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In a word: Incline

When you first think of this word, it is with a slippery slope in mind.

I’ve been on a few of those in my time.

And while we’re on the subject, those inclines measured in degrees are very important if you want a train to get up and down the side of a mountain.

For the train, that’s an incline plane, the point where traction alone won’t get the iron horse up the hill.

Did I say ‘Iron Horse’?  Sorry, regressed there, back to the mid-1800s in the American West for a moment.

It’s not that important when it comes to trucks and cars, and less so if you like four-wheel driving; getting up near-vertical mountainsides often present a welcome challenge to the true enthusiast

But for the rest of us, not so much if you find yourself sliding in reverse uncontrollably into the bay.  I’m sure it’s happened more than once.

Then…

Are you inclined to go?

A very different sort of incline, ie to be disposed towards an attitude or desire.

An inclination, maybe, not to go four-wheel driving?

There is another, probably more obscure use of the word incline, and that relates to an elevated geological formation.  Not the sort of reference that crops up in everyday conversation at the coffee shop.

But, you never know.  Try it next time you have coffee and see what happens.

Featured

Writing about writing a book – Day 2

Hang about.  Didn’t I read somewhere you need to plan your novel, create an outline setting the plot points, and flesh out the characters?

I’m sure it didn’t say, sit down and start writing!

Time to find a writing pad, and put my thinking cap on.

I make a list, what’s the story going to be about? Who’s going to be in it, at least at the start?

Like a newspaper story, I need a who, what, when, where, and how.

Right now.

 

I pick up the pen.

 

Character number one:

Computer nerd, ok, that’s a little close to the bone, a computer manager who is trying to be everything at once, and failing.  Still me, but with a twist.  Now, add a little mystery to him, and give him a secret, one that will only be revealed after a specific set of circumstance.  Yes, I like that.

We’ll call him Bill, ex-regular army, a badly injured and repatriated soldier who was sent to fight a war in Vietnam, the result of which had made him, at times, unfit to live with.

He had a wife, which brings us to,

Character number two:

Ellen, Bill’s ex-wife, an army brat and a General’s daughter, and the result of one of those romances that met disapproval for so many reasons.  It worked until Bill came back from the war, and from there it slowly disintegrated.  There are two daughters, both by the time the novel begins, old enough to understand the ramifications of a divorce.

Character number three:

The man who is Bill’s immediate superior, the Services Department manager, a rather officious man who blindly follows orders, a man who takes pleasure in making others feel small and insignificant, and worst of all, takes the credit where none is due.

Oops, too much, that is my old boss.  He’ll know immediately I’m parodying him.  Tone it down, just a little, but more or less that’s him.  Last name Benton.  He will play a small role in the story.

Character number four:

Jennifer, the IT Department’s assistant manager, a woman who arrives in a shroud of mystery, and then, in time, to provide Bill with a shoulder to cry on when he and Ellen finally split, and perhaps something else later on.

More on her later as the story unfolds.

So far so good.

What’s the plot?

Huge corporation plotting to take over the world using computers?  No, that’s been done to death.

Huge corporation, OK, let’s stop blaming the corporate world for everything wrong in the world.  Corporations are not bad people, people are the bad people.  That’s a rip off cliché, from guns don’t kill people, people kill people!  There will be guns, and there will be dead people.

There will be people hiding behind a huge corporation, using a part of their computer network to move billions of illegally gained money around.  That’s better.

Now, having got that, our ‘hero’ has to ‘discover’ this network, and the people behind it.

All we need now is to set the ball rolling, a single event that ‘throws a cat among the pigeons’.

Yes, Bill is on holidays, a welcome relief from the problems of work.  He dreams of what he’s going to do for the next two weeks.  The phone rings.  Benton calling, the world is coming to an end, the network is down.  He’s needed.  A few terse words, but he relents.

Pen in hand I begin to write.

 

© Charles Heath 2016-2019

An excerpt from “The Devil You Don’t”

Available on Amazon Kindle here:  https://amzn.to/2Xyh1ow

By the time I returned to the Savoie, the rain had finally stopped, and there was a streak of blue sky to offer some hope the day would improve.

The ship was not crowded, the possibility of bad weather perhaps holding back potential passengers.  Of those I saw, a number of them would be aboard for the lunch by Phillippe Chevrier.  I thought about it, but the Concierge had told me about several restaurants in Yvoire and had given me a hand-drawn map of the village.  I think he came from the area because he spoke with the pride and knowledge of a resident.

I was looking down from the upper deck observing the last of the boarding passengers when I saw a woman, notable for her red coat and matching shoes, making a last-minute dash to get on board just before the gangway was removed.  In fact, her ungainly manner of boarding had also captured a few of the other passenger’s attention.  Now they would have something else to talk about, other than the possibility of further rain.

I saw her smile at the deckhand, but he did not smile back.  He was not impressed with her bravado, perhaps because of possible injury.  He looked at her ticket then nodded dismissively, and went back to his duties in getting the ship underway.  I was going to check the departure time, but I, like the other passengers, had my attention diverted to the woman in red.

From what I could see there was something about her.  It struck me when the light caught her as she turned to look down the deck, giving me a perfect profile.  I was going to say she looked foreign, but here, as in almost anywhere in Europe, that described just about everyone.  Perhaps I was just comparing her to Phillipa, so definitively British, whereas this woman was very definitely not.

She was perhaps in her 30’s, slim or perhaps the word I’d use was lissom, and had the look and manner of a model.  I say that because Phillipa had dragged me to most of the showings, whether in Milan, Rome, New York, London, or Paris.  The clothes were familiar, and in the back of my mind, I had a feeling I’d seen her before.

Or perhaps, to me, all models looked the same.

She looked up in my direction, and before I could divert my eyes, she locked on.  I could feel her gaze boring into me, and then it was gone as if she had been looking straight through me.  I remained out on deck as the ship got underway, watching her disappear inside the cabin.  My curiosity was piqued, so I decided to keep an eye out for her.

I could feel the coolness of the air as the ship picked up speed, not that it was going to be very fast.  With stops, the trip would take nearly two hours to get to my destination.  It would turn back almost immediately, but I was going to stay until the evening when it returned at about half eight.  It would give me enough time to sample the local fare, and take a tour of the medieval village.

Few other passengers ventured out on the deck, most staying inside or going to lunch.  After a short time, I came back down to the main deck and headed forward.  I wanted to clear my head by concentrating on the movement of the vessel through the water, breathing in the crisp, clean air, and let the peacefulness of the surroundings envelope me.

It didn’t work.

I knew it wouldn’t be long before I started thinking about why things hadn’t worked, and what part I played in it.  And the usual question that came to mind when something didn’t work out.  What was wrong with me?

I usually blamed it on my upbringing.

I had one of those so-called privileged lives, a nanny till I was old enough to go to boarding school, then sent to the best schools in the land.  There I learned everything I needed to be the son of a Duke, or, as my father called it in one of his lighter moments, nobility in waiting.

Had this been five or six hundred years ago, I would need to have sword and jousting skills, or if it had been a few hundred years later a keen military mind.  If nothing else I could ride a horse, and go on hunts, or did until they became not the thing to do.

I learned six languages, and everything I needed to become a diplomat in the far-flung British Empire, except the Empire had become the Commonwealth, and then, when no-one was looking, Britain’s influence in the world finally disappeared.  I was a man without a cause, without a vocation, and no place to go.

Computers were the new vogue and I had an aptitude for programming.  I guess that went hand in hand with mathematics, which although I hated the subject, I excelled in.  Both I and another noble outcast used to toss ideas around in school, but when it came to the end of our education, he chose to enter the public service, and I took a few of those ideas we had mulled over and turned them into a company.

About a year ago, I was made an offer I couldn’t refuse.  There were so many zeroes on the end of it I just said yes, put the money into a very grateful bank, and was still trying to come to terms with it.

Sadly, I still had no idea what I was going to do with the rest of my life.  My parents had asked me to come back home and help manage the estate, and I did for a few weeks.  It was as long as it took for my parents to drive me insane.

Back in the city, I spent a few months looking for a mundane job, but there were very few that suited the qualifications I had, and the rest, I think I intimidated the interviewer simply because of who I was.  In that time I’d also featured on the cover of the Economist, and through my well-meaning accountant, started involving myself with various charities, earning the title ‘philanthropist’.

And despite all of this exposure, even making one of those ubiquitous ‘eligible bachelor’ lists, I still could not find ‘the one’, the woman I wanted to spend the rest of my life with.  Phillipa seemed to fit the bill, but in time she proved to be a troubled soul with ‘Daddy’ issues.  I knew that in building a relationship compromise was necessary, but with her, in the end, everything was a compromise and what had happened was always going to be the end result.

It was perhaps a by-product of the whole nobility thing.  There was a certain expectation I had to fulfill, to my peers, contemporaries, parents and family, and those who either liked or hated what it represented.  The problem was, I didn’t feel like I belonged.  Not like my friend from schooldays, and now obscure acquaintance, Sebastian.  He had been elevated to his Dukedom early when his father died when he was in his twenties.  He had managed to fade from the limelight and was rarely mentioned either in the papers or the gossip columns.  He was one of the lucky ones.

