Henrik extended a hand into the rain.
âWhat terrible weather,â the man said. âA good thing we took the washing in.â
âWe?â Birgitte said.
âSummerâs long gone,â Kevin said. He felt a drip run down his neck.
âBirgitte,â Henrik said. âWhy donât you fetch those cookies?â
âTheyâre supposed to be for later.â
âFetch them, go on.â
She stepped past him and disappeared from view.
âThe proceeds go toââ Kevin began, only to be cut off. It was Birgitte, back already. Her hands held out a baking tray. She gave it a little shake and the cookies loosened from the greaseproof paper.
âTake one,â she said, looking at Kevin and then at her husband.
âJust the one, mind,â Henrik said.
Kevinâs fingers hovered over the cookies before selecting a medium-sized one.
âThank you,â he said, and popped it into his mouth.
He shuffled forward, slightly out of the rain. Under-floor heating streamed from the house and warmed his face.
âI know who you are,â Henrik said.
Birgitte looked at her husband in surprise.
Kevin was going to say he knew who they were, too, only his cookie was in the way.
âThereâs no mistaking it,â Henrik said, his eyes finding Birgitte as if wanting her to say something, too. âCanât you see?â
She scrutinized Kevin.
âItâs à ge Jørgensenâs lad,â he said.
A little gasp escaped her. A snap of breath.
âIt is, isnât it?â Henrik said, and then seemed to examine Kevinâs clothing. A moment passed in which Kevin munched and pointed at his mouth, munched and pointed.
Kevin swallowed at last and smiled with pride.
âYes,â he said. âI am.â
âI hadnât realized,â Birgitte said. She kept looking first at Kevin, then at her husband.
âDo you know my dad?â Kevin said.
âOh, we donât know him,â Henrik said, his expression changing. âBut we know who he is.â
Kevin gave a puzzled look.
âFrom when he used to live here,â Henrik explained.
âHere?â Kevin said.
âThatâs right,â Henrik said.
âBut heâs never lived here.â
They all went quiet.
âYouâll be Jan,â Henrik said after a second.
âNot Jan, Jon,â Kevin said.
âJon,â Henrik said.
âJon, yes,â Kevin said. âHeâs my younger brother.â
âYes, you would have a younger brother,â Henrik said, glancing again at Birgitte.
âTwo, in a way, if my dadâs new girlfriendâs boy counts. But they live in Pattaya,â Kevin said. âItâs in Thailand.â
âYou donât say,â Henrik said, and laughed as if what Kevin had said was funny.
âHave you been there?â Kevin asked. He smoothed the front of his top.
âNo,â Henrik said, rather quickly. âWe certainly have not.â
âMe neither,â Kevin said. He could hear his fatherâs voice in his head: Someday weâll go there together. Only itâs a bit expensive if weâre all going to go.
One of the candles on the chest of drawers in the hall went out. Birgitte opened a drawer, took out a long-necked lighter, and lit the candle again.
âTheyâre very nice candles,â Kevin said.
âWe produce them ourselves,â Henrik said.
âI know.â
âIt keeps half the village in work,â Henrik said. âBut whatâs your name, if it isnât Jon?â
âKevin Jørgensen.â
âKevin,â Henrik said.
âYes.â
âBirgitte,â Henrik said, placing a hand on her shoulder. âOffer Kevin another cookie, would you?â
Birgitte held out the baking tray. He chose another one and put it in his pocket.
âThank you very much,â he said.
âTake a couple.â
Kevin studied the cookies again.
âIn fact, you can take as many as you like,â Henrik said, and so Kevin took one, two, three more cookies and put them in his pocket.
âAre you sure thatâs all? Go on, have some more,â Henrik said.
âI donât mind if I do,â Kevin said.
âI thought so,â Henrik said.
Kevin didnât know what else to say. Fortunately, Henrik did.
âYouâre the absolute spit of him,â he said.
âThe spit?â
âThatâs right. You look just like him. Your dad, that is,â Henrik said. âItâs amazing, when you think about it, that a person can look so much like somebody else.â
Kevinâs father was tall and hairy. His forehead was creased, and the creases never went away, not even when he relaxed. His father had five DVDs of porn hidden under the mattress and a bat next to his bed. His father walked with a slight limp and coughed up mucus into the bathroom sink every night without washing it away. His father hated the government, which made people work for their disability benefits. His father was a Libra. His father had green eyes.
âIâve got my mumâs eyes,â Kevin said, widening them so that both Henrik and Birgitte could see.
âItâs your honker that gives you away,â Henrik said, tapping the side of his own nose with a forefinger. âWhatâs he doing with himself, anyway?â
âNow, you mean?â
âYes, now.â
âI can phone him, if you like. But I donât think heâd answer.â
âIâm sure,â Henrik said.
âItâs because weâve only got one charger at the moment.â
âAh.â
âOur dog keeps chewing them up.â
âI see. Thatâs not very good.â
âNo, he chews everything up.â
âDogs need to be trained, or elseââ
âOr else what?â Birgitte said.
âWell, or else you shouldnât have one.â
âHe just needs to learn, thatâs all,â Kevin said. âHeâs only a puppy.â
Birgitte was about to say something, but then her husband did.
âI saw that advert your dad put in the local paper. What was the slogan, now? Itâs slipped my mind.â