See If I Care (11 page)

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Authors: Judi Curtin

BOOK: See If I Care
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Helen brought her boyfriend home for tea, so he could meet the family.

His name was Sean. He had short, light brown hair and pale blue eyes and a thin face scattered with little red spots. He brought a small box of chocolates for Mam when he came to tea, and an apple tart that his mother had made. He shook hands with their father and called him sir, and he didn’t seem to notice that their father wasn’t really interested in talking.

He blushed if anyone spoke to him, even Anne. He cut into his fried egg with the side of his fork, instead of using his knife, and he ate every bit of his rasher, even the skin. But he had a nice smile, and when he
looked at Helen, his face went soppy.

He worked in the garage across the road from Helen’s school, and he lived at home with his parents and older brother. He was almost eighteen, and he was training to be a mechanic. When Luke mentioned his car washing jobs, Sean said he could probably get Luke a few more customers.

Nobody at all mentioned the baby, not even Anne.

Granny made custard to go with the apple tart, and they all had a slice. Mam told Sean that he must get the recipe for her, and he blushed and smiled, and would have knocked over his water glass if Anne hadn’t caught it just in time.

A whole month had gone by without Anne wetting the bed. Granny took her shopping one day for new socks, and they came home with three pairs of socks, a red dress and shiny red shoes. Mam laughed and said Granny would be broke from them.

The Saturday after Sean came to tea, Luke asked his uncle Jack if he had a camera.

‘I have, a digital one,’ Jack told him. ‘Got it for Christmas.’

‘Will you take my photo with Chestnut?’ Luke asked him. ‘I want to send it to a friend.’ So Jack got his camera and took a few photos of Luke sitting on Chestnut’s enormous back, and then he printed off
the best one and gave it to Luke.

‘Look,’ Luke told his father. ‘Here’s me on Uncle Jack’s horse.’

His father looked down at the photo. He touched Luke’s face gently in the photo. ‘Luke,’ he said. ‘Son and heir.’

He had mostly good days now, hardly ever sat facing the wall. Helen began reading bits of the paper to him when she came home from school, and Anne drew him pictures of cats and ballerinas and stuck them on the wall behind his bed.

And Mam was talking to him again. Luke heard her, in the bathroom when she was shaving him, or as she was helping him down the hall to the kitchen for tea. Luke heard her telling Dad how sweet Sean was, and how she was sure he’d stand by Helen, and how it looked like Anne was over the bed-wetting at last.

Dad didn’t answer her much, but Mam kept on talking to him. And on her evenings off from work, she’d sit beside Dad’s bed as he fell asleep, still talking softly. It was like she was telling him all the things that she’d saved up for the past three years.

On the day that Sean came to tea for the second time, Mam announced that she’d been promoted to branch manager in the travel agency, and now she could afford to give up doing the overtime in the
evenings. The next day Granny baked a coffee cake and Helen wrote
Congratulations
Mam
in purple icing when she came home from school, and Luke bought a bottle of sparkling grape juice, and they all drank a toast to Mam’s promotion.

That night, Luke sat down to write to his penfriend. He wrote her address and stuck on his upside-down stamp, and then he folded up the photo of him and Chestnut and slid it into the envelope.

It was time to tell the truth. He sucked the end of his biro for a few minutes, and then he started his letter. And as he wrote, he felt something changing inside him, some heaviness falling away and leaving him with a feeling he couldn’t name …

… and as he got to the end of the letter, he decided it just might be happiness.

Dear Saffron,

I called you penfriend because I thought if I didn’t use your real name, then I wouldn’t be writing a real letter to a real person. I thought that it wouldn’t matter what I wrote, that I could make up the craziest stories, and it wouldn’t make one tiny bit of difference. It wouldn’t be like telling fibs, or lies, because it was all
imaginary. You were just part of my homework, that was all – nothing to do with real life. And if I called you penfriend, it made it easier to go on believing that.

Does any of that make sense? I hope so, because for the first time I’m writing the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. This is the real story of Luke Mitchell, whether you want it or not.

I already told you that I made up the bit about climbing the Pyrenees with my dad. The truth is, for the past three and a half years, my dad hasn’t been able to climb the stairs in our house. He sleeps in what used to be our dining room, and he has to use a walking frame, like old people use, to help him get around the downstairs.