I had managed to keep a similarly low profile until I met Phillipa.  From that moment, my obscurity disappeared.  It was, I could see now, part of a plan put in place by Phillipa’s father, a man who hogged the limelight with his daughter, to raise the profile of the family name and through it their businesses.  He was nothing if not the consummate self-advertisement.

Perhaps I was supposed to be the last piece of the puzzle, the attachment to the establishment, that link with a class of people he would not normally get in the front door.  There was nothing refined about him or his family, and more than once I’d noticed my contemporaries cringe at the mention of his name, or any reference of my association with him.

Yet could I truthfully say I really wanted to go back to the obscurity I had before Phillipa?  For all her faults, there were times when she had been fun to be with, particularly when I first met her when she had a certain air of unpredictability.  That had slowly disappeared as she became part of her father’s plan for the future.  She just failed to see how much he was using her.

Or perhaps, over time, I had become cynical.

I thought about calling her.  It was one of those moments of weakness when I felt alone, more alone than usual.

I diverted my attention back to my surroundings and the shoreline.  Out of the corner of my eye, I could see the woman in the red coat, making a move.  The red coat was like a beacon, a sort of fire engine red.  It was not the sort of coat most of the women I knew would wear, but on her, it looked terrific.  In fact, her sublime beauty was the one other attribute that was distinctly noticeable, along with the fact her hair was short, rather than long, and jet black.

I had to wrench my attention away from her.

A few minutes later several other passengers came out of the cabin for a walk around the deck, perhaps to get some exercise, perhaps checking up on me, or perhaps I was being paranoid.  I waited till they passed on their way forward, and I turned and headed aft.

I watched the wake sluicing out from under the stern for a few minutes, before retracing my steps to the front of the ship and there I stood against the railing, watching the bow carve its way through the water.  It was almost mesmerizing.  There, I emptied my mind of thoughts about Phillipa, and thoughts about the woman in the red coat.

Until a female voice behind me said, “Having a bad day?”

I started, caught by surprise, and slowly turned.  The woman in the red coat had somehow got very close me without my realizing it.  How did she do that?  I was so surprised I couldn’t answer immediately.

“I do hope you are not contemplating jumping.  I hear the water is very cold.”

Closer up, I could see what I’d missed when I saw her on the main deck.  There was a slight hint of Chinese, or Oriental, in her particularly around the eyes, and of her hair which was jet black.  An ancestor twice or more removed had left their mark, not in a dominant way, but more subtle, and easily missed except from a very short distance away, like now.

Other than that, she was quite possibly Eastern European, perhaps Russian, though that covered a lot of territory.  The incongruity of it was that she spoke with an American accent, and fluent enough for me to believe English was her first language.

Usually, I could ‘read’ people, but she was a clean slate.  Her expression was one of amusement, but with cold eyes.  My first thought, then, was to be careful.

“No.  Not yet.”  I coughed to clear my throat because I could hardly speak.  And blushed, because that was what I did when confronted by a woman, beautiful or otherwise.

The amusement gave way to a hint of a smile that brightened her demeanor as a little warmth reached her eyes.  “So that’s a maybe.  Should I change into my lifesaving gear, just in case?”

It conjured up a rather interesting image in my mind until I reluctantly dismissed it.

“Perhaps I should move away from the edge,” I said, moving sideways until I was back on the main deck, a few feet further away.  Her eyes had followed me, and when I stopped she turned to face me again.  She did not move closer.

I realized then she had removed her beret and it was in her left side coat pocket.  “Thanks for your concern …?”

“Zoe.”

“Thanks for your concern, Zoe.  By the way, my name is John.”

She smiled again, perhaps in an attempt to put me at ease.  “I saw you earlier, you looked so sad, I thought …”

“I might throw myself overboard?”

“An idiotic notion I admit, but it is better to be safe than sorry.”

Then she tilted her head to one side then the other, looking intently at me.  “You seem to be familiar.  Do I know you?”

I tried to think of where I may have seen her before, but all I could remember was what I’d thought earlier when I first saw her; she was a model and had been at one of the showings.  If she was, it would be more likely she would remember Phillipa, not me.  Phillipa always had to sit in the front row.

“Probably not.”  I also didn’t mention the fact she may have seen my picture in the society pages of several tabloid newspapers because she didn’t look the sort of woman who needed a daily dose of the comings and goings, and, more often than not, scandal associated with so-called celebrities.

She gave me a look, one that told me she had just realized who I was.  “Yes, I remember now.  You made the front cover of the Economist.  You sold your company for a small fortune.”

Of course.  She was not the first who had recognized me from that cover.  It had raised my profile considerably, but not the Sternhaven’s.  That article had not mentioned Phillipa or her family.  I suspect Grandmother had something to do with that, and it was, now I thought about it, another nail in the coffin that was my relationship with Phillipa.

“I wouldn’t say it was a fortune, small or otherwise, just fortunate.”  Each time, I found myself playing down the wealth aspect of the business deal.

“Perhaps then, as the journalist wrote, you were lucky.  It is not, I think, a good time for internet-based companies.”

The latter statement was an interesting fact, one she read in the Financial Times which had made that exact comment recently.

“But I am boring you.”  She smiled again.  “I should be minding my own business and leaving you to your thoughts.  I am sorry.”

She turned to leave and took a few steps towards the main cabin.

“You’re not boring me,” I said, thinking I was letting my paranoia get the better of me.  It had been Sebastian on learning of my good fortune, who had warned me against ‘a certain element here and abroad’ whose sole aim would be to separate me from my money.  He was not very subtle when he described their methods.

But I knew he was right.  I should have let her walk away.

She stopped and turned around.  “You seem nothing like the man I read about in the Economist.”

A sudden and awful thought popped into my head.  Those words were part of a very familiar opening gambit.  “Are you a reporter?”

I was not sure if she looked surprised, or amused.  “Do I look like one?”

I silently cursed myself for speaking before thinking, and then immediately ignored my own admonishment.  “People rarely look like what they are.”

I saw the subtle shake of the head and expected her to take her leave.  Instead she astonished me.

“I fear we have got off on the wrong foot.  To be honest, I’m not usually this forward, but you seemed like you needed cheering up when probably the opposite is true.  Aside from the fact this excursion was probably a bad idea.  And,” she added with a little shrug, “perhaps I talk too much.”

I was not sure what I thought of her after that extraordinary admission. It was not something I would do, but it was an interesting way to approach someone and have them ignoring their natural instinct.  I would let Sebastian whisper in my ear for a little longer and see where this was going.

“Oddly enough, I was thinking the same thing.  I was supposed to be traveling with my prospective bride.  I think you can imagine how that turned out.”

“She’s not here?”

“No.”

“She’s in the cabin?”  Her eyes strayed in that direction for a moment then came back to me.  She seemed surprised I might be traveling with someone.

“No.  She is back in England, and the wedding is off.  So is the relationship.  She dumped me by text.”

OK, why was I sharing this humiliating piece of information with her?  I still couldn’t be sure she was not a reporter.

She motioned to an empty seat, back from the edge.  No walking the plank today.  She moved towards it and sat down.  She showed no signs of being cold, nor interested in the breeze upsetting her hair.  Phillipa would be having a tantrum about now, being kept outside, and freaking out over what the breeze might be doing to her appearance.

I wondered, if only for a few seconds if she used this approach with anyone else.  I guess I was a little different, a seemingly rich businessman alone on a ferry on Lake Geneva, contemplating the way his life had gone so completely off track.

She watched as I sat at the other end of the bench, leaving about a yard between us.  After I leaned back and made myself as comfortable as I could, she said, “I have also experienced something similar, though not by text message.  It is difficult, the first few days.”

“I saw it coming.”

“I did not.”  She frowned, a sort of lifeless expression taking over, perhaps brought on by the memory of what had happened to her.  “But it is done, and I moved on.  Was she the love of your life?”

OK, that was unexpected.

When I didn’t answer, she said, “I am sorry.  Sometimes I ask personal questions without realizing what I’m doing.  It is none of my business.”  She shivered.  “Perhaps we should go back inside.”

She stood, and held out her hand.  Should I take it and be drawn into her web?  I thought of Sebastian.  What would he do in this situation?

I took her hand in mine and let her pull me gently to my feet.  “Wise choice,” she said, looking up at the sky.

It just started to rain.

© Charles Heath 2015-2023

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If I only had one day to stop over in – Barcelona – what would I do?

One Day in Barcelona? The One Spot That Will Make It Unforgettable

If you’ve only got a single day to soak up the magic of Barcelona, there’s no better way to turn a quick stopover into a memory that lasts a lifetime than to spend it at the Sagrada Familia.

The towering spires, the kaleidoscopic light that dances through stained glass, and the sheer audacity of Antoni Gaudí’s masterpiece make this basilica the ultimate “must‑see” for any traveller pressed for time. Below, I’ll walk you through why the Sagrada Familia deserves top billing, how to experience it efficiently, and what you can squeeze in around it so your twelve‑hour layover feels like a full‑blown Barcelona adventure.


