Authors: Catherine Bruton
There's a pause. I'm halfway down the stairs now but I stop because I don't want them to hear me and think I was listening. And because part of me still sort of wants to know what's going on.
âOf course,' says Granny. There's a pause before she says, âAnd if you don't want to go . . .'
âWhatever,' says Jed.
Five minutes later, Jed comes downstairs. He flops down on the sofa and pretends to be engrossed in some babies' TV programme about a family of pigs that Blythe likes, only he doesn't look like he's really watching.
I draw a picture of Jed and Granny, both wearing pig disguises, tiptoeing along like undercover spies. Jed's pig looks really angry, but Granny's one ends up just looking old and sad.
* * *
âYou know it's not for making radios, all that,' Jed says when we're both in bed. He still seems to be in a bad mood from before.
âWhat?'
âAll that stuff Shakeel has. It's not for radios.'
âHow do you know?' I say. I'm busy doodling cartoons of him and Priti dressed as Princess Leia and Han Solo and duelling with light sabres.
âI just do.'
âWhat is it then?' I ask.
âIt's for making bombs,' he says.
âDon't be stupid,' I say, looking up from my sketch pad and glancing across to the other bed where he's playing with his games console.
âHe's a Muslim, yeah? That's what they do. My dad told me.'
âThat's stupid. Why would he want to build a bomb?'
âTo blow up loads of British people.'
âAnd how's he going to do that then?'
âHe'll strap it all on to himself, then put on a big coat so no one can see and then he'll go somewhere really busy, press the button and â
boom
!'
âHe'll get killed himself then,' I say.
âDuh! That's the point!' says Jed. âHaven't you ever heard of suicide bombers?'
âOf course I have,' I say.
âMy dad's always going on about them. He reckons there are loads of them out there, plotting stuff even worse than what happened to your dad. He reckons we need to hunt them all down and string 'em up.' Jed sniffs and stares up at the ceiling then says, âI reckon he might be in some counterterrorism intelligence unit actually. Undercover.'
âReally?' I say. I'm sort of used to him making stuff up; he's been doing it ever since I've known him. When we were little, before his mum and dad split up, we used to see him loads and my mum told me not to believe everything he told me. (That was after the time he said he could hold his breath under water for ten minutes and dared me to try it too.)
Jed just shrugs. âMaybe. Cos there's no way the army sacked him, so I reckon he's undercover.'
I don't say anything.
âI don't really get it myself.'
âWhat?'
âTerrorists. Like, why don't they just plant the bomb somewhere then press the button when they're safely away? Or maybe they're too stupid and haven't thought of that.'
âShakeel seems really clever,' I say.
âOr maybe the sniffer dogs can't find bombs if they're on people, only if they're in shopping bags or suitcases or whatever.'
âMaybe.' I do some more drawing. Of Shakeel as Yoda, then as Darth Maul with zigzags on his face.
âOh, man!' says Jed, tossing aside his controller as his games console plays the music for âGame Over'. He flops over on to his back and stares at me crossly. âWhat's that all about anyway?' he asks, waving in the direction of my notepad.
âWhat?' I say.
âThe drawing stuff.'
âI just like doing cartoons,' I say.
âShow us then,' says Jed.
He reaches out a hand across the gap between the two beds. I hesitate before passing him my sketchbook.
He flicks through it with a bored look on his face. âThese are all right.'
âThanks,' I say. âYou're meant to read it backwards.'
âWhy?'
âIt's manga. You know, Japanese comic strips.'
âI know what manga is.'
âWell, you read them backwards, don't you?'
âI don't do reading either way,' says Jed, staring up at the ceiling again.
âMy English teacher says it's not real reading,' I say. âBecause there aren't enough full sentences.'
But Jed isn't listening. He's come across the pictures of him and Priti in
Star Wars
outfits. âCool!' he says. âReckon I'd be a better Anakin though. Can you draw me as him?'
âI can try.'
