âYou're looking a bit wistful,' Lin said. âAre you all right?'
âFine. I was just thinking about . . . about Saturday night.'
âI understand.' Lin squeezed my hand. âThe biological clock's got a lot of tick left in it, Cookie. You'll have kids one day. I know you will.'
My mouth dropped open.
âIn the meantime,' Lin concluded, âit would be wonderful if you could develop a relationship with mine. I'd love that.'
âAbsolutely,' said Georgie.
I didn't look forward to Saturday evening with a sinking heart, principally because I didn't look forward to it at all. It crept up on me like an end-of-term exam which you have convinced yourself can't possibly be as bad as you feared. Granted you've done no preparation, let alone revision, you missed the lectures and you know bugger-all about the subject, but a little common sense will get you through. Children, I told myself, were just adults in the larval stage. The knack was to treat them as such. (I tried not to think about my nephew and niece, Raphael and Hermione, who definitely belong to another species.) Besides, any children with Lin's genes were bound to be basically decent. Of course, the twins also had Sean's genes, and Meredith had Garry Grimes' genes, but . . . I abandoned that train of thought as discouraging, called Georgie on her mobile to synchronise watches, and set off for the rendezvous point.
Despite being close friends with Lin, we had seen little of the kids. They were all bigger than we remembered, especially the boys. Sandy was â well, sandy, with a collection of freckles that should have been endearing but weren't and a taciturn manner which would have defeated a professional interrogator. I was not at all surprised he had been in trouble for bullying and felt he needed only a can and a couple of tattoos to turn him into a lager-lout. (He later showed us a tattoo on his arm, but it transpired he had done it himself with indelible ink.) Demmy was dark-haired and sallow, slighter in build than his brother, the taciturnity here mutated into swift sulks and occasional smiles where the ghost of Sean's charm danced unawares. Probing questions revealed that Sandy despised Harry Potter (âkids' stuff') but Demmy thought well of Pullman, Sandy grudgingly admitted to liking pizza, Demmy preferred pasta, both had PlayStations and skateboards, played football and/or rugger, supported Manchester United, Arsenal, and, failing that, any other British team, and seemed to have no ambitions beyond the soccer field. This information was elicited with some difficulty while Lin rushed around doing last-minute things to her face. When she finally appeared, mascara'd, lipsticked, and jacketed, Georgie asked: âWhere's Meredith?'
âIn her room,' Lin said, trying not to look anxious, and failing. âShe'll be down in a minute. I bought you this.' She thrust a bottle of wine into my hands. âI'm sure they'll be fine. Do I look okay?'
âFine,' we said in chorus.
âTake care of them, boys. Try to remember your manners. Is that the taxi?'
It was. We pushed her through the door with a last âgood luck' and turned back to the bottle of wine, which was clearly all that stood between us and tedium. Or so we hoped.
Meredith still didn't appear, and the boys immersed themselves in a DVD in which a supernatural villain specialised in lopping off the heads of random victims, evidently in order to replace his own, which had gone missing some time previously. (Why he needed so many was not clear: he'd only lost the one.) At one stage, Sandy remarked sapiently of one of the female roles: âShe done it.'
âShe can't have,' I said, lured into dispute against my better judgement. âIt's a ghost story. The ghost done it.'
âShe done it,' Sandy repeated obstinately.
âHow d'you work that out?' asked Georgie.
âShe's that actress who always plays the villainess. I've seen her in lots of things. Of course she done it.'
âBut she's just been killed herself!' I objected.
âIt's a fix. She done it.'
(Amazingly, he was perfectly right.)
âI'm hungry,' said Demmy. âCan we have supper now?'
We reheated chicken nuggets as per instructions. Sandy demanded pizza. âThere isn't any,' said Georgie.
âYes there is,' he said. âIn the fridge. I don't like chicken. I told you: Mum always has pizza for me.'
âPerhaps you'd like something different too,' Georgie said sarcastically, turning to Demmy.
âYes please. There's pasta in the cupboard.'
