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DAISY CHAINS
Author's note:
This is a personal novel written some years ago. A drafted version of an original piece.
HOW DO YOU PACK UP YOUR LIFE? I bend swiftly over my battered brown suitcase, scanning the folded vintage clothes; the old, one-eyed teddy-bear; the Christmas socks, the photo album. The last item I push right down, to the bottom, out of sight. You know what they say. My hands shake a little as I snap the case shut, almost catching my fingers. The bare, vast hollowness of the room is just beginning to strike me. This was my home, once. Not anymore. A burst of bitter nostalgia threatens tears, so I stand up abruptly, trembling, and take my suitcase. Without another glance, I stalk from the place I may never see again. An image flashes into my mind. Me, aged seven, curled under the covers, clutching my forlorn bear, racked through with sobs. The face gets older, tougher, but the memory remains the same. Downstairs, my ‘social worker’ has prepared breakfast. Her bright, fluffy blonde hair covers her lined, youthful face; the kind blue eyes the colour of tear drops. She smiles at me as I enter; a smile I don’t return. I’m not being mean. I genuinely cannot force my muscles to lift upwards. Another time, maybe. I fiddle with the daisy chain bracelet on my wrist – anything so I don’t have to look at Claire. Evidently, she doesn’t get the message. “Steph,” she says, her voice breathy with feeling. “How are you?” Let’s see – I want to kill myself, I’m leaving home, and my mum’s otherwise engaged. I’m great, Claire. Amazing. “I’m just so excited to be starting a new life,” I say, mimicking her high-pitched tone. “Great!” she says, beaming at me. “Have some toast.” She pushes a plate of burnt jam bread towards me, and I shudder inwardly. Even though it’ll probably give me food poisoning – good; I can delay leaving – I swallow every bite, even the crusty black bits. You know me. Nothing if not a trooper. “That’s the spirit,” Claire says, unending enthusiasm colouring every syllable. “You know, some kids start up a real fuss, yelling and screaming that they don’t want to go.” I widen my eyes. “Get out!” Claire nods, matching my glazed expression. “I know, right?” When she heads to the fridge to get more milk; I roll my eyes and stick my tongue at her back, even though I’m fifteen and should really know better. I don’t look fifteen. My light brown hair frames my face in a long bob, complete with fringe, and my almond-shaped, butter-brown eyes scream childhood innocence. If that wasn’t enough, I’m about five foot tall, and in an era of elongating teenagers, I may as well be ten years old. It’s very frustrating. I don’t know where my short genes (or plainness) comes from, to be honest. My mum is tall and willowy and beautiful, with blade-sharp cheekbones and curly dark hair. Mine is straight, my skin softer and creamy, with absolutely nothing to mark me out as different. I don’t look like her at all, except my long; sooty lashes, and button nose. She is nothing like me in personality, either. If we didn’t have a birthing video (yes, I know, I die with the shame) I’d swear she’d adopted me. But then, my mother is not the type to adopt. Claire’s fingers drum on the table top, breaking into my thoughts. I look up to see that stage-smile lit up perfectly on her face, her raincoat on. “Time to go, d’you think?” she says pleasantly, gazing at the grainy weather outside, which has just started to sparkle with rain. I love rain and the way it brushes across your face, wet and unforgiving, drowning out everything. Besides, I hate going on a long car journey when it’s hot and stifling. Best to do it now. I’m not so sentimental as to want to stay here a second longer, not even to hug the furniture. I’m leaving anyway, and nothing’s going to change that, so why get emotional? Anyway, I don’t want to go down as one of Claire’s screaming charity projects, desperate to stay. I’m not a charity case. Circumstance has forced this leave, and I’m not going to live with just anyone. It’s my brother and his family – my family, I suppose – not some weird adoptive parents. My heart beats painfully at the thought, but I push the doubts away. “I don’t want to stay here another second,” I say, thrilled by own lying streak. Well, let’s just say I had years and years to perfect my craft. “That’s very grown-up of you, Stephanie,” she says happily, cramming a bunch of sandwiches into her rucksack. They’re crushed and mouldy, peeling with brown, rotting banana and out-of-date jam. If I didn’t get food poisoning from the toast, lunch is a dead cert. I follow Claire to the dark blue Nissan, shivering from the sprinkling rain and trying not to mind she used my full name. To her credit, she doesn’t comment when I choose a backseat, even though it’s just the two of us in the car. They must be paying her very nicely for this. Still, at least I won’t have to see her much again. Only on ‘routine visits’, which I will try and stop if it takes my last breath. Slowly I will whittle Claire Wheeler out of my life, and everything that comes with it. I don’t need her. I have a new family, a new set-up, and the outlook is good. Really, my mum’s breakdown is the best thing that could have ever happened to me. She was a cold b**** as well. I won’t miss her. Claire’s hums set my teeth on edge as the car buzzes along, an old Abba tune playing away in the background. Ignoring this irritating soundtrack, I plug in my earphones and spend the ensuing journey being entertained by the familiar sounds of angry rock music. I’m not even a big fan of rock, but the loud noise is sufficient in blacking out everything else. I can lie back and refuse to think of anything, anything at all. Just the sound of the drum attack, of the lead’s ear-splitting, whiny tones, of the sound of the electrifying bass guitar, of the feeling of the whole world contained in one moment... “Steph? Steph, will you take your headphones out for me please?” After a while, I become aware of a quiet bleating, somewhere far in the present time. I pause the song, scowling, and relieve my ears of the buds. “Earphones,” I say, practically spitting the words at her. “They’re called earphones.” Claire holds up her hands, eyebrows slating into a distressed frown. “Hey, chill, I’m your friend, remember?” I stare at her. “You are not my friend,” I say slowly, in case she hasn’t got the message. “OK?” Claire’s elastic smile droops at the corners, closing in on itself, rebounding. “OK,” she says calmly. “Just take a few deep breaths and-” I swear, stepping out of the car and slamming the door hard. If that woman – that miserable creature – dares tell me taking a few deep breaths will solve my problems one more time, I will kill her, I swear I will. I’ll chop her up into a thousand pieces and serve her to my new classmates. Subdued somewhat by these dark thoughts, I compose my face into a blank mask as Claire parks the car in my brother’s drive, a tight knot squeezing in my stomach. I’m not nervous exactly...just a little disconcerted. You would be too, if you were beginning again. “Ready?” Claire says breezily, smoothing down her rainbow-coloured skirt. I nod, not trusting myself to speak, not even to imitate her. All of a sudden, my knees have gone to jelly, my brass confidence fading away like smoke. My social worker walks briskly up the toy-littered path, carefully sidestepping a pink Princess bike, and reaches with one pointed square nail to press the bell. I have a mad urge to run up and stop her, Matrix-style, but that would be very wrong, obviously. I’ll just stand by the car in dignified silence, freezing out Claire’s patronising banter. This could be any day, any time. I could be coming to see Will and his girlfriend Sarah on a random, spontaneous trip to London. I do it all the time. The trick is not to think of this as something special, and that way the anxiety will die away. I think. I hope. There’s a gentle pause, perhaps the longest of my decade-and-a-half life, and then I hear the sounds of someone tripping down the stairs. The someone crashes down on the last few steps, cursing profusely. A snort bubbles up inside me, and I start to laugh. Will. Of course. A moment later, my brother appears in the doorway, looking just the same as the last time I saw him, on his daughter’s three-year-old birthday a few months ago. His dark, wavy brown hair points upwards in floppy spikes, and his chocolate-brown eyes shine with familiar warmth. His feet are bare, I realise, shaking my head. “Hey, Steph,” he says casually, like this really is just another day. “Sorry for all the swearing. I’m a terrible influence. I stubbed my toe on one of Angel’s used Barbie dolls, and I seem to have forgotten my socks...” “Used Barbie dolls?” I echo uncertainly, aware of how sharp my voice has gone. Will just grins. “Yeah, her latest thing is to give her dolls a Nightmare Makeover, then rip off their heads and toss them down the stairs.” I must look scandalised, because he adds quickly: “But don’t worry, she isn’t dangerous.” I laugh, completely forgetting Claire’s here, which is a bit rude, I guess. Maybe I should introduce her? “Er...this is Claire,” I say grudgingly, gesturing to the awkward-looking blonde woman on my right. “My ‘social worker’.” Will catches the sarcasm, and we share a secret look. “Nice to meet you,” he says amicably, drawing out his hand. Claire accepts, still looking slightly shell-shocked. What did she expect to find? A drunken twenty-something bloke feeding his toddler used matchboxes in a chav estate? I suppose that’s what she’s used to dealing with. But Will’s house is actually really nice – a neat, four-bedroom house with a newly-painted white exterior and golden French windows. They recently moved from a flat (after Will’s promotion and Sarah’s new teaching job) so this house is new to me. I’m glad, though. I’d hate to have crowded their small flat, not with a small child in the house. “Shall we go in?” Claire says presumptuously. We? I was thinking I could leave her at the door, like a milk bottle. Will steps aside to let her in, ignoring my silent groan. “Be nice,” he mouths at me while I’m taking off my shoes. “It’s alright for you to say,” I whisper. “You don’t know what she’s like. I’ve practically had to live with her recently.” Will pulls a face as we enter his living room, giving an understanding smile. “Where’s your partner?” Claire asks – rather nosily, I think, as it’s none of her business – as we sit down on the plush cream sofas. Are they crazy? A light colour with a tearaway three-year-old in the house? These people have no idea. “They’re far too young to settle down and have a family,” Mum had sniffed at the time of Sarah’s pregnancy. A surge of vindication burns in my veins. Look how they’ve proven her wrong. Four years on, Will’s manager at a major food company, and Sarah’s an English teacher at a Secondary school – and they have their own house. I desperately want to tell Mum this, since she flatly refused to join me on the last couple of visits, but I have no way to contact her. She’s in ‘isolation’, apparently. Whatever. “Sarah’s out shopping with our little monster,” Will says cheerfully, not seeming put off by Claire’s bossiness at all. “I told her the stuff you like for meals and whatnot, and she’s gone to restock our shameful fridge.” “She didn’t need to do that,” I say uncomfortably, my voice barely a mumble. Will waves away my discomfort. “She goes every Saturday anyway,” he says. “And Angel needs a raincoat. I usually go with her, but you were coming today, so I got to shirk shopping duties.” He flashes me another grin, and I grin back unthinkingly. Claire watches this exchange thoughtfully, playing with a loose strand of hair. “So this is your annoying, Neanderthal brother, is it?” she says, nudging me. “You said what?” Will says, sitting up and looking at me, mock-outraged. “Don’t mind her – um –” “Claire,” she says. “My name is Claire.” “Yeah, Claire, whoever. She’s always been jealous of me. It’s no wonder she’s been feeding you all this crap. I wash and everything.” I just shake my head, refraining from rolling my eyes. As Will opens his mouth to spout more nonsense, a key turns in the lock, and we all look at each other, strangely unnerved. This is stupid, of course. I know Sarah – she’s like my sister, and Angel’s my niece. Apart from the new development of Barbie head-pulling, she’s actually really sweet – or she’s cute enough to get away with any inherited mischievousness. Will was the same, and people fell for it every time. No wonder he was Mum’s golden boy – until he c***ed it all up by getting Sarah pregnant before they’d graduated. Now he’s just as scorned at as me. I can’t help feeling a tiny bit mollified by this, even though I’m not meant to think evil, hateful thoughts, as lovely Claire keeps reminding me. She’s like my 24/7 conscience, never shutting up. I think that annoying voice of hers will stay in my head long after she’s driven away. I’m not crazy, by the way. I just haven’t been out much recently. If you’d been cooped up with Claire the Care for the whole summer, you’d be cracking up too. I actually can’t wait to start year eleven, just to get a fresh environment.
I help Sarah manoeuvre the pram and the tartan shopping trolley into the kitchen, returning her warm hug and answering her typically babbling questions about my summer and car journey. Both were crap, but I embroider them wildly to show willing. Sarah, like Will, hasn’t changed a bit. Her gingery brown hair falls in the same style as always, loose with a few front strands pinned back, dressed in a pristine cream-coloured trouser suit. I don’t know what I was expecting. Just because life as I know it has twisted on its head, doesn’t mean the same for the rest of the world. Reality is setting in, cold and razor-sharp.
An unexpected blast of childlike colour hugs me round the waist, getting my brand new outfit sticky with flip knows what. I’ll have to get used to it, living with a toddler who might tear my homework to shreds. If I bother doing any. I can always say the niece ate it. This will actually be true.
Angel gazes up at me, melted brown eyes as round as Christmas baubles. “Hi, Seth!” she says, mispronouncing my name with effortless charm and all but dragging me back into the living room, where a curious Claire is observing her.
“Daddy, this is Seth,” she says proudly, like she drove me here herself.
“Yeah, I know,” Will says, taking it all in good humour. He ruffles her startlingly gold curls, looking thankful he doesn’t have to make polite conversation with Claire any longer. I don’t blame him. I had to do the same for three weeks.
Even my tactless social worker seems to realise family life is settling in, and she should, to put it bluntly, beat it. She stands up, smoothing down her creased skirt, looking suddenly out of place, even though she’s been pretty much my only contact with the outside world of late. Even I have to take pity on her.
“See you on your next visit,” I say in airily civilised tones.
“Well. I’m be on my way, if you’re alright here?” she scrambles in her leather skin handbag for something, emerging a heartbeat later with a messily scribbled phone number. “Remember you can call me anytime,” she says, clumsily patting my shoulder.
“Mmm,” I say, shaking off her arm in annoyance and looking down at the cushiony woolly rug. Definitely Sarah’s choice.
With a last infuriating show of her teeth, she finally leaves, being shown out by Will in a last-ditch attempt at hospitality. I crumple the number and stuff it in my combat trousers, where I don’t have to think about it. What makes her think I’ll need to call her? What makes her think she has the right to act like a substitute guardian?
After I’ve helped unpack the shopping, Sarah directs me to my room – second bedroom on the left – and leaves me and my suitcase to it. I glance without animation at the prettily whitewashed walls, waiting to be filled with memories. My eye falls heavily on the thick blue curtains that cloud the room; on the white chest of drawers, the matching wardrobe, the glass Cinderella shoe on the windowsill. I curl up on my new bed, breathing in the scent of just-washed covers. It doesn’t smell of home, of anything. It hasn’t got a smell yet, hasn’t been consumed by the essence of its new owner. Delicate stitching draws up the strawberry-themed duvet, the only suggestion it belongs to me. I take one of Claire’s deep breaths, staring up at the pale, perfect ceiling and trying not to cry.
This new home holds promise, laughter, youth, maybe even happiness. Already a baby seed of hope nestles inside my chest, stupidly daring to imagine a life of strawberries and schoolwork and fun.
You can pack up your life into a worn, wasted brown suitcase, but I have a funny feeling it isn’t that easy to leave the past behind.
I WAKE TO THE STEADY STREAM OF LIGHT SUNSHINE, BLINKING IN THE
sudden brightness that glows through the room. I sit up, a little dazed, and peer around the clean, pretty room. Yesterday may as well have been a dream, but I seem not to have woken up yet. I yawn loudly and stretch my arms, sliding my feet onto the velvety pink carpet. My pocket-sized Mini Mouse alarm clock reads 8:15 a.m., much earlier than I’d usually get up on a Sunday, if I stirred at all before one in the afternoon.
I rummage in my still unpacked suitcase, pulling out a monochrome top and leggings and seizing a pair of black, rebel-style boots that make a satisfying stomp sound as I thunder down the stairs. While I’m waiting for Will and Sarah to make the eggs, I brush fiercely through the night’s tangles and scoop my hair into a high ponytail, flattening my fringe hastily with my fingers. I’m never going to walk the catwalk, let’s face it, but I’ll do.
“Stupid Barbie doll, why won’t your hair plait?” I hear a small voice say from the direction of the staircase. A second later, something comes crashing down the steps, making a deafening thunk as it makes contact with the ground. My eyes narrow, and I follow the sound outside the living room, looking down at the huge, now bald doll head that stares up at me, its eyes huge and glassy. For some reason, the sight of it disturbs me. I remind myself to focus, like damn Claire’s always advising, but I can’t stop a shudder gripping my body, statue-like, in place.
Angel looks down on me from the top of the stairs, hair arranged in little ponytails, her face cherubic. “Hi, Seth,” she says, showcasing her gleaming white smile. “Play hairdressers please?”
No way in actual hell.
“Not if your rejects get their heads pulled off,” I say, but my niece just giggles, not taking me seriously. I sigh and tramp back up the stairs, taking her hand and leading her into the sweet-smelling kitchen, where my brother is shovelling bacon onto egg-laden plates.
“Are you sure that’s safe, Sarah?” I say, wrinkling my nose doubtfully. “I mean, if Will’s been near it, I think I’ll pass...”
“What a cheek!” he says, flicking a burnt piece at me, which I cleverly dodge. “I happen to be an excellent cook now. A lot’s changed since I set off for uni only knowing how to make toast, you know.”
“Yeah, fair enough,” I say, taking the plate he offers me and sitting at the table, moodily scanning through the news app on my phone. Earthquake this, conflict that...why is the world so depressing?
Fifteen minutes later, weighed down by umbrellas, we’re ready to go...to buy my brilliant-sounding uniform. Astoundingly, without even consulting my opinion, Claire has steamrolled on ahead and chosen a school for me. What is it with these people, thinking they know best all the time? This school sounds really lame, too – some sort of day private school called Cloverfield High, excellent reputation, good grade percentiles, ‘Outstanding’ Ofsted report, blah blah blah...
I mean, who cares that 86% of their students scored A*-C grades in their Maths and English GCSEs? I feel a stab of evilness at the thought I might just rock up and dent that impressive record. Maybe they’ll kick me out and destroy my envelope of results in the shredder. It’s just as well, really, because I haven’t had time to concentrate much on schoolwork. I scraped through my year ten exams, but year eleven’s the final GCSE year, and I have loads of catching up to do. In fact, that’s another thing my social worker lumped me with – doing extra work to make sure I’m ‘fully prepared to begin an exciting routine at my new school’. What a laugh I’ve had these summer holidays, eh?
And the fun will clearly continue at Cloverfield. What can I say, the future looks bright.
Eventually, I’m kitted out in a smart pearly blouse, a grey pleated skirt deliberately a size too small (because the school rules say knee-length only) and a hideous matching blazer, probably made of tweed. Gross. I hate it already. If that wasn’t enough, allegedly I’m to wear a pair of cloppy black patent shoes straight out of an Enid Blyton novel. With the small clicking noise they make, I may as well be little Noddy. Great. Now I’ll be bullied. That’s just what I need. Oh well. Nothing I haven’t dealt with before. I didn’t even have any friends at my last school, not really. There was this one girl – Eugenia or something – I struck up a brief, pair-work themed friendship with, but that doesn’t count. We were just thrown together out of social necessity. The only personal question she ever asked me was about my mum, to which my answer was ‘bitch’. You can guess the question.
“It looks great,” Sarah says encouragingly. “Really...neat.”
“It’s disgusting,” I say flatly. The shop assistant chances a glance at me, looking harassed. “But we’ll have to take it, if it’s school policy.”
“Cheer up, it isn’t all bad,” Will says as Sarah stops Angel from pulling off a button on a school shirt. “At least you’re only in uniform for another year – less, really, since the year elevens are off when the exams finish in mid-June.”
“Yes, whoopee,” I say quietly, with just the amount of falsity Will’s statement deserves.
When we’ve bought the – thing – and marched out of the shop, ‘we’ decide to head to this old American-esque milkshake bar, owing to Angel’s whining about being hungry, thirsty, and on the point of sleepdom.
Will pushes the menu towards me, and reluctantly I order my favourite strawberry milkshake, as well as a medium-size steak burger hastily stuffed with bits of salad and grilled cheese. I’m just getting stuck in when Angel decides to sick up her vanilla milkshake. I told them she’d only chuck it up again, what with all the milk and the busy excitement of the day. My stomach turns over, and to get away from the stench of reeking orange bile, I volunteer to fetch a wad of napkins, slowly breathing through my nose. It’s fine, fine, just a bit of vomit, I tell myself sternly. Don’t be such a baby. I can’t help it. I’ve never been able to stand the sight of someone throwing up. It’s right up there with my fear of heights and poisonous spiders, seriously.
To my intense irritation, I find the way to the napkins blocked by a group of seven teenagers, all looking about my age. Four girls and three boys. The first is a pretty mixed-race girl with blonde-brown curls, tutting at a laughing boy with dazzling ginger hair, who has a milkshake straw stuck up his nose. Next to him, a boy with tousled, wavy black hair sits close to a stunning girl with waist-length blonde hair, while the pink-cheeked girl next to her lets out a long sigh and runs her eyes down her silver phone. The two last teenagers stare at me as I clear my throat, one a girl with light-brown skin and freckles, the other a dark-skinned boy with chiselled cheekbones. A bout of nervousness steals over my skin as gradually, they all stop what they’re doing to gaze at me. It’s been a while since I’ve been near the company of kids my age, to tell you the truth.
“You guys are kind of blocking my way to the napkins,” I say quickly, before the silence can drag on. The ginger-haired boy chokes on the milkshake and spits out the crazy straw, while I stare, partially revolted, partially fascinated.
“Sorry, but our table’s right in front of it, and we can’t exactly shift it,” the gorgeous blonde girl says, her model-like pink lips curved into a cold smirk. An instant feeling of dislike ripples through me.
“Well you could just pass me a napkin,” I say icily, and the black-haired boy next to her grins at the snappy tone to my voice.
“Gee, why didn’t we think of that?” he says, stretching an arm lazily across the chair of the bitchy girl. “C’mon, Maisy, don’t be mean.”
The girl just huffs and shakes off his arm irritably. “Whatever. I didn’t mean to be rude, but you could just use the toilets rather than bothering our table.”
My eyes flash as I glare at her, my jaw tight. “If you’d just passed me some damn napkins in the first place, I wouldn’t even still be here, you stupid bimbo.”
There’s a shocked gasp as I lean right over her to snatch some napkins, not troubling to stop my arm from elbowing her in my haste. The others titter, aside from the girl, Maisy, and her pink-cheeked friend, who give me glowering looks. To my horror, my stupid new Cloverfield badge spills out of my pocket and lands with a dramatic splat in the ginger boy’s ice-cream float.
“Hey, do you go to our school?” he says, perking up with interest. “Haven’t seen you before.”
“Schools are pretty big,” I say stonily. “I’m sure there’re several people you haven’t seen before.” Idiot, I think to myself.
To my surprise, the mixed-race girl next to him sniggers at this. “Actually, we have about fifteen people to a year group, literally,” she says, stirring her milkshake with her straw. “I actually think we would have seen you.”
“Really?” I say, raising my eyebrows. What kind of freak school am I starting at? “Well, you’re right, as it happens,” I add to the flame-haired boy. “I’m starting next week. Year eleven.”
Great. Trust me to start animosity among my brand-new group of classmates in a year group with fifteen people. I knew it. I am going to have no friends. I mean, these people are most of my new class.
“I knew it!” says the ginger boy excitedly, ignoring the rolled eyes of his curly-haired companion. “I’m Ollie, by the way. Welcome to class 11A.”
“Can’t wait,” I say sarcastically, my eyes travelling over Maisy, who returns my cool look with a dark stare.
“We’re not so bad, really,” the black-haired boy says, laughing at my incredulous expression. “Sit down, I’ll introduce you to everyone.”
“I’m actually meant to be cleaning up that mess,” I say, nodding towards the table where Will and Sarah sit – already being assisted by one of the staff. Whoops. I must have taken too long, thanks to these guys.
I have no option but to slide in beside the mixed-race girl, who introduces herself as Mi-Mi. I prefer being on the end. I don’t think I could resist scratching out Maisy’s eyeballs otherwise.
“Well, you know me, Ollie and Maisy’s names,” Mi-Mi says, smiling at me. “And that’s all the names worth knowing really – hey!” she ducks as the dark-haired boy chucks a – get this – napkin at her.
“You absolute bastards,” I say, trying not to look as shocked as I feel. “You had bloody napkins of your own the whole time.”
There’s a long silence – then we all burst out laughing.
“It’s not funny,” I say, even though it kind of is. “I hate you all.”
“Well, you’re stuck with us now,” Mi-Mi says fairly. “Anyway, you know me, Ollie and Maisy, so-” She gestures to the pink-cheeked girl. “Introduce yourself, then,” she says commandingly. I can’t repress a smile.
“I’m Hannah,” the girl all but spits out.
“Wait a minute, you completely left me out,” the black-haired boy says in an annoyed voice.
Mi-Mi and I exchange conspiratorial looks. “Oh, I meant to,” she says unkindly.
“Well, I’m Smith – Damien Smith,” he says, looking offended.
“I’m sorry, but who do you think you are, agent 007?” I say scathingly. “The name’s Bond – James Bond.”
Vengeance is sweet, I think as the group chuckle at his expense. Serves him right for withholding the napkins.
The last two members of the group announce their names at last – Rihanne and Zac – and there’s an uncalled for fuss as everyone realises they don’t even know my name. See what I mean? Idiots.
“It’s Steph,” I say, disappointed I couldn’t make up a really strange one on the spot. “Short for Stephanie, as you might have gue-”
We all look up to see Sarah and Will coming over at last, holding hands with a pale-looking Angel. Double whoops. They must be wondering what the hell I’m doing. I’m wondering, actually.
“We really need to get home,” Sarah says apologetically. “It’s not just the milkshake – I think she’s got a tummy bug.”
While everyone’s busy cooing over my niece, I stand up, grabbing my dripping badge back from Ollie, who is now attempting to force two milkshake straws up one nostril. Delightful.
“Wait a sec,” Mi-Mi says as I start to follow Will and Sarah out. “Phone.”
“What?” I say.
“Give me your phone,” she says, seeming to lose patience and seizing it from my pocket. “I’m giving you our numbers, stupid,” she adds, seeing my startled face.
“Right,” I say, catching the phone when she thrusts it at me. “See you next week, then.”
I’m greeted by a chorus of ‘byes’ as I finally depart, excluding Maisy and Hannah, who give me nice friendly scowls. I scowl back and flounce out of the milkshake bar, head held so high I knock into a cross-looking middle-aged man in a suit.
“Sorry,” I say, making it clear I’m not sorry at all. Distantly, I hear the dark-haired boy, Damien or whatever, laughing at me. I ignore him and let the door whip shut behind me.
Well, today I’ve managed to make five new friends and two enemies. I think I’d call that a successful initiation into Cloverfield’s elite.
Weird.
*
“Steph, hurry up, we’re going to be late!”
Dismissing my brother’s hurried tones, I continue brushing down my fringe, deciding to leave my hair loose this time. I peer at my face critically, wishing I’d got more sleep. Shadows under eyes – check. Pale skin – check. Brilliant. I hesitate over my make-up bag. I don’t usually go in for all that. Somehow, it makes me look even younger than I do in my more natural state, like a little kid dressing up. I huff at myself and settle for a slicked-on glimmer of strawberry-flavoured lip gloss, leaving the rest of me au natural. I don’t need to go round like some drag act like that Maisy does, anyway, I say spitefully to myself, even though she’s miles ahead from me in the pretty stakes. Who needs looks, anyway? I will be a successful career woman, eternally single and rich, and they’ll call me...
“Steph, get your lazy arse downstairs! Do you want to make a bad first impression or what?”
“Alright, alright, keep your pants on,” I say, slinging my reindeer rucksack across one shoulder and stepping into my ugly black shoes. “I’m coming.”
I trip down the stairs, humming faintly, to see Will already ready to leave, a sleepy-looking Angel with him.
“I’ve taken the day off work,” Will says, seeing my stare. “Since Sarah’s only just started her new job, and Angel has this tummy bug thing...”
“I hope she doesn’t throw up on my head teacher,” I say, alarmed, as my niece rubs her eyes with a tiny yawn.
“You’re all heart, you,” Will says, unlocking the door. After a pause he reaches into his pocket and tosses me a spare set of keys. ”I forgot to give it to you on Saturday. You’ll need your own now, obviously.”
I catch the silver key, zipping it up with my spare change, phone, oyster card (free travel on the bus) and lip gloss, the four things I can’t live without. Well, OK, that’s a lie, but excluding food and water and all that.
“Technically, I’m not actually starting today, am I?” I say anxiously as I hurry after them to get to the garage.
“No,” Will says shortly, pressing a button. The door to the garage falls down as if in slow motion, and I watch it, transfixed. “It’s just a quick meeting with Ms Tavern so she can give you a customary welcoming speech and your new timetable. I expect you’ll be starting tomorrow, though, so don’t get too comfy.”
I’m not even listening. I’m pointing, horrified, at the monstrous object in front of me. I can see it with my very eyes, but I don’t believe it, not yet. Standing in front of me is a bright, shiny red sports car that gleams a sinister silver as it catches the early morning light.
“What is that?” I say in a choked voice.
“My sports car,” Will says in exaggerated tones. “What else?”
“You’re not taking me to school in that monster!” The bird-like screech that tumbles out of my mouth doesn’t even sound like me. I’m sure even the old man in No.6’s shed can hear me.
“Yes I am,” Will says jovially. “A problem?”
“A problem?” I repeat squeakily. “A problem? Only that you’re about to cause the most embarrassing scene at my new school ever.”
“Grow up, no one will care what I drive,” my brother says ignorantly, patting the car like it has feelings. He doesn’t get it at all.
“Angel can’t go in that, it’s too fast,” I try again, gesturing to their much more friendly-looking black family car in the corner. I jerk my thumb desperately. “Let’s go in that instead.”
“No way, this baby’s begging for a spin,” Will says, opening the car door. “Get in. We’re late.”
I give a whimper and scuttle into the back of the car with Angel, strapping her into her booster seat. “If we die, it’s Daddy’s fault,” I say in a hiss as the engine roars to life.
In a whoosh, we’re up and away, breezing through the suburban lanes in terrifying speed and silence, my heart thudding wildly the entire time. After an age, the car comes to a halt, parking in front of what has to be the greyest, smallest, flattest school on the planet. Peering out, I can even see bars on their windows. I knew it. It’s a prison.
I get out, legs shaking, and take Angel’s hand to steady myself lest any milling students notice. There’re only a few early birds here, since it’s a Monday morning and registration isn’t until 8.45 a.m., or so I’m told.
We step into the main building and are promptly told to wait outside by the headmistress’ haughty-looking secretary, Miss Green or something boring like that. Will raps his fingers annoyingly on the coffee table while I listlessly flick through pages of a crappy school magazine, looking pitifully down at my fellow students’ pathetic efforts at professionalism. I mean, my baby niece could draw better, no offence.
I’m just about to look around for a radiator to burn the magazine at the stake on when I hear an amused cough in front of me. I look up, arching my eyebrows, to see Damien Smith, the idiot from the cafe, choosing a seat on my right. Probably best. Seated to the left, Will gives him daggers for daring to talk to me. Honestly. He thinks he’s so modern with all his high-tech stuff, but he is really backwards sometimes. He probably believes in arranged marriages and everything.
“Got bored and decided to do some spying?” I say snippily.
“Actually, I have an official appointment,” he says. “Why else would I be here so early?”
“I don’t know, maybe you’re a model student.”
“Maybe I am, without the student bit.”
My eyebrows practically shoot into my fringe. “Well, I can see modesty’s one of your virtues.”
The boy grins at me, green eyes glittering with self-confidence. “Yep, you’ve found me out,” he says buoyantly, not seeming irked by my sulky tone. How annoying.
“Don’t you have something else to do, besides get on my nerves?” I say, smacking the magazine back on the pile and selecting another – dated about two years ago, but who cares?
“I told you, I have an appointment. Are you starting today?”
“No.”
I turn a page in the magazine, landing on, to my chagrin, ‘Fifty Shades of Sex Toys’.
“What are you reading?” he says inquisitively, looking over my shoulder. OK, now I want to die. “Nice taste,” he tells me with a trademark smirk. “Didn’t know you were into-”
I hit his arm. “Shut up now. Older brother, remember?” I whisper.
“Sorry, sorry,” he says, but he doesn’t lose the knowing grin. I don’t believe in murder as a rule, but just sometimes...
The door to the office opens, sparing me a criminal record, and Miss Green calls in a prim little voice: “Stephanie Collins and co., Ms Tavern will see you now.”
How mysterious. Is Ms Tavern, like, some slitheen who’ll zip open her forehead to reveal a fat, slimy creature who farts spontaneously...?
Maybe.
“Wish me luck,” I say heavily, getting up.
“Break a leg, princess,” he says with a low laugh at my half stressed, half hostile face.
“Call me that again and I’ll get Will’s old pocket knife and slice off your-”
“Come on, Steph,” Will says impatiently, face unusually stern. “We don’t want to keep Ms Tavern waiting, do we?”
“No,” I say, shooting the boy a dirty look and storming after my brother.
I take a moment to look around the surprisingly small office, at the gold-lined photo frames that present nerdy, perfect students with their 1st place trophies and straight, teeth-baring smiles. Show-offs.
Ms Tavern herself is sitting gravely in a massive, The Apprentice-type chair, her painfully tight black hair scraped back into a high bun, her small eyes piercingly black and hawk-like. I stumble over an abandoned, fist-sized piece of paper on the otherwise immaculate carpet – something she probably threw down in a temper or something. Ms Tavern’s eyes sweep over me, apparently unimpressed at my attempts to journey my way to my seat. Oops.
Angel looks at the strange, icy woman, wide-eyed, thumb in her mouth. I give her a reassuring squeeze on her sticky hand (she’s just had a lollipop to keep her quiet in the waiting room, even though she’s supposedly ill) just as my new headmistress starts to speak.
“Well, Stephanie,” she says in a serious, pointed voice. “Welcome to Cloverfield High. I hope you will-”
It’s at this moment that I begin to drown out her completely false speech. If she can’t even be bothered to sound sincere, then why should I be obliged to listen?
Exactly.
And I seem to remember Will asking them to add ‘Steph’ along with my full name on the register, so teachers know how to refer to me. Witch. She may as well call me by my surname – Collins, if you’re interested.
“So, any questions?” she says brusquely, looking like the first person to ask her one will be struck down with her secret staff. (The one she keeps hidden under the desk, obviously).
“No,” I say loudly, cutting across Will’s ‘yes’.
“Well,” my headmistress snaps. “Is there a question or not?”
“No?” I say meekly, glancing at my brother, who shrugs, defeated.
“Here you are then,” she hands me a plastic-bound planner with my Week One and Week Two timetable helpfully stuck in by her secretary, presumably. I take it, thanking her with about as much sincerity as she showed me, and stick it in my bag, deliberately placing it next to my slightly open water bottle.
“I expect to see you on the school grounds before 8.45 tomorrow,” she says, giving me the full power of her eagle-eyes.
I squirm uncomfortably, hatching a sneaky plan to turn up at 8.45 at night, and then say confusedly the next day: “Sorry, Ms, I must’ve mixed up the time.”
The trouble is, I value my life too much.
I say goodbye to the Wicked Bitch of the Cloverfield West, banging the door ‘accidentally’ on my way out. Instinct tells me I am not going to get on with that woman. Oh well. She was hardly Claire the Care, despairingly labelling herself my friend, was she? In fact, I think she almost wants to hate me. Snobby vulture-faced cow.
“Wish me luck,” Damien says as I’m about to leave, and a villainous feeling crawls up my spine. You have no idea how monumental this is. I’ve been dying for someone to say that to me ever since I watched The Devil Wears Prada, just so I can respond:
“Shan’t,” I say loftily, and turn on my heel, the main door skimming my thick shoes as it shuts.
I am so embarrassing sometimes.
I UNFOLD MY PRISSILY ARRANGED TIMETABLE WITH SLIGHTLY
trembling fingers, ignoring the fierce hammering of my heart against my ribs. It’s only a school, for goodness’ sake. I mean, I’ve been institutionalised basically my whole life, so what am I so afraid of? Besides, the school’s tiny, and I already know about half of my classmates, and they seem...OK, aside from Maisy and her pig-cheeked lapdog. I grind my teeth at the thought of them. I’m not the brightest spark at keeping the peace, but if I’m going to be forced to be in their humble company should I want to hang onto my new friends, I’ll have to find some way to get along with them. This is precisely what I had to do with Claire, and she’s pretty fooled I’m not a total headcase. I know better.
My eyes run despairingly down ‘Week One – Tuesday’. History, first period, followed by science, then drama, then double maths. Can you imagine? Why do I have such rotten luck? Double maths at the end of the day. I knew the universe was on my side. I knew it.
“Hey, it’s the porn star!”
I look up coldly to see Damien sauntering towards me, accompanied by Mi-Mi and Ollie, to my relief. I check the time on my phone – 8.30 exactly. Most students seem to arrive around this time. I internally (if savagely) send a wish to the world to break down Maisy’s bus, smudge her make-up and make her late, just so I can see her face when she gets detention. Since, you know, apparently tardiness is the equivalent of genocide at Cloverfield. I wouldn’t know.
“Stop calling me that,” I say, glaring into his laughing green eyes.
“Technically, I called you it once, so you can hardly tell me to ‘stop’,” he says, unperturbed by my rudeness. “Not my fault yoau’re into hard porn, but whatever floats your moat, I suppose.”
Does criticism fly over his big stupid head, or what?
I turn to Mi-Mi and Ollie, deciding it best not to respond and hence fuel his idiocy further. “I’m guessing with fifteen people in the year, we have the same timetable?” I say, fingering the one still clutched in my hand.
“Sixteen, now you’re here,” Mi-Mi says automatically, like corrections are natural to her. Probably are. I didn’t get a good look to see if she was one of the stars of Ms Tavern’s Hall of Nerds, but she seems the type, in the best possible way.
“Double maths?” Ollie says tragically. “If I were you, I’d bunk the first day.”
Mi-Mi shoots him a look that could kill poison. “Oliver Evans, this is her first day here,” she says bossily.
“So?” he says uncomprehendingly.
“So fifty percent of the company here are complete jerks,” she says, tossing a shiny curl over one shoulder.
“Bad luck, Steph,” Damien says, winking at me. “But, hey, I’m sure she’ll get used to you in the end...”
“I meant you,” Mi-Mi says nastily, hooking an arm through mine. “C’mon, let’s get away from these losers.”
“No, don’t goooooo,” Ollie says, clutching his chest as if it can’t bear the strain. “I’ll do better next time Ms Tavern, I promise...”
Firmly, Mi-Mi tugs me away, leading me to an ominously far edge of the school grounds, still not losing the irritable expression.
“Um, if you’ve lured me here to murder me, can you save it for double maths?” I say wearily.
“Are you blind or something?” Mi-Mi says, digging my side. “Look up.”
I do as she says (hey, the effect is catching) – and take a step back, staggered. Rihanne and Zac are sitting casually in the tree branches, crunching on apples. Identically, they smile at the shocked face I wear.
“Hey, Steph. Happy first morning?” Zac says flippantly.
“Slow down a second,” I say, calming my racing breaths. “Let me get this straight. You want to have a normal conversation with me – up a tree?”
“Yeah, what’s the problem?” he says, dark eyes lighting with amusement. “This is standard protocol. You’ll get used to it.”
“When you fall and die, don’t come crying to me,” I say weakly.
Mi-Mi laughs at this, looking at them reprovingly. “I’ve tried telling them,” she says. “But they don’t listen. You won’t catch me up there, though, don’t worry.”
“Well, you wouldn’t want to ruin your head-girl-ship, would you?” Zac says sardonically, taking another bite out of his pale green apple.
“Wait, you’re Head Girl?” I say, taken aback.
Mi-Mi nods. “’Fraid so. If you want to get into Cambridge, you have to make personal sacrifices.”
I blink.
“Want a leg-up?” Rihanne says cheerily, curly ponytails held up with thick red hair bobbles, a perfect girlish contrast with her light, dotted freckles.
“The bell’s about to ring,” Mi-Mi tells her with a roll of her eyes. “Honestly. Is it Corrupt the New Girl day or something?”
I’m beginning to think so.
Nonetheless, I allow myself to be hoisted up through the autumn leaves, looking around in wonderment as though I’ve just discovered the Faraway Tree. I bloody loved the Faraway Tree growing up.
“This is so weird,” I say, finding to my astonishment that the soft moss and roomy space make it quite comfortable living. As I speak, a branch crackles, and I give the smallest of small starts. Maybe not that small.
“Jumpy or what?” Zac says, entertained. “It’s alright, you’re not about to fall.”
“How would you know?” I say with a note of challenge.
He gives a nonchalant quirk of the eyebrows. “’Cos I spend every school morning up here, that’s why,” he says. “And look down – it isn’t even that far.”
“I can’t look down,” I say quickly. “In films, they always say ‘don’t look down’.” I give him an accusing stare. “Are you trying to kill me?”
