Authors: C. J. Skuse
Zoe sipped her water like the answer to this was at the bottom of her glass. âResearch has shown that monkeys and dogs that have undergone partial body transplants can be completely retrained. In essence, their memories have been wiped. Wild dogs became controllable. Good dogs became wild, etcetera.'
âSo he might really love me?' I said.
âAnything is possible, Camille. My father was making
inroads in all of these areas and applying the electromagnetic principles when he was so cruelly snatched away from his research. So now it's up to me. With your help of course.'
âCool beanies,' I said, âmy very own boyfriend. My sexy dead boyfriend.' I stuffed another chip into my already full mouth â a curry sauce-flavoured one â and it was heaven.
Some boys came in and sat at a table opposite, making such a noise I could barely hear what Zoe was saying. They ordered bacon sandwiches and Cokes. Two of the boys with spotty skin and greasy spiky hair were sitting with their legs wide open and their feet flat on the floor, leaning back in their seats and leering at us.
âBut
how
are you going to do it?' I said, trying to ignore them. âI just don't understand how it's possâ' I started to say, as Zoe swept aside my condiments and lay her notebook down before my plate.
âSo, what do we have on our shopping list? A genius brain, a model face, a superlative body with organs in peak physical fitness,' she said, pointing to the little pictures on her boy diagram. âWe find the body, we find the head,' she said, circling the body and head sections, âwe stitch the head to the body. I source the brain,' she drew an arrow where the brain was going to go, inside the head, âthen we inject the serum here, here, here, here and here,' more arrows, âinto the peroneal, femoral, carotid, radial and vertebral arteries, which should regenerate the structural tissue and begin to repair blood vessels and musculature. Once the serum is injected, then we can think about galvanism.'
âGalvanism?' I said.
âYes.' She turned the notebook back to face her. âWe will need to apply pulses of electrical current to his body in order to cause muscle contraction. Once we apply the charge and get the heart beating, it'll just be a matter of waiting for his eyes to open.' She stared at the boys at the opposite table who were sharing pictures of something on their phones and laughing.
Hur hur hur.
âAnd you won't have to kiss any more frogs.'
âI
shall
go to the ball,' I said.
âYes,' said Zoe, slamming her book shut, âI'm certain you shall.'
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I
didn't hear anything from Zoe for days and college sucked without her. There were no body part news flashes, no
How about this for a square jaw?
updates, nothing. So I tried to keep myself busy in the meantime and not think about what was probably going to be the most wondrous thing ever: my brand-new sexy dead boyfriend.
Pee Wee was still Secret Pee Wee at home as I still hadn't worked out quite how to break the news to my mum and dad. Luckily, our house was three storeys and my bedroom was on the third floor, and Mum only ever went up there for washing and Dad only went up there if something needed mending, so it wasn't too difficult.
On Thursday I had to explain to my tutor, Jill Price,
why I had to bring Pee Wee into classes with me. I told her I was like the weird girl, Amanda Stones In Her Hair who'd been in my Sociology class. She was one of the âspecial cases' who was allowed a canine companion to stop her having tantrums. I said Pee Wee had been given to me by a children's charity. Amazingly, she bought my lies, and even brought in a biscuit for Peeps next time I saw her.
But on Thursday night, there was a knock on our front door and it was Zoe. I was so excited to see her I wanted to hug her, but I stopped myself.
âYour mother used to do nail art,' were her first words to me.
âUh, yeah,' I said, biting back my smile as best I could. âWhere have you been? You haven't phoned . . .'
âYou said she had a van; a van for her nail art,' said Zoe. âI presume to transport her table and assortment of polishes.'
âYeah.' I couldn't remember telling Zoe about it but clearly I had and she'd remembered.
âDoes she still have the van?'
âYeah. It's in the garage.'
âWe need to borrow it. Go and get the keys. I can drive.'
âBut . . .'
