
Involuntarily Ally’s hands clutched even tighter at the ladder. Whew. She was about to get a blast. His deep, grey-flecked eyes looked straight up at her, and they blazed with anger.
This man intended to let her have it with both barrels.
OK. She knew about anger. She’d lived through it before and she could live with it again. She closed her eyes and braced herself.
Silence. Then: ‘Hey, I’m not going to hit you,’ he told her.
That was out of left field. She opened her eyes cautiously and peered down.
‘I beg your pardon?’
‘I said I’m not about to hit you,’ he told her. ‘Or knock you off your ladder. So you can stop looking like that. Much as you deserve it, there’s no way painting shoes merits physical violence.’
She thought about that and decided she agreed. She agreed entirely. She shouldn’t expect violence, she thought, but she had entirely the wrong slant on the world, and she’d had it for ever.
‘You scared me,’ she said, still cautious.
‘So I did.’ His voice was almost cordial. ‘Silly me. So you decided to paint me in return.’
‘It might come off,’ she told him. ‘With turpentine.’
‘Do you have turpentine?’
‘No.’
He sighed. ‘You’re painting with oil-based paint-and you don’t have turpentine?’
‘I’ll get some. When the store opens.’
‘At nine o’clock. By which time my shoes will be dry. Blue and dry.’
‘But I’ve only just started to paint, so I don’t need turpentine yet. Or I didn’t.’ She gazed up at her handiwork then down to his shoes, and her ladder wobbled again.
‘You know, if I were you I’d come down,’ he told her. ‘That ladder isn’t safe. You need someone holding the bottom.’ Then, as if it occurred to him that she just might ask him to volunteer, he added, ‘Maybe you need to get a different type of ladder.’
‘This one’s fine.’ Though maybe he did have a point, she conceded. It was sort of wobbly. Sort of very wobbly. Maybe instead of one that balanced against the shop front, she should get one that was self-supporting.
