Even with all the clutter, the van is much bigger inside than the outside suggests. I can't see a bed so the table must fold down to make one. Lupe is visible through the beaded curtain that separates her living quarters from the kitchen. She tinkles through the curtain now and places a cup and saucer in front of me.
âTo make things better' is all she says, before returning to the kitchen. Wolfboy nods so I sip the tea. It's hot and sour and the colour of green apples. If it's witchcraft, I'm not complaining because calm rolls over me almost instantly. My heart returns to normal, and my legs stop burning.
I examine the van. The walls are quilted in pink vinyl and studded with crystal buttons. A sideboard crammed with photos, statues and crockery runs down one side of the van, opposite the door; above that shelves groan with books and LPs. There's some seriously crazy shit in here: a grinning skull on a stick, a string of lights in the shape of lotus flowers, a bunch of dried chillies hanging in one corner, peacock feathers in a vase, a case of pinned butterflies, a rusty microscope, jars of pickled god-knows-what.
I drink the last of my tea. Wolfboy has his head in his hands and seems unable to meet my eyes. The table is covered all over with photos cut out of old magazines, topped with a thick layer of varnish. I'm leaning on some of my favourite old-timey movie stars. Lupe has good taste when it comes to films. Maybe not so much on the interior decorating.
Lupe clatters plates and knives in the kitchen, and Wolfboy still doesn't speak. He looks exhausted, blinking those gorgeous blue eyes like it's the only thing he has energy left to do. I want to cradle his tired face in the palms of my hands.
âYou've got the long blinks,' I tell him.
âSorry,' he mumbles.
âFor what?'
We're safe. I saw my first Dreamer. The bit where I got attacked by the Ewok was freaky, but I can hardly complain when freaky is what I've been demanding. And here I was worrying the night was going to be all ritzy bars and wankers. I'll tell you one thing: when I was running from those brats it was the only time I managed to forget what I've been trying to forget all day.
âThat was my fault. I should have asked you if you were carrying. Are you okay?'
I touch my head all over to see if that nasty little animal actually drew blood with its claws. I still have my handbag and my phone and my keys and the magic bankcard. I didn't dare check on the card until we were well out of sight. I haven't had a chance yet to think seriously about my travel plans but I have no intention of giving up this card for anyone.
I check under the table, and my tights aren't even ripped. âI'm fine, really.'
I got rolled by a monkey and a bunch of kids on hotted-up bikes and they didn't take the one valuable thing I have on me. The kid who went through my bag was barely old enough for school, and he was terrified, his lower lip wobbling like he was going to burst into tears. I can see the funny side, but Wolfboy still looks shattered.
âI should have seen them. They would have been following us for a while.'
âThe monkeys or the brats?'
âThe monkeys. They're called tarsier. They're foot soldiers. They find targets, get information and follow people. They can go places no one else can. The one that attacked you would have dropped off a roof.'
The tarsier didn't look like any monkey I've ever seen. It was too small for one thing, and its bulging saucer-eyes took up almost its whole head, and it had huge hands with nubby fingers. I wish I could have a shower to get rid of the feeling of its filthy fingers brushing against my face.
âSuch big eyes,' I say, and I'm not sure if I'm talking about the kids or the monkeys.
âThe night favours those with big eyes.' The words sound strange coming out of Wolfboy's mouth, like he's reciting a proverb. âRemember, if you see tarsier, the kids aren't far behind.'
Somehow, through my fatigue and hunger, a few pieces of the puzzle slide into place.
âKids? Kids as in K-I-D-D-S rushing in, right?'
Wolfboy nods. The graffiti near Sebastien's makes more sense now.
âYou were scared,' I say. âWe were outnumbered, sure, but none of them was older than fourteen or fifteen.'
âI'm sorry. I should've stepped in earlier. They had no right to search you like thatâ¦it was out of line. But I recognised the leader of that gang. A guy called the Elf. Everyone around here knows he's bad news.'
âI don't blame you,' I say, and I mean it. âWere they really only interested in jelly beans?'
If he'd gone for the bankcard Baby would have received a good smack on the bum.