Why the Sagrada Familia Wins the One‑Place Vote

FactorWhat It Means for a One‑Day Visitor
Iconic statusRecognisable worldwide, a single photo here instantly says “I’ve been to Barcelona.”
Architectural wonderGaudí’s evolving vision combines Gothic verticality with natural forms—an immersive lesson in art, engineering, and spirituality.
Compact yet completeYou can explore the interior, the crypt, and the towers in 2–3 hours, leaving plenty of time for a bite and a stroll.
AccessibilityCentral location (Eixample district) is on the main metro line (L2, L5) and a short walk from the city’s bus network.
Year‑round appealNo seasonal closures; the light inside changes dramatically with the sun, giving you a fresh experience any day you visit.

In short: it’s the perfect blend of visual impact, cultural depth, and logistical convenience for a traveller with a clock ticking.


Making the Most of Your Visit

1. Book Your Ticket Ahead of Time

  • Online reservation: Purchase a timed‑entry ticket on the official site (or a reputable reseller) at least 24 hours in advance.
  • Choose the “Tower + Audio Guide” upgrade if you want panoramic city views and a deeper narrative (extra €15–€20).
  • Arrive 10‑15 minutes early; security is brisk, but the basilica fills up fast, especially in summer.

2. Timing Is Everything

  • Morning slot (9:30 am‑11:30 am): Sunlight streams through the Nativity façade, highlighting the intricate stonework.
  • Mid‑day slot (12:30 pm‑2:30 pm): The interior glows with a warm, diffused light—perfect for photography.
  • Late afternoon (4:30 pm‑6:30 pm): The Passion façade faces the setting sun, casting dramatic shadows.

If your flight lands early in the morning, aim for the 9:30 am slot; if you arrive later, the 4:30 pm slot gives you a chance to explore a bit of the city first.

3. Navigate the Space Efficiently

  1. Entry Hall – Quick video intro (3 min) runs on the screen; pay attention for a concise overview of Gaudí’s vision.
  2. Main Nave – Follow the audio guide’s highlighted points: the column forest, the ceiling’s ribbed “cocoon,” and the stained‑glass windows.
  3. Crypt & Museum – Spend 20 minutes here; the crypt holds Gaudí’s tomb, and the museum explains the construction timeline.
  4. Towers – If you opted for the tower experience, the lift ride (about 5 min) ends with a 360° panorama that includes the Mediterranean, Montjuïc, and the city grid—a perfect final shot for your travel diary.

Quick “Around the Basilica” Itinerary

You’ll have roughly 5‑6 hours left after the Sagrada Familia. Here’s a streamlined loop that maximises flavour, fun, and photogenic moments without straying far.

TimeActivityReason
12:30 pmTapas on Carrer de Mallorca (e.g., Bar Mut or Cerveseria Catalana)A short 5‑minute walk; try “patatas bravas,” “jamón ibérico,” and a glass of cava.
1:30 pmPasseig de Gràcia stroll – admire Casa Batlló & La Pedrera (exteriors)You get a second Gaudí glimpse without buying extra tickets; perfect for quick photos.
2:15 pmMetro to Plaça Catalunya (L2 to Passeig de Gràcia, then L1)Central hub for a short walk to the next highlight.
2:30 pmLa Rambla & Boqueria Market – a sensory sprint10‑minute walk; sample a fresh fruit juice or a quick jamón bite.
3:15 pmGothic Quarter (Barri Gòtic) – snap the Cathedral façade, narrow alleys, and Roman wallsA 20‑minute walk from La Rambla; you can wander until your next transport.
4:00 pmHead back to the airport – Metro L3 from Liceu to Zona Universitària, then transfer to the Aerobus (A1) or direct train (R2 Nord)Gives you ~45‑60 min buffer for security and boarding.

Adjust the times according to your flight schedule; the whole loop can be trimmed to a “quick bite + photo sprint” if you’re pressed for minutes.


Insider Tips for a Smooth Stopover

  1. Carry a lightweight, waterproof backpack – You’ll need space for a water bottle, a portable charger, and a small umbrella (Barcelona’s micro‑showers love to appear unexpectedly).
  2. Download the Sagrada Familia app – It syncs with your ticket QR code, offers an offline audio guide, and shows real‑time tower wait times.
  3. Speak “Catalan” greetings – A friendly “Bon dia!” (good morning) earns smiles from locals and staff alike.
  4. Avoid the “free ticket” scams – Only buy from the official website or authorised vendors; the price is consistent (€26‑€32 for basic entry).
  5. Take a moment to just look up – The basilica’s interior is designed to make you feel small and infinite simultaneously; a few silent seconds are worth the crowded schedule.

Wrap‑Up: The One‑Place Rule for One‑Day Travellers

When a city as vibrant as Barcelona squeezes into a single day, the temptation is to hop from museum to market to beach. Yet the true essence of Barcelona lives in a single, unforgettable structure that ties together its spiritual past, avant‑garde art, and bustling present—the Sagrada Familia.

A brief but intentional visit gives you:

  • Instant visual identity (those spires are instantly recognisable worldwide)
  • A deep cultural touchpoint (Gaudí’s philosophy of nature and faith)
  • A logistical hub (central, well‑served by public transport)

Add a quick tapas stop, a dash of modernist architecture on Passeig de Gràcia, and a stroll through the Gothic Quarter, and you’ll leave Barcelona feeling like you’ve truly lived the city—even if the clock says you’ve only been there for a day.

So next time you find yourself with a 24‑hour layover, remember: a single visit to the Sagrada Familia converts a fleeting stopover into a lifelong story.


Happy travels, and may your Barcelona day be as unforgettable as the basilica’s soaring towers!

If I only had one day to stop over in – Moscow – what would I do?

Making the Most of Your One-Day Stopover in Moscow: The Ultimate Guide to Red Square

If you’re whisked away on a one-day stopover in Moscow, you’re in for a whirlwind of history, grandeur, and unforgettable vistas. While the city teems with landmarks, there’s one place that captures Moscow’s soul and serves as the perfect hub for a memorable day: Red Square. This iconic plaza isn’t just a single attraction—it’s the heart of Russia’s capital, where centuries of imperial history, stunning architecture, and vibrant culture converge. Here’s how to make the most of your day.


Morning: Arrival and the Majesty of Red Square

Start your day early to beat the crowds and soak in the serene, pre-dawn atmosphere of Red Square (Красная площадь). As the sun rises, the golden domes of St. Basil’s Cathedral shimmer, and the Kremlin’s fortress walls glow in the light. Begin your stroll here, taking photographs and marvelling at the square’s historical energy.

  • St. Basil’s Cathedral: Pop into this kaleidoscopic masterpiece. Climb its domes for panoramic views of Moscow, or simply admire its colourful onion-shaped roofs.
  • GUM Department Store: Adjacent to the square, this neoclassical shopping arcade has sold luxury goods to Russian elites for centuries. Grab a coffee at its open-air café to people-watch.

Midday: Kremlin Intrigue

A short walk away lies the Kremlin—Moscow’s most powerful symbol. This fortified complex is a labyrinth of palaces, cathedrals, and museums. Allocate 2–3 hours here to explore:

  • Kremlin Walls and Towers: Walk along the 19th-century fortress walls, with stunning views of the city below.
  • Cathedrals of the Assumption and St. George: Tour these UNESCO-listed churches, where Russian emperors and Soviet leaders are buried.
  • The Armory Chamber: Discover opulent treasures like the Diamond Fund and Fabergé eggs.

Pro Tip: Book your Kremlin tickets in advance to skip the lines—especially recommended if you’re short on time.


Afternoon: The State Historical Museum

Head back to Red Square for a deeper dive into Russia’s past at the State Historical Museum (Gosudarstvennyy istoricheskiy muzei). Its gold-domed façade is a masterpiece itself, but inside, you’ll find exhibits spanning Byzantine icons to Soviet memorabilia. This is a must for history buffs, offering context for the landmarks you’ve seen.

Alternatively, take a lunch break at Ermolaevskiy (just steps from the square). This historic restaurant serves traditional Russian dishes like borscht and pelmeni in a lively, old-world setting.


Evening: A Walk to the Kremlin Wall and Beyond

As the sun sets, stroll along the Kremlin Wall Gardens, a hidden gem with a prime view of the Kremlin and St. Basil’s. For a romantic finale, visit Sparrow Hills (Vorobyevy Gory) in Moscow’s southwest. The 200-meter hill offers sweeping views of the city’s skyline and is lit up at night—a magical way to cap your day.

An excerpt from “What Sets Us Apart”, a mystery with a twist

See the excerpt from the story below, just a taste of what’s in store…

http://amzn.to/2Eryfth

whatsetscover

McCallister was old school, a man who would most likely fit in perfectly campaigning on the battlefields of Europe during the Second World War. He’d been like a fish out of water in the army, post-Falklands, and while he retired a hero, he still felt he’d more to give.

He’d applied and was accepted as head of a SWAT team, and, watching him now as he and his men disembarked from the truck in almost military precision, a look passed between Annette, the police liaison officer, and I that said she’d seen it all before. I know I had.

There was a one in four chance his team would be selected for this operation, and she had been hoping it would be one of the other three. While waiting for them to arrive she filled me in on the various teams. His was the least co-operative, and the more likely to make ad-hoc decisions rather than adhere to the plan, or any orders that may come from the officer in charge.

