Authors: Fleur Hitchcock
For G.M.H. & Auntie Norah
Hello.
My name is Bugg.
Jitterbug.
Don't laugh; it's not supposed to be a joke. It's a dance.
Since Monday we live at number 1, Cherry Blossom Avenue, Shabbiton.
The town has a pier (burned-out), a shopping centre (mostly closed), a car showroom (shiny), a skateboard park (really a building site), a huge sandy beach, a bank of pebbles and a nuclear power station (disused).
We have, in our house, among other things, a bedroom (that I share with Dad's paperwork), a TV (with Granddad glued to it), six skateboards (four with wheels) and a fridge, a large, cream, enamelled fridge that hums and whistles and stands in the corner of the kitchen. It has two plastic letters on it. An
A
and a
T
.
I mention the fridge, because I just tried to turn it off.
But it won't. It won't switch off. When I flick up the switch on the wall, it goes on humming and whistling, and the light inside turns on when you open the door. I've checked to see that there's only one cable, and there is. It just won't switch off.
Granddad's watching telly at full volume in his dressing gown and pyjamas. He's also eating noodles. He sucks them through a gap in his teeth, one at a time, the longest ones first, the shorter ones later.
âHave you seen Dilan?' I ask.
Granddad pauses mid-noodle and glances over to me. He shakes his head and draws the end of the noodle through the tiny gap in his lips. It makes a kissing sound as it disappears.
âDilan?' I yell up the stairs and then, when there's no answer, clamber past the folded removal boxes until I reach his room.
There's no sign of Dilan. No sign of Dilan himself, just a crumpled school uniform on the floor, some headphones and a pair of crusty socks.
Even from up here I can hear Granddad's music. I can't actually pick out the tunes, but it's like living over an old-fashioned disco, all day and almost all night.
I look out of the window. There's a thick sea mist blowing over the town, making the house feel as if it's on its own island. I can barely see over the fence, but I know Dilan's out there on his skateboard. He says the road here's better for skateboarding than where we lived before, which was only two hundred yards away in the estate. He says living in a cul-de-sac makes it more fun. It's definitely quieter â hardly any cars â and now we've got a proper garden with an apple tree and a shed, and the house has room downstairs, so that Granddad can stay with us all the time and not be lonely any more.
And the fridge. We've got a bigger fridge.
I open the window. âDilan! Can you come in?'
He thumps down one end of the skateboard. âWhy?'
I look up and down the street. There isn't anyone to see, but I don't want anyone to hear me. âJust, could you?'
Dilan lets out a sigh. âWhat is it now?' he says, balancing on one pair of wheels.
I close the window and wait. I'm not going down again until Dilan comes in. I'm not going to be on my own with the fridge.
Someone opens the front door and, although I know it's Dilan, I jump.
âBugg!' he yells up the stairs. âThis had better be good. I'm not searching under the bed again, or the cupboard, or the cellar â do it yourself.'
I jump down the stairs, my feet together, thumping in time to Granddad's TV music.
âIt's the fridge,' I say.
âThe fridge?' says Dilan, kicking off his shoes. âWhat do you mean, the fridge? Is there something living underneath it? What is it?'
âIt won't turn off,' I say. âIt's alive.'
âWhy did you even try to turn it off?'
âBecause it was making these horrible noises â sort of
weeeeeeeep
, and
whooooooo
, and
cccccccccccccccccc
.'
Dilan shakes his head. âWhat are you on about?'
I walk through the sitting room, passing Granddad, who is sitting on the floor by the TV. He's left the noodles on a side table, and is flicking through a pile of ballroom-dancing DVDs. I know he's watched them all a hundred times before, but Mum says it gives him comfort, so Dilan and I are learning to leave him to it.
âWhere's this fridge then?' says Dilan, behind me.
I lead him into the kitchen, a room he never visits if he can help it. I'm scared of monsters, but Dilan's scared of washing up.
Actually, Dilan's scared of soap and water â I don't think he's had a shower for more than two months.
We stop in front of the fridge. âOK,' I say, âwatch.' And I unplug the fridge.
The little red light on the front stays lit.
âThat could just be a time-delay thing,' he says. âMy phone takes ages to turn off.'
âDoes it really take this long? I switched it off five minutes ago.'
Dilan obviously doesn't believe me.
âWhat about this then?' I ask, swinging the door open. The inside light pings on, illuminating the butter dish.
Dilan raises an eyebrow.
âAnd listen,' I say. âListen to it.'
We stand in silence. Granddad's dance music shakes the thin wooden walls of the house. The fridge hums. It whistles, it burps, it sings. It's as if it knows what Granddad is listening to; it's even in tune.
Eeeeeeeeeeeee
Oooooooooooooooh
Fsssssssssssssssssh
We listen for minutes, and the noise goes on.
Sweeeeeeeeeeeeeee
âThat doesn't make sense,' says Dilan, walking around the fridge, checking for wires. âAh,' he says, âit must be plugged in underneath.'
I hadn't thought of that. He checks for wires by nudging the fridge out from the wall and sliding a fish slice underneath. He scoops out a green plastic
C
. No wires. He arranges the letters on the fridge door.
cat.
âSee?' I say. âIt won't turn off.'
