![](/files/books/160/oblozhka-knigi-you-against-me-203728.jpg)
Текст книги "You Against Me "
Автор книги: Дженни Даунхэм
сообщить о нарушении
Текущая страница: 12 (всего у книги 17 страниц)
‘I thought you had work?’
‘Sod work. Let’s get out of here.’
She nodded. ‘Yes please.’
Absolute gold and unexpected.
‘Where shall we go?’
She wiped her eyes with her sleeve. ‘Not near my house.’
‘OK.’
‘And not in town.’
He knew it was wrong, knew it was slipping back into something he’d given up. But here was Ellie, telling him her brother did it. Her family were going to hate her for this. She needed him.
He looked around for inspiration. They couldn’t go to the flat because of Karyn, and they couldn’t go to Ellie’s house because of her brother and they couldn’t go into town because of everyone else. And they had to decide pretty quick. Once the rain stopped, this place would liven up and someone would come out of those lift doors and see them for sure.
‘Can you get your friend’s car?’ she said.
He wished he could, but Jacko would be here to pick him up for work in a minute, and he didn’t fancy that run‑in.
‘Maybe a bus,’ she said. ‘Where do they go from here?’
‘Through town, then out to the coast.’
She looked at him as if she was working something out. ‘Do they go near the bay?’
And now he knew what she was thinking. He stared at her, willing her not to change her mind, to be brave enough to go through with this.
‘Pretty close,’ he said. ‘We could walk the last bit.’
‘Because that’s where my gran’s cottage is.’
He tried not to look too happy. She’d told him about the cottage the day they’d gone swimming. It was near the beach and it was empty because her gran was in some nursing home. Perfect.
‘Have you got a key?’
She faltered for only a second. ‘There’s one hidden in the garden, in case of emergencies.’
Well, this was an emergency for sure. He couldn’t think of a better one. Two people locked out in the rain, who only wanted to be alone together.
She sat chewing her lip for a bit. ‘My dad’ll kill me if he finds out.’
‘You want to stay here then?’
They looked around the place together – at the rubbish piled up near the lift, at the wet steel doors, at the drips of rust‑coloured rain splashing into puddles at their feet.
She stood up and held out her hand for him, like she had that time at the pub. ‘Come on.’
He half expected to hear a crowd suddenly burst out cheering.
He turned his mobile off so no one from work would bug him, and put his hood up. Ellie swung her hair in front of her face to hide from anyone walking by. They looked like a couple of criminals. It was funny. They were blazing with it, both of them jittery as they got on the bus. They sat at the back. It was quiet, too cold and wet for day trippers. Their knees touched. Mikey wondered what that meant, if Ellie even realized. He leaned in closer. She smelled of vanilla and rain.
They didn’t say anything. It was impossible for him to talk with her knee against his. He was having to use all his concentration to stop himself leaning in and kissing her. Did she know this? Did she know her leg knocking against his made his whole body throb?
The bus went down the high street, past the bakery and the shops, through the estate on the other side of town and into the country. Fields appeared, cows, a few straggly sheep. Rain slammed against the windows, hot air leaked at them from heaters under the seats. Their clothes steamed, which made them laugh again.
As the coast swung into view, she nudged him. ‘I saw a whale there once.’
‘You never did.’
‘I did. Me and my granddad used to climb over that cliff and sit on a ledge about halfway down. When the tide was in, it was amazing with all that water crashing against the rocks. We used to sit there for hours watching the boats go by. And one day we saw a whale.’
‘Well, I’ve never seen a whale and I’ve lived here for years and years.’
She laughed at him softly, her eyes shining. ‘Well, maybe you weren’t looking in the right place.’
It was true. He used to come here sometimes with Karyn and Holly when he was a kid, but they’d just go to the beach. They’d eat pasties and doughnuts and Mum would take her shoes off. On sunny days, the place would be crawling with families, hot and salty people flinging themselves after balls, bobbing about in the water with their armbands and rubber rings. But he’d never seen a whale. He felt sad about that. It seemed strange that two people could be in the very same place and see totally different things.
