Authors: Bernard Beckett
âI don't know,' she said.
Her restraint repulsed me.
âBut it's my profession's best guess. It's how we operate.'
My knees were buckling. Would she think it an act, if I fell? She didn't move.
âAnd if it wasn't your job, if it was just you and me, would you hold me?'
âIf it wasn't my job, I wouldn't be here.'
âNo, you wouldn't,' I said.
âThat's not what I meant.'
In my memory, she looks around, to make sure there's no one outside, but I suspect
I've added that detail since. She takes me in her arms and lets her collar grow wet
with my tears. Her neck smells of shampoo; her skin is warm, like a mother's. I lean
against her.
I could have stayed there, and let time pass until there was no decision left to
make.
âWe need to get back.' Her voice tickled my ear.
I nodded and wiped my eyes with my sleeve. âThank you.'
Theo would have loved her.
I turned back to him. I looked at his face, properly. My living, breathing mirror.
Almost
living. With his eyes closed, the eyelashes were even more striking. Long
and thick, like a girl's, curling upwards.
âI always wanted to be him,' I said. I don't know if she heard me. Maybe she thought
it wasn't for her. âI watched the way he was with people, the way people were with
him, and I never admitted it to him, but I spent a lot of time trying to work out
how he did it.'
âMaybe he wanted to be like you, too.' She put her hand on my shoulder.
âMaybe.'
It was the kind thing to say, but it wasn't true. I wasn't even sure, if he'd been
given the choice, he would have wanted to be a twin. I never asked him. The millions
of words we spent, like we thought we'd never run out, and I never asked him. But
I wouldn't have changed it, not for the world.
âIt must have been good,' she said, âto have had someone always looking out for you.'
âDon't you?'
She didn't answer.
âThere was one time, when he could have died, trying to help me.'
Her hand tightened at my collar.
âWe were in the forest, with Mum and Dad. They liked to take us camping. For Mum,
it was the quiet she loved; it was a place she could sit and sketch. For Dad, it
was to do with us all being together. I remember one night when we were still young,
and he had all four of us sleeping beneath a fly strung between two trees. A storm
came, and the fly flapped loose. We ended up out in the sheeting rain, trying to
tame the beast. Mum looked wet and miserableâthat's how I remember itâbut Dad was
laughing the whole time. Like the storm was the whole point. It always seemed right
to me, that he died in the rain. This time though, there wasn't a storm. Mum went
off to draw something, and I followed her, and Theo thought I'd gone missing, so
he followed me. Dad found me and Mum, but not Theo.
âThey panicked. We all panicked. Mum and Dad wanted me to go to the road with some
people we met on the track, but I wouldn't leave them. Someone must have called Search
and Rescue. I remember us all shouting his name out, until we had no voice left.
When the calling stopped, there was that silence you only get in the forest, a silence
filled with soundsâof the wind moving through
the trees, and the river easing over
the rocksâsounds that go on forever.
âIt took four hours to find him. The Search and Rescue woman had come to tell us
we had to get back to our car, because soon it would be dark. Dad was refusing, and
Mum had begun to howl. Then I saw his jacket, a flash of blue amongst the green,
on the other side of the river. Just a moment, and it was gone. I knew they didn't
believe me, but it made a good negotiating tool. We would cross the river, have ten
minutes looking, and then we agreed we would head back. We linked arms for the crossing.
The water wasn't high but Mum and Dad weren't about to lose another one. I was between
them, lifted off my feet for most of it.
âTheo tried to pretend he hadn't been crying. At some point he'd abandoned his pack.
He didn't know where. The cold that night would have killed him. That's how close
we came to not being twins anymore. I'll never forget the look on his face. It wasn't
relief that we'd found him, but relief they'd found me. He jumped up and clung to
me, and I was so tired I fell backwards. That's the way I'll always remember him,
inches from my face, his eyes too big for his head, his face so pale. That
night
I first saw how delicate everything is, how easily it can come apart. In the background
there was crying: Mum or Dad, maybe both. But Theo and me, we were already laughing.
âI've thought about it so often, imagined Theo alone on the other side of the river,
calling out my name until his throat hurts, feeling the chill of damp moss where
he's settled, the cold of loneliness. If someone told me I'd got it the wrong way
round, that I was the one who'd got lost, it wouldn't be hard to believe. That's
what it's like, having a twin brother. In case you were wondering.'
I couldn't look at him anymore, him or the machine or the hospital bed. I closed
my eyes.
âHe loved you.' Maggie said.
I felt the past tense settle on us, like a blanket.
âYeah, he did.'
I turned away, knowing it might be the last time, and walked out before the thought
took my legs from under me.
âIt's cold in here,' I said. Maggie turned to her desk and tapped the screen. Warm
air whispered over us.
âNow tell me how you came to be a drama student.'
âI already told you.'
âI thought you might be ready to give me the truth.'
âIf you already knowâ¦'
âI don't,' she said.
âThen I've told you the truth.'
âI don't think you have.'
She didn't seem to have much trouble, slipping back into role.
âWe weren't always close.'
I wanted the other story to be true, the easy
story: two for the price of one, loyal
to the end, inseparable.
âWhat happened?'
âNothing special,' I said. âSchool, girls.'
âDo you want to explain that?'
âI don't want to, no.'
âI think you should,' she said.
I tried to take a breath, but it wouldn't go in. I felt the panic rising, prickly
and familiar. I tried again and this time my chest froze completely. I thought back
to what I had been taught to do. I counted to three, and told myself this airlessness
was normal. I swallowed, mouth closed. Y
ou're okay, you're okay.