This, she said quite bluntly, was going to end badly.

I still had no idea why Prendergast instructed me to attend the scene of what looked to be a normal domestic operation, but as the nominated expert in the field in these types of situations, it was fairly clear he wasn’t taking any chances. It was always a matter of opinion between us, and generally I lost.

In this case, it was an anonymous report identifying what the authorities believed were explosives in one of the dockside sheds where explosives were not supposed to be.

The only reason why the report was given any credence was the man, while not identifying himself by name, said he’d been an explosive expert once and recognized the boxes. That could mean anything, but the Chief Constable was a cautious man.

With his men settled and preparing their weapons, McCallister came over to the command post, not much more than the SUV my liaison and I arrived in, with weapons, bulletproof vests, and rolls of tape to cordon off the area afterward. We both had coffee, steaming in the cold early morning air. Dawn was slowly approaching and although rain had been forecast it had yet to arrive.

A man by the name of Benson was in charge. He too had groaned when he saw McCallister.

“A fine morning for it.” McCallister was the only enthusiastic one here.

He didn’t say what ‘it’ was, but I thought it might eventually be mayhem.

“Let’s hope the rain stays away. It’s going to be difficult enough without it,” Benson said, rubbing his hands together. We had been waiting for the SWAT team to arrive, and another team to take up their position under the wharf, and who was in the final stages of securing their position.

While we were waiting we drew up the plan. I’d go in first to check on what we were dealing with, and what type of explosives. The SWAT team, in the meantime, were to ensure all the exits to the shed were covered. When I gave the signal, they were to enter and secure the building. We were not expecting anyone inside or out, and no movement had been detected in the last hour since our arrival and deployment.

“What’s the current situation?”

“I’ve got eyes on the building, and a team coming in from the waterside, underneath. Its slow progress, but they’re nearly there. Once they’re in place, we’re sending McKenzie in.”

He looked in my direction.

“With due respect sir, shouldn’t it be one of us?” McCallister glared at me with the contempt that only a decorated military officer could.

“No. I have orders from above, much higher than I care to argue with, so, McCallister, no gung-ho heroics for the moment. Just be ready to move on my command, and make sure you have three teams at the exit points, ready to secure the building.”

McCallister opened his mouth, no doubt to question those orders, but instead closed it again. “Yes sir,” he muttered and turned away heading back to his men.

“You’re not going to have much time before he storms the battlements,” Benson quietly said to me, a hint of exasperation in his tone. “I’m dreading the paperwork.”

It was exactly what my liaison officer said when she saw McCallister arriving.

The water team sent their ‘in position’ signal, and we were ready to go.

In the hour or so we’d been on site nothing had stirred, no arrivals, no departures, and no sign anyone was inside, but that didn’t mean we were alone. Nor did it mean I was going to walk in and see immediately what was going on. If it was a cache of explosives then it was possible the building was booby-trapped in any number of ways, there could be sentries or guards, and they had eyes on us, or it might be a false alarm.

I was hoping for the latter.

I put on the bulletproof vest, thinking it was a poor substitute for full battle armor against an exploding bomb, but we were still treating this as a ‘suspected’ case. I noticed my liaison officer was pulling on her bulletproof vest too.

“You don’t have to go. This is my party, not yours,” I said.

“The Chief Constable told me to stick to you like glue, sir.”

I looked at Benson. “Talk some sense into her please, this is not a kindergarten outing.”

He shrugged. Seeing McCallister had taken all the fight out of him. “Orders are orders. If that’s what the Chief Constable requested …”

Madness. I glared at her, and she gave me a wan smile. “Stay behind me then, and don’t do anything stupid.”

“Believe me, I won’t be.” She pulled out and checked her weapon, chambering the first round. It made a reassuring sound.

Suited up, weapons readied, a last sip of the coffee in a stomach that was already churning from nerves and tension, I looked at the target, one hundred yards distant and thought it was going to be the longest hundred yards I’d ever traversed. At least for this week.

A swirling mist rolled in and caused a slight change in plans.

Because the front of the buildings was constantly illuminated by large overhead arc lamps, my intention had been to approach the building from the rear where there was less light and more cover. Despite the lack of movement, if there were explosives in that building, there’d be ‘enemy’ surveillance somewhere, and, after making that assumption, I believed it was going to be easier and less noticeable to use the darkness as a cover.

It was a result of the consultation, and studying the plans of the warehouse, plans that showed three entrances, the main front hangar type doors, a side entrance for truck entry and exit and a small door in the rear, at the end of an internal passage leading to several offices. I also assumed it was the exit used when smokers needed a break. Our entry would be by the rear door or failing that, the side entrance where a door was built into the larger sliding doors. In both cases, the locks would not present a problem.

The change in the weather made the approach shorter, and given the density of the mist now turning into a fog, we were able to approach by the front, hugging the walls, and moving quickly while there was cover. I could feel the dampness of the mist and shivered more than once.

It was nerves more than the cold.

I could also feel rather than see the presence of Annette behind me, and once felt her breath on my neck when we stopped for a quick reconnaissance.

It was the same for McCallister’s men. I could feel them following us, quickly and quietly, and expected, if I turned around, to see him breathing down my neck too.

It added to the tension.

My plan was still to enter by the back door.

We slipped up the alley between the two sheds to the rear corner and stopped. I heard a noise coming from the rear of the building, and the light tap on the shoulder told me Annette had heard it too. I put my hand up to signal her to wait, and as a swirl of mist rolled in, I slipped around the corner heading towards where I’d last seen the glow of a cigarette.

The mist cleared, and we saw each other at the same time. He was a bearded man in battle fatigues, not the average dockside security guard.

He was quick, but my slight element of surprise was his undoing, and he was down and unconscious in less than a few seconds with barely a sound beyond the body hitting the ground. Zip ties secured his hands and legs, and tape his mouth. Annette joined me a minute after securing him.

A glance at the body then me, “I can see why they, whoever they are, sent you.”

She’d asked who I worked for, and I didn’t answer. It was best she didn’t know.

“Stay behind me,” I said, more urgency in my tone. If there was one, there’d be another.

Luck was with us so far. A man outside smoking meant no booby traps on the back door, and quite possibly there’d be none inside. But it indicated there were more men inside, and if so, it appeared they were very well trained. If that were the case, they would be formidable opponents.

The fear factor increased exponentially.

I slowly opened the door and looked in. A pale light shone from within the warehouse itself, one that was not bright enough to be detected from outside. None of the offices had lights on, so it was possible they were vacant. I realized then they had blacked out the windows. Why hadn’t someone checked this?

Once inside, the door closed behind us, progress was slow and careful. She remained directly behind me, gun ready to shoot anything that moved. I had a momentary thought for McCallister and his men, securing the perimeter.

At the end of the corridor, the extent of the warehouse stretched before us. The pale lighting made it seem like a vast empty cavern, except for a long trestle table along one side, and, behind it, stacks of wooden crates, some opened. It looked like a production line.

To get to the table from where we were was a ten-yard walk in the open. There was no cover. If we stuck to the walls, there was equally no cover and a longer walk.

We needed a distraction.

As if on cue, the two main entrances disintegrated into flying shrapnel accompanied by a deafening explosion that momentarily disoriented both Annette and I. Through the smoke and dust kicked up I saw three men appear from behind the wooden crates, each with what looked like machine guns, spraying bullets in the direction of the incoming SWAT members.

They never had a chance, cut down before they made ten steps into the building.

By the time I’d recovered, my head heavy, eyes watering and ears still ringing, I took several steps towards them, managing to take down two of the gunmen but not the third.

I heard a voice, Annette’s I think, yell out, “Oh, God, he’s got a trigger,” just before another explosion, though all I remember in that split second was a bright flash, the intense heat, something very heavy smashing into my chest knocking the wind out of me, and then the sensation of flying, just before I hit the wall.

I spent four weeks in an induced coma, three months being stitched back together and another six learning to do all those basic actions everyone took for granted. It was twelve months almost to the day when I was released from the hospital, physically, except for a few alterations required after being hit by shrapnel, looking the same as I always had.

But mentally? The document I’d signed on release said it all, ‘not fit for active duty; discharged’.

It was in the name of David Cheney. For all intents and purposes, Alistair McKenzie was killed in that warehouse, and for the first time ever, an agent left the Department, the first to retire alive.

I was not sure I liked the idea of making history.

© Charles Heath 2016-2020

365 Days of writing, 2026 – 24/25

Days 24 and 25 – Writing exercise

Dreams, they can take you places, or they can scare you to death

It was difficult at the best of times getting to sleep, a problem that went back to my childhood when, one night as I was going to sleep, the police arrived, kicked the front and back doors in and dragged my mother and father away into the night.

I was taken away by a sullen, obese woman who stank of cigarette smoke, whom I was told was from Child Services.  She promptly dumped me in an orphanage three towns away, told nothing of where and what happened to my parents, and no one seemed to care or come and find me.

That was when I realised, at 10 years old, that life could irrevocably change for the worse in the blink of an eye, that whatever life you thought you had could be taken away just as easily.

That first week in hell taught me everything I needed to know about survival, that there was no such thing as friends, allies, only enemies.

