Authors: Catherine Bruton
âDon't be stupid!'
âYou'd better watch out. She's arranged-marriage-engaged to my brother. Her family will be out to honour-kill you, if you're not careful,' says Priti.
âI don't fancy her!' I say.
â
And
she's a terrorist!' says Jed.
âShe is not!'
âDon't defend her just because she's your girlfriend. How else did she know all that stuff about explosives?'
âThat was just for fun,' I say.
âYou heard what she said about making a really big bang!' says Jed.
âI reckon she's the chemist of the group,' says Priti. âEvery terror cell has once. Shakeel makes the detonators. She makes the explosives.'
âExactly,' says Jed. âThey're probably not even engaged. Just pretending so they can work on
the terror plot together without anyone getting suspicious.'
âSo you might still be in with a chance, Ben!' says Priti.
âShut up,' is all I can think of to say.
âI've found this website called Tuesdays' Children,' Priti announces after Jed goes off with Granny for one of his top-secret appointments. âIt's for 9/11 kids like you.'
âSo?' I say. I'm sitting on the floor of my bedroom with my notebook, doodling pictures of princesses on flying carpets in giant fluffy slippers. I haven't seen Priti for a couple of days because she's been off with her mum and Ameenah doing wedding stuff. Even Jed said it'd been a bit boring without her around.
âSo there's loads of interesting stuff on there,' she says. âThere's even a chat room so you could get in touch with the other bereaved kids.'
âStop calling me that, will you?'
âFine, I'll call you a 9/11 orphan.'
âHow can I be an orphan? My mum is still alive.'
âIf you say so.'
âWhat's that supposed to mean?'
âIt means even Jed talks about his mum more than you do.'
âJust because I don't talk about her doesn't mean she doesn't exist,' I say, putting down my pencil.
âWhatever.'
âMy mum will be better soon and then she'll be coming to get me,' I carry on angrily. âSo I'm not an orphan.'
âLook, my point is that there are loads of other kids with 9/11 issues just like yours who are gagging to chat to you online.'
âAnd what if I don't want to?' I pick up my pencil and try to keep drawing the princesses, but they don't seem to work any more.
âOf course you do. That's just the grief talking,' says Priti.
âI told you, I'm not grieving!' I say, doodling rows of triangles.
âMaybe you feel angry or anxious or lacking hope. They are all forms of grief,' says Priti with a learned expression on her face. I imagine her with a giant pair of glasses and a white doctor's coat
several sizes too big for her.
âHave you been learning the website by heart?' I draw a big square, then a smaller one inside it, then a smaller one again: boxes within boxes.
âI reckon I could be a counsellor or something. I'm getting you to talk about your unacknowledged grief here.'
âAren't you supposed to, like, respect my privacy or something?' I say, my boxes getting smaller and smaller.
âIf it's in the patient's best interests, sometimes you have to be cruel to be kind.'
âYou just made that up,' I say, abandoning my boxes and trying to doodle Dr Priti.
âMaybe I did, but I still reckon you should be getting in touch with these other kids. They go on camps together and talk about their feelings and build schools for poor kids in Costa Rica and do art therapy and music and meditation and all sorts.'
âWell, I don't want to do any of that, OK?'
âAll right! All right! Keep your hair on. There are other things we can do.'
âLike what exactly?'
âLike we make a big poster of your dad and everyone has to write down their memories of him on it and we put it up somewhere everyone can see it. We could do that.'
I look up from my drawing. âYou didn't even know him,' I point out.
âI could pretend I did. I expect he was just like you only grown up and better-looking and a bit less miserable.'
âYou can't pretend you knew a dead person if you didn't,' I say, trying to do another Dr Priti, this time with massive glasses perched on the end of a giant Mr Nosey nose.
âWell, you could tell me some of your memories and I could pretend they were mine,' she suggests.
âI don't have many memories of my own,' I say, staring crossly at the cartoon, which looks nothing like Priti. âI can hardly remember what he looked like.'
But Priti doesn't seem to worry too much about this. âWell, your granny and grandad must have loads. And Jed says he remembers him and we can ask your
uncle Ian. And your mum,' she says pointedly. âWhen she gets back again.'
âGranny gets all upset and cries whenever anyone mentions Dad,' I say.
âAnd your mum?'
I have an image of my mum, lying in a hospital bed.
âShe says it's no one else's business,' I say quickly.
âFine. What about you make a shrine, with his picture and some of his stuff, and you can light a candle there?'
âGranny won't have candles in the house. She reckons they'll set fire to the net curtains and bring down the house on our heads or something.' I draw a little picture of a house with flames coming out of the roof.
âWell, you could have a torch or one of them flameless candles that squirts air-freshener like my mum's got. I'm sure I could nick one.'
But I obviously don't look convinced because then she says, âOr you can just make a memory box with some of his things and people's memories in it.'
âI really don't want to make a shrine to my dad
or a memory box or whatever.'
âWell, we're going to do something and if you don't decide what then I'll decide for you.'
âPriti, please.' I wish she'd just drop it.
âIt's for your own good. You can't just sit around doodling cartoons all day. Hey, is that supposed to be me?'
âNo,' I mutter as she makes a grab for my notebook. âSome doctor you are!' I scribble over the half-finished Dr Priti faces and shove the book under my legs so she can't get it. âI thought you were supposed to make me feel better, but the thought of doing all this is making me lots worse!'