“Not another crackpot murder theory,” Mi-Mi says, her voice slightly distant above the chirping of our neighbouring birds. “I swear, Steph, you watch too much Sherlock.” (This affronts me a little – what’s wrong with watching too much Sherlock?)
Unwittingly, I look down to answer her, gulping. We are several feet in the air. Zac is a liar. If I fall, I die. This is hardly fair. I’m not even sixteen yet. There’s a rulebook, surely, about how much misfortune one person can suffer?
Or not, in my sorry case.
“I’ll have you know it’s not crackpot,” I say with dignity. “For all I knew...in fact, for all I know...I was led to a quiet corner of the school, lured up a tree...and kidnapped!”
They just snigger at me, refusing to answer, which only confirms what I know.
“I’m getting down,” I say unsteadily.
“Er, can you get down?” says Rihanne with a stifled giggle.
“Point taken,” I say, folding my arms stubbornly. “Well, you two got me into this mess – you’ll just have to get me out.”
“How do you propose that we do that?” Zac says idly. “Push you or what?”
At that moment, the bell begins to ring, as shrill and harpy as Ms Tavern herself. I have a little giggle myself at the thought of my headmistress’ face if she could see me now.
Lateness must be a serious issue here, though, because Zac and Rihanne begin giving me quickfire instructions on how to slowly slide myself to safety, and mercifully, I manage to do it with shut eyes. And that’s it. I’m back on solid ground. I’m free.
Mi-Mi gives me a quizzical look as the four of us are striding into the gloomy building. “If you’re scared on heights, why on earth did you agree to be hauled up?”
“I have no idea,” I say honestly. “I just do things sometimes, think later, you know.”
My form tutor turns out to be far removed from the towering nightmare of my imagination. She’s small and softly spoken, with long, lank hair and rosy cheeks, whether from inbred heartiness or stress, I can’t tell.
“So...Steph,” she says, just about recalling my name. Brownie points for not using my full one. “Welcome to class 11A!”
“I already used that line,” comes a jolly-sounding voice.
We whirl round to see Ollie stomping in, raising his eyebrows at our form tutor. “You want to get more original,” he adds helpfully.
“Right,” she says, flustered, looking all of a sudden like one of those young, desperately keen teachers on Educating Yorkshire. “Well, I see you’ve already met some of your classmates, Steph.”
“Looks like it,” I say pityingly. “Um...Miss...”
“Preacher,” she says breathlessly. “Miss Preacher.”
“Yes,” I say, leaving a deliberate pause. “Well...where should I sit?”
‘Miss Preacher’ looks round, considering. Honestly – this isn’t Deal or No Deal. “Next to Damien,” she says at last, and I groan.
“Really, Miss? I think it’s better if I sit elsewhere...” I flounder slightly as the oddity himself strolls in, maddeningly still smiling. Is he made of freaking rubber or what?
“Come on, Steph, don’t be like that,” he says mockingly. “I can be your tour buddy and everything.”
“What an excellent idea,” Miss Preacher says, beaming.
I look at Mi-Mi, appealing for support.
“Miss, I think it’s better if the new girl’s taken into my hands,” she says. “Er – as Head Girl, I’m clearly better experienced.” She looks hard at Damien, daring him to disagree. I have the feeling she’d make a killer lawyer.
“What’s all this fuss about?”
I turn and groan again at the sickening sight that greets my eyes. Maisy Dawn a.k.a. The Bimbo, is wandering in, dressed in a dangerously short skirt and tacky (if I say so myself) fishnet tights, somehow managing to pull off sexy in school uniform. Her crisp blue eyes gleam as she takes in the arguments in front of her. They seem to diminish in my mind as she curls her lip, reducing the debate to silly and immature, a preschool feat. If Damien’s rubber, she’s a hoover, I think rather lamely. Hatred courses through my veins, and that’s saying something, because I am a very forgiving person. Very forgiving.
“Seriously, Stephanie, it’s just a form seat,” she says maliciously, her tone charmingly light. “You’ll be in here twice for what – ten, fifteen minutes? In a twenty-four hour day, that’s half an hour or less.” She exchanges a catty look with her friend Hannah, who has her hair in lumpy pigtails, and is once again poring over her phone. What’s so interesting, I wonder randomly.
There’s a silence. I look to my lawyer for a suitable comeback, conveying a death stare to Maisy at the same time. Everyone knows wise clients look to their lawyers to defend them, not cheaply argue like hoodrats themselves. Any other time, though, I’d tear her down, from her stupid blonde hair to her tottery black heels. But seeing as I’ve just met my form tutor, it would probably be best not to kick up a riot. I don’t think her nerves can stand another shattering, to be honest. Call it my good deed.
“No one asked for your opinion, Dawn,” Mi-Mi says bluntly, burning a hole in the girl’s made-up face. “So kindly shut up your cheap little gob. Anyway, Miss Preacher, it seems obvious Steph shouldn’t be left to the incompetent hands of Damien Smith and his sad little sidekick.” She grins at me, satisfied. I guess Maisy gets under her skin, too, even though they go round in the same group. This is good news if I’m to stage an uprising. Excellent news, in fact.
During this battle, Damien keeps darting quick, amused looks at me, as if to say: All this fuss over us? I’m flattered! He actually does mouth this at one point, and I suppress a smile with difficulty. Determinedly, I black him out from my line of vision as much as I can, but as this means examining Maisy’s white-tipped pink nails, it turns out to be a grim, grim task.
“Well, all this arguing has clearly been very productive, children-” Miss Preacher begins to say, but I cut her off swiftly.
“How?” I say.
“What?” my teacher says, seeming flabbergasted.
I look round at the others. “How in the world has this mess been productive?”
“Well – I – ” she turns a curious shade of puce. “Well – I –”
Across the room, Damien shakes his head at me, eyes twinkling.
“Oh, is that the time?” I say abruptly, looking at the big green clock. “Sorry, Miss, got to go – I don’t want to be late for my first lesson, after all.”
“Of – of course,” she says, and a prickle of guilt pierces my skin. “Well...um...who wants to show Steph to History class?”
“I’ll do it,” Mi-Mi and Damien say at the same time.
“Either one of you!” our form tutor says hysterically. “Anyone, I don’t care, just get to class!”
We scurry out. I’m half expecting her to say ‘please’.
“Steph, hold up,” Damien I-can’t-seem-to-get-the-message Smith says brightly, falling into step beside me. “Don’t you want to know the room number?”
“From you? No thanks,” I say scornfully, skipping to catch up with Mi-Mi and Ollie and blowing my fringe out of eyelash-range.
“So, what’s the room number?” I say as they take in my flushed, I-just-escaped-from-the-madhouse face.
“Er – room 112,” Mi-Mi says heavily. “It’s Tuesday morning, but it feels like Friday afternoon, already...”
“Tell me about it,” I say moodily. “And it’s my first day.”
They give me sympathetic looks, and somehow I feel a tiny bit better. OK, so I got off to a dodgy start, but maybe it won’t be so bad, I delude myself into thinking. I don’t think I could get through my first lesson with any other mindset, to tell the truth.
-
*
By break time, my resolve is starting to crumble to dust. My right hand aches from writing, my throat’s sore from answering unexpected questions, and my head’s whirring madly with new information. So this is what school feels like. I’d forgotten, having had the long, secluded summer break.
In a resigned sort of way, I pull out a Nature Valley cereal bar, my taste buds coming to life as I bite into the oats and honey. I was too keyed up this morning to eat, and my stomach churns with gnawing hunger and anticipation.
“So, how’ve your first lessons been?” Mi-Mi says with a kind of forced breeziness. The tired shadows under her alert hazel eyes pretty much shape up how I feel.
“Lousy,” I say, immediately regretting my words when her and Ollie look slightly crestfallen. “But...apart from that...great.”
Neither looks convinced. I open my mouth to try again, but am thoughtlessly interrupted by the mistimed arrival of Maisy and Damien, who are holding hands. The image of them makes me want to vomit twice over, and you know how I feel about vomiting.
“A lousy day just got worse,” I say tersely, not troubling to keep my voice down. Mi-Mi smirks at my boldness.
“Do any of you guys have a protractor?” Maisy says, fanning her face with her maths book.
“Buy one,” I say testily. “Reception desk’s over there.” I throw her a what-they-say and what-they-mean look: as in, get lost.
She stops fanning herself, her eyes contracting. “Excuse me?”
I give a long, inflated exhale of breath. “The reception desk,” I say patiently, pointing like I’m talking to a small child. “Right over there. You see the sign spelling out ‘Reception Desk’ in big black letters? That building.”
Mi-Mi, Ollie and Damien chortle with laughter.
“Well, thank you for that help,” Maisy says curtly, whipping her head round to address Damien. “Let’s go, then.”
As they start walking away, I dig in my bag for something, then call out: “Wait – I think I have one after all.”
They turn back disbelievingly.
“Here you are,” I say in a sing-song voice, slinging it into her confounded hands. “Enjoy.”
The three of us fall about laughing as they traipse away, Damien pausing long enough to look right into my vengeful eyes. Then they’re gone.
“You’re still not over those napkins, are you?” Ollie says, wiping his eyes.
My left shoulder rises casually. “What do you think?”
By the time I get home, I’m exhausted. I spent the entire double maths session sandwiched awkwardly between Maisy and Damien, who kept murmuring unrepeatable nothings to each other. The maths teacher, a stern, upright man straight out of the ’40s, insisted there was nowhere else to sit (like I believed that) – and besides, I could separate the bad influence of my canoodling peers. Lovely. Another thing I’d forgotten – algebra will be the death of me, seriously. Everyone knows letters are for English lessons – why introduce them to maths too? It’s something I’ve never understood. I know my times table, I know how to add and subtract and multiply and divide, so what else do I need? I don’t want be a flipping mathematician.
“Be that as it may, Miss Collins,” Mr Rogers had said without a flicker of humour. “But unless you want to be a homeless nobody, I suggest you get your maths GCSE.”
I had just gulped. Point taken. Make that point annihilated.
“Cheer up,” Damien had said. “You can’t win them all.”
The memory of it still sends a blaze of fury through my head.
Using words even I shouldn’t know, I catch my damn black shoes on something heavy as I’m shutting the door. Over my fit of pique, I glance without interest at the thick white envelope. No Hogwarts logo. I knew that.
I’m about to throw it down with the rest of the dreary old bills when something catches my eye. The writing. It looks like...
No. No. That shaky, curled writing could be anybody’s. Then I see something else that weakens my thought process. A small, almost indistinguishable daisy chain has been linked up the corner of the crumpled envelope, delicately painted with rose pink and yellow and white.
It is. It is her.
I GAZE FIXEDLY DOWN AT THE CHIRPY, FANCY WRITING, TENTATIVE,
maybe even a little bit scared. Do I read it, or toss it straight in the bin, where it belongs?
I bite my lip. It couldn’t hurt to just see...could it? I don’t know.
The very glimpse of it, the glimpse of her, is enough to make it all come flooding back. The hazy nights spent sitting at the windowsill, waiting, a book in hand, a stone cold mug of hot chocolate in the other. The way she would be perched on the ruined green sofa when I came home from school, staring into nothingness, into a void I couldn’t see. I had to sit with her, hold her hand, talk her back to the present, and eventually her dead eyes would light with life, and she would smile and shake back her beautiful hair...
“I just dozed off for a moments,” she’d say, and ever the dutiful daughter, I’d believe her. “What’s the time, sweetie?”
I’d have done anything for her back then. Anything at all. With dad gone, it was the two of us, against everything, against everyone. I had no friends, no life outside her, but that didn’t matter.
She wasn’t crazy all the time. Some days we’d lie down for the whole day in our matching gingham pyjamas, trawling through our vast collection of DVDs, licking strawberry and peanut ice cream. Looking back, she was bloody obsessed with DVDs. They had to be ordered by preference – her preference – and if we had an odd number, she’d grab her woolly scarlet coat, still in her pyjamas, and rush out to buy another. Occasionally it was a good investment, so I tried not to mind, even when her mascara cascaded in spidery lines down her cheeks, even when her mouth was set in a grave, thin line and she didn’t want to smile anymore.
And then our bubble smashed to glass. They took me away, they took her away, and I was so angry...
My fingers reach for the envelope and tear down a corner, destroying the pretty chain of daises. A small parcel and a letter. Which do I open first?
The letter.
Impassive, immobile, I start to read:
Steph,
They’ve shut me up in the madhouse, like I told you they would. Not much happens, except the little daily pills and the incessant screaming. It’s like a jail sentence. I’m not exactly mad, am I? Not like them.
Colourful, your father used to say. What’s wrong with that? Why can’t they appreciate my artistic genius? Anyway, I didn’t write to complain. I wrote to see how you are.
Firstly, sorry you got made to stay with Will and that girlfriend of his. The child must keep you up half the night. Not like you. You were this tiny, quiet baby, more grown-up than I was even then. It seems incredible my tuft-haired, beautiful little angel is this strong, capable teenager now. I know school’s a drag, but I hope you’re settling in OK and making friends etc.
I’ve just had a brilliant idea. I know I’m ‘in isolation’ (so that bitch-faced nurse keeps telling me) but you have to come to see me. I know I’m meant to be going not-crazy here, but I’m more mental now than I was before, shut up in this place. You have to get me out.
Please?
Love Mum xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.
I stare at the xs until the letters run with my blurred tears. I wipe them away, furious.
I can see now that if I thought I’d steeled myself against everything, against her, I was wrong.
She wants to see me. The question is, do I want to see her? I could just bury this under my floorboards, tell Will and Sarah nothing about it, carry on as normal...
But something stops me. The real question is, what am I doing here? Making friends, making enemies, settling into a school routine...it...none of it makes sense. An old, long dead feeling rises inside me. I should be with her. That’s where I should be. Not here.
I must’ve been as crazy as her to think I could build up a new life here. What was I thinking?
My eyes go as wide as saucers as I see the scribbled P.S.: Address on back. Mum has a plan – and it seems pretty clear. She wants me to rescue her. So I will.
*
Packing again doesn’t take long. Most of my clothes, all my things, are still shut in the suitcase I set off in. I look for a moment at my ragged, one-eyed teddy bear, torn. Am I really doing this? Am I really just going to take off and leave Sarah and Will in the lurch?
My fingers scrape into my wooden desk as I think. Inspiration strikes like wildfire. I’ll leave them a note, explaining everything. They’ll understand...they have to.
Got to go, I’m sorry, I write in my biro-driven scrawl, will explain if you call later. Don’t worry, I’m not in trouble. I look at it. It hardly seems sufficient, not for what I’m about to do. Please don’t tell Claire, I add after a breath’s hesitation. I promise I’m coming back...with Mum.
It’s the best plan I’ve got. I know Mum and Will don’t get on nowadays, but he’s not so heartless as to see her on the streets, is he? Or if he is, he’ll take her in for my sake, surely? Well, he won’t have much choice. I won’t come back if she doesn’t. Yeah, I’m angry, just like Will is, but it would be cruel, inhumane even, to leave her locked up in that hellhole. She sounded desperate, and I know that feeling all too well. We can work out the rest later. I nod to myself, validated. It’s four o’clock. Will’s working until five, and Sarah’s taking Angel to see her parents, like they do every week, since they live fairly nearby. I was relieved I had schoolwork as an excuse. Sarah’s parents are nothing to me, really, so why should I bother seeing them? Especially when I could be helping my only real family. I’m resolved. You can’t go back on a promise, even if mine was a telepathic one.
There’s just one thing left to do – change out of these hideous school clothes. A laugh forms in my throat as I kick off my hated shoes and strip down to my underwear, reaching into my suitcase for the most inconspicuous items I know. I end up with my oldest, most retro pair of jeans, a black sweater, and my spiky boots. I tie my hair into a quick, messy bun, running my fingers down my fringe to straighten it. Done. Ready to go.
I march down the stairs, grabbing a few quick snacks and some bottles of water and Dr Pepper from the fridge, stuffing them into Sarah’s Tesco picnic bag. If I’m going to do this, I’m going to do it properly, even if it means extra caffeine to keep me awake.
Finally finished, I use the key Will gave me with a twinge of conscience, shutting the door decisively. I just pray the suitcase won’t hinder my progress too much, lest Sarah or Will should get home too quickly and catch up with me at the station. If that happened, I would probably throw myself into the nearest train and hope for the best, I muse wryly.
A few people give me odd looks as I puff through the streets with my suitcase and big, recycled bag, but I pay them no attention. I’m new to this area, so they can’t exactly stop me, can they? (If they do, I’ll give them the finger. I am a woman on a mission).
What I need to do now is work out a route. I pull out my phone, shrugging, and begin plotting my steps from my town in North London to Mum’s nuthouse in the quiet village of Shepperton, Surrey. I lean against a shop on the doorstep of Bounds Green station (the nearest from Sarah and Will’s house), frowning over the list of Google results. Why can’t I find what I need, just this once?
Aha. I peer more closely at a trail of directions, and am left speechless. All this time, my mum has been one hour and sixteen minutes away? Now that’s just taking the...
“Excuse me?” comes a gravelly voice.
I twist round, heart jarring, to see a toothless old woman right up in my face, so I can see the haggard lines around her yellowing eyes.
“Spare change?” she says in a slurred voice, and I move away, further into the station. If I get away from her, she’ll leave me alone, I think uncertainly.
I’m wrong. The woman stumps up to me, jabbing me in the chest. “Just two, three pounds,” she says insistently. “Just two, three pounds...”
Oh, help. She’s started repeating things, mumbling into her handkerchief, and we’re attracting attention (we? We’re a ‘we’ now?), something I really don’t need.
“Sorry,” I say politely. “But I don’t have anything.” Nothing to spare, at least.
At last, the woman’s ramblings cease as she sees another straggler, leaping into their path and striking up the same tune. As I watch, the only guard on duty grunts and stamps up to the woman, demanding that she leaves. She refuses, spitting in his face, and chaos ensues, with the guard hissing into his radio. A fearless sensation begins at the tips of my toes, trickling into my mind. I couldn’t...could I?
One way to find out.
Throwing caution to the grave, I take a chance and dash through the ticket barrier after an on-the-verge-of-meltdown mother of five. Nobody noticed. Nobody saw. I’m invisible.
Exhilarated, I ride down the speedy escalator, watching busy Londoners charge down the moving stairs, phones clutched to their ears, briefcases in their hands, bumping shoulders and not apologising. Shit. I’ve broken right into rush hour. Just my bloody luck. While I wait for the tube, I feel a strange mixture of gratitude and revulsion for the unnamed woman, whose diversion saved me a bit of cash. I feel a tiny bit bad about that, actually. Since I didn’t pay for this particular tube ride (I don’t think I’ll be trying it again, on second thoughts), I probably could have spared that two, three quid. I can’t seem to get those haunted, drained pair of eyes out of my head. Somehow, they have me questioning everything I’m going to find. But that’s stupid. By the look of her, the woman probably would have spent it on cheap alcohol anyway. I would have only sped up her premature death, I think hopefully, somewhat reassured.
After nine minutes and 45 seconds (I timed it) on the tube from Bounds Green, the doors swing open for Finsbury park – my stop. After somehow having enough spare to get through the barrier and top up my oyster card, I get on another tube, this one a little longer – about seventeen minutes. On the way, I play quick games of solitaire on my phone – I’m a whiz at this game. Call it plenty of hours of experience travelling to places, waiting for someone, but I’ve gotten pretty good. A text interrupts my latest win, and I look down at it with a growing sense of panic. It’s from Will. He has no idea yet, only having texted to see how my first day went, but how long until he finds the note? How long until he takes after me? I haven’t thought this through at all, I think despairingly. And he’s much quicker at working out routes than I am.
The first day was bearable, I text back. Lessons are drab as expected, but most people seem nice, I guess. When will you be back?
I nearly asphyxiate from the suspense hinging on his answer – then it pings back, and my shoulders slump in relief.
Will be late tonight – something’s come up at work. Sarah told me to pass on message her and Angel won’t be back until seven, so heat up one of those ready-made meals, OK? If you know how to use a microwave.
Of course I know how to use a microwave, I type back, insulted in spite of myself. What do you take me for?
He won’t suspect a thing. None of them will. At least until seven (cue mad hyena laugh). By that time, I’ll have got Mum out of that place, with a bit of much-needed luck, even though it’s let me down so many times. I sigh. You can’t control hope, I suppose.
I get off the tube, heavy-shouldered, and prepare to board my final destination. Forty-eight minutes from Vauxhall to Shepperton, and I’m there.
-
This time I sit down, predicting a crowded journey as thus far. This time, though, it’s quieter. I guess less people need this village than London. I look out at the foggy images that breeze past, lingering on grassy meadows and star-shaped clouds that hang idyllically in the heaven-blue sky. The best bit of entertainment comes, surprisingly, in the form of a random cow-field, in which I take great pleasure in naming the ugliest ones after Claire, Ms Tavern, Maisy and Hannah. Juvenile or not, it takes my mind off things for a while. My head’s drooping sleepily on my seat when a cool, mechanical voice announces the end of my mini-odyssey. I stand up, stretching my legs, and grab my luggage, filing out of the train after a blue-haired woman with a guitar case. I’m stunned. Too stunned even to punch the air in triumph, like I ache to. I don’t believe it. I actually made it. Me of all the people, the Homer Simpson of geography. I look at my phone – ten to six. I bite my nails, deliberating. Would it be better to storm in there now, or wait for the morning? I’m swinging in favour of the latter, but the only thing is, I have nowhere to stay for the night, and I’ll need to count my coins to pay for a bit of breakfast in the morning. There’s no way I could afford even the most pint-sized Bed-and-Breakfast, anyway. The evening sunshine slits my eyes, and I rub them, still a little dazed. The dream-like feeling I felt on my first day at Sarah and Will’s is back, more forcefully than ever. It’s as though I’m expecting an inn to spring up out of nowhere, Stardust-style. I wouldn’t be surprised, the mood I’m in right now. Of course, no inn appears, which may be just as well, since I like my heart where it is. I sink down onto a bench to think, steadying my thoughts. I’m considering using the bench as well of an old bit of newspaper like some old bum (hey, beggars can’t be choosers) when something catches my eye. Outside the eerily deserted station is a reasonably sized, and abandoned ring of toilets. The room is a little beaten in, to be kind, and someone’s scrawled illegible vandalism inside it, but I’ve stayed in worse places, seriously. Broken toilet it is. I wander in, marvelling at the shabby glamour that meets my eyes. If I imagine enough, this could transform to a gilt, five-star hotel with bed sheets that smell of strawberries and butlers who bring you trays of honey-dripped pancakes and fizzy lemonade. I hold onto this image as I take out my rough sleeping bag from my suitcase, using my thick winter coat as some sort of clumsy mattress. It’s still only six o’clock, and my stomach rumbles, but there’s no sense in spending any more of my precious coins. I break into my supplies, taking out a squashed jam sandwich that reminds me uncannily of Claire, as well as a pear and a melted chocolate bar. Dinner is served. I think of Will’s ready-made meal and my mouth waters. It’s not too late to go back... No. When I decide to do something, I do it, and there’s no turning back. Not for anything. Besides, the sandwich’s perfectly good, if I say so myself. Like my current living quarters, I’ve had worse meals, too. Trust me, this beats trampled-on soup any day. I jump in dismay when my phone starts to ring. It’s not even six thirty yet. Nobody’s supposed to be home. I breathe out. It’s just Mi-Mi. “Finally!” she says peevishly. “I’ve been calling for ages.” “Hi to you too,” I say sourly, secretly thrilled to hear another person’s voice. “What are you doing now?” I can’t even laugh. The truth’s too sad. I picture how high her voice would go if I blurted out: ‘In a smashed-in toilet in Shepperton, Surrey’. She’d probably scream at me. Then contact my brother, somehow. I don’t doubt her ability to track down anyone. “Nothing. Just sitting at home, making micro-wave spaghetti Bolognese,” I say, stroking my rumpled sleeping bag. “Why?” “Shut up, Ollie,” she says in a tetchy voice. I hear the sounds of a whack and an ‘ow’. “You deserved that. Now give me back my bag.” A few crackly seconds later, she’s back on the line. “Sorry about that. We’re getting him checked out for Peter Pan syndrome any day now. Anyway, want to join us at that milkshake bar? We’re shopping for materials for that History project, remember? I for one am I not being the only person in the group to do any work like always-” “Hey, I contributed last time!” I hear Ollie say indignantly. “You know I did.” “You gave me a toothpick,” she says, as though the mere memory still disturbs her. “Remember?” “Well, maybe,” he says sheepishly. “Well, are you coming or not?” Mi-Mi says, and I look around for a fool-proof excuse. Nothing. Just those damn dripping taps. “I’d love to, but I’m kind of held up,” I say carefully. “Don’t worry, I’ll still help with the project, obviously.” “You just said you were doing nothing,” Mi-Mi says suspiciously. Shit. “Well, I wasn’t at that moment,” I say stupidly. Think, you imbecile, think. “But now I am.” Lame, Stephanie, lame. “Because...because Angel’s thrown up again, right this second, in fact, and Will’s held up at work and Sarah’s popped out to get some medicine, so, yeah, I’ll be held up for the rest of the evening.” “Oh,” she says, clearly disappointed. “Well, fine. But now I suppose I’ll have to pay for everything on top of doing everything...” “We can split the cost three-ways, and I’ll give you the money tomorrow,” I say tiredly, starting to yawn. “Three-ways?” Ollie says, horrified. “I don’t even think you’re really held up. I didn’t hear any voices. Are you lying to us?” For flip’s sake, Ollie, accept the f*ing excuse. “The signal’s bad, and it happened when you stole Mi-Mi’s bag,” I say triumphantly, quite proud of my moment of invention. So take that, I feel like adding. “Well, fine,” he says mulishly, then brightens up at the thought of something. “With three of us, I think we should split the jobs up. Mi-Mi, you can do the research...let’s see...Steph, you do the presentation based on her findings...” “And what will you do?” Mi-Mi says, her keen-eyed suspicion trained on him this time. “The artwork,” he says. “I’ll find loads of cool pictures-” “Cool pictures of burnt Vietnamese children?” Mi-Mi says sceptically. “You know what I mean,” he says impatiently. “Just go with it. If you do, I’ll pay more than my fair share.” “Deal,” Mi-Mi and I say seriously. At this second, one of the toilets suddenly bubbles up, splashing over the surface. “What was that?” Mi-Mi says, the distrust returning. “That was Angel, vomiting up her spag bol again,” I say rapidly. “Sorry, guys, got to go. See you...tomorrow.” I switch off the phone and push it away from me as though it’s a dirty object, wiping my forehead in pacification. I’ve never had such interfering friends before. Or any friends, come to think of it.
I SIT BOLT UPRIGHT AT SEVEN IN THE MORNING, AS THOUGH I’M
getting up for school, and it’s then that I remember Mum’s present. In my panic, it went out of my mind, and I buried it in the picnic bag. That’ll have to wait for the moment. I need to get sorted. I look around at my grimy, class-less surroundings, taking the sleep out of my eyes. Oh well. At least this toilet has mirrors and taps. Though, to be honest, the thought of washing here makes me shudder.
I can’t turn on my phone. I physically can’t bring myself to do it. If I don’t listen to the frantic messages, if I don’t see the constant flow of texts or the long line of missed calls, then maybe none of it exists. I’m in Surrey now. Time to leave London behind for the moment.
I get up with renewed determination, deciding it’s best to get on with it. I bring out my towel, stuff my used clothes into a suitcase, and start to wash, shivering (hey, it’s September). At least I thought to bring my sponge and flannel, as well as some toothpaste. I can always do my teeth later, after I’ve tracked down a cafe to have a quick breakfast (maybe using the cafe toilet, if it has mirrors too). If the situation wasn’t so humourless, I’d spot the irony in all this. I must be the most efficient runaway ever.
Runaway. I feel a little sick at the thought. The label feels odd, and I scrub my skin raw to take away the alien bleakness of the situation. I long to wipe everything away with a flourish of pressed-down soap and cold water, and start over again. My head hurts thinking about it all. I was supposing to be starting again, wasn’t it? With Sarah and Will? And I cocked it all up, as usual. I should come with a warning – ‘danger, do not house’.
Successfully depressed, I dry my body methodically, searching for fresh clothes. Eventually, I settle on a cherry-print shirt and baby blue jeans along with a white pair of trainers, brushing my hair in world-record time and scooping it into a neater bun than yesterday. You’d never guess I spent the night here. You’d never guess I was out of place on the streets of Shepperton. The thought makes me smile, but it makes me sad too.
The biggest problem to hand at the moment is my luggage. I can’t really run the risk of leaving my suitcase in here, can I? I know this isn’t North London, where someone might rob you if you started keeling over and dying in front of them, but still. I have valuable items in this. I’ll take the picnic bag (my purse and oyster can go inside, just in case, along with my phone), but the suitcase...it’ll look totally out of place. That’s the disadvantage of landing in a seemingly nice little village. People might peer at me, seeing I look a little young, and ask if I’m alright. I’ll just have to say...I’ll say I’m visiting someone. It isn’t a lie. I am. She just isn’t, you know, officially sane. What’s a small detail like that in the way of truth? Like my dress code, on a normal day, you’d never know she was any different, either. You might notice her because of her graceful, sparrow-like walk, her high cheekbones, her sultry red lips. But when you look perfect on the outside, people seem to miss the fragility inside.
I put my bag on my right shoulder, seize my suitcase with the left, and take an almost mawkish last gaze at last night’s shelter. We had some good times, this toilet and I. It was all I had, anyway.
I set off down the too-green, cobbled streets of the sleepy, tucked-away village, impressed in spite of my cheerless goal. Is this really such a bad place to end up in, on the scale of things?
Maybe if you have a life here, a voice in my head tells me sternly. Not like your mother. She won’t be seeing the beautiful, picturesque landscapes, or the old-fashioned teashops...unless it’s through a window. With bars...
Hang on a second. Old fashioned teashops? Perfect.
I step inside the one that looks friendliest – a small, slightly peeling cafe with chocolate-brown paint and the air of a Beatrix Potter story. I push open the door and have to quash a girlish squeal as the little silver bell tingles. I am less than an hour and twenty minutes away, but London may as well be another world. I’d almost live here.
“Hello, dear.”
I look up in surprise to see a red-faced, fairy godmother-like woman with cheerful grey hair piled in a mess of plaits on top of her wide face, positively beaming at me. Not in the kerching – customers! kind of way, but like she’s actually pleased to see me. That’s stupid. Of course she’s seeing pound-signs.
“Er...hi,” I say timidly, unnaturally shy. I’m so far from anything familiar, my personality seems to have vanished along with my new life. “Um...can I have a breakfast menu, please?”
“Right you are, dearie,” the woman says, wiping a jammy crumb off her pink, frilly apron. This is too priceless. If Will or Mi-Mi or Ollie (etc.) were here, I can imagine their looks of total disbelief. I am literally in a parallel universe, five thousand miles away. Plus, this is the first time I’ve heard a waitress with an English accent in a while.
She sits me down in a subdued corner of the cafe, with only five other customers, all sitting at different tables. I will never challenge the phrase ‘silence is golden’ again. Whoever said it is a genius. Maybe I’m losing my marbles too, but I feel...tranquil. Like none of the world’s problems can touch me.
I roam my eyes over the outdated, laminated menu, selecting a bacon sandwich and a tall glass of orange juice. I don’t want anything fancy (although there are loads of delicious-looking, homemade cakes oozing with milky cream and layers of icing), just something to get in my stomach. I feel empty enough as it is, without throwing up when I locate the...when I find Mum. I could ask frilly-apron woman if she has exact directions from here, because like I said, I’m not the best traveller around. I got here, and that’s a start. In truth, if I do end up getting found by Will, I’ll probably just boast I didn’t end up in Yorkshire or something rather than Surrey. I’m on the verge of looking forward to it. That and completely pissing my pants.
What will he say? What will they both say? Will they hate me for running away? Will they even understand why I did?
It’s alright for them, I think fiercely. They know who they are, they know their family. Me, I’m all over the place. Half a person.
I guess being tranquil bit the dust pretty quickly.
I attempt to finish the sandwich like the wolf to the grandmother in Red Riding Hood, swallowing it with relish. It’s really good, for a cheap little bacon breakfast. I’m starving. It occurs to me I’ve been living on sandwiches recently. Why did all these intrepid explorers never include them in their survival guides? It’s a scandal.
I look up to see the maidenly waitress watching me as she reads her newspaper at the counter. Damn it. She’s already getting nosy, isn’t she? Soon she’ll wake up and smell the fishiness. I plan to be long gone before then, of course.
Time to pay. (With money, not revenge, obviously. What do you take me for?)
After I’ve brushed my teeth slyly in the toilet, I haul my suitcase and myself over to the counter, taking out a two-pound coin and a fifty pence piece. After I’ve paid, I shift my feet a little, wondering if I dare to ask. The waitress looks at me, waiting, and I cough once before speaking.
“Um...could you possibly give me directions to this place?” I say, bringing out the wrinkled envelope in no great haste.
“Right you are, dearie,” she says heartily. “I know this place like the back of my hand.” She scrutinises the loopy, curled writing, a frown creasing her features. My trainers do another scuffle-dance on the polished, white-and-black tiled floor.
“What do you want with this place?” she says at last, and I can’t help noting her eyes go straight to my suitcase.
“I – I’m visiting someone,” I say, flushing. “A relative. Is that a problem?”
“No! Goodness me, of course not,” she says, gathering herself. “You see that post office at the end of the street?”
I nod.
“Turn left and keep walking straight, and you can’t miss it,” she says. “Just follow the signposts. It’s a big, silver building – tight security, though. You’ll have to buzz in to the receptionist. You do have an appointment, of course?” she adds more sharply.
“Yes, yes of course,” I say. “I came up here from London especially.”
Thanking her for her help, I start to move my suitcase towards the Victorian-style black door, but she calls out after me. I freeze, a million thoughts whizzing around in my brain. Maybe she knows. Maybe Will phoned the police after finding my note, and now the villagers are on the lookout for me...have I unwittingly given myself away?
“Take this on your way,” she says warmly, pressing a slice of wrapped yellow sponge with swirly pink icing into my free hand. “You look famished.”
“Oh, er, thanks,” I say, heart slowing. “You’re too kind.”
The little silver bell tinkles merrily as I shut the door.
I follow the instructed path (it’s hardly the Yellow Brick Road, but it’s quite pretty really), a little stricken. Maybe I should check my phone now. My nails embed themselves violently into my hands as I try to think. I don’t want to lose my bottle now – I’m come so far. But I don’t have to actually listen to any messages, do I? Or read any of the texts? Just seeing how many have been left will tell me enough.
I turn left at the post office and switch on my phone, feeling jittery. It’s like if I acknowledge what I’ve left behind, it’ll suddenly appear out of an abyss and snatch me back. Not knowing, it’s safer. I take a deep breath, telling myself staunchly to quit being so ridiculous and cowardly. It’s time to face up to what I’ve done.
Twenty missed calls? Twenty? Didn’t they get my note? I’m hardly in Outer Mongolia – I can easily find my way back in little over an hour.
It gets worse. My inbox is flooded with texts, the most recent ones from Mi-Mi. Confused, I decide to read these, but they all say basically the same thing: Steph, where the hell are you? Your brother rang me yesterday asking if I was with you, which is crazy because you said you were staying in. Why aren’t you at school?
School. It completely slipped my mind. I picture Ms Tavern’s flaring nostrils, and flinch. What if she expels me?
I didn’t bother listening to most of her speech, but what I did hear was a lot of jabbering about ‘extremely high standards’ and ‘impeccable behaviour’ etc etc. She’s going to kill me with her bare hands for tarnishing her precious school record. And she didn’t even cross my mind in my desperation to get here. How could I have been so stupid?
I haven’t just messed up with Sarah and Will. I’ve ruined any chance of settling into a good school and completing my GCSE qualifications. And there’s no one to blame but myself.
I stare helplessly up at the great, sombre silver building that comes into view. The chances are they won’t let me in anyway, and I’ll have to turn back. My stomach simmers in nervous expectation. Well, it can’t hurt to try now, can it? I’ve botched everything else up, but maybe I can still salvage this.
I jab the buzzer aggressively with my thumb, stabbing at it repeatedly until the calm, deep tones of a man answers.
“Abbey-Lake residence,” he says in a bored, practised monotone. “How may I help?”
“I – I’m here to see someone,” I say, feeling like there’s a ball of wool wedged in my throat.
He clicks his tongue snappily, obviously used to this conversation. “Are you here to see one of our specialists, or patients?”
“I – a pat – I’m visiting someone,” I say, stammering.
“Do you have an appointment?” he says lazily.
“Yes,” I say defiantly, fired up all of a sudden. I check my watch. “For ten o’clock today. The person’s name is Sian Collins. I’m her daughter.”
“Ah,” he says, and I imagine him nodding. “Sian. Quite a character. Yes, she talks about you often.”
She does? I feel a glow of pride. Even the receptionist has noticed. A few of my nerves quell down in my stomach. Of course she wants to see me. She’s my mother.
“However,” he says curtly, and my face falls. “I’ve been informed Ms Collins isn’t supposed to be seeing any visitors for quite a while.”
No. No way. I’ve come this far, and a bloody receptionist isn’t going to stop me now.
“This is different,” I say plaintively, hoping if I persevere he’ll give in to get rid of me. “It’s a special case. She’s my mother – I can’t not see her for months and months!”
I peek at the intercom sanguinely.
“Alright,” he says bullishly after a long pause. “I’ll send someone out to see you.”
Yes.
I wait outside the coiled, rusty iron gates, tapping my toe persistently on the tarmac. It worked. It actually worked. I did something right.
After a moment, a bright-looking woman with thick black hair bounds out, holding a special kind of pass. My toe stops tapping, and I stand eagerly on the pavement, hardly able to contain my glee. As the gates unwind theatrically, I’m expecting a lecture, but the woman passes me a friendly smile, seeming, weirdly, as ecstatic as I am. Maybe the carers are as mad as the patients? Figures. I’ve seen it in movies.
“You must be Steph,” she says knowingly, and I’m a bit freaked out a person I met this second knows who I am. But, then, Mum would have talked about me, I suppose. I feel a wash of sympathy. What is she even doing here? She doesn’t need looking after. She just wants to look after me, her daughter. What’s so crazy about that? OK, so she has mood swings sometimes, and maybe she is a little quirky, but so what? I think of the word she used...colourful...and smile. I’ve always thought she sees the world in moving, abstract water paintings, a green land to explore, armed with Technicolor contact lenses, while the rest of us see life in grey, drab and pale and routine. It’s what I love most about her, and now they’re trying to crush her and make her into one of them with seedy little pills? No wonder she wants me to rescue her. If that were me, I’d have smashed a window, jumped out and never looked back. Rather a broken ankle than a minute longer in this dump. It’s OK, I try to communicate telepathically as we walk inside the building, I’m getting you out.
I am.
The woman walks me briskly down the hallways, and on the way, I use the opportunity to look around and get a feel of the place. No screaming, incensed words hit my ears, like I was expecting. No one is banging on the walls, shouting to be let it out. It’s remarkably, strangely, quiet as we go along. I don’t see many people awake at this point in the morning, but the people I do see look at me tentatively, like I’m a wild animal who’s wandered into their midst. They don’t look scary. They don’t look mad. They seem...spookily normal. Spookily sad.
“We’re a tight knit group here,” the woman – Barbara by her name tag – says genially, seeing my face. “Most people – not your mother! – go in for the shared counselling sessions. It makes it feel like a community, see? Like you’re not as strange or outcast as you’ve been made to feel, because everyone here has problems, and they’re willing to talk about it. That’s what we need,” she adds, suddenly fierce. “People who are willing to talk about it. Get rid of this stigma.”
I lick my dry lips. “Why doesn’t Mum like to go?”
I know the answer, though. I can’t honestly imagine my mum sitting in a supportive circle of people, tossing her long hair and admitting she needs help. That isn’t her. I’m not really surprised. It’s something I’ve learned, too. Not relying on anybody.
Barbara throws back her head and roars with laughter, while I look at her, a little irked. “Your mother!” she says, clucking like a hen. “Would rather die than be seen in those sessions – or words to that effect. We’ve tried, believe me. But she doesn’t want to integrate at all.”
“Yep, that sounds like her,” I say, cheered by the thought.
Barbara stops by a greyish white door, studying my composed, blank face. “Are you sure about this?” she says quietly.
“Of course I am,” I say for what must be the millionth time. “She’s my mother.”
“OK.” Barbara opens the door, and then stops again. “I’ll wait down the corridor, by my office, if you need me,” she says, seeming to have mulled something over. I’m relieved. How can we sneak out if she’s in here snooping?
I push open the door, my breath in my throat.
