I don’t have a diary.
I stand there for a moment longer and try to think. The tampons in my school bag came from the machine in the toilets by the science labs. It’s the only one that still works and has “Mr Dhupam is a rabbit shagger” written in marker pen on the side. I had to make an emergency purchase after Year 11 assembly, which was the first one after term started…
I count forward past Jay’s party, Mum’s birthday, Lola’s dentist appointment. Four weeks — it should have been then, right? — but I count another week then one, two, three, four, five, six days.
My finger rests on today’s box:
Mum book club 7 p.m. — Life of Pi
That can’t be right. About the date, not the book club… although really it should be called film club, since Mum only ever reads the first few chapters before streaming the movie on Robert’s laptop.
Focus, Hannah.
I count again. I’m nearly two weeks late — or is my period standing me up? Is it a no-show rather than a late show?
It can’t be like that. In the movies everyone’s always sick for a few days before they take the test. They think it’s those dodgy prawns or a bad hangover, but no: baby.
But no: it can’t be like that.
Really. It can’t.
Robert’s coming down the hall and I leave the kitchen, dodging past him on my way towards the stairs, then I’m in my room and at the computer. It’s a very shiny new one, a present from Mum and Robert for my birthday in July. They hope it’ll help with school work, but I like to think of it as an extension of my phone — email, iTunes, Facebook… I wonder if anyone’s commented on my status…
Focus, Hannah.
I type so quickly that it takes a second attempt before Google asks me if I mean “pregnancy symptoms”.
I suppose I do.
FRIDAY 23RD OCTOBER
HANNAH
It’s the last day before half-term and it’s raining when I walk out of the school gates and up the road. Katie is steaming because I’ve told her she can’t come round to mine straight from school, that I’ll come over to hers later. I’ve told her there’s somewhere else I’ve got to be.
I hurry past the cemetery and try to forget it’s where I pulled Mark Grey. He trod on my foot so hard as he grappled with my bra that I thought he’d broken it (my foot, not the bra). It kind of brought home to me that maybe he wasn’t my type. Too chunky. And sweaty. You should see him during PE — gross. I wasn’t joking when I said I can’t forgive Katie for her bad taste.
By the time I get to Cedarfields and sign the visitors’ book, water is running off my chin and it blurs my signature. I head to the end of the corridor, where I knock on the door and wait, listening to the shuffling and kerfuffling on the other side. Then the door opens.
“Hannah?”
“Gran.” I step in and give her a hug, resting my nose on her tiny, bony shoulder and smelling her lily-of-the-valley perfume. I close my eyes, trying to remember what it was like when I was smaller than her and she was the one who had to be careful not to squeeze too tight. Tiny, bird-like body or not, she’s the strongest person I know. The steadiest. The least judgmental.
“You’re soaked.” She steps back and eyes me suspiciously. “Don’t sit down until you’ve dried yourself — there’s clean towels in the bathroom. This place ain’t no hotel, but they do have plenty of fresh linen.”
I like the way she says “hotel” — as if there’s no “o” in it. I spend a long time in the bathroom, towelling my hair dry, looking at my reflection, going to the loo just in case…
Gran watches me carefully when I come out and sit in the chair opposite. “What’s up, pet?”
That’s when the tears come and I reach out, knotting her fingers with mine. When my eyes clear I see there’s a tissue on my knee that wasn’t there before. It’s rumpled and very, very soft and I know it’s come from Gran’s sleeve.
I open my mouth, but I can’t form the words. Instead I just shake my head and start crying again, snuffling into the tissue until it’s soggy with snot.
“Come on, now, Hannah, you’re scaring me.” I look through my tears to see her fix me with a stern glare. “What’s the matter?”
“I think I’m pregnant.”
The word seems to hang in the air for an impossibly long moment. Everything has stopped and the room holds its breath, waiting for the meaning to sink in. Pregnant. My insides are hollow and I can hear the word echo through me. Except I’m the opposite of hollow, aren’t I? That’s the problem.
Gran blinks once, then a couple of times, her lids fluttering over her eyes.
“Oh. Really?”
I nod and take a deep breath that wavers in my lungs like it’s not sure it should be there.
“Oh,” she says again, blinking some more. “Are you sure?”
“I looked up the symptoms on the Internet.” She huffs at that. I’m always telling her stuff I’ve read on the Internet and every time she says that if everyone was meant to know everything, then God would have made us all much cleverer. “I’ve not been sick, but I’ve got the other symptoms — my boobs are tender, I’m tired…”
“You’ve not had your monthly visitor?”
I shake my head. “It should’ve been and gone by now.”
I look up to see Gran looking at me with wise eyes, twinkly with the moisture that always seems to be trapped there. I can’t tell what she’s thinking. Is she disappointed in me? She must be. The thought makes me start to cry again, silent, sad tears spilling off my face and onto my school shirt.
“Hey, pet, shh.” She pulls me to her. “You don’t know anything for sure until you take a test. Have you?”
I shake my head into her cardigan. Gran gently pushes me upright and creaks out of her chair and takes a twenty out of her handbag. I get up, intending to wave it away, but she presses it into my hand and gives me a look that means business.
“There’s a chemist round the corner by the parade. Get two tests and come back here.” She strokes the back of my hand with soft, cool fingers. “You don’t need to do this alone.”
AARON
Rex is having a house party. Depending on who you ask, he’s either celebrating the end of the half-term, or the end of his relationship with the invisible girlfriend. Either way, he plans to get wasted and get laid — in that order. He’s invited half the school to his house tonight and it’s all the guys have been talking about. Tyrone is grumbling because Marcy’s got some modelling job that means she can’t come. I say, “grumbling”; I mean, boasting.
I cut my visit to the old folks’ home short so I could come early and hang out with Rex. I don’t really know why he asked me over, but it’s nice of him and since there’s a certain weight of expectation from Mum that her son will socialize on Fridays, I accepted.
I’m starting to regret my decision.
“What do you reckon?” This is the fourth shirt he’s tried on and it doesn’t look that different from the last three.
“Fine,” I say, looking at my phone and wondering when the others will get here.
“Come on, man. I need your help.”
“Why?” I know nothing about clothes, nor why Rex cares. It’s just a house party.
“You always dress cool. I want to look good.”
“In that case I should have brought my mum over. She’s the one who buys my clothes,” I say, letting my guard down.
Rex laughs and I do too. It feels like we’re mates.