dark.â
Sally almost vomited then and there on the welcome mat.
Sheâs going to know. Sheâs going to know as soon as she looks at me.
Sally had always been a terrible liar; she was going to be in so much trouble. In her parentsâ eyes, girls had been locked in iron masks for less. Her skin was suddenly unbearably hot, the tattoo at the epicentre of the heatwave.
Her mum just looked at her. âWell?â
âSorry â I forgot to get Daddyâs parcel. I had to go back.â
Her mum brushed a lock of hair out of her face. âOh, youâre such a scatterbrain, Sally.â She took the box out of her hands and headed back to the kitchen. The conversation was apparently over. âI canât trust you with the most basic errands. Go and wash your hands for supper, please. Itâs your favourite. Corn beef hash.â
Number one: Sally hadnât liked corn beef hash since she was about five â itâs a meat tumour. Number two: sheâd got away with it. She looked around the frilly house â the lounge to her right and dining room to her left. Everything was as it should be: the grandfather clock ticked away, the immaculately polished photographs lining the staircase, the vases overflowing with fresh hydrangeas. If she angled her ear towards the lounge, she could hear Tweetie, her motherâs canary, picking through the seed in her cage. Everything was the same, but she was different.
And no one else knew but her.
She recalled Rositaâs words about secret strength. Supressing a smile, Sally dashed upstairs towards the bathroom.
Getting through dinner was a struggle. She was sure her dad would spot something was wrong, but he seemed far more concerned about uncovering the identity of the co-worker whoâd dinged his car outside the bank.
As Sally tried to stomach supper, her initial dread turned to something like hysteria. She had to supress the urge to giggle manically. The words, âI GOT A TATTOO,â sat right at the very tip of her tongue. The more she thought of potential punishments her father might dole out (being dragged through the town centre behind a horse-drawn cart, being made to wear an
Iâm a heathen
sandwich board while ringing a bell outside church), the more she wanted to laugh.
It was so clear now. They might well be her parents but these were not her people. Despite her and their best attempts to make a cookie-cut daughter, Sally did not belong in this house â a fact pencilled in since birth. Getting a tattoo signed it in ink. It didnât bother her so much, though. In fact, admitting it was quite freeing.
After maintaining invisibility over dinner, Sally ducked through the fence to Stanâs house. She was sore and exhausted, but she figured if she didnât go over like sheâd promised, heâd know something was up and she wasnât sure sheâd hold up under interrogation.
Stan was in the kitchen when she arrived, waiting for microwave popcorn to finish. He was wearing his pyjamas even though it was only a little after seven. âHey,â he said after sheâd run the gauntlet of their cluttered hallway. âCan you get the Coke out of the fridge? Kareem lent me
Hacksaw 5
on DVD. We can watch that if you want.â
âIs that the one with the evil clown?â Sally went to the fridge.
âIt sure is!â He gingerly pinched the steaming bag out of the microwave and tipped it into a bowl, sucking his burned fingers. Job done, Stan turned round and looked at her for the first time. âAre you OK?â
âYeah. Iâm fine.â
âYou look different.â
Sallyâs heart plummeted into her feet. She steeled herself and avoided the truth. âIâm wearing exactly what I had on at school.â
Stan scrutinised her. âYeah, but . . . I donât know . . . you just look different.â
âNope. Same as ever.â She wasnât even sure why she
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