“How is this supposed to work anyway if I can only see you at book club and on Saturday afternoons, and for a couple of hours on Thursday hanging around in Shrewsbury?” he asked, belligerently, as we walked up the hill, past Smiths and BHS. “You couldn’t ever go to a party with me.”
“I can see that,” I said. “I can’t help being stuck in school. Maybe it isn’t going to work.”
“So you could break up with me because I went dancing with Shirley?” He looked down at me inquiringly.
“More because I don’t want to be humiliated about it, than because you did. I mean, obviously, even if I wasn’t stuck in school I couldn’t go dancing.”
“It isn’t that,” he said, very quickly. “I don’t care about dancing especially, it’s just something to do.”
“And you don’t care about Shirley either, she’s also just something to do?” I asked, cattily.
“Or I could break up with you because I can hardly ever see you and it’s too inconvenient,” he said, in a strange musing tone.
We had come to the corner by Thorntons, where we’d turn down if we were going to the bookshop and Poacher’s Wood. I stopped, and he stopped too. “Are you supposed to be making any sense?” I asked, exasperated. Boys are weird.
“Do you agree that we could break up right now, on this corner, and never say a kind word to each other again?” he demanded. The wind was blowing his hair back, and he had never looked more gorgeous.
“Yes!” I said. I could imagine it all too well, saying things at book group about books and never looking at each other.
“Then it’s all right. If we could break up right now then whatever magic you did didn’t make it destiny that we would be together,” he said.
“What?” Then I got it. “Oh.”
He grinned. “So if we’re not together because the magic forced us to be, that’s all right.”
It was the most backwards way of looking at it that I could imagine. “So, what, you were doing a
He did have the grace to look a little abashed. “Sort of. I hate the idea of being forced into things. I hate the idea of True Love and Finding the Right One and you know, being tied down, marriage, and the thought that the magic had made me—”
“Wim, I admitted I kind of like you,” I said. “When
“That’s you,” he said, starting to walk again, so I started to walk too, downhill now. “That’s not the magic. I like you, I really do. But I thought if we
“So you don’t actually want to break up?”
“Not if you don’t,” he said.
What I know about magic that he doesn’t is how tricky it is, and how much easier it is to get people to do things they want to do anyway. It would only prove anything if we did break up, not if we just agreed that we theoretically could. But ... I didn’t want to. “I don’t want to,” I said.
“What did you say to her?”
“Who?” I asked.
“Little Miss Hitler, back in the cafe?”
I snorted. “Her name’s Karen. I said obviously I couldn’t go to a disco, and then I just smiled. I didn’t want to give her the satisfaction.” We were coming down to the bookshop, and he stopped again.
“Then just keep smiling. I won’t see Shirley again.”
“I don’t care if you see Shirley, as long as I know about it,” I said. “... I think.” I was really clear on the theory of this from Heinlein, I wasn’t quite so sure about the practice.
“She’s a moron,” he said, which was very reassuring. It’s nice to be wanted for something real.
We crossed into Poacher’s Wood, and walked down to where the ruined walls are. The snowdrops were dead. There were leaves coming through, but no other flowers yet. The place was swarming with fairies, mostly gnarly treelike ones, who didn’t pay any attention to us. Wim could sort of see them, he said he could see them sideways. We sat on the wall for a while, looking at them. Then when we started to get up, he happened to brush against my walking stick, and made a choking sound. “Now I can really see them,” he said. He sat down again beside me, holding the stick on his lap. “Man,” he exclaimed, rather inadequately.
Ages afterwards, after he’d been watching the fairies for a long time, I said it was time to go, and reached for my stick back. Without it he was back to only half-seeing them. “I wish I knew what they were,” he said, as we walked back up into town. “Could I have that stick? I mean, do you have another one of those?”
“I do, but the other one is metal and hideous, and this one gives me strength. The fairies gave it to me.”
“Maybe they gave it to you so I could see them,” he suggested. “All of those colours and shapes.” He sounded drunk. They were just fairies, and not even doing anything especially interesting.