The first month, if you survived, turned you into a person who was unrecognisable from who you were. At the end of it, I looked in the mirror and could not recognise the boy who had arrived there what seemed like an eternity ago.

At the end of that first year, when my Aunt whom I’d never seen or heard of before, came to see if she really had a nephew, and somehow under the scraggy exterior seemed to find a family resemblance.

I was not sure whether I was supposed to be relieved.  By that time, I could not trust anyone or anything, or whether this was trading one form of hell with another.

In the car heading to wherever my new home would be, I had told myself I would stay until I could escape, that this was just another trick, one of many they played on us orphans.

But I had to ask, “How did you find out who I am and where I was?”

If it was a trick, she was far more kind-looking than the others.

“A coincidence.  I have a friend who works in the police department.  She was sorting through a pile of old Wanted notices and found one she thought was my sister, because of the resemblance. Turns out it was.  I hired a private detective to find them, and here you are.”

“It took you a year?”

“I didn’t know my sister all that well, and she broke off contact the day she left, 15 years old and pregnant.  Our parents threw her out.  I’m not surprised she had a Wanted notice on her and that useless boy she was involved with.  Nothing good was ever going to come of it.”

Whatever she thought, that was not the mother I remembered.  What had been the worst part of the last year was the difference in how I’d been treated.  My mother was kind, gentle and loving.  I had never wanted for or needed anything.

My father was a different story, and now I could see that he was bad, and led them down a path of self-destruction, leading to the last straw, a failed attempt at robbing a gas station, and accidentally shooting the attendant. 

I guess if there was a moment in time when the nightmares started, that was it.  The look of pure fury on my father’s face, the look of total despair on my mother’s, and then the feeling of dread I had, because instinctively I knew what was going to happen.

“For what it’s worth,” I said, “thanks for getting me out of that place.  I promise you won’t know I exist.”

I saw her give me a measured look, one that told me that she was not sure if she could believe anything I said, because trust needed to be earned, and for me, it was going to be very difficult.

“I’m sorry it took so long.  I can’t promise that life will be easier because I’m sure, like you, it’s hard to accept new people you’ve never met before, but it will be better than what you had.”

Better was just a word, one that could describe a lot of things.  My life, in one sense, was better, but in others, much worse.

I was brought into an existing family where the family dynamic was set, three girls and two boys. They were older and resentful that another kid was vying for attention, another mouth to feed, and a bed to find, and having nothing when I arrived, they were every bit as possessive as the tribe I left behind.

Good intentions counted for nothing.

Children, no matter what the situation, are cruel, at home, at school, anywhere.  The thing is, they didn’t realise I had a year’s experience of their kind of behaviour, only a hundred times worse, so I simply ignored them.

They put me in the attic. I asked for nothing, I wanted nothing that I couldn’t get myself, and said nothing, about me or my parents or anything else.

Seven years, until I graduated top of the class, far better than any of my step-siblings, who honestly believed they didn’t have to work for anything, that their parents were there to hand-feed them.

The day after I finished school and presented my so-called mother with a bank draft for an amount I calculated to be worth the seven years of care, quite a considerable sum when taken in context, I left.

No one, in the end, seemed to care.

I went to the nearest big city, having accepted a position at a newspaper, one of the few still published daily, and was starting at the bottom. 

My intention: to spend my spare time finding out what happened to my parents.  I figured I was not going to get a position working for a private detective agency, though I did try, so the media was next in line.

I’d worked on the student newspaper and had been trained up to a point by the English teacher who had studied journalism some time, as he called it, in a murky past.

In my spare time, I had been given access to the archives, including the back copies of the newspaper.  It was in the process of being digitised, but as yet not to the extent that it was usable.

My job for the ensuing month or two was getting bundles of dusty newspapers and scouring the issues for news.  Given that the institution had given me a copy of my records whilst incarcerated, I knew roughly when I was in the orphanage.

But, just the same, dates, places and names were hazy, and the records were incomplete, to protect those who should not have been protected.

It took time, but I found two items, and only two items.  The first was the initial report.

Heinous crime arrives at Bridgeport.

“Bridgeport man and woman arrested in relation to the attempted and subsequent murder of the service attendant at the Bridgeport gas station. The defendants had to be constrained after an altercation with several deputies, one of whom sustained superficial injuries.

“Hector Loomis has been charged with murder, a hundred count of theft and six counts of assault occasioning grievous bodily harm.  Stella Loomis is charged with being an accessory.  Their son has been removed to a state facility, pending the results of their arraignment.”

There was a photo of the two, post-arrest, and both looked like they had barely survived a car crash, though the deputies escorting them did their best to hide as much of the damage as possible

When questioned, all the sheriff would say was that they had resisted arrest and were facing extra charges of assaulting police officers in the execution of their duty.

The second was a short paragraph lost among the agricultural pages, stating they had been transferred to a state facility. 

That was it.  The weeks after that, nothing.

For all intents and purposes, they had disappeared off the face of the earth.

It was the photo that caught my attention.  Grainy, indistinct, but it sparked something in my memory.  I asked the archivist if there were any original photos from the journalist’s article notes, and she said to come back the next day.

I had taken note of the journalist’s name and asked whether he was still around, only to learn that I would have to go to HR for that information, but it was most likely they would not give it out.

The internet is a remarkable source of information, and I had learned over time that it was not that information couldn’t be found, it was just that you had to know how to ask the right questions.

In three hours, I had built a resume for the journalist and knew exactly where he was.  Retired, upstate, has recently had his photo and name in a rural newspaper after winning a fishing competition

He had tried very hard to hide in plain sight, and it would have worked, but for the love of fishing.

I had tracked down the sheriff of the deputies that had arrested my parents, but he was a little further away, in Florida, and not doing so well.  Depending on the journalist’s answers, it might be worth paying him a visit.

That night, when I finally retired, my head hit the pillow and filled with a hope I would get some answers, I slipped into an uneasy sleep.

At what point do you wake and realise it’s not where you thought you were?  I had, for quite some time, tried not to sleep because the other kids would be waiting.

It was like I was back there.

Only it was my mind playing old images over and over, perhaps lamenting that I had finally managed to put those memories away.

Until I saw that photograph of my parents.

The thing is, it was not the photo of my parents as much as it was what my mother was wearing, an old sweatshirt that was from a university she didn’t go to, one she said she found in a market stall.

One she wore to bed.

No surprise then she would be in it since she and my father had been dragged from their beds.  But the significance of it was more than just a substitute for pyjamas.  And that was the point, there was something she told me about it, thinking I was listening, and I don’t think I was.

She used to impart life lessons as she called them every morning, noon, and night, so many that it was no wonder if she switched off.

I could see her, plain as day, wandering around in that top, going about her day, which included me.  It was pure bonding time, she had once said, but those memories only went back a few years.

But that connection was what I had missed, what had been taken away from me, and never to return, even when I was with my new family.

I was still no further with the story when I finally woke, but I had gleaned some memories of my father.  He was nice when he was clean, but when drunk or drugged, he became vicious.  He had been, and still was, a drug user and abuser, and as I got older, I never understood why she didn’t just dump him and get a better man.

I guess there was a lot I had to learn about grown-up stuff.

An email told me that the archivist had found nothing.  I thanked her for her effort, but something else that I realised after I left her, her hesitation before answering questions told me that there was something about this story that put it in a different category, that asking more about it was cause me grief.

That meant, to a reporter like me, that there’s a story lurking in the details, the sort of story people tell you is best left alone because rattling the bones of the fallen dead wasn’t going to earn me any favours.

I called in sick and headed upstate.

If the reporter went all cagey on me, well, I wasn’t sure what I was going to do.

I think I realised the moment I parked the car on the side of the dirt road beside a fence post holding up a prison class security gate that this was a man who worried about his personal safety.

At first, I thought it was to keep bears out. We were in the middle of a forest, but the very large SUV that was coming up the drive, a dusty, rutted lane way that led into the forest, told me the gate wasn’t the only security this place had.

I watched it emerge from the forest, carefully picking its way along the track and then stopping at the gate.  When the powerful engine was switched off, the sounds of the countryside returned.

The door opened, and a person got out, pulling on a Cowboys hat, then came around.  A woman, old as my grandmother, with a rifle, ready to use it.  She did not look like the sort of woman anyone would want to tangle with.

She stopped opposite me, loaded a round into the chamber and made good effect in the theatre of locking and loading.

“This is private property.  Who are you and what do you want?”

“Sam Clark.  I rang yesterday about having a chat with Ben Grother.”

“You work at the Sentinel?”

“Gopher, now.  Working on being a journalist.”

“I’m sure you’re not here to get tips.  What is your business?”

I could see the old lady was getting tired of dancing.  “Information about Hector and Stella Loomis.”

“Why?”

“I’m their son, and I would like to find out if they are dead or alive.”

She looked me up and down in the same manner the principal of the high school had when my new mother took me.  He knew I was not her son, and whatever she had told him showed in his expression, one that said I didn’t belong.

I proved him wrong, but that initial impression never changed.  People judged, rightly or wrongly.

Her expression, though, was not one of distaste or fear; it was one of sadness.

She unlocked the gate.  “I’ll take you down.”