This is it. This is everything I’ve been waiting for.
Mum is perched on the colourless window sill, robin-like, her legs curled up. I stare at the image of her for a few seconds, not wanting to speak, to ruin it. Her curly, raven-brown hair is swept into a hasty ponytail, making her sharp cheekbones all the more striking. It’s like I’m seeing a film star or something. She doesn’t seem real. I might have dreamt her up.
Her head turns, sensing something, and at once her full, scarlet lips quirk up in a bright, glittering smile, her whole body seeming to awaken from a long, long sleep. She looks as astounded as I am.
“Steph,” she says at last. “Hey. Good to see you.”
I TAKE ANOTHER STEP INTO THE ROOM, SHUTTING THE PALE, WASHED
- out door. I still can’t quite believe I’m here. I can’t quite believe it’s her.
Now I am actually here, though, a small fist seems to have closed around my heart, fortifying myself against her. I guess Mum’s life lessons have worked a little too well. I can’t even bank on the only family I’ve ever really known. I thought the journey to and from here would be the difficult bit, but that wasn’t it at all. It’s this awkward stage in-between, where we both stare at each other, speechless. Mum seems to be waiting for me to say something, but I don’t really have any words. I didn’t prepare anything. That seems stupid. It should be so natural, shouldn’t it? But it isn’t. An old resentment rises to the surface. That isn’t my fault.
“Er...hi,” I say when I can’t stand the silence any longer. Not that Mum seems affected by it. She just looks at me, face pensive and eerily ethereal, with her wild dark hair and unfathomable expression. I have the feeling I could look down a thousand dark tunnels, and I still wouldn’t quite reach her.
“‘Hi’?” Mum says in a curious echo of my voice. “Is that all? Haven’t exactly been on holiday, have I?” her eyes look beadily into mine, and I have to look away. I wasn’t expecting this. I didn’t come here to play her mind games. I love her, but sometimes, it’s like she can’t help twisting everything, playing her own private, warped version of chess. After a summer apart from her, I can’t keep up with it anymore. And I’m tired of trying to. I’m the daughter, the teenager. She’s the one who’s meant to be working me out.
“Well, what do you want me to say?” I say defensively. “‘Hey, Mum, how’s the madhouse?’” Right away, I wish I could take the words and cram them back in my mouth, stop them poisoning everything, but I can’t, of course. Mum gives me another of her long, assessing looks, and then she bursts out laughing. It’s such a shock I stumble and bash my hip on her chest of drawers, rather painfully, I might add.
“You’re a chip off the old block, alright,” she says, the edges of her strong brown eyes folding into smiley lines, the only hint of her real life, her real experiences. She likes to tell people she’s thirty, and once, memorably, that I was her little sister, and it was such a drag to babysit me all the time. But that was because she wanted to pull some IT technician guy who was twenty-six. I didn’t mind him, because he got me a free laptop his company were chucking away. Then – well, Mum did what she always does and went and slept with someone else. That guy was old (but rich). She has weird taste in men.
“I got your letter,” I say doubtfully, sitting on the end of her pink-and-white quilted bed. “You mentioned...leaving this place?”
Maybe she’s changed her mind. Maybe she thinks all this is the best after all. Not that I’m clinging to this thought. I don’t care either way. I’ve found her...the cards are in her hands now.
Mum sits up, lean legs dangling from the window sill. “Well, do you blame me?” she whispers, whipping her head round as though Barbara’s about to reappear, a guard in tow for good measure. “This fleapit’s driving me insane. Oh, the irony.” She smirks at me, the bitterness clear in her face. “I mean, what am I doing here, Steph? I’m saner than all these bloody psychologists’ and doctors, all those bloody I’m-here-to-talk f&ing specialists!” Her voice reaches fever pitch, chewing the words in their rage. “So what do you think, huh? Do I want to leave or not?” Her tone drips with exasperation. Maybe because no one in here is listening to her, stressing her illness and her confusion, literally driving her up the bend.
“Obviously, yeah,” I say, trying not to give away how unsettled I feel. I unravel the stitching on a pink patch of quilt, turning it all over my mind. “What do you want to do, then? Break out? I don’t think it’ll be that easy...a woman I met said security’s pretty tight here...”
Mum doesn’t seem to be focusing on the conversation. “What? Oh, that. Not a problem, sweetie. Look at this.” She brings out a slightly wonky, clearly homemade cushion, looking down at it in unhidden distaste.
“Um...nice,” I say lamely, wondering where this is going.
“What, this?” she rolls her eyes. “Don’t be ridiculous. This is part of some half-baked ‘therapy’ idea.” I can hear the quotation marks in her voice. “I’m actually trying to show you something, Steph. Please try and concentrate.” Waspishly, her fingers find the cushion zip and draw it down. The sound inflames my ears like hands running down a blackboard.
A look of unbridled victory crossing her face, she brings out a thin, green, rectangular card swathed in white plastic.
“Do you know what this is?” she says jeeringly.
“A pass,” I say, remembering Barbara’s.
“Gold star, Steph. This is our ticket out of here,” she says, while I look at her, puzzled. Our ticket out of here? I’m not exactly shut up in this place, am I? What is she talking about? I’m half expecting masked doctors to slam into the room, sinisterly telling me I can’t leave. Maybe I need some of those pills. Tempting, after this week. I look at my watch. Everyone will still be in second lesson back at Cloverfield, without me. I don’t even know what I’m missing today, but that can’t be helped. Woman on a mission, remember?
“Where did you get that?” I say nervously, and am even more rattled to see Mum’s responding, gratified expression.
“Stole it,” she says with an unmistakable air of pride. “It was easy. I created a diversion, pretending to be as crazy as everyone else in here, and charmed one of the other inmates into sneaking into the office and grabbing a pass. Can you believe him? He didn’t even question me, following my plan along like a pet monkey. I didn’t even need to bribe him with pills to keep his mouth shut – though I gave him some anyway, to get him to stop bugging me.”
A q-tipped bubble appears in my head, showing a vacant-eyed, strait-jacketed man performing tricks for my mother. It feels uncomfortable, humiliating even.
“So I was surprised you turned up today,” she says, applying a glistening coat of red lipstick, not that she really needs it. “You were my reserve. I was always going to get out of this dumping ground. I’m not a sitting duck, am I?”
“Apparently not,” I say, still gathering my thoughts together. It’s been one hell of a morning – in a good or bad way, I don’t know. Technically, my plot is on its way to instant success, but funnily enough, I’m not in a celebratory mood. I think I must have been in a total fantasyland.
“You know Barbara’s in her office right this minute?” I say pointedly.
“Yeah, dreadful woman, she never leaves,” Mum says in a mutter. “Don’t worry. We’ll get rid of her. You can cause a distraction, and I’ll slip out. If the emergency alarms start ringing, just pretend to be looking for me and ask to leave. They can’t keep you here, can they? Unless there’s something you’re not telling me, Miss Sane?”
I can’t help smiling at this. “Right,” I say. “OK. Erm...right now?”
“Well, I haven’t got anything better to do,” Mum says sarcastically. “Now, you guard the door in case Prissy-knickers comes nosying again, and I’ll pack.” She glances at my own suitcase. “I’m glad to see you came prepared.”
“Prepared for what?” I say.
She doesn’t answer, starting to throw t-shirts and pairs of jeans and non-toxic paint bottles into a heavy black rucksack. I notice this morning’s pill – still in its stale water glass – goes straight down the sink. I chew my lip, watching her. I’m starting to get a bad feeling about all this. Where does she think we’re actually headed?
Oh gosh. She doesn’t think I’m going on the run with her, does she? That wasn’t in the plan.
“We’ll go somewhere exotic,” she’s saying as she flings items carelessly into the rucksack. “Somewhere amazing and hot and relaxing...”
“They took your passport,” I say, forcing myself to sound calm, when really I’m thinking: shit, shit, shit.
Mum tuts, remembering. “Well, that’s a bummer isn’t it?” she says with a sigh. “Somewhere in Britain, then – somewhere secluded.”
“Yes, but where?” I say. The whole thing is bizarre. It’s like my own mother is kidnapping me.
“I don’t know, Steph!” she says, her hands starting to tremble. “I don’t know, OK? I’m trying to do the best for us and you’re just pissing all over our plans! What’s wrong with you? I’m trying to give us a brand-new life, full of birds and sunshine, and you go and say all this! We can work out the geography later, OK?”
I get the sense I’m shrinking, falling into nothingness, beneath her unflinching gaze. I don’t know what to say. It’s not OK, of course. I’ve completely forgotten what she gets like. How ideas take possession of her everything, and nothing and no one will get in their way. I used to be able to talk her out of them, most of the time, but I seem to have lost the knack. We’ve been separated too long. Now she feels like a distant creature, a stranger, and that hurts.
“Mum, this isn’t going to work unless we start getting realistic,” I say, but she carries on piling the rucksack with clothes until it can’t fit anything more, acting deaf. I know she can hear me. “Would you please stop packing and take some responsibility for once in your life?”
She swears to herself, still trying to cram the clothes in the rucksack. “Damn things,” she says, absent-minded. “What the hell is wrong with you?”
She’s talking to a pair of jeans. I don’t know whether to laugh or cry.
“Stop it!” I say viciously. “Stop packing and grow up! Grow up, Mum!”
At last, the frantic music of the packing fades away, and her thin, frail body seems to be falling in on itself. I don’t know what to do.
So I do the only thing I can. I call Will.
Mum and I sit cross-legged on the patchwork bed, poring over her endless succession of watercolour paintings. Some are hulking and bright, big sketches of the green, flowery landscape from the viewpoint of the dirt-stained window, seeming like unattainable paradise. Others are small yet clearly inspired; a circle of black-tipped daisy chains; the red and white breast of a robin; the colour of my eyes; the daffodils that spring up in the first wake of spring. They’re beautiful, uncanny. When I look at them, I see the person she should be. The person she really is, underneath it all. A perceptive, talented, spirited woman with a keen eye for nature, for people. All this time, I’ve failed to understand her, but it seems like she’s understood everyone and everything she’s ever encountered. The paintings certainly seem to have placated her, anyway, but her eyes won’t lose that rabbit-like, agitated look, and I’m constantly on edge it might start again. Mum’s mood swings are like a fairground ride, sometimes thrilling, and sometimes downright terrifying. I’m dizzy, exhausted. I can’t cope with it anymore, and it makes me feel like a failure. Useless.
Barbara and a small posse of sombre-faced guards are right by the door, watching us – presumably in case we take hike of our senses and leap out of the window. Yeah, right. Don’t they have lives, beyond sticking their badly-in-need-of-a-nose-job noses into our business?
The ride comes to a shaky halt at one o’clock, when a red-haired, freckled policewoman appears, muttering something into her radio. They didn’t really start a search for me, did they? I’m not ten years old – and I told them where I’m going. OK, so I didn’t reply to the texts and voicemails, but I was always going to ring back in the end. I’m crimson with mortification. All of this is totally unnecessary. My brother is so melodramatic.
“Great, the Fun Squad have arrived,” I say in an undertone.
Mum just sits there, stroking her paintings, unresponsive.
“I’ll have to go now,” I say softly, but she still doesn’t reply. “Bye, then,” I add lowly, standing up and picking up my suitcase and bag.
Mum doesn’t look up, not even when the policewoman – PC Wood – starts informing me of the ruckus I caused, yaddah yaddah yaddah, and how my brother and co. have been sooooooo worried about me, yawn yawn. Well-practised by this point, I don’t take in a word of her self-righteous little speech, holding up a hand in the middle to stop the relentless monologue. She’s like a yappy dog. I. Get. It.
“I get the point, alright?” I say cuttingly. “Just shut up, please.”
Her eyebrows rise disbelievingly, but she draws herself up majestically and says in martyred tones: “Fine. We should be on our way, in any case. Your brother called to say he’s fifteen minutes away from the station.”
“Hopefully not while he was driving,” I say, but the woman doesn’t seem to appreciate ironic humour. Perhaps not, then. If anything, her lips get thinner (and they were pretty thin to begin with, trust me. I hope she’s not considering lip fillers.) I make a mental note, scanning the woman’s face: lip fillers, an improvement or not? Not, I decide.
“Well, say goodbye to your mother,” she says dispassionately, not even bothering to wait outside. “I’m on a tight schedule.”
“Charming,” I say lightly, and then I raise my voice. “See you...when I can,” I end up saying flimsily.
It’s only as I’m about to turn my face away that she sneaks a look upwards, seeming to have something confirmed in her mind. Her hard brown eyes register betrayal and anger, and I know they’ll stay with me, seep right into my latest nightmares.
“I didn’t know what else to do,” I say thickly. “What was I meant to do?”
“Something better,” she says coldly, then, dropping to a whisper: “We could have been starting our new life by now, you know. If you hadn’t had that hissy fit and destroyed our plans, destroyed everything we dreamed of.”
“That’s crap,” I say, astonished. I take a step backwards. “You messed up our plans, like usual. You – you ruin everything-”
“Maybe I do,” she says contemplatively, her eyes reading mine. “But at least I’m not a tedious, cautious, uptight bitch too scared to carry anything out. At least I’m not that.”
I feel like she’s slapped me. I wish she had.
“I hate you,” I say, hating the weak quavering that comes out of my mouth. “You’re sick. Sick in the head. You belong in this dump, with the rest of them.”
Her eyes don’t flicker. “Truth hurts, doesn’t it?” she says. Her disgusted eyes drift to my bruised suitcase, and a cruel look forms in her eyes. “Yeah, I’m crazy – I have pills for that. Question is, what are they going to do about you?”
I don’t hear anymore. I take my suitcase and move towards the door, banging it shut so hard the hinges judder in my wake.
I’ve been so stupid. I latched onto the letter, convinced she’d finally changed, convinced she needed my help. She doesn’t need me – she doesn’t need anyone apart from those cocktail of drugs. I shouldn’t have even come. What was I expecting to find? She’s just a wasted, spiteful hag, not worth a second more of my time. I hope she stays in insolation for the rest of her life. I hope no one ever comes to visit her again, because I won’t be making a return. Then she’ll see.
Her words swirl in my head, getting louder and louder: something better...destroyed everything we dreamed of...uptight bitch...Truth hurts, doesn’t it?
I shut out the voice, plugging in my earphones savagely and running through my whole playlist. Each gets angrier, darker, as the songs go on. I barely even acknowledge PC Wood beside me, who keeps up a whiny stream of small talk along the way. The one phrase I do pick up goes something along the lines of ‘your brother’s waiting at the station’, which does a wonderful job of smothering the sickness inside. I feel so much better, PC Fix-it. All my problems have mysteriously floated away. Right. What is up with these people? Talking isn’t the answer to everything. Sometimes it just opens up a whole can of worms, and I really don’t need that right now.
Will is leaning, crossed-armed, against his glossy sports car when we get there, his face unreadable. I swallow, ignoring PC Wood’s encouraging smile. If she’s after a reconciliation scene, she’s going to be very disappointed. Actually, I think there might be a murder scene, but hey, at least it’ll be interesting.
“What, no rant?” I say, mock-surprised, as I pull out a piece of gum and stick it in my mouth. Anything to get the horrible taste away.
“Get in the car. We’ll talk later,” he says, his voice like ice.
Hmm. Straight to the car. Wow. Must be bad, then.
I get in, unconcerned, as PC Wood starts up a no doubt rousing conversation I can’t make out from inside the car. I’ve never been very good at lip-reading. Not one of my talents.
I search for guilt, or fear, or anger, anything, but find nothing. I’m empty.
Will gets into the front seat (I’m at the back again, plainly symbolic of the fact I’ve taken a step backwards in my life), and doesn’t even turn on the radio to dull the tense atmosphere as the car speeds along the quiet roads. I decide I don’t care. Silence is golden. Never was there a truer word.
The vehicle rumbles suavely through the cobbled streets, and the lonely, fantastical land of Mum’s dreams grows fainter and fainter, a tiny dot on Will’s crumpled map.
I AM IN DISGRACE.
I am officially in disgrace. I try to see the bright side, thinking of all the boring conversations I don’t have to take part in, but truthfully, it’s pretty rubbish, stuck at home with a non-communicative Will and a neutral Sarah, who seems to be the official peace-maker in the house. I’m grounded, to say the least. Can he do that? I asked him, and we got involved in a childish argument for a while about guardianship, until Will remembered he wasn’t speaking to me and resumed an adult silence. Even Angel’s beginning to sense frostiness in the air, pinching her dad’s cheeks and giggling until he smiles and plays along. At least, when I’m in the room. I’ve taken to hanging out in my room, just to escape the awkwardness. I didn’t think they’d get so upset, you know. I guess I didn’t think at all.
Ms Tavern is evidently too important to do so herself, so she got that secretary of hers to phone up and tell me she expects me back at school on Monday, thank you very much. During this period of compassionate leave, Mi-Mi has kindly offered to store up all the missed work and pass it on to me, which I don’t know whether to kill or thank her for. And we still have that history project to sort (due Monday, incidentally), so at least I’ll get out of the house today to go to Mi-Mi’s house. She keeps going on about how she knew something was up that day we spoke on the phone, fancying herself as the next Sherlock if you ask me, even after what she said about my crackpot murder theories. I don’t think she can help gloating about it every time we see each other. I’m perfectly willing to put up with it, though (as long as it’s not too permanent), since life at home is as chilly as the champagne Sarah brought home yesterday (one of the parents). Another bright spot of the week – Will made me my favourite peanut butter toast for breakfast this morning, so that’s progress, isn’t it? OK, he did it without a word, but still. Anyway, the point is, Mi-Mi’s given me a reason to get up before one o’clock, so that’s something.
After the near-silent breakfast (I’m starting to feel sorry for Sarah and her obvious attempts to force us to speak to each other), I tramp back up the stairs, rooting through my now unpacked clothes to find something to wear. I settle on a dark, Miss Sixty pair of jeans and a long-sleeved, midnight-blue top made of soft cotton, dressing swiftly. I leave my hair in its limp, loose state after rubbing in some shiny oil Sarah picked up for me yesterday. Well, it’s as lettuce-like as ever, but at least it’s brightened up a little, along with my mood. I can honestly say Sian Collins doesn’t cross my mind. Not once. (Apart from now, when I was mentioning how much she doesn’t cross my mind, obviously. But that doesn’t count). Most people hate their enemies, thinking of them vehemently twenty-four hours a day, but I can go one step better than that. I won’t think, feel or acknowledge anything about her. It’s that easy. And really, my life’s all the better without her. I can’t understand what I was thinking. Like that...cow could ever have made my life complete. The bad news is, as a result of my jaunt, Claire will be back in town on Saturday to ‘evaluate my current position’. Why can’t she tell the truth and admit things aren’t working out already? I mean, I’ve been here days and look at the chaos I’ve caused already. By the time she arrives, I’ll probably have set the house on fire (I knew those ready-made meals were dangerous, I’ll say, superciliously wagging a finger at Will at the same time).
As I’m stuffing my rucksack with my purse and history book, Will appears to have come to a decision about his behaviour, hovering by the staircase as I get ready to leave.
“Are you going to manage a sentence before I go out, or is that too optimistic?” I say tartly, and my brother chokes with laughter after a short internal fight. “You know, I am late.”
As Will’s ludicrous game face returns (did he ever expect me to take him seriously?), I let out a breath, thinking: here we go.
But this time, his stance seems to have changed. “Well, I was doing some thinking...”
“Will, you never think,” I say fairly. A feeling of suspicion comes over me. “Is this Sarah’s idea?”
“No!” he says heatedly. “I mean, yes. But, even without her input, I decided you’d suffered enough.”
“Oh, cheers, big bro,” I say dryly. “I had that one worked out ages ago. I mean, the torture! You picked me up in the sports car!”
Will grins back at me, but then his manner seems to take a grave turn again. “This isn’t about the sports car,” he says, more gently. “It’s-”
“Look, I don’t want to talk about it,” I say through clenched teeth. “I’m sorry I went to flipping Surrey without telling you, but that’s where this conversation ends. Apology accepted?”
Will opens his mouth, then shuts it again, thunderstruck. This clearly wasn’t the reaction he was expecting. What, does he want me to break down and cry? For that – person - ? Unlike him, I didn’t get to escape to university. I dealt with her most of my life, so none of this affects me now. Not anymore.
“You’re doing a great impression of my dead fish, but I’m really late now,” I say, sliding the zip on my bag shut. I’m reminded forcefully of Sian doing the same thing, but I push the thought away.
“Steph-” he starts to say.
“What?”
“Shepherd’s pie for dinner – my speciality,” he says. “So don’t be late.”
Muttering under my breath, I shut the door on his ravings about six o’clock on the dot. Now we’re talking again, I almost wish we weren’t (joking).
Mi-Mi’s house turns out to be, remarkably, a little like her. A tidy, white-brick old house with authentic wooden beams and even a chimney (have her parents been sending her up there since she was five? I think to myself). I pad through the house and locate Mi-Mi and Ollie in her neat, airy purple bedroom, leaning over her thin, silver-screen computer. They’ve written the title – and shelled some nuts – so that’s a start. Always a sign of a genius, nut-shelling.
Both look up as I come in and shut the door, eyes widening. OK, so I went to Surrey, but I’m not that notorious, surely?
“You sly dog!” is Ollie’s nonsensical greeting when I’ve joined them at the computer, dragging a folded orange chair. “You should have told us you’d escaped the country!”
“She didn’t escape the country, you doughnut,” Mi-Mi says to him, and we share a despairing look. “How was Surrey, by the way?”
I make my shoulders move up and down, playing for time. “Oh, you know, OK,” I say non- committedly, and it’s their turn to share a let’s-change-the-subject glance.
I can tell from Mi-Mi’s not-so-subtle dig in the ribs that Ollie fails in this regard.
“You must’ve seen this, though!” he says, bringing something out from inside the computer desk. “You’re famous, Steph.”
“Infamous,” Mi-Mi says with an immediate note of correction in her voice, flashing me a smile.
“What are you guys talking about?” I say, intrigued in spite of myself.
“You mean you don’t know?” Ollie says questioningly.
“Hey, in my defence, I’ve spent the past few days hiding in my bedroom,” I say, folding my arms. “Come on – tell me.”
They look at each other again, unsure.
“The faster you tell me, the faster this project gets done,” I say, delighting in my skills of blackmail. Rest assured, I’m going to get this out of them, one way or another.
“Alright,” Mi-Mi says unwilling, spreading a few newspaper articles onto the desk. The three of us look at each other, then at the articles. Eyebrows sliding into a frown, I start to read the first one:
FEARS RISE FOR MISSING SCHOOLGIRL OF PRESTIGIOUS ACADEMY
CLOVERFIELD ACADEMY, AN 'OUTSTANDING' PRIVATE SCHOOL, WAS YESTERDAY THROWN INTO DISREPUTE WHEN THEIR NEWEST STUDENT, WHO COMES FROM A TROUBLED BACKGROUND, VANISHED FROM HER HOME AFTER HER FIRST DAY.
Stephanie Collins, 15, had moved from her home in Leicester to London to live with her brother Will Collins, 23, his partner Sarah Kane, 23, and their three-year-old daughter, shortly after her bipolar mother suffered a breakdown. Fears have grown the teenage schoolgirl has run away to find her mother Sian Collins, 39, who was sectioned in the summer. The family of Ms Collins were said to be "distraught" last night, with concerns growing for the girl's safety on the streets at night.
They’re all like it – ‘The scandal of social services, who once again failed to consider the eventuality of the event’ or ‘It may have outstanding Ofsted reports, but clearly a closer look is needed to inspect the help and support given in this robotically efficient school’, or ‘Demon headmistress trades heart for coldly militant school’. One decision, one short trip to see my deranged mother, and I’ve become embroiled in some stupid smear campaign? I put the article down jerkily, hot tears pricking behind my eyes. I won’t cry. I won’t. I’m not shedding anymore tears over this.
Both my friends are watching me apprehensively, looking like they regret ever showing me anything. Well, that makes three of us. I drag a hand over my eyes, and am pleased to see it comes away dry.
“The Guardian always latch onto stuff like this,” Mi-Mi says confidently. “It’ll blow over. It’s just, Cloverfield’s pretty well-known – top school and all that – so they feast onto the slightest sniff of a scandal. There’ll be a new one next week.”
“You know what they say,” Ollie says with a wink. “Fifteen minutes of fame. Enjoy them while you can.”
I can’t help a small snigger at this.
“Anyway, to the project,” Mi-Mi says in a professional voice. “Well – we’ve got as far as the title, but I bought all the materials, at least.” She heaves a sigh. “We were waiting until you arrived to start.”
“Well, the presentation’s my forte, isn’t it?” I say with a yawn. “So I’ll work at the computer – you too, Ollie, you can help me find pictures – and Mi-Mi can find information in the textbooks.”
Ollie groans, as though he’s going to reproach himself for this later: “Wait – I’ve had a change of heart. You can find the images, I’ll do the presentation.” He looks so comically like he’s signed his own death warrant that Mi-Mi and I giggle.
“You’re not developing a conscience, are you, Ollie?” I say teasingly as Mi-Mi moves over to her bed to start the research.
“Don’t change my mind,” he says with another groan, putting his head in his hands. “And if you tell anyone about this, I’ll-” he looks around the room for inspiration. “Well, I’ll do something, that’s for sure. I have a reputation to uphold, you know.”
“Uh-huh,” I say, making the scepticism clear in my voice.
Across the room, Mi-Mi rolls her eyes.
*
I wake up dead on six o’clock on Monday morning, a feeling of dread swimming in my stomach. I couldn’t sleep half the night, playing endless games of solitaire on my phone until I eventually dropped off, still above the covers. To take the edge off, I take a long, warm shower, letting the shampooed water drip down my body as I scrub myself clean. Afterwards, I slouch on my bed in my pink dressing gown, drying my damp tendrils of hair with Sarah’s polka dot dryer. No one else is awake yet.
I pull on my clothes rhythmically, ignoring the steady drum of my heartbeat. It’ll be fine, I tell myself dubiously. It’s like Mi-Mi says. It’ll be old news.
But will my new classmates really forget about this? How can I face everyone now they know what she is – where she is? I can feel the shame crawling through my body; can see it in my already-rosy cheeks. Great, now I’m turning into Hannah. What a laugh her and Maisy are going to have today, all at my expense. I bet they’ve kept the rumour machine working very nicely.
I leave my hair in its mundane, shoulder-length bob again, letting my fringe fall in my eyes and hide the shadows, the sadness. I’m going to go in with my chin up, shoulders straight, whatever anyone says. And if Maisy dares mention anything, I will try my best not to smack her smug drag-queen face in.
Today, I choose to get the bus to school – all the better to glare at any gossiping classmates. I might start getting it every day from now on – I mean, there’s only so many times I can be seen in a sports car, and Angel’s Nursery school starts later than Cloverfield anyway, so it’s more convenient all round.
As I’m bending horizontally over my phone at the bus stop, finishing off another game of solitaire (is this a premonition for a lonely future?), I hear the sounds of a casual, approaching tread, and then black shoes land right in front of mine.
I’m about to tell whoever it is to piss off and find somewhere else to wait when I happen to take a peek upwards, and see a wavy, dark-haired boy whose vivid green eyes glint in the cool September breeze.
“Hey, Steph,” Damien says, his expression unusually animated for this early in the morning. “Imagine the coincidence of seeing you here, at the same time, on the same day-”
I cut into his nonsense. “We go to the same school,” I say haughtily. “It’s hardly a coincidence, is it?”
“Well, look at the probability,” he says, not ruffled in the slightest by my tone. “It’s not even eight o’clock yet, for a start – and second, what are the chances we’d live mere streets away from each other?”
“Where are you going with this?” I say indifferently, pretending to admire my freshly painted, sky-blue nails. (To be fair, they are a very pleasing colour – not hot pink, anyway).
“Well, you’re a local celebrity now,” he says, and I can hear the laughter in his words. “Therefore the chances of me bumping into you at this time in the morning at the same bus stop on the same day are even more remote.”
My nostrils flare. “I am not a local celebrity,” I say, but I’m finding it difficult to keep a straight face. My finger prods furiously at the game of solitaire.
“Sure you are,” he says as I curse at the damn phone. “You made the front page and everything.”
“This is a good thing because...?” I say without looking up.
“All publicity’s good publicity,” he says brightly.
“Bullshit.” I tap at the game angrily. “Thanks a lot, Smith. That’s my first lost game in weeks.”
“Hey, it’s not my fault you’re a sore loser.”
“I’m not a sore loser. I...you made me lose my concentration!”
“You tell yourself that, sweetheart. I’m sure it’ll help you sleep at night.”
“You-” I start to say, but just then the bus appears, which is smart timing really because this bulldog-faced old lady’s in earshot. As it happens, she shoots us a grumpy look as we let her get on first. Talk about grateful. Forget ‘the kids of today’...more like ‘the old folk of today’.
“I know, so rude,” Damien says, following me to the back of the bus.
“Look, mate, if I want a stalker, I’ll ask for one,” I say, dumping my bag on the nearest seat before he can sit there. Shrugging, he takes the next seat. I make a noise through my nose. “What is up with you? Are you immune to getting the message?”
If anything, his grin widens. “No, I get the message,” he says. “Playing hard to get, huh? Old school.”
I can’t even find any words, I’m that gobsmacked.
He pats my arm consolingly. “Yeah, reality sucks, doesn’t it? It’s OK, you can admit it now. I won’t judge you...even though I have a girlfriend, and, you know, she wouldn’t be too happy with your flirting. Don’t worry, I don’t mind.”
“You – you have to be the most arrogant arse I’ve ever met,” I say, completely thrown by his attitude. “Earth to Planet Delusion, I’m not interested!”
“Earth to Planet Denial, you so are,” he says at once, passing me a smirk as his aforementioned girlfriend advances onto the bus, dark pink lipstick slashed across her lips.
“OK, let’s get the facts straight,” I say in a sharp undertone. “Me – no – interested, OK?”
“Chill out, I was just messing with you,” he says, waving Maisy over.
“You have some nerve,” I say shrilly.
“And you have some huge, solitaire-related anger issues,” he says through the side of his mouth as Maisy squeezes into the seat next to him, running her eyes appraisingly down my uniform. Um, hello, we’re wearing the same outfit? Are there actually any brain cells rattling around in that blonde head of hers? I’m so angry with the pair of them – which just adds ammunition to Damien’s latest unwanted comment, of course – I could scream. But, no. I will stay perfectly civil in public (laughs hysterically at voodoo doll hidden in bag).
Maisy twirls a rich golden strand round her finger, turning to her boyfriend. “So, what do you want to do for your birthday?” she says in such a honey-sweet simper the airs on my arm strain to slap her.
“I dunno, really,” he says, looking uncharacteristically embarrassed – not that I’m paying attention to either of them, obviously. “Nothing. You know, beginning of the school year – I’m not in the mood.”
“It’s your sixteenth, Damien,” she says, firm. “You can’t do nothing.”
“Sure I can,” he says, looking jaded. “It’s no big deal.”
“It’s on a Friday,” she says for emphasis.
“I don’t care,” he says for emphasis.
Just then, the bus comes to a tumultuous halt, and the driver shouts for all the school kids to kindly pile off the bus. Another charming one.
We get off, my so-called companions still arguing over the importance of sixteenth birthdays – ‘you only turn sixteen once, Damien!’
I’m ready to stitch my ears up for a long, long time when excited babbles meet my entrance through the gate. What in the world - ?
“It’s her, I’m sure that’s the girl...”
“Did you see her in the paper? My dad brought it home and...”
“She actually ran away...who does that?”
“Can you believe her mum was sectioned?”
“She’s fit, and famous...fancy my chances?”
Turning on my heel, I sweep past the chattering stragglers and don’t stop walking until I’ve reached the big tree on the other side, where I can see Zac and Rihanne’s legs dangling over my head.
*
By the time of our History presentation third lesson, things aren’t going much better. So far, I’ve been asked to sign shoes, bags and boxer shorts. Ha-ha. Ollie finds the whole thing hilarious, predictably. I find it deplorable.
“What happened to it all blowing over?” I say faintly to Mi-Mi as she fiddles with the Smartboard, our images starting to emerge onto the screen.
“It will...in the end,” she says. “Can you just try to focus, for ten minutes? We’re getting graded, you know.”
Great.
We’re moving to the end of our well-planned presentation, and it’s going brilliantly, if I say so myself, until we get to the ‘do you have any questions’ bit. I never expect anyone to put their hands up for real at this point, but one rat-nosed boy does. I should have known it would be something...
“I’m interested...how do you relate to the Vietnam War, Steph, having made a bit of history yourself?” he says, and is instantly followed by a chorus of guffaws. Come to think of it, he’s the jerk who called me ‘fit and famous’ earlier. I look at the floor, eyes burning, pretending not to hear, prepared to blank out the question entirely.
“I’m interested...how do relate to America in this situation, Steven, having made a complete prat of yourself?” Damien says pleasantly, and is followed by an even bigger round of laughter.
I give him a grateful look – because I still have my manners – and fly to my seat, Mi-Mi and Ollie hot on my heels. The history teacher, looking a little taken aback, says our presentation was very good – A-star for effort, and rat-nosed boy (or Steven) is handed a lunchtime-detention. I feel a little better.
“Well, it isn’t all bad,” Damien tells me after the lesson. “At least you’ve made a name for yourself...he’s the same smarmy nobody he was last week.”
I smile tentatively. “Yeah, there’s that.”
“Someone else’ll do something soon,” he adds good-naturedly. “Just wait and see. Who knows – could even be me.”
His green eyes hold mine as he smiles back, and, weirdly, I believe him.
DESPITE HIS PROTESTATIONS, IT ARISES THAT MAISY HAS GONE AHEAD
and planned Damien’s birthday anyway. What a cheek. If that were me, I’d dump her on the spot. She even went round the form, telling everyone the date and time – Friday, straight after school, the whole class has been invited to the Bowling Alley. How courteous of her. She looked like she was steeling herself to have a round of boxing when she clip-clopped over to where Mi-Mi, Ollie and I were sitting in her sky-high heels and asked us if we were coming. I said yes, I’d love to come, just to spite her. The thing is, I don’t know whether I’m meant to bring a present or not. I guess I’ll have to, even though I’ve only just started at Cloverfield. I can’t exactly go to someone’s birthday celebration without one, can I? Even I draw the line there. Besides, I get the sense Maisy might obliterate me with her secret sonic gun if I turn up empty-handed. She’s such a cow.
“What do you think he might like?” I ask Mi-Mi Wednesday lunchtime, where we’re perched on canteen stools, deciding whether the cook’s Shepherd’s pie is edible or not. (Not).
Mi-Mi pokes at her plate with her fork, a look of careful consideration on her face. “That’s a tough one,” she says thoughtfully, then visibly heartens at the thought of something. “A photoshopped picture of Damien with his arm round Cara Delevingne, complete with silver frame, to make Maisy’s day?”
“Appealing though that idea is, Mi-Mi, I don’t want to get strangled,” I say, as the girl in question walks past, Hannah running to catch up with her. We cough into our lightly burnt Shepherd’s pies as Maisy catches our eye, giving us a dark look. Why can’t she get a bloody life and stay out of ours? (Even if we were, you know, bitching about her). She deserved it. She may ooze siren-style glamour on the outside, but to me, she’ll always be a tarted-up pig in disguise.
“Steph! You’re so mean,” Mi-Mi says, practically in stitches, when I tell her this. “I’d almost think you were jealous.”
“Of that botoxed-by-thirty airhead? I think not,” I say, outraged at the idea.
“I don’t mean of her, you nut job. I mean of her and him,” she says craftily.
“Is that some kind of a sick joke?” I say imperiously, though my heart thrums uncertainly at the thought. “Seriously, Sherlock, you have your wires crossed.”
“You can fool yourself, Steph Collins, but you can’t fool me,” she says smugly. “Admit it. It’s OK, lots of other girls do. A word of warning though - he’s quite the slut around here.”
“What do you mean?” I say in a disinterested voice, pulling out my timetable. “Damn. Science last period.”
Mi-Mi leans forward confidentially, and says: “You have to know he’s dated a fair few girls in our year – and there are only eight of us, remember – as well as the Year Eleven brats at that all girls’ grammar school round the corner. Maisy’s his first – well – permanent girlfriend, shall we say?”
“Well, I’m not surprised,” I say distantly, replying to Sarah’s please-pick-up-Angel-today message with a sigh. That means two extra stops on the bus. “He’s quite...well...”
“Flirty?” Mi-Mi says, supplying the perfect word with ease.
“Yeah, kind of. He even accused me of fancying him!” I say, the hackles on my neck ignited by the memory.
“What a conceited little-”
“Yeah, I know. That’s what I said. He said he was joking, but who knows?” I look at Mi-Mi for clarification. “I’m not interested, OK? Really. I’ve just opened up to the idea of being friends with him, let alone...let alone anything else.”
“OK,” she says, but I can still see the cogs working in her head. “If you say so, Steph.”
“I do,” I say fiercely.
Who should appear at this moment but...?
“Hey, girls,” says an overly-familiar voice, gliding into the seat next to mine. “Not hungry?”
I show him the completely burnt inside.
“Oh. Maybe not, then,” he says, eyeing his own with dislike. “There goes lunch.”
“Canteen food’s overrated, anyway,” I say, pushing my plate away, though my stomach rumbles in dissent. Does it want food poisoning, or what? Jeez, I have a stupid gut.
“Steph and I were just wondering, what do you want for your birthday?” Mi-Mi says in an off-hand kind of way, and I think I’m the only one to detect the edge to her question.
The spark in Damien’s usually glowing eyes seems to dim as he answers. “Nothing special,” he says, raising a hand at Maisy’s calling table. I can’t help mulling over why he didn’t sit there in the first place. Oh well. Not my relationship. “Seriously, I don’t really want anything. I’m not fussed about birthdays.” His voice drops on the last bit.
“We have to get you something,” Mi-Mi says in objection, while I study him perplexedly from underneath my too-long lashes. What it is with him and birthdays? I don’t take great pains with them myself – let’s face it, all my past birthdays have been about Sian – but I still get a teensy bit enlivened at the prospect. You’d think we were getting his teeth pulled out, minus the anaesthetic.
“I don’t want anything.” His voice goes even lower. “To be blunt, I didn’t even want to go bowling. But you know what Maisy’s like. It’s hard to say no, when she’s gone to all this effort.” It occurs to me he might have ditched his girlfriend for our table to escape her.
“Why doesn’t she channel this into her own birthday?” I say, riled at the mention of her.
“You tell me,” he says dejectedly. “Anyway, enough about my bloody birthday. How’s life on Planet Steph?” The light is back in his eyes, and I fight off the tiny pricking that shivers through my body as he meets my eyes.
“Not very exciting,” I say, staring down at my nails. They’re in serious need of a re-coat. “I might go crazy and do some science homework later.”
“You do that,” he says solemnly, suddenly spotting something. I realise he’s glancing with interest at the background image on my phone, one I’d like to shove into a drawer and forget about. “Oh, is that your mum?”
“Mm-hmm,” I say, drumming my fingers on the canteen table. Well, if I fail my exams, I can always start a band. Called...
“She looks like you,” he says contemplatively as I give in and let him have a closer look. Mi-Mi is eyeing me suggestively, and I try to avoid her gaze. OK, I’m keeping away from her in science. I’ll sit next to Maisy instead. She’s like the human equivalent of garlic. Yeah, harsh. I’ll do a Dobby and shut my ears in the microwave when I get home.
“She doesn’t look like me,” I say with obvious resentment. “She’s nothing like me. Really, you must be the first person who thinks so.”
I can’t bear to see the smiley, peace-sign picture on the phone, taunting me with its smooth, blissful expressions. We went to Brighton beach that day, and nearly cracked our teeth on too much rock. I almost smile at the photographic reminder. That was before everything fell apart. Not long before, actually. Looking at it in the midst of a bustling canteen, it’s like my parallel lives are colliding, coming apart.
“She does! Doesn’t she?” he says to Mi-Mi, who looks conflicted between loyalty and truth. Loyalty, I scream at her with my eyes. She goes with truth.
“Well...sort of,” she says, wriggling in her seat. “I think it’s the eyes, and the sooty lashes. You know when you can kind of tell two people are related even though they look a bit different?”
“No,” I say stonily.
“Yeah you do,” Damien says, failing to be discouraged. “Practically twins...only you’re cuter. Prettier.” He smiles at me as he says it, looking oddly shy. It’s weird, but I’ve never met anybody so candid, so unreserved – especially when his girlfriend’s in easy earshot, but he doesn’t seem worried at all. Strangely, though, this just makes it all the more difficult to figure him out. At the pole end of the scale, I’ve been brought up playing games that go round in a zillion circles, each one more draining than the last. I think this boy must have spawned from another planet entirely.