The bus followed the curve of the bay and then swept back inland and up the hill.
‘We’re close now,’ she said. ‘Shall we walk from here?’
They stood on the corner and watched the bus move away. It was quiet after it had gone. It smelled different from town, like everything was wilder. The rain was lighter now, but it wasn’t letting up. He was glad. She might say they had to go back if it stopped. They walked in the road. No pavement, no cars. There was something old‑fashioned about it, as if they’d gone back in time.
‘Look,’ she said. ‘Lapwings.’
Two black and white birds hung poised above the sea. He thought they were gulls, but he liked it that she knew their proper names. They watched them gliding and pitching as they walked on. Even from the top of the cliff they could hear the faraway hush and roar of the waves.
‘Fancy a swim?’ she said.
He laughed, hoped she wasn’t serious. They’d get hypothermia down there today.
‘There’s a path that goes down,’ she said. ‘I used to stay here every school holiday with my grandparents and we’d swim every day.’
They stopped to look at the water for a bit. They stood under a tree, rain dripping around them. Out there, under the clouds, the sea was the colour of carbon. There was a strange light coming from the sky as well, like maybe a storm was coming.
‘Tell me about your grandparents,’ he said.
What she told him then sounded like something from a film – sunny days and picnics, games of rounders and cricket on the beach. She didn’t mention Tom’s name once and Mikey wondered if she was being careful, or if he never went on holiday. Maybe the grandparents were sensible enough to avoid him. They sounded nice enough.
‘When we moved here last year,’ she said, ‘I was looking forward to spending more time with them, but as soon as we got here, my granddad died.’ She gave him a sad smile. ‘Three heart attacks in a row. I didn’t even know you could have that many.’
He took her hand. She didn’t move it away, only looked down at their fingers laced together.
‘After that, my gran went crazy,’ she whispered. ‘She lived with us for a while. She used to sit in a chair at the top of the stairs all night. She said if she went to bed, she’d wake up with cobwebs on her face. It infuriated my dad, so he shoved her in a nursing home. Now my mum has to drive miles if she wants a cup of tea with her own mother.’
Mikey lifted Ellie’s hand to his lips and kissed it. He didn’t know why he did it, but it fitted in with the sadness and the sea and the rain. He knew he’d got it right, because she gave him that look again, like he was some kind of hero.
‘Come on,’ she said. ‘It isn’t far now.’
Thirty‑four
‘I didn’t expect it to be like this,’ she said. ‘It’s so… bleak.’
There was her gran’s old armchair by the side of the fireplace and Granddad’s hard‑backed chair by the window. There was the sofa against the opposite wall. But everything else had gone – no books or photos on the shelves, no trinkets, even the TV had disappeared.
‘I thought my mum came here to get away from my dad for a bit, but she really was clearing the place out.’
Mikey touched her gently on the arm. ‘It’s cold, which doesn’t help. We’ll put the heating on.’
They went into the kitchen together and hunted for the boiler, which they eventually found in a cupboard. It was ancient, had some kind of pilot light that needed holding down and an ignition switch that needed pushing. Ellie stood next to Mikey while he worked it out. She liked him knowing what to do.
‘Disconnected,’ he said, ‘which means there’s probably no electricity either. I’ll have a look and see if there’s an oil burner or anything.’
While he searched in the hall closet, Ellie went back into the lounge, stood in front of the fireplace and rubbed her hands together, as if that would make a difference. Sadness washed over her in waves. She’d wanted it to be good, somewhere to escape to. She wanted sunlight streaming through the windows, like when she was a kid.
‘Nothing,’ he said as he came back in. ‘Not even a candle.’
‘I’m sorry. I brought you all this way and it’s rubbish.’
‘Don’t worry.’ He nudged her with his elbow. ‘I like adventures.’