I grinned, left her to it, and went upstairs to locate Meredith. Like a fool, I thought that was the soft job. When my tap on her door produced no answer, I opened it slowly and went in.
It was clear that at some time in the remote past the room had been decorated to suit the supposed tastes of a little girl: butter-yellow walls, curtains patterned with sunflowers, pale blue carpet. But the walls were smothered in posters, not S-Club 7 or Gareth Gates but an assortment of far from cuddly monsters, an old-fashioned Dracula,
Lord of the Rings
, and prints of Max Ernst, Escher, and Warhol's Coke bottles. Clothes, books, and CDs littered the floor; in the middle there was a mock-bearskin rug with pink furry mouth agape and an array of white furry teeth. It was wearing sunglasses. Meredith herself sat at a desk watching something on her PC. There were earphones clamped to her head connected to a Walkman on her lap, and a carton of ice cream, nearly empty, beside the keyboard. When she turned round my worst fears were realised (not for the last time, except the truth was to prove worse than my worst fears). A smudge darkened her cheek and a pale green moustache rimmed her upper lip. It was mint-choc-chip. She studied me with a jet-black gaze that was completely impenetrable.
âHi,' I said. âI'm Cookie.'
No response. Presently, by gesture, I got her to remove the earphones, though I was perfectly sure she could hear me even with them on.
âWhy Cookie?' she asked. âBecause you eat so many biscuits?'
So much for my diet. âNo,' I responded, suppressing infanticidal urges. âMy surname's Cook. That's why they call me Cookie. Should I call you Merry?'
âNot if you want to live,' she said, deadpan. Meredith, it was plain, was good at deadpan. She had her father's monkey face without the humour, squashed under an unnaturally domed forehead, the small features set into tight little lines. Her hair was braided against her scalp and twisted into curious-shaped nodules on either side, like the head-pieces on a cartoon robot. Her eyes were so black it was impossible to distinguish iris from pupil: they looked like little round holes into nothingness. Most nine-year-old girls have some spurious charm â the bloom of childhood and all that â but Meredith Grimes appeared uniquely and determinedly charmless. Her monkey-face was at once unreadable and alarmingly intelligent.
âYou shouldn't be eating mint-choc-chip,' I said, picking up the ice-cream carton. There was clearly no point in trying to make friends. âYour mummy says it disagrees with you.'
âDoes she?' Meredith said. âI like it.'
âWould you like to come downstairs and have some chicken?'
Rather to my surprise, she got up, discarding the Walkman and switching off the computer. As it went into shutdown mode, I caught a quick glimpse of the vanishing picture. âThat was a porn site!' I gasped in horror.
âI know.'
âYou shouldn't be watching that stuff. You're
nine
. You shouldn't be able to log on to those sites.'
âOh, it isn't for me. I was checking it out for the twins. I'm better with computers than they are: I know how to bypass the anti-child system. I don't like porn much, it's boring. I don't think they do either really, they just watch it so they can talk about it to impress their friends. They pay me to get past the censorship device. They get more pocket money than me, 'cos they're older. Grandma Vee gives them money too.'
âDoes your mother know?' I found myself asking, mesmerised.
âOf course not.' She gave me what, in another child, would have been a winning smile. âDon't tell her, will you?'
âWhy not?' I rallied.
The smile faded to a black glare, latent with menace, but she said nothing. She didn't need to. Her expression said it all.
Downstairs, she ate her way through most of the chicken while the supernatural villain bagged a few more heads. âI don't think we should let her watch this,' Georgie hissed,
sotto voce
.
âIt's better than what she was watching in her room,' I replied, out of the corner of my mouth. This is what children do to you. I had never spoken out of the corner of my mouth in my life â for one thing, it's extremely difficult â but five minutes with Meredith had turned me into a mutterer of furtive asides.
âIt might give her nightmares.'
âChance would be a fine thing.'
âI beg your pardon?'