Jed tosses the book back at me. âGlad to find there's something you're good at. I was beginning to think you were a total no-hoper. When did you start this mango thing anyway?'
âManga,' I say. âI dunno.'
I could have told him that when I started getting
pocket money, I bought
The Beano
(which Mum said was my dad's favourite when he was a boy) and that's when I started drawing my own stuff. Just doodles at first, then my friend Lukas got me into manga and I started doing little comic strips, mainly about me and Lukas as superhero kids, defeating loads of baddies. I could have told Jed that it was about the same time my mum met Gary and then got into doing her stuff again that I started thinking in comic strips. But I don't bother explaining any of that because I don't think he's listening anyway.
âSo you just, like, make it up?' he asks.
âI suppose so,' I shrug.
I don't tell him about the doodling in my head either: how, when I'm watching stuff going on â everyday things â I find myself adding captions or doodles; how I imagine drawing pencil moustaches and specs on teachers' faces and see things people say in speech bubbles above their heads. Because if he did listen, I know he'd only laugh.
âSo do you reckon Shakeel is a terrorist or what?' says Jed, losing interest in my notepad.
I shrug again.
âIf someone held a gun to your head and said they were going to shoot you unless you decided, what would you say?'
âThat's stupid,' I reply.
âYeah, but what would you say?'
âI'd say: if Shakeel is building a bomb, why would he show it to us?'
âHe reckons we're just kids and we won't realise what he's up to,' says Jed.
We both lie in bed and I stare at my dad's star-sticker constellations on the ceiling. I can make out Orion, the Bear and the Seven Sisters. I don't know any of the others, but I decide to ask Granny tomorrow if she has a book I can look them up in.
I glance over at Jed. He's holding a tatty bit of old baby blanket close to his face and is still for the first time all day. He looks different somehow.
âI don't think Shakeel is a suicide bomber,' I say. âHe's nice.'
âYeah, well, I bet that's what people said about the men who killed your dad,' says Jed.
This morning, Granny's taking Jed to his appointment. She doesn't say what it's for and Jed avoids talking to me over breakfast, so I guess he doesn't want me to ask.
Granny makes Jed put a belt on before they go, so his trousers don't hang down and show his pants. She even makes him do his coat up, which I know he hates.
She seems a bit nervous about going: she gets in a muddle about the bus times and numbers when she talks to Grandad. (He doesn't offer to drive â he says that being summoned to pick me up at five in the morning was enough driving to last him all year.) Jed looks a bit weird too. He rolls his eyes at me as they leave and when Granny tries to put a hand on his arm, he shrugs it off impatiently.
Later on, Priti comes over and we hang out in my bedroom.
âHe thinks he's it, doesn't he? Your cousin,' says Priti, checking out some of Jed's things, which are
scattered all over the place. In fact, apart from the extra bed and a stack of manga comics, it hardly looks as if I sleep here at all.
âNo, he doesn't,' I say. For some reason, I don't want Priti saying bad stuff about him.
âDon't pretend you don't agree.'
âI don't.'
âYeah, right. Anyway, Zara doesn't reckon he's cool. She reckons she saw him out the window yesterday, doing keepy-uppies on your driveway like he thought he was some kind of Premiership footballer. She says he looks like a tramp. And I agree with her.' Priti is wearing a red and white cheerleader's outfit with a huge picture of some teen movie star emblazoned on her bum and red and white pompom bobbles holding up her pigtails.
âShe says you can tell he doesn't have a mum,' she goes on.
âHow do you know?' I ask.
âI'm right, aren't I!' She grins. âYou can always tell.'
âAnyway, he does have a mum,' I say. âHe just doesn't see her.'
âSame difference.'
Priti flicks through one of Jed's football magazines. I pick up my notepad, but I can't think what to draw.
âSo can you tell I don't have a dad?' I ask.
âThat's not the same,' says Priti, without looking up from the magazine.
âWhy?'
âIt just isn't,' she says.
âSo you can't tell then?'