âThe Kidds are sugar freaks, and they've got the tarsier hooked as well. They were all high, completely off their chops. You can tell when you look at their eyes.'
There
was
something weird about the way the Kidds moved; their eyes sliding and their hands twitching. There's plenty of junkies in Plexus, but none that young.
âCan sugar really do that to them?'
âIn high enough doses, yeah. They'd do anything for it. Usually they don't bother with the small stuff, but maybe it's been a slow night. Or they were bored.' Wolfboy frowns. âI shouldn't have let them search you.'
I want to reach across the table and put my hand over his, but Lupe tinkles through the curtain again and I fold my hands in my lap instead. The smell of meat and garlic wafts in. Lupe's face shines from the heat of the rotisserie.
âWhat are you thinking?' she asks abruptly, putting a plate in front of me.
âI'm thinking you have a lot of crap in here.'
God, that wasn't very polite. The woman invites us into her home and feeds us and I call her possessions âcrap'. Fortunately Lupe just laughs and squeezes into the seat next to me. Three is a tight fit, and none of us are small people. I tuck my feet on either side of Wolfboy's ankles, nudging him, but he doesn't seem to notice.
The kebab takes up the entire plate, a thick roll of pita bread stuffed with salad and meat and dripping with sauce. Wolfboy takes huge bites out of his like he hasn't eaten in several years. I take a quick look at his plate. Chunks of charred meat fall out of the bread. Nothing raw or bloody that I can see.
He catches me looking. âIt's cooked. I'm not an animal.'
âI didn't thinkâI know you're notâ¦' I can't think of what else to say so I pick up my kebab and take a bite. It's deliciousâsalty and crispy and garlicky in all the right proportions. The bread falls apart in my hands but I just pick up the pieces and keep shovelling it in. I can't believe how hungry I am. We don't talk as we eat, and Lupe seems to enjoy watching us. I become human again with food in my stomach.
As soon as I finish my meal, licking my fingers clean and sighing with satisfaction, Lupe sits up abruptly, making the red beads around her neck dance.
âDarling, your arm.' Lupe takes my hand in hers again and stretches my arm out flat, so that the pale skin of my inner arm is exposed. âI read skin,' she explains. âLike palm reading, but instead I read your veins.'
âLupe,' growls Wolfboy, pushing his plate away. There's colour in his cheeks now and life back in his eyes. He looks at me. âYou don't have to if you don't want to.'
My veins are barely visible.
âHave you had it done?' I ask him. He nods.
Up close Lupe's face is crisscrossed with powder-caked lines. I've never had my palm read, or my stars done, or seen a psychic. I don't think you can ask them to only tell you the good stuff and filter out the bad. I need to believe that good things are going to happen to me soon, to make up for all the crap that's been happening recently.
âYou shouldn't be afraid,' says Lupe, âI already see lots of life here.'
âSure,' I say. I don't have to believe what she tells me anyway. Hopefully she'll say that I'm about to begin a long journey and leave all my problems behind. And if she doesn't then I'm strong enough to think otherwise.
Lupe begins to tap my arm lightly all over with her fingertips.
Wolfboy slides along the bench and frees himself from the table.
âI'll wait outside.'
I can't tell if he's pleased or upset that I've agreed to have my arm read.
âIs that safe?' I ask. âMaybe you should stay. I don't mind.' âThere's a circle around the van,' Guadalupe says. âA circle no one can enter without my say so.'
Wolfboy turns; our eyes meet before he leaves. The van dips as he steps down. The door clatters shut behind him. I give Lupe a nervous smile as I shift in my seat. The familiar weight of my handbag rests on my feet.
Guadalupe's face slackens; only her eyes remain sharp. I watch her as she traces patterns over my arm. It's so relaxing sitting in this pink capsule, with my arm being stroked like there's a miniature figure skater gliding over it. I feel my breathing slow and my mind empty.
There are changes that creep up on you slowly, and then there are sudden changes that rip you apart, so that you don't know who you are anymore. When I first visited Lupe, I had been ripped apart. I was so scared I thought my legs wouldn't carry me there. I was fourteen and no one knew the Darkness was on its way. Cars still drove down Saturnalia Avenue, and Orphanville was just an abandoned housing development.
