Page List

Font Size:

“Ate them?” he turns back to me.

“Only one, thankfully.”

“They do that,” he shrugs, making to walk towards me, “are you planning to put them in the pot?”

“No,” I gasp, “they are pets.”

He nods as though he figured as much, and I step back out onto the porch so that he won’t pass too close to me, dangerously close, on his way out.

“I couldn’t understand it,” I add as he leaves the house, “why Spike would do that.”

“Spike?”

“The male rabbit – he’s such a sweetie usually.”

“One way or other fathers destroy their sons,” he says quietly, casting me a quick sidelong glance as though he had said too much, revealed something of himself he shouldn’t. “You have a merry Christmas now.”

“You too,” I frown, as he vaults down the steps and strides to his old Ford truck, starting it with a roar and driving away without looking back.

“You too,” I repeat, as I ponder his words about fathers.

Turning inside, I shut the door firmly behind me and, hands on hips, consider how I might decorate a tree that takes up fully one-third of my lounge room.