“When did you get home?”
Catherine opens her eyes and looks at her mother.
“A little while ago.”
“Did they let you out early then?” Her mother smiles and Catherine wonders for a moment whether she thinks she’s been let out early from school, but that can’t be. She’s not that far gone yet.
“I finished what I needed to do.”
“Have you got another of your headaches, love?” Tears spring to Catherine’s eyes. Her mother knows and doesn’t know but it doesn’t matter because she knows what Catherine needs. She needs to be cared for without being interrogated. She needs someone to trust that she isn’t a terrible human being without having to tell them — without having to explain anything.
39. SUMMER 2013
Nick had spent most of the afternoon up in his bedroom, smoking dope; half day he was going to say if his dad came home early, but he didn’t. It’s ten PM and he’s back up there, door shut, windows wide open. He rolls another spliff, lights up, and leans out of the window. The spare room is directly above the kitchen, and when he looks down he can see his dad through the glass roof of the extension. He’s clearing up after supper and Nick knows he should be helping him, but his dad didn’t stop him when he left the room. He leans back in case his dad looks up and sees him. Surely he can smell the smoke drifting down though, but Nick doubts he’d say anything about that either. He won’t want to risk driving Nick away. It is not easy living with a parent, but at least he’s saving money. It was all he could do to stop himself screaming during supper when his dad kept asking him about work. Thank fuck for football, which got them through the rest of the meal.
He flops down on the bed, catching his reflection in the mirror on his way. He looks like death, all colour in his face washed out. He lays his laptop open on his chest and imagines the unearthly colour his skin is now with the light from the screen reflecting on it. A stoned sarcophagus of an unknown young man, arms holding his book of life. He announces his return to the world and is greeted with a torrent of hellos and welcome backs. Virtual strangers, virtual friends. He gets to them all in turn, pressing the flesh, gently wafting through their outstretched hands, desperate to touch him, eager for his attention. He graces them with his presence, glad to be back in the world of the living.
He hears his dad call goodnight and Nick echoes the word back, but he might as well have barked like a dog, the sound is meaningless. He is in midconversation and won’t be interrupted, his fingers chatting away, telling anyone who’s out there what he thinks, what he’s up to. And some of them try and tempt him out. Not far, just round the corner — a boarded-up heaven where they gather to hang out. A shithole of a place, but it’s fine once you shut your eyes and after a while you don’t notice the smell. Not something you’d want to make a habit of and he hasn’t. He’s only been a couple of times, creeping out of the house when his dad was asleep and making sure he was back in time for breakfast, beating his dad to the table already dressed for work, and even though he was too tired to speak, his dad understood. Nick’s never been good in the mornings.
Not tonight though, tonight he is content to stay at home. He has a message he has saved ’til last — a private message meant only for him, from a new friend. And for once the word has a ring of truth. He gives him his full attention — one to one, just the two of them. He’s only a kid and he looks up to Nick, hangs on his every word. How you doing? Nick asks and the friend can’t wait to tell him everything he’s been up to since their last chat.
They have a lot in common. More than you’d think given the age difference. Even a fucking book. He’s read the only book Nick’s picked up in years. Nick confessed he’d skipped to the end — hadn’t read the whole thing but, you know what? He has now. Fingered through the recommended chapters, the sexy stuff. Bit tame love: try some of this, and Nick’d sent him something hot — better than he’d read in a fucking book. Nick’s older, seen more of the world. Follow my lead — don’t go to university, fuck Bristol or Manchester — stay in Spain — the sun’s shining in Spain. He’s hungry for Nick’s advice and Nick has dished out plenty of it. Life’s too short to waste, he says. Like he can talk, but he does. Can’t stop himself — comes up with all sorts of things he’d never say out loud, never say to anyone else — and Jonathan listens to every word that drips off Nick’s fingers and asks for more, wants to know about the girls Nick’s fucked and his business plans and the year he spent travelling round the States. Jonathan laps it all up and listens and learns.
40. SUMMER 2013
I know all about what’s going on at home: she’s moved out and he’s on his own with dad, who’s not himself, poor man. My little delivery of books to her office seems to have unsettled things too. She is off sick, they told me when I phoned. They had no idea when she would be back. Hope it’s nothing serious, I said before I hung up.
My heart has become as hard as my toenails. There was a time when I might have felt something for that boy. Once I might have tried to help him. It’s touching how he’s opened up to me. My teaching days taught me to spot them a mile off: the boys with the black hole at their centre. They tried swaggering nonchalance to cover it up, pretending they didn’t care about anything, least of all the consequences of giving up on themselves. But I’m talking about adolescents. He’s not a boy, he’s twenty-five years old and however much he “bigs” himself up to my nineteen-year-old self with his dismal little fantasies of travelling round America and whatnot, he can’t hide his shivering, shrinking soul from a man with my experience.
He is desperate. Desperate to talk late into the night. He has other friends of course, but they’re as lost as he is. I’ve read their inane banter. And they don’t know him like I do. When I go offline, off he goes to meet them in the real world, his druggy little friends, and then back he comes the following night, tongue hanging out, slathering with anticipation of my arrival, waiting to impress me with his pathetic narcotic adventures. I think it’s time I started making him wait for me now — just ten minutes or so, keep him keen.
It didn’t take long for him to respond to my initial request — it was the photograph of his mother which got his attention. I told him I’d found it hidden in my house. Told him it had her name on the back. Told him I’d tracked him down and I think he liked that. I think it tickled him, the idea that someone had made the effort to seek him out. It was an innocent enough photo, his mother alone on a beach, but it’s given him food for thought. Let him ponder for a while whether we might be related. Did his mother have an affair? Did she have another child? Does he have a little half brother? Could it be me? And there are more pictures to come of course, but he’s not yet ready for those — they will need a health warning. Not that he gave me one when he sent me that filth. Still, I managed to fake my boy’s appreciation well and Jonathan is such an innocent it wasn’t hard to pretend he had never seen anything like that before.
He thinks I hang on his every word, and I do in a way. Poor sod — dribbling out his sorry tales to a boy six years his junior who has been dead for nearly twenty years. He may have opened his heart to Jonathan, but it is me who has marched in: me with Nancy’s voice ringing in my ears, her book of words whispering to me, the source material. And with her at my side, it won’t take much to nudge this feeble specimen to the brink. All I need do is feed his darkness and lead him to a point of no return then leave him there, teetering on the edge.