“Yeah right,” I say, almost to myself. Cute? Pretty? I think he must have a different girl in mind. Like, maybe his girlfriend.
I refuse to look at Mi-Mi. I refuse to blush. Even so, I feel a deep pink rise like fire in my cheeks. I hate my friends, I really do. I swear they group together to shame me in every way possible. There’s probably a secret club, within the darkest, grimiest streets of Chicago...carried away? I know.
Just then the bell rings, sparing me. For once, for once the world is on my side. On second thoughts, I’ll sit next to Smarmy Steven. Then, hopefully, no one will go near me.
“I don’t know about you,” Mi-Mi says in my ear as Damien carts ahead with Maisy, reunited at last and away from me, thank goodness. “But if I didn’t know better, Steph, I’d say he has it bad for you.”
“Then you’re as deluded as he is,” is all I say.
*
Friday seems to arrive in a whirlwind, the week breezing by in a mix of tiring lessons, even more tired teachers, and mounts of preparatory homework. If someone mentions any of the following phrases a) You are sitting your final GCSE exams in the summer, so wise up b) You can forget a job outside cleaning and McDonald’s if you screw this one up and c) Children should be working and not heard, I’ll eat my shoelaces. Not that I have any shoelaces, in actual fact, but you get the point. (If you don’t, maybe you should consider revising for your GCSEs, or perhaps re-sitting them).
I root through my wardrobe disparagingly before breakfast, and end up with a loose, silky silver top and a black pair of jeans, teamed with my black boots. After some deliberation, I settle on tying my hair into a topknot, leaving my fringe to hang to the hills. We’re not changing until after school, of course, but it doesn’t hurt to make an effort. I bundle the clothes in a bag and shove them in the only remaining corner of my reindeer rucksack, along with a birthday envelope. Even though Damien doesn’t want any presents – so he says - I got him something small anyway. Just ten pounds and this Sponge Bob key ring I couldn’t resist buying in a shop, along with a stiff-backed Happy Sixteenth card with a comical bubble (it’s a shit joke, actually, but never mind. Something about a dead horse and...it’s too dull to explain).
A buzz is fizzing explosively in form when I walk in with Mi-Mi, Ollie, Rihanne and Zac, and it’s not just because it’s nearly the weekend. The only conversation anyone seems able to muster up contains the name ‘Damien’ or the word ‘bowling’ – and even some hopefuls bidding on whether we’ll go for pizza afterwards. With the sub-standard meals offered at our supposedly ‘outstanding’ school, I can’t help hoping myself. I’m half-tempted to have a ‘talk’ with Ms Tavern, but I’ve been having this consistent nightmare she’s rip my eyeballs out if I so much as criticise a textbook, so then again, maybe not. You know, I don’t think she’s ever forgiven me for dragging her precious institution through some (very) brief mud. In my defence, how was I meant to know my fruitless actions would splash across page one? It’s not my fault it happened to be a quiet week in news world. It’s not my fault she runs a – what was it again? – soulless, perfection-obsessed boot camp, is it? People had clearly been dying to start slating Cloverfield, so really, none of this is my fault. Well, only a little bit.
“All this drama over one bowling session,” Rihanne says, her light brown eyelashes flicking upwards. “Our peers need to get out more.”
“That we all know,” Mi-Mi says, resigned, as we flop down in our form seats. Luckily, even though we’re not next to each other (yes, I am still next to Damien and his Barbie-bitch), we’re in the same aisle, plus my seat-mates are nearly always late. That time I saw Damien at the bus stop before eight must have been a serious one-off, because he and Maisy barely make it in time for the second bell. The first is a warning; the second is a get running bitches. Needless to say, poor Miss Preacher is at the end of her tether. (And it wasn’t very long to begin with, admittedly). I had a bet with Ollie yesterday she’ll quit before next September dawns. He asserted she’s ‘tougher than she looks’. Right. Rest assured, twenty big ones will be mine by next year, hee hee hee. Mi-Mi told me in private he thinks I’ll have forgotten all about it by then. No sir-ree.
“I wish it could have been a Saturday instead,” I hear Hannah say blithely to Rihanne. “It would be so much more practical. I hate changing in the school loos. My jumper’s designer, you know!”
“Shame about the face,” Ollie whispers to me, and I try not be catty and join in, but the pressure is great. I get out my water bottle and chuckle into that, so bubbles travel up my nose.
“Cool,” Ollie says, snapping a picture.
“Delete that,” I say imperatively. “Delete it now, or – or your life won’t be worth existing in!”
“Nice try, Collins,” he says, whistling. “As scary as your threat sounds, believe it or not, my life is already not worth existing in.”
I will kill him.
“Well, I’ll make it more not worth existing in!” I say, tongue-tied by my own word knots. I should do cross words. (NB: Does getting tongue-tied mean you’ll be good at cross words?)
“Talk to the hand, bitch, ’cause the face ain’t listening,” he says, wisely ducking to avoid the assault of my maths book.
By our final lesson – ICT – no one’s even pretending to do work anymore. I even catch the ICT teacher minimising her roulette game and quietly cheering when she wins something. I guess the school lock on certain websites doesn’t apply to staff. (I must catnap a teacher computer one day, in that case).
Rather than designing our own game (I get as far as creating an avatar duck – small and yellow with adorable, flapping black feet) and creating a spreadsheet for our expected profit, the whole class are quite blatantly communicating via the instant-messaging school email system. (Hey, they created Frankenstein’s monster there, so I’m saying nothing).
MAISY: Who’s EXCITED for Damien’s BIRTHDAY??
DAMIEN: Well, at least that makes one of us.
OLLIE: Cheer up, mate. You’re only sixteen once.
DAMIEN: Yeah, so I’ve been told. How would you know? What about multiple lives?
MAISY: Well, right now it’s this life!
DAMIEN: That sounds so wrong.
MI-MI: Corrupting everything!
MAISY: Actually, I was being wrong.
MI-MI: Oh.
DAMIEN: ‘Oh’? Where’s my apology?
[email protected] has gone offline and is unavailable for comment.
STEPH: Does anyone know how to use the formulas? Damn Mi-Mi’s gone offline.
DAMIEN: Which formula do you want, sweetheart?
STEPH: Someone less ridiculous...?
ZAC: I’ll do it. For a fee.
STEPH: What fee?
DAMIEN: Need you ask?
STEPH: I’m getting you blocked, any second now. One finger on the report button and Ms Tavern will expel your sorry arse, Smith. Zac?
ZAC: $10.
STEPH: Why dollars? Are you applying for US citizenship?!
ZAC: No – am going to NYC in October half-term.
STEPH: What?? You lucky – TEACHER ALERT!!
Ironically taking a leaf out of Ms Iron’s book, we minimise our screens and return to our ‘work’, attempting to look studious and not like we want to flunk our ICT GCSE. Bring on the technological world and all that.
“Creative duck,” my teacher says as she passes my area, and I look up modestly, doing the whole ‘it was just something I threw together’ thing. “Now perhaps you could try and formulate something?”
My winning expression falls a slittle. “Um, OK,” I say, while my friends look at me as if to say: how are you going to get out of this one? But like Severus Snape, Dumbledore, I have a plan. “Only...”
“Only?” Ms Irons says in a prompting voice.
“I feel my best work, er-” I begin to say, inventing randomly. “Is –er -”
“Achieved – while – I’m – alone – in – the – workstation,” Mi-Mi says in a clever mime.
“Is achieved while I’m alone in the workstation,” I say gleefully.
“Well, yes, that seems sensible,” Ms Irons says, moving on to observe Zac’s perfect spreadsheet. Typical. And it would’ve only cost me ten dollars. That’s...what, just under six pounds in our currency? All I can say is, the maths teacher would be proud of me. I’d probably get an award. Gold. No, silver, I think in a rush. Less tacky.
“Steph, your eyes have gone glazed,” Mi-Mi says, her hand in my face.
“What?” I say, brought out of my daydream in a cruel crash. It’s 1929 all over again (take that, year 10 History exam!). “Right.”
At last the lesson is, regretfully, at its end. All sixteen of us head towards the door in a stampede, having got special permission from a nervy Miss Preacher to skip afternoon form to change. Another tutor wouldn’t have done it, but I would hazard a guess she wants us out of her hair as much as we want out of her greasy locks.
Skins-style, the group of us troop away from the grey, concrete school grounds, dressed in all our fancy modern finery. Well, more slutty than fancy, to tell the truth, but I’m allowed a bit of artistic licence, right?
I try not to see it as a bad omen when a passing car sloshes water onto the hem of our various different trousers and glitzy shoes, the clouds starting to thunder menacingly overhead. A storm’s coming, and we’d best be ready when she does...I couldn’t resist. (Hagrid, Harry Potter Five film reference, in case you’re lost).
The rain begins to splatter down, delicate at first, in small, teardrop-shaped sleets, and I let it fall down and drench my outfit, even when it starts to pour down my spiky boots. Right here, with the splashing water drowning my socks in an infant tornado, I feel the tips of homesickness starting to seep into my wet skin.
In a paradox life, a long-faded reality, ghost fingers entwine mine as the storm rages on, and together we laugh as we spin into nothing, into dizziness, into the void where we belong.
OK, CONFESSION TIME. WHEN I AGREED TO COME BOWLING, I KIND OF
neglected to mention I can’t actually bowl. Well, not without a ramp. And before you go thinking I’m one hundred percent hand-eye brainless, this is speaking from a girl who hasn’t been since she was nine, when it was still, you know, OK to use a ramp with dignity. I tug on Mi-Mi’s purple sleeve to convey this devastating piece of news, and rather than being big on the Fanta and sympathy, she seems to find the whole thing funny. Social suicide...really gets your funny bones going, doesn’t it?
“You’ll catch on,” she says, not very convincingly. “It’s easy. You insert your fingers in the ball holes, and roll it. If you come last, well, at least no one will know you usually use a ramp!”
“I do not usually use a ramp, as it happens,” I say hotly. “I told you – I haven’t been in over six years. I’d like to see you try it if you were me.”
She holds her hands up in a gesture of surrender. “Sor-ee. Not my fault you have to use-”
I elbow her painfully in the ribs. “Would you mind keeping it down?”
“C’mon, you have to see the humour in all this...”
“Not really.”
“You can always sit out,” Mi-Mi says, in a stroke of eureka. “Say you’re ill. I’ll even sacrifice participating myself if you really want.”
I turn down the offer with obvious reluctance. “No. I’ll play. I don’t want to be a party pooper, do I?”
I am a good person.
“What are you two whispering about?” Ollie says, desperate not to be left out, as we queue for the shoe hire.
“Oh, we were just bitching about you,” I say breezily.
“What? Why? What were you saying?”
“I was just telling Steph about the time you-” Mi-Mi starts to say.
“Hey, you swore you wouldn’t tell anyone! We make a pact!”
“Pacts can be broken!”
“What are you two talking about?” I say, my attention gripped.
Mi-Mi giggles. “I swore I wouldn’t tell, sorry,” she says.
Ollie breathes out. “Thank goodness. The secret’s safe.”
“What secret?” I say, fighting the impulse to stamp my foot. That wouldn’t be the best idea, anyway, since I’m currently in the process of taking my boots off and handing them to shoe hire guy (name badge: John.)
“Oh, that secret,” Zac, who’s been eavesdropping, says, giving them a significant look. I want a significant look. I want in the secret.
“I won’t tell anyone,” I say persuasively.
“All you need to know is ‘dare’, ‘nude’, ‘locked out’, and ‘old lady’,” Zac says, and there’s a pause while I digest this.
“No?” I say, jaw hanging open.
“’Fraid so,” Rihanne says as we career over to the only remaining space in the Bowling Alley. “We don’t like to mention it.”
“I’ll try not to let it...slip out,” I say wickedly, and Ollie pales beneath his freckles.
“You won’t actually tell anyone, will you?” Mi-Mi says as he ambles off to beg Hannah for some of her fruity gum. “He’s really quite sensitive about it.”
“I won’t tell a soul,” I say promisingly, trying my best to keep a poker-face. Lady Gaga I ain’t.
“OK,” she says, shoulders relaxing.
The game kicks off in alphabetical order – by surname, and I quiver, being in the ‘C’ pile. Not long now. Even more terrifyingly, Maisy’s go is straight after mine. I can feel the competition tensing between us like electricity. A competition I will lose.
“Just roll straight,” Mi-Mi says haplessly when my turn is announced.
Oh gosh. Take a few, deep, Claire-care breaths, and everything will be fine. I’m not going to die, I’m not going to die...though I might end up wishing I would after this. Knees knocking, I walk up to where the brightly-coloured bowling balls are lined up like giant sweets – a deceptive image. I know the villainy that lurks within.
I do as Mi-Mi says, plugging my fingers into the holes, secretly fearing they won’t come out again. I had to go and pick a small one, didn’t I? I’m going to get stuck. I’m going to get stuck.
“C’mon, Steph, you can do it!” Ollie says deafeningly, as Maisy and Hannah look over at me, whispering, and... well, it doesn’t take Stephen Hawking to work out who’s hot on their bitch-list.
I roll my first ball in six years, watching its progress like a pushy parent on sports day. It careens off to the right, veering into another group’s section, who all give me the finger in response. Typical. I hurry over to retrieve the sparkly pink ball, red-faced, as they shout after me. I guess the phrase, ‘it’s only a game’ isn’t really appropriate here, huh?
“Well, you tried,” Mi-Mi says, ever the motivator. “Er...what more can you do, really?”
“Don’t even bother,” I say, defeatist. “I stink.”
“You smell nice, actually. Strawberries,” Ollie says, sniffing the air and giving me a lopsided smile. I find myself laughing through my suicide strike 1#, even when the whispers increase in volume, like clicking insects.
Then it’s Maisy’s turn. She hits eight pins. I can’t stand to watch as she hits the air, screaming about being the champion of the universe. Nauseated, I trade an equally derisive glance with Mi-Mi as Maisy totters away from the bowling start point in those clip-clop heels, giving Damien a birthday smooch in front of us all. Gross overreaction, much?
“That is it, I have to beat her,” Mi-Mi says stormily, a hard glint in her hazelnut eyes. “No one gets away with such a puffed-up celebration. Nobody.”
Even I’m a little scared of her.
True to form, Mi-Mi scores nine pins on pure spite alone, if you ask me. Soon the points have begun stacking up, with Mi-Mi leading, then Maisy tied second place with Damien, because they’re so romantic and connected they can’t even have a separate score. Ollie’s in third, and me...well, I’m next to last. But I’m not last, Hannah is! Three cheers for almost-losers. And that’ll teach her for cackling about me in her completely fake designer jumper. In my opinion, I’m not the only one who could do with a ramp.
As the rounds go on, I find myself not minding when I don’t knock a single pin, or when I inspire the towering wrath of our neighbouring bowlers. The game turns silly anyway, with people cheating left, right and centre (Ollie knocks seven pins down for me when no one’s looking, allowing me to sneak up to third-to-bottom), and soon I’ve forgotten it’s a tournament at all. Only Maisy and Mi-Mi remain serious, locked in a mental battle of stamina and strength. I vie for the latter, obviously.
“The claws are out,” Damien says in a murmur as I await my next turn.
“Tell me about it,” I say. “Bet you five pounds Mi-Mi will trump your girlfriend?”
“Deal,” he says, holding out his hand. I shake it, and a fission of warmth runs in an undercurrent through our fingers. I pull back as though I’ve been burnt, taking my place at the heel of our bowling section and managing to wallop four pins, face bright pink. Hannah’s now the only one on a single figure score, to my delight.
In the middle of one of the rounds, my phone starts buzzing in my pocket. I take it out idly, thinking it’s Sarah or Will, but it’s not. It’s Claire. There is no way I’m talking to her with all of this lot listening. Not now they know about Sian.
I slip out the backdoor and slump against a knobbly brick wall, pressing ‘accept call’. Claire’s rainbow voice rushes through the signal like a flame.
“Steph, so good to hear from you!” she says happily, even though she called me. For a professional, this woman is amazingly stupid sometimes. “I was just ringing to confirm our appointment tomorrow?”
“Oh, yeah. What time?” I say, playing with a tearaway piece of hair.
“Should we say about one? Give me a chance to drive over,” she says, and then leaves one of her social-worker-training silences. Here it comes. “If there’s anything you need to talk about, let me know anytime,” she adds in her best confide-in-me-I’m-your-friend voice.
“Will do,” I say in clipped tones. I hope I’ve made it crystal clear I’ll be doing nothing of the sort. “Was there anything else?”
“Well, just something about your mum,” she says, hesitant.
“Whatever it is, I’m not interested,” I say, violently scuffing the dusty stones at my feet. “She’s nothing to do with me anymore. Will that be all?”
Claire sounds distinctly ruffled. “Stephanie, we agreed I’d give you regular updates, if you recall?”
“Whatever it is, say it fast,” I say woodenly.
“I called Abbey-Lake, and they’re under the impression your mother’s sent you a letter of apology?”
I give a bitter laugh. “Yeah, right. They probably forced her to do that. Or wrote it themselves. Or if she does mean it this time, she’ll probably wake up tomorrow and have another f*ing personality transplant!”
I end the call with a wrench of satisfaction. Claire will want to discuss my inexcusable behaviour tomorrow, of course, but right now it’s today and I don’t care.
Mood as dampened the rain that still trickles down my trousers, I resume my last game of solitaire, even though it’ll be my turn to bowl soon. They can manage without me for ten minutes, surely? It’s all wrong, though. Everything’s spoiled, tainted. Well, you have to hand it to my mother...it’s not many who could cause an earthquake from miles and miles away. Talented woman, Sian Collins.
There’s a squeaking sound as the hinges on the aged backdoor sway open, the doorframe shuddering in my ears. I slash at the phone with trembling fingers, wishing whoever it is would go away. He doesn’t, obviously.
“It’s your turn,” Damien says, holding the door open like I’m about to walk through it. “What are you doing out here, anyway?”
“I...had to pick up a phone call,” I say, rubbing my temple. I don’t just feel all wrong...I sound it, too. It’s incredible how one thing can transform you in a second, incredible how you can go from fun to sad, warm to cold. I’m beginning to discover it doesn’t take much to make things change, but it takes an awful lot of effort to reverse the damage that gets done.
“What’s up?” he says, expression shifting from eager and game-ready to concerned. “You look fed up.”
“Do I?” I say petulantly. “I hadn’t noticed.”
He looks like he wants to laugh, but thinks better of it. Smart choice. “Who called?”
“My wacko social worker,” I say, too tired to make something up. “On account of my running away, I have a fun, fun meeting to look forward to tomorrow.”
“Right,” he says, joining me in lying against the wall. “That should be thrilling.”
“Yep,” I say, preventing a yawn with difficulty. “I should get back inside, I guess. I’m working on it.”
“Bowling’s not really my thing, either,” he says quietly as I make no attempt to move. “Or birthdays, really. Any of it.”
“Why not?” I say. “Everyone loves birthdays. It’s all about me and all that.”
“Not me,” he says, sounding so morose I look up from my game of solitaire.
“Seriously, what’s so terrible? One day and it’s over.”
His eyes are fixed on his shoes. “Something happened, OK?” he says, so softly I can barely hear him. “A long time ago. Since then...I’ve hated it. Every year. I know it’s stupid, but...” he trails off, his usually joking mouth pulling down at the corners, like a sad clown.
“Doesn’t sound stupid to me,” I say, slipping my phone in my bag. “What happened?”
I don’t expect him to tell me – I certainly wouldn’t spill all my darkest, deepest secrets to a girl I’ve known for days. The thought of talking about my own messed-up life leaves me cold, in all honesty. But Damien’s clouded green eyes collide with mine, and I hold my breath.
“I was ten,” he says flatly, still looking right at me, inside me. “It was a school day – the usual normal, boring routine – and I didn’t think anything of it, you know, when mum was late.” An empty smile tugs at his lips. “If anything, I was a bit annoyed – there I was, playing with this stupid truck in after school club, on my tenth birthday – everything a kid could ask for, right? But she never came. I waited and waited until I was the last one there, and the secretary said she’d have to call home, find out what was going on, and...”
“And?” I whisper.
“And no one was home. Dad was who knows where, and the school eventually got a call from the hospital, saying she’d been involved in an accident. She didn’t make it.”
I don’t know what to say. My whole being seems to have gone numb, frozen. I feel like I’ve been through someone’s knicker drawer, snuck a look at their scariest, most intimate thoughts, and it’s horrible. But this isn’t about me, so I reach for his fingers, and that same powerful jolt burns from his hands to mine.
“I’m sorry,” I say, and I mean it. “That is...one crap birthday.”
A shaky laugh rises in his throat, and soon we’re both bizarrely, impossibly laughing, our bodies falling into each other in the narrow space allowed by the brick wall. Then we look at each other, and then look away again.
“I’m over it now, anyway,” he tells me, even though I don’t think you’re ever over a thing like that. “Like I said, it was a long time ago. I don’t even think about it much, not anymore...”
“Just on birthdays,” I say, finishing the sentence.
“We’ve probably both lost about fifty points stuck out here,” he says, and we laugh again.
“I bet I’m in last place now,” I say regretfully. “Damn. I so wanted to beat Hannah, at least. It’s like, fastest loser.”
“Speaking of bets...let’s go see who’s indebted by five pounds,” he says with a sideways smirk, and we walk back through the door as though nothing happened. Maybe nothing did. Everything’s starting to take on that funny, surreal quality.
*
We re-enter into the fray of things to find Mi-Mi and Maisy both preparing to bowl their last turn, discovering everyone else gave up a long time ago (I’m not last on the scoreboard, ha). It’s a two-woman fight now.
Maisy goes first, her surname being Dawn and Mi-Mi’s Taylor, and hits her neon ball hard in the direction of the pins. Fail, fail, I say in my head. She knocks down nine pins, and I curse to myself.
“Prepare to pay,” Damien says in a low voice.
I glare, my competitive spirit remerging in a frenzy as Mi-Mi takes to the stage.
“Go on, Mi-Mi!” I say noisily, and she turns and gives me a thumbs-up, uncommonly nervous.
Mi-Mi takes her crimson red ball, determined, and hurls it straight at the pins. We wait, hung in musty tension, as it rumbles towards the end...
“Strike!” Mi-Mi says, her face lit up in triumph, as all ten pins collapse in hair-raising fashion. Ollie, Rihanne, Zac and I cheer the loudest.
“What were you saying?” I ask Damien sweetly, and he swears and brings out a crisp five-pound note. My fist closes around it. I may not have won the battle, but I did win the war.
As rumoured, we go to the nearby Pizza Hut after retrieving our shoes, temporarily caught in confusion as to which belongs to who. I’m glad to see my boots are among the most original, along with Maisy’s hideously pink heels.
It takes eons for our order to arrive, since everyone wants different things. The sickliest choice, Mi-Mi and I feel, is Maisy exclaiming she’ll have the ham and pineapple along with Damien, since their taste buds are so in tune with each other.
“And their tongues, by the look of them,” Ollie says in a muted voice, and in the disruption of the multiple orders, I’m the only one who hears.
I go for pepperoni, to say the least, the only one who does. Great. I knew I was a freak. Most people end up plumping for boring old cheese and tomato. After the pizzas, we dip into the all-you-can-eat ice cream, with Ollie setting the Pizza Hut record for most bowls of desert (I lost count). They even take a complimentary picture of Ollie with a spoon in his mouth, eyes crossed. Like the day I first met him, I don’t know whether to be impressed or disgusted by my friend’s greediness, so settle for both.
“How can he just keep eating?” a gobsmacked Mi-Mi says to me.
“One of the great mysteries of the universe,” I say, a little stunned myself.
Full to burst, I head to the not-so-glamorous toilets (let’s face it, I’ve seen worse), not thinking anything of the heeled feet that follow me there. It’s only as I’m brushing my hair back into its topknot that whoever’s in the other toilet flushes it and walks out, rinsing her tanned, sun-kissed hands with soap suds and water. Maisy. Brushing aside the strained atmosphere with a swoop of my thick-teethed comb, I eliminate her from my vision entirely, an art I’m pretty learned in now.
“I imagine you’re very pleased with yourself, aren’t you?” she says suddenly, ice-blue eyes hooking onto mine in the polished surface of the mirror.
I brush down my fringe, applying more lip gloss.
“Don’t pretend not to know what I’m on about,” she says, losing her cool. “I saw you earlier...snuggling up to my boyfriend. In fact, you’ve had your hands all over him pretty much the whole day.”
“What?” I put down the comb to face her, incredulous. “What the hell are you talking about?”
“Don’t play games with me, Steph Collins,” she says through her teeth. “Anyone can see what you’re after...who you’re after.”
“You’re paranoid,” I say calmly, putting my brush in my bag. “Maybe you should speak to your precious attachment about all this, rather than embarrassing yourself here.”
Her sugared voice matches my soothing tone, honey-sweet and deadly. “Stay away from my boyfriend,” she says, and she couldn’t be clearer. “OK?”
Then she walks out, heels tapping on the hard parquet floor, leaving me utterly dumbfounded, her words still ringing aggressively in my ears.
I LIE LIKE A STARFISH ON MY STRAWBERRY-PATTERNED BED, STARING
glassily up at the ceiling. Maisy’s comments keep twisting around in my mind, bleating repeatedly in my ears every few seconds. A hot, burning charge of blood thuds in my veins. I wasn’t ‘all over Damien’ yesterday, for her information. I stood outside with him and listened as he told me about his mum’s accident, and it was a moment between friends, a moment of confidentiality. I didn’t have some ulterior motive like she might have done, had our places been switched. And maybe if she’d taken the time to listen to her beloved boyfriend rather than making showy gushes of affection, she would have realised her bowling party was the last thing he needed. But no, she streaked on ahead and took over his life, his plans. And for her to have the balls to accuse of me of trying to take him for myself...
I turn off the game of solitaire, too enraged to engage with the task at hand. It’s all about her, isn’t it? She’s totally superficial, going round snogging him in front of everyone with her stupid heels and her short skirts. She’s one of those people who always have to be in the sunshine, rejecting the dark, imperfect versions of life to suit her, and it makes me mad. I’ve met people like her before. When everything in your life’s stable, they’re your best friend, but when things take a rocky turn, they’re nowhere to be seen. I can read that girl, and I don’t like what I see. Something tells me that if Damien wasn’t good-looking and entertaining and popular, with boys and girls alike, she wouldn’t give one ounce about him. I know I should forget her, put her out of my mind, but I can’t. She’s there, like a hangnail you can’t wait to tear off. How will it look if I start blanking him on Maisy’s instruction, after what he told me? She may be taller and prettier and miles more popular than I am, but I see her for what she is, and she doesn’t scare me. If I want to break friends with someone, it’ll be on my own terms. That’s it.
I stand up, stout-hearted, and pound down the stairs, no longer shocked to see the Barbie head at the bottom. I give it a kick for good measure, reminded of a certain someone.
I find Angel splotching paint onto a cream-coloured sheet of paper, little sleeves rolled-up, chin set. She looks so like Will when he’s working I’m overcome with a strong sense of deja vu (though in my case, I can place where the familiarity comes from, so maybe that doesn’t count. It sounded cool, though. French does.)
“What you painting?” I say, sitting beside her on the sofa.
She points to four colour-coded blobs. “Mummy, Daddy, Seth and me. And a house.”
I smile. Things are so simple in her three-year-old world. Things are so steady. Nothing is about to lurch into the unfamiliar, the blackness. She knows everyone in her life, all pampering to her, and she doesn’t care about anything outside it. In a way, it’s a lot like I used to be, only brighter, more promising.
“Well, I can definitely see the likeness,” I say, looking at the ape-like sketch of Will, splashed with angry red paint. Uncanny.
Angel’s coin-shaped brown eyes hang onto my every word. “Weally?” she says.
“Really,” I say, tussling her shoulder-length, ringletty hair. My eyes brighten. “Angel, Angel, Angel,” I add villainously. “How would you feel about taking part in a hair experiment?”
“Yes, yes, yes!” Angel claps her hands. “Hair experiment, hair experiment!”
“Alright, keep it down,” I say, one eye on the living room door. Both Sarah and Will are staying home today because of Claire’s ‘visit’ - a.k.a. reviewing of my shoddy progress, and they’re cleaning the house of all of Angel’s junk and the dust that’s gathered since she was last here. Both have stressful jobs, so they don’t have time to run around with a hoover all the time. I do it sometimes, because it’s no big deal and I’m used to it. I was Chief Cleaner in my last home, after all, and it wasn’t so bad.
“What are you doing, Seth?” Angel asks as I lift her curls up and down, deciding what to do with it. Sarah goes through a painful inner struggle when it comes to trimming her hair, only doing it when absolutely necessary. It would be quite funny to see her expression if I chopped half of it off, but I’m not going to do that. What kind of monster would that make me? I’ll just even up the ends, that’s all. I need something to divert my busy brain, what with Claire’s ‘appointment’, and I can’t leave the house in case she comes early, so this’ll have to do.
I end up fixing Angel’s hair in numerous tiny plaits, combing and separating frequently. She’s a very good hairdresser’s client, sitting very still on the sofa and keeping her finger to her lips, muttering ‘shh’ every so often. I tie different colour bows onto the ends of each plait, and it takes a painstakingly long time, but after an age the look is complete. Voila! I should go into the hair business.
Sarah, like my niece, actually claps her hands when her and Will tramp downstairs, hands grey with dust, carrying bin bags.
“Did you do those little plaits, Steph? You’re so clever,” she says, coming closer to admire my handiwork, and I try not to look too pleased with myself.
“Oh, please, anyone could’ve done that,” Will says dismissively, and Sarah steps on his toe pointedly. “Joking!”
“Yeah, I’m not ten, I do understand jokes,” I say, my eyes going round like washing machines. Angel starts copying me, so I stop, not wanting her to pick up on my less than impressive etiquette.
“Don’t worry about Grumpy over there,” Sarah says from the side of her mouth. “He’s just jealous.”
“Of my hairdressing skills?” I say doubtfully.
“Of anyone who’s better than him,” she says, evidently from experience. “Everything’s a competition – even the dusting.”
“Yep, that’s Will,” I say in humorous agreement. In fact, I think he and Sarah first met at university in the gym, where Will challenged her to a treadmill duel. Weird. (They tied, though now both separately insist they won). And their first date was rock climbing. I mean, what the hell? No wonder I’m so odd – I come from a family of freaks. We should join the circus.
As the clock starts inching towards one o’clock, we all huddle on the sofa, Sarah, Will and I clutching steaming mugs of tea, and Angel a beaker of juice. I don’t know why they’re so tense. It’s me who’s being cross-examined here. Oh, yeah, and I was rude to Claire yesterday. Maybe she won’t mention it. Just in case, maybe I should, oh so casually, bring it up...
“Um, Claire called when I was at the Bowling Alley, didn’t I tell you guys?” I say innocently. They shake their heads, looking so suspense-filled and springy I’m half expecting them to leap up in nervous shock. “Well, I, uh, wasn’t the nicest to her.”
“What did you say?” Will says alertly.
For goodness’ sake. All this drama over one pointless phone conversation...
I point at Angel’s head, raising my eyebrows.
“Well, give us a hint,” Sarah says fervently.
Not her too. It’s not bloody charades.
“Did you say a bad word?” Angel says in a whisper. “Like poop-bum?”
“Not exactly,” I say, lamenting to myself. They get so worked up about stuff, the three of them – like wound-up robot dolls. “Erm, worse than poop-bum.” I feel ridiculous. This is ridiculous. It was supposed to be a casual conversation! Ca-su-al. This is excruciating.
“How worse?” Will says keenly. “Did you call her a-”
Sarah throws him a sharp look, and he stops himself mid-sentence.
“I mean, it wasn’t too terrible, was it?” he says. “How did you leave it?”
My nails entangle themselves in the exposed, fluffy part of the sofa. “I terminated the call,” I say in a low voice.
“Oh, good. You got rid of her!” Angel says, and looks confused when we all look at her.
“In a nutshell...yes,” I say, exhaling.
“Well, that’s just brilliant, Steph,” Will says acridly. “Great start to the meeting.”
“It’s not a meeting kind of meeting,” I say in a wail, losing my head completely. “It’s informal. In-bloody-formal, OK?”
Someone thumps on the door, and we jump, spilling tea everywhere (though luckily nowhere near Angel or her...er, lovely painting). It turns out it isn’t even Claire – just the postwoman, who looks flustered by our snappy demeanours. I hope my social worker knows what wrecks she’s made of us. Maybe I’ll bring it up as a point of conversation if she dares breathes a word about the phone call and why I got so pissed...
The real Claire arrives at 1.45 p.m., and I save this up in my arsenal as another thing to use against her. If the person supposedly helping me can’t even be reliable, then it’s no wonder my life’s a mess, is it? I know this is unfair, but it’s a case of self-preservation.
“Hi, all,” she says in her usual airy-fairy fashion, and maybe I’m being as paranoid as Maisy was last evening, but I swear I detect a certain stiffness in her manner.
“Erm...hi,” I say as Will nudges me.
“Do you want a cup of tea or anything?” Will and Sarah say, their shared question chiming together in the epitome of good hosting. You’d think we were filming a parody of Come Dine with Me or something. Flip’s sake.
Annoyingly, they wander off to the kitchen to fetch the tea and presumably some biscuits (on this nice green china plate they always save for guests – they almost had a fit the other day when I harmlessly laid my hand on it), leaving me and Angel alone with Claire. I make no move to diffuse the taut atmosphere. In fact, I revel in it. The more squeamish this is, the quicker she’ll be back out of my life, where I’d like her to stay.
“Hello, Angel,” Claire says with forced cheeriness. “That’s a pretty picture.”
Angel looks at me worriedly, sucking her thumb, and this spurs me into action. It’s not right to act this way in front of her. Selfish.
“I’m really sorry about yesterday,” I say without looking her in the eye. “You caught me off guard, that’s all. I’d have blown up at anybody.”
Claire’s collected aura seems to shift as the lines around her eyes smile. “That’s quite alright,” she says, unwaveringly kind-natured. “Shall we agree to say no more about it?”
“Mmm.”
Will and Sarah return to the living room (a little too on cue if you ask me), carrying a tray of fresh tea and biscuits, or milk if you’re Angel.
“Anyway,” Claire says briskly as she takes a seat on the sofa. “We were all a little concerned at your rash decision to leave, Steph, so early into your new start here.”
I realise they’re all waiting for me to speak.
What do I say?
“Look, that was a mistake,” I say, prodding Angel’s fallen, bristly paintbrush back into the cup. It makes a gentle thud as it lands. “I was always going to come back. I know the plan to go abroad or go on the run was crazy, and I’d never have gone along with it-”
“But do you understand the danger you put yourself in?” Claire asks me, pressing on. “In going to see your mother in her...state.”
“I didn’t think,” I say angrily. “I got the letter, and she was really distressed...she didn’t want to stay in that place, that was the only reason I went.”
“And we get that,” Claire says understandingly. “But you won’t do it again, will you?”
“No,” I say pungently. “I won’t.” Obviously, I add silently. What kind of half-wit do they think I am? I’m going nowhere near that woman, not for a long while, and not ever if I can manage it. If I see her in five years, it’ll be five years too soon.
“I also understand a stir was caused with your school,” Claire says, the disquiet clear in the immaturely aging planes of her skin.
“Oh, that,” I say perfunctorily. “That blew over.”
“And no lasting problems were caused with your headmistress?” she says like a conflict interviewer.
“Not really,” I say with a shrug. “She’s just as demo-”
“Just as professional as she’s always been,” Will says quickly, overriding my response. Probably for the best, really.
“Good.” Claire breathes out, her Spanish inquisition apparently over. “And how are you doing at your school, with the lessons and the students?”
Taking out maths, ICT, science, Maisy, Hannah and a quite a few other bitches, I can give an honest answer that won’t niggle at my social worker’s mind.
“It’s great,” I say, my teeth coming together as cheerily as a child in a cereal advert. “Just great. Everything’s going really well.” I work to sound optimistic.
“I’m glad,” Claire says, and I move away slightly in case she’s about to go in for a hug. Instead, she takes out a folded, yellowing piece of paper and holds it out for me to take.
I accept it automatically, stomach clenching at the swirly black writing on front, addressed to my name. Steph.
“Read it,” she says unassumingly. “Trust me. It might make a few things clear.”
Trust her? Trust her? How transparent do I look?
“OK,” I say, making myself stay looking serene. “Fine. I’ll do it later.”
Both Will and Sarah’s smiles have frozen.
“I must be on my way,” Claire says with a stretch of her arms. “I have a bit of a drive to embark on.” She stands up, says goodbye to Angel and me, and is shown to the door. I barely hear her. It’s like the room’s dulled – everything. The air, my insides, my senses. I can’t feel anything.
I turn on my phone, desensitised, and flip straight to solitaire, my legs coiling on the end of the sofa. I play limitless games for the rest of the afternoon, trying to get that feeling back, that peaceful triumph of a champion. It doesn’t work. All day, I’m on my feet, sitting down, back up again, constantly doing something. I end up pacing in my bedroom, watching as the heavens open up in the sky and glitter with rain. It’s beautiful.
Sarah finds me later on the window ledge, still holding the unopened letter, looking out at the disturbed, weather-beaten storm outside.
“You don’t have to read it. Not if you don’t want to,” she says impartially. I don’t respond, my socks touching the woolly texture of the rug. “We’ve got popcorn. Will’s rented some DVD or another – probably a horror. Don’t worry, we’ve sent Angel to bed. Coming?”
I allow her to draw me back to the living room, where she paints my toenails cornflower blue with her neat, careful hands, jostling Will for an even share of the popcorn. It’s not the best evening I’ve ever spent, not to mention that the DVD is full of clichéd plot holes and low-budget murder scenes, but it isn’t the worst. It’s, you know, OK. As Sarah leans into Will, her eyes closing, I patter back upstairs, shutting the door softly.
I don’t sleep. I can’t. There’s no point denying it...I have to see what’s in that letter, for better or worse, for richer or...I’ll stop. Concentrate, Steph.
I smooth out the letter, emotionless, and read:
Sorry, sorry.
It looks like I’ve messed up again, huh?
You know how it is, Steph. Things get tangled in my head, distorted, like there are ropes changing my words, churning them into poison like butter. I didn’t mean the things I said. You know I didn’t. I was mad (in both senses of the word), because I so wanted to escape, and then reality crashed and burned. I knew you could leave me, but I was stuck here to rot. Please forgive me. You’ll all I have.
Everyone has demons. You’ll learn that one day.
Mumx.
I crumple the letter until it resembles a tiny ball, fighting the desire to scream. It’s just more of her pathetic excuses, more of her lies, her manipulation...well, I’ve had it with her sordid little web. I’m done with her, and I mean that. I’ve had enough. I’m not going to write back. With any luck, she’ll have enough sense to see my silence speaks for itself. I won’t be opening any more of her tireless monologues, either. This is it as far as the two of us go. It’ll be like...detox. I’m sure it’ll do us both the world of good...Mum can stop using me for her ends, and I can stop being let down. People are temporary by nature, not to be trusted, so the smartest thing is to depend on yourself alone and leave the rest to fate. Have friends, sure, but don’t put your everything in them. All that’ll do is give them the power to break you. I for one would like to be whole.
I get up long before anyone else rises, and the first place I go is the fireplace. There I watch the letter become consumed in the flickering orange, shrivelling up into nothing but black ash. Perfect.
If it’s a little disconcerting to destroy the past so easily, I don’t let it show. You have to make tough decisions sometimes, and there’s no going back. Seeing Mum again...that was a set-back. One I won’t be repeating, that’s for sure.
My phone hums on the coffee table, beeping with a message. Against all reason, something inside me gives a flutter, spreading its wings like a cocooned butterfly.
Hey, Steph. Just wanted to say thanks for yesterday, and ask after that meeting. You didn’t sound too thrilled at the prospect. Damien x.
Meeting was bearable, I reply. I got rid of her in the end, anyway. Hope you’re OK. Steph.
I flop down on the sofa, phone on my stomach, and try not to feel the tender first blossoms of a forbidden crush.
LIFE IN LONDON, LIFE AT CLOVERFIELD, STARTS TO SHAPE INTO A
regular, structured pattern. I go to school, I take part in legions of projects, chew over my homework, and even get into the habit of reading Angel bedtime stories. Sometimes I select well-known ones like Snow White and Cinderella, but I often deviate the ending...I’ll have Snow White sussing out the Queen’s poisonous apple plot, throwing her down the rocky battlements, or Cinderella saying no thanks to the witless wonder Prince, running off in a Ferrari and marrying a dark-haired stranger. When I’m not putting my own spin on my niece’s big pink book of fairy-tales, I’m inventing my own, especially one Angel loves about a fierce Princess with long golden hair who ventures into the forest and encounters a starving dragon, who takes her on midnight-blue flights on his green scaly back in exchange for apples and cheese. I haven’t made up my own stories since I was about seven, but what’s stranger is the fact I enjoy telling them. It’s like a fire, a spark, has been reignited. Lately, I don’t even think about Mum anymore. The letters keep coming, but each one flies into the fireplace, unread. Deep down, I’m pressed with the knowledge that soon, in whatever form, something new will come and blow apart everything that seems settled and new. It always does, in the end. But for now, things are going OK.
