There is no purple sock, thought Fancy as she smiled her thanks at the Canadian. There is no purple daisy sock belonging to a woman from the pay office at Radcliffe’s work. Radcliffe’s affair – she thought next, with a strange little thud, like a book falling off a bedside table – Radcliffe’s affair is over.
My husband is not having an affair.
MARBIE ZING
The day after the picnic on the living room floor, Marbie hit snooze on her alarm clock, just as the telephone rang. It was the aeronautical engineer.
‘Don’t call me at home!’ she hissed, pretending that Vernon and Listen were still there.
‘If your boyfriend had answered I’d have just hung up. Okay? Just chill, okay? Can you talk?’
‘No.’
‘Well, can you listen for a moment? Marbie, you are a riot. What was that yesterday? Showing up at my place, telling me a story about spying on a 2nd grade teacher, and waltzing right out the front door? You didn’t even touch my picnic! I thought to myself, who was that?’
‘Well,’ said Marbie, ‘it was me.’
‘Okay, whatever, I just want to say one thing. I want to say that you are gorgeous, and I want to say how happy I am about the decision that I made, way back when I first met you at the Night Owl Pub.’
‘That’s more than one thing. And you didn’t meet me at the Night Owl Pub. You met me at work.’
‘Huh. Yeah, I remember that too. Your paper aeroplanes! Wo ho! Dodgy! But what I’m talking about here is my decision. At the Night Owl Pub? When I saw you sitting there? All your pals were gone and my car had just got towed. So I asked you what the time was and “five o’clock” you said, in that voice of yours – and right away I made a decision. The best decision I ever made.’
‘What decision?’
‘The decision to get a taxi. I thought – like out of nowhere, like shazam! – I thought: I’ll get a taxi. I was running late for a meeting, see, and I knew I’d miss the bus if I stayed. So I was about to say, “see ya”, but then I thought: shazam, I thought: a taxi, that’ll do the trick! And it was the best decision I ever made.’
‘Okay. Well, that’s great. I think I should hang up now.’
‘Sure. That’s all I wanted to say anyway. Just that.’
‘Okay.’
‘Oh, and Marbie, you’ve got to come by my place tonight and explain what you were going on about yesterday. You can’t tell a spy story like that and just leave me hanging. You hear me?’
‘I can’t?’
‘No.’
‘Because I was thinking that I could. I was thinking you could forget I said a word, and get on with your life. Okay?’
‘No, because I heard every word, and now I need an explanation or who knows what might happen? See you tonight. Another thing, if there’s anybody there with you now, just say that this was a wrong number.’
‘That’s stupid.’
‘Okay, gorgeous. Bye.’
Marbie hung up and clutched her pillow tightly to her chest. Quite simply, she did not know why she had slept with the A.E. in the first place, let alone told him the Secret. She looked around the room in confusion. The night before, she remembered, it had suddenly seemed clear that she must tell him, and that this would be the answer. But how could it have been? Here she was, Marbie Zing, embracing an irrational existence. She looked down at the pillow in her arms and thought: my existence is a pillow. She did not even know what she meant.
She threw the pillow away and dialled Vernon’s number, but there was no answer. She left a message saying that she just wanted to wish Listen good luck again, for her first day at Redwood Primary, and also, if Listen needed anything, well, she, Marbie, was right here in the apartment, except when she was at work.
The Year 7 St Carmel students were marching down the path at Redwood Primary School. They had been welcomed at the Assembly Hall and now they had to go to the demountables, which would be their classrooms.
‘In pairs!’ shouted the teachers. ‘March in pairs!’
But actually the teachers did not care if they walked in pairs or not, and Chloe, who was next to Listen, faded back from her to join the two behind. Listen had just said, ‘How was your holiday?’ but at exactly the same time someone had shouted, ‘GIVE ME MY HAT’, so Chloe had not heard.
There were Redwood Primary kids at the windows of classrooms, opening their mouths to stare. Listen tried to huddle with the pair in front, so the kids would not think she was alone, but she couldn’t because they patterned out and took the whole path.