âIt must be rechargeable,' he says. âIt must have a battery.'
I hadn't thought of that either and together we pull it right out so that we can look behind. But there's no room for a battery, and there's no switch, just a squashed red thing that was probably once a tomato.
We stand, staring at the back of the fridge, listening to it singing and humming, and sounding  â¦Â human.
âI think,' says Dilan, âthat you might be right. It is alive. We have bought a house with a living fridge.' As he says it, the door springs open.
I jump. I jump right out of the kitchen, into the hall.
Dilan turns and raises an eyebrow. âIt's only a fridge, Bugg.'
Mum bursts in through the door behind us, shopping bags dangling from her wrists. âGosh, it's foggy out there, never known one like it. Your poor granddad would call it a pea-souper.'
âMum,' says Dilan, âthis fridge doesn't seem to need electricity to run. And the door opens â on its own.' He glares at me.
Mum wrinkles her nose. âReally? That can't possibly be true.'
âLook, we unplugged it. The light still works.' He opens the door wide. Inside, apart from yellowed plastic, the fridge looks normal. It's almost completely empty except for a shelf of yoghurts with foil lids and the last scrap of butter smeared on the butter dish.
âHow odd,' says Mum, stepping back and rustling the shopping bags. âWell, there must be some explanation. It
was
running when we arrived, and those yoghurts were there. I haven't had the heart to throw them away.' She reaches past me to pick one up. âThey haven't swelled up or anything, and I know that yoghurt keeps for ages.' She holds the yoghurt at a distance, studying the label. âFunny â they're almost retro â like the yoghurts on the TV when I was a child.' She puts it back on the shelf. âSort this shopping away for me, dears. I'm just going to see your granddad.'
We empty the bags. Dilan does the cold food and I do the cupboards. The fridge hums almost tunefully. It feels like we're sharing the room with another person.
âRight,' says Dilan, looking down at all the things that won't fit.
âTake the yoghurts out,' I say. âWe don't really want them in there â do we? They must be toxic by now.'
He shuffles the contents until the yoghurts come out, and they stand on the side â a row of eight waxy cartons.
âHmm,' says Dilan. âThese are  â¦Â '
âOld?' I say, picking up one of the yoghurt pots. I examine it for a sell-by date. It doesn't have one. It doesn't even have ingredients on it. There's a faded yellow picture of what could be a peach; that's all.
Dilan holds another. It might be blackberry flavoured â or it might be coal dust; the picture's so bad I can't tell.
âDare you to open it,' he says, holding it out under my nose. I look down at the top. It's a foil lid with the word
YOGHURT
printed across it in blue capitals. Not even the slightest hint of a flavour. It could contain anything. It could contain a monster from a distant galaxy. Admittedly, it would be a very small one.
âNo,' I say.
âScaredy-cat,' he says.
I stare at the yoghurt pot. It's too small to house anything really lethal.
Surely.
The clock on the wall ticks away the seconds. The fridge sets up a new tune. Idly, I rearrange the plastic letters on the fridge.
ACT
.
I turn the yoghurt upright, hold my breath and peel back the corner of the foil.
Nothing happens. It doesn't explode â nothing climbs out of the pot.
We peer inside. âIt looks exactly like ordinary yoghurt,' says Dilan. âThere was no
pft
when you took off the top; it's fine.' He looks disappointed. âIt isn't even full of alien bacteria, unless alien bacteria don't act immediately and are in fact
slow-release alien bacteria
. Like one of those plug-in air fresheners.'
I ignore Dilan and stare into the pot.
âDare you,' he says.
âDare you back,' I say.
âDouble dare,' he says.
So I take a spoon from the drawer and dip it into the yoghurt.
A yellowy blob trembles on the bowl of the spoon.
âDouble double triple dare,' he says, his eyes wide and fixed on my mouth.
âOK,' I say, and drop the yoghurt onto my tongue.
Nothing happens. Nothing â except that, not to be outdone, Dilan rips the lid from his pot. His is a mild lilac colour. He plunges the spoon deep inside and takes almost half the contents in a single mouthful.
âThat â' he says. âThat's delicious â best yoghurt I've ever tasted.'
I dip the spoon deeper into my pot. I can't work out the taste. Is it peach â or pear? Or maybe apricot? I peer at the outside of the pot. The label really doesn't tell me anything. There isn't even a company name, and the picture is so indistinct it might as well be a fried egg. And then I see faint numbers on the side. A one, a nine, a seven and a four.
â1974?' I say, pointing to the pot. âIt can't be that old.'
Dilan tilts his yoghurt and examines it. He stares for a long time, long enough for me to scrape the last smears from the inside of my pot and then run my tongue around the inside, just to make sure.
âIt might say 1-9-7-4 â but it can't be a sell-by date. They hadn't invented them then. We studied that in food tech. Perhaps it's some sort of inspection code. You know, like clothes have numbers on them, to say who checked them.'
I shrug. I look towards the countertop, where the other six yoghurts are.
Except they're not there. The countertop's not there either.
âDilan,' I whisper.
âWhat?' he says, running his tongue around the inside of his yoghurt pot.
âLook.'
âWhat at?'
I gaze around at what ought to be our kitchen. âEverything.'