That was so kind; he was so kind. Dad or Tom would be fuming at the wasted journey and the freezing cottage. They’d be marching off down the road by now, looking for the nearest taxi rank. She felt the world loosen around her as Mikey stood there smiling.
‘Well, I’m sorry anyway.’ She meant for everything – the cottage, Karyn, all of it. None of it was fair. She wiped her face with her sleeve and gave him what she hoped was an upbeat smile. ‘So, what shall we do now?’
He laughed. ‘Wait there. I’ll be back.’
He went out of the lounge, down the hallway and out the door. She heard him scrunch down the gravelled path towards the gate. She sat on her gran’s chair by the empty fireplace and waited for what would happen next. He wasn’t long, came back in with a pile of newspaper and some logs and sticks in a basket.
‘I noticed the shed when we came in,’ he said. ‘I thought there might be wood.’
He ripped up sheets of paper, screwed them into balls and put them in the grate. He built a pyramid around them with twigs and stacked larger sticks around that.
She leaned forward on the chair watching him. ‘How do you always know what to do?’
He grinned. ‘Every bloke knows how to build a fire.’
She didn’t think that was true.
Mikey got out his lighter and lit the paper. She sat next to him on the rug as the flames took hold.
‘There’s plenty of wood,’ he said. ‘We can dry our clothes as well.’
He began to unlace his trainers. She wondered if his heart was slamming as fast as hers. All her clothes were wet. How many were they taking off? She pulled her own trainers off and placed them next to his on the hearth. They peeled off their socks and laid them next to their shoes. She unzipped the jacket he’d lent her, knew he was looking as she carefully hung it over the chair so the heat could reach it. She watched him pull his hoodie off and spread it out on the floor. He was only wearing a vest top underneath.
‘Is that a tattoo?’
A small green snake with a red tongue writhed on his shoulder as he lifted his arm to show her. She traced the tattoo with her finger and he watched her. His skin was soft and she didn’t want to stop touching him. But she couldn’t go on for ever, so she pulled her hand away and put it back on her lap.
They sat there looking at each other. He looked away first.
‘You think there’s any food hidden away?’ he said.
‘I doubt it.’
He smiled as if he didn’t believe her. ‘Show me.’
He was right. There were some potatoes in a basket at the bottom of the larder. He wrapped them in silver foil and shoved them under the fire. They played childish games while they waited for them – Noughts and Crosses and Hangman. She found a pack of cards and taught him to play Rummy and he taught her Go Fish. It was like a siege and they were hostages.
When they got bored of games, they lay next to the fire on their backs and looked at the ceiling. Spider webs shivered in each of the four corners. There were cracks all over the plaster and the paint was yellow from her grandfather’s pipe. It made Ellie sad. They lay there for ages not saying a word, not touching at all. She cheered herself up by sneaking looks at him. There was something about him that made her dizzy – the dark of his hair, the brown of his eyes, the angles of him lying next to her.
This is real, she thought. This is real.
She wanted him to touch her. She wanted to say, Kiss me, please, do it soon.
But if she said that, then he’d think she was easy.
Instead she said, ‘Tell me what you’re thinking.’
He was thinking she’d probably never been with a boy before. He was thinking he’d never been with a girl who’d never been with anyone else. He was wondering why that was freaking him out. Lying next to her in front of the fire was stirring him up, and the longer they lay, the more he wanted to touch her. But what if he made a move and he’d mis‑read the signs and she didn’t want him at all? Or what if he made a move and she did want him, but then he was rubbish and she hated it? Whenever she was asked about her very first time she’d say, Oh, it was shit.
She treated her body as if it was really special. He’d noticed it at the river and again today – how she kept changing the position of a strap or pulling buttons shut or yanking her dress lower so he couldn’t see bits of her. It was like she had something hidden and if you got in there, you’d be really privileged. It made him think of that line in the Spider‑Man movie about power and responsibility. It was doing his head in.
‘I was thinking,’ he said, ‘about those potatoes. You reckon they’re ready?’