Two’s company. Three’s a crowd. She thought this sadly, and then there was a glint of sunlight on the buckle of her school bag and she thought it again: two’s company, three’s a crowd! Of course! Let’s say somewhere in her form there was a group of three friends? Well, two’s company, three’s a crowd. So, they would need a fourth. She could be the fourth.
The teachers tried to teach like a normal day, but the girls mucked around like a vacation. It should be a vacation; it was the first day back and this was a primary school.
‘That doesn’t mean you have to act like primary schoolers,’ the teachers said, over and over. When the bell rang for recess, it was not a high school electric bell, it was a strange, clanking primary bell.
On the muddy grass outside the demountable, Listen pulled her jumper sleeves over her hands and said, ‘Hi, Kelly.’
Kelly Favoloro, who was walking past, looked surprised and said: ‘Hi.’
Listen said fast, in a metal-flat voice, ‘Can I hang out with you guys, maybe, just today?’
Kelly looked around for her two friends, Amber Tang and Sasha James, and all three raised their eyebrows.
Then Kelly said, ‘Sure, yeah, okay.’
Quickly and politely, the other girls said it too: ‘Sure, Listen, yeah!’
Listen said, in a serious voice, ‘Just say no if you want.’
‘Don’t be stupid.’ Kelly twirled Listen’s ponytail around her hand. ‘Why would we say no?’
She would have to go to the A.E.’s place to begin repairing her mistakes. Maybe she could shout ‘April fool!’ and pretend it had all been a trick? But it was not April, and when she arrived, she saw that it was too late to pretend.
His eyes, when he opened the door, had a glittery, greedy look.
So, sitting straight-backed in his lounge chair, she explained the Secret again, more succinctly this time, and with emphasis on confidentiality. She spoke in a soft, serious voice, in order to imply that reverence was the appropriate reaction, rather than feverish excitement. He assumed a grave expression. She concluded by explaining that the Secret was an honour which was rarely bestowed. He smiled and assured her he was worthy of this honour.
Then he served the lasagne and things began to go wrong.
In the caravan that night, Listen had a bumping heart of frightened happiness. This plan could work. She had sat with Kelly and the others at recess and lunchtime that day, and Kelly had admired her hair. It’s so soft and shiny, Kelly said. Then she wanted to do it in a French braid. Also, Amber told a long story about how her father lost his job during the holidays but then talked his boss into giving him a promotion instead. Sasha didn’t say much, but Listen thought she could ask her some questions about ballet. Sasha loved ballet so much that she carried her slippers around with her all the time, like a long, drooping bracelet.
Marbie had a mouthful of lasagne when she noticed that the A.E. was frowning. He was staring at his fork and there were at least thirteen different cracks and creases in his forehead. It was unnecessary, that many cracks and creases.
‘So, basically, you spy on this woman without any kind of government authorisation, or permit, or, I don’t know, police protection? Right?’
‘Right. It’s just us. But “spying” is the wrong –’
‘And basically, this woman is not only a 2nd grade teacher, she’s also a lawyer, you say?’
‘Not a lawyer. She just studies law part-time.’
His frown was like a freshly broken mirror. ‘Studying law part-time? I’ve got to say, Marbie, you’re playing with fire there. What happens when she finds out? Don’t think a lawyer’s going to pull any punches, do you?’
‘Who says she’s going to find out?’
‘Well,’ said the A.E. with a maddening shrug. Then, as he reached for more lasagne, he said, ‘Come to bed with me?’
‘No,’ replied Marbie, ‘thanks all the same.’
The second day of term, Listen felt both frightened and safe. At recess and lunchtime she sat outside in the late winter sun and chatted with Kelly Favoloro while Amber and Sasha arm-wrestled. She passed around her bag of Valerio Honey-Mustard Chips, and everybody took one.
Then, the next morning, while the History teacher read to them from the textbook, Judith Sierra, who had braces and a ruler-straight fringe, turned around and whispered, ‘Listen?’
‘Yeah?’ Listen whispered back.
‘Who d’you hang around with?’ Carefully, Judith regarded her.
