The Boy from France

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The Boy from France Page 7

by Hilary Freeman


  ‘No, you’re a guest. It wouldn’t be right. Anyway, you need to get ready for school.’

  ‘Bof. Wiz two eet eez quickair.’

  ‘OK, then. That would be great. Thanks.’ Before he can change his mind, I find him another cloth and hand him the can of cleaning fluid, pointing him in the direction of the sink. He sets to work, humming some of the Grease yogurt lyrics we made up as he goes along. ‘Ya da wada wada, you da wada wada, ooh ooh oh.’

  I join in on the ‘ooh ooh oohs’ and we both giggle.

  Max should be proud of me. I am totally ‘being myself’ – I can’t think of any activity less glamorous or pretentious than cleaning. And cleaning with Xavier is (almost) fun. Come to think of it, doing pretty much anything with Xavier would be fun or, certainly, more bearable. I should ask him if he’ll come to the dentist with me and help me with my maths coursework.

  ‘Zair,’ he says, when he’s finished. His effort has been a bit slapdash and he’s forgotten to wipe around the taps, but who cares? ‘All fineeshed.’

  I smile at him in the (slightly smeary) bathroom cabinet mirror and he grins back at me. Funny how things turn out. I’d always imagined my Fairy Godmother to be a slightly plump, middle-aged woman with a perm, a pink tutu and a magic wand, not a fit French boy with wavy hair, dark-wash jeans and a can of Mr Muscle. Perhaps Xavier is my Prince Charming and Fairy Godmother rolled into one. Although he can’t make Mum better. Nobody can do that, not even the brain scientists.

  I leave him to take a shower while I go into my bedroom to finish getting ready for school. We meet downstairs, in the kitchen. Mum is at the table, where I left her, looking at her laptop. She makes small talk with us while we eat our cereal, and then, before I can stop him, Xavier comes out with, ‘I am very sorry to ’ear of your accidont, Madame.’

  Whoops! When I told him my little white lie, I didn’t expect him to say anything to Mum. That was stupid of me. I should have warned him not to mention it, said that she was touchy about it. I don’t want Mum to think I’m ashamed of her illness.

  Mum raises her eyebrows at me. Her expression reads, ‘We’ll discuss this later.’

  I glance back at her, innocently, and will her not to correct Xavier.

  ‘Thank you, Xavier,’ she says. ‘That’s very kind of you. Actually, while you’re both here, I wanted to ask you something. My friend Jane has just emailed. She’s got a spare ticket for the theatre tonight and wonders if I’d like to go with her. She said she could pick me up at six and take me for a bite to eat first. Would you mind if I wasn’t here tonight? Could you manage on your own? It’ll only be for a few hours.’

  I try not to look too happy. Do I mind having to spend the evening alone with Xavier? Hardly. Do I mind having the house to ourselves for a few hours? Hell no!

  ‘Sure, Mum, that’s fine with me. It’ll be so good for you to get out. Um, that’s if it’s OK with you, Xavier?’

  He looks puzzled. Perhaps Mum was talking too fast. Sometimes I forget that his English isn’t perfect and he can’t always keep up.

  ‘My mum is going out tonight, so we’ll have to stay alone here. Is that OK?’

  He grins. ‘Mais oui, of course. Perhaps I can cook something Français, as I promised?’

  ‘Cool,’ I say. ‘That would be perfect. There you go, Mum. All sorted. Go out and have a good time. We’ll be fine.’

  Mum is hesitant. ‘Perhaps I should clear it with the school. I’m not sure if I’m allowed to leave Xavier unsupervised.’

  ‘Oh, no, I wouldn’t bother with that. Like you said, it’s only for a few hours. And you know we’re both very responsible. Well, you know I am, anyway.’

  She nods. ‘OK, then.’ Although neither of us dares to say it, we’re both aware that, these days, I’m usually the one who looks after her, and not the other way around.

  I smile. ‘I promise we won’t have any wild parties or set fire to the kitchen.’

