Read All These Perfect Strangers Online
Authors: Aoife Clifford
âI remember you,' said Alice. Her voice was low and husky. âYou stayed with me until the ambulance. Held my head.'
âThat's right. I'm Kesh,' said Kesh, nodding over-enthusiastically.
Rachel moved to the other side of Alice's bed. âDo you remember who attacked you?' she asked.
Alice's head didn't move, but her eyes flicked to Rachel. For a moment, I thought she might not have heard the question, but then she said, âHis face was covered.'
âBut it was a man?'
Alice's voice began to get fainter. âSpoke to me.'
Her eyes returned to Kesh as if she didn't want to speak to Rachel any more.
âWhat did he say?' asked Rachel.
âRachel, that's enough,' said Kesh, gently. âRemember what the nurse said, Alice is tired.'
âI don't know, all right.' Alice sounded tearful.
âWhat did his voice sound like then?' Rachel was so insistent that she sat down on the bed, trying to lean across to get in Alice's line of sight. Alice grimaced in pain at the movement.
âRachel, get off the bed,' I said. âAnd stop badgering her.'
Rachel stood up but when she looked at me, she was annoyed. âThe police will have asked her the same questions.'
âBut you're not the police,' said a voice in the doorway. âSo, what's it to you?'
There was a large outline in the door. I only recognised him when he moved into the light, a bald Nico dressed like us in jeans and a t-shirt, holding an enormous bunch of flowers. There was no boater hat or bottle of champagne today.
âExcuse me,' he said, forcing Rachel to move away from the bed to let him in.
He kissed Alice on the forehead.
âYour hair,' she murmured. A small hand reached out, a bandage on the back keeping the drip in. She touched his shaven head.
âIt's so we match. Our hair will grow back together.' He put his hand on hers, and I noticed his was shaking. He held on to her hand for a moment, then brought it down gently and placed it on the cover. He showed her the bouquet.
âMore flowers. Nico,' she sighed.
He put them down on the ledge next to the bed. Then he turned to us, arms folded, and he looked more like her bodyguard than her boyfriend.
âWho are you and what do you want?' It was clear he didn't recognise us from the bar crawl.
Alice gave a feeble half protest at this, and Kesh quickly began to explain. Nico's hostility eased but only slightly. He pulled up a chair, sat down next to the bed, and stared hard at Rachel through bloodshot eyes. His body jangled as though a mild electric current was running through it.
âWhy are you asking so many questions?'
Rachel shrugged. âInterested.' She moved away from him and walked over next to me.
âI'm sure Rachel just wants whoever did this to be caught. I mean, that's what we all want,' said Kesh.
Nico nodded, which Rachel took as an opening to keep asking questions. âSo does Alice remember what the Screwdriver Man said, or not?'
But this seemed to have flicked a switch in Nico.
âYou checking up? Someone sent you, didn't they? That maniac in the balaclava, he sent you?'
He stood up, his face contorted.
âYou came to see how well he carved up Alice? She's got to have another operation. Her hearing is permanently damaged.'
Alice tried to tug at his sleeve to get him to sit down. âNico, Nico, stop,' she pleaded, but he ignored her.
âWanna know what we've said to the police? Tell them from me, I'm no dog but you screw with me and I'll screw with you. Leave Alice out of this.'
Exhausted, Alice's hand dropped back to her bed and she lay there, pain on her face.
âAll right, we've got the message. We're leaving,' said Rachel.
Kesh got up, upset. âWe just wanted to make sure Alice was OK. That's all we wanted to do.'
âJust get out of here.' Nico was spitting with rage. âI'll kill anyone who comes near Alice again.'
After my appointment with Frank, I go to the library and write about the hospital visit until closing time. I decide to take the long way home, past the saleyards and around the cemetery. I avoid the centre of town. I walk along the road that leads up to The Hill. You can see The Hill from almost anywhere in our town. I used to go up there all the time with Tracey. We would sit at the top and plan how we would escape from here. I always knew I wanted to go to university but Tracey wasn't sure. Her father wouldn't pay for her, we both knew that. The one time she had argued with him about it, she came to school with welts on her legs from where he had beaten her with his belt.
