Authors: Charlotte Calder
âKind of,' said Andy, and then they were off, talking about someone's theorem and something or other machines, until Dad and I looked at one another in amazement.
âWhoa!' said Dad, and I cried, âI didn't know you did maths at uni, Mum!'
She turned and looked at me, raising one eyebrow archly.
âThere's quite a bit you don't know about me.' Then she stopped, and I saw another thought cross her mind. Like a shadow, something the complete opposite of fun and flippant. She turned around to the stove.
âMy mysterious wife,' said Dad, nodding cheerfully. But I was still staring at Mum, or rather, at the back of her.
A few minutes later, when we were just starting to tuck into our eggs and bacon, the doorbell went.
We all looked at one another.
âAnyone expecting anyone?' asked Dad.
Mum and I shook our heads.
âProbably Jehovah's Witnesses or someone,' I said carelessly, popping a large piece of tomato into my mouth.
âIt's Sunday morning,' called Dad over his shoulder as he went into the hall, âthey'd be in church, surely . . .'
âI think they're one of the ones who go on Saturdays,' said Mum, who seemed to have regained her playful mood, âaren't they?'
âSearch me,' said Andy
âHow would I know?' I cried, simultaneously.
âSssh . . .' Mum put a finger to her lips; we strained
our ears to catch the murmur of what sounded like a female voice.
There was a silence, then Dad's voice cried âYes â come in!'
The other voice said something like: âJust for a minute . . .' And two pairs of footsteps came along the passage.
And there, rounding the corner and following Dad into the room, was Wilda.
âA
l,' said Dad, turning to her with a smile, âlook who's here â your twin!'
Despite my shock, it occurred to me that he must be wondering if any more surprise visitors were going to turn up. I'd mentioned to him that I'd finally met Wilda, though with the exams and whatnot I hadn't got round to telling Mum. Something, if I'm honest, had stopped me.
âOh, wow!' I cried, standing up from the table. âHey . . .'
Wilda smiled, but unlike the last time she looked slightly flushed, almost ill at ease.
âHey,' she said. âI'm just going to lunch with those friends â you know, the ones who live in the next street â so I thought I'd pop in and say hi on the wayâ'
âGreat!' I said, pulling out the chair next to me. âSit down.'
But her gaze had swivelled to Mum, then Andy.
âOh, this is my mum, Marisa, and . . . Andy.'
I'd just stopped myself from saying âmy boyfriend'. Wishful thinking, but a mite presumptuous . . .
Then I registered the look on Mum's face. I know it must've been a shock to see someone who so resembled her own daughter, but for a moment her eyes seemed to hold something more than just shock.
Fear would be a closer approximation.
Then whatever it was was gone, though I noticed she did keep staring at Wilda, on and off. We all did.
âWell,' Mum said with an odd little laugh, tucking her hair behind her ear. âEveryone apparently has their double somewhere in the world.'
âYeah,' said Wilda, smiling at me, âthat's us â separated at birth!'
We laughed, and then Dad said, âWhat about a coffee â or tea?'
âWellâ' Wilda looked at Andy's and my half-finished plates.
âOr breakfast!' I said. âD'you want some brekky?'
âNo!' she cried, laughing. âI'm about to have lunch!' She smiled at Dad. âOK, a coffee'd be great â ta.'
I motioned to the chair again and she put down her bag (not the red one this time) and sat down.
Mum crossed to the machine. âCappuccino? Latte?'
âGee,' said Wilda, âwhat service!'
I could see her taking in the sleek planes of our house â the glass, stainless steel and expensive furniture, and felt obscure stirrings of guilt again.
âIt's amazing,' I said. âWilda's friends with the people in the share house just over our back fence. Y'know,' I added, turning to Dad, âthe house that we go past on our run â the one that often has their front door open.'
âOh, yeah . . .' Dad looked a bit vague and I realised he hadn't really noticed it. After all, it wasn't their bedroom window that looked out in that direction.
