Jordan heads over with his blue blue eyes and his cowboy swagger, hands dug deep in his pockets. One corner of his mouth smiles, the other turns down. The girls fall silent and watch him with greedy eyes. Could it be them?
I know I look ridiculous, like confectionery, frothy white with watery eyes and sticky lip gloss and melted marshmallow in my hair. A week ago, this could have been it: that perfect moment when he asks me out or holds my hand or kisses me. I want to forget what he did and pretend this is the real beginning. But we're too far gone for that.
I stand. I keep my fists clenched, tight against my sides. My heart beats too fast and I forget how to breathe. I can't think.
Think
, Jemima. This is the moment where I will cut him down, in front of all these people I don't know. This is the moment for transcendental public revenge.
Take your time, make it stick like a blade between his
ribs.
But the words won't come. So, I jut my chin in the air and I do what all Dodds do when they're sizing up an opponentâI sneer and I say nothing, because the words won't come.
Jordan circles me like a matador. He bends down on one knee and grabs one of my hands while I stand there, mute and stupid. Then, the pain as he twists my little finger sideways. His stare is cruel and hypnotic.
âStay the fuck away from my sister.' He gets up and walks off.
In shock, I step back and fall over the log. The two girls huddle together and their laughter sounds like barking.
Tahnee stumbles over, pigeon-toed. âWell? What did you do? What did you say to him?'
âPlease ask Ryan to take me home.'
âWhat happened?'
âTake me home!' I shout.
âI don't get you, Mim. You're gutless, that's what you are. Go home then. I'm sick of you and your fucking Virgin Mary act,' she yells back.
For a moment we stand and stare at each other. The gap between us gets wider. Then she turns and walks away.
I get into the car and I'm shaking hard as if I'm getting the flu. It's ages before Ryan comes, alone.
âWhere's Tahnee?'
âI'm dropping you off, then I'm coming back. She's not ready to go home yet.'
âDon't leave her here, will you? She's drunk.'
He looks over his shoulder at me. âTahnee can look after herself.'
âJust take me home. Please.'
When he drops me off I sneak down the driveway and go straight to the shed. I don't have anything for Gargoyle to eat, but I need to scream silently for a few minutes before I go into the house. Mum has a radar for sadness, maybe because she carries so much of it herself.
Inside the shed, the air is silent and still. The fluoro flickers and dies, then plinks on, making me blink.
The bucket and the blanket are empty. The beast is gone.
There's not much that can wake me before ten during the holidays, but I hear Mum up and around and that's strange enough to make me curious. What's even stranger is she's got the vacuum going. My head thumps and I have that reckless feeling again. The one I get when things are out of control.
I send Tahnee a text.
I'm sorry I left you there last night.
Hope you got home ok. I need to talk to you. Ring me.
I know she wouldn't have snapped if she hadn't been off her face. I know she would be on my side if I had told her the whole story. If I tell her about Jordan and what he did, we'll get back to the way we used to be. No more secrets.
My finger still aches, but it could just be in my head. I don't get it. Why does he hate me so much? Why did he give Kate my address if he didn't want us to hang out? Somewhere deep, I can feel the slow burn of anger begin to snuff out the restâmy anxiety about my brothers, my shame about the package, the desolation I feel when I think about him. Mum's indifference. Gargoyle's desertion. I should feel relief about that, but I don't.
The smell of real coffee seeps under my door. Now I'm really suspicious. That means Mum's actually opened something she's bought
and
she's using it.
From the look of the kitchen, I can see she's been at it for hours. The bench is uncluttered, the dishes are clean and the rubbish has been taken out. It smells of Windex and bleach. A stainless-steel coffee machine is hissing and spitting like a rabid camel and Mum's swearing at it, trying to jam a glass pot where it obviously doesn't fit.
âWhat's going on?'
âI'm making coffee. What's it look like?'
âSince when do we drink real coffee?'
I check the lounge room: there are places to stand and sit, matching coasters on the table, tracks on the carpet. And she's flipped the couch cushions, I can tell, because they're cleaner than the back and the arms.
âNo, I mean what's going on?'