Priti grins at me. âSee, there you go! You're expressing your emotions at last!'
Eventually, I agree to make a memory box and this shuts Priti up for a bit, mainly because we don't have a box, which means we can't start it today. Priti says she's going to ask her mum for one and meanwhile, I have to start getting stuff together to go in it.
âDon't disappoint me!' she says.
âYou sound like someone's mum.'
âI'm going to make a great mum one day,' she says.
âYour kids will never get a word in edgeways.'
âAt least I'll be cool. You'll be one of those sad, embarrassing dads. The one who comes to pick the kid up and everyone thinks he's a paedophile.'
âWho says I even want to have kids?' I say.
âEveryone has to. It's punishment for giving your own parents hell, I reckon.'
âWell, I don't.' Without a pencil, I don't know what to do with my hands.
Priti stares at me then says, âWhat? You don't want kids or you're one of those freaky kids who don't give their parents a hard time?'
âNo,' I say quickly, not sure which bit of the question I'm answering. âYes, I mean . . . maybe.'
âI get it,' says Priti. âI guess with your mum being ill and all you've been forced to grow up before your time.'
âShe's nearly better,' I say.
âDid she say that?'
âSort of.' I look down at my hands.
âWhy can't you visit her?'
âToo far away,' I say.
âWhat's wrong with her anyway?'
I stare at Priti.
âHey, I figure if you're actually talking about her, I get to ask all the questions I want.'
âShe kind of stopped eating,' I say, looking down again.
âThat happened to my aunt when she had cancer. Has she got cancer?'
âNo.'
âI reckon Jed's got cancer,' says Priti.
âWhat?' I say, looking up.
âWell, he must have something really serious if he has to go to the hospital every week.'
âWho says he's even going to hospital?'
âAll these appointments. What else can it be?'
I shrug.
âI've been looking at my mum's medical book and it's either that or kidney failure.'
âAre you sure?'
âI asked Ameenah about it and she said kids whose
kidneys don't work have to go for this thing once a week to clean all the wee out of their blood. She reckons they look a bit yellow too, with all the wee. Do you reckon he looks yellow?'
âNot really,' I say, imagining Jed with a Simpsons yellow face.
âMe neither. So I reckon it must be cancer which means his hair will fall out, only I can't tell if Jed's is because he always wears that skanky cap. What's it like when he goes to bed?'
âHis hair is all right,' I say, thinking of my mum's beautiful hair starting to fall out.
âIt might not happen straight away. If he's having chemo, it might take a while.'
âYou really think he's sick?' I ask, imagining Jed with a bald head, all his footballer curls lying scattered on the floor around him.
âMust be. No one has appointments twice in a fortnight if they're not sick.'
âI suppose so. But do you really think he might be dying?'
âMight be,' says Priti. âGuess we'll have to wait and
see. They sure like their secrets in your family.'
âWell, you've got a brother who's a secret terrorist,' I say.
âYeah, about that, Shakeel was well mad at me for messing around in his room. Wouldn't let me tidy up though, which I reckon is a bit sus!'
âYou've also got a sister with a secret boyfriend and another brother who'll kill her if he finds out, so I reckon your family has as many secrets as mine.'
âTrue,' she says. âGood job you and me are good at keeping our mouths shut then!'
1. Why does she have such long hair? None of the other mums I know have hair like hers.
2. Why does she sometimes let me stay up really late and go to bed when I want and eat pizza and not brush my teeth, but at other times she's really strict about bedtime, has no-processed-food-products drives and makes sure I brush my teeth for three whole minutes every time?
3. Why does she always insist on sitting to watch me eat? Just sitting there, watching me, with this weird smile on her face, telling me to tuck in because I'm a growing boy.
4. Why does she have to volunteer for everything? Why doesn't she let some other people volunteer sometimes?
5. Which hospital has she gone to exactly?
6. Why is my granny cross with her for being ill?
7. How can it be that she's so much happier since she's met Gary, but she still got sick again? I know she's happy because she's always singing and dancing and laughing. But she cries more too. And now she's sick again, which doesn't make sense.
8. Why doesn't she like phones? And couldn't she make an exception and call me just once?
9. When is she coming home?
10. Why can't I think of another question? Does that mean I'm forgetting her too?
When Granny and Jed get back from their appointment, Granny seems sad and a bit shaky. She's carrying two plastic shopping bags and a box from the bakery and she says she thinks we all deserve a cup of tea and a little treat. Jed says he doesn't want anything. He just goes straight up to his room, but not before I see that he's wearing a brand-new pair of trainers.
I offer to take Granny's shopping for her and she says, âOh, you are a good boy. The arthritis in my fingers is playing up today.'
As I take the bags from her, I notice that her fingers don't uncurl when she lets go: they stay tightly balled up for ages afterwards.
âDid it go OK?' I ask as I take the things out of the bags and put them away in the cupboards: sugar, cereal, milk, jam. Granny is like me; she likes everything to be in its place.
âOh, yes,' she says sadly. âAt least I hope Jed enjoyed it.'
This seems like an odd thing to say about a hospital appointment, but I don't want Granny to think I'm prying, so I don't ask her any more about it.
âYou and I will have to do something nice together soon,' she says, smiling at me.
âI'd like that.'
Then she says, âYou are just like your father. He always used to help me unpack the shopping.' I make a mental note to remember this â I suppose it counts as a memory for Priti's box.