yesterday?â
âEr, well, we had our lunch,â said Hal. âWaffles and beans.â
âSounds disgusting,â I said.
âWell, normally itâs broccoli and rice cakes, the stuff women eat. And I put a border around the kite. Look, I made it out of wallpaper that I found in a skip on our road.â
âVery nice, Hal,â I said.
âI thought about what you said about a blue kite disappearing into the sky, and I thought a red border would make it more visible.â
âWell,â I said. âItâs nice to know you listen to me some of the time. So, itâs red like Wednesday then?â
âNo!â he said. âWednesday is a completely different shade of red!â
âRight,â I said. Weirdo, I thought.
Heâd attached these two amazing tails to the kite as well. One was made out of an old Christmas decoration, all glittery streamers, and the other one had these paper bows
in different colorsâpurple and yellow and green and red and pink and turquoise and gold. It was gorgeous, and really long, and every bow was a little bit smaller than the one before it, so the whole tail kind of trailed away, right down to the tiniest little mauve bow, not much bigger than a shirt button. Heâs quite artistic, Hal, when he puts his mind to it.
âItâs wicked, Hal,â I said, âbut what happened ?â
I was dying to know how Halâs folks had reacted to all that business with the hospital, and whether the row between his mother and Alec had continued after she got back from the golf tournament. It was an interesting situation.
âI told you.â
âI mean Alec, what did he say ? Did he mention the hospital business?â
âTo me?â
âWell, yes, to you, to your mother, whatever. Did it come up in conversation over the waffles?â
âHe doesnât eat waffles. Heââ
âHal!â
âWhat?â
âLook, letâs take this in easy stages. When you got home yesterday, who was there?â
âMy mother was still out playing golf.â
âRight. And Alec?â
âHe was having a beer in the back garden.â
So, he was home before Hal. He hadnât got locked into some sort of nightmare in the hospital, going around and around pathetically looking for Clem Clingham and a pot of paint. He must have known about the back gate all along. Heâd got one over on us there, even though he probably didnât even know it.
âSo, you stuck your head out the back door and said ⦠oh no, you donât talk to him, so maybe you waved to him or something?â
âWave to Him? No. I just took my bike around the side of the house. I keep it in the back, and he was sitting there on a deck chair, still wearing his painting overalls.â
âAnd?â
âSo I said, âWere you working this morning, then? Only, I thought you were going to the golf thing with my mum.ââ
âHal! You spoke to him!â
âWell, I thought, itâs a bit funny to be wearing his overalls when heâs not working, and if I donât mention it, itâll look as if I am avoiding it or something, and that might seem a bit suspicious.â
âWell, yes, but I thought you said you never spoke to him! Not since he moved in.â
âWell,â Hal said, âI never had anything to say to him before, not really. Nothing important. But it seemed important to say something yesterday, after ⦠everything. So I did.â
âOK, so he said?â It was hard work getting this story out of Hal.
ââRrrmph,â something like that.â
I wasnât getting very far with this line of interrogation.
âSo, when did your mum get home?â
âShe didnât.â
âHow dâyou mean, she didnât come home? She must have been home by bedtime.â
âNo.â
âShe stayed out all night?â
âYeah,
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