âYeah, you can. But it's not the same. He talks funny too, your cousin.'
âHe talks the same as you.'
âHe so does not. He sounds like a total chav,' she says.
âYou both talk through your noses,' I say. âMy mum says that people in the city do that because of the pollution.'
âYeah, well, at least
I
can talk about my mum without looking like I'm going to have a heart attack.' She flicks the pages of the magazine, her red and white bobbles bouncing up and down with each turn.
I imagine the bobbles morphing into giant red and white basketballs, crashing down around her head.
âHow can you tell then?' I ask after a moment.
âWhat?'
âThat I don't have a dad.'
She stops flicking and looks thoughtful. âWell, you're crap at climbing trees and you're way more polite than most boys I know. Oh, and you're always drawing those pictures.'
âIs that it?'
âAnd you walk differently.'
âI do not.'
âNot like a girl. But not all swaggering and sticking out your crotch like most boys do. I guess they must get that off their dads.'
âThat's pants,' I say.
âDon't blame me if you've got unresolved issues about this! Hey!' she says, suddenly leaping to her feet, looking very excited. âDo your grands have a computer in the house?'
âYes. Why?' I still have a picture in my head of myself swaggering like a cowboy with chaps on.
âWe should do some research.'
âWhat are we researching?' I ask.
âYou,' she says. âThe whole 9/11 kid thing. You never talk about it. So I reckon we should find out more about it. Then I can help you.'
âI don't want to be helped.'
âTry telling that to my mum.'
Priti makes out that her mum is this terrifying professor type, but I met her yesterday after Shakeel finished showing us all the radio stuff, and she's actually a tiny little woman with a soft voice and long hair down to her waist, like my mum. She wears hippy tie-dye stuff and dangly earrings, and she seems all right to me. Priti says that I'm not the one who has to carry around âthe weight of maternal expectations', so what do I know.
If Granny had been here, she'd have made a fuss about supervising Internet access, but Grandad is too busy reading an article about benefit fraudsters to care about cyber-stalkers. He just says, âDon't blow up the computer!' and lets us get on with it.
So Priti makes herself comfortable in the big swivel chair in Grandad's office (really the spare room) while I get to perch on a kitchen stool, which
is dead uncomfortable and too high.
âRight, what shall we type in?' She doesn't even pause for my answer before saying, â9/11.Then what?'
I shrug. Staring at the screen, thinking of paper aeroplanes and cartoon towers.
âBereaved children,' she says.
âBereaved?'
âThat's what my mum called you. “He's bereaved,” she said. She reckons that's why you don't talk much. B-E-R-E-A-V-E-D. Bereaved,' she says, with a slight American accent as she types in the word.
Priti turns to me and grins as she jabs at the enter button and almost immediately a whole scroll of links comes up.
âBingo!' she says. I imagine a fruit machine coming up with three little aeroplanes.
Ching! Ching! Ching!
âRight, let's just click on the first one.'
I don't look at the screen. I look down at my hands, but Priti opens the link and reads out the contents in a loud voice, so I don't get much choice but to listen.
â
Nearly 3,000 children under the age of 18 lost a parent during the terrorist attacks of September
11 2001
,' she reads. âWow! So there are loads of you out there.'
âMost of them are in America,' I say.
âStill, there must be some over here. I bet you didn't know there were so many of you.'
âI hadn't thought about it,' I say, which is almost true. I've never considered how
many
other kids there are like me out there, although I've sometimes wondered what I'd do if I ever bumped into one.
â
The average age of the “9/11 kids” when the Twin Towers fell was 9
,' Priti reads. â
But some were mere babes in arms (or in their mothers' wombs) when they lost a parent that day
.' She turns to look at me and says, âSo if some of them were born after it happened, they must never have met their dads at all.'
âI guess so,' I say. At least they've got a decent excuse for why
they
can't remember their dads.
âThat must be weird,' says Priti. âI wonder if they met them on the way down.'