‘Kelly Favoloro and Sasha and Amber.’
Judith looked concerned. ‘Um,’ she whispered, ‘’cause they were talking to me before school, and they’re really worried. They thought you only wanted to sit with them for one day – they didn’t think you meant, like, forever?’
‘It was just until today,’ Listen explained. ‘They don’t need to worry, it was just until today, and that’s it.’
Judith looked relieved. ‘I’ll let them know. They were really worried. See, Kelly likes you but Amber and Sasha aren’t so sure, so Kelly felt guilty about saying you could join.’
‘Okay,’ said Listen. ‘Thanks.’ She smiled for reassurance and Judith smiled back.
Over the next few weeks Marbie’s days fell into a pattern. She would arrive home from work, phone Vernon, get his answering machine, and go over to the A.E.’s place. The A.E. would ask difficult questions about the Secret, and try to persuade her to go to bed with him. The next day she would go to Fancy’s place to find answers to the A.E.’s questions, so that, on the following day, she could go to the A.E’s place again.
It was exhausting but she could not see how to stop. The A.E. had the Secret, and he kept setting little brush fires with it. She had to go over and put them out.
Mopping the shop floor in the Banana Bar one late afternoon, Listen discovered that her mind was humming: two’s company, three’s a crowd! Two’s company, three’s a crowd! – in a cheerful, mocking tune. All right, she thought, so the plan didn’t work. You don’t have to sing about it.
She looked at Vernon, who was counting money at the register, and thought, with a thud: two’s company, three’s a crowd. That’s why Vernon and Marbie broke up! Because I made them into a crowd!
She mopped savagely for a few moments, tears in her eyes. Then she calmed down, because she knew what Vernon would say if she mentioned that to him. She knew she was being stupid. She wouldn’t even waste Vernon’s time by raising it.
But she would ask him something one more time. ‘Vernon,’ she said, and he looked up, mouthing twenty-three as he did. ‘Vernon, what did you and Marbie fight about?’
‘Ab-so-lute-ly nothing,’ said Vernon with a smile, and returned to his counting.
She squeezed the mop into the bucket. It was too much of a coincidence: A Spell To Make Two Happy People Have A Huge Fight Over Absolutely Nothing. Even when she reminded herself that there was no such thing as magic, and also that, as far as she knew, the first two spells had not worked (a spell to make someone decide to take a taxi, a spell to make a vacuum cleaner break) – it was still too much of a coincidence.
The only hope was the promise on the back of the book: This Book will make you Fly, will make you Strong, will make you Glad. What’s more, this Book will Mend your Broken Heart. As long as she finished all the spells, the book would somehow fix its own mistake.
She wondered if the next three spells would work – as far as she could figure out, they were all supposed to happen at the same time in a few weeks. A spell to make someone give someone a rose (maybe Vernon would give Marbie a rose?); a spell to make someone find something unexpected in a washing machine (hmm); and a spell to make someone eat a piece of chocolate cake (maybe Marbie would drop by the Banana Bar for cake?).
At least, if those spells worked, they wouldn’t hurt a fly.
‘Playing with fire,’ A.E. said, wanting to talk about the Secret again. ‘Crash down on you like a house of cards.’
‘What do you mean, exactly?’ Marbie was slicing up an onion. ‘The house of cards will catch on fire? Or the house of cards will fall on our heads. Because guess what, a house of cards would not hurt a fly.’
A.E. sat on his kitchen bench, drumming his heels against the cupboards and watching as Marbie chopped the onion. The frown was in the centre of his forehead again.
‘Ton of bricks then,’ he adjusted. ‘Crash down on you like a ton of bricks.’ Then: ‘Don’t think a lawyer’s going to pull any punches, do you?’
‘What’s the charge?’ pounced Marbie. ‘What charge?’ She spoiled the effect by sneezing seven times.
‘Hayfever?’ said the aeronautical engineer.
‘So?’ said Marbie, spitefully.
‘You’ve probably got a cold. Not hayfever at all. As for the charge,’ he continued, ‘ever heard of a particular little document known as the Convention for the Protection of Individuals with Regard to Automatic Processing of Personal Data? Hmm?’
