Sunday, 20 January 2013

Roman Sunset - a short story by Martin Thorp


Okay, instead of my usual drivel here's a short story I've written which I've entitled "Roman Sunset" although I'll probably think of a better on later. Read and digest, if you enjoy I'd appreciate any comments. If you don't enjoy I'd still appreciate your comments. Just not as much. I know it's probably a bit rough around the edges and might have the odd typo and spelling mistake, but is the plot idea any good that's the question?


ROMAN SUNSET a short story by Martin Thorp


I’d overstretched myself, and I knew it. I ought to admit it to myself, I am not as young as I once was, and with failing health I shouldn’t push myself so hard. But then, I’d rather die alone here and now on the moors, than a few months older in a sterile hospital bed surrounded by two faced family, covertly bickering about the will.
I seemed to have been walking for days, and every step now was an effort. It was my own fault though. I loved walking in Yorkshire, and a rare day off on a warm late autumn Wednesday had been too good a chance to pass over. To be honest, every day could be a day off, I was well over due for retirement, but retire to what? Everyday the same, watching Jeremey Kyle, Top Gear and Emmerdale, slurping soup and waiting for God to come and claim my tarnished soul. No, that wasn’t for me, so I kept up my job although on reduced hours now. There’s only so much a man in his late sixties riddled with cancer can do, and I was increasingly aware that subtly my responsibilities were being taken on by the younger fitter members of staff. They didn’t know about the cancer of course, I kept that to myself. They all assumed that as a reasonably well off widower I just kept working for the company, that I didn’t want to spend my days alone. Far from the truth, it wasn’t loneliness that I feared, but boredom, and the infinity that lay ahead once my ageing body surrendered, leaving my healthy alert mind trapped.
I loved the solitude of the moors, the stretching silence punctuated only by the sounds of nature and the occasional whoosh of a distance car on the open roads. Sometimes it was so quiet the only sound would be my own breathing and my own footsteps as I shuffled, leaden footed, leaning heavily on my stick on the tougher gradients. And those gradients were getting tougher, even more so as I tired. I knew in my heart this would probably be my last chance to hike these parts, I was weakening by the day, and if the fat lady wasn’t singing she was certainly looking at the play list to see what might go down well. I’d stopped taking the medicines a month ago, they made me nauseous and dizzy, and they didn’t really work anyway. The end game was on, so here I was, making the best of it, an old man with a mission, to seal his memories, capture the past in photographs, so that when the family forced me into the hospice to die I would have a little book filled with Yorkshire in there with me.
I’d parked the car just after first light in Cropton Forest, in a small layby shielded by trees, marked as the Newtondale Forest Drive. That gave me a marvellous view down into the valley over the Goathland railway and the river Pickering, down into the wonderfully quaintly named Hole of Horcum and across to the Saltergate Inn, where I planned to have a relaxed lunch and a beer. I’d walked this area many a time in my youth, and was as familiar with it as the locals who were lucky enough to live with this landscape on their doorsteps, instead of the brick and concrete of the city I endured daily.
I hadn’t bothered to pack a map, going against the sensible hikers rules of course, and I didn’t have a compass either, but I wasn’t concerned. I knew the area well, and I was otherwise well prepared for anything the weather could throw at me. My rucksack was a huge but lightweight modern goretex job, a pale sage green with many Velcro and zip fastened pockets, containing food and water to last easily overnight with spare dry clothing, first aid kit, a kettle and stove, eating irons and the essential whistle, torch and matches. Plus of course, like any modern hiker and despite muy age, I had my tablet phone, with built in SatNav. I could work the essential functions on it, the phone, maps and email, but I’m sure it could do a lot more beyond the needs of an elderly technophobe. I had reached my IT ceiling many years back once DVD’s were invented.
It had been a cool but bright start to the day, but after a half hour hiking I had stripped down to shorts and a t shirt, the sweat top and cargo pants getting stuffed into the Bergen on top of the wet weather gear and sleeping bag inside. The walk down through the devils punchbowl which is the Hole of Horcum saw a sheen of perspiration glistening on my forehead, the rim of my saggy old beige bush hat soaking up the excess. I was breathing hard by the time I arrived at the Saltergate Inn only to find it obviously closed, the lower windows boarded over and the frontage festooned in scaffold tubes. I wasn’t desperate for a pint, but I do like to reward myself with one during and after a good hike. I knew there was a very welcoming pub down in Levisham, a picture postcard village down the other side of the Hole, but then I figured I wasn’t so very far from Goathland either. It was still before midday, so I decided I would push on along the A169, past Fylingdales and into Goathland, where several pubs ought to be open. The other driver of course was the chance to see Mallyan Spout again, and then planning my route in my head, I would return across Wheeldale Moor along the old Roman Road.
