Authors: Rebecca Stevens
And then she saw the dog.
He was sitting outside the station as they came out, and was right in the middle of the path, blocking their way. It was almost as if he'd been waiting for them.
âHello, you,' said Rose. She always spoke to dogs, whether she knew them or not.
The dog looked up at her and wagged his tail. He was quite a small dog, black and white and scruffy-looking, with serious-looking eyebrows and a hint of a beard. He looked friendly and tough at the same time.
âHe can't understand you, Cabbage,' said Grandad. âBelgian dog, see. Doesn't speak English.'
Rose held out her hand to the dog, with the fingers curled up into a fist like Dad had shown her. He gave it a polite sniff and then looked back at her face. There seemed to be a question in his bright brown eyes.
âHow do you say hello in Flemish then, Grandad?'
âDon't ask me,' he said. âIt's a difficult language.'
Rose crouched down beside the dog and ruffled his head. The fur felt coarse under her fingers. She'd always wanted a dog. She and Dad used to talk about them a lot â which were their favourite breeds, stuff like that. They'd agreed that mongrels were the most interesting because they were all different. If you had a pedigree dog, a Labrador, say, it would look just the same as all the other Labradors. But you never knew what you'd get with a mongrel. They could be big, small, hairy, soft, black, white, brown, anything. This one was perfect.
âDon't you think we should try and speak a bit of Flemish while we're here, Grandad?' she said, scratching the dog's ears. âJust to be polite?'
âNah,' said Grandad. âI reckon we can get by with speaking English in a funny voice.' Rose looked at him, not sure if he was joking. And then he said âHallooooo!' in a ridiculous accent, so she knew he was.
âThat is never Flemish for hello,' she said.
âIt is, actually,' said Grandad, pretending to be hurt. âI've got a phrase book.' Rose continued to scratch the dog's ears, while Grandad rummaged in his bag. âI bought it especially. In Waterstones,' he added in a prim voice. He produced the book, turned a couple of pages and then shouted,
âAlstublieft!'
The word sounded exactly like a sneeze. The dog looked startled and gave Rose a look that seemed to say,
Is he with you?
She smiled and stroked his back. She could feel his ribs under the fur.
âBless you,' she said to Grandad.
âIt means “please”,' he explained. âVery important word. Useful when you want to ask for stuff. Biscuits, for example.'
â
Biscuits
?'
âOh yes. Belgium's famous for 'em. Everybody knows that.'
âHow d'you say that word again?'
Grandad checked his book and then repeated it, making it sound even more like a sneeze:
âAlstublieft!'
âI'm never going to remember that.'
Grandad looked pleased, as if he'd won an argument. âTold you it was a difficult language,' he said.
Rose sighed. Her knees were starting to hurt from crouching down by the dog. âThey speak French here too, don't they?' she said as she stood up. âMaybe he's a bilingual dog. I could say
bonjour
.'
âYou could,' said Grandad, putting on his most serious face. âBut you might look a bit daft. Talking French to a dog.' He grabbed the handle of his suitcase. âCome on. Let's find our hotel.'
âHang on, Grandadâ' Rose looked down at the dog. âDo you think he's a stray?'
Grandad paused. âNo collar,' he said. âBut he looks healthy enough.'
âHe's a bit skinny. I could feel his bones when I was stroking him.'
âTough-looking little chap, though, Cabbage. I reckon he can look after himself.'
âMaybe, butâ'
âAnd we can hardly take him to the hotel with us, can we? I bet he belongs to someone. Probably lives round here.'
Rose wasn't sure. There was something about the dog that made her feel responsible for him. It wasn't just that she was afraid he was a stray. It was the way he looked at
her, as if he was trying to tell her something. But before she could say anything, he got up and trotted off with his tail in the air, casting a quick look back over his shoulder as he went. So that was that.
Rose just stood there, watching him go, but Grandad struck a dramatic pose and called after him, waving.
âVaarwel! Vaarwel, mijn vriend!'
Rose stared at him, open-mouthed.
âFlemish for goodbye, Cabbage.'
âI guessed that much â farewell. What did the second bit mean?'
âWhat, the bit that sounded like “my friend”?' He made a big show of looking in the book. âAh yes, here it is. It means “my friend”.'
Rose gritted her teeth. Sometimes Grandad could be quite annoying.
He snapped the book shut and twinkled at her, thoroughly delighted with himself. âI'm not just a pretty face, you know.'
Rose shook her head. He really was unbelievable.
âRight. What we need now is the map. Map map map . . .'
He rummaged in his bag again and pulled out a single crumpled sheet of A4 that he'd printed out before they left. After studying it for a bit, then turning it the right way up and studying it some more, he announced, âThis way!' and they set off across the car park and into the city.
Rose was nearly as tall as Grandad now, and he had a slight limp from having polio as a boy, but she still found it hard to keep up. He walked faster than anyone she knew.
âThey rebuilt it after the war, you know, the city.' Grandad had done his research before they left, and was
determined to share it. âEvery brick, every stone, was put back, exactly as it had been. There was nothing left in 1918, not a thing. It had all been blasted to smithereens.'
Rose looked along the street. It was neat and pretty, lined with houses built of light-coloured brick, quite unlike the warm red of the houses in Rose's street back home. But there was something strange about it. It was almost
too
neat,
too
pretty, like the pond they'd seen from the train. Even the people seemed too perfect: the woman riding past on an old-fashioned bicycle with a bunch of flowers in the basket; the rosy-faced children skipping hand in hand along the pavement . . . they looked too good to be true, like they were extras in a film or something, not real people at all.
It's like the city's a copy of itself
, thought Rose.
A clone.