He dug them out with a fork while Ellie got plates from the kitchen. She came back with salt, pepper and, by some miracle, an unopened tube of cheese spread.
‘Found it in the herb rack,’ she said. She looked proud. Her face lit up with it.
They sat together on the carpet to eat, their plates on their knees. The potatoes were delicious.
‘This was a good idea,’ she said.
‘Coming here, or eating?’
‘Both.’
They smiled at each other. There was a sweet shyness about her that he really liked. It was as if his heart got rubbed clean looking at her, like it was possible to start again. You’re so pretty, he wanted to say. But he didn’t, because that didn’t seem enough.
‘I’m not sure about the cheese spread,’ she said. ‘It tastes like it’s only a molecule away from plastic. You know, if you put a pot of margarine on the lawn, not a single insect will touch it because it doesn’t recognize it as food?’
He laughed. ‘How do you know that?’
‘From Science.’
‘I don’t remember anything from school. The only lesson I liked was Food Tech and the rest was the most boring rubbish I ever had to listen to.’
‘You hated it that much?’
‘Don’t you?’
She shrugged. ‘Some things I like and the rest I put up with. Did you take any exams?’
‘They put me in for five, but I only got Food Tech and ICT.’
‘Did you revise?’
‘Not really. There was always something going on that seemed more important. You know – with my mum and sisters and everything.’
She nodded, but didn’t say anything.
‘Pass your plate,’ he said. ‘I’ll take it out if you’re done.’
He might not have hundreds of GCSEs, but he could build a fire, make food, clear up, which had to be worth something.
The water hadn’t been disconnected, but it came out rust‑coloured and he had to run the tap for ages. He rinsed the plates, gave them a shake and put them back in the cupboard. If anyone noticed they’d been here, they might not be able to come again, and he wanted to. There was a pint glass in the cupboard and he filled it with tap water and drank it straight down. It tasted fine, even though the colour was still weird. He filled the glass again and took it in for her.
‘Here,’ he said.
He sat back down on the carpet and watched her drink. He liked the way her throat moved, the sound of water falling into her. He liked it so much that he leaned right over and laid his head on her shoulder.
She laughed. ‘What are you doing?’
‘Listening to you.’
He could feel her breath on his face.
‘What do I sound like?’ she whispered.
‘Beautiful.’
He felt like a junkie might feel as he leaned in to kiss her.
She’d thought of it, dreamed of it, and here it was – like a slow drowning as his lips touched hers. She could feel his heart beating against her chest, could hear the pulse at her own neck thundering. It was how it should’ve been all along, and why had they wasted hours without touching at all?
Kissing Mikey McKenzie on the carpet in her grandparents’ cottage, the world felt more intimate and more exactly right than Ellie had ever guessed it could. It was like a shape had chosen her and shifted her from ordinary to special. She’d run like an animal through the rain and gone to find him. She’d caught a bus and brought him here.
It began to get gloomy outside. It would get darker and darker and later and later. It was a long bus ride back. There was no landline or mobile signal, there were no neighbours and nobody knew they were there.
Every now and then a picture of home would leak in – her father’s furious face, her mother’s disappointed one, the stabbed look in Tom’s eyes. The three of them would have eaten Sunday lunch with the solicitor by now. They’d be drinking coffee and talking about her, wondering where she was.
But the longer she kissed Mikey, the less important these things became.
He stroked her hair. She dared to touch his hip. There was a crazy flare under her fingers where her skin touched his. She buried herself in his neck and breathed in the boy smell of him.
‘I can’t get close enough to you,’ she said.
He looked at her with dark eyes, his breathing like an engine. He looked like he was sinking, like he couldn’t help himself as he reached to kiss her again. It made her want to laugh out loud. She did this to him. She did. Ellie Parker. Never, ever had she dreamed she could feel so alive.
She said, ‘I haven’t ever…’ as he began to unbutton her dress, but then she gave up, because, in fact, she wanted him to unbutton it. It shocked her that this was true. How could she want this when she’d never done anything more than kiss a boy before?
