They went food shopping on Thursday nights, up to the big Tesco near the motorway. Normally Mum and Uncle Christian let Amber and Saffron go to the toy section after they’d been down the first three or four aisles, but today they’d made them wait until Amber had chosen her birthday cake (she picked Bart Simpson.)
The toy section was a big collection of aisles just by the clothes, and the first thing you came to was a big wall of dolls, Barbies and Sindys and all the others. Even though she’d probably looked at them a million times before, Amber took down the boxes, one by one, and read the little bits of writing on the back. “These ones are supposed to be going to an international high school, right?” she said to Saffron, “But then you get three of them from America and four from everywhere else in the world.”
Saffron nodded. She’d said the exact same thing last week.
Amber put the doll back, and moved on to the little plastic Sesame Street characters on the right. “Do you think that sometimes Americans forget that anywhere else exists?”
“Maybe. America is really big.” Saffron pointed behind her. “I’m going to look at the books, OK?”
“OK,” said Amber. She was too busy mercilessly analysing the Cookie Monster to look up.
The bookshelf here was excellent. Even if there wasn’t anything new this week, Saffron would be happy to flick through a couple of the ones she’d read before. There was a poetry book about what teachers got up to behind your back, for instance, and a spooky one about an evil great-aunt who came to visit a family and plot their doom, and the youngest son was the only one who could stop her. On her way there, though, Saffron passed the cuddly toys, and decided to have a look at them. Really what she wanted to do was buy them all and take them home, but Mum and Uncle Christian would never let her buy eight whole toys on one shopping trip. They couldn’t stop her picking them up one by one and hugging them, though.
The one nearest to Saffron was a giant Tigger- nearly half her height- and when she picked it up, she noticed something strange on the shelf beside it, hidden in its shadow. It was a little pink plastic rectangle, and Saffron was pretty sure it wasn’t meant to be there. Why would they put it somewhere you couldn’t even find it? You’d never get anyone to buy it that way.
Saffron put the Tigger back and picked up the rectangle. It looked a bit like a make-up kit, but Saffron wasn’t going to open it up to make sure in case it broke. Was it one of the ones from the make-up aisle, or had it fallen out of someone’s handbag by mistake?
“Someone must have changed their mind about buying it,” said Amber, after Saffron went back to show her.
“But why’d they leave it with the cuddly toys?”
“‘Cause they were too lazy to take it back to where they’d got it.”
Saffron looked back down at the rectangle. “I’m going to take it to the Customer Service desk. They’ll know what to do.” Saffron had only found out about the Customer Service desk last month, when Amber had left her coat by the bookshelves and they’d had to come back the next day to find it, but now she knew all about how it worked.
“Why not just take it back to the makeup section? That’s where it goes.”
“It might not be from the makeup section here. Someone might have lost it.” Saffron wasn’t as worried about that as she was about getting to the makeup section, not being able to find the place it was supposed to go, putting it on a random shelf and having total strangers ask her what she was doing. But she wasn’t going to tell Amber that in case she laughed. “If Mum and Uncle Christian get here before I come back, can you tell them I’m at the Customer Service desk?”
“Fine,” said Amber, and went back to reading the Action Man box.
The Customer Service desk was right on the other side of Tesco, over by the entrance. To get to it, Saffron had to find a till with no-one on it, duck under the chain with the ‘Out of Order’ sign stuck to it, and walk all the way along the front of the store, with her right hand pointing out awkwardly in front of her so everyone could see she had the makeup kit and she wasn’t trying to hide it or steal it or anything. She walked past the café, with its lovely smell of baked beans and chips like a signal saying, It’s Thursday! The weekend’s nearly here! And it was around then that the man caught up with her.
She didn’t know where he’d come from. One second there wasn’t a man walking beside her, and the next second there was. “What have you got there, sweetheart?” he asked.
Saffron stopped in her tracks, her feet seeming to lock in place all on their own. He’s a security guard, she thought, He thinks I’m stealing.
He didn’t actually look like a security guard. He wasn’t wearing a uniform or anything- just an old grey sweatshirt and jeans. He had wild grey hair and glasses, and he was smiling at her. Sort of. It was more like he was trying to smile, but he wasn’t very good at it.
