‘I don’t know,’ said Alison. ‘She’ll probably 				spend a lot of it on studio time.’
   			‘She deserves another hit record, that’s for 				sure. I really loved the last one. She’s a very talented lady, your mom. And don’t mind my 				husband, with his nosy questions. He’s never had any manners.’
   			‘That’s all right,’ said Alison. ‘I don’t mind 				answering questions.’
   			‘I’ve got one,’ said Malikah, one of Selena’s 				younger sisters. ‘Can I feel your false leg?’
   			At nine o’clock, they sat down together to watch 				the programme. Alison was nervous, but this time it wasn’t too much of an ordeal: partly because 				Selena’s family kept up such a lively running commentary, and partly because her mother was 				hardly in this episode at all. There was quite a jolly scene in the last five minutes, when 				somebody brought a guitar into camp and Pete and Danielle did an entertainingly terrible 				performance of ‘Yellow Submarine’. Val could be seen singing along with the chorus: she was 				smiling and looked like she was having a good time. Apart from that, she 				was barely even glimpsed on screen.
   			‘Ah, that was funny,’ said Ashley, muting the 				television when the news came on. ‘Really, that silly girl couldn’t sing to save her life.’
   			‘Fuck me, she’s fit though,’ said Navaro. They 				were practically the first words he’d spoken that evening.
   			‘You mind your language, mister,’ Ashley said. 				Then, turning to Alison: ‘I wonder why they didn’t give your mom the guitar to play? That would 				have been nice.’
   			‘Don’t know,’ said Alison. ‘She’s quite shy, my 				mother. I know that sounds weird, for a singer, but she really is. Very shy, in fact.’
   			‘Well, that’s probably the reason,’ said Ashley. 				‘But I still think it’s a shame. We would all like to have heard her voice again.’
   			*
   			A few minutes later Alison left, and Selena 				offered to walk with her to the bus stop. It was a cold night, enough to make their teeth 				chatter as they stamped their feet to keep warm and waited for the Number 11 to appear. Once 				again, Alison found it hard to believe that this, a few days ago, had been her mother’s world, 				and yet now she was sitting around a camp fire in Australia with a guitar and a bunch of minor 				celebrities. She should have grown used to the unreality of it, by now, but it continued to 				stagger her.
   			‘By the way,’ she said, trying to put this 				thought aside, ‘I wanted to tell you something. Something about me. A little secret.’
   			‘Oh God,’ said Selena. ‘Not another one. It’s not 				your other leg, is it?’
   			Alison shook her head, smiling.
   			‘Glass eye?’
   			‘No.’ But now, some undertone of urgency in her 				voice made Selena fall silent, waiting for the revelation. ‘I’m gay,’ Alison said finally, in a 				quiet, neutral way.
   			‘Oh.’ Selena had been staring at the pavement. 				Now she looked up brightly. ‘Well, that’s no big deal really, is it?’
   			‘Isn’t it? You sure?’
   			‘Of course.’
   			Alison let out a deep breath and smiled and 				hugged her. ‘I’m so relieved.’
   			‘Why?’ said Selena, clasping her tightly in 				return. ‘What did you think I was going to say?’
   			‘I don’t know … People react in funny ways 				sometimes.’
   			‘They do?’
   			‘Well, actually I’ve only told two people – you 				and my friend Rachel. But she took it so badly it’s made me a bit nervous.’
   			‘Why, what did she say?’
   			Alison traced a careless pattern on the pavement 				with her right foot as she began to explain: ‘I’ve known Rachel for years. We were at primary 				school together. She lives in Leeds but we’ve always stayed in touch. So a couple of months ago, 				I wrote her a letter. And then the next day, I sent her a message on Snapchat, asking if she’d 				got the letter. And she sent a reply, saying that she had. And then I asked her what she was 				doing that night, and she said …’ (Alison swallowed hard) ‘… I mean I can hardly 				believe she said this, but she said she was going to be sleeping with her brother, and it was 				just the sort of thing I liked doing.’
   			Selena gaped at her. ‘She said 				what?’
