‘No, no, it’s OK. I’ll get one of them to pick me up. They’ve all got cars.’

He looks stunned. Ha! Good! That’ll teach him to be the same as everyone else. I don’t even bother saying goodbye.

‘Wait!’ he says.

But I won’t. I won’t look back at him either.

‘The path might be slippery!’ he shouts. ‘It’s beginning to rain.’

I said it would rain. I knew it would.

‘Tessa, let me give you a lift!’

But if he thinks I’m climbing on that bike with him, he can think again.

I made a fatal error thinking he could save me.

Seventeen

I start with assault, shove my elbow hard into a woman’s back as I get on the bus. She spins round, crazy-eyed.

‘Ow!’ she yelps. ‘Watch where you’re going!’

‘It was him!’ I tell her, pointing to the man behind me. He doesn’t hear, is too busy carrying a screaming child and yelling into his phone to know I just slandered him. The woman sidesteps me. ‘Arsehole!’ she tells him.

He hears that.

In the commotion, I dodge the fare and find myself a seat at the back. Three crimes in under one minute. Not bad.

I rifled through the pockets of Adam’s motorbike jacket on the way down the hill, but all I found was a cigarette lighter and a bent old rollie, so I couldn’t have paid for the bus anyway. I decide to go for crime number four and light it up. An old bloke turns round and jabs a finger at me. ‘Put that out!’ he says.

‘Piss off,’ I tell him, which I believe might count as violent behaviour in a court of law.

I’m good at this. Time for a little murder now, with a round of the Dying Game.

The man three seats in front is feeding takeaway noodles to the small boy on his lap. I give myself three points for the food colouring creeping along the child’s veins.

In the opposite aisle, a woman ties a scarf about her throat. One point for the lump on her neck, raw and pink as a crab’s claw.

Another point for the bus exploding as it brakes at the lights. Two for the great globs of melting plastic from the seats splitting the air.

A counsellor I saw at the hospital said it’s not my fault. She reckoned there must be loads of sick people secretly wishing malevolence upon the healthy.

I told her my dad says cancer is a sign of treachery, since the body’s doing something without the knowledge or consent of the mind. I asked if she thought the game might be a way for my mind to get its own back.

‘Possibly,’ she said. ‘Do you play it a lot?’

The bus sweeps past the cemetery, the iron gates open. Three points for the dead slowly prising open the lids of their coffins. They want to hurt the living. They can’t stop. Their throats have turned to liquid and their fingers glint under the weak autumn sun.

Maybe that’s enough. There are too many people on the bus now. Down the aisles, they blink and shift. ‘I’m on the bus,’ they say as their mobiles chirrup. It’ll just depress me if I kill them all off.

I force myself to look out of the window. We’re in Willis Avenue already. I used to go to school along here. There’s the mini mart! I’d forgotten it even existed, though it was the first place in town to sell Slush Puppies. Zoey and me used to get one every day in the summer on the way home from school. They sell other stuff too – fresh dates and figs, halva, sesame bread and Turkish delight. I can’t believe I let the mini mart slip my mind.

Left at the video shop, and a man wearing a white apron stands in the doorway of the Barbecue Cafe sharpening his knife. A rack of lamb slowly rotates in the window behind him. Dinner money bought a kebab and chips there two years ago or, if you’re Zoey, it bought a kebab and chips plus a cigarette from under the counter.

I miss her. I get off the bus in the market square and phone her. She sounds like she’s underwater.

‘Are you in a swimming pool?’

‘I’m in the bath.’

‘On your own?’

‘Of course I’m on my own!’

‘You texted me that you were at college. I knew it was a lie.’

‘What do you want, Tessa?’

‘Breaking the law.’

‘What?’

‘It’s number four on my list.’

‘And how are you planning on doing that?’

Before, she’d have had an idea. But now, because of Scott, she’s lost her definition. It’s like their edges got blurred together.

‘I was thinking of killing the Prime Minister. I quite fancy starting a revolution.’

‘Funny.’

‘Or the Queen. We could get a bus to Buckingham Palace.’

Zoey sighs. She doesn’t even bother to hide it. ‘I’ve got stuff to do. I can’t be with you every day.’

‘I haven’t seen you for ten days!’ There’s a silence. It makes me want to hurt her. ‘You promised you’d do everything with me, Zoey. I’ve only done three things on the list. At this rate I’m not going to get it all done in time.’

‘Oh, for God’s sake!’

‘I’m at the market. Come and meet me, it’ll be fun.’

‘At the market? Is Scott there?’

‘I don’t know, I’ve only just got off the bus.’

‘I’ll meet you in twenty minutes,’ she says.

There’s sun in my teacup and it’s very easy sitting outside this cafe watching it shine.

‘I think you’re a vampire,’ Zoey says. ‘You’ve sucked all my energy away,’ and she pushes her plate to one side and rests her head on the table.

I like it here – the candy-striped awning above us, the view across the square to the water fountain. I like the tang of rain in the air and the row of birds lining the wall over by the dustbins.

‘What kind of birds are they?’

Zoey opens one eye to look. ‘Starlings.’

‘How do you know?’

‘I just do.’

I’m not sure I believe her, but I write it down on my napkin anyway. ‘What about the clouds? Do you know what they’re called?’

She groans, shifts her head on the table.

‘Do you think stones have names, Zoey?’

‘No! Neither do raindrops, or leaves, or any of the other mad things you keep going on about.’

She makes a nest with her arms and hides her face from me completely. She’s been grouchy ever since she got here and it’s beginning to piss me off. This is supposed to be making me feel better.

Zoey shifts in her chair. ‘Aren’t you freezing?’

‘No.’

‘Can we just go and rob a bank, or whatever it is we’re supposed to be doing?’

‘Will you teach me to drive?’

‘Can’t you ask your dad?’

Вы читаете Before I Die aka Now is Good
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