Saffron took a deep breath. “I found something in the toy section that’s not meant to be there, so I’m taking it to the Customer Service desk so they can work out who it belongs to.”
“Right,” said the man, stretching it out as if he thought that she was funny. Or that she was lying. “And what’s your name? Are you here with your mummy?”
Those were exactly the kind of questions that a security guard probably asked you before arresting you. “Yes. And, um, I’m Saffron.”
“Saffron, right,” said the man, rocking back and forth on his heels, “And your mummy’s name, is it Octavia?”
“Yes…” Saffron looked sideways. A few people had moved out of the way, and a path had cleared to the front of the store. “Um, I really need to go to the Customer Service desk,” she said, and walked away from him as quickly as she cold. She didn’t run, because that would have made her look guilty, but maybe if she went fast enough he wouldn’t have time to work out what was going on and stop her.
It was only a minute later, after the Customer Services lady had nodded and smiled and taken the make-up kit off her hands, that Saffron really began to wonder who the man had been. It was funny- she’d been told a million times not to talk to strangers, but she’d been so worried about him arresting her for shoplifting that she’d forgotten all about it. Maybe the man had been a security guard. But what if he wasn’t? What else could he have been?
Saffron turned around and looked at the route in front of her, deciding that if the man was still there, she’d go and hide in the Ladies’ toilets until he’d gone. But there was no sign of him, so off she went, walking as fast as she could, back to Amber.
*
She had it planned out- as soon as she answered the door, she’d fall to her knees and beg, telling him she’d do anything, work any job, just as long as he let her stay somewhere warm and bright for just a little while.
*
Anna’s birthday lunch (seven lots of burgers and fries, plus milkshakes and bits of cake) was finished. Immediately after the last bite, the kids had disappeared into the playground equipment near the picnic tables, leaving the adults to clean up the mess and/or use their absence as an excuse to gossip about people they didn’t like.
“I told you she wouldn’t last long,” said Gemma Marsh, the mother of Saffron’s friend Bethany and also Octavia’s colleague at the drop-in centre fifteen hours a week, “Every time you asked her to do something, she took it as a personal insult.” She picked up some of the food packaging and put it into a plastic nag. “In the end, she threw a screaming fit in front of a group of patient, and stormed out.”
“Why do I always miss the good stuff, eh?” asked Octavia, picking up the remains of the Swiss roll. She’d only had a couple of bites of it herself- it had smelled strange, sort of cheap and yeasty. She hadn’t said anything, because whoever had brought it had been very generous to do so without being asked, but she had to wonder what was in it.
Her mother would definitely have said something.
Yes, Octavia, you’re a real paragon of virtue for not demanding to know who tainted your daughter’s party by bringing along such a low-class Swiss roll. That’s a really high bar you’ve set for yourself.
“So she left this week, did she?” Mr Ashley asked Gemma.
“On Thursday, yeah.” Gemma started filling up another bag to take to the bins over by the fence.
“So would I be right in assuming that this means there’s a paid position open at the drop-in centre?”
Octavia shot him a look that said, Don’t start. Mr Ashley looked back innocently.
The table was clear. They could start walking up to meet the children and see which ride they wanted to go on next (preferably a gentle one, for the sake of everyone’s stomachs). As they went, Octavia went over a conversation in her mind, one that she and Mr Ashley had had a thousand times before. Yes, alright, it’s a hassle travelling between London and Torquay. Alright, I don’t even like London that much. Alright, everyone I work for is a complete tosser. But it brings in good money, OK? At this rate, eight years from now, Amber and Saffron will have their pick of universities, and in the meantime, they won’t have to worry about…
There was a cry of pain. It wasn’t Amber or Saffron, but it did sound familiar. Octavia looked up and saw four of the girls they’d brought to Finch’s crowded around one of the rope swings, where it looked like the fifth girl was trapped.
“She wanted to see what would happen if she spun her hair around the rope at the same time as it was spinning the other way,” explained Amber, as the adults hurried towards them, “But then she got stuck.” The girls’ friend Lily sat on the swing, deeply uncomfortable, with her head stuck to the rope by her long, blonde ponytail, which seemed to have actually merged with the rope in places. This is why we keep Amber and Saffron’s hair shoulder-length, thought Octavia, before she could stop herself.
Gemma and Angie, one of the other mothers, tried turning Lily the other way and unwinding the hair like that, but it didn’t seem to work. Gemma looked back at Octavia, cringing as if she had toothache. “We might have to get the scissors out…”
Lily, overhearing this, looked horrified- she’d always been proud of her long hair. She’s got nobody to blame but herself, said Octavia’s mother, in her head, Let this be a lesson. Vain little creature.
“Wait, let me try,” said Octavia, stepping forward, “I’ve got long nails. I might be able to do it.” The other mothers moved out of the way, and Octavia bent down a little so that she could get a better look at the rope.
She picked at the hair, strand by strand, finding the ends and teasing them out. Every so often, Lily made a whimpering noise when she pulled too hard, but otherwise she stayed quiet. She was hoping this would work just as much as Octavia was.
After three or four minutes, Octavia’s fingertips were burning and raw from rubbing up against the rope for so long, but Lily’s hair was almost all out. She pulled the last few strands away herself, leaving a strange golden sheen on the rope. “I’m free!” she cried, punching the air as she jumped down.
Octavia straightened up, and beamed. She couldn’t remember the last time she’d felt this great.
*
From the moment Josette let the man into her house, he looked at it as if he owned it. She couldn’t even call it covetousness- he was looking at it as though it was already within his grasp. He was inspecting it as though it was a used car he wanted to buy. Well, of course. Like so many in this country, he thought he was entitled to come in and make himself at home. There was no difference between himself and Josette, after all. Why would there be?
He sat himself down on the sofa (Chesterfield in grey oak, if he only knew), and grinned at her. “Cup of tea?” he asked.
Josette could have slapped his face. Instead, she just walked over to the chair opposite and sat down. “You said that you had information about my daughter. What is it?”
If Mr Doggett expected payment, he was about to be very disappointed indeed. Josette had as much information as she required about her daughter- no more, no less. She knew about the “event-planning” business, a kind of monetised obsequiousness in which Octavia desperately courted the favour of notable people. She knew about the bare little flat near London Bridge. Mr Doggett would have to try hard indeed to convince Josette that she cared to know anything else.
An oily grin spread across his face, revealing teeth that looked like rubble from a building site. Fitting, perhaps- Mr Doggett likely came from a long line of labourers, generation after generation of men whose greatest joy was to make animal noises at any passing woman, never looking for greater intellectual stimulation than that provided by a ninety-minute football match. (Ah, said the socialists, but he was born the same helpless, weak creature that you were. And what difference did that make? Some people actually learned and grew after their birth, instead of rolling around in their own filth for decades to come.)
Mr Doggett took out his mobile telephone, pressed a few buttons, and held it out so that Josette could see what was on the screen. “Take a look at these photos. See if you recognise anybody.”
The first photograph was of an outdoor picnic table of some sort, with a large group of children stuffing their faces with fried food while the adults ignored them. It took Josette barely a moment to recognise Octavia (bony and unwell-looking, chatting to a fat woman with a ragged pony-tail), and a few seconds more to recognise Mr Ashley, Octavia’s old music teacher. Josette would have thought that the man would have been long dead by now.
Mr Doggett swiped his finger across the screen, and the image changed. One could see more of the background- multicoloured rollercoasters and signs pointing to other attractions. This one showed Octavia with her arm around a small girl who was blowing out candles on a shabby store-bought cake. The child’s hair was dirty and her face was smeared with food. Beside her, a balloon floated on a string attached to the table. It was a gaudy pink-and-silver thing with the number ten printed on its side.
Josette opened her mouth to ask the point of any of this- was she supposed to be shocked that Octavia’s repertoire apparently included children’s parties?- when she saw the other girl in the picture. Ratty pigtails and a pair of cheap plastic glasses, but besides that, she was the exact image of Octavia at ten years old.
Mr Doggett saw the expression on her face, and nodded. “What if I told you you had two grandchildren you never knew about?”
(To be continued)