Gate relocked, we got in the truck, did a sweeping turn and headed into the forest.  It was dark and in the distance, and in a circle of light and beyond the blue of the water.

“Bears bad out here?”

She gave me a sidelong glance.  “The bears are our friends.”

Make of that what you will, I thought.

A few minutes later, we stopped beside the house and got out.  She pointed to a pier at the bottom of a gentle slope, and a man sitting with a fishing rod.

“Ben’s getting dinner.  One day he will.” 

Perhaps she had a sense of humour; perhaps she didn’t.

“He’s expecting you.  Take care going down the hill.”

It was a warm, still day with very little movement on the water.  The pier was in the middle of a little cove, with a boat tied up a short distance from the pier.  It would be too far to swim to the other side.

To me, it would be the ideal place to spend your summer vacation.  Swimming, fishing, hiking.  Learning survival skills…

He looked up as I approached.  An old man, now I could see his days were numbered, the laboured breathing, then the weathered complexion, and the pain in his eyes.  He had come home to die on his terms.

“You’re the Loomis boy, aren’t you?”

“Yes, sir.  I’m not here to cause trouble.  You are probably the last person who took any interest in my parents.”

He motioned to the seat beside him, and I sat.  I made sure that his glass had water and that he was comfortable first, adjusting the blanket.

“I may have been the last person to see them.”

“Do you know what happened to them?”

“Not what we were told, that’s for sure.  It was a routine assignment: go down to the county courthouse and cover the proceedings.  Rookie job, but the editor said he had an off call about something big.  There was nothing of note on the docket.  But midway there was a heck of a commotion, a woman screaming, where was her kid, what had they done with him, on and on.  It sounded like a riot had broken out “

He stopped, took a deep breath, and closed his eyes.  I thought after six or seven sentences, he had worn himself out or worse, lost his train of thought.

Then his eyes opened again and sparkled.  “Half an hour passes, then two people were virtually dragged on, a man and a woman.  Both looked like they’d been in a car crash, and the judge that day was
astonished.  He knew the deputies were hands-on, but this was too much to pass off as resisting arrest.  He roasted the sheriff, whose excuse was that they had shot and killed the gas attendant in a botched robbery.  Nothing he could do but sent them to jail without bail. They did it, of course, the gas station had CCTV, which was unusual in a small place.  I got a note a week later, they been sent to a State penitentiary awaiting trial, no names, no dates, nothing.”

“Is that usual in cases like this?”

“Murder, clear evidence, sometimes.  But this was different.  I recognised the girl, Stella.  Not her name at all.  She was a Banderville, from what used to be one of the richest families in Pennsylvania.  It was the seat shirt.  Penn State.  She had a brain, just didn’t use it.  Your mother was sixteen, pregnant and excommunicated.  Ran off with the gardener.  She wasn’t a killer, just ran with the wrong crowd.  Sister wasn’t much better.  But the brother, the lord and master in eating, there was a piece of work.  They reckoned he was the one who raped his younger sister, but being the only boy, he could do no wrong.  Until he did.”

“My mother was rich.”

“She didn’t want to be.  Both the sisters rebelled and were, according to their father, disappointed.  Stella had been his favourite, and it literally killed him when she left.  The son took three years to destroy what had taken over a hundred years to build.”

He shook his head.  “Three years.  Mary found you, didn’t she?  I should have guessed.  She had disappeared after the reckoning, and I lost touch with her.  She came to me, but I couldn’t help her.  I’d just had the first of three heart attacks.  I’m sorry.  I would have found you.”

“She hired a private detective.”

“Of course.”

I had a thousand questions, but it was not the time.  It seemed to me that it was a story he had rehearsed in case one day I would come.

I waited about ten minutes and then decided that he had finished, or had tired.

As I stood, he woke and looked at me.  “There’s a will, the old man had reputedly changed it the day before he died, but no one could find it.  The estate was never meant to go to the boy.  It’s out there somewhere, but here’s the thing.  As the prisoners were being taken from the courthouse to the van, the boy tripped over, and the guards swarmed on him.  That’s when the girl came over and said, “Find my son and tell him it’s in Penn”.  Odd thing, she was not wearing her sweatshirt.  Later, I asked what had happened to it, but no one could find it.  I thought there must be something in it, but like everything to do with them, it’s gone and now just another mystery.”

The old lady came down, and we sat with him for an hour or so before we went back to the cabin.

By that time, he had forgotten who I was.

The dreams, when they came, were of my mother.  I used to think she was a fairy who never grew old, and realised now that she was so young when she had me, a child almost herself.

But she was a great mother, something she used to tell me was given to her by her aunt, the woman she had spent most of her early years with.

I never remembered once her saying she was from a wealthy family, and neither ever spoke of it, though if I were to think about it, he was always going on about her life and how she could never understand him.

He was greedy and selfish.  And he didn’t like me.  I took her away from him.

But then there was the dream where I was playing while she was mending clothes, or in one case, she was sewing a big letter P on a shirt.

The P, she said, was a school she once went to, when younger, when she was clever, before the drinks and drugs.  It was not something she meant to do, but it happened, and she did something bad and got punished.  It was a slippery slope, one thing after another, but there was a silver lining.  I came into her life.

It was weeks before I could piece together the fragments of my memory started to format into a cohesive idea.

That the P on her sweatshirt was significant, so significant that she was rarely parted from it day or night, and that the sweatshirt was now missing.

It took a month more to discover the sweatshirt was in the inventory the night they were arrested, but not when they were transferred.  Had it been stolen?  Had it been thrown out?

Then I remembered what Ben had said, among many words, a lot of which I had forgotten because of the memories of her that had been stirred up.  It came in another dream, and this time we were in a very strange place, which she called a university.

It was a place she had attended when she was younger, and liked to visit every now and then.  But as the dreams became clearer, they focused on one person, a man, a man whose name she never mentioned except for a nickname, Ducky.

She used it in the same manner that she used mine, in a different tone and manner, and given the limited experience I had with girls, even I could see she had great affection for him.

But one noticeable thing, she tried hard not to let me, or anyone else, see them together.

What else did I suddenly realise?

Loomis wasn’t my father.  The professor was.  And the lengths she had gone to not involve him because of what would have happened to him.  The law would not have seen it as a loving relationship, but as one of an older professor taking advantage of a young girl.  Perhaps it was.

But the thought of Loomis not being my father was a relief.

My next mission was to find the professor, a man by the name of Duckworth.

Over the next week, I retraced my mother’s steps as well as I could remember them from my dreams.  It eventually took me to the Mathematics department, and there he was, an old man now, though not as old as Ben.

I sat at the top of the room and watched him try to impress the importance of his subject on the minds of the next generation of mathematicians, and to my mind, failing somewhat.  Fidgety kids talking, looking at cell phones, reading books, it was as if he was preaching to the disbelievers.

After he dismissed them, seemingly uncaring about their singular lack of interest, I watched him pack up his books.  Then, as he turned to go, he turned around and looked straight at me.

“I don’t know you, son.”

“Do you know all the kids in your class?”

“Yes.  You are…”

“Loomis.”

“Come down here, please.  My eyesight is not as good as it used to be.”

I did as he asked, then stood before him.

It took a minute, two before the expression on his face changed.  “Oh, my lord, she was telling the truth.”

“Then I’m not a Loomis?”

“No.  Oh, my Lord.  What do you remember?”

“Being in this place.  With my mother and you.  I realise now she loved you very much.”

“And I her, though it could not be.  And I was a cad back then when she told me, and that was the last I saw her.  I did see she was arrested, but it had nothing to do with that gas station robbery.  It was about who she was and what she was entitled to.  She was murdered for money.”

It was a complicated story: a man who knew the truth, but telling it would get him a long jail sentence.  Not that the truth mattered.  Had he tried to discredit the son and heir, the lawyers would have ruined him anyway. 

He had the sweatshirt, the one with the P, the one she never let out of her sight, the one she managed to get to Duckworth from the prison, the one that had the last will and testament of their father, leaving everything to the girls because he knew that the boy was a wastrel.

Only the pregnancy and his anger came with the threat to disown all of them, but he died before changing the will back. Since she had only one copy, and believing it was invalid, she never acted on it.  By the time it would have mattered, it didn’t matter; the wastrel had destroyed everything.

Things happen for a reason.

I don’t think I was supposed to end up in an orphanage, but the fact that I had might have saved my life.

I do think I was meant to end up with my aunt, but it was meant to be sooner, and I think my aunt was supposed to see her before she ended up in jail.

I was always meant to visit Ben.  At his funeral, six months after I visited him, his wife said he had told her a week before that he was expecting an important visitor.

Duckworth had always known that the little boy who came visiting him with his mother was special in a way he could never explain.

But one thing he was sure of, I had inherited my mother’s mathematical brain.  His too, if truth be told.  After meeting him, I had two jobs: reporter by day and mathematician the rest of the time.

When I showed my aunt the will, she was surprised, then shocked, then accepted her fate with a shrug.  It had been hard going from privilege to poverty, but age had survived.

My departure had hastened her desire to end what was, for her, a marriage of convenience and had forged a new path, away from the children who were all suffering from their newfound independence.

She was far happier these days.