  Today, with no Dad around to give us a lift, we’re meeting Rosie and Manon at the end of the street, so that we can all walk to school together. (Xavier now feels confident enough in Camden to make the last part of the journey on his own.) It’s the first time Rosie has seen me with him since our little chat, a couple of days ago, and I feel very self-conscious. As we head towards her, I know she’s watching how I act with him, reading my body language and trying to work out what’s going on between us. I’m giving nothing away; I don’t want another lecture. I try to behave as coolly as I can, walking fast and looking straight ahead until I’m close enough to make eye contact with her. Then I smile my broadest smile, greet her and Manon, and start chatting about the test we’ve got today. I even let Manon monopolise Xavier all the way to school, pretending that it doesn’t bother me.

  Xavier leaves us at the school gates.

  ‘See you laytair, Veecks,’ he says, as he kisses me goodbye (he kisses the others too). I maintain my composure, giving him a shy smile only when I’m sure the others can’t see.

  He’s just begun to walk away when Rosie calls him back. ‘I forgot to say, do you want to come out for coffee with us after school? I’ve said I’d take Manon and a couple of her friends to Tupelo Honey. You should both come too. And I’m going to text Sky to see if she fancies it.’

  I don’t know what to say. I try to catch Xavier’s eye to see his reaction but he just grins at me, enigmatically. Maybe he doesn’t understand. After what Rosie said the other day, I certainly don’t want to make a big thing about having time alone with Xavier tonight, or to tell her that he’s cooking for me. Never mind, I suppose we can always have coffee with the others and then go home and have dinner later.

  I’m just about to say, ‘OK, that would be nice,’ when Xavier answers instead.

  ‘We cannot come tonight, sorry,’ he says, with the type of assurance that nobody would dare to question. ‘I promise to make dinair for Veecks’s muzzair. Anuzzer night, per’aps.’

  So he’s fibbed! And I didn’t even ask him to. Either he doesn’t want to go out with the others or he really does want to spend time alone with me. God, I hope it’s the latter. I seriously cannot wait until tonight.

  osie comes to find me at breaktime. I’m really glad to see that she’s on her own for once, without Manon, because I am absolutely dying to tell her about everything that happened after Mum went out last night. I need to get it off my chest and I could do with her perspective. By the time I got to bed it was too late to text her or Sky. And there was no time before school this morning. Not being able to talk about it is driving me a little bit bonkers.

  But she doesn’t seem to notice that I’m bursting to spill. Before I can begin, she says, ‘We really need to talk, Vix,’ and she sounds ominously serious. That throws me. Today, of all days, I am not in the mood for serious. ‘Can we have lunch together today?’ she asks. ‘Just you and me?’

  I nod, vigorously. ‘I’d like that.’ She has no idea how much. ‘And, actually, I need to speak to you as well. I’ve got loads of stuff to tell you . . .’

  I leave the sentence hanging in the air, enticingly, hoping that she’ll ask me what it is that I want to talk about now, and let me start telling her, because I’m not sure I can keep it all inside until lunchtime. But she doesn’t. She just puts her hand on my shoulder, gives it a little squeeze, and says, ‘OK, cool, see you later, then,’ and announces that she has to go to the loo before her next class.

  And then she’s gone, and I’m still standing in the same spot, looking like a demented fish, with my mouth hanging open. I’ve got no idea what she wants to talk to me about. Whatever it is can’t be as important as what I need to say. Maybe she feels bad about Manon being mean to me and is trying to make things right again. That would be good. I miss Rosie. It feels like ages since I’ve spent proper time with her, even if it is only about a week.

  Somehow, I make it through the morning’s classes without getting into trouble for daydreaming or doodling. I meet Rosie at the entrance to the school cantee
n and, even though I’ve got no appetite at all (despite not eating any breakfast), we grab some ready-made sandwiches and yogurts, so we can take them outside to our favourite lunch spot, a quiet area just behind the science block, where hardly anybody comes. We sit down on a step and open our sandwiches and Rosie starts eating hers, while I play about with mine. I’m still dying to talk but I’ve had too much time to think about everything and now my thoughts are all jumbled up, and I don’t know where to begin. Maybe I’ll let her go first, after all.

  ‘So . . .’ I say, grinning at Rosie.

  ‘So . . .’ She grins back.

  ‘You wanted to talk to me about something?’

  ‘I did. That’s right. Didn’t you want to tell me something too?’

  ‘Yes . . . but you go first.’

