Authors: A. F. Harrold
Some children need their parents to pay them a lot of attention. Some children need constant watching. Their day is somehow wasted if there's no grownup around to witness everything they do. They get bored if they're left on their own for more than five minutes (less, sometimes). They sulk and slump and kick their heels and grumble.
Amanda had never been one of those children. She'd always been quite content off by herself. When she was little she'd spend hours with big bits of paper and boxes of pens and crayons, drawing maps and monsters and planning adventures. She was more than happy to sit on her bed reading books or sailing the ocean. When she went round other children's houses
for
birthday parties and sleepovers the other children's parents would sometimes phone her mum up and say things like, âI've just found Amanda sat under the kitchen table. She said her boat had been swallowed by a whale and she was waiting for it to be sick. Um⦠Would you like to come and collect her?' To which Amanda's mum would say, âDoes she
want
to come home early? Has she broken anything? No? Then I'll be over at six as arranged.'
Because Amanda was so good at entertaining herself, at inventing adventures and exploring made-up stories of her own, her mum, even in the school holidays, could spend most of her time working in her study (sending off e-mails and spreadsheets to Mr and Mrs Shuffleup, Amanda's grandparents, for whose business she did the accounting), or pottering in the kitchen waiting for the kettle to boil while listening to the radio, or laid on the sofa with her feet up (just for ten minutes) with a glass of wine in the middle of the afternoon, and sometimes she'd quite forget (almost) that she even had a daughter.
Which is not to say Mrs Shuffleup was anything other than a good mother or to imply that she
wouldn't
have instantly pressed
Save
on her computer and sat down to read a book with Amanda or played a board game or helped her with her homework or gone to the pictures, had Amanda just asked. Nevertheless, it pleased her that Amanda was the sort of girl who was quite happy to get on with stuff by herself. Perhaps because it made her feel less guilty about spending so much time working in her study.
One
Sunday morning, a few weeks after Rudger had made his first appearance, Mrs Shuffleup answered the telephone. She was sat at her desk, looking past the computer screen and out of the window into the garden where Amanda was playing.
At the other end of the phone was her mother, Granny Downbeat, as Amanda called her. They chatted for a while, as adults do, about this and that until Mrs Downbeat asked after her granddaughter.
âIs she around? Does she want to say hello?'
âNo, Mum,' Mrs Shuffleup said, âshe's out in the garden playing with Rudger. I don't want to interrupt her.'
âRoger?' her mother asked. âIs that a new friend?'
âSort of. He's new, yes, and he's a friend, yes, but, wellâ¦'
âWhat is it?'
âYou're going to laugh, Mum. You're going to say I indulge her too much, or that I ignore her too much. One or the other.'
âDon't be silly, love,' her mum said. âGo on.'
âRudger's not really real.'
âNot real?'
âNo, he's imaginary. Amanda dreamt him up the other week, but they've become inseparable. He has to have a place set at the table and everything. Don't laugh.'
But her mother wasn't laughing. Instead, she sounded wistful. âOh, Lizzie, love,' she said. âDo you remember Fridge?'
âThe fridge?' Amanda's mum asked. âWhat are you talking about?'
â
Your
old imaginary friend, dear. I think he was a dog, wasn't he? It's a long time ago now, of course, but when you were little you wouldn't go anywhere without him. The cats wouldn't go in the room when he was there. You'd chase them out so that he wouldn't get scared.'
âI don't remember that,' Amanda's mum said, wondering how she'd forgotten something that sounded so memorable.
âOh dear. You ask your brother next time you speak to him,' her mum said. âYou and Fridge used to drive him potty.'
And after that the conversation moved onto other things, weather and work, artichokes and arthritis, the usual sort of boring grownup subjects.
Once she'd put the phone down Amanda's mum sat at her desk in silence for a few minutes. She looked out of the window at the garden and smiled as she saw Amanda leaping off the bench with blue paint on her face and a stick in her hand, yodelling like some ancient Pictish warrior and scaring poor Oven out of the flowerbed.
The cat flap rattled in the kitchen.
She leant back in her chair and thought of Fridge. Now her mum had reminded her, she found she did remember something. She could
almost
remember what he looked like. Had he been an old sheepdog? Maybe. It had been so long ago, and although she had a sense that she remembered some things (the damp, earthy, musty smell of the dog as he slept under her bed, for instance),
most
of what had slipped out of her mind as she'd grown up remained lost.
What
was
clear, though, was that inventing a friend hadn't done
her
any harm, and so she wasn't going to worry on Amanda's behalf. While some adults she knew would be on the phone to the child psychologist at the first hint of an imagination in their child (heaven forbid such a terrible thing!), she was more than happy to share a house with Rudger.
If there was an extra place to lay at the dinner table, then so be it. If she had to buy the special strawberry-scented shampoo the imaginary boy preferred, well, that was easy enough. If they had to make sure his seatbelt was done up in the car before they drove anywhere, these were all small prices to pay for a daughter who was happy.
Besides, from everything Amanda had told her about Rudger, he didn't seem like a bad influence. In fact, secretly, she worried a little for
his
sake.
That evening Amanda's mum was going out. She didn't go out often, but when she did she always managed to find the most annoying babysitter she could to get in Amanda's way.