And so it had gone. I had a very refreshing pint of ale in Goathland, then dropped down the valley to Mallyan Spout where I dipped my feet in the icy cold water before replacing my boots, refreshed and ready for the return haul.  I spent a good quarter of an hour shooting the waterfall from all angles, the reliable Cannon DSLR making the best of the dappled sunlight playing off the shimmering water, deepening the shadows and highlighting the fairylight twinkles of the spray, rainbows dancing in a multihued green backdrop.  I’d considered taking a video camera with me, but decided against it. Video captures an event, like a news film, and without a lot of editing and buggering about it always looks amateur. No, for me, a still picture, well composed is far better at trapping a memory. If I’d been any good with a brush I’d have tried painting, but photography was second best.
I’d have liked to have continued on along the valley and out to Beck Hole, the pub there with its little wild bird garden was always a treat, but I knew I was pushing my luck, the air was starting to cool, the skies clouding over. If I had the chance, if I had another day, maybe I’d fit in that visit.
Hauling myself back up out of the valley was hard work, I had to steady myself more than once with my hands, and rely heavily on my stick. Reaching the top road again my heart was pounding, I could hear the blood rushing in my ears and the pain from the exertion of worn out muscles was agony. Reaching Hunt House road I stopped at the bench and slipped my cargoes and sweat shirt back on. The clear blue skies of the morning had now filled with low grey clouds, the moorland weather changeable as ever. I strode out towards the Youth Hostel, glad that the surface was now level for a while and that at least it had remained dry.
By the time I reached the branch off at Hunt House the air was decidedly moist and cool, and a thin mist was forming. I swung open the gate and started onto the Roman road. The road is a bit of a mystery, because although generally termed as Roman it is potentially much older. The Romans are credited with building many of Britain’s roads, famously long and straight and built to last, with a definite structure. More recent researchers argue that the Romans simply reconstructed existing roads improving what they found with better surfaces and engineering. Wheeldale Road however differs from the Roman design, they were gravel topped, whilst Wheeldale is paved with large stone slabs. It also deviates from the straight, direct route one would expect of roman roads. That it was built at all is a mystery in itself. What outposts must it have linked? I had always been fascinated by it. To me it symbolized the stubborn resolute of the Yorkshireman that farms the bleak moors. It was built just because it could be, because others said it couldn’t be done, so they proved them wrong. That’s my theory anyway. Some say it linked Malton to Whitby, but there must have been easier routes. Carrying the tonnes of stone slabs up onto the remote fells must have been a mammoth task.    
The mist had thickened to a fog now, and my peripheral vision had gone, the fog was deadening what little sound there was too. The remains of the Roman road though were easy enough to follow, and I knew that if I kept going I would reach Keys Beck, then Brown Howe Road which would take me through the edge of Cropton Forest and back to where my Rover was parked. The light was failing now too, it would be dark before I reached the car, but not a problem, it was tarmac once I hit Keys Beck and I couldn’t get lost on a single track road. I wouldn’t want to be out on the moor itself in the dark; that is asking for trouble.
I became aware of a shadow on the path ahead, the vague suggestion of another hiker moving slower than me, but travelling in the same direction. Other than a few locals in Goathland I had barely seen a soul all day. Midweek and late in the season few hikers ventured out on the moors, and only those like myself, caught out by age and an ambitious route were likely to be out so late in the day. I wondered if the hiker must be lost, but the lone figure seemed to be walking with purpose, albeit slowly, slower than my own agonizing pace. I was gaining slowly, and decided in the gloom that the figure must be that of an elderly woman, appearing short and wiry and wearing a skirt and a strange hat of some sort, a plume of feathers or something visible in fog.