âHe says you're a bad influence,'
she told me. That was funny because my mother said the same thing about her.
I turn off The Hill road and take the underpass under the highway rather than using the bridge. I want to see if the graffiti is still there and it is, red against the grey. It hasn't faded much and I wonder if it is refreshed regularly, like flowers on a grave. Gone but not forgotten.
P.S. IS A MURDERER.
I stand there remembering the first time I had seen those bright dripping letters, except then the initials read T. C. You can still make out Tracey's initials under mine and when I put my finger up and touch the cold concrete, it is her letters that I trace over again and again. It is dark before I head home.
·  ·  ·
âWhere have you been?' asks Mum, accusingly. She is wearing her best getup, tight, sparkly with everything on display. âYou knew Terry was coming for dinner.'
âYou didn't have to wait,' I say.
âI wanted us to all sit down together.'
Mum is someone who still believes in fairytales. If Terry wasn't here, Mum would be in her dressing gown and slippers and we would eat packet noodles or tinned soup in front of the television. But Terry is always here now.
The three of us sit in our small kitchen that smells of burnt onion and spice, surrounded by dirty dishes and sticky surfaces, eating a meal so awful that even Rachel would have happily chosen chilli con carne in preference. Terry keeps pushing his spoon down into the sludge trying to smooth out the lumps, but the spoon never goes near his mouth.
âGot the recipe from the new girl at work. Vegetarian but eats chicken still. Not an inch of fat on her,' Mum says, trying to cover up the silences. âHad to go to the health food shop for some of the ingredients and they charge like wounded bulls there.'
âMmm,' Terry says. âMight get some chips down at the pub.' That's the thing about Terry, he's only a hippy sometimes.
Disappointed, Mum turns to me.
âYou like it, don't you? You told me how you ate all that vegetarian food at college.'
I don't bother to pick up my fork. Terry pushes back his chair with both hands on the table. He's too tall for our kitchen. Long hairy arms and legs. The rickety table wobbles and my bowl is in danger of spilling. I could have given it a surreptitious shove and been able to blame it on him. But there is no point. A saucepan full of the stuff is sitting on the stove.
He gazes around the kitchen, mentally cataloguing our possessions. But there is nothing expensive or shiny to capture his attention for long. This house and everything in it belonged to my grandparents. In fact, technically still belongs to my grandfather, even though he's been in the nursing home for years.
âSaw that university fella of yours yesterday, on the television. Back in court,' Terry says.
âWhere did you see that?' Mum is surprised, because Terry pretends to hate television. He calls it the idiot box. Takes one to know one. Mum unplugs ours and covers it with an old sheet before he comes over.
âMick's got one in his caravan. He had it on while we had our lunch,' he says. âBack in court,' he repeats, in case I missed it the first time. âOff to jail soon.'
I say nothing because I'd already read the newspaper report about it at the library. There was a large photograph of Marcus being bundled into the back of a taxi, arm flung up, shielding his face from the camera. He had been all alone. No friends or family with him, not even his lawyer was in the picture. There was something shrunken about him, as if he had already been found guilty.
âIt's only the committal hearing,' says Mum. âThen it's the trial. Different standards. Beyond reasonable doubt for a trial. Mind you, shouldn't be hard seeing he's as guilty as sin.' She pulls off a diamante earring and massages her red lobe.
Terry looks surprised at Mum's grasp of the legal system. He opens his mouth to question it, but I get in first and ask him how the Taj Mahal is going. Mum gives me an encouraging smile. Most of the time I ignore Terry because he is a waste of space. The only reason he is in town is to help build some dropout's mud-brick house. At the start, he pretended to Mum he owned it and she was dumb enough to believe him, but it really belongs to his friend Mick. He calls it his job, but the amount of time it's taking, it barely qualifies as a hobby.
âA couple of weeks and Mick'll be in. Sooner the better. Gonna be a wet spring.'
Mum clips the earring back into place and checks her reflection in the oven glass. She frowns, patting her hair. The hairdresser talked her into having a perm, and she isn't convinced.