As for me, nearly 20 years had passed, and half had been almost lost in time and the rest, proof that living nightmares are real.

I’m writing the story of a family that had lost everything because one person made a mistake.  It didn’t have to be like that, but in accordance with the rules and the law, it did.

But to tell it, I was going to have to change the names. 

©  Charles Heath  2026

An excerpt from “The Things We Do for Love”; In love, Henry was all at sea!

In the distance, he could hear the dinner bell ringing and roused himself.  Feeling the dampness of the pillow and fearing the ravages of pent-up emotion, he considered not going down but thought it best not to upset Mrs Mac, especially after he said he would be dining.

In the event, he wished he had reneged, especially when he discovered he was not the only guest staying at the hotel.

Whilst he’d been reminiscing, another guest, a young lady, had arrived.  He’d heard her and Mrs Mac coming up the stairs and then shown to a room on the same floor, perhaps at the other end of the passage.

Henry caught his first glimpse of her when she appeared at the door to the dining room, waiting for Mrs Mac to show her to a table.

She was in her mid-twenties, slim, with long brown hair, and the grace and elegance of a woman associated with countless fashion magazines.  She was, he thought, stunningly beautiful with not a hair out of place, and make-up flawlessly applied.  Her clothes were black, simple, elegant, and expensive, the sort an heiress or wife of a millionaire might condescend to wear to a lesser occasion than dinner.

Then there was her expression; cold, forbidding, almost frightening in its intensity.  And her eyes, piercingly blue and yet laced with pain.  Dracula’s daughter was his immediate description of her.

All in all, he considered, the only thing they had in common was, like him, she seemed totally out of place.

Mrs Mac came out of the kitchen, wiping her hands on her apron.  She was, she informed him earlier, chef, waitress, hotelier, barmaid, and cleaner all rolled into one.  Coming up to the new arrival, she said, “Ah, Miss Andrews, I’m glad you decided to have dinner.  Would you like to sit with Mr Henshaw, or would you like to have a table of your own?”

Henry could feel her icy stare as she sized up his appeal as a dining companion, making the hair on the back of his neck stand up.  He purposely didn’t look back.  In his estimation, his appeal rating was minus six.  Out of a thousand!

“If Mr Henshaw doesn’t mind….”  She looked at him, leaving the query in mid-air.

He didn’t mind and said so.  Perhaps he’d underestimated his rating.

“Good.”  Mrs Mac promptly ushered her over.  Henry stood, made sure she was seated properly and sat.

“Thank you.  You are most kind.”  The way she said it suggested snobbish overtones.

“I try to be when I can.”  It was supposed to nullify her sarcastic tone, but it made him sound a little silly, and when she gave him another of her icy glares, he regretted it.

Mrs Mac quickly intervened, asking, “Would you care for the soup?”

They did, and, after writing the order on her pad, she gave them each a look, imperceptibly shook her head, and returned to the kitchen.

Before Michelle spoke to him again, she had another quick look at him, trying to fathom who and what he might be.  There was something about him.

His eyes mirrored the same sadness she felt, and, yes, there was something else, that it looked like he had been crying.  There was a tinge of redness.

Perhaps, she thought, he was here for the same reason she was.

No.  That wasn’t possible.

Then she said, without thinking, “Do you have any particular reason for coming here?”  Seconds later, she realised she’d spoken it out loud, hadn’t meant to actually ask, it just came out.

It took him by surprise, obviously not the first question he was expecting her to ask of him.

“No, other than it is as far from civilisation, and home as I could get.”

At least we agree on that, she thought.

It was obvious he was running away from something as well.

Given the isolation of the village and lack of geographic hospitality, it was, from her point of view, ideal.  All she had to do was avoid him, and that wouldn’t be difficult.

After getting through this evening first.

“Yes,” she agreed.  “It is that.”

A few seconds passed, and she thought she could feel his eyes on her and wasn’t going to look up.

Until he asked, “What’s your reason?”

Slightly abrupt in manner, perhaps, because of her question and how she asked it.

She looked up.  “Rest.  And have some time to myself.”

She hoped he would notice the emphasis she had placed on the word ‘herself’ and take due note.  No doubt, she thought, she had completely different ideas of what constituted a holiday than he, not that she had said she was here for a holiday.

Mrs Mac arrived at a fortuitous moment to save them from further conversation.

Over the entree, she wondered if she had made a mistake coming to the hotel.  Of course, there had been no conceivable way she could know that anyone else might have booked the same hotel, but she realised it was foolish to think she might end up in it by herself.

Was that what she was expecting?

Not a mistake then, but an unfortunate set of circumstances, which could be overcome by being sensible.

Yet, there he was, and it made her curious, not that he was a man, by himself, in the middle of nowhere, hiding like she was, but for quite varied reasons.

On discreet observation, whilst they ate, she gained the impression his air of light-heartedness was forced, and he had no sense of humour.

This feeling was engendered by his looks, unruly dark hair, and permanent frown.  And then there was his abysmal taste in clothes on a tall, lanky frame.  They were quality but totally unsuited to the wearer.

Rebellion was written all over him.

The only other thought crossing her mind, and incongruously, was that he could do with a decent feed.  In that respect, she knew now from the mountain of food in front of her, he had come to the right place.

“Mr Henshaw?”

He looked up.  “Henshaw is too formal.  Henry sounds much better,” he said, with a slight hint of gruffness.

“Then my name is Michelle.”

Mrs Mac came in to take their order for the only main course, gather up the entree dishes, and then return to the kitchen.

“Staying long?” she asked.

“About three weeks.  Yourself?”

“About the same.”

The conversation dried up.

Neither looked at the other, but rather at the walls, out the window, towards the kitchen, anywhere.  It was, she thought, unbearably awkward.

Mrs Mac returned with a large tray with dishes on it, setting it down on the table next to theirs.

“Not as good as the usual cook,” she said, serving up the dinner expertly, “but it comes a good second, even if I do say so myself.  Care for some wine?”

Henry looked at Michelle.  “What do you think?”

“I’m used to my dining companions making the decision.”

You would, he thought.  He couldn’t help but notice the cutting edge of her tone.  Then, to Mrs Mac, he named a particular White Burgundy he liked, and she bustled off.

“I hope you like it,” he said, acknowledging her previous comment with a smile that had nothing to do with humour.

“Yes, so do I.”

Both made a start on the main course, a concoction of chicken and vegetables that were delicious, Henry thought when compared to the bland food he received at home and sometimes aboard my ship.

It was five minutes before Mrs Mac returned with the bottle and two glasses.  After opening it and pouring the drinks, she left them alone again.

Henry resumed the conversation.  “How did you arrive?  I came by train.”

“By car.”

“Did you drive yourself?”

And he thought, a few seconds later, that was a silly question; otherwise, she would not be alone, and certainly not sitting at this table. With him.

“After a fashion.”

He could see that she was formulating a retort in her mind, then changed it, instead, smiling for the first time, and it served to lighten the atmosphere.

And in doing so, it showed him she had another, more pleasant side despite the fact she was trying not to look happy.

“My father reckons I’m just another of ‘those’ women drivers,” she added.

“Whatever for?”

“The first and only time he came with me, I had an accident.  I ran up the back of another car.  Of course, it didn’t matter to him that the other driver was driving like a startled rabbit.”

“It doesn’t help,” he agreed.

“Do you drive?”

“Mostly people up the wall.”  His attempt at humour failed.  “Actually,” he added quickly, “I’ve got a very old Morris that manages to get me where I’m going.”

The apple pie and cream for dessert came and went, and the rapport between them improved as the wine disappeared and the coffee came.  Both had found, after getting to know each other better, that their first impressions were not necessarily correct.

“Enjoy the food?” Mrs Mac asked, suddenly reappearing.

“Beautifully cooked and delicious to eat,” Michelle said, and Henry endorsed her remarks.

“Ah, it does my heart good to hear such genuine compliments,” she said, smiling.  She collected the last of the dishes and disappeared yet again.

“What do you do for a living?” Michelle asked in an offhand manner.

He had a feeling she was not particularly interested, and it was just making conversation.

“I’m a purser.”

“A what?”

“A purser.  I work on a ship doing the paperwork, that sort of thing.”

“I see.”

“And you?”

“I was a model.”

“Was?”

“Until I had an accident, a rather bad one.”

“Oh, I’m sorry.”

So that explained the odd feeling he had about her.

As the evening wore on, he began to think there might be something wrong, seriously wrong with her because she didn’t look too well.  Even the carefully applied makeup, from close, didn’t hide the very pale, tired look, or the sunken, dark-ringed eyes.

“I try not to think about it, but it doesn’t necessarily work.  I’ve come here for peace and quiet, away from doctors and parents.”

“Then you will not have to worry about me annoying you.  I’m one of those fall-asleep-reading-a-book types.”

Perhaps it would be like ships passing in the night, and then he smiled to himself about the analogy.

Dinner over, they separated.

Henry went back to the lounge to read a few pages of his book before going to bed, and Michelle went up to her room to retire for the night.

But try as he might, he was unable to read, his mind dwelling on the unusual, yet compellingly mysterious person he would be sharing the hotel with.

Overlaying that original blurred image of her standing in the doorway was another of her haunting expressions that had, he finally conceded, taken his breath away, and a look that had sent more than one tingle down his spine.

