The carpet ran through the hallway and up the stairs. There was so much in it, I remember thinking; that if the person who had made it had tried to squeeze another shape inside it would burst. It contained all of the colours that I knew how to name and it swirled like a kaleidoscope as we did handstands in the hall. There was that trick you showed us how if you didn't make a sound and stood right there on the bottom step, faces would rise to the surface and wink or grin. Like the fat fish in your pond outside where we dropped bread like wishing-coins. And they moved so much the water was boiling. Sometimes the circles were stepping stones and we would jump from blue to green so not to burn our feet on all that red. But one day you weren't there anymore, and two men came and tore it up from the floor and laughed about somewhere called the seventies. And as I watched through a film of tears I couldn't understand why they didn't burn their hands on all that red.