‘What is it?’ he says. ‘What’s wrong?’
I can’t look at him, so I move closer, bury myself deeper, hide in his arms. I know I’m making a complete fool of myself. I’m snuffling all over him like a baby, and I can’t stop, it’s horrible. He sweeps his hand in circles on my back, whispers ‘Shush’ into my ear, eventually eases me away so he can see me.
‘What is it? You’re not going to say you didn’t want to, are you?’
I wipe my eyes with the duvet. I sit up, my feet dangling over the edge of the bed onto the carpet. I sit with my back to him, blinking at my clothes. They’re unfamiliar shadows scattered on the floor.
When I was a kid, I used to ride on my dad’s shoulders. I was so small he had to hold my back with both hands to stop me tipping, and yet I was so high I could splash my hands through leaves. I could never tell Jake this. It wouldn’t make any difference to him. I don’t think words reach people. Maybe nothing does.
I scramble into my clothes. The red dress seems smaller than ever; I pull it down, trying to cover my knees. Did I really go to a club looking like this?
I slip on my shoes, gather the things back into Zoey’s bag.
Jake says, ‘You don’t have to go.’ He’s leaning up on one elbow. His chest seems pale as the candle flickers.
‘I want to.’
He flings himself back onto the pillow. One arm hangs over the side of the bed; his fingers curl where they touch the floor. He shakes his head really slowly.
Zoey’s downstairs on the sofa, asleep. So is Stoner Boy. They lie together, their arms entwined, their faces next to each other. I hate it that it’s OK for her. She’s even wearing his shirt. Its sweet buttons in little rows make me think of that sugar house in the children’s story. I kneel beside them and stroke Zoey’s arm very lightly. Her arm is warm. I stroke her until she opens her eyes. She blinks at me. ‘Hey!’ she whispers. ‘Finished already?’
I nod, can’t help grinning, which is weird. She untangles herself from Stoner’s arms, sits up and surveys the floor.
‘Is there any gear about?’
I find the tin with the dope in it and hand it to her, then I go to the kitchen and get a glass of water. I think she’ll follow me, but she doesn’t. How can we talk with Stoner there? I drink the water, put the glass on the draining board and go back to the lounge. I sit on the floor at Zoey’s feet as she licks a Rizla and sticks it to another, licks a second, straps that down too, tears off the edges.
‘Well?’ she says. ‘How did it go?’
‘OK.’
A pulse of light through the curtain blinds me. I can only see the shine of her teeth.
‘Was he any good?’
I think of Jake upstairs, his hand trailing the floor. ‘I don’t know.’
Zoey inhales, regards me curiously, exhales. ‘You have to get used to it. My mum once said that sex was only three minutes of pleasure. I thought, Is that all? It’s going to be more than that for me! And it is. If you let them think they’re great at it, somehow it turns out all right.’
I stand up, walk to the curtains and open them wider. The streetlights are still on. It’s nowhere near morning.
Zoey says, ‘Have you just left him up there?’
‘I guess so.’
‘That’s a bit rude. You should go back and have another go.’
‘I don’t want to.’
‘Well, we can’t go home yet. I’m wrecked.’
She stubs the joint out in the ashtray, settles herself back down next to Scott and shuts her eyes. I watch her for ages, the rise and fall of her breathing. A string of lights along the wall casts a gentle glow across the carpet. There’s a rug too, a little oval with splashes of blue and grey, like the sea.
I go back to the kitchen and put the kettle on. There’s a piece of paper on the counter. On it someone’s written, Cheese, butter, beans, bread. I sit on a stool at the kitchen table and I add, Butterscotch chocolate, six-pack of Creme Eggs. I especially want the Creme Eggs, because I love having those at Easter. It’s two hundred and seventeen days until Easter.
Perhaps I should be a little more realistic. I cross out the Creme Eggs and write, Chocolate Father Xmas, red and gold foil with a bell round its neck. I might just get that. It’s one hundred and thirteen days until Christmas.
I turn the little piece of paper over and write, Tessa Scott. A good name of three syllables, my dad always says. If I can fit my name on this piece of paper over fifty times, everything will be all right. I write in very small letters, like a tooth fairy might write to answer a child’s letter. My wrist aches. The kettle whistles. The kitchen fills with steam.
Five
Sometimes on a Sunday Dad drives me and Cal to visit Mum. We get the lift up to the eighth floor, and usually there’s a moment when she opens the door and says, ‘Hey, you!’ and includes all three of us in her gaze. Dad usually loiters for a while on the step and they talk.
But today when she opens the door, Dad’s so desperate to get away from me that he’s already moving back across the hallway towards the lift.
‘Watch her,’ he says, jabbing a finger in my direction. ‘She’s not to be trusted.’
Mum laughs. ‘Why, what did she do?’
Cal can hardly contain his excitement. ‘Dad told her not to go clubbing.’
‘Ah,’ Mum says. ‘That sounds like your father.’
‘But she went anyway. She only got home just now. She was out all night.’
Mum smiles at me fondly. ‘Did you meet a boy?’
‘No.’
‘I bet you did. What’s his name?’
‘I didn’t!’
Dad looks furious. ‘Typical,’ he says. ‘Bloody typical. I might’ve known I wouldn’t get any support from you.’
‘Oh, shush,’ Mum says. ‘It hasn’t done her any harm, has it?’
‘Look at her. She’s completely exhausted.’
All three of them take a moment to look at me. I hate it. I feel dismal and cold and my stomach aches. It’s been hurting since having sex with Jake. No one told me that would happen.
‘I’ll be back at four,’ Dad says as he steps into the lift. ‘She’s refused to have her blood count checked for nearly two weeks, so phone me if anything changes. Can you manage that?’
‘Yes, yes, don’t worry.’ She leans over and kisses my forehead. ‘I’ll look after her.’
Cal and me sit at the kitchen table, and Mum puts the kettle on, finds three cups amongst the dirty ones in the sink and swills them under the tap. She reaches into a cupboard for tea bags, gets milk from the fridge and sniffs it, scatters biscuits on a plate.
I put a whole Bourbon in my mouth at once. It tastes delicious. Cheap chocolate and the rush of sugar to my brain.
‘Did I ever tell you about my first boyfriend?’ Mum says as she plonks the tea on the table. ‘His name was Kevin and he worked in a clock shop. I used to love the way he concentrated with that little eye-piece nudged into his face.’
Cal helps himself to another biscuit. ‘How many boyfriends have you actually had, Mum?’
She laughs, pushes her long hair back over one shoulder. ‘Is that an appropriate question?’
‘Was Dad the best?’
‘Ah, your father!’ she cries, and clutches her heart melodramatically, which makes Cal roar with laughter.
I once asked Mum what was wrong with Dad. She said, ‘He’s the most sensible man I’ve ever met.’
I was twelve when she left him. She sent postcards for a while from places I’d never heard of – Skegness, Grimsby, Hull. One of them had a picture of a hotel on the front. This is where I work now, she wrote. I’m learning how to be a pastry chef and I’m getting very fat!
‘Good!’ Dad said. ‘I hope she bloody bursts!’