The Apple Tart of Hope

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The Apple Tart of Hope Page 14

by Sarah Moore Fitzgerald


  “That’s perfectly fine with me, because I’m not in love with you either.”

  “Then why did you try to kiss me that time?”

  “Because I thought you wanted me to, and I was confused. But I’m not confused anymore.”

  “Then why are you here?” she asked, and I wondered how someone could be so deluded.

  “I’m here because I have to tell you that it is wrong to do the things you tried to do to me. And you can go on pretending, but it’s not going to make any difference. I’m here to ask you to tell me what Meg’s letter said.”

  “Why don’t you ask her yourself?” she said, and she tried to slam the door shut, but I put my foot in the way and I held it open.

  “You work hard to make boys dream about you,” I said to her. “Well, for your information, I don’t dream about you. I dream about Meg.

  “Boys falling in love with you makes you feel powerful and important, but it’s a trick. I think you need to start thinking about other ways to feel good about yourself. That’s my advice, Paloma, take it or leave it.”

  She thanked me and I said she was welcome and she said I was right and that I deserved someone better than her, which is a thing beautiful girls often say, regardless of whether it’s true or not, but in this case she was totally right.

  She told me that even Andy and Greg missed me, and I was like yeah right I really believe that okay, and she said, “No seriously, Oscar, it’s true.”

  I’m not going to say too much about when my dad and Stevie saw me. What I will say is that first it was silent, and then it was loud, and then Dad cried and he kept saying “good grief,” two words that shouldn’t, when you think about it, go together.

  Stevie came trundling out and did not look angry either. He hugged me around my knees the way he always used to. “I knew it,” is what he said. “I told everyone, but nobody believed me!” he shouted, and he whizzed around and then hugged me some more, and I could feel the familiar scrawniness of his arms, only they weren’t quite as scrawny as I remembered them having been. And he was talking fast saying stuff like, “Woo hoo. It wasn’t a dream. I was riiiight I was riiiiight!” and talking about the notes he’d left on the pier.

  Amazingly, the three of us started to laugh. We laughed until we had to sit down on the grass in the front garden to recover.

  I took his notes out of my pocket with the words of hope on them. They were short, full of encouragement and cheerfulness and I’m going to keep them for the rest of my life. They say things about how we need to keep going, and about never giving up and how valuable and good I am. Some of them ask questions, mainly about what are the things you need if you want to make a perfect apple tart.

  Stevie and I talked for the whole day and into the night and Dad didn’t stop us or tell us it was time to go to bed. We talked about life. I told him about how I had taken him out of his car seat when Mum was driving and that was why the accident had happened. And I asked him how he could ever forgive me and he said there was nothing to forgive.

  We went outside and Stevie rolled around on the tarmac. “Listen, Oscar, and look at me, this is me now. If you’re full of guilt because of something that couldn’t possibly be your fault, that makes me feel like some kind of lame boy. I’m not a lame boy. In fact I’m pretty happy with myself,” he said, and then he did a little twirl in his chair, spinning around and around and leaning backward and forward in a whole series of gravity-defying impressive moves.

  “Watch me,” he said. “See? Seriously, Oscar—who else in the world can do that? There are enough people who stare or cross the road or talk loudly to me like I’m a retard. Don’t make me your sad secret, Oscar. I’m your brother, okay? Oscar? D’ya know what I mean?”

  I did know.

  And Stevie did his wheelchair moves and his chair shimmered in the light and sparks flew out from him as if he was made of moon drops, and as he twirled around they scattered around him, throwing a pale and beautiful reflection on his face.

  I never really remembered that much about my mum, but my dad has begun to tell me about her. Apparently she was lovely. The most important thing about her was that she was kind. I think she must have learned it from my gran, who was extremely kind too.

  Dad says kindness is magic. It looks gentle and mild on the outside, he says, but it has hidden powers. I know for sure that’s definitely true. For example, it’s still powerful enough to wake me up and have me jump out of my bed at weird times like three o’clock in the morning to make tarts.

  You might think that eating apple tarts would be the last thing that someone would want in the middle of a crisis, but it turns out that the smallest forkful can make everything bearable again—even if the crisis is bursting with huge amounts of grief or if it’s packed with massive loads of despair.

  There’ve been journalists and TV guys and writers who’ve come especially to interview me about it, but when they ask me what the secret is, I shrug my shoulders because it’s difficult to explain.

  I realized I’d been avoiding her because I couldn’t figure out what I was going to say. But I couldn’t wait any longer. So the next night, I’m sitting at my window wondering what it’s going to be like to be back at school and her light is on and then I can see her. It is Meg, of course, and she comes to the window and it’s a bit like none of this has ever happened and it’s just us again, because she doesn’t say, “How dare you?” or “Where were you?” or “How could you?” and her face is soft.

  “I need to talk to you,” I say, and she goes, “You’re talking to me now, aren’t you?” And she is smiling. I tell her about the accident and what I did and she also says it’s not my fault and the tears on her cheeks seem to make her face glow in the dark. And I’m feeling so many things at the same time that I can’t breathe. Mainly that I never want Meg to feel sad. I want to take away all the sadness she’s feeling now, and all the sadness she’s ever felt and all the sadness she’s ever going to feel, even though I know that I can’t do that.

  Then I tell her that the thing I need to say to her can’t be said here at our windows. And she asks me what I mean, because we were always able to tell each other everything from here. But I tell her it won’t do for the thing I have to say now. And I ask her to meet me by her gate.

  “Be there in two minutes, then,” she says. And she is, and before I have a chance to say anything, she puts her hand flat on the middle of my chest and she keeps it there for a long time. And though the future feels fragile and uncertain, the present has something new in it. Something sure.

  Whatever waits for me tomorrow or next week or deep into the future, Meg’s hand is right on the center of my body, still and flat and strong and small. I can’t imagine anyone being more beautiful.

  And if again I find myself on the end of a pier, thinking of jumping, or if I am again lost or desperate or if I feel I have nowhere to go, the imprint of Meg’s hand is always going to be there, long after she has taken it away. It is going to be the thing that saves me.

  I move my face down to hers and she moves her face closer to me and I say, “Is it okay?” and she says “Yes.” I’m holding my breath when I kiss her. She closes her eyes and she kisses me back. I don’t close my eyes. I keep them open so I can look at her close-up.

  I still have lots of things to tackle of course, like my first day back at school, and Andy and Greg and the things that people might still be thinking or saying about me.

  Right now, it’s just Meg and me telling each other something that we both already know. We are alone, but I wish the whole world was watching. It is night, but already I’m wishing for the new day.

 

 

 
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