The Wolf Border

The Wolf Border by Sarah Hall

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Authors: Sarah Hall
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leader.
    He leans in and kisses her, then hands her a flute of champagne, which was sitting amid a galley of others, waiting for the guests. He is dressed with intermediate elegance: slacks, an open-collared shirt, cufflinks, a blazer. The lunar woman lingers by his side, smiling at Rachel.
    Settling in OK, I hope, Thomas says. Is Seldom exactly as you need it to be?
    I only arrived today. The cottage is very nice. You must let me pay rent while I’m there.
    Thomas Pennington swats a hand through the air.
    Not at all. Part and parcel of the job. The place hasn’t been used since, oh, goodness knows how long. I really don’t like the idea of unoccupied buildings; it’s such a waste. You’ve met Sylvia, my youngest?
    The daughter. Rachel feels immediate relief. They do not look overly similar, other than their stature.
    I’ve got her for the holidays. What was Paris going to do with her anyway? Ruin her, Rachel, that’s what. She’d have come back terribly angular and filled with ennui.
    Sylvia protests playfully.
    Oh, Daddy! You love France.
    He shrugs, turns the corners of his mouth downward, and rolls his eyes.
    La vie, c’est une chose pareille obscurité .
    Stop being naughty, Sylvia insists.
    She smiles at her father, fondly collaborative, and links her arm through his. He kisses her hair like an adoring, neuter lover. Under the expressionless, obscuring beauty, Rachel tries to discern her age – twenty, perhaps a shade older, though she could pass for sixteen.
    I don’t even like Paris, Sylvia says. Too much stone and no green anywhere. Our city parks are bliss, aren’t they?
    The question has been directed towards Rachel, who nods politely, though she would not go so far in praise for a few boating lakes and stretches of shorn grass.
    That’s because nature is in the British soul, Thomas says. We must recreate it wherever we can, or we’ll go mad.
    Their enthusiasm and positivity is like a miasma. It could be a scene from the back pages of a society magazine, Rachel thinks, or a parody. Father and daughter are clearly used to holding court together; they are mesmerising and faintly sickening to watch – polished, too enjoying of each other for the average family. She cannot imagine such a relationship with a parent. She and Binny could barely manage three sentences without barbs or sarcasm. Sylvia is obviously well schooled in elegance and courtesy, with only enough of the coquette remaining to seem unspoilt. When she raises her glass of champagne, she barely sips. Her colouring – the light English umber and lash-less, crescent-shaped blue eyes – is presumably the dead mother’s.
    How about some music, Soo-Bear, her father suggests.
    Yes!
    She crosses the room to a discreet piece of equipment in a cabinet. She moves with extreme, but sexless, grace. The dress drifts a few millimetres from her hips and chest, its creases flocking and darkening as she moves. A demure but flattering item, the kindof thing lesser royalty might wear. Thomas Pennington asks if Rachel has any requests. She does not – she could not name an album or a band if she tried.
    Put on something to annoy you-know-who, he says to his daughter, mischievously.
    He seems less restive than previously, as if the presence of the daughter has a calming effect. The kind of man who fares better in female or familial company, perhaps. The older son, Leo, is absent. There are dark rumours, passed on to Rachel by Binny during her stay. A drop-out, a hellion. Talk of disinheritance, though it is hard, given the current show of unity and wholesomeness, to imagine rifts in this family. Thomas raises his glass.
    Cheers, Rachel. We couldn’t be doing any of this without you.
    Clearly this is not true, the scheme was well underway before her acceptance, but Rachel thanks him.
    Now, this is a bit off the bat, he says, but Sylvia has a question for you. Don’t you, darling? I’d fire

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