She shivered. There was a sort of shimmer in the air and she imagined she could feel the pulse of something under her feet, like a heartbeat or the bass-line of a song heard from a long way off. It was as if the old city was lying asleep beneath the pavements, and, like Sleeping Beauty, was waiting for someone to come and wake her up.
âLook, Cabbage!'
âWow!'
Mum had told Rose that Belgium was famous for its chocolate shops but she hadn't expected anything like this. The window they'd stopped outside was full of hearts: heart-shaped boxes of chocolates, chocolate hearts wrapped in red foil, shiny gold hearts hanging from pink ribbons . . .
Dad used to give Mum roses every Valentine's Day, one for each of the years they'd been together. She'd shake her head at him and say they couldn't afford it, but then she'd
hug them to her chest and bury her nose in them even though they didn't smell (shop-bought roses never did, Dad said). Rose always got something too, something small, like a chocolate heart or a tiny cake in a box. It had started when she was little, so she wouldn't feel left out, but then it had become a tradition. This year would be the first Valentine's Day it didn't happen.
As Rose stepped away from the window and its display of memories, three things happened at once.
There was a shout from Grandad: âRose!'
Someone else shouted as well, words she didn't understand.
And she felt a thud in her back and a searing pain in her knee as she fell on to the road, breaking her fall with her hands.
Grandad rushed over, leaving his suitcase on the pavement.
âIt's all right, Grandad, I'm fine . . .'
As Grandad took one arm and started to help her to her feet, Rose felt someone take her other arm and heard a voice, worried and apologetic:
âHet spijt me zo. Ik heb je niet gezien. Ikâ'
Rose looked up to see a fair-haired boy of about her own age. He'd abandoned his bike on the pavement, where it lay next to their suitcases with one wheel spinning, forcing pedestrians to walk around it. He had a nice face with dark eyebrows, darker than his hair, and quiet grey eyes that met hers with a look of concern. As she struggled to her feet she felt uncomfortably aware of his hand under her elbow.
âIt's fine,' she said. âI'm fine. Thanks.'
Now go away,
she thought. But he didn't. His face broke into a slow, sweet smile.
âYou are English,' he said.
Rose still didn't want to look at him. It was her fault really, what had happened â she'd backed into his bike because she was thinking about Dad â but she wasn't about to admit that. She always felt a bit awkward with boys, even when she wasn't out in a weird little city in Belgium with her grandad. This was super-embarrassing.
âAre you sure, Cabbage?' Grandad looked worried too. âYou came a nasty cropper. Let me have a look at that knee.'
âNo, really, it's fine. I'm OK, Grandad. Let's go.'
âI am very sorry,' the boy said. He spoke careful English with some sort of accent. âI did not see you there.'
âIt's OK.' Rose looked at the pavement. âIt was my fault.'
Go. Now. Just go!
âYour leg . . .? Is there somethingâ?'
âNO!'
The word came out much louder than she'd intended.
âSorry,' she said. âI didn't mean â you know. Thanks for helping and everything, butâ'
Grandad must have realised how much she was suffering, and decided to intervene. âIt's all right, young man. I think she'll live. You a local?'
Grandad was like Dad, any excuse to talk to a stranger. Mum used to say that when Dad went to the corner shop he'd come back with a pint of milk, a newspaper and seven new friends.
âExcuse me?' said the boy.
âLocal!' Grandad raised his voice a notch. âFrom around here? Belgian?'
The boy had gone to pick up his bike, but paused to
reply. âBelgian? Me? Oh! No, no, I am here as a visitor. Like you.' He indicated their suitcases, then added, âI am from Germany.'
âGermany?' Grandad sounded surprised. âWell! I hope . . . you enjoy your stay.'
This was the boy's cue to leave, and he took it. âThank you,' he said, with a polite nod. âI hope you do too.' And then, to Rose: âAnd I hope your legâ'
âIt's FINE!'
The boy nodded seriously. âI am happy to hear that. Goodbye.'
âBye!' The word burst out of Rose like an accusation. She felt bad. The boy must think she was really weird. âI hope your bike's all right!' she called after him as he moved away, pushing his bike along the pavement. He looked back over his shoulder and gave a little wave before riding off down a side street. Rose and Grandad watched him go.
âGerman!' said Grandad. âWell, well.'
âWell, well, what?' Rose asked. âWhat do you
mean
, Grandad?'
Grandad shrugged. âI don't know, Cabbage. I don't suppose they get too many German visitors, that's all. Come on.'
As Rose followed him down the street, the lights ahead shimmered and the ground seemed to shift under her feet. It was as if, beneath the modern pavements, the old city was stirring in her sleep.
T
he little shopping street opened out on to a huge cobbled space. Rose would've called it a square, except it wasn't square; it was a kind of misshapen rectangle, dominated by one massive building that bristled with so many towers and pointy bits that it looked like some kind of huge spiky creature.
âCloth Hall.' Grandad was pleased to have another opportunity to show off his research.
âCloth Hall?' repeated Rose.
âThat's what it's called. Something to do with what it was originally used for. It's a museum now.'
âAbout the war?'
âAbout the war.'
They walked on past a low wall where a family of five sat in descending order of height licking ice creams. A stream of British schoolkids was tumbling off a coach. They were about Rose's age, she guessed, and were laughing and shouting and pushing each other, obviously
excited their journey was over.
âOw! Get off me!'
âSir! Can we get ice creams, sir?'
âWhere's the toilets, sir? Sir!'
A stressed-out teacher got off after them. âBack here in twenty minutes, please!' he shouted. Nobody was listening. âTwenty minutes, everybody! And that includes you, Josie!' A dark-haired girl wearing loads of make-up pulled a face before sauntering off after her friends.