though,â she said. Occasionally, sheâd suddenly get irrationally protective: âNot a chance! I canât give you freeloaders all my secrets.â
One day, halfway through a demonstration of how to make breadcrumbs by bashing a bag of bread against the table leg, Sofi accused Pip of looking at her funny.
âHeâs looking at me funny. Whyâs he looking at me funny?â
Pip put his head straight. Heâd been looking at her from an angle, more with his left eye than his right. He did the same to me sometimes when we were in the study.
He mumbled something.
âWhat do you mean âdeathâ?â She almost shouted. âIs he trying to curse me?â
âDeaf,â he clarified. âDeaf in my left ear. Just a bit.â
After that we switched seats so that we were always on his hearing side.
We ate lunch lying on our fronts on the croquet lawn, or round the kitchen table on days when it was too hot. After lunch, Pip would get tired, which Sofi decided was because he was growing. As soon as he was asleep, Iâd say there was no point in staying and we would escape and leave him. We went to the Venus Caves, and lay in uncut grass which stayed erect in the gap between us, like a little fence. We walked to a cliff edge over Derrible Bay â the sea ahead spread like a jewelled carpet â and sat in the wind, feet dangling.
âNext time,â Pip had asked me, âcould you take me? There are some places Iâd like to show you. I could come.â But when he fell asleep after lunch, I didnât wake him.
The following day, however, he said the same thing in front of Sofi. He wanted to show us Little Sark. I said weâd already been a hundred times. His face fell, so Sofi said, âWe love it though, letâs go again. Vaseline,â and she reached into her pocket and dabbed some on his lower lip.
Pip didnât have a bike, so he ran along behind ours. Because of the way his spider legs moved â knees to the sky â it looked like he was pedalling too.
The afternoons were different with Pip. He knew which one was Jersey and which was Guernsey. He told us that the Coupée was a wind trap, and that, during the most terrible storms, kids from Little Sark used to have to crawl across on their bellies to get to school. He answered Sofiâs question about it staying up: it was âan isthmusâ. And the beach weâd looked at, the one that curved between the cliffs like the in-between-toes of a webbed foot, was called Grand Grève. We sat looking out at its white bay, and he told us other things: about the silver mines at Port Gorey; and that Sark was the last place in Europe to abolish feudalism. He paused.
âIn 2008,â he finished.
Sofi said sheâd guessed. She bit a fingernail. âSo whoâs the king?â
âNo king,â Pip said. âHeâs called a Seigneur,â and he told us how the Seigneur âsemi-rentsâ the island from the Queen for £1.79 a year.
â Cheap skate!â Sofi said. âThatâs the price of a cup of tea in Costa. What jokers.â
She asked Pip if everybody knew everybody knew everybody knew everybody knew everybody. Pip said he didnât know, and then, âmostlyâ.
âLike them, for example. Do you know them lot?â She pointed, using her elbow for subtlety, at a family having a picnic down below us on Grand Grève, a father and three sons. The youngest two â one olive-oil blond, the other rustier â were filling their pockets with shells and having competitions to see how far they could throw rocks into the sea. The father and the oldest son had deckchairs, and looked like they were giving the stone-throwers marks for each shot. The wind was strong enough to make each stone fly in a bow-shape.
âBend it like Beckham!â Sofi yelled then, subtlety forgotten.
âThem? The Millers? No,â Pip said. âI
Alyssa Brooks
Mia Hoddell
Jane Green
Regina Richards
Kerrigan Byrne
Lorena McCourtney
John Freeman
Lorne L. Bentley
Maureen Jennings
José Carlos Somoza