   			‘Yeah. Being gay, for her, apparently, is just 				like fucking your own brother.’
   			‘Is that what she said?’
   			‘I only saw the message for a few seconds, 				because that’s how it works, but that’s pretty much what she wrote. I asked her where she was 				and she said: “With my brother. We’re doing the incest thing tonight.”’
   			Incredulous, half laughing and half frowning, 				Selena was almost lost for words: ‘Wow. That’s a … pretty weird thing to say. And a weird 				way of saying it, actually.’
   			‘Well, it was handwritten, and, like I said, it 				wasn’t on the screen for long. But that’s what it looked like. And then she said, “Right up your 				street I would have thought.”’
   			‘Shit,’ said Selena. ‘That’s 				harsh. Is that it? I mean, is that the sum total of her response?’
   			‘She did write me a letter, but I couldn’t face 				reading it. I chucked it away.’
   			‘Is she … is she, like, a born-again 				Christian or something?’
   			‘Not the last time I looked,’ said Alison, and 				then the bus swung into view. They managed a quick kiss on the cheek – fumbled but tender – 				before she climbed on board.
   			*
   			Danielle and Val followed their guide along the 				jungle path. They had no way of knowing it, but it was only ten thirty in the morning. The air 				was already dense and sticky, and the path was heavy going.
   			‘Can I ask you something, Val?’ said Danielle, 				over her shoulder.
   			‘Of course.’
   			‘It’s about your song the other night – which was 				really lovely, by the way.’
   			‘Oh, thank you.’
   			‘I can’t stop thinking about it, actually. Can’t 				stop thinking about the words.’
   			‘Yeah? Well, that’s a good sign, I suppose.’
   			‘It’s just that line: “I need your breath, Like 				the moonshine controls the water.” Have I got it right?’
   			‘Yeah, that’s right.’
   			‘I was just wondering … what does that 				mean, then? How can moonshine control the water? Is it just like … something you made 				up?’
   			Val hesitated, not sure whether this was a joke 				or not. She decided it wasn’t. ‘Well no, I was just talking about … you know, the moon, 				and the tides. The gravitational pull of the moon.’
   			‘What do you mean?’
   			‘You know – how when the tide goes in and out, 				that’s because of the moon.’
   			Danielle stopped and turned. 				Now she was the one suspecting a joke.
   			‘Are you winding me up?’ she said.
   			‘Of course not. I’d never do that.’
   			‘That’s why the tide goes in and out? 				Really?’
   			Val nodded.
   			Danielle’s beautiful eyes widened. This was a 				revelation to her, it seemed, and a very important one.
   			‘That’s incredible. Just fucking incredible. When 				we get out of here,’ she said, turning back to resume her progress along the path, ‘I want to 				spend a lot more time with you. You know so much. How did you get to know all these 				things?’
   			‘I don’t know,’ said Val, almost tripping on a 				creeper. ‘It helps if you work in a library, I suppose …’
   			In a few more minutes, they emerged into a wide 				clearing, where their chortling hosts, inevitably, were waiting to greet them.
   			‘Morning, ladies!’
   			‘We’ve got a nice little treat for you 				today.’
   			‘Yes, today we’re going to do not one but 					two jungle trials!?? 
					     					 			?
   			‘But there’s a twist, as always.’
   			‘Yesterday we asked the viewers at home to say 				who was their favourite person in the camp.’
   			‘The person with the most votes is going to do 				the first of today’s trials, which is a pretty easy one, to be honest. It’s called The 					Fluffy Jungle Path of Pink Marshmallows and Cuddly Toys.’
   			‘Unfortunately, the person with the smallest 				number of votes is not going to have quite such a nice time. She’s going to be entering 				something called The Cave of Evil.’
   			‘So, are you ready to hear the results of the 				vote?’
   			They both nodded.
   			Val wasn’t surprised, of course, to hear that 				Danielle was the most popular person in the camp. But it was a shock to learn that she herself 				had been voted the least popular. As soon as the news was broken to her, with the hosts’ typical 				cheeky, ironic grins, her stomach turned over and she felt her legs were about to buckle. The least popular? How on earth had that happened? All the hard-earned 				confidence acquired over the last few days drained out of her. She barely knew what was 				happening as Danielle was led away in one direction and then she felt herself being taken by the 				arm as the other host (which one was it? She never could tell them apart) propelled her in the 				direction of a steep, intimidating escarpment at the other end of the clearing.