That was back when the petrol station was still open and there were canvas flags strung around the forecourt, bags of ice in the big freezer out the front and gas bottles for hire. Lupe's van was newly painted. I'd heard all the ten stories about Lupe at school: that she was a witch, that she could see the future, that she could make bad things happen to people who'd done you wrong, that she could talk to the dead.
My parents warned me about her. I think they were scared of her because she was different. Fat women horrify my mum. She says they've let themselves go. My mum can't let anything go.
I find it difficult to remember now. Remembering involves being able to picture myself a few years ago, and that's almost impossible. I had a scrawny body and barely a hint of facial hair. For weeks I went to Lupe's van and barely spoke to her. I walked there full of purpose, but when I got there I froze and wound up eating my kebab under her canopy, miserable that I didn't have the guts to say anything.
Eventually, on maybe my fifth visit, Lupe handed me my change and asked, âIs there anything else you want, my boy?'
The question stopped me dead. What did I want? I wanted things to be like before. No. Before was too long ago. Before I stopped talking to my parents, before Gram moved out and we hardly ever saw him, before Gram and Ortie split up. Before was when I was ten and we all lived in the one house, like a family. Before was impossible.
Really, I didn't know what I wanted. I stood there opening and closing my mouth like the dumb kid I was. Maybe I wanted to know why bad things happened. Or when the pain would stop.
In the end I didn't have to say anything. Lupe disappeared from her window and unlatched the door. I sat at her table, my arm laid out flat across the plain orange laminex. Lupe's van was a lot emptier back then. She read my arm in a trance. She said a lot of things, some of which I don't remember. Every now and then I'll have a flashback, and I'll be reminded of something she said. Things that meant nothing then have grown to mean something over the years.
âYou must be careful not to get cut off,' she said. âDon't go too far inside yourself.'
Maybe it's too late for that. She probably meant don't live on your own in a big house, rattling around the empty rooms. She probably meant talk to your friends about things that matter instead of filling in time drinking and listening to music.
There were other things. She said there was a black spot inside me, a blind spot. She said it worried her that I was keeping things hidden inside this spot, things that should really be let out.
It was Lupe who mentioned Gram first.
âYour brother has gone, but not too far. He left this world, but there are other places very close by. He can still see you. He smiles.'
I could have asked: Why did he do it? How could he leave me? Why would he be smiling now when he was so unhappy before?
I don't believe in heaven so it's hard to believe in those other places Lupe talks about. But maybe it wasn't heaven she meant.
I sit on the tail of the caravan, using the spare tyre as a cushion. The fairy lights strung across Lupe's awning lift the gloom more than you'd expect; the light they give off forms a perfect circle around the van. Beyond that are dark patches where the petrol bowsers have been torn out, leaving holes in the concrete. I exhale, trying to blow away the heavy cloud of memories.
I was another person then.
I wonder what Lupe is saying to Wildgirl now.
You'll find yourself telling the truth in Lupe's van.
That's what I should have told Wildgirl before we even stepped inside.
Wildgirl and I walk back up the concrete desert of Saturnalia Avenue, taking our time. The sound of our footsteps volleys between the houses. Lupe placed a protection on us before we left. I didn't ask her how it works. Presumably walking through the gates of Orphanville with a kilo of caster sugar is still out. But it was generous of Lupe, and it has made me relax a little. She always knows what I need, even if I don't. âEnjoy yourself,' she said as we left the van. Then she whispered in a more serious voice, âStay close to her.'
Wildgirl is uncharacteristically silent. I haven't known her for long, but I do know that she doesn't mind shooting her mouth off. I like it that she says exactly what she's eleven thinking, but right now her mind is somewhere else. I won't ask her what Lupe said or what she told Lupe. What goes on in Lupe's van is private. I thought I was doing the right thing taking Wildgirl there but I should have known Lupe would talk her into a reading. Lupe means well, but she doesn't exactly do small talk. I need to get Wildgirl out of whatever memory she's stuck in, and back with me.