Instead, I press the red button on my phone and concentrate on the road ahead.
‘She’s a very
silly girl,’ Dad says. ‘The longer she leaves it, the worse it will be. Terminating
a pregnancy isn’t like taking out the rubbish.’
‘She knows that, Dad. Anyway, it’s nothing to do with you – she’s not your daughter.’
‘No,’ he agrees. ‘She’s not.’
I write Adam a text. I write, WHERE THE HELL ARE U? Then I delete it.
Six nights ago his mum stood on the doorstep and cried. She said the fireworks were
terrifying. She asked why he’d left her when the world was ending.
‘Give me your mobile number,’ he told me. ‘I’ll call you.’
We swapped numbers. It was erotic. I thought it was a promise.
‘Fame,’ Dad says. ‘Now, what do we mean by fame, eh?’
I mean Shakespeare. That silhouette of him with his perky beard, quill in hand, was on the
front of all the copies of his plays at school. He invented tons of new words and everyone knows
who he is after hundreds of years. He lived before cars and planes, guns and bombs and pollution.
Before pens. Queen Elizabeth I was on the throne when he was writing. She was famous too, not
just for being Henry VIII’s daughter, but for potatoes and the Armada and tobacco and for being so
clever.
Then there’s Marilyn. Elvis. Even modern icons like Madonna will be remembered. Take
That are touring again and sold out in milliseconds. Their eyes are etched with age and Robbie isn’ t
even singing, but still people want a piece of them. Fame like that is what I mean. I’d like the whole
world to stop what it’s doing and personally come and say goodbye to me when I die. What else is
there?
‘What do
you mean by fame, Dad?’
After a minute’s thought he says, ‘Leaving something of yourself behind, I guess.’
I think of Zoey and her baby. Growing. Growing.
‘OK,’ Dad says. ‘Here we are.’
I’m not sure where ‘here’ is. It looks like a library, one of those square, functional buildings
with lots of windows and its own car park with allocated spaces for the director. We pull into a
disabled bay.
The woman who answers the intercom wants to know who we’ve come to see. Dad tries to
whisper, but she can’t hear, so he has to say it again, louder. ‘Richard Green,’ he says, and he gives
me a sideways glance.
‘Richard Green?’
He nods, pleased with himself. ‘One of the accountants I used to work with knows him.’
‘And that’s relevant because…?’
‘He wants to interview you.’
I stall on the step. ‘An interview? On the radio? But everyone’ll hear me!’
‘Isn’t that the idea?’
‘What am I supposed to be interviewed about?’
And that’s when he blushes. That’s when maybe he realizes that this is the worst idea he’s
ever had, because the only thing that makes me extraordinary is my sickness. If it wasn’t for that,
I’d be in school or bunking. Maybe I’d be at Zoey’s, fetching her Rennies from the bathroom
cabinet. Maybe I’d be lying in Adam’s arms.
The receptionist pretends everything’s all right. She asks for our names and gives us both a
sticker. We obediently attach these to our coats as she tells us that the producer will be w ith us
soon.
‘Have a seat,’ she says, gesturing to a row of armchairs on the other side of the foyer.
‘You don’t have to speak,’ Dad says as we sit down. ‘I’ll go in by myself if you want, and you
can stay out here.’
‘And what would you talk about?’
He shrugs. ‘Paucity of teen
cancer units, lack of funding for alternative medicine, your dietary
needs not being subsidized by the NHS. I could talk for bloody hours. It’s my specialist subject.’
who is taking life by the horns.’
We’re bundled out pretty sharpish. I think Dad’s going to have a go at me, but he doesn’t. We
walk slowly up the stairs. I feel exhausted.
Dad says, ‘People might give money. It’s happened before. People will want to help you.’
My favourite Shakespeare play is
Macbeth . When he kills the king, there are strange
happenings across the land. Owls scream. Crickets cry. There’s not enough water in the ocean to
wash away all the blood.
‘If we raise enough money, we could get you to that research institute in the States.’
‘Money doesn’t do it, Dad.’
‘It does! We couldn’t possibly
afford it without help, and they’ve had some success with their
immunity build-up programme.’
I hold onto the banister. It’s made of plastic and is shiny and smooth.
‘I want you to stop, Dad.’
‘Stop what?’
‘Stop pretending I’m going to be all right.’
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