|
Brent and Catherine
finished their breakfast - Brent even managed to persuade Catherine
to have some of his pancakes, to her private relief as she was still
hungry after finishing the muffin she'd ordered - and the two of
them waited for a while until they realised that in this particular
café they were expected to pay at the counter. They duly
did so, and then left.
The cold air of
the drizzly winter morning outside hit them with a heavy shock to
their lungs as they emerged from the warm café. Their breath
plumed out before them, and Brent hugged Catherine close to him
as she pulled her beanie back on, gathering her hair behind her
head to get it out of the way.
"Aren't your
ears cold?" asked Brent, touching her right earlobe affectionately
with the tip of his finger.
"Gah!"
she yelped and recoiled from him, giggling. "Your hands are
freezing! How could they be so cold after sitting in that
café for so long?"
"Bad circulation"
Brent shrugged. He gently turned down the rim of her beanie so that
it covered her ears. She turned to him, her lips pursed in the tight
smile he liked to see so much, her eyes gleaming. "Maybe you
should be wearing the beanie" she said.
Brent laughed and
wrapped his arm back around her waist. "It looks better on
you" he replied.
They walked slowly,
a little awkwardly because they were so tightly entwined, down Smith
Street. "Where are we going?" asked Catherine.
"I don't know"
answered Brent. "Towards Johnston Street, I guess."
It wasn't a long
walk: in a few minutes they got there and turned the corner.
As soon as they did so they noticed, further down the road towards
Brunswick Street, a number of police and police cars blocking off
the street. Behind the police was a large flat-bed truck, beyond
which a densely packed crowd had gathered, holding banners and listening
attentively to somebody who was speaking into a megaphone from the
tray of the truck.
"What's going
on down there?" asked Catherine.
"I don't know"
replied Brent, puzzled. "I haven't heard anything about a demo
today. Shall we go check it out?"
"Sure, I guess
so." Catherine wasn't particularly interested, but she was
happy just to wander and Brent's curiosity was piqued, so they headed
down Johnston Street towards the demonstration.
As they approached
the demonstration, the noise of it grew steadily louder: on Smith
Street, the closely-packed buildings and the fact that the speaker
addressing the crowd was facing in the opposite direction had ensured
that they couldn't hear anything - but now they were closer it was
becoming quite loud.
They got beyond
the police and stopped at the fringes of the demonstration. It was
a mixed crowd: students, pensioners, families with children, men
with dogs. They were all listening intently to the man who was currently
addressing them, some applauding loudly and some applauding with
a little more reservation - indeed some weren't applauding at all,
though that might just have been because their hands were pushed
deep into their pockets against the cold. Brent scanned the crowd
while Catherine, a little bored, gazed up towards the speaker standing
on the tray of the flat-bed truck.
She suddenly felt
Brent's arm slip away from her waist; she turned her head to see
him walking a few steps to tap a young woman on the shoulder. The
woman was dressed all in black, with a scarf wrapped tightly around
her throat and thick-rimmed glasses balanced on her nose. She was
listening seriously and respectfully to the speaker, though with
a frown on her face and her brown creased with unease. Her expression
changed to one of great surprise when Brent, also surprised at finding
her there, tapped her on the shoulder and spoke her name:
"Sacha?"
|