âThere are six garages around the corner. I'm surmising one of them belongs to your family?'
âUh, yeah . . .'
âI'll meet you there in three minutes.'
âBut . . . it won't have any petrol in it. And what about Pee Wee? I can't leave him here; if Mum finds him she'll chuck him out . . .'
âWe can get petrol first and then we'll drop the dog off at my house on the way. Bring your purse. Come along,' she said and disappeared around the corner like a puff of smoke.
Zoe had found the perfect body, that's what all the mystery was about. So by half past nine that night, we were sitting in my mum's nail art van, in the archway opposite the funeral parlour, waiting for a good moment to break in. Our local paper,
The Herald
, lay on Zoe's lap, folded open at the obituaries page. In the middle, dead centre, there was an advert for
Burnett & Sons
and it showed four men â one old and fat, one black-haired and fat, one black-haired and moustached, and one young, shaggy-haired and square-jawed (Louis Burnett) â and they were standing in front of a black hearse, wearing black suits. The ad read: â
BURNETT & SONS: Hoydon's Bracht's most professional budget funeral service.'
I switched on the overhead light so I could read it over her shoulder. She turned over the page to a news story with the heading
â
LIFEGUARD KILLED IN FREAK POOL ACCIDENT
'. There was a large picture of a half-naked young man with floppy brown hair wearing dark glasses. He was smiling and flexing his bicep.
âThat's our body,' she announced.
â
Well-respected Hoydon's Bracht lifeguard Luke Truss died last Saturday evening following a fall at the town pool
,' I read. âOh my God, I knew him!'
âYou did?' said Zoe.
âYeah! He was one of the lifeguards at the pool.'
âEvidently . . .'
âMe and Lynx and Poppy used to go down there during the summer and full-on flirt with him chronically.' I carried on reading.
The nineteen-year-old is thought to have slipped on a novelty Snot Monster called Big Greeny in the children's changing area at around 9.00 p.m. last Saturday night. It is thought he banged the back of his head on the floor. A cleaner discovered him later that evening and an ambulance was called. He was declared dead on arrival at Bracht General Hospital. There have been calls to ban the sale of Snot Monsters as well as all other slime-based toys. His funeral will be held on Friday 10 October.
âThat's tomorrow. He looks smarmy in that photo though, doesn't he? Bit like a paedo.'
âHmm. A paedo in Speedos,' Zoe mumbled, setting the paper to one side.
âDo we really want a paedo's body for our project?' I asked, gently touching the end of my nose. It was still really painful to touch and a bit crunchy too but I kind of liked the sound.
âHe's not really a paedophile, is he?' said Zoe. âAnd anyway, his personality is immaterial. We just want his body. We won't be using his head or brain.'
âWhy not?' I said. âHe was good-looking.'
âIt's not that,' said Zoe. âHis brain isn't good enough. And his face is local. People know him around here. The head will have to come from much further afield. Like a wise man once said, the main function of the body is to carry around the brain.
That's
the most important part. And that's all we will need Luke Truss to be. The carrying
tool. The body to carry around our perfect brain. Don't worry, I have everything in hand.'
âThe body that I will walk into the Halloween party with, looking all gorge and making everyone hella jelly belly,' I said.
âQuite,' said Zoe, looking at me oddly. She rubbed a patch of steam on the windscreen and peered through.
âDo you think the coast is clear yet?' I said, wiping my side of the windscreen.
âThere they go,' she said suddenly, pointing to some figures coming out of the side door of the funeral directors.
âThat's Louis,' I said, wiping away the steam again. He was wearing a suit and tie. Another figure came out behind him: an older man with a black moustache. âThat must be his dad,' I said as the rain pitter-pattered on the van roof.
Zoe flicked on the air conditioning to clear our steam. Neither of us made a sound. After about twenty seconds I whispered, âI think they've gone.'
âRight,' said Zoe, pocketing the van keys.
âAre we going in then?' I said.