He said, ‘You want me to stop?’
She shook her head.
‘We can just kiss,’ he said. ‘We don’t have to do anything else.’
‘I don’t want to stop.’
Every girl knows if you get into a situation with a boy who has had sex already, then he will want to have sex with you. He will push at your boundaries. If you say no to a boy like this, he will try and get you to change your mind.
But she wasn’t saying no.
She’d broken into her grandparents’ cottage and her rules were crumbling to dust. She’d known Mikey for less than eight weeks and this was only their second date.
‘Are you sure?’ he said.
She nodded.
Then.
He was on his knees and he held out his hand to her. She sat up and together they slid the dress from her shoulders. It was the blue dress she’d worn at the party the first time she’d spoken to him properly. That felt like years ago, like another life.
And how easy that life slipped off.
He knew he was supposed to take it slow, but all she had left was bra, jeans, knickers. Three things. He was burning with how much he wanted her. He reached out for the buckle on her belt.
‘Wait,’ she said.
She put her hand over his. Had he gone too far? Too fast? If this was Sienna, they’d have done the business by now and be having a fag and talking about nothing. But it was different with Ellie. He was whimpering like a dog inside, and the only way forward was to let her decide what happened next. He wanted to yank those jeans right off her. He wanted to know if her knickers matched the black lace of her bra. He wanted to tell her he probably had a condom somewhere and that everything was under control. But he didn’t want to scare her.
He said, ‘Am I going too fast?’
She shook her head. ‘It’s not that.’
‘What is it then?’
‘I lied to the police.’
His heart sank. Why wasn’t anything ever simple? She was in front of him, confessing, and he didn’t want to hear it. He wanted to kiss her.
‘When I made my first statement I said I was asleep all night, and I wasn’t. I’m scared that when you know how important that is, you’re going to hate me.’
‘I won’t ever hate you.’
‘I hope not.’ She touched his belly. Up. Gently. Her fingers ran over the ridges of his ribcage. ‘I want to help Karyn.’
‘I know that.’
She said, ‘So you think this is a good idea then, you and me?’
He said, ‘Yes.’
Then he said, ‘But only if you think so.’
She leaned in close and kissed his chin, the end of his nose, each eyelid.
She said, ‘I missed you so much. I’ve been wanting to touch you for days.’
And he was worth something. Just like that.
Her breath on his face was salt and wood smoke and something underneath that, something sweet and pulsing. He sat very still as her kisses moved to his neck, as her right hand explored his back, all the way down his spine to his belt. If he moved, she might stop and he didn’t want her to stop.
It had never crossed his mind that his body might be special too. No girl had ever taken the time to show him. Or was it that he just hadn’t let them?
Whichever it was, it was like a pulse rising.
Ellie put her hand against his chest and felt his heart through his T‑shirt. He was watching her and she knew she had to decide what happened next.
For the rest of her life, he’d be her first and nothing could ever change it. And if he hated her later because of what she knew about his sister and Tom, then she’d have to live with it. It was now that mattered. Right now. Right here. She watched herself move her hand down to the edge of his T‑shirt.
She’d thought it would be like speaking different languages, because he was experienced and she wasn’t. But she knew what she wanted and somehow she knew what to do. She dared to lift his T‑shirt and he raised his arms like an obedient child and she pulled it over his head. She loved the feeling of power as he melted towards her, the way his breathing changed under her fingers.
‘Do you want me to stop?’ she said.
He shook his head.
They smiled at each other.
They both got it. That’s what was so great. Ellie had never known it was possible for two people to want the exact same thing at the same time.
‘Is this how it is for everyone?’ she whispered.
‘No.’
‘How do you know?’
‘I just do. I’ve never felt this with anyone before.’
‘Serious?’
‘Serious. That isn’t a line.’
‘Kiss me,’ she said.
He did. Everywhere.
Afterwards, he stroked her. It made her shiver and he liked the way her eyes got serious as he stroked the bit where her leg joined her bum. All the little hairs at the top of her thigh stood up under his fingers.