He never goes out, except when my mam takes him for check-ups to the hospital, or when my uncle Jack, his brother, brings him out to the farm for a visit. He can’t cut up food, or shave himself or even do a jigsaw properly.

The reason why my dad is like this is that he drove through a red traffic light and crashed into a jeep, and
damaged his brain. I was in the car with him, but the only bad thing that happened to me was that I swallowed my two front teeth. (I have false ones now, that look just like the real thing.)

My mam was mad with my dad for a long time afterwards, because he drank two glasses of wine before he drove, and because I wasn’t wearing my seat belt. (She was always very strict about wearing seat belts.) She didn’t talk to my dad when he came home from hospital, even though she had to shave him and help him eat and lots of stuff like that.

Our house felt terrible, with Dad being the way he was, and Mam being mad at him. My sister Anne started wetting the bed, even though she was four at the time. My sister Helen (who isn’t a model, just a schoolgirl) started staying out late and not telling us where she was going, and that caused a lot of rows with my mam.

Our granny moved in with us after Dad’s accident, to help out, but she was often stuck in the middle of some row, and I was always afraid she’d go back to her
own house, but she never did.

We don’t live in a big fancy house. We live in a cul de sac, in a normal semi-detached house with four bedrooms, and we don’t own any horses. The picture I’m sending you is of me on Uncle Jack’s horse, Chestnut, which is the only horse I know. Chestnut never won a race in his life – he’s a big farm horse who’d probably run the wrong way. But I ride him around Uncle Jack’s field every Saturday, and I feed him apples.

You can see from the photo that I don’t look a bit like I described myself. And in case you can’t see clearly, I haven’t anything pierced, or any tattoos either – I’m pretty sure Mam would kill me if I ever did anything like that.

The good news is that things have got a bit better lately. Everyone seems kind of happier. I’m not sure why, but I think in a funny sort of way, it has something to do with Helen having a baby, even though she’s not married and only sixteen. But since she told us the news, she and Mam have stopped having rows, and Mam has started talking to Dad again. And Anne has
stopped wetting the bed all the time.

My dad will never get better, and that makes me a bit sad, because I miss him a lot, all the time. You can’t talk properly to him any more, because he doesn’t really understand a lot of what you say. But most of the time now he seems quite happy, and that cheers me up too.

So now you know all my terrible secrets. I hope you’re not too shocked, and I hope we can keep in touch. It’s nice to have someone to talk to. Sorry this letter is so long.

 

Your penfriend,

Luke

 

PS I think the name Elma is OK. If I could pick a name for myself I’d go for Sam. I think it’s nice and friendly.

The next few weeks went by slowly. Mum seemed to be getting used to being at home in the afternoons, and wasn’t so jumpy. Sometimes she sat down and read a magazine, or phoned a friend for a chat. Sometimes she even looked happy.

Dad still watched TV a lot, but now it was called ‘
research for the UK finals
’, and it didn’t seem like such a waste of time. Also, he got dressed properly every day now, and most days he took Snowball for a walk, or took the boys to the park to play football. One day he went to the supermarket with Elma, and they bumped into Tara. Next day Tara said that Elma’s dad seemed ‘really nice,’ and Elma floated around on a little puffy cloud of happiness all day long.

Then, just when Elma thought she was going to die from eating her mum’s cooking, there was some really, really great news. The school got a grant to pay for a cookery course for one of the dinner ladies. Mum was picked (Elma could guess why), so there was real hope that in a few months they might even be eating food that tasted like food. And maybe, just maybe, soon she could invite Tara home without feeling she was risking her friend’s life.

The day of the geography quiz final was wet and windy. Everyone got soaked on the way to the railway station, and shivered most of the way to London. Dad did his best to cheer them all up, but Elma couldn’t help feeling that the day had started out badly, and was sure to continue in the same way.

