling on the bonnet.
'But the Moss also preserves it,' Matt said. 'That's the only drawback. Peat preserves. You give it to the peat, and you've got rid of it, but the peat preserves it for ever.'
He turned and looked at her; she saw something swirling in his eyes and the truth exploded in her mind. Oh, Christ, don't let me taste it. God almighty, don't let it come. Was the girl, what's her name, Gina ...it was the girl, it wasny you, Matt, wasny you ... please, don't let it be you ...
In the silence, the kind which only new snow seemed to make, they looked at each other in the streetlight made brighter by the snow.
'This is it then,' Matt said flatly.
'Think I might cry again.' But she was lying now. There was the residue of something unpleasant here, something more than sadness swirling in Matt's eyes.
Matt had his door open. 'Pass us your guitar.'
'Huh? Oh. Right. Sorry.'
The street was silent, snow starting to make the three and four-storey houses look like soft furnishings. Lights shone pastel green, pink and cream behind drawn curtains. Matt took the guitar case, snowflakes making a nest in his denim cap. He pushed it back. He said, just as relaxed, just as mild and just as offhand as he'd been earlier, 'One thing I've always meant to ask. Why do you always take this thing on stage with you?'
'The guitar?'
'No, lass. The case. This old and cracked and not very valuable guitar case. You never let the bloody thing out of your sight.'
'Oh.' How long had he been noticing this? She looked at him. His eyes were hard. He'd never asked her questions; everything he knew about her she'd volunteered. Matt was incurious.
And because of that she told him.
'There's... kind of a wee pocket inside the case, and inside of that there's, like, something my mother gave me when I was young.'
He didn't stop looking at her.
'It's only a comb. Kind of an antique, you know? Very old. Too heavy to carry around in your pocket. It means a lot to me, I suppose.'
'That's your mother, the ... ?'
'The gypsy woman. Aye. Ma mother, the gypsy woman.'
She shook snow off her hair. 'They're big on good luck tokens, the gypsies. Throw'm around like beads.'
Matt said roughly, 'Don't go making light of it.'
'Huh?'
'You're trying to make it seem of no account. Traditions are important. Sometimes I think they're all we have that's worthwhile.' He propped the instrument in its stiff black case against the wide concrete base of the streetlamp.
Moira said, 'Look, you're gonny get soaked.'
He laughed scornfully, like the noise a crow makes.
'Matt,' she said, 'I'll see you again, yeh?' And she did want to, she really did. Sure she did.
He smiled. 'We'll be on different circuits now, lass. You in a suite at the Holiday Inn, me over the kitchen at the Dog and Duck. Tell you what, I'll buy all your records. Even if it is rock and roll. How's that?'
She took a step towards him, hesitant. He was only a wee bit taller than she was.
This was it. The final seconds of the last reel.
Two years in the band, building up her reputation on the back of his. Matt watching her with some pride. A touch supervisory at first, then graciously taking half a pace back until even the wee folk clubs were announcing 'The Matt Castle Band with Moira Cairns'. And a couple of times, to her embarrassment, Moira Cairns in bigger letters.
And now she was leaving. Off to London for the big money.
Traitorous bitch ...
'Matt . . It was the worst moment. She should kiss him too, but that would seem perfunctory, demeaning and pretty damn cheap.
Also, for the first time, she didn't want to go that close to him.
He'd pulled down his cap; she tried to peer under the peak, to find out what his eyes were saying.
Nothing. His eyes would show no resentment, no disappointment. She was leaving the band which had changed her life, made her name. Leaving the band just when she was starting to put something back, and Matt felt ...