Who scored the winner?

  It shouldn’t matter, because we all did, and you can see it, if you want – see the last page. We won a silver cup, and got to dance around the pitch holding it. We got to show it off in school assembly, and we were in the local paper. We even got a special dinner, which was our end-of-term party, and the very last thing I’m going to mention. Mr Barlow made a speech that had everyone in tears, because he told us he loved us. There was so much hugging and crying I couldn’t see straight, and then suddenly it was over – all over. Finished.

  We opened the doors, and there were our parents waiting to drive us home . . .

  Let me tell you, friends: you have to fight to survive.

  Aparna and Jeff, for instance: they fight all the time. They can’t agree on anything.

  Which makes me think maybe they’re the closest. Because I know the people we love most are the people we fight with – I see that now, and I never saw it before. I think the day you stop fighting is the day the world ends, and that’s when it’s over.

  It was an amazing term, and I have no problems now looking in mirrors, because it’s just as he said. I see his eyes, looking into mine, and I’m going to live up to his memory, or try to.

  Lots of love, and thank you for reading . . .

  R.W.

  xx

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  I wrote this book during my last year in Manila, so I’d like to thank my friend Jane Fisher for her encouragement. Dinah, Rob, Nikki & Rob, Trav and Rachel were also very kind and supportive. While the story never changed, details did. I’d like to thank Susan Wardell and John Childs for helping with a few facts. I’d also like to thank my family, for constant support, as well as the children of Dundonald Primary School in Wimbledon – especially Year Six, looked after so ably by Harvey McGavin.

  Lesley Burgess, Michael Gee, Annemarie Shillito, Sam, Abigail and Louie North, and Chris Mantz let me use their houses. Jane Turnbull was with me on every page, and the David Fickling team: David, Hannah, Bella, Tilda and Linda were tireless in offering ideas and challenges. Sue Cook was a superb copy-editor, and it must be time to record a real debt of gratitude to Sally Riley, for all her hard work.

  There are ghosts in this book, of the children I’ve taught. So thank you to Max, to Paolo, to Mustafa, to Alice, to Ben, to Sam, to Billie, to Adam, to Miles and to Katkat . . . and the many others who may or may not see fragments of themselves.

  Finally: thank you, Joe and Katie, my next-door neighbours. You offered advice, and you gave me the idea in the first place.fn1

  fn1 To view that final goal, log onto www.andymulliganbooks.co.uk. Click on ‘The Boy with Two Heads’ and follow the links.

  About the Author

  Andy Mulligan was brought up in South London. He worked as a theatre director for ten years, before travels in Asia prompted him to retrain as a teacher. He has taught English and Drama in Britain, India, Brazil and the Philippines.

  Andy’s novel Trash has been published in twenty-two languages and is now a Bafta-nominated major film directed by Stephen Daldry and scripted by Richard Curtis.

  Also available by Andy Mulligan:

  Trash

  Ribblestrop

  Return to Ribblestrop

  Ribblestrop Forever!

  1

  My name is Raphael Fernández and I am a dumpsite boy.

  People say to me, ‘I guess you just never know what you’ll find, sifting through rubbish! Today could be your lucky day.’ I say to them, ‘Friend, I think I know what I find.’ And I know what everyone finds, because I know what we’ve been finding for all the years I’ve been working, which is eleven years. It’s the one word: stuppa, which means – and I’m sorry if I offend – it’s our word for human muck. I don’t want to upset anyone, that’s not my business here. But there’s a lot of things hard to come by in our sweet city, and one of the things too many people don’t have is toilets and running water. So when they have to go, they do it where they can. Most of those people live in boxes, and the boxes are stacked up tall and high. So, when you use the toilet, you do it on a piece of paper, and you wrap it up and put it in the trash. The trash bags come together. All over the city, trash bags get loaded onto carts, and from carts onto trucks or even trains – you’d be amazed at how much trash this city makes. Piles and piles of it, and it all ends up here with us. The trucks and trains never stop, and nor do we. Crawl and crawl, and sort and sort.