The train ran late, and they got to the BBC just on time. Dad was whisked away, and Mum, Elma and the boys were led into a small room. There was a table with tea, coffee, and heaps of yummy-looking cakes. Mum drank litres of black coffee, and the boys ate most of the cakes, but Elma couldn’t touch anything. She was so nervous she felt like she was going to throw up. She was so proud about Dad winning the regional final that she’d boasted to the whole school about it. So now everyone was going to be listening. If Dad did badly, she would never, ever
hear the end of it.

Once again, there was a radio in the waiting room, and after ages, the quiz began. It was just like the regional final, with five contestants, and five rounds of buzzer questions.

The questions were very fast and it was hard to tell who was winning, but at the end of the first round, the scores were almost level, with Dad in joint second place.

At the end of round two, Dad was in second place on his own. Zac and Dylan did a little victory dance, scattering cake crumbs all over the carpet.

After round three, Dad had slipped into third place. Elma felt like crying.

Was Dad going to fall to pieces?

If he did, what would happen to them all?

There was a short break, and soft classical music began to play. Even Zac and Dylan were quiet, sitting pale-faced on a huge red leather sofa. Mum had her hands over her mouth, and her eyes looked tired and scared.

All of a sudden, Elma felt like walking away from the room, away from the BBC, away from her family. The whole quiz thing had been an impossible dream. How could she have thought that her dad could win a national quiz? She’d learned at school that there
were almost sixty million people in the UK. How could Elma have thought that her dad could be better at geography than the other fifty-nine million and however many hundreds of thousands were left?

Just then, the music stopped, and round four began. Elma held her breath. Dad seemed to be doing OK. He was buzzing quite often, and never getting any questions wrong. At the end of the round, he was back in second place.

As the fifth and final round began, Elma laced her fingers together, and squeezed tightly until her fingertips began to turn white. She glanced at her mum, who seemed to be praying. The round seemed to be progressing in s-l-o-w m—o—t—i—o—n. It was almost as if the world had suddenly decided to turn at a more leisurely pace, just because Elma’s dad was in the last round of the BBC geography quiz.

Elma stopped listening to the questions. There was a strange kind of buzzing in her ears, as if her brain had decided she couldn’t listen any more. Soon Mum grabbed her arm. ‘It’s over,’ she whispered. ‘That was the last question.’

Elma felt like she was waking from a long sleep. ‘And???’

Mum shook her head. ‘I don’t know. I lost count of the questions.’

The quiz presenter’s voice interrupted. ‘Well, that was a very interesting round, and at the end this is how things stand …’

There was along silence. Elma felt like screaming. She wished she could run into the studio, find the presenter and shake him to make him call out the results quickly.

Finally the presenter continued, ‘In fifth place … Laura Wilson.’ There was the sound of clapping from the other contestants. Elma wondered if Dad was clapping with the others. She wondered how he felt. Did he know who had won?

Was he glad he hadn’t come last?

Was he glad he was here?

Or did he wish he was at home, lying on the couch, listening to Snowball snarling in the yard?

The presenter interrupted her thoughts. ‘In fourth place … James Dowling.’ There was more polite clapping. Elma supposed that James Dowling wasn’t clapping. Was he very upset because he’d come second last? Was he picking up his coat and getting ready to leave?

‘In third place … Amrita Sharma.’

Elma breathed again. Dad was first or second. She told herself either would be good, but in her heart she was fairly sure that second place wasn’t good
enough at all. First place would take the winner to Paris, for a big European competition. The person who came second would go back home with nothing but their tattered dreams and a souvenir mug.

This time the silence was so long that Elma began to wonder if the presenter had packed up his microphone and gone home. At last he spoke again. ‘And now we have an interesting situation. It’s a dead heat between Michael Davey and June Worth.’

Zac and Dylan began to jump up and down, screaming loudly. After a moment Dylan stopped. ‘What does that mean, Mum? Does it mean Dad won? Is he the champion? Is he going to Paris?’

Mum put her arm around him. ‘Shh, love. Listen and we’ll know.’

The presenter spoke again. ‘I’d like to congratulate all five contestants on an excellent competition. I have to say that the standard has been particularly high this year. Over the past few months …’

Elma stamped her foot impatiently. ‘Get on with it,’ she muttered. ‘Tell us what happens next.’

Finally the presenter got to the point. ‘As we have two contestants with equal scores, we go to a sudden death.’