  ‘OK . . .’ She seems reticent, like she’s having second thoughts. ‘It’s, er, about Manon.’

  ‘Aha. I thought so.’ Reassured, I take a bite of my sandwich.

  ‘Look, it seems like you’re not exactly getting on, and it’s a bit awkward for me, what with her staying with me and you being my best friend and everything.’

  ‘I know. I’m sorry. It’s not like I haven’t tried. It’s weird for me too.’

  She smiles. ‘It’s just . . . you could make it a lot easier.’

  Irritated, I put my sandwich back in the packet and place it on the step. ‘How do you mean I could make it easier? She’s the one who didn’t like me from the start. I didn’t do or say anything bad to her.’

  ‘I know. It’s not that. Of course you didn’t. It’s more about . . . Xavier.’

  ‘Xavier? What about him?’ I’m aware I sound defensive. I can’t help it.

  ‘Manon really likes Xavier. You must have noticed – she’s not exactly subtle about it.’

  I snort. ‘Yeah, that’s for sure.’

  ‘She thinks you’ve got in the way.’

  It all makes perfect sense now. ‘So that’s why she doesn’t like me! She’s jealous! I couldn’t work out what I’d done.’

  ‘She doesn’t not like you. She thinks you’re all right, actually. But she’s miffed that you’ve come between her and Xavier. It’s also obvious to her that you like him and that you’re after him.’

  ‘It’s not exactly like that!’

  ‘Vix, there’s something you need to know. She told me that they’ve got something going on, back in France.’

  My stomach lurches horribly, the piece of sandwich I’ve just swallowed sticking halfway down my throat. ‘What do you mean?’ I try not to sound panicky. ‘He says he hardly knows her. They go to the same school, that’s all.’

  ‘Well, that’s not what she told me. She said that they’d flirted at a party and that they were getting quite close before the exchange. All her friends said something was definitely going to happen between them in London. And then she got here and Xavier met you, and everything changed.’

  ‘Oh! Is that all? They flirted at a party – which she could have imagined – and her friends said something might happen – which they probably only said because it was what she wanted to hear.’ I’m so relieved, I’m practically laughing. ‘Sorry, Rosie, but I think it’s all in her head. Do you know what? Between you and I, I don’t even think Xavier likes her that much as a friend. He never looks that happy when she talks to him and he doesn’t seem to want to spend any time with her. He never, ever mentions her or says he wants to hang out with her.’

  She doesn’t look at me. ‘Maybe that’s because you’re always there.’

  ‘So what? If he really liked her, not just in her fantasies, that wouldn’t matter.’

  Rosie looks uncomfortable. ‘I’m not getting at you, Vix. Please don’t get so upset about this. She just thinks you’ve got in the way, distracted him.’

  But I am upset. ‘Distracted him? Doesn’t he have a mind of his own? And anyway, even if it were all my fault, which is ridiculous, how was I supposed to know that she thought she had something going on with him?’

  ‘You weren’t. But you do now.’

  ‘So what am I supposed to do? It’s not like I can help it if he likes me.’

  ‘You could step aside. You could act like you’re not interested until he gets the message and gives up. I’m just asking you nicely to please back off. Then we can all be friends and it will all be so much easier.’

  ‘It’s not that simple,’ I say quietly. ‘I like him. A lot.’

  ‘I know you think you do, hon,’ says Rosie. I roll my eyes. I realise she means to be sweet, but it just comes across as patronising. ‘But you hardly know him. Do you really think you’d like him that much, if he weren’t French? Maybe it’s just the cute accent and the fact he dresses differently from the guys we know. If you put him in a hoodie and trainers, cut his hair differently and made him talk with a London accent, you probably wouldn’t look at him twice.’

  I’ve tried to keep calm but I’m angry now. ‘That’s total crap, Rosie. I’ve spent loads of time with him, talking about all sorts of stuff. I know I really do like him. And why the hell should I care about Manon’s feelings, when I don’t even know her? She’s not my friend. She’s just some girl who you’ve only known for a few days! It’s not as if you or Sky had feelings for someone first – that would be different. I don’t owe Manon anything. Anyway, I can’t tell Xavier who he should fancy. If he prefers me, that’s not my fault. That’s just life. Or, c’est la vie, as Manon would probably say.’