Slowly, as if to creep back up on life before it realised the trick, I let air leak
in through my nose. It expanded me. I felt giddy, present, almost hopeful. A second
breath, easier than the first. The third almost normal. It had passed. Maggie watched
closely, but it didn't matter. She'd seen my file.
âSchool was fine, at first,' I said. I would ignore the incident if she did. âWe
each had our roles to play. Theo's was to be charming, confident, unshakable. Even
when Mum and
Dad died, Theo stayed calm. As if he had always expected it.
âI was the clever one, that was my thing. After Mum and Dad died, I tried even harder,
I suppose as a way of saying thank you. Early school was good, and middle school
too, because there they have a way of letting you know that test scores don't really
matter. As long as you say please and thank you, show kindness, and always do your
best, you're doing fine. Our reports always said we were doing fine.
âWe had a good group of friends. Theo had the friends; I had Theo and they came as
part of the package. If it'd stayed like thatâ¦'
I felt the shadow looming over me.
âBut it can't stay like that, can it?' Maggie said.
âMaybe it can,' I said. âBut it didn't.'
âWhen did you first realise?'
âFirst day of finishing school.' The real story had begun. Soon, there would be no
stopping it, not until we hit the bottom, or collided with the truth on the way down.
âWe'd always been in the same class. It was a given. Mum had insisted, which was
strange for her, but I think she knew how much we needed
it. After Mum and Dad died,
the middle-school teachers decided it was even more important to keep us together.
âBut finishing school was different: bigger, too busy for anyone to distinguish between
waving and drowning. Walking through the gates was like walking into a storm. It
was the noise, the movement, but mostly the sense of being swept away. There were
more than four hundred first-year students. On the first day we were led into the
hall for our entry tests. I remember the visors. The masks were too big, and smelt
of sweat and fear; the slide screens were sticky and slow to react. It lasted an
hour, orange numbers ticking down in the top left corner.
They told us the results would be used for our class allocation. When I heard that,
I could hardly breathe.'
âYou could have done poorly, if you'd wanted to. You could have deliberately given
false answers.' Maggie didn't miss much.
âYeah, I could have.'
âBut you didn't.'
âI was equal second. Theo scored forty-third. He tried harder in that test than he
ever had in
his life. He wanted us to stay together even more than I did.
âThe top class was treated differently. We had the best teachers, got the best equipment,
went on trips no one else was offered. They said it was reward for how well we were
working, but everyone knew it went the other way. The rewards produced the behaviour.'
âFeedback.'
âI should have been top, it was a couple of stupid mistakes, that's all. Maddy was
smart, beating her wouldn't be easy, but at least I had something to focus on.'
âWhat about Theo?'
âHe'd overachieved in the entry test, and the second class was too hard for him.
He started to struggle.'
Sadness settled deep in my stomach. My eyes were scratchy, my throat dry.
âDid it worry him?' Maggie asked.
âHe said it didn't.'
âDid you believe him?'
âNo.'
âAnd that worried you,' she said.
âOf course.'
âWhat did you do about it?'
I wanted to be able to give a different answer. I wanted to say I'd been a better
brother.
âI suppose I pretended we weren't growing apart. At lunchtime, or during releases,
I'd find him, and we'd act like nothing had changed. Some things hadn't. People still
wanted to be with him and, at a school that big, that gave him a lot of choice.'
âWho did he choose?'
âAnyone who could make him feel special. See, I liked the classroom. I liked plugging
in and listening to people who knew more about the world than I did. And then composing
responses, and the feedback sessions, taking each other's work apartâto me class
time and break time were all the same, a succession of games I enjoyed. Theo wasn't
a listener. He'd either say, I already understand so why listen, or I don't understand
and listening doesn't help. I told him there was a sweet spot, just at the edge of
understanding, and that learning's just the art of finding it, but that's not the
sort of thing that makes sense until you've been there.
âHis was a small group, just five or six of
us most days. None of them were properly
bad. They knew how to cause trouble, but not enough to be excluded. Just stupid stuff.
One of the girls, Harriet, had a pet ferret, and she was told she couldn't bring
it to school, so they all went and caught some ducks at the park, and dumped them
in the staffroom.'
âWhy?' Maggie asked.
âI think it was a protest.'
âI don't understand.'
âNone of us understood.'
âYou helped?'
âI tried, but you know how, when something you're holding wriggles to get free? I'm
the sort that lets go.'
Maggie nodded, as if that much was already obvious.
âWhat else did they do?'
âThey liked drugs,' I said. âThat was a big part of it. Canisters mostly, stuff you
could come back from quickly.'
âThey or we?'
âIt wasn't optional. But I was careful. I looked into it. They called me the professor.
People I didn't know used to ask me for advice.'
âDid it affect your grades?' she asked.
I shrugged. âMaybe.'
âBut you still did well?'
âSometimes first, sometimes second.'
âHow did second feel?'
âMuch like first,' I said. âThat surprised me. Once I realised I could beat her,
it stopped mattering.'
âDo you think Maddy knew you could beat her?'
âShe certainly hated me; that could have been why.'
I wanted to ask again, what her method was. Why she lingered on these things, when
all the time the clock was ticking. But I didn't, because I didn't want her to think
she was getting to me.
âAnd you got in trouble, sometimes, I imagine,' Maggie said. âA group like that.'
âA little. The others more than Theo or me. Theo had his charm to hide behind, which
worked with most of the teachers, and I was their top student.'
âHow did you feel about the others? Did you like them?'
âWhy wouldn't I?'
It came out too quickly.
âBecause they were taking your brother away from you.'
âHe didn't go anywhere he didn't want to go,' I said.
It wasn't true.
âWhere was that?'
âHe dropped down a class, from two to three. That was when other people started to
get interested.'