Everything We Keep, Di Walker [best pdf reader for ebooks txt] 📗
- Author: Di Walker
Book online «Everything We Keep, Di Walker [best pdf reader for ebooks txt] 📗». Author Di Walker
‘I certainly did. Where’s your Dad? Is he helping you?’ Celeste was at the boot, taking out the shopping bags. As she closed the boot Agatha said, ‘I want to get my suitcase.’
‘It’s okay sweetheart. I’ll drive you to your aunty’s later.’
‘Please. I want it.’
Celeste hesitated, then smiled at Agatha. She lifted the suitcase and placed it down in front of her.
Ike was already at the shopping bags, peering inside each one, looking for the necessary ingredient for his project. ‘Ike, just let me get the bags inside,’ his mother said, not that it stopped him from looking. She handed him the bags in her hand, and he hurried back in through the door.
Tully came over to Agatha and picked up her suitcase. ‘Come on, I know exactly where we can put this while you’re here.’ Tully turned and walked inside, Agatha closely behind, not wanting to be too far from her suitcase.
Through an internal door that led directly into a narrow room, which had a long rack for shoes and boots with coat hooks above and then shelving with containers above the coats. Everything had a place.
Through that room they went into a large kitchen that opened up to the rest of the house. Agatha stopped and looked around.
‘Hello again,’ Tully’s dad was standing at the kitchen counter, knife in hand as he cut up a tomato to add to a salad. ‘Just in time for dinner. Pasta bake and salad.’ Agatha nodded.
At the other end of the kitchen Tully stood in a doorway leading to a hallway. ‘Follow me, Agatha.’ She didn’t wait. With a few hurried steps Agatha caught up to her. ‘We can leave your case in my room.’
Tully opened her bedroom door. Agatha wasn’t sure what to do. She couldn’t remember the last time she had been to anyone else’s house, someone of her own age, a friend. She just never had friends anymore. It was easier not to. ‘You can come in. It’s a bit messy but you know how it is.’
Tully put the suitcase at the end of her bed. She bent down and scooped up a small pile of clothes and put them in a basket near the door. ‘Have a seat,’ she said, pointing to an armchair that sat under the window. Agatha looked down at the carpet and made careful steps towards the chair.
The room was no bigger than Agatha’s, yet it was so different. There were white fairy lights draped across her bedhead, a pin board showed photos of Tully’s happy life and she had a desk with a row of matching colourful containers, deliberately placed, holding pens and other small knick-knacks. Tully opened her wardrobe to put away a top that had been lying on her bed. From one quick glimpse, Agatha could see how organised it was.
‘What school do you go to?’ The question from Tully took Agatha by surprise. She had gone to primary school, most of the time, but she hadn’t started high school, something that Nell kept telling her she should do.
‘The local high school,’ she said.
‘Do they give you much homework?’
Agatha shrugged. She didn’t mind lying to strangers but lying to friends was different. She felt uncomfortable about it.
‘Mine does. Tonnes.’
‘Dinner!’ Tully’s dad called out.
The two girls walked back towards the kitchen. Instead of eating at the dining table, that was covered with a half-completed project, the family took up their places at stools around the kitchen counter. Agatha watched as they fell into a rhythm of passing plates and bowls, pouring water into tall glasses and handing around napkins. Tully held a bowl in front of Agatha. ‘Salad?’ Agatha looked at the other plates then picked up the tongs that laid across the bowl. Tully’s mum placed a large scoop of pasta on Agatha’s plate and then a bread roll.
Between mouthfuls of food, and the clinking of cutlery, the small family began talking about their day, asking questions about school, work, and listening to Tully’s animated retelling of getting caught in the rain and meeting Agatha on the train.
Occasionally a question was asked of Agatha, but she pretended to be chewing, or shrugged her answer and the conversation moved on. As they finished up, Tully’s dad began moving empty bowls away, Tully and Ike put their plates in the dishwasher and Celeste moved to the dining table to inspect the progress that had been made on the project. Agatha, not sure what to do, continued to pick at the remaining bits of salad on her plate.
Tully sat back down at the counter. ‘When you’re finished, we can go to the TV room, get away from the project drama.’
‘I’m done,’ Agatha replied. Tully picked up Agatha’s plate and took it away. Agatha looked at the kitchen counter. Everything had been packed away and wiped down. Only a fruit bowl and a pile of papers at the end remained.
‘Let’s go,’ Tully whispered into Agatha’s ear. ‘I’ve grabbed a couple of ice creams from the freezer.’ Tully held them up, as if she had won a prize.
The TV room was through a sliding door on the other side of the dining room. It had large comfy armchairs and a long L-shaped sofa, like the ones Agatha had seen in a furniture store when she had been window shopping with Nell.
Tully sat on the sofa and Agatha carefully sat down beside her, sweeping the cushion with her hand, as if to push invisible things away. ‘Don’t worry about the sofa. Mum says that she would like a neat and tidy house but that will probably be after we’ve left home, but I really think she means when Ike leaves. He’s so messy!’ Tully laughed as she spoke.
‘I don’t think this looks very messy at all.’
‘Really? Look
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