‘What in the world makes you think I’d have heard of such a thing!’ cried Marbie with a flurry of onion skins.
The aeronautical engineer simply breathed.
‘You made it up,’ said Marbie.
He turned his palms upwards. ‘Did I?’
There were disadvantages to being at Redwood Primary. For example, there were no laboratories or kitchen facilities, which meant that, in Science and Food Tech, they did nothing but theory for the term. A lot of the girls complained about this and the effect it might have on their futures. Also, although Redwood was only five minutes’ drive from St Carmel’s, some teachers could not make it there in time for a class. So they often had substitute teachers, and once, they even had a Redwood teacher step in at the last moment to take Commerce. His name was Mr Bel Castro. His own class, he said, were doing gym.
‘Excuse me, sir,’ said Donna Turnbull, pretending to be polite. ‘Can I just check with you about something?’
‘Of course,’ said Mr Bel Castro, also polite.
‘What grade do you teach normally?’
‘Fifth grade,’ he said.
‘So,’ Donna continued, slowly, ‘don’t take this the wrong way or anything, but could I just ask, have you ever had any, kind of like, experience with teaching high schoolers – I mean, students like us?’
Anxiously, she looked around the room as if concerned about the fate of her class. Beside her, Caro giggled.
‘Teaching students like you?’ said Mr Bel Castro, pausing as he picked up a marker. ‘Well, I don’t know about students like you. I did spend five years teaching Economics to Year 11 and 12 students at Riverview before I came to Redwood. So, I don’t know, which would you say are more like you – my senior students from Riverview, or my 5th graders here?’
Everyone laughed and someone said, ‘Haaa, Donna, he got you good.’
Then Mr Bel Castro wrote his name on the whiteboard and moved straight on to teaching. Afterwards everyone said he was better than their regular high school teacher. In fact, he seemed to have a whole lesson stored in his head, which he taught by asking questions.
‘You’ve been doing advertising?’ he began. ‘Consumer awareness and so on? Well, who here thinks that the Valerio Empire is messing with our minds?’
Then he smiled when everyone said, ‘Huh?’, and soon had them shouting out Valerio products from their homes and their days, including Valerio toys, pies, cars, computers, TV shows, and cleaning products. Then he waited while they began reciting Va
lerio jingles, and lines from the recent Nikolai Valerio biography, which had outsold the Harry Potter series in the first two weeks of its release.
‘Okay, you’ve got Valerio jingles jumping around in your minds, and Valerio’s book on your shelves. You’ve got Valerio films on your TV screens, and Valerio junk mail in your letterboxes. Who thinks the Valerio Empire might even be invading their privacy?’
This led to a discussion about whether you could invade somebody’s privacy by getting products and words inside their mind. Also, whether it made a difference if people chose to buy the products and watch the movies. Kelly Favoloro pointed out that you sometimes couldn’t choose because Valerio shows were the only things worth watching on TV. ‘Good point,’ said Mr Bel Castro.
Then Angela Saville said, ‘But isn’t it really the other way around, and we invade the Valerio family privacy?’
‘Ah-hah!’ said Mr Bel Castro. ‘Interesting! Well, let’s see how much we know about the Valerio family. Who’s in the family for a start?’
Of course, everyone knew the Valerio family: Nikolai, his wife Rebekka, and their three handsome, grown-up sons. Nikolai and Rebekka had now retired of course, and liked to play tennis and gin rummy in their South Dakota mansion. They had their own bowling alley! Nikolai had been a beautiful young motor mechanic, working in New York with a smear of motor oil on his nose, when he was discovered by a movie producer. His seven films were generally considered the best ever made. He became a sex symbol and an icon immediately after his first film. He designed a line of Valerio underwear, which was an instant smash. When he married Rebekka, a Romanian model, after his first film, women all over the world threw themselves off buildings. There was a famous wedding photo of Nikolai and Rebekka dancing their bridal waltz in a buttercup meadow, in bare feet. Bees buzzed close to their naked toes, but the pair, being blessed, were not stung.
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