car park had warned sternly that these cliffs were dangerous and might fall at any time. And Maria, looking up at the blasted slopes of Black Ven,thought with a shudder, Iâm not going up there, I donât fancy that at all.
For it was an eerie place. It seemed both very old and very young â old and infertile as the moon, with its barren reaches of mud and rock, and yet young as last week in its impermanence. For this, she saw, was the landscape of collapse. The cliffs had slipped and slid â sometimes long, long ago, so that the place that had crumbled away was now clothed in scrub, grass, reeds and sapling trees â and sometimes so recently that nothing yet grew at all except a few valiant seedlings poking out from the mud to show what they could do, given time and a world that would stop moving.
She followed a path that wound between bushes and over dried gullies lined with whispering reeds. It was a garden, this place, a wild garden over which the ashen cliffs presided like cathedral walls. There were flowers all around. Some of them she could recognise â the more ordinary ones. Vetch and ragwort and those little yellow things called eggs and bacon that are really birdsâ foot trefoil, and clover. But there were plenty of others she did not know, including a most abundant green plant growing in forests like small pine trees, and something like a wild sweet-pea. She picked a piece of this and tucked it in herbuttonhole, meaning to look it up in a book, if possible. She picked a dandelion head, and blew babyishly, and it erupted into the wind in a shower of shiny fragments that drifted uselessly away towards the sea. Where, thought Maria, they havenât a hope of growing. Waste. Youâre always being told not to waste things â time and electricity and left-over food â but things waste themselves much more. All that growing and flowering and making seeds for nothing. Dandelions and those millions and millions of seeds from elm trees in the spring. And tadpoles. And all those ammonites that got fossilised in the rock, there must have been millions and millions of them too. Seas full of them. All getting eaten by other things before they grew up. Talk about wasteâ¦
âWhat?â
She came round a large gorse bush to find herself face to face with someone who had been standing on the path, and realised with sudden shame that some at least of these thoughts had been said aloud. And the person, to make it worse, was the boy from the hotel next door.
âYouâve done it again,â he said. âBut I daresay you didnât mean to.â
âDone what?â
âFrightened the birds away. There was a pair of linnets.âHe looked at her with mild irritation, which turned to active exasperation as something about her caught his attention. âWhere on earth did you get that?â
âWhat?â
âThe grass vetchling,â said the boy crossly, âstupid.â
Mariaâs hand flew to the now wilting flowers in her buttonhole. âThese? I didnât know what they were.â
â Only the rather rare grass vetchling,â said the boy. âThatâs all. Donât you know this is a nature reserve?â
âNo,â said Maria dolefully. The grass vetchling felt now as though it were burning a reproachful hole in her shirt.
He looked down at her â he was at least a head taller â and apparently relented a little for he said more tolerantly, âOh well, donât do it again, anyway.â And then, looking at her hand, âCan I see your fossil?â
It was a bit of ammonite, not very impressive, but all she had been able to find that morning. âSuper,â said the boy kindly. He fished in his pocket and brought out something that Maria recognised at once.
â Stomechinus bigranularis ,â she said confidently.
The boy gaped in astonishment. âIs that what itâs called?â And
Misty Evans, Adrienne Giordano