Amanda was quite old enough to be left on her own without a babysitter. Babysitters were for babies, she'd tell you (the clue is in the name), and she hadn't been a baby for years. Besides she wouldn't be on her own, would she? She'd be with Rudger.
But it happened every time: Amanda would rehearse the arguments, loudly, intelligently, pleadingly, and the babysitter would turn up just the same.
âIt's as if,' Amanda said to Rudger, âshe doesn't trust us. I blame you.'
âWhat?' said Rudger, taking umbrage at the accusation.
âWell, you
did
break that vase of hers throwing the ball round in the dining room that time.'
Rudger's
jaw hung open.
âFirstly,' he said, counting on his fingers and wondering if he'd have enough, âit was a
jug
and not a vase; secondly, it was
you
and not
me
who threw the ball; thirdly, it was an
orange
and not a ball; fourthly,
you
said it was a
hand grenade
, not an orangeâ'
âAnd fifthly,' she interrupted, âI told her it was
you
, Rudger, because you're my shining knight who takes the blame, otherwise she'd have been dead angry with
me
and I wouldn't have been allowed burgers on Friday. Did I say “Thank you”?'
Rudger was confused, but that wasn't unusual. He scratched his elbow.
The doorbell rang.
They ran downstairs to find Amanda's mum opening the front door to a tall teenage girl. She was stood in the rain under a dripping black pop-up umbrella and talking loudly into her mobile phone.
âYeah, so like I'm at the house now,' she was saying to whoever was listening. âGotta go. 'kay? Speak later, yeah? Mwah! Mwah!' She made loud mock kissing noises.
Amanda looked at Rudger and tried not to laugh.
âYou've got my number, haven't you?' Amanda's mum was saying. âI'll be back about ten. Thanks awfully for coming out at such short notice.' She turned to Amanda and said, âYou be on your best behaviour forâ¦oh, sorry, what was your name again?'
âMarigold, but everyone calls me Goldie.'
â
Isn't that a dog's name?' said Rudger quietly.
Amanda giggled and her mum said, âBe nice.'
âIt wasn't me,' Amanda said. âRudger said something funny, that's all.'
âOh yes,' her mum said. âAmanda's got a friend called Rudger, but don't mind him, he's no trouble.'
âThere's two of them?' Goldie asked. âYou didn't say there'd be two.'
âOh no.' Mrs Shuffleup laughed. âThere's no need to worry. Rudger's
imaginary
.' She half-mouthed, half-said the word, but still everyone in the hallway heard it.
âMum!' Amanda protested. âHe's standing right here. He does have feelings, you know.'
Mrs Shuffleup looked at her daughter for a moment, took in the crossed arms and the frown, and said, âSorry, love, I didn't mean to be rude.'
âWell, it's not me you should be apologising to, is it?'
Amanda didn't uncross her arms until her mum looked round and said, âSorry, Rudger,' to the thin air nowhere near where Rudger was stood.
âApology accepted,' said Rudger.
âHe says he forgives you,' Amanda said.
After she'd made herself a cup of tea Goldie said, âSo, where's the biscuits?'
The three of them were sitting at the kitchen table. The room was warm and the back door was open. Although rain was falling
hard
on the patio, the evening hadn't got cold yet. The air smelt clean, tangy, almost electric. The storm had swept away the close sticky dull afternoon, and although the clouds hung low and dark, and the thunder grumbled overhead, the rain felt good, and the evening felt fresh.
âIn the jar,' Amanda said, pointing. âMum says we're allowed two each.'
The babysitter pulled the biscuit barrel across the table and lifted the lid.
âOkay, so two for you,' she said, extracting a pair of cookies with her long fingers. âAnd two for me.'
She replaced the lid.
â
And
two for Rudger,' Amanda said.
âRudger?' asked the girl, confused.
Amanda rolled her eyes and said, âOf course Rudger. Mum
always
lets him have two biscuits too, 'cos he's a growing boy and needs his vitamins.'
Goldie slapped the table and smiled as she remembered, laughing. âOf course! Your imaginary boyfriend. When I wasâ'
Whatever Goldie was about to say was forgotten as Amanda spat the nibbled corner of cookie all over the table in shock.
âHe's not my
boy
friend,' she said, sounding utterly outraged at the very idea. âUgh, uh, uh.'
She waggled her hands at her mouth as if she could somehow expunge the bad taste through the power of waving.
Rudger
sat in his chair and stared at her. He didn't like the suggestion any more than Amanda did, but he wasn't sure all the theatrics were
entirely
necessary.
âCalm down,' he said.
She glared at him, aghast. âCalm down?' she repeated as if she couldn't believe what she was hearing.
â
Mandy and Roger sitting in a tree
,' Goldie sang between sips of tea. â
K-I-S-Sâ
'
âThat's not even his name,' Amanda snapped, turning on the babysitter with a glare.
âPardon?'
âIt's not
Roger
,' she said firmly. âIt's
Rudger
. And I'd be dead before I'd kiss him.'
Goldie stared at Amanda for several long seconds before she put her mug down. She looked like a babysitter getting out of her depth. âWhatever you say,' she said.