   			‘Now, Val,’ he was saying, his voice dripping 				with boyish charm, ‘how are you with the old creepy-crawlies?’
   			She had no idea what he was saying, what she had 				just been asked. All she knew, as her eyes slowly came back into focus, was that she was being 				pointed in the direction of a low, narrow aperture in the rock, which seemed to lead into 				nothingness. There was just about room for a human being to crawl through it, and a few seconds 				later she was inside.
   			*
   			Alison stood in the kitchen, her hands over her 				ears. She’d been in this situation countless times before: on her own, in the kitchen, trying to 				block out the sounds of the TV, which Val always turned up too loud. What could be more mundane, 				more banal? Except that tonight there was a crucial difference: tonight, the sounds coming from 				the television, the sounds she was trying to ignore, were her own mother’s screams of distress.
   			They were awful sounds. Keening, animal howls 				coming from thousands of miles away: from somewhere in the depths of a cave in a corner of the 				Australian rain forest, captured as digital information and beamed faithfully into Yardley via 				the television’s speakers. This latest ordeal would have taken place several hours ago, of 				course, but that was little consolation to Alison, who was having to live through every moment 				of it now, in real time. Sometimes when the screams died down she could hear the chortling host 				intervene with comments like ‘OK Val, here comes the next lot!’ or ‘Ooh, these are nasty little 				fellas all right, aren’t they?’ But otherwise there was no respite from her 				mother’s lacerating, inhuman screeching. How long had it been going on for, now? No more than a 				couple of minutes, surely. But she wasn’t sure that she could stand it any longer.
   			‘Selena!’ she shouted towards the living room. 				‘For fuck’s sake turn it down.’
   			The TV was muted and a few seconds later Selena 				came into the kitchen. ‘It’s OK,’ she said. ‘It’s finished. They’ve gone over to the adverts.’ 				She saw that Alison had been crying, and took a Kleenex out of her pocket. ‘Here,’ she said. 				‘Let’s clean you up a bit.’
   			‘Fuck,’ said Alison, wiping her eyes with the 				back of her sleeve. ‘That was rough.’
   			‘She didn’t cope too well, did she?’
   			‘Of course she didn’t fucking cope! That would 				have been her worst nightmare. She’s claustrophobic for a start.’
   			The cave into which Val had been made to crawl 				had been no more than two feet high, and not much wider. Once inside, she had been told to lie 				on her back, and then the entrance had been sealed with a rock.
   			‘She also has nyctophobia.’
   			‘What’s that?’
   			‘Fear of the dark. And entomophobia.’
   			‘Fear of … insects?’
   			Alison nodded. ‘The silly cow. She should have 				fucking … told them.’ She grabbed another fistful of Kleenex from the box, and 				blew her nose. ‘Were they all over her? What were they?’
   			‘I don’t know – cockroaches, mainly. And some 				spiders.’
   			‘Shit. She hates spiders.’
   			‘It’s over now, Al. She’s got through it.’
   			Selena took Alison in her arms and held her 				close, and for a while they just stood like that, not moving, beneath the glare of the kitchen’s 				strip lighting. Selena waited for Alison to relax, to soften beneath the embrace, but it wasn’t 				happening.
   			‘She was here,’ Alison said eventually. 				‘This time last week she was here with me. A week later she’s in the Australian jungle and 				someone’s buried her alive and she’s got spiders crawling into her mouth. I 				mean, what the fuck …? What happened to us this week?’