âStop asking stupid questions, Mim, and help me with this bloody thing.' She slams the pot on the sink. âNothing goes back the same way.' Her hands are shaking.
âIs it the boys?'
âNo, they're fine. I'm going in tomorrow, if you want to come.'
âAre you going to explain to me why our house is clean?'
âNo. And I need you to be out today. All day. And make sure your room's tidy.'
This doesn't happen very often. When it does, it means that there's a âmeeting'. Stuff that I shouldn't overhear. Hushed conversation with hard-looking men who don't take their boots off at the door for anybody, not even Mother Dodd. Feeney never comes to our house although he's been a constant in our life since I was a pre-schooler. Like a Godfather. But Mum never deals without the protection of the boys and they aren't here. Suspicion cranks in my gut like a rabbit trap. Something funny is going on. Nobody who attends the meetings gets real coffee or matching coasters.
âAre we okay, Mum?'
I think, for a moment, she actually sees me.
âWe'll be okay, Mim. There's just going to be a few changes around here.' She gets the pot in the right place and gives it a nod.
âCoffee?'
I laugh because she's got as much chance of getting coffee out of that machine as she would have getting milk out of a bull. I pour myself an instant and she's not offended.
âOh, Benny brought your bike over last night.'
âDid he?' I say casually, but my tongue feels like I could choke on it. I don't want the goddamn bike. Surely someone would have taken it by now? âWhat did he say?'
âYou know Benny. He parked it around the side, helped himself to a beer and took off. What was he doing with your bike?'
This is my chance. I should tell her. I could clear my conscience and sacrifice Jordan Mullen to The Wrath of the Dodds.
Instead I say, âOh, I bent the front wheel. He was going to try and fix it for me.'
âOkay. Well, go on, have some breakfast and clear off.'
âNow?'
âI need you gone by nine. And could you drop off the boxes on the porch to Mrs Tkautz? She's going to do her garage sale this weekend.'
Great. Mrs Tkautz is particularly vile in the morning. Mum must be desperate for money, to be selling off her hoarded stuff. But things can't be that bad yet, because she hasn't asked me to get the package. I'm confident she won't get it herself. The pit is narrow and dark, two things Mum can't navigate with her big body and her poor eyesight.
Outside, the heat is relentless. Even the witch's garden is baked dry. Her flowers rustle and squeak. One by one, I deposit Mum's boxes on Mrs Tkautz's porch.
âWhassat?' Mrs Tkautz rasps through a crack. I can make out her one good eye and half her nose. I'm so not in the mood for her.
âMum asked me to bring these over. For your garage sale.'
âFifty-fifty, you tell her.'
Capitalist witch. I want my books back. âI want my books back,' I say out loud.
âWhat books?' she asks.
âMum gave you my box by mistake. They're not for sale.'
She looks over her shoulder, down the dark hallway. âShe gave me a lot of boxes. I haven't sorted through them yet.'
Godless child.
Her phone rings and she closes the door in my face.
âWitch!' I yell at the flowers.
Benny's in his cockpit. I stomp up his driveway. I know to miss the second step because the white ants have eaten it. It looks solid but most of Benny's house is as fragile as honeycomb.
âDammit,' I mumble. âHey, Benny. How do you put a curse on somebody?'
âBloke,' Benny says.
âThanks for getting my bike,' I say. âNot that I wanted it, anyway. Gargoyle's gone back home, I reckon.'
âHe don't know any different,' Benny says. He squints at me. Holds out his hands, pale palms up, black backs down. Then he flips them. I watch carefully in case there's some message in his actions, but he just sits there, flipping his hands. Over and over.
âWell, thanks, I've got to go. Next time you find my bike in a ditch, don't bother bringing it back.' I start walking.
âBloke.'
I stop. âYeah?'
âOutside's one way. Inside's different.'
âYeah, I get it. Ugly mutt, soft heart. It's just a dog, Benny. Don't go all mystical on me.'
âNo. Listen!'
I've never heard Benny raise his voice before and it makes me jump. âWhat are you trying to tell me?'
âShe's not what you think. Open your eyes.' He jabs his finger at me.
