Susan Hill - Hunger

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When Adrian and Paula move to a cottage in the countryside, they don’t know what to expect. At first, Adrian finds their new life idyllic, and insists on lots of long walks and fresh air, while Paula finds rural life lonely and dull.
Then some small and oddly silent children start showing up – in the woods, the garden, and eventually inside the house itself. Their presence proves disturbing to Adrian, who is having second thoughts about the move they’ve made. It’s Paula now who seems more at home with country life, and Paula who starts to take a peculiar comfort from the mysterious new arrivals.
Hunger

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Susan Hill

HUNGER

On the second afternoon, after they had unpacked the last of the boxes, Adrian said they should go out for a walk. That, he said, was the whole point of moving here, to go out for walks.

‘Nature,’ he said. ‘You don’t just look at it, do you?’

For the time being she would have been happy to do that. She was bone-tired. Even her brain was tired. Filling the packing cases, cleaning the old flat for the people who were coming in, because that, apparently, was something else you did; travelling down, cleaning the cottage, because the people leaving had not done it for them; unpacking the boxes, putting things away. A hot poker bored into her lower back every time she moved. She had period pain. Her arms ached.

What she wanted to do was indeed to ‘just look at it’. To lie down and look at the dense, green leaves that blotted out the mould-coloured sky. The faint line of blue hills in the far distance. The jungle of garden.

‘We can get our bearings later,’ Adrian said.

Bearings.

She went in search of some painkillers. The bathroom had a sloping roof with a small square of window that let in more greenish, undersea light. The trees pressed in on them, but she supposed that in winter the light would be clear and they would see across fields to the blue hills.

‘Paula?’

He bounded up the stairs.

‘Come on. What are you doing?’

‘Looking for the Nurofen.’

‘What’s wrong with you?’

She waved a hand vaguely.

‘Headache?’

‘Back. Arms. You know.’

‘You don’t need painkillers. You need a walk. Fresh air. Come on.’

She went, not being able to find the Nurofen. Maybe they were in her handbag. Maybe they were slipped in with the bed linen. Or the DVDs.

‘Come on!’

The wooden gate felt greasy after the night’s rain and the long grass trailed cold against her legs.

Adrian stood in the middle of the track and slowly stretched his arms above his head. Closed his eyes. Took a deep breath, expanding his rib cage. Released it slowly.

You look so stupid, she wanted to say. But just walked on past him.

‘AAAHHHH!’ he went again.

The cottage was at the end of the track that opened into a wider lane. There was no other house until you reached a small green at the top.

‘Do you think we’ll be snowed in?’

Adrian leaped and jumped until he reached her. His mouth was half-open, the huge white teeth grinning.

‘Hope so.’

‘What?’

He put his arm round her shoulders and pulled her in to him for a second.

‘Well, it would be fun and it’s all part of living in the country.’

‘It snows in the town.’

‘Different.’

‘How?’

‘Oh, you know – town snow melts to slush. It looks dirty.’

‘Doesn’t country snow?’

‘Not in the same way.’

Paula thought it probably did, but said nothing.

He pulled her along.

Past the houses, another lane led steeply downhill. Unsuitable for Motors .

It narrowed. Trees on either side, and more trees below. The air mushroomy.

Adrian turned to face her. His forehead was damp.

‘You’re going to love it. You could come down here every day.’

She tried to imagine that.

‘Before you start work.’

‘I start work at half past eight.’

‘But I’ll be gone by seven, and people get up early in the country.’

‘What people?’

‘Oh, everybody.’

But she liked it. Liked the great smooth tree trunks and the closeness of the air. She looked up. The sky seemed far away.

They dropped down the steep slope, clutching onto one another and suddenly Paula had a leap of the heart, as if this were some sort of mad, secret impulse, rather than a long-planned and several times almost-capsized move from suburban street to isolated village. But it had not capsized. The cottage had not been bought by someone else. They had packed up their lives and despatched them two hundred miles in a van, which had had to make three stabs at reversing down the track to their gate.

They were here, then. She slithered a couple of yards down to the point where the hard surface turned to mud.

‘What’s that?’

Adrian stood sideways, head cocked.

‘Sounds like singing.’

‘Not singing.’

It was quiet again, apart from the occasional shushing of the leaves.

‘There.’

‘Sounds like chanting.’

Paula hesitated.

‘What?’

‘Maybe we shouldn’t… disturb them.’

‘Disturb who?’

He went crashing on through the undergrowth. The noise stopped.

Eventually, she followed him.

There was a clearing. The ground was level, covered in leaf mould and twigs. Paula smelled burning wood.

They were a few yards away: four children, nine or ten years old down. Two girls, two boys. They were crouching or kneeling, and bending forwards to look into something from which a thin spiral of smoke was coiling.

‘What are they doing?’ She did not know why she whispered.

‘Whatever it is they shouldn’t be lighting fires in a wood,’ Adrian said. But he was whispering, too.

‘What have they got?’

They went forward a pace.

The children had started to half-sing, half-chant softly again. They had an old enamel bowl and a stick each; the bowl was balanced on a nest of twigs, which was alight and smoking feebly. Each child took a turn at stirring whatever was in the bowl, while the others watched; then another took over, on and on, stir and stir.

Paula smiled.

‘Damn silly,’ Adrian said.

‘It’s hardly alight. The sticks will be quite damp. They’re OK.’

Eventually, two of the children lifted the bowl and the oldest child banged on the sticks to extinguish the smouldering. They had a bucket and they poured a greenish liquid into it from the bowl. The two smaller children had lost interest and wandered away.

‘Great,’ Adrian turned to her, eyes bright. ‘Isn’t it? Great.’

‘But you said – ’

‘No, no. It wasn’t dangerous. There was hardly a spark. No, I meant it’s great for kids, playing out in the wild like this, making up their own games.’

‘Boy Scouts?’

‘No, not Boy Scouts. Boy Scouts are organised – by adults. This is all the kids themselves. I think it’s great. It’s what they should be doing. It’s why we’ve come here, Paula.’

‘We’re not kids.’

But she could see he was impatient.

The children had trailed away, two trying to carry the bucket between them.

Adrian stretched, arms high, fingertips splayed out.

‘Don’t you think that’s what they ought to be doing? No dangerous roads, no mindless computer games, out in the fresh air.’

‘I was wondering why they aren’t at school.’

Adrian was keen on proper schooling.

‘When we have our own…’

But they did not have their own.

‘It’ll be some holiday or other. Country holidays, you know. May Days and so forth.’

‘It’s the end of June.’

He turned. ‘Why do you always have to pick me up when I say anything? Why do you have to pour cold water? You agreed we should move to the country. You wanted to move here.’

Which was true.

They hauled themselves back up the muddy path.

She needed to think about it. Yes, she had agreed. Was that the same as wanting to? She wasn’t sure. She agreed to a lot of things.

She thought of lying in bed, looking at the green leaves. Grey sky. Listening to the silence.

‘You’re not the one having to get a train at seven every morning, commute for over an hour, walk at both ends, rain or shine, leave in the dark, get home in the dark.’

‘Well, in winter.’

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