Occasionally as visibility got worse the figure would disappear in the swirling cloud, only to reappear moments later, and each time I had the impression the figure had moved ahead again, as if running whilst concealed only to slow down as soon it cleared once more. I was definitely gaining though. I assumed the walker must be local, looking at the upright posture and the suggestion of old and seemingly obscure rural clothing, perhaps a farmer or shepherd. As the fog swirled clear once more I was startled to see I had suddenly caught up with the figure, and he had turned to face me, stopping and staring past me, no through me, as if unseeing, but seeking something. It was a man I saw, and he wore against all probability a Roman Centurions uniform, or what I supposed one to look like. What I had mistaken for a skirt was a leather and hide kilt, he wore long knee length socks and sturdy leather sandles with thick soles, and enclosed toes. A metallic breastplate covered a thick woollen shirt, and despite the increasing chill he was bare armed and bare legged. What I had taken to be a plume of flowers in a close fitting hat was a metal cap with a plume of burgundy brushes. The man had a wide bladed heavy looking sword in a sheaf on a broad leather belt. He looked muscular and weather tanned, his skin tone matching the leather of his outfit, as though he spent much of his time outdoors. He appeared in his late thirties, maybe early forties, the first signs of grey appearing in his dark brown hair.
At my age I like to think I have seen everything and nothing surprises me, but seeing a middle aged man in fancy dress on the moortops, miles from anywhere sent my brain reeling for a moment. Then explanations began top present themselves. Maybe he was a student and this was some sort of stunt? No, too old for a student. No, he must be an actor, they’ll be filming something and I’ve stumbled in across the set, there’ll be an angry director shouting at me any moment. It will be “Heartbeat” filming something, or maybe some period drama. Or maybe he’s just a crank? Whatever he was giving me the willies, looking straight through me like that.
I realised I had stopped walking and was leaning heavily on my stick again, my heart pounding from the exertion of walking, and of the sudden surreal experience. I had stopped maybe 30 feet from him, and still neither of us had spoken or acknowledged each other in any way. He seemed to be still scanning through me, looking beyond me and to either side, and I instinctively looked around to see who might be behind me. The camera man maybe? I felt I ought to say something and resorted to that reliable old English expression; “Good afternoon.”
The roman turned his head slightly, cocking his ear, as if struggling to hear me, yet there was not a sound to be heard other than my laboured breathing. The fog swirled, and he suddenly appeared to be more solid, the colours of his dress more vivid, and I realised with a start that he had been semi-transparent; the fog had been swirling through him until now. “Ego sum conscius vestri presenti,” he said. My language skills are poor at best, my Latin limited to the essentials I learned for sciences at school, but somehow I understood the gist of what he was saying. I know you’re there. “Ego fui questio vos.” I have been looking for you.
My mind reeled. I realised that whilst he was speaking his lips weren’t moving, although his facial expression showed puzzlement to match his sentiments. I then saw him start, and now he could see me, I could sense it, like he had been looking at one of those pictures with all the dots, and now suddenly saw the pattern. My body let me down then, the fatigue of walking, the pain, the cancer all conspired to collapse my legs and a sat with a bump onto a grassy tuft between the stones of the ancient road, the pain jarring up my back. “Who …..who are you?” It seemed a stupid thing to ask, but then it was a stupid situation, on the top of a moor with a ghostly figure dressed as a Roman centurion speaking ancient languages at me. Again he spoke, and again I understood not the words, as he spoke soundlessly, but the essence, the meaning became clear in my mind. “Vestri vicis has adveho, fatum specto in Olympus. Nos fui ut vado.” Your time is done, heaven is waiting. We must go now.
“I am a …..medic?” He spoke now in faltering English, as if he had had time to recalibrate and tune into my wavelength, and I wondered if he was hearing my words in his head as I heard his. I was faintly surprised to hear he had a vague Yorkshire accent, but then I realised he had spent a great deal of his own life in Yorkshire. I began to understand things without really knowing how I did, as if some collective knowledge was being downloaded into my brain, some sort of cosmic internet. “I am here to ease your path,” he said. He helped me to my feet and we walked a short distance to a dry stone wall, part of which had collapsed and I sat on the lowered section, taking off my rucksack and placing it on the ground besides me. I say I walked a short distance, the man, for I couldn’t comprehend him as anything else, but who I knew was some sort of spirit helped me along. I was in a lot of pain now, and I might have blacked out once or twice. I think he may have carried me in a firemans lift. I was passing in and out of consciousness, and I may have been hallucinating.
“Nos fui supervenio procul vestri electus locus.” He smiled and then translated himself, “I fall into my old ways,” he apologised, “We have arrived at your chosen place. The prodigium. The portal. Time is short. If you have affairs to finalise make your peace with the gods and the world now.”