âMuch less than six degrees of separation here,' said Andy. He smiled quizzically at Wilda and me and then gave a little laugh, shaking his head. âIt's uncanny â I can't believe you two aren't related!'
âWell . . .' Dad laughed and shrugged exaggeratedly, arms spread wide. âMuch as I'd like to claim you as a long-lost relative, Wilda, I'm afraid my side of the family is pretty well accounted for. No dark secrets there . . .'
âOh . . .' Wilda stared back at him, and I wondered if it was only me who could see the chip of doubt in her eyes.
Dad was turning to Mum. âHow 'bout you, Tinks? Any darkâ'
Mum, however, had temporarily left the room.
About fifteen minutes later Wilda drained the last of her coffee.
âGuess I better get going,' she said, glancing at her watch.
âYou sure?' I said politely.
âYeah.' She reached down for her bag. âThey'll be wondering where I've got to.'
Dad, Andy and I stood up too.
âThanks, it's been . . . great. To meet you all,' she added, her gaze lingering for a second on Dad.
âGreat' wasn't the word I would have used, exactly. The morning had lost the lovely chilled-out feeling it'd had before she arrived.
I followed her to the door. We stood there on the
front step in the pale winter sunshine. She grinned, jerking her head in the direction of inside.
âCute!' she said. âBeen around for long?'
I laughed and took a breath.
âBrand new . . . but I hope he will be around â for long . . .'
She patted my shoulder.
âHe will,' she said. âTrust Wilda â she can tell these things. You two go together.'
We laughed and hugged one another.
âWhat about you?' I asked. âIs there anyoneâ'
A shadow flitted across her face.
âOne of the guys in that house, actually,' she said. âBut it's been a bit . . . problematic. Tell you all about it another time â when you've got a spare hour or two.'
âOh,' I said sympathetically, âone of those . . .'
âMmm . . .'
I suddenly thought of all the time I had spent thinking about my âtwin', when she may well have been just about a hundred metres away.
âListen,' I said, after a moment, âyou'll have to come around for dinner!'
âLove to!' She grinned again. âAfter all, twins have to stick together!'
I laughed. âYep!'
âAnd . . . Al?'
âMmm?'
She was drawing away from me, frowning slightly. As though she was plucking up courage to say something.
âWilda?' I stared at her. âWhat?'
Her eyes met mine again; she bit her lip.
âI think we must be related. Your dad . . . he looks so
similar
â to mine!'
I told Andy what Wilda had said as I was driving him home.
âTold you,' he said, glancing sideways at me with a little smile. âYou've got a sibling after all. Well, a half-sister.'
âHardly!' I cried, making a face at him. âI mean, it's not as though she doesn't know who her dad is â she sees him every few years.' I put my indicator on, glanced over my shoulder and darted into the next lane. âJust because our fathers look similar . . .'
âAnyway, you don't look hugely like either of your parents,' he said, his gaze teasing. âWell, you're kind of a mixture, I guess â a unique blend.'
Our eyes met; I laughed. âYeah, right!'
Then we both remembered Wilda; laughed again.
âActually,' we said, more or less together, ânot so unique!'
A red light was suddenly looming; I braked hard.
âWhoops â sorry!'
And it's a wonder I didn't have a prang on the way home. I must have driven on auto-pilot, my mind was so full of everything but the road in front of me. Andy's eyes, his grin, his kiss goodbye. The happy feeling in the kitchen with him and Mum and Dad . . .
Then I thought of Wilda's gaze on Dad, almost fierce with a kind of hunger. And Mum's expression when she first saw Wilda, how she'd seemed to withdraw slightly, go into one of her shutdown modes. And of Wilda's tone at the door, almost apologetic in its insistence.
He looks so similar.
The hug we'd shared. And that strange sense of connectedness, blood relations or not.
As you can see, the weekend certainly wasn't dull. Nor the week that followed, for that matter.