   			Whatever it was that had happened, it was soon 				over. At the very end of that night’s episode, the show went live to Australia, where it was now 				eight o’clock in the morning. It was time for the first of the celebrities to be voted off. 				Forlornly, Alison and Selena sat on the sofa, wielding two mobile phones and a landline, 				repeatedly punching in the number that was supposed to save Val from expulsion. But they were 				wasting their time (and money). She was, by some margin, the contestant with the fewest votes, 				and just a few minutes later she had left the camp and was being ushered into the makeshift 				outdoor studio where she would have her final interview with the two hosts. Sitting down beside 				them, she looked tired and skeletal. Her eyes were blank with shock and exhaustion. Her skin was 				grey. When the interview was over, she was directed to walk across the little suspended wooden 				bridge to the spot where her car and driver would be waiting. The cameras followed her as the 				programme’s theme tune played out. To Alison, her mother looked older and more frail than ever. 				Her stoop was worse. At the far end of the bridge, Alison could glimpse Steve, holding out his 				arms in expectation. He greeted her mother with a brief, amicable hug. The credits came to an 				end and Alison turned off the TV.
   			‘Well,’ she said. ‘That’s that.’
   			She poured a glass of wine for herself and 				another for Selena, who looked at it doubtfully.
   			‘I should really be getting home in a minute,’ 				she said.
   			‘Well … Just one more. Won’t do you any 				harm.’
   			Forty minutes later, the telephone rang. It was 				Val, calling from Australia. She was back at the hotel, crying down the line. Alison tried to 				comfort her at first but it soon became clear that all her words of reassurance (‘No, really, 				you came across very well … Everyone here’s been rooting for you …’) were beside the 				point. The point being that Steve had dumped her. Apparently, while the celebrities had been in 				the jungle, all their partners and guests had been taken out on organized day trips, and in the 				process a romance had developed between Steve and Jacqui, Pete’s aunt. This 				afternoon they were flying up to Cairns to spend a few days surfing together.
   			‘I’ve got to stay here for another week,’ Val 				said, between snivelling breaths. ‘What am I going to do, all by myself?’
   			‘I don’t know, Mum,’ said Alison. ‘I can tell you 				what you shouldn’t do.’
   			‘What’s that?’
   			‘Go online, or read the papers.’
   			She hung up when it became clear that her mother 				was too tired to speak any more. Selena had overheard most of the conversation and was already 				fuming with sisterly indignation.
   			‘Has what I think just happened, actually 				happened?’
   			‘Yep. I should have warned her. I should have 				warned her 
					     					 			 about that fucking creep. Next time I see him, I’m going to get him on the floor, and 				give him such a kicking …’
   			‘Can I join in?’ Selena asked. ‘I’m pretty good 				at kicking. I’ve got two good legs, for a start.’
   			Alison gave a long, grateful laugh, and 				instinctively reached out to touch her friend on the cheek.
   			‘I don’t suppose you could stay the night?’ she 				said.
   			*
   			 				Perry Barr – Handsworth – Winson Green – Bearwood – Harborne – Selly Oak – Cotteridge – 					Kings Heath – Hall Green – 				Acocks Green – Yardley – Stechford – Fox & Goose – Erdington – Witton – Perry Barr.
   			Shit!
   			Did you say that out loud? Did you scream? Why 				are they all looking at you?
   			Must have dozed off.
   			 				– Yardley – Stechford – Fox & Goose –
   			Same thing. Same images. Same sensations. The 				darkness, first of all. The knowledge that the roof is just above your head, that you can’t 				move. And then the noises. The scurrying noises, as they empty the first 				load on to you, from somewhere up above, through some hole in the rock.
   			No sleep again last night. Not a wink. This seems 				to be the only place you can sleep now. But you don’t want to. As soon as you sleep, you hear 				them again. Feel them crawling. Up your legs, inside your trousers, down the front of your 				shirt. Oh fuck.
   			 				– Fox & Goose – Erdington – Witton –
   			Two months now. Two months since you got back. 				Two months and no change. Nothing. Same old shit, day after day.
   			 				– Witton – Perry Barr – Handsworth –
   			Doctor says it’s only a matter of time, a matter 				of waiting, but what does she know? All they do is give you pills anyway. She doesn’t 				understand. Nobody understands, knows what it’s like. ‘Look on the bright side,’ for fuck’s 				sake.
   			 				– Handsworth – Winson Green – 				Bearwood –