Page 65 of The Good Part

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There’s a depot under the arches at Battersea Bridge. Guy called Arcade Dave who restores all these vintage machines. Brown door next to the flower stall. If anyone knows about your wishing machine, he will. He’s off-grid, no phone, so you’d need to go down there. Tell him Crock Pouch sent you and he’ll be more amenable. He can be a bit of a funny fella. CP

Then beneath his sign off, there’s a quote: ‘I’m not a player, I’m a gamer.’

‘We have to go!’ says Felix. ‘It’s like a real-life quest, with passwords and everything. Let’s go now!’

‘We can’t go now, I have work, you have school.’

‘So?’

‘So we’re not skipping school to go to some random depot to meet a guy called “Arcade Dave”.’

Felix glares up at me, then turns his attention back to his cereal bowl, filling the air with disgruntled munching.

‘Sorry, Felix, I just have a lot of work to do. No one liked any of the ideas I pitched.’

‘Did you pitch helicopters and conger eels?’ he asks.

‘Surprisingly, yes.’ I sigh.

‘Did you tell them the conger eels would beinthe helicopters?’ Felix asks.

‘Maybe that’s where I went wrong.’

‘What are you two plotting?’ Sam asks. He’s in a suit, on his way to a recording session in Reading.

‘Oh nothing,’ I say. Now that Sam and I are on firmer footing, I’m not sure I want to complicate matters by admitting that his son and I are secretly looking for a magical portal to send me back in time. ‘Felix is just helping me with ideas for work.’

‘No one’s come up with anything yet?’ he asks, making himself a coffee to go.

‘No. Despite everything, Michael’s still confident I can think of the right idea. But I’m not sure how much value I can add. There are too many gaps, too much I don’t know.’

‘There’s not a room you could be in and not add value,’ Sam says, and his sincerity makes me feel as though a tiny cheerleading squad has come out and done a pom-pom routine just for me. ‘Right, got to run. See you all later.’ Sam kisses me on the lips, then rushes out of the door. I watch him go through the kitchen window.Wow, this guy, no wonder I wished for him. He’s almost too good to be true.

‘Mummy? Mummy!’ Felix says behind me.

‘What? Oh, the depot, right. Look, I’ll try and find out more. If it’s a real thing, maybe I can go this weekend.’

‘With me?’

‘We’ll see,’ I say, beginning to regret going along with all this. Surely it can only end in disappointment. But is it me or Felix that I’m worried about disappointing?

‘Can I have more raisins?’ Felix asks.

‘You don’t even like raisins,’ I say, picking up the raisin jar from the sideboard and passing it to him. Then I stop still. How did I know Felix doesn’t like raisins? As I grip the table to get my balance, Felix shoots me a puzzled look.

‘No. I like them now, but only on cereal, not on their own.’ Felix pauses, watching me, then his eyes bulge as he realises what I’m saying. ‘You remember something from the in-between?’

‘Maybe, I don’t know,’ I say, rubbing my eyes.

‘What does it mean – if you start remembering stuff?’ Felix asks, flinging his hands in the air, his entire body a frantic jumble of animation. ‘If you came through a portal, you wouldn’t have those memories! Maybe the portal is closing? Maybe the raisins are awarning?’ He takes a dramatic breath. ‘Maybe—’

‘Forget it, it’s probably nothing, your dad must have mentioned the raisins. Come on, we need to leave for school in three minutes.’

Clearly, I should not have said anything to Felix. It’s hard enough to get everyone fed, dressed and out of the house as it is, without throwing in a casual debate about the rules of time travel.

Felix gets me thinking though and I’m distracted on the drive to school. If these memories are in there somewhere, does that mean that I didn’t jump here? Part of me is holding on to the idea that all this might be temporary. And while I doubt Arcade Dave holds the key to getting me home, I still believe I might simply wake up one morning back where I was. But it has been two weeks now, and if I genuinely do have amnesia, there will be no going back.

‘I’ll ask Molly what she thinks it means – you remembering about the raisins. She knows loads about time travel,’ says Felix. ‘Her dad writes science fiction, but he calls it science fact that hasn’t happened yet.’ He pauses, then says excitedly, ‘Maybe Molly and her dad could come with us to the depot?’