Triplets Pointed At A Widower’s Tattoo And Unburied One Night-Teptep

Three identical little girls walked directly towards me in the centre of the park and said it with the innocent confidence of children who had no idea they were opening a sealed room inside my life.

“Our mummy has the exact same tattoo as you.”

For a few seconds, I could not answer.

Image

The afternoon around me carried on as if nothing had happened.

A pram rattled over the uneven path.

A dog shook rain from its ears.

Somewhere behind the trees, traffic dragged itself through the slow grey light of the day.

I sat on the damp wooden bench with a paper cup between my hands, the final inch of coffee already turning cold, and stared at the three little girls standing in front of me.

They were no more than seven.

That was the first thought that came properly into focus.

Seven, perhaps a little younger, with matching cream coats buttoned to their chins, dark ribbons tied neatly in their hair, and small polished shoes that looked too clean for a park path after rain.

They stood shoulder to shoulder as if they had practised it.

Not one of them seemed afraid of me.

Not one seemed to understand why my face had gone blank.

I looked down at my left forearm.

My sleeve had slipped back when I reached for the coffee, and the faded tattoo lay exposed against my skin.

A compass.

Not a clean sailor’s compass or some fashionable design from a catalogue.

This one was crooked.

The outer circle was uneven.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *