sense of injustice. Heâd drifted in here for his own reasons. The job had suited him, and the room. He could go to ground for a while, living with these two strange, distant sisters, each with their own stuff going on and not much caring what he did or didnât do. Not asking about his past.
But he was getting pissed off with the way they only gave away so much, though the irony was not lost on him. He was living with them â surely he was entitled to more than a few crumbs of information?
Mouse flushed hot water into a basin. Steam surrounded her like mist as she snapped on yellow Marigolds. He wasnât going to let her blot away what had just happened like an inconvenient stain.
âSo whatâs Alysâs problem then? Bipolar? Autism? What?â
Mouse hefted the basin from the sink and made for the freezer, slopping water in her hurry to avoid the question. He followed her.
âIf Iâm working with her I need to know.â
âI donât know what it is.â She kneeled down and opened up the freezer drawers, releasing a faint whiff of death. âSheâs always been like that. I suppose sheâs on the spectrum, somewhere. When she was little she was just a handful, like most kids. She was wilful, disruptive.â She sat back on her heels, pushing aside her hair with one clumsy yellow rubber hand. âShe was always in trouble at school, for breaking things and fighting.â
Walt came to stand right behind her. âMaybe itâs that attention deficit thing.â
âDonât know. Mum might have had her assessed, but Dad was a bit old-school. He didnât want people coming around prying, so it just got left, like a lot of other things.â
He couldnât see her face but the bitterness was unmistakeable.
âSo is that why you stick around? To look after her?â
âCan you imagine how sheâd cope on her own?â He could hear the threat of tears in her voice. The sound hurt him, and he reached round and pulled her up by the elbows and folded her into his arms. She stood there, not moving, like William had done, trying not to touch him with the wet rubber gloves. He moved back to look into her face, but she wouldnât catch his eye. She looked miserable, wet cheeks, red nose.
âYou know what? Iâm going to do what all good Brits do in a crisis.â He moved her firmly to the table and made her sit down. She pulled off the gloves with an air of defeat. Walt went over to the worktop and switched on the kettle. âIâve made tea all over the globe and I have a theory.â Heâd got her interest, albeit reluctantly. âAll families have a tea triangle.â
âA tea triangle?â She looked at him like he was trying to sell her snake oil.
He demonstrated obligingly. âLook, kettle here. Along the worktop, mug rack. And above the kettle . . .â He flung open a cupboard. âTeabags. I rest my case.â
âItâs an isosceles.â She perked up a bit, resting her chin in her hands.
âCorrect. Now my mother favours the obtuse triangle. Kettle here, teabags here, near the sink, and mugs overhead in this cupboard.â He flipped open a different door.
Mouse shook her head. âYeah, but what about the sugar? And the milk?â
âEe, now youâre just making it complicated, like.â
She flashed her wide grin. âAll this proves is that youâve spent far too much time drinking tea.â
âTrue. Unless . . .â He opened the fridge with a flourish. âThere is alcohol to hand. I see wine. Fancy a glass?â
She sat up straight, batted the idea away with a hand. âNo way. Iâve a kid upstairs and a sister who . . . No, I canât. Just make tea.â
âSo you have a packed Saturday night, do you?â
âNo, not exactly.â
âYouâll be sitting watching The X Factor like everybody else. Have one
Geralyn Dawson
J.W. Schnarr
Tessa Bailey
Unknown
Lacy Danes
Todd-Michael St. Pierre
Martina Cole
Jennifer Latham
Genevieve Jourdin
Anton DiSclafani