When both the chicken and the head collection were finished, the boys switched to a sports channel showing something which, from the massive padding and frequent bouts of inactivity, appeared to be American football. âI don't get this game at all,' I remarked. Astonishingly, Meredith proceeded to give me a comprehensive explanation that left me none the wiser, but impressed. âDo you enjoy it?' I asked her.
âNot really: it's very slow. I don't like any sport much.'
âBut you understand it?'
This time, all I got was a sort of shrug. Understanding things, evidently, came naturally and meant nothing.
âWhat kind of games do you like?' I persisted.
âChess. Bridge. World Domination.'
âI play chess,' I volunteered bravely.
âAre you any good?'
My turn to shrug.
âI play on the Internet with a man in New Zealand. He's a maths professor. I've won our last two games.' So much for that.
Georgie, who had been distracted by the array of muscular male buttocks on screen, remarked: âI think we need the wine now,' and went into the kitchen.
âDo you want to see my party piece?' Meredith said unexpectedly.
I couldn't imagine her having a party piece, and for a few seconds my stare must have been as blank as hers. âAll right,' I said.
I should have been warned by the way the twins lost interest in the TV and turned to look at me. Meredith stood up, facing the armchair where I was sitting. Her eyes squeezed shut and an expression of intense concentration convulsed her features. She pressed her hands to her stomach, which made a horrible glooping noise. âAre you okay?' I demanded in idiotic concern.
The jet of vomit â pale green with chicken lumps â caught me full in the chest, dousing my sweater, bra, breasts. I must have screamed, because Georgie came rushing in, a half-corked wine bottle in one hand. âMy God!' she gasped. â
Cookie
!' And, to Meredith: âYou poor childâ'
Meredith was panting slightly, possibly with triumph. âMy party piece,' she announced.
âYour
what
?' said Georgie.
âHer party piece.' The vomit was starting to ooze down my cleavage. I got to my feet, white with fury. I know I was white because I could
feel
it â the blood draining from my cheeks as my face went hard and cold. In that instant, I wondered how anyone could object to corporal punishment for children. Or capital punishment. I spoke to Meredith in a voice I had never heard myself use to anyone, let alone a child. âTake me upstairs to the bathroom.
Now.
'
âWhy on earth did she do this?' Georgie demanded, dumping the bottle on a convenient sideboard.
âGod knows. She's probably a budding psychopath. Can you find me something of Lin's to wear?'
âMummy's things won't fit you,' Meredith said.
âSomething
loose
. You. Bathroom.'
We trooped upstairs, Georgie to Lin's bedroom, Meredith and I to the bathroom. I stripped off my sweater and bra â my beautiful Rigby and Peller bra. The first thing was to wash me, then my clothes. âYou'd better find some soap for clothing,' I told Meredith. âYou made this mess: you're going to clean it up. You can wash my things.'
âBut I don't know how!' For once, Miss Smartarse admitted to something she didn't understand.
âIt's like chess. You can learn.'
Meredith backed away towards the door, which we'd left ajar. I could see her in the mirror. Suddenly, she stuck two fingers in her mouth and gave vent to an ear-splitting whistle. There was a pounding of feet, and the door was flung open. I wheeled instinctively, bare-bosomed, my nipples erect from the cold (I hadn't waited for the water to run hot), to find myself face to face with the twins. There was a moment of frozen silence . . .
âWow!' breathed Demmy.
Sandy said nothing. He was too busy staring.
Then I exploded. I can't recall what I said except that, amazingly, it contained no four-letter words. Modesty went out the window: I was Venus Enraged, and I didn't give a damn about my absent draperies. At one point Meredith tried to slip away, but I grabbed her by the scruff of the neck â or at any rate, the scruff of something â deposited her by the basin, and ordered her to get scrubbing. âAnd don't forget to pick the chicken bits out of the plughole: you can flush them down the loo.' Georgie came pelting along the passageway, assimilated the situation at a glance, and disappeared, returning with one hand behind her back. By this time, my tirade was running out.
âGo to your room,' Georgie told the boys. âSit down, and write letters of apology to Cookie. And they'd better be good.'