“Fine,” Valentina said. “I’d rather be dead than spend my life with you.”
“
Valentina stood staring at the door.
A Proposition
“Do you want me to turn pages for you?”
Elspeth looked up, shook her head. She made a muscleman gesture, cocking one arm:
Valentina was lying on the pink sofa with a tattered Penguin edition of
Elspeth pointed at the ceiling. Valentina said, “Ah,” got up and left the room. She returned with the Ouija board and planchette. Valentina put her finger to her lips. Elspeth looked at her quizzically.
Valentina said, “You know what happened with the Kitten?”
Elspeth turned away.
No, Elspeth spelled.
“Couldn’t, or won’t?”
NO NO NO. She sat shaking her head.
“Because. Why do you have to know why?”
Elspeth wondered if this was what it would have been like to have a teenaged daughter: unreasonable demands, tendered with unthinking entitlement. She wrote, WHAT IF I CANT PUT YOU BACK.
“You could practise with the Kitten.”
RATHER HARD ON KITTEN
Valentina blushed. “But the Kitten was fine. And there’s no reason it wouldn’t work with me, so you wouldn’t have to do the Kitten again anyway.”
CELL DEATH BRAIN DAMAGE HOW DO WE KNOW KITTEN IS FINE
“Come on, Elspeth. At least think about it.”
Elspeth stared at Valentina. Then she wrote, FORGET IT, and vanished. Valentina sat thinking. A breeze ruffled the pages of the books lying open on the carpet. Valentina wondered if it was Elspeth or just wind. To annoy Elspeth she flipped all the books facedown. She had not expected Elspeth to agree. But she had introduced the idea, and she knew she would figure out how to get her way.

Julia was restless. She sat on the landing with her back against Martin’s front door, one leg thrust straight ahead of her and the other angled down the stairs. It was another rainy morning, and the light seemed to coat everything on the landing with extra dust. Julia could hear Martin grumbling to himself inside his flat. She wanted to go in and bother him, but she would wait a while yet. She changed her position so that both of her feet pressed against the piles of newspapers Martin kept on the landing. The piles were a bit unstable. Julia imagined them toppling over and burying her. She’d be smothered. Martin would never find her-he wouldn’t be able to open his front door.
Martin began to sing. Julia could tell that he enjoyed singing. It was not a song she knew. She thought it might be an advertising jingle. She kicked at the papers again but they did not fall over.
The following morning Valentina and Elspeth sat at the Ouija board together. Elspeth had been doing some thinking.
I DONT UNDERSTAND, Elspeth spelled.
“I want to leave Julia,” Valentina said. Her idea had been growing on her until she thought of little else.
SO LEAVE HER
“She won’t let me.”
NONSENSE
“When you and Mom split up-”
WE HAD NO CHOICE
“Why not?”
Elspeth twirled the planchette aimlessly, then stopped.
“If Julia thinks I’m dead, she’ll let me go.”
JULIA WOULD BE CRUSHED IF YOU DIED EDIE AND JACK TOO
Valentina had not thought of her parents. She frowned, but said, “Look, Elspeth, it’ll be perfect. I’ll die, Julia will be forced to go on without me, she’ll get over it. And you’ll put me back in my body and I’ll live happily ever after, or, you know, I’ll at least be able to live my own life. I’ll be free.”
Elspeth sat with her fingers on the planchette, looking at Valentina. To Valentina her expression seemed irritated, then thoughtful. LETS CONSIDER THIS LOGISTICALLY, Elspeth spelled. YOU WILL BE OUT OF BODY FOR DAYS-THERE WILL BE A FUNERAL-BODY WILL BEGIN TO ROT-THEN BODY IS IN