Chapter 31
10 years AC
‘LeMan 49/25a’ - ClarenCo Gas Rig Complex,
North Sea
‘How is she this morning?’ asked
Walter.
Dr Gupta sipped on her breakfast chowder. ‘The
infections are clearing up. The dressings are coming off dry. I
cannot tell you how relieved I am about that.’
Walter nodded. So was he.
‘Basically, she has finished fighting off secondary
problems, now she is busy healing.’ Dr Gupta made a face. ‘There
will be a lot of scarring, however. She will have it up her neck
and across her right cheek. I just wish we’d had a few pressure
wraps to minimise the hypertrophic scarring on her face. Stupid
really, in all our trips ashore for medical supplies I never really
thought there would be a need for me to treat burns.’
He nodded and glanced around the mess. It was
mostly empty now, most of the third sitting had finished and left
for their morning chores to make way for the fourth sitting and the
four long tables were empty save for five small children still
eating at the far end, urged to get a move on by an exasperated
mother. Walter knew them all by name, but since they’d only joined
the community seven months ago, he’d yet to get to know them well.
That was something Jenny was much better at - finding time to sit
down and talk to people.
Walter knew he wasn’t a popular choice of stand-in
leader. Tami would probably have been more welcomed in the
role.
She was looking at him as he thought that; reading
his face like a book. ‘You know, Walter, no one can really blame
you for that explosion,’ she replied. ‘That is not fair.’
‘But they are, aren’t they? I’ve heard what’s being
said.’
He sometimes even wondered himself whether he
was to blame. Even something as simple as those £30 cooking
stoves you used to be able to buy at any camping store had a
bayonet fitting as well as a screw valve. Safety should have been
more on his mind than haste; haste to get something up and
running for Jenny. And his allowing Jenny to bring Hannah down into
the generator’s back room with those methane digesters, when no
children, under any circumstances, should have ever been allowed in
there . . .
Stupid. Stupid.
What was Hannah doing down there on her own,
though? She knew she shouldn’t play there, she knew that very well.
So why? And the feed pipe lying on the floor, the G-clamp lying
beside it.
Did Hannah do that? Did she pull it loose by
accident?
There’d only been a fleeting few seconds down there
in that dark room before the explosion. He’d caught the briefest
glimpse of her feet protruding from behind the generator and the
rubber hose dangling from the roof softly hissing gas. That’s it.
That’s all he saw. But she would have had to have been climbing
over the top of the casing to pull that hose free, surely? If she’d
had an urge to climb on something, for crying out loud, there were
plenty of other places she could have done that. It just didn’t
make sense. Hannah was a good girl. She knew she’d have been out of
bounds. She knew the generator was dangerous; not a climbing frame.
It just didn’t make sense to him.
Dr Gupta interrupted his wool-gathering. ‘So, what
are you going to do with Mr Latoc?’ she asked quietly. ‘Is he
staying or going?’ She slurped a spoon of chowder. ‘You cannot
leave the question unanswered for much longer, you know?’
‘I know, I know.’
Walter would ask Jenny what she wanted to do about
him, but she was still out of it, either half asleep, or half-cut
on those knock-out-a-horse painkillers she was taking.
Walter wanted the man gone. Valérie Latoc was
trouble brewing. He had the people living over on the drilling
platform in thrall to him. Every time he caught sight of the man,
it was with a row of people sitting patiently, listening to him
talking.
What the hell does he gabble on about?
Of course it was women listening, mostly.
What is it with women? Give them a
coffee-skinned man and they go weak at the bloody knees.
But he’d also noticed David Cudmore and Kevin in
one of Latoc’s little audiences. It always seemed to look like a
prayer group; a sermon on the mount kind of thing.
‘He’s some sort of preacher, I think,’ said
Walter.
‘I know. Jenny would not be happy with him if she
knew.’
Much as he’d like to, he couldn’t just kick the man
off the rigs. Jenny had said he could stay on probation and, given
that she was slowly getting better and would hopefully be able to
take the helm again one day soon, it was her decision. Not his. If
she woke and found Latoc gone, she’d think he’d booted him off out
of petty jealousy. In fact, everyone would say that, wouldn’t
they?
Walter didn’t like the fact that Valérie was
more popular. More attractive. Younger. He didn’t like that at all
so you know what he did? The bitter old bastard kicked poor Valérie
out to fend for himself. God knows if he’s still alive out there .
. . I hope he is . . .
Even if he tried to have the man removed, Walter
suspected it wouldn’t be allowed to happen. There’d be an uproar
amongst his fan club.
‘Oh, speak of the devil,’ said Dr Gupta.
Latoc entered the mess followed by three women.
Walter knew them quite well, they were bunked on the main
compression platform. He hadn’t spotted them before amongst Latoc’s
regular drilling platform crowd. Keisha, Desirae and Kara. The
first two were sisters who’d once lived in north London. Kara was
originally from Nottingham. Together, the three of them were
normally an infectiously cheerful group, filling any room they were
in with loud and cheerful bingo-hall banter frequently peppered
with high-pitched and raucous belly-laughs.
New recruits. It seemed that Latoc’s brand of charm
was spreading like a bloody virus to the other platforms now. They
grabbed plastic bowls from the galley’s counter and were served a
ladle of steaming broth each and then sat together at one of the
other long tables.
Valérie Latoc extended his hands across the table
and they reached out for them. His head bowed, as did theirs, and
he began to utter, quite loudly, a prayer of thanksgiving. Walter
knew Jenny would be on her feet already, on her way over to ask him
to do this quietly or take it outside. This space was communal,
shared not only by non-believers but by so many others of different
faiths, who were equally asked to keep their faith a personal
thing.
Jenny was strict on this. No public prayers, not
here, not in the mess. Otherwise the door would be opened to all
sorts of petitions: people wanting to eat on single-faith tables,
people wanting the men to eat separately from the women, people
insisting on fasting, people insisting on eating before sun up or
after sun down.
Tami tapped Walter’s arm and nodded towards them.
He shot a glance over his shoulder at them and then turned back
round to face her, reluctant to meet her eyes.
‘You know Jenny would not accept this?’
He nodded.
‘If you let this happen, it will happen
again.’
‘I know . . . I . . .
A dozen more people entered the canteen; the start
of the fourth sitting, children chatting noisily to each other,
hungry and too energetic for the mums shuffling in with them. One
or two of them eyed Valérie and the others curiously.
‘You cannot let this happen and not say something,
Walter. People see this and there’ll be others who will want their
particular faith blessings before each meal.’
‘Yes, yes,’ he whispered. ‘Okay . . . let me just
think how I’m going to say—’
But then it was done. Valérie, and the ladies
sitting with him, chorused ‘amen’, released each other’s hands and
the canteen was almost immediately filled with their high-spirited
chatter and good-natured laughter.
Walter bit on his lip and made a face. ‘Maybe if he
does it again . . . I’ll, uh . . . I’ll have a quiet word.’
Dr Gupta looked at him and shook her head, tutting.
‘Not good,’ she muttered. ‘Not good.’