‘Can’t you go to his house?’
Frank shakes his head. ‘We tried. His granny’s there. She’s got some dementia thing. She won’t leave us alone. She shouts and she cries and sometimes she doesn’t know who Linus is, and she keeps taking everything out of the freezer. They, like, have to watch her all the time. Linus has to do all his homework at school.’
‘Right.’ I digest this. ‘Poor Linus. Well . . . you know. Tell him it’s all fine.’
‘He asked for your number, but . . .’ Frank shrugs.
‘Right.’
I don’t have a phone number at the moment. Just to add to the party, I’ve become phone-averse. Not phobic, just averse.
Which Frank will never understand in a million years.
He heads off and I switch over to You’ve Been Framed. Felix comes in to watch it with me and we snuggle up on the sofa together. Felix is like a walking, talking teddy bear. He’s soft and snuggly and if you press him in the tummy he laughs, every time. His head is a curly mass of blond like a dandelion clock and his face is constantly open and hopeful. You feel like nothing must ever go wrong for him, ever.
Which is, I guess, how Mum and Dad felt about me.
‘So, how’s school, Felix?’ I say. ‘Are you still friends with Aidan?’
‘Aidan has chicken pops,’ he tells me.
‘Chicken pox?’
‘Chicken pops,’ he corrects me as though I’m an idiot. ‘Chicken pops.’
‘Oh, right.’ I nod. ‘I hope you don’t get them.’
‘I will fight the chicken pops with my sword,’ he says importantly. ‘I’m a very strong fighter.’
I take off my dark glasses and look into his round, open little face. Felix is the only one I can cope with looking at, eye to eye. My parents’ eyes – forget it. They’re full of worry and fear and too much knowledge. And kind of too much love, if that makes sense? If I look at them, it’s like it all comes flooding back over me in a gush – mingled in with their anger, which is pretty righteous. I mean, it’s not directed at me, obviously, but still. It feels toxic.
Frank’s eyes are just a little freaked out, every time he looks at me. It’s like, Help, my sister went nuts, what should I do? He doesn’t want to be freaked out, but he is. Well, of course he is. His sister hides inside and wears dark glasses – what else could he be?
But Felix’s blue eyes are as transparent and clear and soothing as a drink of water. He knows pretty much nothing except the fact that he’s Felix.
‘Hello, you,’ I say, and press my face close against his.
‘Hello, you.’ He squashes up even closer. ‘Do you want to build a snowman?’
Felix has a bit of a Frozen obsession, for which I don’t blame him. I can relate to Queen Elsa myself. Only I’m not sure I’m going to melt the ice away by some random act of love. Chip it away with an ice-pick, more like.
‘Audrey.’ I hear Frank’s voice. ‘Linus is here. He sent you this.’
My dark glasses are back on as I raise my head from Felix. Frank is holding out a folded sheet of paper.
‘Oh,’ I say, nonplussed, and take it from him. ‘OK.’
As Frank heads away, I unfold the sheet and read the unfamiliar handwriting.
Hi. Sorry about the other day. I didn’t mean to freak you out.
Linus
Oh God.
I mean, oh God on so many levels. First, he thinks he freaked me out. (Which he did, but not because he’s freaky.) Second, he feels the need to apologize, which makes me feel bad. Third, what do I do now?
I think for an instant, then write underneath:
No, I’m sorry. I have this weird thing. It’s not you.
Audrey
‘Felix,’ I say. ‘Go and give this to Linus. Linus,’ I repeat as he stares at me with blank eyes. ‘Frank’s friend. Linus? The big boy?’
Felix takes the paper and looks at it carefully for a moment. Then he folds it up, puts it in his pocket and starts playing with a train.
‘Felix, go on.’ I prod him. ‘Give it to Linus.’
‘But it fits in my pocket,’ he objects. ‘It’s my pocket paper.’
‘It’s not yours. It’s a note.’
‘I want a pocket paper!’ He screws up his face to howl.
For God’s sake. In movies, they fix the note to a dog’s collar and it trots off obediently, no nonsense.
‘OK, Felix, you can have a pocket paper,’ I say in exasperation. ‘Whatever that is. Here you are.’ I rip a page out of a magazine, fold it up and stuff it in his pocket instead. ‘Now give this one to Linus. In the playroom.’
When Felix finally leaves, I have no confidence that the note will reach its destination. It’s a thousand times more likely that Felix will feed it into the waste disposal or the DVD player or just forget it exists. I turn up You’ve Been Framed and try to forget about it.
But about two minutes later, there’s Felix holding the note, saying excitedly, ‘Read it! Read the pocket paper!’
I unfold it – and Linus has added a new line. This is like a game of Consequences.
Frank explained. Must be tough for you.
I smooth the paper out on my knee and write:
It’s fine. Well, you know, not fine. It is what it is. Hope you’re winning. Btw you were a great Atticus Finch.
I send the paper off with Felix the Wonder Dog and stare ahead at the screen – but I’m not watching You’ve Been Framed at all. I’m just waiting. I haven’t done anything like this in for ever. I haven’t interacted with anyone except my safe people for . . . I don’t know. Weeks. Months. Before I know it, Felix is back, and I grab the paper from him.
Hey, thanks. Actually we’re tanking. Frank is shouting at me because I’m writing this. You are a bad influence, Audrey.
I look at the way he wrote my name. It feels intimate. It feels like he’s taken hold of a piece of me. I try to hear his voice saying the word. Audrey.
‘Draw the words,’ Felix is instructing me. He’s totally got into his role as go-between. ‘Draw the words.’ He jabs the paper. ‘Words!’
I don’t want to give this paper to Felix any more. I want to fold it up and keep it somewhere where I can look at it in private. Study his writing. Think about him forming my name with his pen. Audrey.
I grab a fresh piece of A4 from the side table where all my school supplies are stacked, and scribble on it:
Well, it’s been nice chatting or whatever.
See you.
I send it off with Felix, and half a minute later the reply comes:
See you.
I’m still holding the first paper; the one with my name on it. I press it to my face and inhale. I think I can smell his soap or shampoo or whatever.
Felix is pressing his nose to the other paper and he looks at me over the top with huge eyes.
‘Your pocket paper smells like poo,’ he says, and bursts into laughter.
Trust a four-year-old to ruin the mood.
‘Thanks, Felix.’ I ruffle his hair. ‘You’re a great messenger.’
‘Draw more words,’ he says, patting the paper. ‘More words.’
‘We’ve finished our chat,’ I say, but Felix picks up a crayon and hands it to me.
‘Make red words,’ he commands me. ‘Make “Felix”.’
I write ‘Felix’ and he gazes at it lovingly as I draw him close for another restoring cuddle.
I feel kind of exhilarated. And kind of emptied out. Which may seem like an overreaction, but then, in case you hadn’t picked it up, I am the Queen of Overreaction.
The truth is, if you don’t communicate with anyone new, ever, at all, then you lose the knack. And when you go back to it, it’s sort of draining. Dr Sarah has warned me about that. She says I should expect even the tiniest tasks or new steps to be a bit exhausting. And believe it or not, that silly little exchange of notes was.