I’m running late for school for one day (shoving my shoes on my feet on the way down the stairs – consequently buckling on a doll head) when I see Will bundling a small, velvety black box into a slush-green raincoat no one wears. I look from the door to Will, conflicted – curiosity, or punctuality?
I creep up behind him, and he jumps, nearly dropping the box.
“Bloody hell, Steph! Don’t do that!” he says, hand to his heart. Melodramatic or what?
“What do you have there, the crown jewels?” I say jauntily, but Will doesn’t laugh.
Lowering an octave, he says: “You have to keep quiet about this, OK? I’m serious.”
“OK, OK, calm down,” I say, beginning to get an inkling about my brother’s secrecy. “So...what’s in the box? Can I see?”
Will looks around furtively, then appears to give in. “Alright,” he says unwillingly. “But not a word to Sarah.”
And he brings out a breathtakingly lovely silver ring, studded with red jewels that shine in the yellow hall light. My mouth is practically on the floor. Will...committing...Will...proposing? I know they have a child together, I know that. I know they’ve been together years now, and Sarah’s already one of the family. But it’s still a shock. I never thought I’d see the day my older brother would choose to get married. It’s so...orthodox. Will snaps the lid on the box shut, hiding it back in the coat, but I still gape at him.
“Stop looking at me like that! It was bound to happen one day,” he says, wounded.
“I just – I didn’t think marriage was your thing,” I say, momentarily thrown.
“Well, I’ve grown up,” Will says, and I’m touched at the pride in his voice.
I guess he has. Please don’t say I’ll turn into one of those tearful parents, sobbing about how one day he was this little boy playing tennis in the garden, and now he’s about to make an honest man of himself...I need to reassess my life. Seriously.
Now morbidly late, I say a hasty goodbye to Will and race out of the door, banging it shut. I speed walk to the bus stop, sitting down and getting my breath back. I need a bus, now, or I won’t make the beginning of form for definite. Even solitaire isn’t enough to placate me. Things are going well, yeah, but I don’t want to trouble the waters yet.
“Late again,” comes a warm, amicable voice, stretching his legs next to me. “You’re making a bit of a habit of this, Stephanie.”
“Shut up!” I say, disgruntled. “This is my first late day in ages, and you know it! My attendance record is clean, I’ll have you know.”
“Sure,” Damien says, grinning. “So what’s the story this time?”
“I have a real, actual excuse,” I say, a trill of excitement running through me. “My brother – Will – he’s about to get engaged!”
His pupils widen, black lashes shading his eyes in surprise. “Seriously? He proposed over breakfast?”
“No, you simpleton,” I say, slowing my marathon breaths. “I caught him with the ring as I was running out of the house. Can you believe it?”
He looks across at me, reflective. “They’re still pretty young, aren’t they?”
“That’s what I thought. But they’re more grown-up than most twenty-three year olds, what with Angel and having to stand on their own two feet at university.”
“Didn’t they just move in with your or Sarah’s parents when they found out about the baby?”
“No. Mum wouldn’t have had them, and they felt like they had something to prove, so they stayed with a mate’s for a while, then managed to scrape together and rent a flat. They have a house now, obviously.”
“That’s one way to prove a point,” Damien says, and I can see the respect I feel duplicated in his expression, in his tone.
The bus sweeps towards us, and I have to pirouette up and stick out my hand to make it stop in time. As we walk on, I spot Maisy dabbing at her cheeks with rose pink blusher, her hand signalling for Damien to come over. I notice her outlined blue eyes survey mine in a silent gesture of unwelcome. Damien sits down next to her and they start conversing exuberantly, and it’s obvious even from this distance they’re completely engrossed in each other. I find a seat as far away from them as possible, invisible once more, telling myself I really don’t care. I’m getting used to fading into the background where Maisy’s social scheming is concerned. Forget dogs...solitaire is a person’s best friend.
*
Mi-Mi, Ollie and I are left in total disbelief when we queue up for canteen lunch once more (why do we keep torturing ourselves?) and find the food is actually, wondrously, edible. Has there been some kind of mistake? Should we send our meals back in to get a bit of burning on the skins of the fish? I need normality, I mean, come on.
“And it’s not even Christmas,” Ollie says wonderingly as we find seats in the chattering canteen. There’s been a distinct rise in the number of students today, and that’s a clear correlation with the quality of lunch on offer. You should have seen yesterday...lumpy beef stew, a total death trap...and surprise, surprise, the room was deserted. At least we are loyal, law-abiding customers, here for the good and the bad. We of all people deserve this crisp, beautifully cooked fish. And we will relish it.
“Christmas’ no guarantee,” Mi-Mi says darkly as we tuck in. “Remember last year’s sticky toffee pudding, Ols? That became even more infamous than you did, Steph.”
“And she was pretty damn infamous,” Ollie says, seemingly awed by a combination of an inedible desert and my past notoriety.
“Don’t make me laugh, Ollie, or I’ll sneeze into this perfect fish,” I say, my nose twitching.
“Oh, honestly,” Mi-Mi says, bringing out her band of tissues. “Take one, and quickly.”
I give in to my nose’s natural instincts about a second after I take a mini-hanky, mumbling my thanks through a wad of pillowy paper.
“Look what the Barbie dragged in,” Mi-Mi says as Maisy shows worryingly symptoms of joining our table, Damien on her arm. It’s sickening the way she sucks up to him all the time, whispering in his ear. Whatever. It’s all for show. She may as well sport a big neon sign spelling: Look at me! So tragic. Like anyone believes her little damsel act.
“Hi, guys,” Maisy says brightly, reserving a smirk just for me. “I hear lunch’s fit to be eaten today?”
“Don’t believe it till you see it, Maise,” Damien says, winking at me as I finish my own plate. “So, Steph...did you survive the cook’s special?”
I mime dying, my head falling into my greasy plate. Oh well...oil’s good for the skin, isn’t it? “What do you think?”
“Here, you have fish imprints on your nose,” he says, wiping it teasingly with one of Mi-Mi’s tissues. “Got to clear up the evidence. I have an Aunt who works here.”
I giggle, batting the tissue away. “Gee, thanks,” I say, snarky-faced. “Nice to know where your loyalties lie.”
“Hey, family ties,” he says apologetically.
Maisy’s whole face seems to have shot up a gear, starting with her arched, threaded eyebrows and ending with her set pink mouth. What, I’m not allowed to have friendly conversation? Looking round the table, though (anywhere to look away from her) I can see she isn’t the only one watching me and Damien with shrewd expressions. Well, more fool them all. Yeah, lame comeback. Still, crazy how delusional people can be. They just want something to be going on, so they have something to gossip about, I think cynically.
“There’s a rumour circulating that something’s going down in drama today,” Ollie says energetically, steering us into safer topics of discussion.
“Have we gone ghetto?” I say, laughing and sneezing at the same time (Mi-Mi sighs). “Ah-choo! ‘Something’s going down’. In English, please?”
Ollie scowls. “Shut up, sneeze-features. Anyway, Zac swears we won’t be enduring our usual bore today. I think there’s going to be some kind of announcement, and a special assembly.”
“Ooh, special!” Mi-Mi and I say, chortling as we stick out our lips.
Ollie physically turns his back on us (honest truth) and declares he won’t be speaking to us until we’re ready to show his feelings some consideration. Of course, within about, ten sounds, he’s turned back to us and started chin-wagging (I love that word, I don’t know why. I know it’s the twenty-first century, but let me have it) contently about the impossible maths homework, which so far has thwarted even Mi-Mi, who seems mortified by the idea. She keeps twisting her hands together, snapping aloud what this’ll mean for her Cambridge application. I’ll think she’ll vent herself and hit someone, any day soon.
“Does anyone actually have any good news?” Zac, who’s since sat at our table with Rihanne (no doubt lured by the smell of fish), says pessimistically.
Damien gives me a meaningful look, but I say nothing.
“Fine, I’ll say it,” he says.
“Don’t!”
I can see Maisy watching us, thickly made-up eyes as narrow as two thin rulers.
“Steph’s brother’s getting engaged, any day now,” he takes the liberty of telling everyone. If there’s anyone who deserves the brunt of Mi-Mi’s wrath...
“What? You didn’t say!” Mi-Mi says, hitting my arm (boy, did that plan backfire).
“Guys, he hasn’t proposed yet. Rein it in,” I say, pink in the face, though this is ridiculous because it isn’t even my news to share. “Seriously. Something could happen, and it might get called off...”
While everyone’s gasping and picking over this piece of information, I hear my phone vibrate in my pocket. I take it out, thinking it’s Will (I’m half-hoping he wants my advice on the proposal, because I’m brimful of ideas), but it’s not Will. I go pinker.
Sorry I blew the big news. By the way, you’re really pretty when you blush. Not that you’re not pretty when you don’t blush, obviously...
Deciding to take this as a friendly joke (emphasis on the ‘friend’), I write back: Get a life.
Honestly. His brand of humour borders on inappropriate sometimes. No wonder our friends are starting to get the wrong idea. Or the right one, murmurs a voice in my ear. Did it ever cross your mind it might be a genuine compliment, dressed up as a joke?
I brush the thought away. Just a joke. And a pretty juvenile one, at that. Well, at least I know there’s more to him than being an outrageous flirt now.
I analyse way too much.
When we troop along to drama, sure enough, there’s a giant Sign-up Sheet on the notice board. I look at it without interest, but it seems to mean something to Mi-Mi and Ollie, who push to get to the front of the small crowd, stirred into action by some drive I neither possess nor understand.
“What’s got their wands in a knot?” Damien says while I look on bemusedly.
“No idea,” I say, still staring.
Damien’s eyelashes tilt upwards as he observes the scuffle in front of us. “Oh, right, the school play,” he says, evidently disappointed. “I forgot it starts around this time of year. You wouldn’t know, nembie.”
“Hey, I’m fully integrated now,” I say, mock-stung. “Enough of the newbie.”
“You know, a really excellent way of joining the school’s community is standing right there,” he says, pointing at the signboard with his long, even fingers.
“No way,” I say, shaking my head. “Not if hell freezes over.”
Ollie and Mi-Mi whirl round to face me, their eyes fizzing with persuasion.
“No,” I say, backing away as though they’re zombies about to infect me. “No, no, and no.”
“Come on, Steph,” Mi-Mi says in a wheedling voice. “It’ll be good for you, I promise. I should know, shouldn’t I? You’re talking to the Head girl and prefect, dually.”
“I said no,” I say, putting my foot down.
“At least come to the auditions,” Ollie says eagerly. “You might not even be chosen for a major part – or any part at all. Loads of people try out.”
“Then why bother?” I say sensibly.
“Because you have as much chance of lucking out as anyone,” Mi-Mi says commandingly.
“Better, now you have the two of us to train you up!” Ollie says, earnestly enthusiastic. I can feel myself weakening.
“I don’t know, guys...I don’t think I want to do this...”
Now having all the vulnerability she needs, Mi-Mi moves into the final, and most lethal stage of the plan.
“You’re our friend, aren’t you, Steph?” she says, fox-like. “Our best friend?”
That cunning little -
“Alright, alright, I’ll do it.” I hold a hand up. “Just stop the guilt-tripping all ready.”
They beam at each other, elated. Those two should go into politics. They’d make a better coalition than the Con-Dem mash-up.
“Are you so easily manipulated?” a smirking Damien says from his squashed corner. “Honestly. What happened to hell freezing over?”
“Steph saw sense,” Mi-Mi says beadily, silently challenging him to change my mind with her determined brown eyes.
“Good choice, newbie,” he says simply, and I just let out an audible sigh.
*
When I get home, I find Sarah rooting through a dozen or so cardboard boxes, surrounded by mounds of clutter. Angel kneels beside her, poking through all the stuff and squealing joyfully if she comes across something she can play with.
“Sarah, what on earth are you doing?” I say, dumping my bag on the sofa – the only remaining place. I get on my knees beside her, helping to clear some of the stuff away.
My soon to be sister-in-law (I squeal along with Angel at the thought) rubs at the sweat on her forehead, frowning. “I’ve lost something,” she says, pulling a face. “Something really valuable, for reasons unspecified.”
Could it be that Will braced himself to propose and she lost his expensive new ring? No wonder she’s so frantic.
Sarah’s ginger-brown hair falls across her tired eyes as she registers the question on my face. “Alright, I’ll tell you,” she says, obediently handing Angel a minute, stuffed rabbit. “But you can’t tell anyone, OK?”
What? Does Sarah want the engagement to be a secret? Damn. Damien’s already let the cat out of that bag. Whoops.
“Why don’t you want anyone to know?” I say, feeling like I’m missing something.
“Well, those are the normal rules of a proposal, aren’t they?” she says, as pink as I was earlier. “And now I’ve managed to misplace the ring I bought.”
The ring she bought? Abruptly, things start to clear in my head. I must not giggle, I must not giggle. They’re both planning to propose. This is insane. Sarah’s right – everything is a competition between them. I can’t believe this.
“Well, it’s not the end of the world,” I say as I sip a can of Sprite. I’m dying to blurt out about Will’s beautiful ring, but I daren’t say anything. Will would kill me.
“How can you say that? It cost a bloody fortune, you know!” Sarah says exhaustedly. “How can this have happened? I don’t understand it. I know I stored it in one of those boxes.”
Slowly, we both turn to look at Angel. Surely not...?
I rummage through Angel’s collection of old, greying toys, and manage to locate a gold-banded, silver embroidered ring in the jaws of a plastic dinosaur.
“This it?” I say calmly, and Sarah runs across the room and hugs me so tightly I can’t breathe, saying she owes me big time. I bite my lip. Should I not say anything, and let the fastest partner win? Well, I haven’t been left with an awful lot of choice. Does it really matter, in the end? They both want the same thing, after all, and they both have rings. It just seems unthinkable they would conceive of the same plot within such a short space of time as the other. What’s up with that?
“We always joked we’d make it official around the date we met,” Sarah says, already getting that bridal glow.
That explains it, then. They must have both started at the uni late September, early October. I can’t get my head around this. My family are truly mind-bending.
In the evening, when Will’s home from work, he gives me a meaningful glance, as if to say: secret’s safe. Meanwhile, I’m laughing inside at the pair of them, feeling a little mean nevertheless. What a day.
They are going to get the shock of their lives, mark my words.
BY THE END OF THE SCHOOL WEEK, NEITHER HAS PROPOSED YET. I’M
forced to go between the two, handing advice to both to make it a fair competition. It’s now early October, yet Sarah and Will haven’t crumbled to the pressure of their meeting deadline yet. I just don’t get them.
In other news, I have been hard at work rehearsing for this damn audition, prompted heavily by Mi-Mi and Ollie of course, who assert there is no play without me. Right. Despite all the practice I’ve put in, I think I’d rather lose out, in all honesty. Anyway, regardless of what I tell my crazy best friends, I’ll try my hardest to try out for a minor role in Oliver! lest I actually have success and land a part. I mean, I have better things to do than waste all my time learning lines for a production I couldn’t give a stuff about, seriously.
It seems every single person in our minute school is trying out, which is a daunting prospect even if I couldn’t care less. No one wants to fall flat on their face in front of everyone, do they? Especially with all the stupid scandal stuff that kicked off my first term at Cloverfield. I’d rather not encounter another degrading scene, if I can avoid it.
These days, Mi-Mi’s full of lines of her own about nervousness: imagine everyone naked (um, does she want Maisy to kill me with a samurai sword?), imagine yourself naked, envision an empty room, close your eyes, all sorts of crap. How is picturing myself nude going to take away the nerves? If anything, it’ll increase them – everyone’s had that dream where they come to school and they realise they’re wearing no clothes, right? Exactly.
On Friday morning (the day of the audition – dun, dun, dun), I sit at my desk in front of my mirror, trying to decide which hairstyle suits Victorian actresses. I comb my bob this way and that, concluding I’ve failed miserably. I complain to myself for a bit, then leave it out, wearing a hard-backed, black and white polka dot headband for luck. OK, it’s more ’70s chic than mid-late 19th century babe, but hey, I tried. And for a limited time only, my grotesque black school shoes will be perfect. Gosh, they’re ugly.
Big day today! Mi-Mi texts me as I’m lounging on a bus seat. I hope you were practising yesterday.
Something seems to dance, snake-like, in my writhing intestines. I wish I hadn’t had porridge for breakfast. Oh well. At least I can pretend it’s gruel. Maybe if you make yourself imagine an image enough times, you’ll be tricked into thinking it’s come true. I’m banking on that, anyway.
Our form room is a drone of speculation around lunchtime’s auditions, with some students insisting we’ll have to sing, dance and act. Shit, I hope not. Nobody prepared me for singing and dancing. It’s hardly my thing, you know.
I sling my bag a little too hard on my desk, bending over the Oliver! script. As far as I know, we’ll all be asked to read out a certain passage, a certain character. I think our drama teacher Miss Fox will ask for hands for this role, and the set number of people will perform, then we’ll vote on the best auditionee. That’s democracy. In a way, it seems unfair, because the result could be the most popular people get the best roles, rather than the best actors/actresses. Not that I’m bothered about it, obviously. Though I’d better pretend to be crushed when I don’t get a part, or Mi-Mi and Ollie will start to smell a rat, and then probably plead Miss Fox for a role in my name. I really don’t want a pity party, if I can help it. I’m already cringing away from this particular hunch of my intuition.
As I’m repeating random lines in my head, Maisy and Damien saunter in, the second bell ringing in a high-pitched soundtrack to their arrival. Miss Preacher looks up, faintly disapproving, but says nothing. I shake my head behind my script. If you ask me, my form tutor’s not built for the ruthless business of Teacher. Not my problem, anyway.
One thing I could do without, though, is sitting right near Maisy today of all days. Unfortunately, the form seating plan is here to stay, presumably all year round. It’s a bit late to start trading places now, though I wish I’d pushed harder when I first arrived. Never mind.
“Nervous?”
“No,” I say, the lie rolling slickly off my tongue.
“Really?” Maisy says, for once speaking directly to me rather than about me, though I don’t seem to remember inviting her to this conversation. Oh, that’s right...I didn’t.
“Really,” I say, not bothering to hide my artificiality. “Why should I be?”
I flick another page in the script, blasé.
“Well, you are new, after all,” she says, laser-blue eyes projecting through the audition book. “I’d of thought you’d wait a while before getting involved in stuff like this.”
“No, it’s like I said,” Damien says, watching this exchange with intrigue. “Best way for a newbie to integrate.”
“Would you stop calling me that?” I say snappily.
“Wo-w, tetchy. Must be the nerves,” he says, emerald-green eyes illuminating in the pale form light.
“I’m not nervous!”
“You keep telling yourself that, sweetheart.”
I turn another page in the script, deciding to ignore the two of them. Honestly. Award for Most Irritating Couple goes to...
“Steph!” Mi-Mi rushes over to my end of the table, eyes shining. “How do you feel? Are you nervous? Have you practised?”
“Oh, she’s not nervous,” Damien says amusedly. “Are you, Steph?”
“Did I ask for your input?” I say malignantly. “No. So butt out.”
“But you did rehearse, didn’t you?” Mi-Mi says anxiously.
“Calm, seriously,” I say, fanning myself with the script. “Everything’s sorted.”
“OK,” she says, steadying her breaths. “How about a run-through?”
I look at her, horrified. “Erm, no,” I say hurriedly. “Not here.”
She looks back at me, hopes dashed. “Spoilsport. So you’re going to leave it to the actual audition to rehearse?”
“I don’t even know what part I’m going for. Anyway,” I say, superior. “Everyone knows the greatest artists have some spontaneity.”
For once, Mi-Mi and Maisy’s doubtful faces are in sync with each other.
“I just wish everyone would leave me alone,” I say, already turning into a drama queen, before my audition. Well, got to get into the role. “No offence.”
“Fine.” Mi-Mi looks slightly hurt, and skips off to bug Ollie. “See you after form, then.”
I put my script in my bag, sick of the whole thing. What am I, public property now?
“Are you auditioning?” I say suddenly to Damien, the question having slipped my mind. But then, he didn’t exactly seem up for it yesterday.
“Well, what’s the harm?” he says, his nose in his own script. “Everyone else’s trying out, so why not? Anyway, it could be fun.”
“Could it?” I say, sceptical. “Seems tiresome to me.”
“That depends,” he says lightly, smiling across at me. “The way I see it, stuff’s what you make of it.”
“What are you, the school play guru?” I say as we all get up to leave for first period – maths. Great. “I mean, do you go round saving these lines to use on people or something?”
“Just on you,” he says coyly. “Cute headband, by the way.”
Face hot, I say: “Shut up. It’s the most Victorian item I own.”
“Hey, that was a compliment!” he says, protesting his innocence.
Like I believe that.
Maisy appears abruptly at his side, sliding a hand over his eyes. I quicken my pace to catch up with Mi-Mi, who’s babbling her favourite Oliver! lines to herself, and we walk into the maths room together. With a twinge of regret, I go to my seat at the back next to you-know-whos, watching Mi-Mi join Ollie enviously. Why does everyone else get to sit where they like, while I’m wedged in between puke-inducing lovers?
“What d’you think...major or minor?” Maisy asks, batting her eyelashes coquettishly at Damien. I huddle over my worksheet, pencilling in answers with a rapidity I didn’t think I was capable of. Well, you learn something new every day. It’s really, really awkward literally being stuck in the middle of a conversation. Especially with a girl who’s convinced you’re after her boyfriend. Not cool.
“Depends on how willing you are to stay after school regularly, give up your social life...” Damien says absent-mindedly, scribbling on his square sheet of paper. “Why? You thinking of going big this year?”
“I don’t know,” Maisy says, inspecting the ends of her hair with her glittery pink hand-mirror. “I just think it might look good on, like, ucas and stuff.”
Oh, like, really? I mimic in my head.
“Go for it,” Damien says from my left, pulling the textbook towards him. Gee, now I know how ping-pong tables feel. I’ll never play again. Never.
“What about you, Steph?” she says sweetly.
The hairs on my arm stand to attention, gathering for an army strike. “I don’t even want a part, to be honest. I’d rather focus on catching up with work etc.”
“You have to be the only person who uses ‘etc’ in their sentences,” Damien says bemusedly.
“Yeah, why is that?” Maisy says, her voice as tart as poison darts. “Habit?”
“You could say that, bi-” I stop myself just in time. Lucky save.
Damien coughs into his hand, and I try not to catch his eye.
Unable to trust myself, I don’t look up from my textbook once for the rest of the lesson.
“We will be fine, everyone will be fine...” Mi-Mi says, dancing on her tiptoes. “Right?”
“Riiiiiight,” I say, giving her a thumbs-up. “Don’t worry, you’ll be great. You’re the only one who knows the whole script back to front.”
“Yeah,” Mi-Mi says, as though she’s trying to convince herself. “You’re right.”
“Usually am,” I say conceitedly, but nobody notices in the anxiety of the audition wait. I need to start watching what I say. (Well, publicly. I will say what I like mentally).
“Hello, children.” Miss Fox stands at the door, as fluffy as a little bunny. “Ready to show us all what you’re made of?”
“We need a new drama teacher,” Damien whispers as we tumble inside the yellow room, each face longer than the last.
“So this is how Joan of Arc felt,” Ollie says, spellbound.
“No, Ollie, this was not how Joan of Arc felt,” I say, attempting to control my own irrational breathing. Why should your body start f*ing up just ’cause your head’s in a spin? It doesn’t make any sense. Actually, it kind of does. Whatever.
“You’re right,” Ollie says, nodding sombrely. “This is much worse.”
“Huh?” I say, but there’s no more time to argue because everyone’s taking their seats, and a turbulent purr is beginning to chase through the small, circular room.
“Climate change, in action,” Rihanne says as Miss Fox, paralleling my little niece, claps her hands for silence. My heart seems to stop as the room gradually quietens. Nope. Not even a whisper. It’s fine. Fine. I’ll only be going up in front of basically the whole school, being asked to perform lines I haven’t run through before...like I said, fine. Nerves? Not even in my vocabulary.
“The procedure is simple,” Miss Fox says, her words echoing creepily round the room. Easy for her to say. “I will announce a part, and all those who would like to try out for that part will put their hands up, and we’ll vote for the best student – and I mean the best, not the most favoured among us.” Mutters break out. “Once all the big roles have been allocated, I will ask for a read-through of all those remaining, and see how many I can get involved in the play. Now, it’s important to remember that behind all the acting, there’s a set of talented behind-the-scenes workers, so if acting isn’t your thing yet you still want to take part, then by all means, don’t be put off. And don’t fuss if you don’t land a part; every helping hand will be needed in the drama studio during rehearsal time. Any questions?”
None. I think we’re all too startled to speak. By ‘we’, I’m speaking generally, obviously.
“We’ll begin with Oliver, then, the lead role,” Miss Fox says in a hushed voice.
There’s an extended pause in which we all look around, craning our necks. Then, to my astonishment, Ollie puts his hand up, a little white-faced, but firm. Other hands follow Ollie’s move, and soon there is a small band of potential Olivers, all asked to line up backstage.
“Good luck,” says Mi-Mi, who doesn’t seem as taken aback as I am. I guess the two of them have had this worked out for ages.
“Yeah, good luck,” I say as my friend gets up, flattening his flame-haired locks.
“Thanks,” he says as he picks his way through the rows of grey seats. We stare after him, enthralled.
By the time the fifth ‘Oliver’ takes to the stand, the cringe scale has already shot up to overpowering. So far, students have fumbled lines, tripped over their own feet, looked straight ahead, blank-eyed, and even give up before they’ve begun. But this new Oliver auditionee is quite good, singing one of the musical classics in a buoyant, cockney-coloured dialect. For a while I’m petrified I’ll have to do a bit of singing myself, but Mi-Mi assures me you get to choose whether you do a singing, acting or dancing piece. I lie back in my chair, somewhat reassured.
Despite being the first to volunteer, Ollie (or, at least, the real one), is last to perform. He strolls out from behind the curtain, script in hand, and my own breaths seize in my throat. It’s one thing watching total strangers fall to pieces, another when it’s someone you care about.
I needn’t have worried. With his confident, funny manner and bright red hair, Ollie is already a stand-out, reading his lines as though they were formed in his own head, originated from his own lips. I have no trouble seeing Oliver, and from the looks of my neighbours, neither do they. Needless to say, Ollie is given the part in a heartbeat.
“He did it!” Mi-Mi says as Ollie pushes back through the crowd and towards us. “He got the starring role!”
That gets me thinking. “Why didn’t you try out for Oliver?” I say curiously.
“Been there, done that,” she says, as blasé in the flesh as I pretended to be in form. “Year six end of year play. No, I’ve got a much more interesting role lined up.” Her nut-brown eyes solidify with ambition, but she doesn’t let on anything else.
“Well done, Ols!” I say as he sits back down, no longer pale but positively radish.
“You were amazing,” Mi-Mi says, as proud as I was of Will.
“That was just something I threw together,” Ollie says offhandedly, and we all laugh.
“Now,” Miss Fox says, looking delighted. (What happened to impartiality?) “I’ll call for the part of Nancy...”
There’s a shorter pause this time. Without missing a beat, Mi-Mi’s hand flies in the air, and she’s up at the front before the second pupil’s had the chance to offer themselves up for the role. She gets the part in three seconds flat, I kid you not. She’s so poised, so sure of herself, so flawless...if I didn’t know her better, I’d swear she’d trained in acting school.
“Hard work conquers all,” she says modestly, shrugging off the praise that avalanches her way. I have the sense nothing could faze her or get in her way, in the end. It’s almost scary, but I’m mostly awe-struck. Why can’t I be like that? I don’t act like it (that’s not a pun), but sometimes...I don’t know...I get just a little bit of stage-fright. Still, maybe if I ‘act’ as unfazed as my friend, the effect will rub off on me. I am a lot more optimistic than people give me credit for.
I relax back in my seat when Miss Fox calls for all the wannabe Dodgers, not thinking anything of the part. After about a nanosecond, I spot Mi-Mi and Ollie watching me, wide-eyed, from the edge of my vision. No. No way...they wouldn’t...
“Go on,” Mi-Mi says, jabbing at me. “Get up there.”
“No!” I say, aghast. “I don’t even want to be Dodger!”
“Steph would like to audition!” My not-for-very-long best friend says in a high, clear voice, making sure no ear misses her words.
Heads swivel round to face me. I shrink back in my seat.
“Come on, dear,” Miss Fox says condescendingly. “We’ll all waiting...”
I’ll kill her. I will kill her.
“For goodness’ sake,” Mi-Mi says when I don’t get up – and she forcibly shoves me in the direction of the stage. I keep walking, too all over the place to turn back. I can’t believe she’d do this to me.
I get behind the long, velvet red curtain, completely shitting my pants. What the hell - ? I’m not ready for this. Crap. What am I going to do? What am I going to say?
“Hey, rival.”
I turn round, heart thumping, to see Damien standing behind me, script dangling casually from one hand.
“You have got to be kidding me,” I say, eyes as round as marbles. “This is a dream. A nightmare. I can’t...I mean it. I can’t go up there.”
“Sure you can.” Damien’s sparkly eyes have softened. “You’ll be great, trust me.”
There it is again...trust. The one thing I’ve never been able to do. Strangely, unthinkably, a warm ascending of belief is spreading through my chest, competing with the self-deprecating burn of my heart.
OK, I can’t act. OK, I have about as much confidence as a dead dog. But I have no choice now, and I’ll be damned if I’m chickening out at this stage.
“Yeah,” I say, skimming through my script. “You’re right. I can do this.”
“Usually am,” he says, and even in my distraction I can hear the smile in his voice. We look each other, paralysed on the spot, a shot of magic leaping from his eyes to mine. Right now, I’ve found it. That feeling that I can do anything.
When my name is called to the stage, my legs are nothing more than wobbling jelly, but my head is empty of self, empty of emotion, ready to become someone else.
I’M ON THE STAGE, STUCK UNDER THE DAZZLING SPOTLIGHT THAT
beams downwards, my heart in my mouth and my head as dazed as if I swallowed sleeping pills. Nothing seems real, nothing solid. The audience at my feet are nothing more than blank red seats. I’m facing forwards, bracing myself to repeat the lines on the script, having it driven into me that I won’t succeed, can’t succeed, but I’ll audition anyway. It is this thought that spurs me on towards speech; towards action. I start badly. My words may as well be wood, my posture frigid, eyes wide open. I chant my lines like a mantra, like a chore, like someone else is channelling the way my jaw moves. But then something happens. Standing under the bright light, saying the lines instructed in the audition book, an unfamiliar, alien desire streaks across my chest, and I close my eyes. I don’t look at the script. I don’t look at my friends, my enemies, my peers. I give myself up to my character, give myself up to the play, and the scene in my head transports me to Victorian London, a dark place, a grimy place. I myself have stayed in such places, so the image is not difficult. But I am different. I am a young boy, an instinctive, cheeky, confident figure in a frayed hat, with brown patches on my trousers. I manoeuvre words like toffee, making them sweet and soft and manipulative. I appear tall and wise and all-knowing, worldly, to the unsuspecting, naive Oliver, a master of trickery, a master of friendship. When my mostly unrehearsed speech ends; when my eyelids flicker open, the presence in front of me is startling. I am back in my drama studio, dressed in a pale grey blazer and a pleated skirt, facing a class full of my peers, and I’m Steph again. I blink a few times, but the weirdness won’t fade away. It may as well have been someone else who auditioned, because I don’t remember uttering a word. It was like...I was Dodger, for a split second. But now I’m back to me again, back to my new life, I hardly even remember being somebody else. Mumbling something undoubtedly stupid and probably incoherent, I scuttle off the stage, blazes of hot pink drawing criss-crosses on my face. For a moment there, I was controlled yet free in a way I’ve never been before, and I drink in the hazy memory of that feeling with a rough wistfulness I haven’t felt in a while. This definitely makes the top twenty on my list of oddest experiences. It might even beat that time...well, I prefer not to think about it.
Mi-Mi appears to be on a similar vein, because when I get to my seat, as stiff and unidentifiable as a machine, her eyes fix onto mine, large and starry. “Steph...that was...um...that was...”
“Incredible,” Ollie says, his own eyes having widened in almost fear. “You were...wow. Why didn’t you tell us?”
“Tell you what?” I say, starting to sink back into myself. Despite my initial reluctance, the transition is unsettling.
“You’re a natural,” Ollie says as Mi-Mi nods vigorously. What am I missing here? I can barely hear a word in my head of what I spoke aloud mere minutes ago.
“You guys are just saying that,” I say, looking at the floor. “You’re both...I don’t know...projecting your enthusiasm into me! I’m your pet project!”
“A pretty damn good one, at that,” Mi-Mi says, pinching my arm. “We’re serious, you know. One day...maybe, just maybe you could be as good as Ollie and I.”
“Don’t count on it,” Ollie says, ducking when I swipe him with the script.
“Shh, guys...Damien’s starting,” Mi-Mi says, hushing us.
Now that I’ve done my audition, I can sit back and actually focus on other people’s. It’s like being in a cinema; only we are the critics rather than the audience. We judge, we pick. With a lurch, I realise I’m about to watch one of my competitors. Yet his advice saved me from bottling it back there. Strange, that he would help out someone he’s up against. I know we’re friends, but still...I wouldn’t give tips to any rival of mine, foe or not.
With a slash of irritation, I watch how easily, how unselfconsciously he moves around the stage, a wink in his walk, an ingrained charm in everything, from his rumpled hair to his smooth words. I almost fall for it like the Oliver character. It’s infuriating. Even in my envy, though, I can see that kind of acting can’t be taught. Some things, like learning to tie a shoelace and reciting the times table, can be achieved with practice and dedication...but with things like acting, things like imagination, it’s harder to fake it if you aren’t born with it. Some people carry their self-consciousness around with them like a weight; others, like Damien, wear it like a crown, if they have it at all. I realise I’m watching him – really watching him – more intently than anyone else in the room. When his audition has ended, I clap along with the rest, seeing I’m not the only one he’s made an impression on. Great. I guess this means I’ve just lost. Not that I wanted the part, anyway. Besides, anyone can see Damien is Dodger, in a modern-day equivalent. He looks the part, he is the part...whereas I’m a mousy-haired, scared new girl with about as much star quality as that plant pot. And that’s being generous.
“Well, he was the last auditionee. The part’s his. No competition,” I say harshly.
“Don’t be insane!” Mi-Mi says, tone scoffing. “You were loads better.” But a small crease has formed between her eyes. Even Mi-Mi, rock-hard and downright ruthless in her aims, can see there’s no use denying Damien’s talent far outweighs my own. Me, I blagged my way through it after bricking it the entire time, and he...he marched out there like he didn’t have a care in the world. It strikes me that this is what’s been bugging me...his carelessness, his perfect expression, rather than my jealousy. Though, I admit, that does form a small part of it.
“Right, should we have a vote?” Miss Fox says, looking by this point vastly deteriorated from her bubbly self at the beginning. Like she wants to get the whole process over. It’ll be another Mi-Mi – over in three seconds flat.
She calls for hands – and I look around, in spite of myself, to see only a few raised for the people who went before me, the people who went before Damien. Once it’s whittled down to the two of us, I can feel the blood pounding in my ears. I daren’t look. I have to look. About half of the people in the room have plumped for me. About half of the people in the room have voted for Damien. We’re tied. What are we going to do now – share the role? I think not. I couldn’t come on one minute, and then him in the next scene...that would confuse people...that would be crazy...
Everyone looks over at Miss Fox, attention caught. Then someone raises their hand. No, not someone. Damien.
“If we’re tied,” he says, shrugging. “Then I’ll vote for Steph. No problem.”
Gasps erupt around the room. I sit up, having slid down my seat while the votes were commencing.
“Erm, he can’t do that,” I say, appalled. “It must be – I don’t know, against the rules or something.”
“Shut up,” Mi-Mi says frantically. “Do you want the role or not?”
“I don’t know,” I say truthfully.
“Well, shut up anyway.” It isn’t a suggestion – it’s an order. “Just for five minutes, and the part’s yours.”
Miss Fox rubs the bridge between her nose, yawning and stretching her arms. When her announcement comes, it sounds distant and echo-ey, as though it’s coming from a microphone. “Fine,” she says in agreement. “Any arguments? No. Done. Steph, congratulations – the part of Dodger is yours.”
“But...” I’m speechless. I have nothing to say in my defence – or, rather, against my defence. Mi-Mi’s right. The part is mine.
My conscience is slightly soothed when Damien is given the part of Bill straight afterwards, after our drama teacher looked ready to keel over, and nobody else wanted to audition for it. The day’s auditions are finally at an end, and the sleepiness of the session is starting to take its toll on me, too. I can’t seem to ease the nagging feeling I won Dodger by default. I know we were tied – but still. It’s the principle of it. I didn’t ask for him to vouch for me, did I?
I hang back as everyone starts to drift away into the cool autumn air outside, waiting yet all the time unsure of what I’m going to say.
When Damien comes out, hands in his pockets, this does nothing to quell the suspicion he out-trumped me as Dodger. I don’t know where I raised the spirit, or the desire, to play him, but it’s here now and I need to shift the doubt.
“Um...you didn’t...shouldn’t have done that,” I say to his shoes, my own feet tapping a little. “You should have let them take another vote.”
“What would be the point?” he says, and even from my limited view of him I can feel his eyes on me. “You played the part better. End of story. I wasn’t going to let the role slip away from you, was I?”
“But you – I don’t know – you suit it so much better,” I say, finally chancing a look upwards. “You seem like – I mean – you are Dodger, kind of.”
“Are you calling me a corrupt, manipulative chancer?” he says, but he’s grinning too much to be really offended.
“No,” I say, unruffled. “Just that it seemed to come to you so easily. Not like with me.”
“That’s the point!” he says exasperatedly. “I didn’t give -a monkey’s about that part. I just walked out and delivered some lines, like anyone could have done. But you...you were perfect. You had something I didn’t have. You connected with the character.”
My cheeks colour, and I can’t seem to muster up a word, even though I’ve never thought of myself as shy, particularly. At least, not until I came here.
“You don’t have to feel bad I lost out-”
“You made yourself lose out, you – you sadist!”
“’S alright...I always fancied being Bill, to be honest,” he says, tipping an imaginary hat at me, his eyes beginning to light up like I’ve grown to know.
“Yeah, who wouldn’t want to be a raging, crooked nutjob?” I put my head to one side to consider. “Oh, hang on a minute...”
Damien laughs. “Besides, as Bill, I get to go mad and suck everyone’s blood - !” As he speaks, he gives me a glimmer of his own shiny white, pointy back teeth.
“You’re not a vampire, you idiot! You’re a crook,” I say. “You won’t be drinking anyone’s blood, I’m afraid. But, seriously, do you still have baby teeth?”
“No – it’s ’cause I’m not, like, human-”
“You talk so much crap.”
“And you don’t?”
I push past him to get to the door, as flouncy as a ballerina. “No, I don’t, for your information. Would you mind leaving me alone now?”
“You waited for me! You’re such a flipping hypocrite!”
“I came to challenge you, and I have. Bye bye now.”
“You’re callous.”
“And you’re taking up my time.” Stepping into the refreshing, breezy October air, I find myself passing by Maisy, who’s standing immovably outside the drama studio like she’s been watching us for a while. My body instantly tightens. I don’t even think about it – I just react. It’s automatic, like a prey smelling its hunter.
Maisy’s icy blue eyes seem to darken as I walk past, sweeping over me like an x-ray monitor. I take no notice, bashing her shoulder ‘accidentally’ as I go on my way, having to hike to catch up with a celebrating Mi-Mi and Ollie.
“To the diner!” Mi-Mi says as I reach them. “Milkshakes on me!”
We sit sipping glass after glass in the old-style bar hours after school, dissecting every inch of the audition process. Both keep turning to the ruckus with the tied vote, to my discomfort. I insert my straw into my latest strawberry drink, a useful tactic in evading taking part in the conversation.
“I’m telling you, that is not what you do for a friend.”
“Huh?” I stop tuning out their restless babble and wake up to what they’re saying. “What d’you mean? What are you on about?”
Mi-Mi sips her drink with a sideways look like I haven’t caught onto something very obvious. “Damien,” she says, draining the cup thirstily. “And you.” Well, I suppose untrue gossip is thirsty work.
