試す - 無料

MAN ON THE SAND

Sunday Express

|

October 19, 2025

A short story by L V Matthews

The old woman is walking the same path she has always walked, high above the sea, where the wind larrups the cliff into bridal white.

The path is grassy, with occasional rocks and stones and scrub, and in parts she has to tread carefully so as not to turn an ankle, but the view is worth itthe great curving ocean and the sun behind it.

She stops and looks down at the small cove below where there are two young people swimming. It's where the young people always go, and it's a scramble down from the clifftop, but there are makeshift steps in the rock and a wooden rail in parts.

If you’re agile enough, it's fine. She used to do it all the time. And she likes it that people enjoy the cove.

Today it’s two girls together in the water, splashing and laughing. Perhaps, the woman thinks, they have finished their school exams, or perhaps they are on holiday from university. She wonders if they might be sisters because their smiles match.

She sits on a rock to watch them, recalls how once she used to fish in that little piece of sea. She went out with her sister in their tiny boat, and sat with a line in the blue, but that was a long time ago. Ten winters have passed since she used that same boat for firewood.

When the girls grow tired of the sea, they sprawl on sandy towels and talk.

One girl smokes a cigarette, and they play cards for pennies.

And when eventually the sun starts to sink and the ocean begins to turn dark, they roll up their things, stuff them into backpacks and bags, and climb back up the cliff.

The old woman stands and smiles at them when they reach the top of the stairs and pass her. They smile back, and when their chatter dissolves with the wind, the woman decides she should move on again.

Sunday Express からのその他のストーリー

Sunday Express

Fury after youths hurl fireworks at firefighters

PARENTS must have a “serious conversation” with their children before Bonfire Night this week, after three firefighters suffered severe hearing loss in a fireworks ambush.

time to read

2 mins

November 02, 2025

Sunday Express

HUNDREDS OF FOREIGN KILLERS SLIP INTO UK

HUNDREDS of foreign murderers and rapists have been allowed to slip into the country.

time to read

3 mins

November 02, 2025

Sunday Express

Extradicted Polish rapist re-entered UK

A PERSISTENT Polish criminal extradited after being convicted of burglary was able to get back into the UK having been sentenced for rape in his home country.

time to read

1 mins

November 02, 2025

Sunday Express

Tired of turkey? Just give it some Welly this Christmas!

THE “most iconic dish” ever created by Tesco can be ordered online for the festive season from Tuesday.

time to read

2 mins

November 02, 2025

Sunday Express

'I am very passionate about the NHS...but it's not working'

MARIA Caulfield knows the NHS inside out. The former health minister worked as a nurse before entering Parliament and now she is back on the wards at London’s Royal Marsden, one of the world’s leading cancer care hospitals. A child of Irish immigrants, she saw the pleasure her mother found in nursing and she followed her into the profession. Now she fears for the future of the health service.

time to read

5 mins

November 02, 2025

Sunday Express

GOLDEN OLDIE WELBECK'S ON TUCHEL RADAR

BRIGHTON 3 LEEDS 0

time to read

2 mins

November 02, 2025

Sunday Express

CRUISING TO A POLL POSITION

Henry downs the Aussies as boss Borthwick says: His energy is just what we need now

time to read

1 min

November 02, 2025

Sunday Express

Tense time as Fockers court Barbra for new sequel

PRODUCERS have launched a “final bid” to tempt Hollywood star Barbra Streisand to return to blockbuster comedy franchise Meet the Fockers for a long-awaited sequel next year.

time to read

1 min

November 02, 2025

Sunday Express

Sunday Express

MUNSTER'S BALL

Cam's the man to grab Ashes series win for Aussies

time to read

2 mins

November 02, 2025

Sunday Express

Failed asylum seekers cost £62million a year

TAXPAYERS are spending £62million every year on housing and handouts for asylum seekers who had their claims rejected but stayed in the UK anyway.

time to read

2 mins

November 02, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size