By the time I got back that afternoon Dad had taken himself off on a tour of some of the larger hardware stores, to carry out a reccy on plumbing supplies before starting work the next day. And I went off to rehearsals later on, then stayed the night at Andy's place afterwards. (Had another lovely chat with Lil the next morning.) Monday night I had a job with Bunters from which I got home late. The next evening was rehearsals again, followed by a party with Andy, and the next was Bunters. Et cetera, et cetera. So what with late nights and holiday sleep-ins, I barely saw Dad, let alone got the chance to raise the subject of mystery family members, until the following weekend.
I did have a little chat to Mum late one night after Dad had gone to bed, but something stopped me telling her what my âtwin' had said about our fathers' resemblance. She did agree that Wilda and I were very similar looking, though not so much, she was quick to add, in personality.
âWhat d'you mean by that?' I asked, leaning against the study doorway, wondering whether to be offended.
Mum, sorting through paperwork in front of her laptop, shrugged carelessly.
âOh . . . I d'know. She seems a bit . . . more worldly than you, that's all.'
âWhat d'you mean,' I repeated irritably, even though I knew perfectly well, âmore “
worldly
”?'
Mum, still half turned away from me, pulled her cardigan tighter around her shoulders.
âWell, it's fairly obvious,' she said finally, carefully,
âthat she comes from a very different background to you. That she's had to . . . look after herself.'
She trailed off; it seemed more like a question than a statement.
âWell, yes,' I said, âshe has.'
I gave her a brief rundown on Wilda's upbringing. And I could tell Mum was listening intently, because even though she was still facing the screen, she sat very still, her hand clutching the sheet of paper.
âI reckon,' I finished, âshe's survived amazingly well, considering everything . . .'
For what seemed like about five seconds Mum was silent. Then she resumed some brisk paper shuffling.
âIt's remarkable,' she said, in a voice that sounded strangely hard and bright, both at once, âwhat the human spirit can survive.'
âMum?'
I leaned around, trying to look at her face. For a moment I could have sworn she was close to tears.
âAnyway,' she said after a moment, in a more normal voice, âwe really liked Andy!'
My face grew instantly warm.
âYeah,' I said, biting my lip to stop myself grinning. âHe's . . . good fun, isn't he?'
Now she was swivelling round in her chair, pretty much in control again, casually and infuriatingly checking out my expression. I shrank back slightly, into the shadows.
âQuite a character. Hope we'll be seeing more of him.'
âMmm . . .'
There was no way I was going to add:
I really hope so too.
The twenty-first century thinks it has Love completely sussed; evidently it's all down to pheromones and immune-system selection and pair-bonding hormones. A never-ending biological imperative, in other words, to reproduce the species. According to science we're just infinitesimally tiny cogs in the inexorable onward roll of evolution.
No wonder it turns you slightly crazy, makes everything else recede into the background. They've even discovered that people newly in love have remarkably similar brain scans to people who are mentally ill!
Anyway, what's that old song about love being the drug? All that week, and for quite a while afterwards I went around like the proverbial headless chook. The body tingling and fluttering through the days and nights, the brain flooded with the sight, smell and sound of Andy, whether he was present or not. And when we were apart, practically all I could think of was being with him again. Later we discovered that with all the calling and texting we'd both managed to use up a whole month's phone credit in a few days.
So in my mad, exhilarated state, when everything seemed funnier or sadder or more vivid than usual, what happened the following Saturday came like a grenade tossed into a glass blower's studio.
It was late morning; I'd just walked in from staying the night at Andy's. And there was Dad, sprawled on the sofa, reading the papers.
âHey, Pa . . .' It was practically the first time I'd laid eyes on him all week. I went over and gave him a kiss,
then plonked myself down beside him, snuggling into the crook of his arm. âSo, how's the job?'
He grunted noncommittally. âNot
quite
as exciting as the last, but not half as stressful, either.' I felt him smile. âPerfect for an old geezer like me, in fact!'
I laughed, digging him in the ribs. âRubbish!'