Фиона Гибсон – The Woman Who Upped and Left: A laugh-out-loud read that will put a spring in your step! (страница 10)
‘What is?’ I ask.
‘This thing here.’ He jabs at his laptop. I go behind him and peer over his shoulder at the screen.
‘What
‘Just a thing, a tutorial thing …’
I watch a few seconds of the YouTube clip in which an earnest-looking child is balancing a beach ball on his head while juggling multi-coloured blocks. ‘But he’s just a little kid, Morgan. He looks about eight.’
‘Yeah.’ He nods.
‘And it doesn’t look that difficult,’ I add.
He rounds on me. ‘It is! You’ve no idea …’
‘Oh, come on,’ I say, laughing. ‘It’s not as if he’s, I don’t know, juggling while dancing on burning hot coals or eating fire—’
‘You want that poor kid to burn himself?’
‘Of course I don’t …’
He turns to Jenna. ‘She’ll only be happy when he’s admitted to hospital for skin grafts.’
‘Jesus!’
The two of them snigger conspiratorially and, not for the first time, I feel like the intruder here, who’s blundered into a world of love bites and YouTube tutorials and meals consisting of salami and crisps, which I have no hope of ever understanding.
‘S’good, this,’ he mutters huffily, having turned his attention back to the screen. ‘S’giving me ideas …’
‘Ideas for what specifically?’ I ask.
He exhales through his nose as the clip switches to the child balancing a stack of bricks on his chin. ‘My act,’ Morgan murmurs.
He nods. ‘Yeah, I know. I’m gonna do some street theatre.’
My heart drops. ‘As a hobby, yes. I meant something as a real job.’
‘No, that’s what I mean. As my
I stare at him, lost for words for a moment. ‘But that’s not … it’s not a career
‘Nah, nah, I don’t mean doing it around here. I’d go to York or maybe, I dunno, even
‘He’s really good,’ Jenna says loyally. ‘You should see him.’
He shrugs. ‘It was raining.’
‘Yes, but this is the north of England. It’s cold a lot of the time. It’s an occupational hazard, I’d have thought …’
‘It was freezing! And I only had my thin jacket …’
‘The thin jacket you chose,’ I shoot back, ‘when I’d given you money to specifically buy a proper, insulating winter coat …’
He turns to Jenna and chuckles. ‘Mum wants me to have proper insulation, like a boiler.’ I clamp my back teeth together as they both giggle away.
‘I meant a coat that was a
‘What’s a doily?’
I glower at him. ‘You’ve got to eighteen years old and don’t know what a doily is?’
He makes a little snorty noise, like a horse. ‘See what I have to put up with, Jen? It never stops!’
I glare down at him, deeply irritated now. I need a proper talk with my son – with capitals, a
‘Ooh, that’s nice,’ she breathes, closing her eyes ecstatically, apparently having forgotten I’m here. Where am I supposed to go while this foot fondling is happening? I can’t bear to spend any more time holed up in my bedroom or the kitchen. Maybe I should sit outside in our unlovely back yard, by the wheelie bins? I can’t help glancing down at her pretty little feet, the nails painted baby blue, the toes perfectly straight and not curled weirdly towards the big one due to wearing foot-cramming courts in the 80s. What kind of person have I become, to feel bitter that a beautiful eighteen-year-old girl – whom my son loves to distraction – doesn’t have any corns or calluses? Christ, it’s a small step from wishing a verruca on her.
‘Mum?’ Morgan’s voice cuts into my thoughts.
‘Yes, love?’
‘Are you … okay?’
Hell, I’ve been staring at his girlfriend’s feet. I hurry off like a discreet maid and busy myself with the washing up they’ve left for me, all the while thinking:
I go about my business all evening, dishing up pizza then keeping out of their way, trying not to feel envious when I hear them laughing raucously, and wishing I didn’t mind so much that I’m not allowed to join in. When did I become so needy? It’s only my birthday, after all, and my friends made it fun. And Vince remembered, as did Mum:
At 11.20 p.m., by which time I have given up on any acknowledgement of the date, I pop my head round the living room door. Jenna is audibly kissing my son’s neck:
Jenna peels herself off him. ‘Night, Audrey.’
‘Oh, Mum, hang on a minute …’ Morgan delves into his jeans pocket. ‘Here,’ he says, handing me a bent pink envelope.
‘Thank you, darling,’ I say, unable to erase the trace of surprise from my voice. There’s an oily stain on it and MUM has been scribbled lightly in pencil on the front.
He grins and winds an arm around his girlfriend’s shoulders. ‘See what she thinks of me, Jen?’ he chuckles. ‘She actually thought I’d forgot.’
My heart swells as I take it from him. It’ll be a voucher, probably, which doesn’t score terribly highly on the effort front – but at least he’s thought about the kind of shops I like. At least, I hope it’s for John Lewis and not Asda. I rip it open. It’s a birthday card depicting a plump tortoiseshell cat sitting on a windowsill. A bit grannyish, but never mind. No voucher either. But then, he’s always broke and I wouldn’t feel great about him spending what little he has on me. And it’s my money anyway, so it would be like giving cash to myself, and not as if I
‘Thanks, Morgan,’ I say, placing the card on the mantelpiece and dropping the envelope into the waste paper bin.
‘Don’t throw that away!’ he yelps.
I blink at him. ‘It was just the envelope, love.’
‘No, no, there’s something in it …’
‘Sorry, I didn’t realise …’ I snatch it back out and find a piece of paper inside, folded over and over into a tiny square. ‘What’s this?’ I murmur, opening it out.
‘Just a list.’
‘A list?’ I squint at his barely-legible scrawl:
I’m aware of both Morgan and Jenna watching me intently from the sofa as I grip the note. Maybe it’s a joke. It goes on: