she must be trouble. So what did she lie about?â
I shake my head. âItâs complicated.â
âYouâre worse than Merlin!â she smirks. âOK, so what are you going to do? She a friend worth keeping hold of?â
âI donât know,â I say, knotting my hands. âDonât know if I even know her all that well.â
âDoes she have a good reason for doing what she did, for lying to you? I mean, from her point of view?â
âThatâs not the point. Her point of view doesnât matter.â
âDoes to her,â Fozzie says, looking at me sideways. âNot being funny, but if you think that, doesnât sound like youâre very good mates in the first place.â
I can hear what sheâs not saying. Iâm not a very good mate.
I wish I could explain why Iâm not being a horrible person; not when Red is the lucky one, perfect and seamless and already ready to speed off into my future.
âInvite her round here,â Fozzie suggests. âGo on! Iâll get Dan to bring doughnuts. They fix everything. Or are you ashamed of us?â
She leans in and elbows me jokily, stale smoke on her breath, a forced edge to her argh argh laugh.
âThanks. I might. Iâll see. Forget I said anything, yeah? Come on, letâs cover up some of this pink.â
Fozzie looks at me sideways a few times, suspicious, maybe disappointed â but once we start piecing the prints together, sheâs all smiles again.
Mags taps on the door, and coos when she sees the prints.
âYouâre an amazing photographer,â she tells me, shyly picking up a shot of her on the beach, on Danâs shoulders. The colours pop: blues and greenish-yellows, brighter than life.
âItâs all down to the camera, really,â I mumble, but I glow all the same.
Mags joins in. We decide to frame James Dean, matching colours or clashing them, filling up gaps and spaces with overlaps before starting to tack them to the wall.
âI canât take all of these,â Fozzie says, sliding me some of the Mulvey Island beach shots. âYou have to keep that one for yourself,â she adds, passing me the top-hat silhouette.
âAnd I donât know what that was meant to be, but you can have that one too,â Mags giggles, tossing me a bland-looking sea view.
Itâs Penkerry Point, on a murky day. Nothing special, grass and grey sea and some cloud.
Something special: the first photo, the one I tried to take of Red, the morning after my birthday. Red was right. Itâs as if she was never there.
I pick up the top-hat silhouette shot and hold them side by side. Red, invisible. Me, a black shape against the sun, empty space.
Two photographs of me, and Iâm not in either of them.
Itâs like the photograph of Mum, drumstick to her belly: a picture of Peanut, though there is no Peanut yet. Part of the family. My family. Not there, and always there.
I hate Peanut.
Iâve never admitted that before. I donât think I even realized it till I thought it out loud in my head.
I hate Peanut for coming along and changing everything.
I love it, too, love it madly. But thereâs a corner of my heart â an alveolus; maybe two â that hates.
I hate Red too, just a little.
It aches, knowing Iâll never be good enough by myself.
My brain ticks backwards. I look at Fozzieâs purple boots, askew in a corner; stare at the top-hat photo and wonder if Iâd ever have got on that boat to Mulvey Island without Redâs help. Something tugs at the back of my mind; as if Iâm looking directly at something, and itâs so obvious I canât see it.
I remember what Red said outside the hospital, about watching the same movie over and over, knowing all the words. Thatâs what this summer is for her. Action replay. No surprises.
No wonder sheâs lonely. Iâm the only friend sheâs got in the world
authors_sort
Robert Charles Wilson
Philip Caputo
Donald Harstad
Mary Elizabeth Summer
Olivia Goldsmith
Holly Martin
Ryanne Hawk
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Grace Monroe