Zac went pale. ‘That doesn’t sound very nice.’

Elma had to laugh, but stopped quickly as the
presenter continued. ‘I’ll ask one question, and the first to buzz gets to answer. If he or she gets it wrong, I pass to the other contestant. Now, Michael, June, are you both ready?’

June’s ‘yes’ was loud and clear. Dad’s sounded like Snowball when he was having nightmares.

‘And the deciding question is: In which country is the volcano Popocatepetl?’

There was another long silence. Elma jumped when the silence was broken by the shrill sound of a buzzer. The presenter spoke. ‘And that was June. Your answer please.’

Elma began to chant in her head:
Get it wrong, get it wrong, please get it wrong
.

But June didn’t get it wrong. She spoke loudly and clearly. ‘Popocatepetl is in Mexico.’

‘And we have a winner! Well done, June. You are this year’s National Geography quiz winner. Well done to Michael Davey, a valiant contestant, in second place.’

There was more clapping. Elma could hear June Worth’s gasps of disbelief. She wondered if all the other contestants hated her for winning the prize they so desperately wanted for themselves? Did Dad hate her? Elma certainly did. She hated June Worth even more than she hated Evil Josh. She hated June
Worth (whom she’d never even met) more than she had ever hated anyone in her entire life. June Worth had ruined everything.

Much later, Dad came back to the waiting area. He was smiling, but he looked like he really wanted to cry. Everyone hugged him, and tried to laugh when Zac said, ‘I thought you were the best, Dad.’

The journey back to Manchester was a sad, quiet affair. Every now and then Dad broke the silence by saying, ‘I knew it. I knew the answer.’

No one argued with him, but secretly Elma wondered if he was just pretending. Then, just as the train drew into the station, Dad spoke again. ‘I knew it was in Mexico. I saw a programme about it last year. The name Popocatepetl means ‘smoking mountain’. It was named by the Aztecs. It’s near the city of Puebla. It’s–’

Elma interrupted him. ‘If you knew all that, why didn’t you buzz?’

Dad sighed. ‘I don’t know, love. I knew the answer, and thought, now I just press the button, and then I looked at my finger, and I hesitated, and before I could move, the other woman buzzed, and it was all over.’

Elma didn’t know what to say. Dad was right – it was all over.

There was no celebration dinner that night. Mum
just served up the usual mush.

In the morning, Dad wasn’t up when everyone else left for school. Elma felt sure that it was back to the same old routine. Dad in front of the TV, avoiding his family, avoiding life.

School was OK. Evil Josh tried to tease Elma about her dad being a loser, but no one listened. One of the other boys pushed him away. Everyone crowded around Elma, and asked about her dad, and seemed to think that second place in the UK was a good result. And second place
was
a good result; it just wasn’t quite good enough. If Dad could have got through to the European competition, the dream could have lived for just a bit longer. And without the dream, life would slip back to the way it used to be.

When she arrived home after school with Mum and the boys, Elma expected to see Dad lying on the couch, watching TV. The house was quiet, though, and it was unusually clean and tidy. Dad was sitting at the kitchen table with a bundle of books. There was a huge grin on his face.

Elma was afraid to ask what he was so happy about.

Luckily, Zac wasn’t as cautious as Elma. ‘What’s going on, Dad?’ he asked.

Dad grinned. ‘What do you mean?’

Zac thought for a minute, then he rubbed his dad’s chin. ‘You’ve shaved. And the house is clean, and–’

Dylan continued. ‘–and the TV isn’t on.’

Dad grinned again. ‘No time for TV. I’m too busy now.’

Mum sat down and looked at Dad in disbelief. ‘Too busy doing what?’

Dad grinned again. This was getting annoying. Elma felt like punching him, but hit the table instead. ‘Just tell us, Dad. What’s happened.’

‘I’m going back to work.’

Now everyone else grinned, and blurted out their questions. ‘Where?’ ‘How?’ ‘Why?’ ‘When?’ ‘Doing what?’

So Dad sat them down and explained that he’d gone to the job centre that morning. There he spoke to a job counselor, and he’d done an interview, and he was going to do a trial placement in the Animal Welfare centre. If it worked out, he could do a training course to be a vet’s assistant. The placement started tomorrow, so would everyone please stop asking questions because he needed some peace and quiet to read up all the books he’d brought home.

After all the excitement had died down, Elma went to sit by her mum. ‘Can I invite Tara over after school tomorrow?’

Mum smiled at her. ‘Of course you can. Now, run upstairs and do your homework. I’ll call you when dinner is ready. It’s roast chicken.’

And Elma was so happy, even the thought of dinner couldn’t spoil it.

In her bedroom, she pulled out the letter she’d got from Luke that morning. First she took out the photograph. He looked nice – kind of normal. He looked happy, too, sitting there on that huge old farmhorse. But hadn’t he said before that he had black hair with blue tips? All along she’d been picturing someone else. She’d been writing lies to someone who didn’t look a bit like this nice Irish boy.

She opened the letter and read through it one more time. All of a sudden, she felt guilty because her problems had all sorted themselves out. How pathetic she had been – upset because Dad had been injured by a toilet. And anyway, Dad was better now, not like Luke’s dad, who was never going to recover. Poor Luke. No wonder he told as many lies as she had. Maybe telling the truth is only easy when you are happy.

She ran downstairs. ‘Dad,’ she said.

Dad looked up from his reading.

‘Yes, love. What is it?’

‘You know that mug you won, the BBC one?’

Dad nodded. ‘What about it?’

‘How badly do you want to keep it?’

Dad shrugged. ‘I don’t know. It’s nice, but it’s only a mug, I suppose. Why?’

Elma sat down beside him. ‘Well, there’s this boy, Luke. He’s my penfriend. He’s the one who gave me the idea about the geography quiz. And I’d like to send him something. So can I send him the mug?’

Dad smiled at her. ‘Yes, I suppose you can. I’ll get you some bubble-wrap later, so you can post it safely.’

Elma went to the shelf and took down the mug. As she left the kitchen, Dad called her back.

‘That’s very kind of you, Elma,’ he said. ‘This Luke is lucky to have a nice penfriend like you.’

Elma ran upstairs and tried not to think how not nice she had been to Luke in the beginning.

She took out her pen and paper and started to write.

Dear Sam,

I am so so so so sorry for your dad. It must be awful for you. My dad was bad, but he wasn’t as bad as all that. And he’s better already. Your suggestion about the quiz is what changed
him. It kind of woke him up, if you know what you mean. You see, his back injury was better, but his mind seemed to have gone to sleep. He didn’t win the geography quiz final, by the way. He came second. It doesn’t matter, though. He’s going back to work tomorrow, and we are all very happy about that.

I hope you like the mug I’m sending you. It’s the one Dad got for being in the finals. I think you deserve it, because you gave me the idea of the quiz to start with. You can show it to your dad.

Tara says I should be cross with you for telling me so many lies. (But that’s only because she doesn’t know how many lies I’ve told you.) I probably can’t remember them all, but these are the ones I can remember:

1. Dad didn’t get hurt saving a little girl. He was unloading a lorry, and a toilet fell on him and injured his back. I think you can guess why I didn’t tell the truth about that.

2. I don’t have a little sister called Jessica. I just wish I did. I do have two little brothers, though. They’re called Zac and Dylan. And they’re quite nice (for boys).

3. Snowball isn’t a cute furry cat. He’s a huge, ugly, mean-tempered Alsatian with bad breath and wiry hair.

4. My mum is probably the worst cook in the world, and she
doesn’t work in a fancy restaurant – she’s a dinner lady at my school.

So that’s it. They’re the biggest lies. I think I made up stuff because I didn’t like the truth.

It’s nearly summer holidays here, and next year I’m going to a new school. I’d like to promise to write to you, but soon it won’t be my homework any more, and I’m a bit lazy, so please try to understand if I don’t write.

If I do write to you, I’m going to put my stamp on upside down. I’m always going to do that from now on. So even in fifty years time, if you get a letter with an upside-down stamp, you’ll know it’s from me.

I hope Helen has a lovely baby. (If it’s a girl she might have long blonde hair and you could call her Jessica.)

 

I hope you have a nice life.

Your

Saffron (Elma)

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