âI'm going in first,' she said, pulling the door handle and stepping out. She reached across and held out her hand for one of the sacks of potatoes at my feet. She heaved it out and placed it on the ground. âYou count to a hundred, grab the other sack and follow me in. I've got the torch.'
âWhat? We're not going in together?'
Zoe shut the driver's door. I could feel my heart beating then, when it was just me alone in the van, and I could
see Zoe walking across the road with the massive bag of potatoes weighing her down. I didn't even know why we'd had to bring two sacks of potatoes; she'd just said it was dead important that we did. The rain fell harder on the windscreen, and I couldn't see her any more.
âOne, two, three, four, five . . .'
At one hundred, I clicked open the door and stepped out.
I could see Zoe's torchlight flickering inside as I approached the side door. My hand was on the handle. It wouldn't move. How on earth had Zoe got in, I wondered? A top-opening window was ajar. I set down the potatoes and tiptoed over to where the bins were, moving one underneath and climbing on top. I was just hooking my leg up over the top of the window when a voice stopped me in my tracks.
âOI! WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING?'
âAaaaarrrggghhh!' I cried, banging my head on the open window. I turned to the voice, one leg in and one leg out.
Louis Burnett was standing below me, his hair soaking in the rain.
âCamille?' he said and sort of laughed. âI thought someone was breaking in.'
And out of nowhere, I started proper bawling. Like when I was little and Dad caught me in my Cook ân' Learn Kitchen making soup with his seventy-year-old Scotch. It was a complete reflex, designed to stop Dad from going ballistic. And amazingly, it also worked on Louis.
âAaaaargh haaaa haaa haaaaa,' I went, full on proper tears and everything.
Louis looked completely shocked. âOh God. Are you okay?'
I shook my head. âAaaaargh aaaargh!' I wailed, on and on.
âIt's okay, I'm sorry. I'm so sorry.'
âI . . . I . . . I'm . . .' I said, between huffs. âI just . . .' I didn't really know what to say. He'd caught me cocked-leg, trying to get into his family's funeral parlour and I had no excuse. Luckily, I didn't need one.
âThe office is closed now. Did you want to view someone?'
I still didn't know what to say, so I nodded. Of course, yes, there was a dead person inside who I was upset about. That would do it.
âI just . . . came into town . . . to p-pick up some potatoes for . . . tea.' He took my hand as I stepped down off the bin and I showed him the massive bag of potatoes. He nodded. âAnd I thought . . . I'd come and see . . . him.'
He smiled but looked totally what-the-hell at the same time. âOh. I'm sorry. Who was it you wanted to see?'
I sniffled a bit, and dabbed my eye at the corner, like my mascara was going to run. I wasn't even wearing mascara. âL-L-L-Luke,' I stammered.
âOh, Luke Truss, yeah? Was he your relative? Your boyfriend or . . . ?'
I nodded. âBoyfriend.'
This was quick thinking. I could get away with saying he was my boyfriend, because there'd be no record of this anywhere, whereas if I'd said brother or cousin or something, this could be traced. Boyfriend definitely seemed the way to go.
âI loved him so mu-huh-huch!' I started crying again and going all shivery like in films when the woman's crying in the rain and the man wipes the hair from her face. I was quite a brilliant actress when I put my mind to it.
Louis didn't wipe the hair from my face. I'd hoped he might hug me, but he didn't do that either. He just stood there, fiddling with his friendship bracelets up his jacket sleeve. He didn't look right in a suit. A bit like a homeless person who'd won a night at the opera.
âGod, I had no idea. I can't really let you in though,' he said. âI've only come back to get my phone. I left it in the office. I'm supposed to be at Fat Pang's. He gestured towards the restaurant almost dead opposite and its smiling fat Chinese man welcome sign. âIt's my mum's birthday. I don't even eat fish but she really likes it there. Dame's there too. He fancies my cousin Madison . . .'