“Hold up,” I say, raising a finger warningly. “There is no me and Damien. Come on, you know that. It’s simple. Either one of us could have got the role, and he preferred being Bill to Dodger. Guess it’s boring to play yourself,” I add ironically.
They smirk at this.
“Steph, speaking as a guy,” Ollie says a little warily. “I’d say he fancies you for sure.” I can see from Mi-Mi’s expression she’s on his wavelength.
“Speaking as the only person with common sense, I’d say he doesn’t,” I say stubbornly, but they give each other parental looks like they know something I don’t. I crush the end of my straw on the table like a cigarette butt, giving up. Nothing I say will change their minds, so what’s the point? Even though it’s autumn, their words make me feel heated, submerged, unable to escape. Escape from what? I don’t know. All I know is, my friends’ suggestions are teetering on a dangerous edge.
“I know he has a girlfriend,” Mi-Mi says frankly. “So that complicates things, clearly – but you can’t keep denying the evidence.”
“Evidence! This isn’t CSI.”
I knew it. They’re dying for something to sink their teeth into. They’re like bloody...ghost busters. I never should have given Mi-Mi a taste for Sherlock. Wrong move.
“Guys, there is no complication and no evidence, OK?” I say blankly, doing up my bag. “Seriously – it isn’t like that.”
I stand up, and they eye me, wordlessly asking where I think I’m going.
“Home. It’s late, they’ll be worried.” Lightly, I throw my bag over one shoulder. “Especially with – with what happened in September. I’m kind of on a curfew.”
“Fine,” Mi-Mi says, but she still looks like she thinks I’m running from the truth. Which is ridiculous. They’re ridiculous. They won’t get it, no matter what I say. I’m not after Damien, and he’s not after me. But I’m not one to keep pushing, so I leave it.
“See you Monday,” I say, trying not to sound too unfriendly. In their own way, they think they’re helping me, I suppose. And, even though they wouldn’t admit it under the toughest interrogation, I think they quite like the idea of being an Agony Aunt and Uncle, becoming entangled in my so un-torrid affairs...in fact, they’re probably devising more out-of-touch theories as I leave. I can definitely sense their eyes on my retreating back, anyway.
When I reach home, for want of a better word, I double-lock Will and Sarah’s fancy white door, still bamboozled by my Cluedo-obsessed best friends. Honestly. Any day now, they’ll come into school clutching handmade black cards, excitedly telling me about Steph and Damien in the drawing room, hitting Maisy over the head with a rolling pin. Which is not, you know, a satisfying image. I am not malicious like that.
Sarah and Will are arguing over the channel on the TV – the Emmerdale repeat or Eastenders, seriously – when I slump down on one of the sofas, spent by the day’s events. They hardly notice my arrival, insultingly, in the midst of their programme debate. I think they genuinely like fighting with each other. It’s hard to tell, because their arguments are so convincing. But, I’m pretty sure. They get some weird kick out of all this. One thing I’ve learnt from living here, I think to myself.
“Oh, hi, Steph,” Sarah says, succeeding in wrestling the remote off Will, who tickles her mercilessly in her weak spots in response. “We were just about to phone you. Why so – get off, Will – late?”
“Oh, I went to the diner with Mi-Mi and Ollie after the auditions,” I say, sounding a little too off-hand. They stop play-fighting and perk up.
“Well? What happened?” Will says, while Sarah takes the opportunity to flip back to Emmerdale.
“I got a part,” I say, smiling shakily. “And I’m not a tree, so that’s good, isn’t it?”
“And you’re not a bowl of gruel?” Will asks seriously. Sarah whacks him with the cushion, communicating: tactless.
“No, Will, I’m not a lumpy bit of food, thanks very much,” I say, reclining back on the sofa. “I...well, I tried out for Dodger, and I got the role.” For some reason the reminder makes me flush.
“That’s great!” They say at the same time, mouths stretching like measuring tape. “Fantastic!”
“It’s OK,” I say in a whatever kind of way, a pleased feeling tugging at my lips. “It’ll mean lots of boring stays after school, rehearsing...”
“It’ll be worth it,” Will says, switching back to Eastenders. “Think how good it’ll look on ucas.”
I roll my eyes. Someone else said that, once. I decide not to mention who. Much as I love them, I don’t need clones of Mi-Mi and Ollie, picking over my non-existent love life. I don’t even want a love life. I’m young, I’m about to be rushed off my feet with this play, and I’m new to town. I don’t have the freedom or the inclination to worry about that. I have plenty of time to do something about it at some other date. Or, failing that, become a dignified spinster. With cats.
There is something I’d like to bring up, though. Something that will finally force my house-mates and guardian figures to sort out their damn wedding already. If there’s anything I’ve discovered about life today, it’s that it doesn’t wait around. You can’t always rely on fate, on destiny. Sometimes you have to go for it, and see what happens. What do you have to lose that you had didn’t have to gain before?
As Sarah’s arguing for Million Dollar Baby against Catch me If you Can, I steal the remote from their grasps and turn off the TV. They look from the black screen to me.
“Don’t bite my head off, guys,” I say, biting my fingernails. “But you can’t dodge this moment forever-”
“Don’t!” Will says. “You swore-”
“You can’t,” Sarah adds, and they stare at each other, utterly perplexed. Time’s ripe to come clean, I guess.
“Will, Sarah,” I say exhaustedly. “There’s something you both have to know, so I’m just going to say it.” I take a deep breath. “You’re both planning to propose, OK? Secrets are out.”
As I expect, a mini time-bomb is unleashed, with a million questions zooming around the air like broomsticks in the confusion of the situation. At last, they seem to process what I’m saying, though they still seem as though they’ve received heavy blows to the head.
“I can’t believe this,” Sarah says, white as a ghost. “This is...”
“Insane?” I say. “Yeah, I know. Imagine what it was like for me, going back and forth behind you two. On top of my own problems, too. Jeez.”
“Well, we’re engaged now,” Will says, bemused. “So it all worked out for the best.”
“You can still go out, you know,” I say as I get up to go shower and go to bed. “I can babysit Angel, and you can make it official over dinner. Give each other your rings – both of which I’ve seen, of course.”
They do as I say, still looking like they need a guiding hand. Well, had to be done. No regrets.
“Congrats again on the play,” Will says as I trump up the stairs, a reluctant spring in my step.
“It was nothing,” I say nonchalantly, closing my bedroom door with a snap.
I don’t end up going to bed like I’d planned. Will dug out his old, dog-eared copy of the original text of Oliver Twist, still with his childish handwriting printed in the front, the only proof it’s been read. I go into the book with the notion I’ll only attempt the first few chapters and hit the hay, but things don’t quite end up going that way. Instead, I sit up all night on the windowsill, entranced, and don’t even look up when rain begins to sprint down from the minute stars, barely visible in the dark, city-stained blue sky.
I’M STILL RIDING CLOUD NINE OF MY STAR ROLE WHEN I WANDER into school to be met with pandemonium in the largely occupied hallways. I contort myself through the gathered crowd with skill that suggests I should change career path, elbowing my way to the mouth of the bustling students. Pinned up on the massive school board is a big, white camping trip notice, open to years nine, ten and eleven, taking place at the beginning of the October half-term and ending on Halloween. It’s essentially what its title suggests – a week spent in a tent in a forest in the middle of nowhere, competing in team activities unknown to the restrained world of the City Kids. Scary. Apparently, places are tight; with a limit of thirty kids on the trip from any of the years specified, making up one class, basically, only with varying age groups. If people were hyped up over the auditions, that’s peanuts to the uproar at this exclusive news. After all, why wouldn’t you want to spend a whole week trapped in a strange wood with only brats from your year and younger for company? With spiders and all sorts of wild animals. As a new student, I clearly still have a lot to learn about my classmates. “What d’you think?” says a voice in my ear. I turn round to see Ollie’s right behind me, studying the sign as though it’s a maths equation. What do I think? No thanks. “I’m not sure, Ols,” I say, trying to put it gently (only it’s not one of my strong points, in all honesty). I think I end up somewhere around sullen. “Not really my thing. You know how it is.”
“But it could be, honestly!” Ollie says, injecting the perfect amount of bribery into his sentence. “You could learn to love the good old country, give it time-” “Ollie, I don’t love the country, and nor will I ever,” I say close-mindedly. “Sorry.” Does he have to look so forlorn? I feel like I’ve stolen candy from a baby. (I did once, but I was only four, so I think that can be forgiven. And Mum told me to take initiative and nick one for myself when I whined for a packet of Smarties all the way to the park). I feel bad about that, now. The poor kid cried his eyes out. So, one-year-old kid with dummy, if you’re reading this, know that I am very sorry. But, really, what were you doing with chocolate at your age, anyway? I did you a favour. You’ll see that one day. “Well, even if you hate it, it could still be a laugh,” he says, with an air of desperation. “I mean, the activities might be fun. Something to put on-” “Don’t even say it,” I say. “Seriously.” “Don’t be such a misery-guts,” Mi-Mi says, approving the sign with one examining glance. “It might be fun. What else are you doing in your holiday that qualifies as better?” Damn it, she has me there. Think, Steph, think. Aha. “Babysitting my niece,” I say, my chin high in the air. “So Will and Sarah can make their engagement official.” If that isn’t watertight, I don’t know what is. Everyone knows how important family is, right? I can visibly see Mi-Mi’s brain ticking this over, seeking a loophole. This is why I am hiring her as my solicitor in ten years’ time. (Not that I’m planning on going to jail, obviously). “Why don’t they just get a real babysitter?” Harsh. For all she knows, I am a real babysitter. “For all you know, I am a real babysitter,” I say, stung. “Steph, you’re not,” she says, the impatience clear in her pursed lips. “Well, why should they pay some inflated price for a jumped-up student babysitter when they can have a perfectly capable fifteen-year-old do it for them?” I say with a dart of competition. This is like tennis. Only, no rackets. Ollie’s the net. Mi-Mi eyes me testily. “Sarah’s parents can do it,” she says, hitting onto a foolproof solution. She kind of lands the jackpot, actually. Damn. And I was doing so well. My shoulders droop. “OK, out with it,” I say. “I don’t want to go camping, in any circumstances. Got it?” “Yes, we understand,” Mi-Mi says, but she sniffs, replicating Ollie’s woebegone expression. For f’s sake... “Alright – if – and only if – there are available spaces, I’ll come on the damn trip.” I am so weak. The effect of my surrender is instantaneous. My friends give victorious howls and engulf me in a boa constricting embrace, crying that they owe me one. Yeah, they bloody well do. Eventually I give in again and accept their death hug rather than tolerate it. There’s just no purpose in doing otherwise with these people. They don’t know the concept of no. Or give up. I can’t help feeling the teeniest bit glad they want me to come along, despite my complete disinterest with camping in general. It’s going to be a nightmare, but I don’t go back on my word. A whole group of Cloverfield students are rehearsing tirelessly in our final week before we break up for half-term when there comes three ominous knocks on the drama studio door. Ghost of Christmas past? I’ve been reading too much Dickens. I don’t give whoever it is my focus, busy perfecting some lines with Mi-Mi (a.k.a. Nancy, whom I end up getting killed. Oops). Still, the final fault is not with me – Damien’s the evil, dog-wielding murderer. I just, you know, snitched about Nancy’s help of poor little Oliver. Hardly a crime, is it? How was I know Bill would flip out and beat her to death? Exactly. I am the innocent here, forced to live with the burden of my guilt. I’m starting to get very protective over my on-stage persona, to say the least. In fact, these days, I spend more time as Dodger than Steph. Sad. “It’s the geography teacher, Mr Latimer,” Mi-Mi whispers, as though it’s some sort of celebrity. I can’t see what’s so special myself. He’s not even a z-lister. And he’s about fifty, with gross sweaty armpits. Oh well, if that’s your cup of tea... “So?” I say, inwardly groaning when I see I’ve got a song in there somewhere. “So he’s got the list of who made the trip,” she says, making a duh face at me. “Alright, alright, no s murder stick and mock attacking her. “Would you mind not poking me! By the time we perform to everyone, I’m going to be bruised all over,” she says unhappily, rubbing her shoulder like a reproachful bird. “There’s only so many times you can die, you know.” I grin at her. “Scared for the death scene?” “You wish,” she says with an eyebrow-raise. “Though I might mention to Damien not to hit me for real. I’m trusting him with my life, after all...” She skips off to lecture him about how to beat her to death believably without, er, beating her to death for real whilst the rest of us twist round to face Mr Latimer, who’s shouting above all the noise for silence. “Shut up,” he says in a growl. “Unless the thirty selected bastards want their names mysteriously vanishing off the list?” We eye each other, thinking: can he do that? “Yes, I can do that,” he says gruffly. “Now can it while I read the list. From outside this room, there are only five people who made the trip, without bias, all from either year nine or ten. From all of you in here (which is basically all the year nines, tens and elevens anyway), there are five chosen from year nine, eight from year ten and twelve from year eleven. Now, from year nine...” I persist in reading my designated song in horror while Mr Latimer calls out people I don’t give a starfish about, unable to stomach the cheesy, dated ring to it. Who comes up with this crap? And, more to the point, how can I sound like I mean these words? I can’t even sing, for a start, which might distract from the worryingly dense lyrics. This is just what I need. A number I couldn’t bring to life if you paid me for it. And I’m talking big money. Anyway... “Lastly, I have here the names of the successful year eleven campers. In alphabetical order...Steven Aarons, Stephanie Collins, Maisy Dawn, Oliver Evans, Zac Johnston, Rihanne Lawrence, Priya Morgan, Mike Myers, – no, not the actor, singer, screenwriter, and film producer, known for such things as Saturday Night Live and Shrek – Damien Smith, Hannah Spirling, Mi-Mi Taylor and Dave Zambo.” No longer ranting to Damien, Mi-Mi looks over and gives a small cheer, and Ollie stops looking so woe-is-me over his paltry gruel. I knew Oliver Twist was a fake orphan. All the more reason not to blame Dodger. “Teams will be allocated shortly,” Mr Latimer says, rounding up. “And placed on the notice board on the last day before half-term, so beware. Now, a few things. One, all campers-” I wish he would stop saying that. I’m getting nauseated. “-will meet at eight in the morning sharp on the first Monday after we finish,” he says, continuing regardless of my feelings. “Two, we will we going by coach. Three, all food and drink is covered by the cost of the trip, which all of you have funded. And four, remember to bring enough clothes to last the five days-” Muffled laughter. “That’s all.” The door whips shut, catching the heel on his black shoes. Swearing, he stomps out, mumbling about incompetent builders. The laughter starts up again, louder this time. But one thing he’s said has the laugh freezing in my throat. “Teams?” I say despondently to a comparatively joyful Mi-Mi. “You didn’t mention anything about that.” I’m very conscious of the fact Maisy Dawn comes after me in the camp register, and if the groups are sorted alphabetically, I’ll be stuck with her for the whole trip. There is no way I’ll let that happen, even if I have to infiltrate another team or kidnap another student so I can take their place. Or just plain kidnap Maisy myself. “How was I meant to know?” Mi-Mi says, throwing her script in the air and catching it, again and again. “Who cares, anyway? It’s not the end of the world. We’ll still all see each other. Besides, we won’t be doing activities all of the time. It is still the holidays, after all.” “Maybe we’ll get to choose,” I say, not listening to her high-pitched chatter and clearly nearing depression. I could always go and get a refund. Just then, I spot something I’ve signed on the letter and curse – once amounts have been paid and you have been selected, no refund will be given in the event you cannot come. Stingy old school. This is typical of Tavern’s slave-driving measures. The papers were right about her. “Oh, I doubt that,” Mi-Mi says, dropping her script and snatching it from under the o-shaped eyes of a year seven. “Cloverfield doesn’t tend to agree with choosing groups. They believe it drags up bad feeling, and creates an – what was it? – atmosphere of inclusion. By separating you from your friends, they think they’re making people interact with everyone, not just a select few. Plus, what happens to the people who can’t get a group?” “They get put in one loser group together?” I say questioningly, having had this happen to me countless times before. “Doesn’t work like that,” my friend says sorrowfully. “Or else they feel like losers, social rejects, desperados, suicidal, take your pick. If everyone’s allocated teams, it eliminates that factor. Get it?” “Right,” I say mournfully. In that case, I’m a dead girl walking. Maisy’ll massacre me as I sleep. ‘And I was so young’, they’ll say. “And as a Head Girl and prefect, I’ll have to back up that measure, unfortunately,” she says, seeing the look I give her, which she rightly takes to mean: use your influence on the school council to change Tavern’s mind. Then I have another, better idea. “Mi-Mi!” I say delightedly. “I know exactly what you can do, and still keep your stupid inclusion measure. Just help the teachers pick the teams, simple! Suck up to old Latimer, maybe commenting on his attractive, sexy damp armpits...” “Shut up!” She swats me with her papers, and I declare a script war. “Do you seriously expect that to work?” she says as we’re duelling. “Yes I do,” I say, amazed at my own intimidation. “And you’re going to go along with it, or I’ll pull out, refund or not.” “And you say I should go into politics,” she says, doubling up when my script gets her in the stomach. “Ow. That hurt. Crazy bitch.” “So you’ll do it?” I say, breathing out. “I’m only saying I’ll try, but you’re indebted to me now.” “I’m not. You owed me first for coming. Consider this payment. Ow!” I move out of her reach as the corner of one of the pages scratches my ear. I’m not being a wimp . It was a particularly sensitive, delicate patch. The – I don’t remember the scientific name, but I’m not lying. Despite my previous. “This is not going to work,” Mi-Mi says as the majority of practising students finally decide they’ve had enough, others on a high about being chosen for the camping trip. There’s the irony. Cloverfield doesn’t want people to be left out...and yet an elite few get taken on the trip, and even fewer even get into this school in the first place. I knew Tavern was a prize bitch, but I didn’t know she was a snake, too. I wonder how I got chosen with her on the panel. I have an image of her in my head, standing up and shrieking: I will have order in protest of my appointment. I would join the school council, just for a wonderful moment like that.
*
I arrive at school earlier than ever before on the last day of school, anxious and out of breath from running. There, pinned self-importantly at the top of the board, is the list of teams – arranged in groups of six. My stomach seems to fall, and I can’t summon the willpower to look. I don’t want to shatter any illusions Mi-Mi’s corruption has succeeded.
“Are you going to look, or should I?” Damien, who’s materialised at the building door, says without fear. I suppose it all works out for him, whatever happens.
I put a hand to my speeding heart. “Could you at least announce your presence before you speak?” I say, chugging down a third of my water bottle as the oxygen stops circuiting so quickly around my body.
“As you wish, princess. Hi, it’s Smith, Damien Smith, who’s just entered the building, coming up behind one Stephanie Collins, who is avoiding reading the notice board...” He sounds like a reporter.
“Cut it out,” I say as I screw the bottle lid back on. It flops off and onto the floor, predictably. You know, it would be more exciting if things actually went right for once. I’m so bored of it.
“Be fair, you told me to announce myself,” he says, tossing me the bottle lid. After a tense moment in which we both watch as the cap wriggles in my fist, I manage to hang on to it and shove it back on top of the bottle. Damien cheers obligingly. I glower at him.
“I can tell you who you’re with, if you want,” he says, making it sound, as usual, as simple as painting your own name.
I want to tell him that life isn’t as easy as he seems to think, that not everything can be met with zealous airiness and freedom, but I don’t. Let’s just say that sort of stuff is too deep for eight in the morning. I’m becoming too philosophical at this school. The other day, I sat senselessly pondering whether the Hockey Cokey really is what it’s all about. Crazy.
“Alright, just do it,” I say, as though I’m about to have a plaster yanked off a sticky bullet wound.
“OK.” Unlike me, he doesn’t need to stand on his tiptoes to see the notice. I can’t help glaring, even though it’s not his fault – this time. Somehow, all the problems in the universe link back to this boy. I’ll find the correlation, any day now. He was probably here in the beginning, framing Adam and Eve for humanity’s failure. Sounds about right.
“Don’t worry, it’s not too bad,” he says, cautiously upbeat.
“Where does the too come from?” I say through my fingers.
Damien yawns to cover his chuckle. “Nowhere, it’s fine,” he says. “I think.”
“Stop being so ambiguous! I want to see the list!”
“Be my guest.”
He steps aside as promised, and I direct my eyes upwards, to the tiny but nonetheless consequential print of writing, just to show him.
My own thoughts are caught in the shadow of a double-edged sword. On one hand, I have Mi-Mi, Ollie and Damien for company. On the other, I’m lumbered with Maisy and Hannah. Now Mi-Mi’s morning text makes sense..."Don’t argue; I did my best. It’s not as crap as it looks. Just ignore the end names".
“C’mon, you get on with most people in the team,” he says chirpily.
“Three out of five,” I say, counting on my fingers. “Not enough.”
OK, now he really looks like he’s struggling not to laugh. “Don’t worry, everyone will be on their best behaviour.”
“By ‘everyone’ I take it you mean your poisonous girlfriend – oh, and her pathetic little sidekick,” I say, giving the list a scorching look.
“She’s not poisonous,” he says loyally, though he doesn’t look too sure himself. “She’s just...defensive. She’ll warm to you, don’t worry. Just give it time.”
“I don’t want her to warm to me, thanks,” I say depressingly. “I’d sooner shoot myself. Sorry, but it’s the truth.”
It’s as though shutters are closing across Damien’s normally carefree eyes, and, suddenly, he doesn’t want to look at me. “She doesn’t hate you, you know.” I think to wonder what Maisy’s been saying behind my back.
“No. She just wants to paper mache me,” I say, and Damien cracks and starts laughing along with me.
Underneath the easy-going humour, something lingers unsaid in the air, as tart and fragile as pear drops. And I think we both know Ms Tavern will do a lap dance in front of the whole school the day Maisy Dawn warms up to me. Unless she wants to give me scarlet fever.
OUR LITTLE CAMPING EXCURSION DOESN’T EXACTLY START WITH A
bang. More like, a crash. Literally, the poor old coach puffs its last bit of steam and peters out, leaving us stranded on the side of a quiet, countryside road. I look around permanently, as though I’ve developed a twitch, convinced we’re about to be torn to pieces by some lunging animal, wanting revenge for its stolen, shop-brought fur. It’s becoming a recurring dream, these past few nights. And it isn’t funny. Who knows what’s out there in the wilderness? Sorry for craving civilisation. Not my fault my fellow campers want to enact Lord of the Flies, yielding to their dark, animalistic sides. I, on the other hand, will be hoping to spot a nice, cheap hotel.
“It’s not even a wilderness!” Damien says, shaking his head with care not to disturb Maisy, who’s allegedly asleep on his shoulder. “It’s a wood. And what’s out there?”
“You’ll see,” I say, queen of the obstinate. “Something’s out there.”
“What, aliens?” comes a snorting voice. I look across the row to see Sleeping Beauty’s awake, noting spitefully her hair’s all over her face, the picture of worse for wear. Somehow, though, she still manages to pull the look off. She may as well have been modelling a pyjama collection, acting fresh out of bed, rather than fresh out of a coach seat on its last legs.
“Did I say that?” I say, myself the picture of serenity. Well, serene for a hungry lioness. “No. But there might be other things-”
This time Maisy collapses against her broken seat, her snorts snuffled by the thick pink mountain coat she’s been using as a blanket. “What next – wolves, apes, maybe even Voldemort!”
I so wish he would come out of the forest now and avada kedavra her. Then she’d be off all of our hands. Oh, and rue the day she denied my coach truths.
“Well, you’d better hope not,” I say in a mutter. Then I raise my voice. “I mean animals, obviously,” I say stoically. “Beasts.”
“I don’t know where you’ve been, Steph, but we don’t get beasts in our forests,” she says, pronouncing each syllable exaggeratedly. “Or in any forest in the world, as it happens.”
“Speaking as a girl who’s been in every forest in the world?” I say, and she shoots me a mean look. “No, thought not. Therefore kindly keep your unwanted opinions to yourself.” Damien passes me a meow look, but I blot it out.
Luckily for me, Mr Latimer begins to instruct the students inside to keep it down as we wait for the driver to drill in another tyre, the sound echoing in anguish over the walls. Why should we keep it down when we can barely hear ourselves think in the first place? Honestly. Surely a geography teacher, or indeed, any teacher, would have more sense.
At last, the tired vehicle is given the good to go, and we set off again, the moaning white coach ambling down the rocky, stone-laden grounds. It’s not got long for this world, if you ask me. Though I hope it’ll hold out until we get there, at least.
Although the coach doesn’t have another meltdown, it goes so slowly it’s lunchtime before we know it, and students are clamouring for some food. ‘Any’ food, some claim. Yeah right. I bet they wouldn’t eat bush meat. The way things are going, I’m starting to believe I’m cooped up with the spawn of Hannibal Lecter.
We end up stopping at a fairly roomy, varnished cafe with too-happy waiters and waitresses. It’s like there’s a secret beyond the confines of the city, one I can’t quite figure out. Everyone, everything, is so isolated.
“Steph, for real, if I hear one more of your conspiracy theories, I’m changing seats with Maisy,” Mi-Mi says, dipping her fork into her tuna pasta. We peer at the girl herself, a few seats down, who is arranging her chips into lips, feeding the remaining ones to her boyfriend.
“There, that’s what you stand to gain,” my friend says as I pick at my jacket potato. Yuck. I’ve just spotted a family of little hairs, sprouting up from the grated, melting cheese. Lunch is, apparently, off the menu. It’s like school all over again. Although, to be fair to the cook, things are gently improving.
“For fifty grand, Mr Latimer’s unwashed armpits or the hairy potato?” Mi-Mi says in a whisper.
“The potato,” I say back, even though there’s no way I’m touching it now.
“Something up with your lunch?” Maisy says out of the blue, managing to make a friendly question sound toxic when the words tumble from her stellar pink lips.
“Why don’t you have it?” I say pleasantly, and Mi-Mi holds her face very still, the corners of her mouth wavering. “Turns out I’m not too hungry after all.” I push the plate towards her, and she inspects it with the demeanour of a forensic scientist.
“Gross, they are hairs all over it,” she says, catching on. “And you were going to make me eat that?”
The whole table splutters into their own plates. I give her a satisfied smile. She looks daggers at me in return.
“Girls, I’m sure we can resolve this,” Damien says, who was one of the onlookers who snickered, albeit quietly. “I’ll eat it.”
“No you won’t,” Maisy says, sliding the plate back to me like it’s contaminated. “You’d probably get all sorts of diseases.”
“Says Little Miss Country,” I say bitchily, binning the plate once and for all.
“Would you two stop sniping?” Ollie says as we’re getting back into the coach. “It’s giving me a headache.”
“I told you it would be a bad idea if I came,” I say, my eyelashes brushing my cheeks. “So you’ve only yourself to blame.”
Ollie sighs. “Fun, remember?” he says with a note of pleading as we all strap ourselves in.
“Yeah, fun,” I say, deadpan.
“Want this?” He produces a damaged, but still intact cereal bar, stuffed with nuts, oats and chocolate. “Since your lunch got ruined.”
“Shameless bribery,” I say, taking it anyway. Um. That’s good. “But thanks.”
“It’s homemade,” he says, the colour of his cheeks perfectly matching his ginger hair. “My first attempt.”
I choke on the bar. “I hope you knew what you were doing.”
“Sure I did,” he says. “Scout’s honour. Anyway, I already gave Mi-Mi one, and she’s still alive, isn’t she?”
We both peek at her – hands on her hips at the front of the coach, waving her iPhone at the driver and demanding that he takes the shortcut, because she’s bloody sick of his snail pace.
“Definitely,” I say dazedly.
Ollie smiles the cute, goofy smile that has me imagining him years younger. “Definitely,” he says as well, watching her argue with the coach driver long after I’ve turned away.
We reach the camping park at around two in the afternoon, having taken that shortcut after all. I jump down the steep coach steps, yanking my faithful brown suitcase with me. We’ve been through it all together, this lump of luggage and I. And, even though I’m surrounded by mounds of dirt-brown soil and hundreds of twisty, lollipop trees that lead into a foggy, spooky clearing, I decide Ollie’s right. It’s wasteful to engage in Maisy’s shit. I’ve paid for the trip, basically all of my new friends are going, so why should I sink to her level and let her spoil things? It makes no sense. So I won’t. I won’t let her get to me.
My resolution to be at one with my natural surroundings is shaken a bit when I discover our lodgings – a pile of poles and several tents that need erecting – the first trial of our day here. I, for one, know nothing about tent erection (please let me never repeat that phrase), but, to the surprise of the whole group, Maisy seems a natural. In our ‘team’ (yes, quotation marks), she’s easily the one with the best technique, with the rest of us chipping in at her instruction. And the tent isn’t so bad really. It has much more space than I was expecting – like a Tardis, only uglier. To be fair, aside from the swamp green exterior, it’s very attractive really. Er...if you look very, very hard. Inner beauty, I think in my head, that’s what we should all strive for. Tell that to Maisy, who I swear wears lip gloss to bed.
I nestle down in my soft sleeping bag, reminded irresistibly of the same situation in a toilet in Surrey. Things, they’re different now.
I dream soundly, and only the light rain that pierces down the stable tent can pull me from my bumpy pillow and back to reality.
*
“Does anyone know how to use this thing?” Maisy says for the thirty thousandth time, the sharp, white top of her nail engrained in the forest map. We’re standing in the heart of the wood, dressed in army-type clothes and steel-strong trainers. I move around a little awkwardly in my own camouflage-coloured, sleeved shirt, it being a little broad for my frame. When it came to finding identical outfits in our individual sizes, this proved a challenge for me. In the end Maisy, making sure everyone was in earshot, said that this age twelve one might just fit me. I thanked her sincerely, smiling through the ordeal with the help of my clenched teeth. It’s not my fault I’m short, but she makes me feel like such a freak. In comparison, Maisy excels us all in the hardly catwalk-ready uniform. She’s wearing shorts, even in the rainy autumn weather, revealing her sun-brown, stalk-like legs, the pocketed sleeves of her shirt rolled up and showing an outstanding amount of cleavage for such a tightly buttoned shirt. I think she chose an outfit a size smaller on purpose. Beside her, I feel like one of the year nines. How archetypal. No, how pathetic.
“Well, we’re here,” Ollie says helpfully. “And we need to get there.” He jabs at two places on the map, while the rest of us give our eyes some exercise. That boy.
“Well noticed,” Maisy says, her tone sharp. Her blue eyes journey round the group. “Has anyone got something useful to add?”
How I’d like to slap her. I wrestle with the idea of causing a fight in defence of my friend, but remember my resolve and share a pukey-face with him instead. To his credit, he doesn’t act annoyed with Maisy at all, through the whole debacle of the trail, even when Maisy claims to have located the red flag he spotted first. If that were me, I would have snapped, but that’s the kind of person he is, I guess.
We stamp through the darkening woods, Mi-Mi and Ollie in the lead, hands not quite touching and tittering about his dive to get to the yellow flag before Hannah did. He won. The poor girl’s cheeks went so red I thought she’d explode, which would be very interesting but not great for team morale, on the whole. Though, personally, I think all our lives would be easier if Hannah and Maisy went down some rabbit hole and never returned.
On the leadership board, we are second, behind Rihanne and Zac’s group, who boast unbearably every mealtime, making well-timed remarks primed to get our competitive juices flowing. It’s all in good nature, though – unlike with Maisy, who acts as though she’s just taken over leadership at Amnesty International or something. All she does is boss us around, nag, nag, nagging like a braying horse. Who needs parental figures when you have her?
And I’m prepared to bet Ollie’s life that bitch pushed me from out of our team-built raft when we were in the water, sailing to collect this bird-shaped trophy, and the boat began to quiver, drops of river starting to bead inside the cracks. We all fell in the end, but that’s not the point. Not very sporting, is it? Or wise, since we’re in the same group. Just when I was beginning to rethink the quantity of Maisy’s brain cells, she goes and reminds me why I’ve always believed she was so stupid. And she looks down her powdered nose at the rest of us all the time.
But, apart from her, the trip turns out to be better than I had anticipated, with us learning how to build a boat, work one, abseil, use a map and a compass, and, on the fourth day, climb up a really huge, rocky wall. It’s not as ghastly as it sounds – we are inside this time, with trained instructors and safety equipment, so it’s not so bad. Damien grins at me as I go to seal the slippery belt on my helmet, cursing profusely when it doesn’t click in the first time.
“You know, most people get someone to assist with all the buckles,” he says, having just suffered through Maisy’s ‘helpful’ hands. “It’s why the sign on the helmet features two people, one helping the...”
I snap the belt in, doing a little conceited dance of celebration, a feat I’ve never attempted before in public. I think I’m tipsy on adrenaline.
“I take it all back,” he says, succumbing to my obvious talents. “You were obviously put on this earth to belt-buckle.” His eyes, a far brighter green than the drab, slimy uniform, search my light brown gaze for a moment before his pillar-box red lips lift up in a smile. “You look cute. Climbing fashion’s your thing, huh?”
I laugh to take the seriousness out of the air. “You betcha,” I say, hooking one leg onto a segment of the wall. Only five hundred more to go. “C’mon. We can set the record!”
“You’re a workaholic,” he says, but he follows me up the wobbly-shaped holes, and we give each other shouts of encouragement as Rihanne and Steven on the other side race us to the top. I put a hand to the top of the prickly wall, claiming victory, and am soon joined by a similarly protesting Damien, who hit the end line a thousandth of a second before Steven. The training instructor awards us first-place. Ha. I can’t resist rejoicing whenever Steven’s in eye shot, even though real athletes keep their cool. I never said I was a real athlete, anyway. And I never said I was cool.
The six of us troop back to the tent at the end of the day, blown down by the day’s rock climbing and swimming in the murky lake that rustled with hidden seaweed-y depths. I can’t even keep my eyes open, so I fall straight on top of my sleeping bag, zoned out in seconds. In the morning, I find the word ‘lightweight’ stuck to my forehead on a sticky note, in Mi-Mi’s distinctive style. ‘Light-fingered’ I stick on her head in response, because she was accused of stealing Maisy’s alluring jasmine-scented spray yesterday.
With the end of our stay looming, the twelve of us plan a secret party in the middle of the forest; making sure to creep out when we know the teachers – and younger students – will be conked out. It’s Halloween night, and we’re in a vast, swirly wood that speaks of ancient witchcraft and unsettled spirits, far away from anywhere we call home. When we sneak out of the tent, using me to soundlessly zip it back up because I have ‘the smallest hands’, it’s to find the forest blanketed in a pitch darkness that blinks silver and white in the crescent-shaped face of the moon, and the millions of winking stars. Out here, you can see things for real; see things as they really are. The air streaks around, pure and smelling of wood smoke, the chilly atmosphere shivering up and down the goose pimples on my arms. As we sit around the leaping orange fire, burning marshmallows and swigging from the clear, cut-glass bottle of vodka, we all stand up; talking too loud, and dancing freely to the songs that blare out of Zac’s iPhone.
I shut my eyes, listening to the blackness, listening to the nothingness that sits like a cloud in my head, waiting to be struck by lightning. Before long, we’ve wandered further into the forest, and I don’t even know who’s who. And I don’t care.
I lie down on the cold earth and the brambles, sketching the moon and the stars with my fingertips. Now I’m no longer standing with my arms flying around like I am airborne, the world seems to have stilled. I become aware of a body flopping down next to mine, the shadow of his lips chasing my neck bone. I can feel his every movement like a breath, like a whisper, and I don’t even remember my own name. Nothing is solid to me, nothing is real, except the dark-haired boy who talks softly next to my ear, language spilling out like the alcohol that burns in my throat.
“I think we’ve lost the trail,” Damien is saying while I nearly knock myself out with my own out-stretched thigh.
“We’re lost?” I say in an airy voice that doesn’t belong to me. “That’s good.”
He chuckles dryly. “Yeah, that’s fantastic,” he says, his tone not rising above a murmur. “Lost in translation.”
“It’s not so bad, being lost,” I say, sitting up and hugging my knees. “Actually, it feels amazing. No one knows where you are and no one thinks to care, and it’s amazing. Why don’t we all just lose ourselves?”
“You tell me,” he says, his shoulder skimming against mine as he shrugs. A clutch of energy spikes at my tired bones. “We’re just resting, anyway. We can’t be that far in. By the way, just how far are we from the trail? We can't be that far in."
My legs settle in front of me, my head now firmly up. “No idea,” I say honestly, the merry-go-round of my head starting to ease up a little. “But we can't be that lost. I can usually pinpoint a place on a compass or map.”
“Me too,” he says, and neither of us says anything for a few time-stopped minutes. The only sound I can hear is our heartbeats, fast and painful in my ears.
“I used to sit like this sometimes,” he adds after an age. “Middle of the night, bottle of vodka, crazy head, no company.”
I'm feeling too dark, too lost, to make sense of this; but even in my state I can hear the resignation in his voice.
All I can think to say, though, is: “No company? Gee, thanks. You know how to make someone feel special.” The last word catches on the end.
“Sorry,” he says, his voice shaking with laughter, which makes me think he isn’t sorry at all. “I meant, I used to sit up alone. Literally, by myself. Sad, isn’t it?”
Hysterical giggles float in my stomach, and soon it’s hard to stop. I bend over for a second, letting it all out, but still feeble laughter jumps out of my mouth.
“Thanks,” he says, but please, I’m not falling for that act. He was as struck over as I was. “And here I was telling you something personal.”
“What’s so personal?” I say quizzically. “We all like to be alone sometimes, right? But we always go back, in the end.”
“Yeah,” he says. “We do.”
As he speaks; all the tension, all the heartbreak, the pain of Mum’s rejection that never really fades, seems to unfurl, coming apart at the seams like an unravelled stitching. He leans forward, I lean forward: and we’re kissing, the crimson pillow of his lips meeting with my marshmallow pink, as sweet and uncomplicated as every daydream, every image that stuns my lips in sleep. The kiss is lighter than air, tasting of weeks of desire and wood smoke, tasting of freedom; as beautiful as the clouds that rumble above the starry sky. There is no reality, there is no me, there is only this.
I would lose myself on a thousand paths, just to feel that again. It’s like...the invisible emptiness is being filled, shared, blooming with life under the warm touch of somebody who might just understand.
And if this is being lost, then maybe I don’t want to be found.
ABRUPTLY, WE PULL APART, THE WITHERING SMOKE DANCING IN
circles above our heads. My temple is throbbing with the force of a pulse, as though I’ve run the hundred metres and haven’t stopped hunting the finish line. My long bob is lightly dishevelled, my fringe weaving with my heavy brown eyelashes. I’d like to bicycle back in time, or maybe freeze this moment and run away, but I can’t. I’m stuck sitting here in the dark with a boy I shouldn’t have kissed. A boy I had no right to kiss. The air is sucking in my chest, the guilt weighing down on me like a stone. That was a mistake. A pretty big one, at that.
When I scramble to my feet, the world is a dizzy, new place, the stars blinking in my eyes even when they’ve closed, my fingers combing through my mussed hair. Still rested on the log, Damien sits looking as though mesmerised at the tree directly ahead, his breathing loud in my ears. The forest is silent, sleeping. But we are awake.
“I’m going to go find the others,” I say, splintering the unconscious wall of sound between us. “Coming?”
I’m so transfixed by the darkness and the forest-like shapes that this didn't happen, not in my mind. We got lost, we sat talking off the party, and then we stood up to leave, to get back. This is what happened. Part of my mother’s therapy was taking a mistake, a bad memory, and willing it into ashes. Then, from the destruction, rose a new chain of crisp, shiny new choices, making the wrong thing you did into something flowery, something good. At the time I thought it was nuthouse nonsense, but now I can start to see the attraction in forgetting everything. Tonight was a rehearsal, a test. A temptation. But I can still return things to their norm, to their right. Things can fall back to how they were before, because everyone knows we always end up peddling back to the past. Tonight – or early morning, by my watch – is no exception. Four o’clock. It’s OK. We have plenty of time to get back to the tent before someone smells a rat, pieces together who’s missing, and figures out what I’ve done. In a few hours’ time, I probably won’t even remember myself.
“Yeah, just a sec.” His voice hits me like a croak, like a smart of pain, the only proof of what took place. The blood is still completing its marathon in my wrists, as tangible as the leaves that flutter onto the ground, some amber orange, others a brown yellow, a navy green. So many different colours. I put a hand to my swirling forehead. Definitely still exhausted.
“When you said we were lost, did you mean actual, off the beaten track lost, or people-lost?” I say, huddling inside my now cold dark blue winter coat. The temperature must have dropped spectacularly during the night. I’ve only just become aware of how shit-cold, impossibly freezing it is.