‘You cried,’ he said.
She put her hands over her face. ‘Doesn’t everyone?’
‘Only in songs.’
‘I’m embarrassed!’
‘Don’t be, it’s good. Other girls aren’t like that.’
She peered at him from between her fingers. ‘What are other girls like?’
‘I dunno. That came out wrong.’
‘Have you slept with lots of them?’
‘Not lots.’
He tried to kiss her again. He didn’t want ghosts in the room sitting around watching them. But she nudged him away and pushed herself up onto her elbows to see him properly. It was dark in the room now the fire had died down.
‘I keep thinking about Karyn,’ she said. ‘Do you?’
‘I keep thinking about your brother crashing in with a gun.’
It was a joke, but she didn’t smile. ‘No one knows we’re here,’ she said. ‘We have to trust each other now, don’t we?’
He pulled her down to him. She smelled great. He stroked her some more and she relaxed against him. They didn’t talk.
The sound of her mobile was piercing – like a bird screaming in their ears.
‘How can it be ringing? There’s no signal here, there’s never any signal.’ She fumbled for it among a sea of clothes, her face terrified. ‘Oh God, it’s my mum. What shall I do?’
‘Answer it, say you’re busy.’
She lobbed it at him as if it was hot. ‘You answer it.’
‘Serious?’
‘No!’ She snatched it back and turned it off, then lay on the carpet and covered her head with her arms. ‘She knows where I am.’
‘How can she?’
‘She knows what I’ve been doing.’
He laughed. ‘She doesn’t. Text her, tell her you’ll call her later.’
‘I forgot about home.’ She sat up again and looked down at him. ‘I forgot about running out, like none of it existed.’
‘You ran out?’
‘Kind of. Oh God! The lawyer will have spoken to Tom. Tom will have spoken to my dad. They’re going to kill me when I get back.’
‘Don’t go. Stay here with me.’
She shook her head, dismissing him. ‘Help me find my stuff.’
It was like watching a spell break. He’d wanted to kiss her again, stay the whole night through, wake up with her.
‘You won’t find your knickers,’ he said.
‘Have you got them?’
‘Might have.’
‘Mikey, please. I have to go.’
‘Tell them you’re at the cinema, say it’s a late film.’
‘They won’t believe me.’
‘Tell them you’re dead, then we can stay as long as we like.’
‘I can’t. You might think I’m brave, but really I’m a coward. Mikey, please, I have to go and deal with this before I get too scared.’
Her knickers looked great in the palm of his hand – lacy and black. He kissed them goodbye, which made her smile.
‘Sorry,’ she said. ‘But if my dad finds out about you too, it’ll make everything a hundred times worse.’
She found her bra, did the clasp up, twisted it round and pulled the strap over her shoulders, like putting a bridle on a horse. She stuck her tongue out at him when she caught him looking, pulled on her dress, did a great wriggle as she smoothed it over her hips.
‘What would your dad do if he knew?’ Mikey asked.
‘Kill me. Kill you. Kill himself.’
‘In that order?’
‘No, actually. He’d kill you first.’
He got dressed quickly while she put on her shoes, then they tidied the room together. He put water on the ashes and spread them out in the grate. She put the cushions and blankets back on the chairs and checked that everything looked the same as when they arrived. It was weird having no electricity, but still being able to see.
‘Can we come here again?’ he said.
‘I don’t know. Thursday maybe we could. I’ve got study leave in the afternoon. If everything’s normal on Thursday, I’ll meet you then.’
She had one hand on the door handle, waiting for him. She hadn’t touched him since the phone rang, and as she shut the door and hid the key, it was like he’d lost something.
‘That’s ages away.’
‘I know, but we have to be careful.’
Was this love? Because it hurt. It was like a bit of glass stuck somewhere important – his heart or his head, and it was throbbing. Already he missed her and they were only just out of the door.
‘Thursday then,’ he agreed.
