the time.â
âMe, too,â Phillip says.
âTheyâre just animals,â Laura says.
âCome on!â Phillip says.
âWhy? If someone I really cared about died, that would be worse. A human being, I mean.â
âI think the worst is for parents whose children die,â I say.
âI would be the saddest if Pia died.â Laura looks down at the table and starts sweeping a few spilled grains of sugar back and forth.
âWhoâs Pia?â I ask.
âMy baby sister. She is so sweet. I miss her so much. She lives with my father.â
Phillip stands up and gets himself some more coffee.
âAnyone else?â he asks, lifting the pot.
I shake my head, but Laura hands him her cup.
âWhen is your mother coming back?â he asks as he pours the coffee.
âNext weekend.â Laura finally brushes the crumbs off the table. âHey, listen, why donât we go somewhere next weekend â leave Saturday and come back on Sunday!â
Phillip shrugs and looks in my direction.
âWhere would we go, and how would we get there?â I ask. Just go somewhere? Can you do that?
âWe just buy a ticket and go. Donât know where. Wherever we want! Phillip, where should we go?â
Phillip thinks for a minute.
âI have an uncle in the east...â
Laura beams. âIsnât it great to have a big family? Hereâs to family!â And she lifts her mug high.
***
âMum?â
Itâs just before ten. The movieâs about half over.
âMmmmh?â Mum yawns.
âMum, weâre thinking of going away for the weekend.â
âAnd who is we?â
âLaura, Phillip and I. Weâre going to go to Phillipâs uncleâs place. Just for one night.â
âAnd does his uncle know about this?â
âYes.â Does she believe me?
âAnd youâll be back home on Sunday?â
âYes.â
Mum yawns again. âDo you have enough money?â
âYeah. Itâs really cheap if you go on a weekend.â
âOkay then.â
âThanks!â Yippee! Wahoo!
Mum yawns again. âI canât stay awake any longer. Turn the lights out before you go up, okay?â And she goes up to her room.
I pull the phone onto the sofa and call Laura.
âItâs okay. I can come.â
âFantastic. Phillip has already called his uncle, and itâs okay with him, too.â
The living-room door opens and Dennis comes in and sits down.
âI have to hang up,â I say. âIâll see you tomorrow.â Then I hang up the phone.
Dennis takes the TV guide off the table, leafs through it and looks up at the screen now and then.
The movie is extremely boring. Iâll go to bed. I have a math exam in the morning.
âHey, Miriam,â he says. I stop at the door. âEverything okay?â
He turns around and looks at me. I can only see his eyes above the arm of the sofa.
I nod and then I go up to bed.
11
âSo what are you doing this weekend?â Ines asks after math.
âWeâre going away for the weekend.â
âReally? Where are you going?â
Laura didnât mention it this morning. I donât want Suse and Ines to know where weâre going. And above all, I donât want them to know who âweâ are.
âHeading east.â
Ines nods and fishes around in her backpack.
âAre you free later today?â she asks.
I shrug. Look briefly at Laura, who is copying stuff into her notebook.
âWhy?â
âI was going to drop by,â Ines says and adds quickly, âI mean for real. Iâm not just using you as an excuse.â
âOkay. No problem.â Laura closes her notebook and goes outside.
âWhen?â
âAround three?â
âSure.â
Ines hasnât been to my house very often lately. And I havenât been to her place in a long time, either.
I like Ines. I like her better than
Dorothy L. Sayers
Red L. Jameson
Virginia Nicholson
Chris Fabry
J. T. Edson
Nancy Fraser
Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
Adam Christopher
Janine Infante Bosco
Joan Boswell