Zoey opens one eye to look. ‘Starlings.’
‘How do you know?’
‘I just do.’
I’m not sure I believe her, but I write it down on my napkin anyway. ‘What about the clouds?
Do you know what they’re called?’
She groans, shifts her head on the table.
‘Do you think stones have names, Zoey?’
‘No! Neither do raindrops, or leaves, or any of the other mad things you keep going on about.’
She makes a nest with her arms and hides her face from me completely. She’s been grouchy
ever since she got here and it’s beginning to piss me off. This is supposed to be making me feel
better.
Zoey shifts in her chair. ‘Aren’t you freezing?’
‘No.’
‘Can we just go and rob a bank, or whatever it is we’re supposed to be doing?’
‘Will you teach me to drive?’
‘Can’t you ask your dad?’
‘I did, but it’s not working out.’
‘It’d take a million years, Tessa! I’m probably not even allowed. I’ve only just learned
myself.’
‘Since when did you care about what was allowed?’
‘Do we have to talk about this now? Come on, let’s go.’
She scrapes her chair back, but I’m not ready yet. I want to watch tha t black cloud drive
towards the sun. I want to watch the sky turn from grey to charcoal. The wind’ll pick up and all the
leaves will rip off the trees. I’ll race about catching them. I’ll make hundreds of wishes.
Three women appear, hauling buggies and children across the square towards us.
‘Quick!’ they cry. ‘In here, quick, before it rains again.’
They shiver and laugh as they squeeze past us to an empty table. ‘Who wants what?’ they cry.
‘What do we want?’ They sound just like the starlings.
Zoey stretches, blinks at the women as if wondering where they came from. They make a
great fuss taking off coats and plonking babies in high chairs, wiping noses with bits of tissue and
ordering juice and fruitcake.
‘My mum used to bring me to this café when she was pregnant with Cal,’ I tell Zoey.
‘She was completely addicted to milkshakes. We used to come every day until she got so fat her
entire lap disappeared. I had to sit on a stool by her side to watch the telly.’
‘Oh my God!’ Zoey snarls. ‘Being with you is like being in a horror movie!’
I look at her properly for the first time. She hasn’t made any effort; is just wearing shapeless
jogging pants and a sweatshirt. I don’t think I’ve ever seen her without make-up before. Her spots
are really obvious.
‘Are you all right, Zoey?’
‘I’m cold.’
‘Did you think the market was on today? Were you expecting to see Scott?’
‘No!’
‘Good, because you don’t look great.’
She glares at me. ‘Shoplifting,’ she says. ‘Let’s just get it over with.’
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