âAnother washed-out Blossom Festival Parade, no doubt,' she says. Mum pretends to dislike the Festival but really she would love to have been crowned Cherry Blossom Princess and I kind of ruined that for her. Not too many single mothers become royalty in this town.
Terry sniffs and I wonder how long he's planning to hang around. He has talked about visiting friends up the coast once the house is finished and then heading further north to pick fruit, but I suspect he will be reluctant to give up his newly found meal ticket. Still, a few more home-cooked vegetarian meals and he might leave of his own accord.
âSo you'll be heading off soon,' I continue.
Mum tenses and gets up quickly. âReckon it could do with some salt.'
Terry stretches out and cups her backside as she walks past. âYour mum's asked me to move in.'
Mum had told me this dinner was important to her. Now I understand why. We are going to be a happy family.
âYeah, and I'm going to do a bit of work on your house,' Terry continues.
I look over to my mother, amazed that she can fall for this again.
âTerry thinks we could pull down the back verandah and make it into a sunroom,' Mum tells the cupboard full of crockery, refusing to look at me.
âA sunroom,' I say. âWouldn't a pool room be nicer? You could put a bar in.'
I think it was Shane, who only talked about guns and hunting, who came up with that one. He never started because Mum couldn't afford the equipment he said he needed. He left after six months when he got a job mining, taking all my grandmother's jewellery with him, as payment for services not rendered.
My mother sticks her head out of the cupboard and shoots me a behave-yourself look. Holding the salt in a glazed clay pot marked sugar, she comes back to the table.
âDoesn't have to be a sunroom,' Terry says. âLots we can do to fix this old place up. Keep me busy for ages.' His face wears a lazy, satisfied look.
I play the innocent and even pick up my fork. Mum senses my scepticism and tries to change the subject. âNow, eat up,' she says. âDon't want it to get cold.'
Terry chokes down a mouthful. âDefinitely needs salt.' He begins to sprinkle it on liberally. âWhy aren't you eating?' he asks her.
âYou know how when you cook something, the smell of it fills you up.'
âAll this sounds expensive. Where's the money coming from, Mum?' I want to see if she has learnt anything from Shane.
Terry jumps in quickly. âIt won't cost that much because . . .' but Mum gives the game away.
âTerry says I could get a power of attorney for Dad and then take a mortgage out on this place.' She looks so happy I haven't got the heart to rain on her own personal Blossom Festival Parade so I deliberately keep my face blank. Still, now I know nicking the electrical goods isn't enough for Terry. He wants real money.
âBut,' says Mum, âif Bob gets you a good settlement against that university, we might not need to get a mortgage. He bloody should too. I mean, the amount of money he charged us last time. When he put in that fancy swimming pool, I said he should call it the Shirley Sheppard Memorial, seeing all my savings went to pay for it.'
âWhy did you need a lawyer?' asks Terry. He must be the only person in town who doesn't know and I wonder how long before he will. If I thought it would make him leave, I'd tell him myself.
âYou know, just the usual,' Mum says, too quickly. âCharge you for anything and everything.' She grabs her handbag which is sitting under the table, and hunts through it, pulling out a lipstick.
âHas Bob said when they're going to make you an offer?' she asks. Terry pretends to be engrossed in his dinner, but he is listening hard.
I shrug. âHe's waiting on Frank's report.' My face stays neutral as I start to lie. âHe thinks the university is going to fight, so he said not to get my hopes up unless we can afford to litigate.'
Mum's mouth drawstrings in disapproval.
âWhere are we going to get that sort of money? You could have been killed. They can't get away with that.' She frowns and then pats Terry's hand. âExcuse me, while I nip to the little girls' room.' Really, she wants a sneaky cigarette. She started again when I was in hospital. Terry doesn't hold with smoking.
She walks out, leaving us alone in the kitchen. I refuse to make eye contact because this is usually the moment when Mum's boyfriend says something to mark out his territory as the new man of the house. The nice ones say something about not being my dad but perhaps we can be friends, but that's not Terry.