“People-lost,” he says, and I’m relieved to hear the smile in his voice. Good. Things are already returning to normal, to how they were. That kiss...I’m prepared to pretend it never existed, vanished off the face of the Earth like the dinosaurs. I tell myself I remain oblivious to the sizzling power that seems to light up the darkness, heat the shivering air. So hot, so cold. Can’t even focus my mind.
“Well, that’s encouraging,” I say as our feet trample over thin twigs. The crunch jolts my heart every time. I’m a fast reactor. “Can you actually remember where everyone went?”
“It’s all a bit of a blur, to be honest,” he says. I nod, thinking even better. Soon he’ll have forgotten too. “Steph...”
Oh no. The we-need-to-talk voice. Quick, get rid of it, now. Think positive.
“I’m pretty sure we went this way,” I say without skipping a beat, surveying a likely-looking, red-flagged tree. I know we passed this one. Something small and red definitely caught my eye. So which way did I find the tree – left or right?
“About what happened,” Damien says, not responding to my direction-related questions. “I...I don’t really know what happened myself, truthfully.”
“It’s simple,” I say breezily, not looking up from my investigation of the forest. “We went to a party; we were alone, we got talking...it could have happened to anyone. Really. No big deal. This must happen all the time...between friends.”
He’s quiet for a few minutes, and I think, I hope, he’s let go of the conversation. Sadly, I hope too much.
“Steph, this kind of is a big deal,” he says, raking a hand through his black hair. “I mean, I have a girlfriend – I don’t just go round kissing people. At a party or not.”
“We made a mistake,” I say tightly. “Why ruin things over one forgotten kiss? I won’t say anything to Maisy, I swear.”
“That wasn’t what I meant.” He draws breath. “Besides, I can’t just carry on as normal. Maybe that’s you but it’s not how I tend to go about things.”
“What do you suggest?” I say thickly. “That we go find everyone and make a big, dramatic confession, culminating in Maisy chopping me up and cremating me?”
“She won’t...” He stops in the middle of his sentence, failing to suppress his laugh. “She won’t flip out, I promise. I’ll explain things – make her understand-”
“Have you gone insane?” I ask. “She’ll never understand. She’ll kill us both.” As he goes to interrupt, I carry on regardless. “Just listen for a second, OK? By the time we get up tomorrow, last night will be a distant memory. If you like, I’ll never even mention it again. Deal?”
“This is ridiculous!” he says, so I take it to mean my terms have been refused. Shame. “You can’t just go around pretending things didn’t happen! That’s crazy!”
I stumble away from him as though the crack of a gun’s split the air between us. A needle is pricking at the back of my eyes, and I’m finding it hard to breathe, to keep it all in. All I know is I have to get away.
Under the safety of the diminishing light, under the dark whooshing of the air, it isn’t hard to disappear. I half-run, half-walk through the maze of the trees, squinting to find a sign of life, a sign of light. I’ve never wanted to be more at home than right now, in the clearing of the secluded wood, when I’ve never felt so alone in my life. People...they’re not to be trusted. They’re too unreliable, too unsteady. They shake up your world like rocks crumbling beneath your feet, and before you know it everything you are is eroded. So maybe alone is better.
I’m resigning myself to settling down for the night on the wet earth when I hear voices. Quiet at first, but drifting closer towards me, growing in volume. A wave of relief soaks through me as my best friends appear from behind some trees, both looking peculiarly rosy-cheeked and giggly. I barely take it in in my state.
“Steph!” Their eyes widen, mouths in a circle shape. “Where’ve you been?”
“Um.” I need to get the story straight. “I...got lost. I thought I’d never find you guys.” I rearrange my face into its normal mask. “What’ve you two been doing?”
“Walking off this headache,” Mi-Mi says with a grumble. “I feel like someone’s swung a baseball bat at my head. Repeatedly.”
“Welcome to my world,” I say, reminded of my own headache. “Only it’s the lead bass guitarist of a really bad, heavy metal band.”
“How can you two be so elaborate?” Ollie says. “I can’t even think.”
Mi-Mi takes hold of both our arms to balance herself, yawning. “C’mon, let’s go find the tent,” she says, dog-weary. “I need sleep. Like, immediately.”
“Me too,” I say, staring into the cryptic distance, the obscured Mexican wave of trees. “Still, we’re going back tomorrow. Say hello to a proper bed.”
“And proper food,” Ollie says, stomach whimpering.
“And shampoo. And a shower,” Mi-Mi adds.
Our suggestions get wilder, more and more farcical, and by the time we’ve found the big tent again, our sides are splitting, the hilarity booming around the wood.
“Keep it down!” Ollie says as we unzip it. “People sleeping, remember?”
When we go in, practically on our knees, it’s to find desertion. My heart slows. Thank goodness.
As my senses become sharper, I grow more mindful of how heavily fatigued I am, crawling under my sleeping bag after exclaiming a quick ‘goodnight’ to Mi-Mi and Ollie.
My body has curved into unconsciousness in seconds, the knobbly sheet ending somewhere around my sky-blue toes.
*
*
Morning promises a heightened sense of pain, of headaches. I take several sips of water, plus one of Mi-Mi’s paracetamol pills; clothed in a musty red jumper and tight, medium blue jeans, my trainers the only reminisce of my stay here. I brush my hair until it crackles with static life, my fringe as floppy-straight as a bendy ruler. I tie my hair in a high bunch, delaying the moment when I have to leave the tent. I woke up last, and I ended up feeling the most ill, so everyone’s waiting for me. I take more than enough time than I need, even though it’ll irritate the kids outside and the moaning coach driver.
When I emerge from my sanctuary, everybody else is ready, rucksacks and cases lying at their feet. I keep my face painstakingly inscrutable as Mr Latimer orders that I stand with my chattering team so they can check the numbers. I lounge on a tree next to Ollie, acting ignorant to the bottomless green eyes that rake over mine before they flick over, back to his girlfriend, and I can breathe out.
“I think I’m suffering from camping-withdrawal symptoms,” Ollie says sadly.
“Otherwise known as a hangover,” I say, and Mi-Mi and I snicker.
“A what?”
We twist round to see Mr Latimer, face stern as he takes us in.
“Um – that was a joke,” I say feebly.
“Hmm.” His shoes scatter the colour-coded leaves as he goes off to accost a student for chewing gum (Hannah. How satisfying). We splutter after him.
“Thanks, guys,” Ollie says furiously. “You almost busted me there.”
“Well, you’ve only got yourself to blame,” Mi-Mi says in her typically considerate way.
“Says the friend who made me attend the party!"
“No, I did not; you absolute bastard!”
I move swiftly out of the way as Mi-Mi’s and Ollie play-fight with their backpacks.
“There’s Mr Latimer over there,” Ollie tells her, victimised. “All I have to do is call him over and you’re dead.”
I step on his toe. “And risk exposing your hangover?”
“Nice to know who’s side you’re on,” he says grumpily.
“Oh, Steph knows where her loyalties lie,” Mi-Mi says complacently. So I do.
The coach ride back is much more dispirited than the journey over, with most people resting their heads on their rocked chairs and looking like a whole row of puppets on strings, waiting for someone to pick up the reins and jerk their movements together. I’m just happy to be away from this place.
When the coach drops me off at my home, I discover that a lot can change in a week. The house has been revolutionised, with wedding plans spread all over the stairs, the sofas, the rickety shelves in the bathroom, all the bedrooms. Sarah and Will appear to have become wedding planners in my absence, theorising designs left, right and centre. I learn that they crave an early spring wedding, that sweet period when the weather is swinging into cool-hearted bliss, the animals reborn, the flowers beginning to grow again in the newly green meadows. They are lost in a head of dreams, but I can hardly contradict that. I’m in some version of a dream world myself.
“Come and see this.” With barely a hello, Sarah tugs me to the living room, where her silver laptop is gleaming with different wedding dresses, all white and embroidered, but somehow all individual in Sarah’s eyes. “What d’you think?” She bounces all over a sitting-room bean bag. “Which do you like best?”
I’m just trying not to be overwhelmed, in truth. Wedding dresses swim in my head, menacing as sharks surrounding water. I end up closing my eyes and landing my finger on a pretty, slim silky dress with purple, pink and yellow flowers embedded in the veiled material. It’s a stunning, but completely accidental, choice.
“Steph, that’s perfect,” Sarah says as Will appears in the doorway. She shrieks at him to cover his eyes and move away slowly. “The dress, I’m picking the dress, you idiot!”
Raising his eyebrows at me, Will backtracks to the kitchen. After I can’t take anymore wedding plans, I patter out to join him in making his ‘legendary’ (very doubtful) chilli-sauce rice. Honestly, since my brother left our original home to go to uni, he’s become a Jamie Oliver in the making. What’s up with that?
“So, how’s engaged life?” I say artfully, testing the dark orange sauce with a wooden spoon.
“My best dream and worst nightmare rolled into one,” he says. “Dream-ware? Or Night-eam? Whatever’s the word, that’s it.”
I grin. “Sounds stressful.”
“You don’t know the half of it,” he says, looking like the victim of electric-shock treatment.
“Regrets?” I say slyly.
“None,” he says, and blames somebody’s mother when he almost puts the wrong ingredient in.
My phone signals a text in my tight-jeaned pocket. I know who it’ll be before I look, because I’m apparently psychic now, which is both deeply cool and weird. I examine it warily: "I know you’re probably pissed off that I’m texting you, but I just wanted to say sorry if I upset you last night. I didn’t mean you were crazy, just that it seemed mad to pretend nothing happened. But if that’s what you want to do, then fine."
The light rain pitter-patters across the glass window, streaming down behind us like tears.
*
With the school term commencing, I throw myself into rehearsals with a rigorous passion, studiously avoiding alone time with Damien, and rarely responding much to the conversation in the frequent times we’re hanging out as a group. Even when we’re made to work together in the drama studio I keep it strictly professional. Nobody said it was going to be easy, watching things slide back into a second-rate mirror of the past, watching Maisy with her hands all over him at every opportunity, but I manage. And every time she kisses him, I try not to think about how I’ve felt those lips, plump and warm, come apart under my own. These days, things seem less effortless, less sleek, between Maisy and her boyfriend, and I can’t fight the squirming feeling that’s my fault. I may not like the girl, but I do have a heart, and I can’t help feeling bad every time I see her possessive blue eyes steal over my averted gaze. She’s got her wish...I’m staying right away from her boyfriend, but still she doesn’t seem happy. Maybe she’d like to wipe all traces of me altogether. Sometimes I wish I could too.
These days, I can’t miss the irony of Miss Fox running around like a rabbit, sowing up the last seeds of the play in a frenzy, her once impeccable skin growing haggard. It turns out there’s a lot more to school plays than I ever dreamed of.
Even I feel like I’ll break under the pressure, some evenings. The good thing is, it’s becoming more and more natural to slip into the persona of Dodger and leave my skin behind. My body, it’s like an inward shell, washed up on a beach in Victorian London, waiting to be occupied by the crabs of moral depravity and theft. I devour the chance to live the life of someone so far removed from my own.
As the December snowflakes begin to skirt down, Mi-Mi, Ollie and I are taken aback to uncover the date of our first real performance – 15th December. It runs through to Thursday, the day before the Christmas holidays begin and the winter term ends. There’s even an after-show Xmas disco planned for the Friday evening, with all those who participated in the play (literally, everyone who’s anyone), invited exclusively. You see? There they go again, getting all economical with their own policies. It drives me up the wall.
“But...but we have less than two weeks!” Ollie says, agog. “They can’t do this to us.”
“Ollie, they have no choice,” I say, sharing an eye roll with Mi-Mi. “That’s the final week before the Christmas hols.”
“Well, they’d better change it, hadn’t they!” he says deliriously, wandering over to have a ‘discussion’ with Miss Fox, who looks ready to crack as it is.
“I really don’t think that’s a good idea...” I say as our friend starts pestering our teacher to push back the date, without success. “She’ll sack him as Oliver soon.”
“Tell me about it,” Mi-Mi says, pointing to the heel of her script. “Now, from the top.”
She’s a slave-driver. And that is not hyperbole. Even when we’re not rehearsing we’re rehearsing. Sometimes she declines to speak to me unless I use Victorian slang. Seriously.
My head is in my audition book by lunchtime, where I’m sitting with a whole crowd of the year group, which happens to include Maisy and her boyfriend, both of whom I’m able to see as empty space on the long bench. Deep down, I know this situation is crazy too, but what more can I do? I need things in my life to be slow, secure. I can’t afford to jeopardise that with some ludicrous love triangle, no matter how non-ideal the circumstance. I cope just fine, great even, with seeing them everyday together, so why jump ship now? I had a little crush – no, I thought I had a crush, and he’s taken, so end of. And honestly, I was probably just looking to get back at Maisy in the first place. I won’t be going back there. It was...immature.
“Rehearsals are a bitch,” Ollie says, joining me in my suicidal head-in-script. “Pity me, guys. I’m in the lead role.”
“You wanted more rehearsals,” I say disbelievingly. “In fact, you’d have done everything to prolong them not five minutes ago. Just ask Miss Fox, if she hasn’t killed herself yet.”
We all laugh at him and his pouty expression, rolling in tension release. These play-fuelled weeks have been gruelling, to say the least, and I feel like I haven’t let loose in a long time. If I ever really did before.
The bell rings as we’re still teasing poor Ollie, and I’m in such a daze I grab my stuff erratically as I try to gather the windswept sheets of my script together, soon being the only one left at the bench. Well, thought I was the only one.
“You dropped this.”
Suspended in Damien’s fingers is my silver, white and yellow daisy chain bracelet, hanging precariously in his smooth, level hands.
“Thanks.” I take it, staring at the ground, and start to fix it onto my wrist.
“You always wear that,” he says, the curiosity etched on his face. He says it like a statement, not a question. Even though we’re late, and the bench area is by now emptied, there’s something in his voice that makes me want to answer.
“My mum...she got it for me,” I say, all of a sudden scared I’m going to cry, even though I never cry, not in public. “It was a present, that’s all.”
“Do you...do you still see her?” he says as we start to walk, not getting that pitying look most people adopt when they’re talking about her, but looking as though he actually wants to hear my response. That is a first. Others, they find it hard, awkward, to talk about someone with an illness. Especially a mental illness. It’s, like, this taboo, only no one wants to admit it is.
“Not anymore,” I say, holding the door so he can walk through. “I did go to see her, but it didn’t work out. So I thought it was best not to see her.”
“Ever?” he says, eyes gazing straight into mine. I want to look away, to shut down the discussion, but I can’t.
“I don’t know,” I say as we start to climb the exhaustive stairs to maths. “It’s just for now, while I settle in.”
“I get it, you know,” he says. “What it’s like to have a parent let you down.”
“But your mum,” I start to say carefully. “She-”
“I didn’t mean her,” he says, eyes taking on that distant, faraway look. “I meant my dad. In and out of rehab. Recovering alcoholic. And before you ask, all this was before mum.”
I think back to what he said that day at the Bowling Alley...something about his dad being who knows where. It seemed odd at the time, but what he told me about his mum’s death cancelled out all else.
“Is he – are things better now?” I say as we reach the third floor. It’s as though all the strain of the past month or so has evaporated, wiped the slate clean.
Damien regards me for a second. “I guess, yeah,” he says. “He’s getting his act together, starting to work on his music again. But you never get it over it, do you? That feeling you have to look after them, rather than the other way round.”
A tennis ball-shaped lump seems to have formed in my throat. “Not really, no,” I say constrictively, but the conversation reaches a premature end at the classroom door. Everything inside me is thumping, swirling around in my head and stomach. I feel like I’m floating on air.
We get lucky. Mr Rogers was at a meeting this lunch, and has put up a curt notice decreeing he’ll be fifteen minutes late, so we should get on with the trigonometry worksheets at the front. I take a sheet and sit down next to Maisy as normal, but I can’t escape the aching notion everything has turned on its head all over again. Worse than that, I can’t hide from the feeling I’m glad.
THE FINAL DAYS BEFORE OUR FIRST PERFORMANCE FLY BY IN A firecracker of last-minute changes and line fluffs and faces that look ready to expand into Outer Mongolia. Needless to say, relaxation has become a privilege. With practically the whole school involved in the process, we’re given periodic time off lessons in the run-up, so it’s pretty much nonstop in the drama studio. When the numbers rise too high, like when we do a scene that involves most of the cast, we have to move to the school hall we’re going to perform in, which makes it all the more dismaying. “Relocation, relocation,” Ollie keeps saying darkly. “Before long, we won’t be using the drama studio at all.” “Don’t be so morbid,” a giggling Mi-Mi says. “What do you expect, anyway? The performance is-” “I know, don’t remind me,” he says, tone sorrowful. I think he needs a shaking or something. “Ollie, you have the star role,” I say, angling for tough love. “Pull yourself together!” He buries his head in his hands again. “Nerves,” Damien says wisely. “They tend to get you down.” “It’s not just nerves,” Ollie says, looking up. “I’ve got some anxiety disorder. I can’t even sleep.” The three of us look at each other, then at Ollie. “But you were so confident in your audition,” I say. “So full of it. You’re made for this part, Oliver, so wake up!” A hard glint forms in Ollie’s eyes. “You’re right, Steph,” he says. “I am?” I say, surprised. “Cool.” Check me, being right. “Well, you usually are, aren’t you?” Damien says, and we laugh at the in-joke. The light feeling that snakes across my chest is so natural now I hardly notice. Spending 24/7 with my friends has meant I’ve got used to everything – everyone’s quirks, everyone’s melodramas, stage fright, you name it. It’s no Hollywood, but we do spend an awful lot of time in each other’s company now. Ollie, meanwhile, appears to have had a serious epiphany. “I’m going to the assembly stage, get to see how it’ll seem being up there, you know? Got to go!” He rushes off, red hair catching the cautious sunshine. “Whatever you said, it worked,” Damien says humorously. “Oh, it was nothing,” I say, ever modest. “Watch out, you’ll make Tavern’s wall soon,” he says with a mock-scared face. “Please, not the wall!” Mi-Mi and I say simultaneously. “Hey, aren’t you a Head Girl slash prefect?” Damien says. “You’re letting down the teacher side.” “I was just thinking the same thing,” I say perceptively. “I’m already on the flipping wall,” Mi-Mi says, tutting. “So shut up, the pair of you.” She starts to stalk in the direction Ollie headed, and adds in a barbed voice: “I think I’ll check out the stage too. Obliterate any last-minute nerves.” And she edges out of sight. “Wow,” Damien says. “Those two need a spa trip or something.” “Agreed,” I say, feeling a little pre-stage out-of-sorts myself. Yesterday I completely snapped at Sarah and Will when they suggested porridge for breakfast. The thought makes me heave, even now. “Hi, guys,” Maisy says, sidling up out of nowhere and acting all sweetness and light. “How’re rehearsals?” “So-so,” Damien says non-committedly, as I mentally work out just how Tavern gets the slab pavements to slot in so perfectly. I can handle being around her, obviously, but when it’s the three of us, alone...let’s just say I’d prefer to be in alternative company. It’s difficult to feel guilt for someone who hates your guts anyway, and always has, but still the feeling persists. I don’t know whether to hate her or pity her. Trust me, that’s a very awkward situation to find yourself in. Not to mention completely mind-boggling. Maisy Dawn, definition of a head-f. Well, she’s messing with mine, and she doesn’t even know it. I look up and realise she’s watching me expectantly. “What?” I say, re-focusing on what they’re saying. It isn’t that easy to blend into the pavement, as it happens. “I said: how are they going to do your costume?” she says, the corners of her mouth smirking upwards. “You are playing a boy character, after all.” I think of Maisy’s own role in a play – as one of the dancers in the lead musical numbers, her hips swaying sexily, her long golden hair cascading down her shoulders, her every curve exemplified in the kind of outfit I’m pretty sure Victorian women didn’t wear. Then I think of me, probably shoved in some unspeakably hideous cap, dressed in corduroy trousers and my hated black school shoes, my voice a low, cockney accent. It’s fairly clear we’re thinking along the same lines. That slick, dark pink mouth is telling me so. “It’s not that complicated,” I say pacifically, a choice array of obscenities scrolling through my brain, each one scrawled on her forehead in my mind. OK, she’s leagues ahead of me without the humiliating make-up, but like I said before, I’m no longer going to let that bitch get to me. She’ll always have a problem with me, and I’m not exactly up for being friends either. I just wish she didn’t always have to fake it, the true intentions, the venomous feelers, hidden under the cool surface of her gold holiday tan. “Really?” she says, smirk widening. Translation: you are so unattractive; you won’t need much tweaking. Mature. Though I am more like a little worried I’m going to end up looking like a period actor meets transvestite. That should be fun. In front of all the parents, too. “Aw, no one’s going to care that you do not look like the character,” Damien says, misunderstanding telecommunication completely. “Once they see you act, no one will care.” I am that close to sharing a companionable look with Maisy. That close. Only she’s the one insulting me, so on second thoughts... “What made you audition for a male part?” she says, her head to one side. She’s ridiculous. I won’t even grace the question with an answer. “Who cares about the gender of the role?” Damien says anyway. “This isn’t the Dark Ages. Besides, men have been playing female parts for centuries.” It would suit Maisy to a tee to be back in the Dark Ages, then she could be some medieval lady-in-waiting who needs courting with immediate effect, while attempting to get my hands cut off for stealing apples at the same time. I wouldn’t put it past her, if we got hold of a time machine fast enough. Speaking hypothetically, of course. “Whatever,” she says, snipping off a split end with the small silver scissors in her pencil case. “Just saying. Anyway, I’ve got to go. The dance troupe are calling!” She kisses her boyfriend and skips off, long hair flowing out behind her like very expensive, clean-cut, unveiled toilet rolls. “Just forget her,” Damien says, seeing my narked face. “She’s just trying to get to you.” “Well, she’s succeeding,” I say gloomily, my fringe flipping in my eyes. I can’t help desiring instant vengeance. I must be a very violent person. But, really, who can blame me? Frankly, I’m astounded I haven’t actually gone for her yet. The old me certainly would have. “She just never leaves it. Why does she bother to speak to me at all?” Damien sighs. “You know how it is,” he says, but no, I don’t, not really. “You’re new, you straight away grab attention with that story, you’re popular with her friends, we become friends...you must be able to see she’s just jealous of you.” “Jealous of me?” I say, snorting. “Are you serious? Maisy Dawn, school siren, jealous of me? Somehow I don’t think so.” Damien carries on his ludicrous claims in spite of my cutting scepticism. “What’s more, you’re talented, and funny, and you don’t take her shit.” He goes red all of a sudden, which is more of a shock than his words, because he hardly ever gets embarrassed. “And don’t take this the wrong way, I’m just trying to explain her attitude...you’re, well, really pretty on top of all that. She sees you as competition, is all.” I don’t know whether to laugh or stay looking bowled over. “You don’t see yourself, you know?” he says, recovered from his blush and looking uncharacteristically serious. “You don’t see how much you have going for you. Speaking as a friend.” “Speaking as your fellow Oliver! star, we really need to get to rehearsals,” I say distractedly. “Fine,” he says in a parody of surrender. But then he says, much quieter: “One day, you’re going to realise you can’t ignore everything that happens.” I choose to ignore this.
*
*
Backstage, the atmosphere has reached paramount. A nervous whizz is oozing through my every particle, and I don’t know whether to be more excited or scared. Next to me, Mi-Mi is teasing her blonde-brown curls with a special spray, her lids painted a glittery purple. She looks amazing, while I’m shunted to exactly what I myself predicted a few days ago. I said I was psychic now. And how is it that my best friend managed to convince Miss Fox it was far more authentic to wear her stylish kitten heels rather than the old, sturdy slippers she was originally lumped with? She took one look at them in Costume and said no way. I use some of the hairspray myself, having to keep my twisted-up bun in place underneath the hem of the cap. Well, at least I got to keep the fringe, provided it had a bit of a re-vamp, which I was all too happy to concede to. I even get a tiny bit of pink blusher to give myself some ‘colour’. My stage fright must have made me deathly pale or something, by the look of the make-up brusher. I have never been so happy not to start something in my life, so I can’t imagine how train wreck-y Ollie’s feeling, having to introduce the whole plot etc. Still, I appear fairly early, so I don’t get off lightly myself. But hopefully by then the play will have come into its own, with the anxious energy vaporised. We’ll see. “You have good bone structure,” the make-up artist (who is actually one of the parents) says, turning my face both ways. “It’s such a shame you’re playing a boy. I could have done so much with this face.” She releases me, and I can’t vanish the feeling of being a guinea-pig. Now I know how they feel. I seem to know how a lot of random things feel now. It’s made me very empathetic. As Mi-Mi grins at the expression on my face, the backstage door bursts open and Maisy walks in, arm bent fashionably as she carries her sheepskin bag. (Proof of her furry immorality, I think). She must have just been sent in here. Her face is free of make-up for once, as the make-up artist ‘prefers to start with a blank canvas’ (superiority complex or what?) and it feels like she’s stripped of her usual power over me. Her outfit isn’t as raunchy as I’d pictured it, just a simple cotton t-shirt and skirt to make it easy to dance in, though she’s painted lips all over her arms, goodness knows why. The make-up artist gives her a thicker coat of mascara than she gave me (don’t ask me why they bothered with it on me to begin with), saying my lashes don’t need it as much as Maisy’s, to her obvious abhorrence. As it happens, even her closed eyelids manage to communicate a vast amount of loathing. Don’t ask me how. Why questions, I can attempt. Regardless, that girl will find a million ways to hate me, in any circumstance. In a way I know I deserve it, but it doesn’t make her any less of the nasty cow she is. Let’s face it, she’s always been braying for my blood, long before things got...complicated with her boyfriend. Anyway, here’s to moving-on. (Raises invisible champagne glass. As long as it’s not vodka, eh?) “Look at the time,” the make-up artist meets parent says with a gasp, gawking at the clock on the wall. “The show’s about to start, any minute!” The worms in my stomach splash about uncomfortably, wriggling inside my dropped gut. I severely regret having beef stew for lunch. Even if it was edible. If this continues, I’m getting the cook a place on Tavern’s highly coveted wall. R-e-s-p-e-c-t. Mi-Mi grabs my shoulder, hazel eyes as spooked as the forest on Halloween. “We’ll...we’ll have to listen out for our cue, and get out there, and not freak out, and not freeze in front of all our friends, their parents, and a whole host of randoms...” “Mi-Mi, we’ll be fine,” I say, desperately wanting to believe in my own assurances. “We must have rehearsed this bloody play a thousand times.” “Exactly,” Damien says from behind the plush red curtain, complete with manic, stuffed bulldog. Terrifying. Yeah, if you’re three. It does look vicious, though, in all fairness. “What can go wrong?” “What universe are you orbiting in?” Mi-Mi says, the incredulity glaring in her face. “What can go wrong? Seriously? Only about a million f'ing things!” The Russian make-up artist thins her lips. Mi-Mi covers her mouth. “Sorry...um, Anna’s mum. I didn’t mean any offence.” The rest of us chortle at her shame. Mi-Mi is quite something when burdened. For a Head Girl-prefect. I haven’t even seen Ollie all evening. It crosses my mind he might have done a bunk, laughing hyena-like as he leaps across the school fence...maybe not. Calm down, Steph. It’s only a play. Like Damien says, nothing will go wrong. Ollie has not done a bunk, so to speak. From backstage, we can hear his familiar woe-is-me orphan tones, pleading for gruel. Even I feel sorry for him. Just give him another bloody portion, you bastards. But the evil superiors from year ten refuse him, voices bellowing and totally overpowering poor little orphan Ollie. I have to keep telling myself it is only a play, only a play. Before long it’s time for my first entrance, my first scene. My heart is jarring in my chest, my legs trembling, but my head feels capable under the spotlight, feeling the beginnings of Dodger start to shudder through my being, and soon I don’t have to ride the storm so much as surf it. Another thing I hadn’t anticipated is how much easier it is to perform with your friends, particularly in my many scenes with Mi-Mi and Ollie, and it’s hard not to chuckle at Damien’s threatening lines, the way he shakes his fist in one scene, lamp in hand. Two scenes make my highlight. The first, when Ollie stumbles in the middle of the kidnap scene, knocking Damien’s fraud bulldog sideways. I only just manage to keep the hysterics in at this point, trying to improvise along with the others. “Stupid brat, you’re always doing that,” Damien says roughly, bringing Ollie to his feet, and the audience both boo the villain and cheer his saving of the scene. The second favourite, though, comes in the shape of Mi-Mi’s death scene (I know, it sounds weird and goth-y), which is acted so beautifully it has seventy percent of the audience in floods of tears, including her dad, bless his soul. He looked ready to deck Damien, in all honesty. But the funny part comes when Mi-Mi hisses insults at ‘Bill’ for ruining her intricately ironed curls in the death blows, as she had to duck frequently to avoid being killed for real. I’d wondered why she’d looked so annoyed as she lay breathing her last breath – annoyed at being killed, maybe? Damien catches my eye and I try hard not to giggle. In the end, though, the show is a huge success. I don’t know what I’d have done if it wasn’t, what with the lives we all gave up to bring Dickens’ story to life. We suffered, we persevered...I can’t think of anything catchy to go on the end. Never mind. My – our – performance was received terrifically, so we don’t need any pretentious Shakespeares, do we? I think not. Even Angel was in the audience, though I worried she might be freaked by the kidnapping of a minor (Ollie), the death of a well-liked young woman (Mi-Mi), the hanging of Fagin (Rihanne) and the snarling dog (Damien’s stuffed mutt). Angel loves it, though, and begs me to read her Oliver Twist, chapter by chapter, every bedtime, despite my play-induced exhaustion. Sarah and Will both offered to chip in, but my baby niece insisted they won’t know how to do all the voices. The things I do, eh...
*
The final show is underway on Thursday, with us adding a special for one-show-only scene as it’s the last night, the whole cast doing a merry dance as the performance begins to wrap up. We all give bows in turn, my cap falling off my head (yes, typical. I’m used to it by now). My head is immersed in a post-show glow, as flummoxed as it was the day of the Party, only this time I have something to celebrate. Majorly. “We didn’t mess up, we didn’t mess up!” Mi-Mi, Ollie and I sing, spinning around like little kids playing ‘Ring a Ring O’ Roses’. Not the catchiest tune in the world, but it’ll do us, in our drunkenly happy states. I don’t seriously believe I’d notice if the ceiling fell down and crushed our celebration short. Which would be a very theatrical end to the play, if grim. I’m searching for Sarah and Will in the exuberant audience, all congratulating their kids and passing teachers, when my phone starts to ring persistently in my schoolbag. The bottom of my stomach seems to cave in, letting the sandstorm pour into my bones. Claire. I have learnt to expect bad things from this phone call, learnt to expect bad news, sad news, mad news. It has made me resent her, resent everything to do with her stupid do-gooding social working, her sickly smile, her fluffed-up blonde hair... She can’t call now. Not when things are finally, finally starting to come together. “Steph,” she says as I click ‘accept call’. “Thank goodness! I’ve been trying to reach you for ages!” Something’s off about her voice. She sounds awful, as though she’s had sugar- paper plastered in her throat. “I’ve had this play thing all week, you know that,” I say. My own voice has dampened, become blunter, to combat hers. The childish dance of seconds ago seems miles away. “Steph, I’m driving over. You need to...the important thing is to remember not to panic, OK? You and I, we need to have a serious talk. Tonight.” “Claire, what are you talking about? Things are fine here, there’s no reason to panic. I’m not in any trouble, I swear...” “It isn’t you, Steph.” Her tone has risen to a bracing, tonic octave. She takes several gulps of air, and even though I’m here and she’s there I can tell she’d rather crawl down a crack in the earth than deliver the words that will come, the words that will blow everything I’ve created skywards. The words that will bring me right back to the reality I’ve been trying to leave behind. “Please. Just tell me.” When she speaks, Claire is decisive, though she breaks on the end, sounding like a child in need of comfort, not a social worker, not an adult. “Your mother. She...she...she tried to end her life tonight.”
MY MIND IS A BLANK HAZE AS I TEAR THROUGH THE CROWD, PUSHING
past the questioning looks, the friendly exchanges, the voices that try to pull me into conversation...I have to get out...I need to find a way out...
Air. It hits me like whiplash, staining my bloodless face with pink, rushing oxygen to my lungs. And I can breathe.
I sit with my head in my knees on a nearby brick wall, its colour Ginger Tom orange, exterior still layered with glue. My insides, already jittery from this week’s performances, feel as though they’ve disappeared. The numb feeling has made a spectacular return, and I keep waiting, hoping, to be sick. To empty the claws gripping my stomach, the sweet, breathy voice that forces me to hear the words... Your mother. She...she...she tried to end her life tonight. I’m strangely detached from the woman herself, the stranger; the patient who does not even want to be alive, who hates her daughter. I cut her out of my life, telling myself it didn’t matter, that she didn’t matter, but she couldn’t even let me get on with that, could she? I was on such a buzz, drifting upwards into space and beyond, flushed with success, messing around with my friends...and she finds a way to spoil that too. I hate her. I hate her.
The pavements are starting to be filled with tired parents, tired performers, weary teachers who bemoan the mammoth cleaning job of the hall. Who cares? Who cares about all that? If these people knew for a second what it really felt like to have everything over, to have your life burn out of shape in a heartbeat, in a phone call, then maybe they wouldn’t care about cleaning, or getting younger siblings to bed, or putting on the tea. If they knew what it was like to have real problems...
I’m sick of the jubilant sight of them all. Always, always other people who get to walk away. Why can’t I walk away from this?
The doors spin open in another blast, the sound nailing inside my ears, impossible to get away from. My friends are spilling out of the assembly hall, still singing that stupid song, ringing their parents to pick them up. I fix my face into a smile, my cheeks a healthy pink from the night air, my eyes showcasing a glister that could have come from happiness. Carrying on, pretending that phone call was simply a figment of my imagination, is the smartest way to go about things. No explanations, no truths, no heart-to-hearts...everything is as it was. My friends won’t look past my bright expression and see that anything’s different from ten minutes ago. How could they? Apart from those damn articles, they don’t know anything about me, about the way I used to live. And it’s going to stay that way. Their lives are so perfect, so nuclear...well, so is mine.
“Have any of you guys seen Sarah and Will?” I say, my face tranquil. “I must’ve lost them in the crowd...I went out for air. It’s stifling in there, I had to get out.”
“I did see them around, but I lost them again,” Mi-Mi says, her own face apologetic. “I can’t believe they got tickets for all four shows.”
“I know,” I say neutrally. “Crazy, right?”
Damien laughs. “You should’ve heard my dad. It wasn’t all ‘I’m so proud of you, son’...he wanted to know if I could get him a discount, being in the play.” If there’s anything bitter in his tone, he doesn’t let it show.
I laugh along with everyone else, and the sickening swirl of my intestines might be from excitement.
“Well, my parents made it to three shows,” Ollie says, incensed. “And I’m in the star role.”
“Recession before kids,” Damien says intelligibly.
My phone starts ringing again in my reindeer rucksack. When I make no move to answer it, three pairs of eyes stare at me.
“Aren’t you going to pick up?” Mi-Mi says. “It might be Sarah or Will, wanting to know where you are.”
“Yeah, what am I thinking?” I say, letting the call through. It’s Will. “Hi, I’m just outside the reception building, by this brick wall, if you want to know-”
“Claire said she called you,” he says flatly. “Why didn’t you tell me? We have to leave, right now.”
The smile slips on my face. I can’t think about that, not right now. Not ever, if I can help it.
“Why is it my business what that woman does?” I say, moving away from the enquiring looks of my friends. “So, she tried to top herself. It’s not like she hasn’t done it before. What’s new? Why should I drop everything because she’s so stupid?”
I predict Will’s intake of breath before I hear it down the phone. “You know full well she’ll ill, Steph,” he says, and he sounds angry. “She has been, for years. She needs help, she needs our support...”
“She doesn’t want it!” I say, fighting to keep my voice down. “Remember how she treated you and Sarah? She couldn’t even spare a bed for her own grandchild! And as for me,” I give a sour little laugh. “She acts like I’m dirt on her shoe. She called me a tedious bitch, did you know that?”
“Steph, she didn’t mean any of that. She’s-”
“Yeah, she’s sick, I get it,” I say, only I don’t get it, not at all. I never really have. “So what? It doesn’t take away from the fact she’s a selfish, self-obsessed...” I exhale. “Look, I really don’t want to know her business. I’m done with all that – and you know what? Cutting ties with her has been the best decision of my life. I haven’t had to worry about what she’s doing, whether she’ll take another cocktail of pills or dance on the roof or get herself arrested! I finally, finally have my own life, and I won’t let that be determined by her mood swings. Not anymore.”
I shut down the call, breathing shallowly through my nose, and walk back in the direction of my friends, my face as bright as it was before.
“Any chance of getting a ride back to my place?” I say to Mi-Mi, entirely self-possessed, entirely in control. A little thrill goes through me. I am in control. “Will couldn’t find a proper car park space – you know how it is, crowded with proud parents.” Huh. Not mine. “He’s picked up a ticket, and his sports car’s been clamped.”
“I’m prepared to bet you tipped the ticket person off,” Damien says, seeming to recall something I’ve said. “You hate that car.”
“I don’t know why,” Ollie says. “It’s a great model – speedy, cosmetically appealing, neat-”
“Why don’t you just marry the car?” Mi-Mi says, eyebrows raised. “And my dad won’t mind about the lift, Steph. I just have to get him to stop crying so he can see to drive!”
“Great,” I say stilly. I realise how cold and unnatural this seems and add a humourless chuckle.
As Mi-Mi and Ollie wander back inside the hall to ship a ride off her parents, I lean back against the wall, taking a drag of air. I wish I had a cigarette. Something, anything to take the edge off.
“Are you OK?” Damien says after he’s texted his own dad. “You look a bit-”
“Fine, I’m fine,” I say glassily. “I just feel a bit sick...all the excitement and the nerves, you know. I think I need an early night.”
Trust him not to accept my excuses. Why can’t he just go with it like everybody else?
“You looked upset earlier, on the phone,” he says, green eyes fiery in the dark, glooming night. Eyes I can’t run from, eyes I can’t pretend to. One slip and it’s all over. My world will come crashing down.
“You know. It was...I got a call from Claire before you guys came out, and I kind of neglected to tell my brother about it,” I say. “Nothing massive. I’d just rather not face him right now.”
“What did she say?” he asks, and I still can’t get away from the look in his eyes. I don’t want him to understand, I don’t want him to see something’s wrong...so why am I opening my mouth to reply?
“Something’s up with my mum,” I say softly. “I don’t want to talk about it, OK? It’s nothing she’s hasn’t done before, I can handle it.”
He doesn’t ask what she’s done. I don’t think I could shield it if he did. I don’t think I could protect her like I’ve been doing my whole life.
“I hope everything goes OK with her,” is all he says. “You don’t get a second mum.” His eyes, a beautiful shade of tortoise shell green, seem to have saddened, like stars flickering out at the rise of dawn. Things are swindling around in my head at the speed of sound, at the speed of lightning striking a tree. I can’t think. I can’t process this. But I know he’s right. I guess I’ve known it all along.
As Mi-Mi and Ollie scamper back out, her parents behind them, I become red-hot aware of how close I’m standing to Damien, of how this might look. I take a step away right before they spot us, waving happily. I’m a complete mess. All I know is, it would be a mistake to go home with them now. I don’t know what I feel, what to feel, but I can’t keep running. Your ghosts, they always get you in the end.
“Actually, I think I might go find Sarah and Will after all,” I say to Mi-Mi, my nails digging into my skin. “I think there was a slight misunderstanding. Looks like the sports car’s available after all.”
“Oh good,” she says, her head against Ollie’s shoulder in her tiredness. “Well...see you tomorrow, at the party.”
“Erm, yeah, see you,” I say, even though there’s no way I’ll be going to any party, or to school. Maybe I’ll explain things to Mi-Mi and Ollie sometime...maybe I won’t. I’ll just have to see how things pan out.
I say goodbye to Mr and Mrs Taylor as the four of them get in a huge black Range Rover, the noise of the engine roaring in my ears, and drive away. Just me and Damien left now. Oh yeah, and I need to find my brother, wherever he’s gone.
Damien shrugs on his smoothly-lined leather jacket, wavy black hair blowing in the breeze.
“Great, my dad’s been held up in traffic,” he says, his expression wry. “Yeah, right. He’s probably gone to the pub with his mates, celebrating being king of the world or something.”
I smile. “Seriously?”
“Seriously,” he says. “Have you met my dad?” He zips up his jacket as the wind takes a stormier, colder turn. “He isn’t so bad, really. Just irresponsible.” I easily recognise the exasperated fondness in his voice, because I’ve often felt much the same.
“He’s a musician, isn’t he?” I say. Damien nods in confirmation. “Then he has some licence to be wild, right?”