The soldier, who I learned was called Marcus, explained as best as he could in his faltering English, and I understood, in that telepathic way that he was to be my spirit guide to whatever came next. I had many questions to ask, but seemed to know the answers without asking. That collective knowledge was really coming together now. And he was right, this was my chosen place, up on the high moors, in the clean clear air. I had decided long ago that if the choice were there I would die on my terms in my chosen place and not in some frigid sterile and godless hospital. I wasn’t a religious man and the time didn’t seem right to find religion even now, but it seemed right to me to go out in Gods beautiful country, admiring it to my last.
Time to make my peace with the world. I reached into my pocket and took out the tablet phone. No signal. No signal and no time. I should have said goodbye to my son, and now I felt selfish and ugly. My hand fell on my camera, and I considered, maybe I could leave one last photograph for posterity. I raised the camera and saw an icon of a sand timer filling the screen, the sands running out of the bottom. Marcus said gently “It is time.”
I felt a sudden loss of pressure and saw a sort of oily blackness seeping out of my body, a thick bloody tarlike substance, it had no real form, like a mist, but not like a mist, there as it leached into the ground but then melted away. And with it went the pain, the ugly cancer gone. I realised that I could breathe freely again, but at the same time knew I had no need. My body slumped and the last thing I saw was the fog clearing, it was bright again, the last rays of amber sun setting in a blaze of pinks and purples mimicking the heather moors below, and I was flying, soaring above the moors, a spirit free of pain and worry.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
EPILOGUE
The policeman knocked on the door of the large detached house and was hustled in by the middle aged man who answered the door. “Have you found him?” he asked. The policeman nodded introducing himself, “PC Jackman, sir, from Grange End Police Station. I’m sorry, Mr Carter” he added, “I’m afraid I have bad news for you. The body of an elderly man was found on Wheeldale Moor earlier today. I believe this to be your father, he matches the description you gave us, and his car was found parked in Cropton Forest nearby. I am sorry, sir. You will need to formerly identify him of course, but I’m afraid there is little doubt.” Carter nodded “Thank you officer, you’ve all been very kind since he went missing.” Emotions running away with him, anger pushed forward, “Bloody old fool, going hiking alone at his age. I told him to go into the hospice, they would have taken care of him, but he wouldn’t listen. Always had to have his own way.”
The policeman explained that a formal identification would need to be carried out and did Carter feel up to it right away. Carter agreed, it may as well be done and over with, and after some arrangements were made by the telephone with North Yorkshire Police the officer organised transport and they set off. Little was said along the way, Carter and his wife sitting in dull silence throughout most of the hour long journey. As they entered the side wing of the mortuary and the curtains were pulled back Carter formerly identified his father’s body.
As they prepared to leave the officer handed Carter a carrier bag and a rucksack. “Your fathers things,” he explained, adding, “You’ll need to sign for them. There’s a camera here too, it was lying right besides him. I hope you understand sir, but we did have to look at the pictures he’d been taking, just to rule out any possibility of foul play you understand, make sure he was on his own, that sort of thing.”
“Yes, yes of course,” said Carter. “He was, of course, wasn’t he?”
“Oh yes,” said PC Jackman, “So far as we can tell. He was a talented photographer I must say, some incredible views of the moors. There was one shot that caused us some consternation though, do you mind if I show you? Some sort of double exposure I think, damned if I know how he’s done it. Must have been the last picture he took too.” He switched on the camera and flicked the review screen to show a picture of a handsome looking middle aged man, dressed as a roman soldier, his feet appearing a couple of inches above the surface of the Wheeldale Road, the figure semi-transparent, a slight ground level mist burning away over the heather and a brilliant pink and amber sunset stretching up into the clear deep blue sky overhead. “A cracking good shot,” said PC Jackman, “I always think a photo tells a story far better than a video can.”
THE END

The idea for the plot developed from my own experiences walking the moors. I too have often walked Wheeldale Moor, reputedly haunted by roman soldiers. Walking alone in the mist one late autumn evening I kept hearing someone coughing behind me, yet every time I checked there was nobody there, only a few scattered sheep. My overactive imagination had me meeting a ghost from the past. It turned out later that sheep have a very human sounding cough! Like the un-named character I too would rather die on my terms somewhere beautifully scenic and outdoors, with a glass of scotch than in some musty hospital ward. The only core difference being, if possible, I'd like my family around me, and for that day to be many years into the future.