  ‘God, Vix, calm down. I don’t want to fall out over this. I was just trying to have a friendly chat. What’s happened to you? You’re not yourself at all today.’

  She’s right, I’m not acting like ‘myself’ today, and do you know what? I feel bloody brilliant about it. I wouldn’t normally be this confident or assertive. Usually, I would back down, apologise even though I haven’t done anything wrong, and contemplate walking away so that Manon could continue to develop her relationship with Xavier, imaginary or not. Anything for an easy life, anything to make other people happy.

  But that was the old me, the me that had no experience, the me who thought I wasn’t good enough or pretty enough, the me who always put other people first. That was the me who had never been kissed, the me who had nothing to lose because I’d never won anything.

  That me doesn’t exist any more. This is the new, improved me. For, what nobody knows yet – that thing that I’ve been bursting to talk about – is that last night, after school, something did happen between Xavier and me.

  I shrug. ‘I don’t want to fall out with you either, Rosie. But what you’re asking isn’t fair. We’ve been friends for ever. It feels like you’re putting Manon’s feelings before mine. That hurts.’

  ‘I’m sorry,’ says Rosie, and I can tell she means it. ‘It’s not what I intended to do. I just want everyone to get on. I had no idea you felt so strongly about this. You’re right. It isn’t fair.’ She gives me a brave little smile. ‘So, let’s change the subject. What was it you were going to tell me?’

  I take a deep breath, open my mouth, and then shut it again. I should tell her. I planned to tell her. A big part of me still wants to tell her. God, I always imagined she’d be the first person I’d tell about something this momentous. But how can I tell her now?

  ‘Nothing,’ I say, turning away to stare pointlessly at the uniform grey bricks of the science block. ‘It’s not important.’

  decide to tell Sky instead. She is equally my best friend, although I haven’t known her for quite as long and she doesn’t go to my school. There are actually some things it’s easier to talk to her about than Rosie – like my worries about Mum – because she hasn’t always had a straightforward time with her parents, either.

  ‘So go on then, spill,’ she says excitedly, once I’ve told her why I’m there. I’ve popped round after school on the pretext of borrowing a book. The truth is, I would have spontaneously combusted if I hadn’t confided in someone.

  ‘I’m not really sure where to s
tart . . .’ I can’t stop smiling. It feels like somebody has attached puppet hooks to my jaw and is pulling them upwards. My lips are starting to ache.

  ‘How about at the beginning? When you got home from school with Xavier.’

  ‘OK. So, we came in and Xavier looked at me in this really sweet, meaningful way and said he was going to go to Sainsbury’s and buy some food for dinner, and then he asked me if there was anything I don’t like to eat and where the shopping bags were . . .’

  Sky giggles. ‘I want all the facts, hon,’ she says, ‘but maybe not in that much detail. Skip to the interesting part!’

  ‘OK, sorry. I was just remembering how it all happened in my head. It’s kind of hard to edit. OK. So, he went to Sainsbury’s and bought some food for dinner. And we ate it. And then we sort of kissed.’

  Sky rolls her eyes at me. ‘Vix, you can give me a bit more detail than that! What did he make? Something really romantic and French?’

  ‘I don’t know what it was. It was kind of weird, actually. Not at all what I was expecting. It was this dish made of macaroni with fried eggs and olive oil.’

  ‘Yeah, sounds weird . . . I guess that could be OK . . .’

  ‘It was really tasty, believe it or not, although I’d probably have pretended I liked it even if I didn’t, so as not to be rude. Xavier says it’s his favourite food at home, sort of comfort food. His mum used to make it for him when he was a kid and she showed him how to do it. And then we had crème caramels – although he didn’t make those, he just bought them.’

  ‘Yum. So how did you end up . . . you know . . .’

  ‘Well . . .’

  It’s a good question. How did it happen? I’m still not entirely sure. Right up to the moment that it did happen, I still wasn’t certain that it was going to, or that Xavier properly liked me. He was shyer than usual all evening, more jokey, even putting me down a bit. But at the same time, I kept catching him looking at me, when he didn’t think I could tell, and when we were in the kitchen he brushed against my leg and my elbow more times than could have been accidental. Looking back, I guess he must have been nervous.

 

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