  It’s a place they call Behala, and it’s rubbish-town. Three years ago it was Smoky Mountain, but Smoky Mountain got so bad they closed it down and shifted us along the road. The piles stack up – and I mean Himalayas: you could climb for ever, and many people do . . . up and down, into the valleys. The mountains go right from the docks to the marshes, one whole long world of steaming trash. I am one of the rubbish boys, picking through the stuff this city throws away.

  ‘But you must find interesting things?’ someone said to me. ‘Sometimes, no?’

  We get visitors, you see. It’s mainly foreigners visiting the Mission School, which they set up years ago and just about stays open. I always smile, and I say, ‘Sometimes, sir! Sometimes, ma’am!’

  What I really mean is, No, never – because what we mainly find is stupp.

  ‘What you got there?’ I say to Gardo.

  ‘What d’you think, boy?’ says Gardo.

  And I know. The interesting parcel that looked like something nice wrapped up? What a surprise! It’s stupp, and Gardo’s picking his way on, wiping his hands on his shirt and hoping to find something we can sell. All day, sun or rain, over the hills we go.

  You want to come see? Well, you can smell Behala long before you see it. It must be about two hundred football pitches big, or maybe a thousand basketball courts – I don’t know: it seems to go on for ever. Nor do I know how much of it is stupp, but on a bad day it seems like most of it, and to spend your life wading through it, breathing it, sleeping beside it – well . . . maybe one day you’ll find ‘something nice’. Oh yes.

  Then one day I did.

  I was a trash boy since I was old enough to move without help and pick things up. That was what? – three years old, and I was sorting.

  Let me tell you what we’re looking for.

  Plastic, because plastic can be turned into cash, fast – by the kilo. White plastic is best, and that goes in one pile; blue in the next.

  Paper, if it’s white and clean – that means if we can clean it and dry it. Cardboard also.

  Tin cans – anything metal. Glass, if it’s a bottle. Cloth or rags of any kind – that means the occasional T-shirt, a pair of pants, a bit of sack that wrapped something up. The kids round here, half the stuff we wear is what we found, but most we pile up, weigh and sell. You should see me, dressed to kill. I wear a pair of hacked-off jeans and a too-big T-shirt that I can roll up onto my head when the sun gets bad. I don’t wear shoes – one, because I don’t have any, and two, because you need to feel with your feet. The Mission School had a big push on getting us boots, but most of the kids sold them on. The trash is soft, and our feet are hard as hooves.

  Rubber is good. Just last week we got a freak delivery of old tyres from somewhere. Snapped up in minutes, they were, the men getting in first and driving us off. A half-good tyre can fetch half a dollar, and a dead tyre holds down the roof of your house. We get the fast food too, and that’s a little business in itself. It doesn’t come near me and Gardo, it goes down the far end, and about a hundred kids sort out the straws, the cups and the chicken bones. Everything turned, cleaned and bagged up – cycled down to the weighers, weighed and sold. Onto the trucks that take it back to the city, round it goes. On a good day I’ll make two hundred pesos. On a bad, maybe fifty? So you live day to day and hope you don’t get sick. Your life is the hook you carry, there in your hand, turning the trash.

  ‘What’s that you got, Gardo?’

  ‘Stupp. What about you?’

  Turn over the paper. ‘Stupp.’
>
  I have to say, though: I’m a trash boy with shorts. I work with Gardo most of the time, and between us we move fast. Some of the little kids and the old people just poke and poke, like everything’s got to be turned over – but among the stupp, I can pull out the paper and plastic fast, so I don’t do so bad. Gardo’s my partner, and we always work together. He looks after me.

  THE BOY WITH TWO HEADS

  AN RHCP DIGITAL EBOOK 978 1 448 15702 0

  Published in Great Britain by RHCP Digital,

  an imprint of Random House Children’s Publishers UK

  A Penguin Random House Company

  This ebook edition published 2015

  Copyright © Andy Mulligan, 2013

  Cover artwork copyright © any.way, 2014

  Headphones, cables: Getty Images

  Headphones: Shutterstock

  First Published in Great Britain

  David Fickling Books 978 0 857 56067 4 2013

  The right of Andy Mulligan to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorized distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

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  THE RANDOM HOUSE GROUP Limited Reg. No. 954009

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

 


 

  Andy Mulligan, The Boy with Two Heads

 


 

 
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