2019. Edinburgh
She named the cloud Cyril. Not for any profound reason. It was just the first name that came to mind when she’d thought of names beginning with ‘C’. She and Cyril soon worked out a pattern although it was the cloud that dictated the rules. He’d stay in the shower at night and in the morning she’d scoop him out with the cloud catcher and arrange his trusses over her head. He’d settle down slowly, weightless and frosty, and ooze calm over her forehead. He’d soothe her prickly scalp, and she’d drop her shoulders, and breathe out slowly through her nose. Fifteen minutes on weekdays. More at the weekends. Sometimes he’d drop tiny crystals into her hair and they’d shimmer there like diamonds before melting. Then she’d send him up a few inches with a couple of waves of the bamboo fan that the man in the Ice Tower had slipped her for free.
‘Going for a song’ the little moustached man had said, as he poured the cloud into the Perspex cooler box and handed her the care instructions. Although song was the wrong word. It should have been symphony or concerto or at the very least a sonata. The cloud had tinkled and whispered and shimmered and oozed until its feathery wisps stacked neat and square, filling the box.
‘It’s the last one’, he’d said as he clicked the white lid into place. ‘You’re a lucky lady, doing so well in the test. Most folk failed, a couple even tried to give me, you know, a bit extra. Imagine that, bribery in this day and age. Reported them of course. You sure you can manage him?’
Janet had wanted to say woman, it’s woman, not lady, and of course I can but instead she had muttered yes, yes she’d be able to manage, she’d passed the test hadn’t she, every one of the thirty questions correct. She had flicked the pages of the manual but kept her eyes on the box.
‘They’re not for everyone. Cirrus. High maintenance.’ He’d been leaning over the counter, closing in on her, his neat orange moustache rising and falling with the tide of his words. ‘You will take care of him, won’t you?’ She had leant back from the trespass of his breath. Did he henna that moustache? But his fingers were pale and clean. His nails smooth and short. You must need clean fingers to handle a cloud.
‘I call him Chronos,’ she thought she heard him say but his words were swallowed by the shrieks of a toddler on the other side of the showroom. She picked up the box. Precious.
‘I’ll get going then.’
‘Don’t forget to register him.’
‘No. I’ll do it first thing.‘ She paused. ‘You can trust me you know. I’m not stupid.’ His eyebrows twisted.
‘No need for that tone,’ he’d said, ‘I was just, well, you know, he’s delicate.’
‘I passed the test.’ Janet’s voice had seemed to come from someone else. Someone more confident. ‘Bye.’
‘Bye, then.’ He’d waved a small hand at the box then rubbed at his eyes. She wondered whether he might cry. ‘Call if you’ve any questions.’ She mouthed a thank you and walked awkwardly through the showroom both wanting and not wanting the other shoppers to look at her. See her. She felt taller, slimmer, significant, younger. Someone with something rare. Someone that people might want to know. Someone that people would talk about to their friends. You know that old woman who wanders round here but never speaks they’d say over a coffee and an over-buttered scone? You mean the stocky one with the short grey hair and weird glasses? Yep, the very one. Turns out she owns a cloud. Really? What’s her name? Not sure. Jan or Mary or something. But we should find out. See if she’ll come for a coffee. Imagine. A pet cloud.
To be continued