“Right,” he says. “He’d love it if I went on the road with him, busking all over. Never gonna happen.”
“Have you ever...you know, busked?” I say, grinning at the thought.
“Hey, what’s so funny about that?” he says at the sight of my amusement. “I’m not half bad, either. No, I don’t do it so much now, but you’ll be surprised how much a big-eyed little kid can earn with a guitar.”
I’m about to reply when I hear my name being called behind me. Sarah and Will, at last. Both look harried, as though they haven’t slept in a long, long time. My heart twists. What if things have taken a turn for the worse?
“We need to go,” Will says, eyeing my companion with undisguised dislike. Please, not the third degree now. “I know you don’t want to, but-”
“No, I’ll come, it’s fine,” I say as Sarah introduces herself politely to Damien. “Sorry I was a bit short earlier.”
“Don’t sweat it,” Will says as he tries to track down the sports car.
“Please let it have been stolen,” I whisper to Damien, who laughs.
“Or clamped with a ticket,” he says back. “This time for real.”
“Steph, come on,” Will says – and damn, he’s found it. “We need to go.”
“Yeah, you said.” I roll my eyes. “Look, I probably won’t see you tomorrow, so...”
“Sometime in the holidays?” Damien says in light suggestion. “All of us can meet up, when it’s convenient. I’ll make your excuses to Mr Rogers tomorrow,” he adds as an afterthought. “He’ll be devastated.”
“Desolate,” I say in agreement, being shepherded into the car by Sarah, while Will straps Angel into her booster seat. “See you whenever!”
The door shuts, and my manner tightens with it. I check my phone as the car tumbles down the streets, but there’s no more word from Claire. I guess she’s driving too.
*
It’s weird, seeing her in the flesh. All this time, all these years, it has been something you can’t see. A hidden thing, an ugly thing, wrestling inside Mum’s head, pushing her to become something I don’t recognise. But with the tubes running like long, thin tails down her bare, creased arms, I’m seeing it. Seeing what it’s done to her. And it’s invisible no longer.
She looks like a character out of a fairy tale, a caricature of Snow White, with her dark hair, her scarlet lips, her white, pale face. Her arms are hanging so limply by her sides that for a few seconds I worry she might be dead.
The Nurse tells me my mother is still unconscious, trapped in some limbo I can’t see. I imagine her distorted state, luring her into a forest of evil, wicked things where nobody smiles and all the light is sucked from the world, driven down a plughole. I worry some more that the drugs that are supposing to be helping her will only make sure she can’t get out, cannot break loose from the confinement of her head, the hospital.
I wish somebody would bring some curtains because there’s nothing to conceal her fragility now...it’s open for everyone, anyone, to see. Looking at the lines, the shadows around her eyes, and the straight-line mouth, it’s obvious she isn’t happy, and hasn’t been for a while.
Did I do this? Did I almost end my own mother?
I think of the cold, ruthless hands that tipped letter after letter in the fireplace, the anger that sprung up in my heart, the determination to forget she ever was. And now, thanks to me, she tried to forget herself too. Worse than that, she tried to die. It’s like, it’s only just sunk in, how close I came to losing her. She wasn’t much of a mother, but she was a friend, a person to tell all my secrets to, a person to cry with, to tell about how I had no one at school. She used to wipe my eyes and tell me I didn’t need any of them, because I was strong and brave and beautiful, and besides, I had her.
Then she started to deteriorate, and I didn’t know what to do. She was always erratic, always slightly out of control, but this kind of madness was different. It was tearing her up from the inside, and I could only watch, only hide her problems from everybody else. Even Will, who grew up with her as I did, doesn’t know how bad she got.
I guess it doesn’t matter what people you love do. Even when they hurt you, you can’t stop caring, can’t stop wanting to change them, to make them love you enough to stop. I tried, but I was just kidding myself. And the good memories, they’re there, somewhere, but I sponged them clean and only saw what was bad, only saw the sawdust. There’s a hard, horrible taste in my mouth, metallic and biting.
I’ve given up on any hope of her waking when she gives a stir, identical eyelashes flittering open like bird wings. Her brown eyes are huge, unending, and they open wide when they see me. All I can seem to feel is the thrashing of my heart against my ribs.
“Hey,” she says, her voice frog-like, a whisper. “Nice of you to drop in.”
I crumple into a nearby chair, my eyes on the open blinds by the window. “Hi,” I say, and I’m surprised by how glacial I sound.
“What’s the time?” she says, and it’s such an ordinary request I start.
“Um, about three in the morning,” I say, running a hand over my loosened bun. The make-up artist won’t be happy, I think stupidly.
“Typical of me to wake up in the early hours, huh?” Mum says, raising her elbows on the white and grey duvet cover. It’s so plain, so colourless, for her.
“I can get someone if you want,” I say, making to get up. “A doctor or the Nurse or something?”
“No, not yet,” she says, her eyes flashing with trepidation. No wonder she hated me for finally dialling 999 on her antics. She hates the hospital, hates doctors, always has. “I will, I promise. In time. I just want to talk to you first.”
“OK.” I wait, arms crossed. I don’t even know why.
“I...I ran away from my problems for so long, Steph,” she says, and I watch her, face impassive. “It got so bad, I’d dug myself so deep, that I thought it was too late to fix this. I – I denied there was anything wrong, for so long. When you called them...it felt like we were acknowledging how damaged, how sick I am. I couldn’t take it. I wanted to take you away, to get away from here, and that wasn’t right.” Her finger fiddles absently with her long, curly hair. “I want you to know that, well, you can’t do what I do. What I did. You can’t run away from your problems.” She laughs derisively. “As your mother, that’s one thing I can teach you.”
However far I reach down, I can’t seem to find anything to say.
“Sorry isn’t enough,” she says. “I know that. It’ll take a long time before you can trust me, before you can let me be your mother again. I understand that. And maybe you don’t want anything to do with me...I don’t blame you, obviously...I mean, who’d want to be stuck with...”
“Mum,” I say, and I’m startled to feel the tears sparking on my cheeks. “It’s OK.”
And maybe it is.
I thought we were so different, so far apart, so disconnected. It’s only now I’m starting to see the bigger picture. And maybe, under it all, we aren’t so different after all. We both kept running, kept denying...that’s something I’ll always understand, wherever she is, wherever I am.
But maybe I do not have to run any longer. Maybe, at last, we’re both free.
“MI-MI, I THINK THAT’S ENOUGH,” I SAY, SQUIRMING AS I FEEL HER
make-up brush tickle my cheek. It’s official – I’ve become a guinea pig. I have let my best friend sweep my high cheeks with glitter, paint my lips red, and dust my eyes lightly with mascara. I even let her pick out my outfit – this short, silver tinsel dress in honour of Christmas. I frown. Maybe too short. Mi-Mi herself is swathed in her favourite purple, her curls fluttering round her shoulders. We both look...Christmassy. Oh well. Get into the spirit of things and all that. I don’t want to turn into Scrooge. Though I might start bah humbug-ing if she ever does my make-up again.
“Now the hair,” Mi-Mi says, ignoring my pained expression. “Hmm. We could definitely do with some volume...”
“Oh, thanks.”
“I only want what’s best for you, Steph. Now keep still.”
“I am still.”
“Yeah, for a bar of soap.”
I grumble to myself. Not one of my brightest ideas, this.
Mi-Mi decides to settle for twisting my hair into a topknot again, only much sleeker than I’ve ever done it myself, or the make-up artist-parent. I look...OK. Plausible, I think.
“We look phenomenal,” Mi-Mi says, twirling around with the mini, fake Christmas tree in her bedroom. “Knockout. Don’t you think?”
“If you say so,” I say doubtfully. Well, she looks amazing, at least. Always does. I sigh, then remind myself wistfulness is not a virtue. I have other qualities. Just let me mull them over for a few more decades, then I’ll get back to you.
“We’re gonna be late,” Mi-Mi says, turning her back on her mirror.
“Fashionably,” I say, heavy-lidded. “Besides, there’s no set time for parties. You just...turn up.”
“And who are you, the party police?” she says snootily, because she is never, ever late for anything if she can help it. “Let’s go, then.” She yanks me up from the experiment chair (a.k.a. torture chamber) and pulls me towards her front door, yelling goodbye to her tearful parents. Honestly. Mi-Mi is so spoilt. Not surprisingly, given that she’s an only child. It’s no wonder she’s so bloody sure of herself.
“Does Ollie know how to throw a Christmas house party?” I say as we cross the road, knees getting a blast of cold air. Well, her mum did say we’d need a coat, in her prim, mother-hen way. Mrs Taylor is like die-hard business woman meets mumsy mum. It’s all very odd.
The traffic lights flash orange in Mi-Mi’s eyes, and we have to hurry lest we get bumped off by the swearing silver-car driver. “I think so,” she says dubiously. “He said so, anyway.”
“Mims, this is Ollie we’re talking about,” I say, tapping my forehead. “The boy who once claimed to have done a handstand on top of a Tesco car park, remember?”
“Maybe he’s changed,” Mi-Mi says, though she doesn’t lose the faintly despairing expression. “We can hope, anyway. I hope we’re the first ones here, we’re supposed to be helping set up.”
“Oh, yeah,” I say guiltily. “Let’s hurry up, then.”
We clatter down the street in our small heels, taking turns to drag the one who falls behind. We make it to Ollie’s red-brick, suburban house with plenty of time to spare.
Ollie puts one hand to his chest when he sees us. “I thought you guys might’ve been other randoms in our year,” he says, breathing out in relief. “I’m not prepared. You two need to come in, quick.” He bundles us both inside and shuts the door, looking around furtively. Mi-Mi and I exchange glances and decide not to say anything. Ollie, know how to plan a house party? That’ll be the day. (In a non-mean way, of course. He’s hopeless, in the kindest possible way).
“I have music, and food, and drink,” he says without taking a breath. “Is that OK?”
“Aaah...is Ollie planning his first ever party?” I can’t resist saying, and he goes as red as his hair, throwing a cushion at me (which I cleverly dodge. Matrix here I come...).
“Stop bullying him, Steph,” Mi-Mi says vigilantly. “It’s mean.”
“Sorr-ee,” I say, and add, much lower: “Jeez Louise. Can’t take a joke or what?”
“I heard that,” Ollie says, eyes narrowing.
Shit.
“I meant...um...that was what I meant,” I say meekly. As soon as his back’s turned, Mi-Mi and I snigger helplessly.
Ding-dong.
The three of us look at each other, then at the living room door.
“I – I’ll get it,” Ollie says uncertainly, scrambling to his feet.
Mi-Mi and I listen steadfastly to hear who it is. Good. Just Zac and Rihanne. It’s safe to act na-tu-ral.
“Hi, guys,” we say, chorus-like, as they enter, both sporting red Christmas hats with a white bobble. “Looking Christmassy.”
“Well, it is Christmas,” Zac says with a roll of his eyes.
“Technically, no,” Rihanne says, freckled cheeks touched up with blusher. “It’s the 23rd.”
“Ha, ha, very clever,” he says, miming a bloody death attack at her back. The rest of us manage to hold in our splutters, probably giving ourselves indigestion. Can you get indigestion from withholding laughter? Weird. I’ll Google it.
The doorbell chimes again, and Ollie nearly jumps out of his own skin. This time it’s Smarmy Steven, flanked by some of his mates. His eyes rove down my short dress, and I shoot him a frosty glare, making it clear I see his wandering eyes. He knocks into Ollie’s coffee table, face an unattractive mustard, and murmurs an apology. Lucky for that, because Mi-Mi looks ready to knock him out cold.
“Sleaze,” she says in an undertone. I nod and grab a beer, steering clear of the vodka. I don’t want to lose my head again, stutter over my senses. That would be a bad idea. Half a can of beer and I’m set to let my hair down (not really, because Mi-Mi would ruin me if I spoiled her hairdo, but point given, right?).
Soon no one bothers knocking on the door anymore, simply bashing in regardless, bringing friends of friends of friends...the power of the virtual world, I think dazedly. It’s a fair estimate to say there’s more people here Ollie doesn’t know, but like I said, Ollie’s not the type to care. Live and let enter your house, so to speak. (Though, actually, don’t follow that advice on a daily basis).
Now, as promised; I did not drink any vodka, so don’t ask me how I managed to end up in the garden as the party was unwinding. And I socialised and everything, but you wouldn’t want to be stuck in a room with creepy Steven either, who didn’t know whether to dare checking me out again or not, so kept passing me secretive, one-second once-overs. Mi-Mi ever so sweetly knocked into him and poured beer down his neck, without apologising. Nice.
No, I’m outside to clear my brain, get some fresh air. I am not antisocial. It’s just so comfortable out here, the wind slicing across my face, the long grass swaying at my exposed legs. Even the moon’s come out tonight, round and cheerful, moving whenever I move. The only shadow in the garden is my own.
I’m in the middle of texting Sarah and Will to inform their anxious little heads of when I’ll be making my return when something cuts me short. Maisy is striding up the back entrance of Ollie’s house, her spiky, killer black heels disintegrating into the squishy mud, her blonde hair prancing in the wind like a spell, like a warning. She’s dressed in a red dress that skims the centre of her goose pimpled thighs, Hannah trailing behind her in an elfish green dress like a dog. When Maisy sees me crouched in the grass, her blue eyes snarl, and a chill bleeds into my frozen veins, a chill that has nothing to do with the cold. I can’t understand the accusation in her eyes, the anger. She hates me, sure, but what’s changed?
Hannah hangs onto her arm like a small child, whispering something about me not being worth it. I’ve become so accustomed to those little whispers of hers, so used to her bitching, something inside me snaps. I stand up, and my fringe wafts in my eyes, blown down by the wind. The silver tinsel on my dress sparkles.
“Whatever you have to say, you can say to my face,” I say, much more brazenly than I feel. “Or would that be too alien a concept for you?”
Maisy pulls up her leg so her heel becomes unstuck in the mud, taking a shaky step towards me. When she speaks, she sounds slightly slurred, as though she’s been drinking before she came here. “You always have to play dumb, don’t you?” she says, voice as pointed and crude as a blade. “Little Miss Innocent, Little Miss I’m-not-after-your-boyfriend. That turned out to be a wad of lies, huh?”
I rub my forehead, genuinely baffled. “What...?”
“Don’t pretend you don’t know!” Maisy says, taking another belligerent step towards me. Instinctively, I take one back. “Look at you, in that stupid dress-”
I can’t hold back this time. “That’s rich, coming from you,” I say raggedly. “Have you seen yourself?”
Hannah gives a shocked intake of breath, piggy face squaring up to me. “You really are cold, aren’t you?” she says, the venom undeniable in her stiff lips.
“I don’t know what I’m supposed to have done,” I say, mystified. “But whatever it is, it’s got nothing-”
“It’s got everything to do with you,” Maisy says, eyes snapping at me. “It always did, didn’t it?” She sees I still look completely confused and glares, her face as hard as stone. “You don’t actually know, do you?”
“Evidently not,” I say, folding my arms.
“Damien,” she says, and her lip wobbles when she says his name. “He broke up with me, not long after that damn stupid play ended. And it’s all your fault!”
I’m dumbfounded as the tears run with her spidery mascara, like the time I accidentally mixed the black and grey in the palate in art class. I’m rooted on the spot, unable to stay, unable to run away. Everything in my mind seems completely thrown out of balance, and I can’t make sense of it all. Damien broke up with his girlfriend? His perfect, gorgeous girlfriend? They’re all the school can talk about on the love score, the faultless couple, as silky and spotless as Will’s shiny sports car. OK, they have been a bit rocky lately, but we all just assumed they’d get past it. And he didn’t say a thing to me, Mi-Mi and Ollie, and we were hanging out the day before yesterday. He seemed his usual happy self, too. And I’m sure Zac and Rihanne would have mentioned it if they’d known. But nobody did.
“I swear I had no idea he was going to break-”
“Just shut up, Steph,” she says, still crying, and my heart throbs. It can’t actually be my fault, can it? “You had every idea. I mean, you flirted with him at every opportunity – the exciting new girl, is it any wonder he got tired of his old girlfriend?” She gives a hiccup. “You knew exactly what you were doing. One day, he’ll see you for what you are...nothing more than a dirty little liar.”
I take another step back, feeling submerged in guilt, feeling as grubby as she called me. I’ve had many labels thrown at me in my life, by many bullies like her, but that one particularly stings. It can go right up there with the other voices that sneer at me, the other memories I’d die to forget. I don’t know whether to hit back or apologise.
“I’m sorry he-” Dumped sounds too harsh. Think of another word. “-ended things with you, but whatever it is, it’s nothing to do with me. If you two were working in the first place, he wouldn’t have split up with you, would he? And for your information, I didn’t have an inkling he was planning to break up-”
“Let’s just go,” Hannah says, shooting me a nasty look. “I told you, not worth it, remember?” She links Maisy’s arm and storms past me, the back door slamming shut after her.
I’m too staggered to absorb this showdown properly, to even think about what it means. The fight has short-circuited my brain, making it hard to take anything in.
He broke up with his girlfriend?
It’s all going round in circles.
I pitch my baby heels in the grass, taking a drink of water (which I sensibly brought along this time), wanting to have a level head. OK, what I’ve learned tonight...
a) Damien secretly broke up with his archenemy of a girlfriend b) Said girlfriend is extremely peeved c) Said girlfriend’s lapdog of a sidekick also hates my guts and d) I am a liar in a tacky dress. Fun times.
It’s not my fault Mi-Mi has liberating taste. Stupid medieval little bitches. I take another swig of water. That is not clear-headed thinking.
Ok, I’ll be the first to admit that illicit kiss was wrong in all kinds of ways, from the fact he was already going out with someone (long-term) to the fact we were very upset. How do I know if that kiss really meant something, or if I was so lost, I was seeing sparks? Yeah, he’s flirty. Yeah, we’re friends...and yeah, it sometimes feels like a little more, but that doesn’t prove anything. We might be totally incompatible. What does it matter, anyway? If Maisy’s his type of girl, I have no chance anyway. The most I can say is that he gets me, and I seem to get him too. But he’s probably just being kind, being a good friend, because neither of us have had what you’d call the easy life.
It doesn’t have to mean anything.
“Hey, Steph.”
About a thousand emotions swill in my stomach; my heart, my chest. Just the sound of his voice makes everything inside me, everything I am, feel pieced together from the mess I’ve been in. You don’t get that from a friend, do you? I don’t know. I hadn’t exactly been friends with a lot of boys until I came here. With a lot of people, period. Maybe things are never truly platonic between two friends in some experiences. It does not mean they should go out. I’m so inexperienced with both friendship and romance it’s hard to tell. The cons of having a sheltered, but f'ed up life, I guess.
“Um, hi.” Why do I sound so high-pitched? What is wrong with me? I saw him just the other day, and everything was fine. I am so embarrassing.
“Why so late?” Good. That sounds much perkier. Much more like me.
“Didn’t know if I was coming.” He scoots over next to me on the grass and makes a face. “I don’t know if you, heard but-”
“Yeah, I heard,” I say, elbowing him in the ribs. “In fact, the news got all but bellowed at me.”
“What?” he says, black eyebrows slanted.
“Yeah, your...well, ex-girlfriend and her puppy-mate just attacked me over it,” I say, sighing. “Apparently it’s my fault. Oh, and I’m a liar in a cheap dress.”
He chuckles at the trying; confounded look conveyed in my eyes, looking right into them. “You look very nice, actually. Very...classy,” he says almost cautiously.
“Well, I’m glad someone thinks so,” I say, staring up at the moon. “Don’t let Maisy catch you saying that, though.”
“Little bit rich of her to criticise your dress wear, though,” he says with another chuckle. “I’ll never get over that one.”
“That’s what I said!” I tell him. “Not that I think she dresses poorly, obviously. I might have implied it. But I was under attack. Like, missile, red alert attack. Seriously. You should have seen their faces.”
“Sorry,” he says sheepishly, black hair soaring up and down with the wind. I watch the movement without even noticing. He brightens suddenly.
“But I have something to cheer you up – Christmas present!”
“Yours is later than everyone else’s,” I say, though my heart beats a little unsteadily. “Doesn’t count.”
“Of course it counts,” he says adamantly, pushing a box-shaped, shimmery silver parcel towards me. “Open it...please?”
I sigh again. The amount of times I’ve been blackmailed...and the amount of times I’ve let my blackmailers live to tell the tale.
“Alright, since you begged,” I say, pulling at the sellotaped corners. A pretty, black-and-white rectangle shape with vertical lines running down falls into my fingers. I can’t help being eager. Christmas, it makes kids of all us all.
“Before you say I shouldn’t have, it’s only something small,” he says, clearly waiting for my reaction.
I prise open the lid, and give a little ‘oh’ of surprise. It’s so thoughtful, so perfect...and he’s right, it is small, but it’s the best one I’ve ever had. It’s a soft, simple, homemade Victoria Cake sponge, with hundreds of tiny, intricately painted daisies weaving in and out of every corner. It must have taken ages. But each flower is the exact replica of the ones on my silver bracelet, the one I never take off. Each daisy even has a lightly suggested shadow, with yellow texture slicked on the end of the cream-white petals. Not for the first time, I can’t think what to say.
“It seems a shame to eat it,” I say eventually. “When it’s so...beautiful. How did you make it? The box, too. It’s so pretty.”
“Well, you know me,” he says with a laugh, but I can see in his eyes how pleased he is that I like it. “Hidden talents.”
“Yeah, you could say that.”
Before I know what’s happening, before he knows what’s happening, we’re kissing again, that same stunning, intoxicating, otherworldly kiss that disorients my mind, abandons all the doubts and the worries and the fears, and leaves everything perfect, leaves everything beautiful, just for a few moments. There are some people who say that after a while, you get bored of it, get bored of the person, but I can’t imagine ever getting tired of this. Each kiss is special, each kiss is new, unlocking a part of me I thought I had long buried. And this time, I’m definitely not confused.
This kiss is different, because, this time, I know it’s real. And when we pull apart, neither of us looks away.
“Well, that was...unexpected,” Damien says when we’re starting to get to that star-gazing stage I never thought would apply to me. Never even wanted it to, before.
We both laugh at this. I swat at his arm.
“Trust you to ruin the moment,” I say, sealing the cake back in its box. It’s too pretty, too carefully made, to spoil.
“So...the good thing is, neither of us are lost in a forest,” he says, and we laugh again. A thought seems to hit him. “You’re not regretting this, are you?"
“Totally,” I say, and I giggle at his expression. “Kidding. I meant it.”
“That’s good to hear,” he says, stretching his legs out on the grass.
I ruffle my fringe out my eyes. “Well, now I’ve told you that, can we be clear on two things?”
“Fire away, princess.”
I glare at him from under my eyelashes. “One, this better not be some kind of rebound-”
“Is that a joke?”
“Do you know when to keep stum?” I say, and have to suffer through five full minutes of teasing for using the word ‘stum’.
“Two, if this is some kind of pity party-”
“You’re just full of jokes today,” he says, shaking his head with an incredulous eye roll. “You seriously think I broke up with my girlfriend because I felt sorry for you?”
“Wait a second,” I say, raising a finger. “You did break up with her because of me? After everything I said to her? Thanks a lot.” How could he be so dense? Flipping hell.
“It wasn’t just that,” he says, then sees my reproachful face. “But it formed a large part, obviously.” We both grin. “Seriously, though, we weren’t working out. These last few months...even the months before you came...things haven’t been right between us. It’s only now I’m wondering if it ever really was, you know?”
“Tell that to her,” I say. “She seems to think everything was perfect before I came along and wrecked everything.” Something strikes me. “Damn it – I’m a homewrecker. Unbelievable.”
“You’re not a homewrecker,” Damien says, but his grin gets bigger, lighting up his smooth, handsome face. “Nothing’s as simple as that, anyway. Cupid’s bow...”
“That has to be the cheesiest thing you’ve ever said, and boy, have you said some cheesy things,” I say with a laugh.
“C’mon,” he says, standing up, his black hair paralleling the white shine of the moon. “Let’s go rescue Ollie from hosting.”
“One more thing!” I say, getting up too and starting to tread after him in my heels, which luckily do not get stuck in the mud. They are ruined, though. Never mind.
“What, Steph?” he says, turning back and smiling in anticipation of whatever I’m going to say.
“What are people going to say?” I say, hoisting the cake securely in my arms. “I can’t really face another round of gossiping, to be honest.”
“Nothing you haven’t dealt with before,” he says, opening the glass door and holding it. I still don’t go in. “Steph, people will get over it. It’s not such a big deal. I’m sure other people have better things to bitch ab-”
“Erm, do you go to our school?” I say, raising my eyebrows.
“Well, we don’t care what they think, anyway,” he says, raising his back. “Right?”
“Right.”
He takes my hand, and together we walk back into the party.
“HERE COMES THE BRIDE...” I SAY IN A SING-SONG VOICE, SHAKING MY
almost sister-in-law’s dead arm. It’s no use. Her eyes are gently closed, her mouth smiling, as she tosses over in bed, her thick white duvet cover swamping her body.
“Sarah,” I whisper, shaking her again. She doesn’t move. “For goodness’ sake.” I’m tempted to get a bucket of cold water and shock her awake, but she’d kill me if I drowned her hair to rats’ tails on her wedding day. And I for one will not be the funeral in Four Weddings. No way.
“Hmm?” her eyes open, still looking sleepily distant. “What’s up?”
“Today’s the big day,” I say, tapping the side of my head as though she’s gone mad. “Honestly, Sarah, how can you forget? You spent the whole of yesterday talking my ear off about it!”
She throws her pillow at me, but I’ve had so many throw-related assassination attempts on my life that this was never going to hit the target. I move with nippy motions out of the way, and shoot her a smug look. She rolls her eyes. Then the actual significance of today’s date seems to register with her. I can visibly see her pupils grow larger. I’ll never doubt my science teacher again, not now that I’ve witnessed it in action.
“It’s actually today, isn’t it?” she says, her hair bed-mussed. “Crap. OK, remain calm. Steph, be a star and fetch that cream I’ve been using.”
This time I roll my eyes, but obligingly get her ‘Special Bridal Boost’ kit from the bathroom. Well, it’s not a total rip-off. Sarah does have flawless, creamy skin that smells of roses now, and I’ve pinched a few of her hair supplements myself. Hey, my boring locks needed it. It really works. Like, really.
When Sarah’s hairdresser arrives, I decide to get out their way (I don’t want to be the piñata of said sister-in-law’s stress) and go find Mum. These past few weeks leading up to the wedding, she’s moved in with us, laden with about five cases, I should say. It’s all part of the healing process, Barbara, Claire and all the Nurses keep saying. Being around family, having a structured life, a proper routine, it’s supposed to help. There’s no quick-fix, no magic solution. Mum will have to be on medication for life, I accept that now. And so does she.
It turns out it’s true, what they say. Good days, bad days. Sometimes I still walk in on her in her bedroom at Sarah and Will’s, the tears spurting down her thin, sharp cheeks in a torrent, her shoulders shaking with a grief I can’t see. I think I’ll always be scared that I’ll come home from school and she’ll be lost, gone. But on those days, I sit with her, and sometimes Angel does too, and we read stories together. It turns out my love of telling them is an inherited gift. Nowadays, Mum is the epitome of what a grandmother, and a mother, should be, plaiting Angel’s gorgeous curls the way she used to do for me, trialling through the fairy tales. Mum says tradition is dull, as grey and colour free as Will and Sarah’s dishwasher, and we should take the tasteless, uninspired things and heat them into something new, something fantastical. I’m pretty sure the fairytales of the Collins women are brighter, crazier, than anything those little kid books contain. It turns out she’s pretty cool, my mother.
I creep down the creaky, wooden brown stairs, my feet gathering the dust on a Barbie doll head. I kick it aside and look around the living room, kitchen, toilet, even outside the front door. Nothing. My hearts jars, as though I’ve missed a step on the staircase. Where is she...?
Panic now starting to furl in my stomach, I race round the back of the house, and turn the key in the back door. Often, she goes out here and sits on the bench, sometimes snipping the ugly weeds that sprout up in the pretty flowerbed, but why she would today of all days is a mystery. We both need to get ready for the service. The panic seems to spiral in my heart when I think how this could have been another kind of service, once. Still could.
I find Mum bent over a large patch of daisies, sunflowers, bluebells, collecting them up with swift, practised movements and bunging them into a thatched, light brown basket. As I approach, she curses at a weed brave (or stupid) enough grow back, hurling it out of the earth by its muddy roots. Her wild dark hair falls like a shower down her back, and she’s dressed in a loose white vest and shorts, the spaghetti shoulder straps slipping down one slim white shoulder, so I can see the knife-like pierce of her shoulder blades.
“Mum, what are you doing? The hairdresser’s here,” I say hesitantly, helping her pull up a rose from the flowerbed.
“Oh, that silly hairdresser can wait,” Mum says, carrying on her work. She doesn’t get on with the hairdresser (who’s also our stylist, incidentally), ever since she suggested she cut and re-style her hair. I don’t mind her myself. She’s called Leah, and is quite young, but very good at her job. I know she’ll make things perfect for Sarah’s wedding day. “I’m just picking some flowers for the Church.”
“But they already have flowers. It’s all been decorated already.”
“Well, these can be confetti,” she says, scooping the final ones up with a flourish. “There! They look lovely, don’t they?”
“If you say so,” I say, smiling at my agitated, restless mother. “But we really need to get upstairs. I promise Leah won’t try to cut your hair.”
“Yeah, yeah, whatever,” she says inattentively, standing up and sliding the basket onto one wrist. “Those damn weeds. What on earth your brother and Sarah have been thinking letting the garden get into this state, I don’t know.”
I consider it best to withhold the urge to counter this. “Well, lucky they have you now to sort it out, isn’t it?”
Mum’s gardening fetish isn’t coincidental with her stay here. Back home – our first home, I should say – she used to work part-time in a flower shop, and she loved it. It was the only thing she could take pride in, the only thing in which she was stable, consistent. No pun intended, she bloomed in the role, but she got fired because she couldn’t always remember to turn up on time, and she used to flirt with the Head florist’s husband. Awkward times.
“Yeah, damn right it is,” Mum says, her laugh lines creasing into a return smile. “I was just messing with you, sweetie. I’ll behave for the Leah the hairdresser.”
My gosh, she actually says her name in air quotes.
We stump back up the unsteady staircases, both staring at Sarah, who looks a vision, from the doorway. Her gingery brown hair has been teased, polished to shine, and fixed into a breathtaking chiffon, her make-up subtle but stunning, now in the artistic, charmingly old-style white wedding dress, her feet slithering into glassy Cinderella shoes, as brittle as splintered glass.
“Sarah, you look...wow,” I say. “Amazing.”
My sister-to-be blushes, but luckily this just adds to her glowing expression, the blissful brightness in her eyes. “Thanks. Now, time to get you two sorted.”
And sorted we get. Mum seems to have gotten over her aversion to Leah, largely due to her making her look incredible too, I suspect. Mum’s hair has been left in its fountain of curls, her lips shiny, her cheekbones accentuated with creamy blusher, her dress a simple dark blue.
Leah has gone for a similarly natural look with me, giving me pink lip gloss and liquid black mascara, and pulling my hair into a high ponytail. My own dress is not heavily elaborate, as I wanted, just a pink, silk bridesmaid’s dress with a minuscule flower decoration – a thousand tiny, effortlessly detailed daises arranged in a cute white belt that sets off my matching white shoes. They say only the bride should wear white, but come on, it only forms a small part of my outfit. Hardly noticeable. And Sarah doesn’t mind – she practically picked it out herself.
“Ready to go?” I say to her now, as the clock signals twelve in the afternoon.
“Ready,” she says, looking unnerved under her immaculate make-up. I have to remember that for all her togetherness and motherhood, she’s still only young, about to embark on the long road to marriage. Well, I hope it’s long.
“OK?” I say as I help her out of her chair, careful not to rip the precious dress. Sometimes I think people just get married for the outfits. But, no. That would be crazy.
“OK,” Sarah says with a brave smile, though she makes a ‘scream’ face at me as we’re slowly backing out the door. I make one back, and soon we’re both giggling as we enter the little cream wedding car straight out of the 1950s. A total contrast to Will, who went for a black sports car. (I shook my head, but gave up that battle). A small wave flutters in my own chest as I think of my brother, actually about to get married. No. Must not, will not, get tearful.
Angel, having arrived with Sarah’s parents to get out of the way of the organising, is easily the most adorable one at the Church, her gold blonde curls in a pretty French plait, clothed in a white duck dress. I have to ‘aah’, just once.
Angel immediately runs up to Sarah, yelling ‘Mummy!’ Sarah sidesteps her small, chubby fists and gives her a smothering hug, making sure not to mess up her dress. Mum decided that rather than be used as confetti, the basket should be taken under the wing of my niece, who can drizzle our guests with all the different flowers under the sun. Angel takes her job very seriously, claiming she’ll be sure not to hit anyone’s eye and popping her thumb in her mouth, brown eyes earnest.
The Church is a small, tucked-away building on the side of a lonely road straight out of The Wizard of Oz. Each brick is layered in different shades of brown, the roof a velvety affair that puffs out greying steam. It’s a quiet, but heavenly beauty spot, nothing extravagant, nothing that tries to attract the spotlight. It just is, much like Sarah and Will themselves.
The wedding march begins; and I follow behind Sarah along with a flower-throwing Angel and the bride’s iron-pressed, grey-haired parents (who are very nice, by the way, if a little priggish), having to take a few deep breaths myself, even though I’m not the one getting married. The entire Church is silent, watching, but this time, I don’t shrink under the eyes, the awed whispers. I walk proudly, and take my place at the front, giving Will a quick thumbs-up. He looks great, if a little out of his comfort zone, in a dry-cleaned black suit, his dark brown hair combed to perfection by his own stylist. He gives me a thumbs-up back, looking as terrified as Sarah did earlier. But the moment she reaches him, they smile at each other, misty-eyed, and it’s obvious they’re in their own world. I cannot help wishing for a similar experience one day, though far, far in the future. I wonder if I’ll ever get married myself; and where, and who with. I’m taking things slowly with Damien, but we’re no longer the subject of gossip, like he said, and we hang out most days after school. I’d say he’s my best friend...but you don’t kiss your best friend as often as I do. To clarify, definitely not friends with benefits...though there are many of those. It’s like I’ve finally come into my own, finally found myself, with someone who’s just alike, someone who finds all the same things funny, someone who makes a room buzz just by entering it, someone I’m starting to fall for at a rate that scares me. I’ve even met his famous dad, a cool, ageing rocker not dissimilar to my mother in his wild, creative ways. He even made Damien participate in his guitar number, to my hysteria. Damien says it’ll be a long, long time before his dad and I are in the same room together with him. I tell him not to be such a grump. I look up abruptly, drawn from my swimming, tadpole thoughts, and realise the ‘I dos’ are coming. In a whirlwind, they’re declared husband and wife, and are kissing, which is both gross (he is my brother after all) and sweet (for Sarah’s sake). The Church bells are soon ringing, and everyone is cheering, louder than all of those crazed, pushy parents at the school play. I make sure to cheer the loudest. “Married at twenty-three,” Will says in a low voice as we leave for the reception. “I don’t recommend it, Steph, if you’re getting ideas.” “Hey, don’t knock Sarah!” I say, tossing confetti in his face. “And I don’t want to get married. As if. I’m only fifteen.” “Yeah,” Will says dreamily. “That’s what I said, once.” He laughs at the horror in my face.
*
“Steph!” I glance up at the sound of my friends’ enthusiastic greeting. There wasn’t space in the minute Church to invite anyone who wasn’t family/a firm family friend of Will and Sarah’s, so I got to bring Mi-Mi, Ollie and Damien to the prettily patterned reception (white and black design. Classic). I don’t actually know where my boyfriend is. He says he’s running late. T-y-p-i-c-a-l. For our first date (which was really old school and certainly not up to Maisy’s standards: the milkshake bar and the chip shop, as well as the park), I ensured I left the house at the time we were supposed to meet, and it was a wise choice. Damien made it just as I did, breathless and windswept from running. “Hi, guys,” I say, sitting down at an umbrella-shaped table with a tall vase. “Been waiting long?” “Only forever,” Ollie says with a grumble, though he gives me his usual cartoonish smile, so I know he’s not serious. “Well, you can’t rush a wedding, can you?” I say in my defence. “Besides, we got stuck in lunch-hour traffic.” “Excuses, excuses,” Mi-Mi says, touching up her eyelashes with mascara. “I’m joking, Steph, stop shouting at us-” “I’m not, you deranged bitch,” I say, and we have a fork fight, Ollie making it two against one, which is just ridiculous. Just then, the waiters and waitresses appear with trays of food, and we stop our three-way duel hastily. “Look, Steph, jacket potato,” Mi-Mi says, smirking at my disgusted expression. “It’s alright, I’ll swap you.” She passes me her Shepherd’s pie, which Will claims to have cooked himself. Bullshit. “Guess who?” says a voice in my ear as I’m pouring more lemonade (wish they’d let me have champagne. Spoilsports). I very nearly spill my drink. That boy is dangerous. “An idiot, who’s in serious trouble with his girlfriend for being late.” “Aah, don’t be like that,” he says, settling into the chair reserved next to me, his arm draped over my chair as he grins at me. “Made it in the end, didn’t I?” “What kept you?” Ollie says as he pushes aside his fourth helping of potato, full at last. My prophecy has come true. Ollie has finally had enough to eat. It’s a joke he played Oliver, seriously. Starving orphan my f'ing arse. “Traffic. And getting this.” He drops something small and silvery into my palm – a small, heart-shaped locket with a chocolate daisy hidden inside, my name drawn in swirly white letters. OK, I have to let this grudge go. I can actually feel the ice melting in my chest. Not that he’s to know that. “Alright, alright, I forgive you,” I say, sighing, and hand him a plate of Shepherd’s pie. “Will made this, by the way.” “Bullshit,” he says as soon as he tastes it. I nod in satisfaction. I knew it. I wasn’t being unfair. The wedding reception lights with colour all of a sudden, and there’s the announcement of the first dance. Wow. I didn’t think Will could dance above Dad level. You live, you learn. Shaking off their heavy lunches, guests soon begin to join in, and it doesn’t seem to matter that most of them are totally incompetent, not to mention middle-aged and pot-bellied. Angel weaves in and out of legs, completely in her element, with the other children. Even Mi-Mi and Ollie have a little dance, both a little flushed, a little too close together. I sense romance, though both deny it with a passion. Right. Hypocrites, much? “Fancy a dance?” Damien says, winking at me. I giggle and we get up and have a crazy spin around the lit-up dance floor, and for once, for once in my life, I don’t care about who can see me, or how I look, because it’s so much fun, so dizzy. We don’t even stop to breathe. “You look beautiful, by the way,” Damien says when we’ve paused at the edge of the room to recharge our energy flow, so pink from dancing we may as well have both swum the channel. Which would be, you know, cool. “Totally gorgeous.” “You’re not so bad yourself,” I say teasingly, going an even pinker shade of rose. It’s true. For the first time in his life, Damien is dressed in a shirt that isn’t school uniform code: a blue number that contrasts beautifully with his deep green eyes, his tanned white skin. It still seems crazy to me that someone like him can look at me from underneath long black lashes like I’m special, like I’m beautiful, and make me believe him. The green mistletoe, expertly chosen by Sarah, floats above our heads, dropping red berries like eggs. We smile at it embarrassedly, because it’s a little too much of a cliché. “Why do they have mistletoe at their wedding?” Damien says curiously. “I always assumed it was for Christmas only.” “No idea,” I say, gazing at it too. “I think it’s meant to be symbolic.” We both snort disbelievingly at this. “You’re going soft, old friend,” he says, tucking in his exposed shirt. “Tell me about it,” I say, rolling my eyes. “I cry now, and everything. I have emotions!” “How inhuman of you,” he says, and we laugh again. I’m glad for the way everything happened, though, in a funny way. It brought me to friends, a boyfriend, to experience life in a way I never had. I was even in a school play, and you tell me that’s not progress. On the way, I’ve seen there are a million different versions of family, and not all are, or have to be, as conventional as you might think. The future...it’s still rocky, unknown, but I’m not afraid of it, not any longer. Damien kisses me under the curled mistletoe, his red lips soft and sweet, until there may as well be nobody else in the room, and the yellow-tipped, purple-stained white daises form a chain, a long line of cute, beautiful memories to come, behind us.
The fresh daisy chains are beginning to spring up from the ashes of my old life. They rise towards the sun with its petals painted milky white; and the stem arching its back so it stands straight and tall.
I do not know if I will keep treading weeds, but I know that if they grow that they will grow healthier; I know that I have life in me yet to extinguish the sorrows until there is only silence.
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Introductory Scenes.