He took her hand and laced their fingers back together as they walked down the path to the gate.
Thirty‑five
The front door opened before Ellie even made it across the lawn and her mother rushed down the steps, arms open wide.
‘Oh, thank God!’
She hugged her so close, Ellie could feel the sharp angles of her mother’s shoulders and the curve of her ribs through her dress.
‘Mum, you’re hurting me.’
‘I’ve been worried sick. We had absolutely no idea where you were.’ She pressed Ellie closer for a second, then let her go, stepping back to stroke her hair and pat at her arms and face, as if checking she was real. ‘We were about to call the police.’
‘The police?’
‘You’ve been gone for hours, we were desperate.’
Only now did Ellie notice her dad glowering at her from the doorstep. He looked older than he had at breakfast, thin and shabby somehow.
He said, ‘Where the hell have you been?’
‘I’m sorry. I went for a walk.’
‘All this time? In the rain, with no coat?’
‘It was stupid. I didn’t think.’
‘Why did you turn your phone off?’
‘I ended up at the cinema, then I forgot to turn it back on when I came out.’
It sounded crap, hollow, like lines from a play. Her father leaned against the door frame and looked at her, taking her right in, from her scruffy trainers to the crumpled material of her dress. I’m not a virgin any more, Ellie thought as his eyes travelled up to her face. Can you tell? Do I look different?
He said, ‘I’ve spent hours looking for you. Your mother’s been distraught.’
‘I’m sorry.’
‘Your brother’s up in his room, convinced he’s going to jail. Do you want to explain that one to me?’
The way her father spoke so quietly was terrifying. Ellie felt tears swelling her throat.
‘Do you want to let your daughter inside before you start interrogating her?’ Mum put an arm round Ellie and clutched her hard. ‘She’s shivering out here in the cold. Why don’t you go and put the kettle on or something?’
Her dad looked confused, as if Mum had suggested something so unusual and particular that it made no sense. Then he said, ‘Yes, of course.’
‘You could make some sandwiches as well. I expect Ellie’s hungry, aren’t you?’
It was wonderful having her mother suddenly fierce, as if new ways of being were possible.
‘Does Dad know everything?’ she asked as Mum led her up the steps. ‘Does he know I spoke to you? Does he know Karyn’s telling the truth?’
‘Hush,’ Mum said. ‘It’s not time for that now. Just come and listen to what he has to say.’
She led Ellie up the steps and into the house, sat her down at the kitchen table and got her a blanket, before going off to tell Tom his sister was home. Dad made hot chocolate and scattered biscuits on a plate. He put some bread in the toaster, then leaned against the sink and folded his arms.
He said, ‘You can’t have been in the cinema all this time.’
Ellie looked at her hands on her lap. ‘Well, a few of the shops in town were open, so I looked round them for a while.’
‘That doesn’t take ten hours.’
‘And I had to wait ages for the bus.’
‘Were you on your own?’
She nodded, terrified he’d sussed her. Maybe she smelled different, maybe there was some way fathers knew when their daughters had been touched by a boy for the first time.
He frowned, turned back to his toast. ‘You can’t go trotting about assuming the world is a safe place to be. Anything could have happened to you.’
‘I’m sorry.’
Mum came in with slippers and insisted Ellie take off her wet trainers. Tom sidled in behind her and stood in the doorway watching. His hair was messed up and his eyes were red, as if he’d been crying. Tom never cried, not ever, not when he broke his ankle, not even when he got arrested. Ellie could barely bring herself to look at him.
‘Where did you go?’ he said.
‘Just walking.’
‘All day?’
‘Sort of.’
He slumped himself into the armchair in the corner. ‘I told them you’d be fine. I knew you would be.’
‘Well, I wasn’t as confident,’ Mum said. ‘I was thinking all kinds of terrible things.’
Dad slapped down a plate of toast. ‘Right, now we’ve established the runaway is safe, let’s get down to business. Eleanor – apologize to your brother.’