I get out of there, fast. Benny's lost it this time. Maybe he's been drinking somebody's home brew again. I check my phone, but Tahnee still hasn't answered. I have two hours to kill before I have to pick up Kate so I could drop around to her place, make sure we're okay. Make sure
she's
okay.
I wish I'd grabbed my bikeâeven if it is clapped-out, it's better than walking. I love summer, but I'm so sick of this heat.
Tahnee's place is jammed between a fencing factory and a pet food manufacturer. During the day, sparks fly from welders and grinders, and at night the stink of offal seeps through the cracks in the weatherboard. She has a skinny mum called Bev who works the nightshift and sleeps all day. The bell is disconnected and a pink Post-it tells door-knockers:
Shift worker asleep.
Piss off
. I hate sleeping over here. Mostly, we hang at our place.
I go around the back and tap on the window. Tahnee's ten-year-old sister, Merrilee, opens the door.
âHi, munchkin,' I say. âIs Tahnee home?'
âShe said she's not,' Merry says, looking over her shoulder.
âWhat's up with her?' I go in anyway, because that's what Tahnee is expecting.
There's a bucket by her bed and she's cocooned in her quilt. She groans and rolls over to face the wall. She's taken down all our photos from her pinboard. Now there are shots of her and Ryan. Kissing Ryan. Hugging Ryan. Dancing with Ryan. Ryan and his mates. Ryan's car. Tahnee and three girls I don't know. Tahnee with one of the girls from the bonfire, their arms linked. There's this whole other life going on that I don't know about. All this stuff happening without
me
.
âYou hung?' I ask the obvious.
âGo away,' she says.
âGeez, how much did you drink?'
âA lot. Now go away.'
âI'll go if you tell me you're not mad at me any more.'
She turns over and sits up, still rolled inside the quilt like a hotdog. Last night's make-up is streaked down her cheeks.
âI'm not mad at you. I'm just so over you. I'm sick of your rules and you thinking you're so much better than everybody else. Now, go away.'
I wasn't expecting this. Tahnee's rejection is much worse than Jordan's. We're always okay after a falling-out. We argue, niggle, teaseâthen we're okay again.
âI don't think I'm better than anybody else!' I yell. âI think I'm worse. It's easy to turn out like I'm supposed to. Pregnant and unemployed and living in a half-house. That's easy, Tahnee. It's fucking hard doing what I'm doing. It's hard.'
âOoooh,' she taunts. âIsn't that one of your stupid rules? No swearing? No sex. No quitting school. No sin. No fun. No wonder Jordan wasn't interested. You're nothing.'
Her words hit me like a punch. Last night Jordan Mullen circled me in the pine forest like I was nothing and I stood there and let him. I had nothing to say. Now I have plenty.
âWhat, did Ryan dump you after you served it up to him on a plate? Oh, Ryan, would you like fries with that?' I mimic her. âWhat did you expect? That's all you had to give him and you just gave it up. Remember this?' I pull up my sleeve to reveal the pale scar inside my elbow. âBlood oath, Tahnee. We were supposed to stick together. Didn't that mean anything to you? You totally dumped me for him. Friends don't do that.'
If I'm expecting sympathy, Tahnee has other ideas.
âIt's not always all about you.' She lies down, flips over and faces the wall again. âI never believed in your stupid rules, anyway.' Her shoulders shake and I think she might be crying.
I put my hand on her back. I don't want to hurt her. âI have so much to tell you,' I say.
No answer, just shuddering sighs, the kind you can do in your sleep after you've cried so hard your ribs hurt.
âAre you okay?'
âNo,' she sobs.
âWhat's happened?'
âGo away!' She flips over and screams in my face. âYou always ruin everything. Things were going great for me. Just stay out of my life!'
âDo you need a punching bag, Tahnee? Go ahead. Everyone else has had their shot this week!' I shout back.
Merry's face appears at the bedroom door. Her eyes are round and scared. âShhh,' she puts her finger to her lips. âYou'll wake up Mum.'
âFine, if that's what you want,' I say, and leave. I let the door slam behind me. âSee ya, Bev!' I yell as I pass her bedroom window.