She may not have thought much of him, but she had certainly made an impression on him.

© Charles Heath 2015-2024

lovecoverfinal1

In a word: Hear

Which reminds me, I am told I have selective hearing, that I only hear what I want to hear

But what if you overhear someone?  Would it be by accident or on purpose?  Of course, some people talk so loudly you can’t help but hear them

In reality, to hear is to perceive with the ear something or someone

If you pay attention in class, you might hear what is being said

The judge, far from being dismissive, said he would hear the case

And I’m sure we sometimes wonder if God can hear our prayers

Did you hear the news?  If it’s anything other than COVID I probably did.

Hear hear, now what does that really mean when someone cries it out after someone else makes a statement?

This is not to be confused with the word here

Like when someone asks where you are, you say I’m here, but forget to add that you are invisible

This is going to end here and now!

Here is a book I think you should read

Here, let me take that bag of groceries

How many times did you consider not saying ‘here’ when the teacher called your name at roll-call?  I know I did, a few times

“One Last Look”, nothing is what it seems

A single event can have enormous consequences.

A single event driven by fate, after Ben told his wife Charlotte he would be late home one night, he left early, and by chance discovers his wife having dinner in their favourite restaurant with another man.

A single event where it could be said Ben was in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Who was this man? Why was she having dinner with him?

A simple truth to explain the single event was all Ben required. Instead, Charlotte told him a lie.

A single event that forces Ben to question everything he thought he knew about his wife, and the people who are around her.

After a near-death experience and forced retirement into a world he is unfamiliar with, Ben finds himself once again drawn back into that life of lies, violence, and intrigue.

From London to a small village in Tuscany, little by little Ben discovers who the woman he married is, and the real reason why fate had brought them together.

It is available on Amazon here:  http://amzn.to/2CqUBcz

The cinema of my dreams – I always wanted to write a war story – Episode 47

For a story that was conceived during those long boring hours flying in a steel cocoon, striving to keep away the thoughts that the plane and everyone in it could just simply disappear as planes have in the past, it has come a long way.

Whilst I have always had a fascination with what happened during the second world war, not the battles or fighting, but in the more obscure events that took place, I decided to pen my own little sidebar to what was a long and bitter war.

And, so, it continues…

——

Johannesen went to find Wallace.  He had seen Jackerby leave the castle alone, which couldn’t be a good thing.  He had also noticed most of the Resistance members had gone too and had considered going back to the dungeons,

If he had been picking team members, Jackerby would not have been one of them.  He might act British and speak perfect British English, but he was a Nazi at heart, perhaps more Nazi than the Nazis’

It was not unsurprising.  The file Wallace had on him along with one for all of them, wasn’t exactly describing a life of roses.  His grandparents were German, and the British had killed them during the first world war.  There was no doubting he had based his whole life on one day avenging them, and this war had given him the opportunity.

To be a wolf in sheep’s clothing.

Johannesen guessed that was an apt description of him.  He was a devoted follower of Mosley and the English Fascists, openly supporting Hitler until it came to choosing a side.  That was easy, become part of a fifth column, Worthing from within.

And when the Reich became the all-powerful country when they won the war, there would be a position for him, a war hero.

Losing the war hadn’t figured in the story, but despite the successes, there were more failures, and tactical errors, like trying to invade Russia, and he could see that it was going to be the reason Germany lost.  Superior weapons were not going to staunch the losses, and it was only a matter of time.

The time he would use to figure out how not to get shot as a spy and somehow get back on the other side.

But, not today.

Wallace was trying a new wine, have the same thirst for wine, but not as swill as those Resistance members like Leonardo, a deep-colored red.

“You should try a glass, Johannes.  It’s an exceptional vintage.”  He picked up the bottle and looked at the label, then cleaning the dust off the label, said, “1907 no less.  Bastards never sold any of this to us to try.  We should liberate the cellar, and share it with our compatriots after the war.  At a price, of course.”

Like all the soldiers he’d met along the way, always looking to make a profit.  Goering and Hitler steal all the paintings, they were talking about the wine.  What did the people finish up with?

“Not really a red man, sir.”

“That’s because you’ve never had one like this.”

“Why not.”

Wallace poured him a glass.

Johannesen sipped it.  Wallace was right, it was better than any other he had tasted, not that he could really remember the last time he had the opportunity.

“It is quite good, sir.”

“It is.  You know Jackerby says you are a double agent, which is pretty rich coming from him.  Strictly speaking, if wouldn’t be a double agent, but a triple agent, if that was the case.  You’re not, are you?”

The smile on Wallace’s face didn’t extend to the eyes.  He was not amused, or annoyed.

Just fishing.

“That’s the problem with our situation.  We’ve been lying to everyone for so long, that it’s hard t tell what is the truth and what isn’t.  At the moment, the British don’t know where my allegiances lie, they think I’m the sleeper in this group, and Atherton, well, he’s not sure if that’s the case or not.  No doubt Jackerby told you about my trip to the dungeons to get the woman to talk.  Jackerby offers the big stick and that isn’t going to work on these people.  She’ll die before she gives up any secrets.  They all will.  And by all accounts that breute Leonardo was executing her compatriots in front of her to make her talk, and all they are is dead, and we’re no closer to anything.  What do you think I am?”

“Clever.  But that isn’t going to be my problem in,” he looked at his watch, “two hours.  We have a new commander, and a few more people arriving to weed out this elusive Atherton and the few resistance that’s left.  People higher than me want Meyer returned to Germany.  Whatever you are, Johannesen, you might have to plead your case to someone else far less understanding.”  He stood.  “Enjoy the wine.  It might be your last.”

Reading between the lines, Johannesen got the impression Wallace no longer cared what happened.  For all of them, it had been a long war, and it was dragging on with no success in sight.

And it was becoming abundantly clear he picked the wrong side.  Now, all that was going to happen was that he would end up in the crossfire.  Perhaps he had known all along that the German notion that no one could ever be trusted, that everyone should be treated as a traitor first, was going to be the death of all of them.

He had no doubt the new arrivals would be Waffen SS, battle-hardened, and sent on this mission as a sort of holiday.  They would find Atherton and the remnants very quickly and snuff out a problem Jackerby couldn’t.

Or, if Jackerby knew the Waffen SS was coming, had he left, knowing his loyalties would be called into question.  Pure German soldiers versus double agents, Johannesen knew who’d he believe first.

For the first time, Johannesen knew he was not going to see the end of this war, or that Germany had any hope of winning.

He needed a plan of escape, and that woman in the dungeons was the only one who could help him.

——-

© Charles Heath 2020-2022

A photograph from the inspirational bin – 11

I remember hearing one day, a line from a poem, ‘I wandered lonely as a cloud’.

Little did I know at the time it was the first line of a poem by William Wordsworth, and mentioned something else, daffodils, and I had a moment where a memory came back from when I was about five, gathering daffodils in a field behind the house we lived in.

But, how often is it we look at clouds and try to make them into something else we’ve seen before?

Clouds are the subject of many conversations, like he’s got his head in the clouds, not literally of course in this instance, just that he, or it could be a she, if far removed from reality.

Dark clouds are associated with ill will and infamy, e.g. he was born under a dark cloud. I heard my grandmother use that expression once, and wondered what she meant by it, because, being a child, it was a literal interpretation, that dark clouds brought heavy rain, and he go ‘very wet’.

I’ve been caught out by dark clouds too, misjudging how long before they arrive, and it always seems like next to no time before you, and the washing on the line get a thorough soaking.

These days, the cloud now means something else entirely, though based on an old analogy, that we store our computer files in the cloud, which simply means at a remote location on someone else’s computer. With file sizes the way they are, it’s not practical to store them on our own smallish computers.

And, isn’t it fun when you are flying through the clouds?

Not!

In those cases, going up or going down in a plane, it’s a very bumpy ride, and isn’t it quite strange when you are flying above the clouds, or can just see mountain tops appearing through the blanket of white.

Of course, you can have your head in the clouds and not be off with the fairies, if you are on a mountain when the clouds have come down so low you can touch them. Sometimes it’s called mist or fog, but there are such things as low clouds. I’ve seen them.

And, as for a single cloud as inspiration…

The story starts,

I was sitting down in a quiet corner of the park, the sound of children playing just audible in the background, along with a lawn mower, and the distant sounds of civilization.

I wanted to get as far away as possible, but in the concrete jungle that was not possible.

IT had bene a difficult morning, juggling customer complaints with the the call from the girl I thought was the one, but who had decided we were going in different directions and it was time.

Yes, we were literally going in different directions, she was heading off to Boston to start a new job, one that she only just decided to tell me about.

Was I disappointed? Just a little. Was it inevitable? My best friend thought so, and had said he had noticed a change in her. I had too, but was hoping it was a passing phaze.

I looked up, and there was a single cloud moving slowly across the sky, perhaps chasing after others that had passed before it.

Was it an omen. Would I become like that cloud, alone, always chasing after the impossible dream?

My phone vibrated, and I took it out. A message.

It was from the girl once of my dreams. I had not expected to hear from her again.

It was a short message, just one word.

“Help”

© Charles Heath 2021