Authors: Shivaun Plozza
âWhere are you going?' The chair creaks; she gurgles and groans.
I grip the doorframe. I'm walking away. I am.
âHe stole it.' She swallows around her words. âThe money. Some drug dealer. How stupid do you have to be?' Her laughter turns into a coughing fit.
I close my eyes. The realisation lands in my heart with a heavy, choking thump.
Oh, Xavier. What did you do?
I push off from the frame and run. It doesn't matter that I hear my mother calling, âDon't leave me alone.'
I'm not walking away. I'm running.
Beneath the overpass, the walls are covered in graffiti but only one piece belongs to Xavier and it's unfinished.
The whole area stinks. Stagnant river water, bird shit and years of drunks using the walls as urinals.
I walk the narrow bike path running alongside the water; above me, the bridge yawns across the Yarra. The bridge foundations are on my right, forming a high, graffiti-covered wall; water drips down the pylons, little trails of green, brown and grey. Pigeons coo from the bridge beams above, daring me to look up.
I hurry past Xavier's unfinished piece, footsteps echoing.
The path is clear. Nothing in the scrub alongside it.
But this is the place. This is where I saw Dave, hiding under the overpass like a troll waiting for passing goats. This is where Steve saw Xavier.
It's still. Cold. Quiet.
I walk out from under the bridge to where a thick carpet of green covers the bank; at the top, a narrow dirt road leads to the Children's Farm.
I wade uphill through the knotted undergrowth, keeping close to the side of the bridge. My boots rip a path through the creepers; I watch my feet but can't stop thinking how nearby children are playing with guinea pigs, their parents looking on with dopey smiles, cameras flashing. Maybe if I close my eyes and breathe quietly I'll hear their laughter, their squeals of delight.
I kick something. Something black, square, about the size of my hand.
I bend, pick it up â a wallet, gritty with dirt and leaves. My heart beats hard, pulsing in my ears. I stay crouched, trembling hands as I flip it open. No money, no ID. A couple of receipts, damp and hard to read â a milk bar, an ATM statement, something . . . I don't know.
I can only make out one word.
Galaxy.
I drop the wallet and shoot to standing, body tense. Rigid.
All I do is breathe.
In.
Out.
I stare at the wallet.
Galaxy, galaxy, galaxy . . .
And then I move. So fast. Everything's a rush. I swipe at the undergrowth, vines pull tight against my forearms. I don't stop, I can't stop. I have to find him.
There has to be more. Some sign. Some hope.
My jeans are wet through, heavy and damp. Uphill. Tangled. Stumbling.
I have to find him.
I have to tell him I get it. The kind of person who steals four and a half grand just to buy a gift so he'll be liked is someone who doesn't know what it means to be loved.
That kind of person is lonely.
Is crying out for help.
Is lost.
I get it.
I reach the top, knee deep in a tangle of green. Where the bridge meets the road there's a gap, a concrete cave about two metres high, five metres deep, a floor of dirt. A troll's cave.
It's dark inside.
But I can see. The smallest hint beneath the dirt. Not quite covered. Not deep enough.
I fall to my knees, choking off a cry, my hand covering my mouth.
It's not possible.
It can't happen like this.
I end up on all fours, clawing at the dirt. I don't have to dig deep.
Brown hair, grey hoodie, high-tops. That's what I find.
Bright-blue high-tops so I know it's him.
__________
I call Vinnie.
Dirt catches in the cracks of my busted screen as I search for the number, shaking.
âIt's me,' I say when she answers.
There's silence. I breathe loudly. Rasps in every intake of breath.
âI waited,' she says, voice cold and flat. âWaited at home, waited when I got to the school. I waited â'
âHe's dead.'
Silence again. Different this time. How many kinds of silence are there?
âDead. I found him. I found . . .'
I look at him; I can't stop looking at him. There are splashes of paint on his bright-blue trainers. Yellow, purple, white, red. Lots of red.
I shove my fist in my mouth and drop to my knees.
She doesn't ask me to explain, doesn't ask who, just where: âWhere are you?'
I force an answer and then I wait. I sit at his feet and wait. I can't leave him because he's been alone for too long and I'm not going to do that to him now.
I listen to birds.
I hear the river.
Traffic in the distance; a gentle hum.
It's peaceful. But it's wrong.
Nothing can be right until she gets here.
When she does, she scoops me up and hugs me tighter than she ever has, tighter even than thirteen years ago when the silk of her blouse against my cheek made me shudder with relief. She doesn't say anything and I'm glad for it. In her arms, my edges feel defined again. For a moment I am contained, real and whole. Almost whole.
She tries to lead me away. I tell her I can't but she says it's going to be okay, that we're not leaving him.
I let her guide me to the edge of the river where we wait, me in her arms. It's not right â nothing's right â but it's better. It's better because she's here.
That's how we are when the cops arrive.
âGoddamn mess,' says Marzoli. He points, starts barking instructions.
My arse is wet from the damp grass; dirt so far under my nails it'll stick around for days. I cling to Vinnie and she makes gentle noises. Ducks surf the river current, pushed downstream toward the Children's Farm.
Behind us there's a glow of red and blue from the police cruiser parked on the grass. Someone says something about a stretcher.
I bury my head in Vinnie's shoulder and tell her I'm sorry I missed the meeting. She says not to worry, it's nothing â but it doesn't stop the shame. The reality of what I've done â what I've missed â hits me hard all at once. I missed The Most Important Meeting of My Life. The Your Future Is Decided Today Meeting.
Who am I going to be now?
I'm nobody's daughter.
Nobody's friend.
Nobody's sister.
Vinnie pulls out her cigarettes. That new-pack rustle. She clears her throat. âYour pop singer fellow didn't go to uni.'
I lift my head, look at her. âIan Curtis?'
âRemember? You told me. Average at school, no uni. But he changed music. Changed lives.'
âHe killed himself, Vinnie. At twenty-three.'
She lights a cigarette. âShouldn't have done that, should he? Because he's still got my niece dancing like a maniac to his mopey bloody songs thirty-odd years later. Point is, the good stuff lasts. He should have lived a happy life till he was ninety-three â just think what he would have created if he'd lasted that long.'
âXavier was an artist too,' I tell her. âThe good stuff.'
She looks long at me. âWell, there you go. Maybe thirty years from now there'll be Xavier fan-girls running about the place.'
I rest my head on her shoulder and imagine what people will think when they see Xavier's creations. How many of them will stop and stare? Who will smile, who will tilt their head and gaze with wonder? They might be painted over by some dumb punk next week, but they could change someone's life while they're here, couldn't they?
âSome people just have it in them,' she says. âNothing can stop them. Not school, not lazy-arse parents, not broken hearts. Nothing.' The ducks quack. They agree. âI'm sure your brother was looking forward to getting to know you and making something of himself. He had that taken from him but you, you've got it all ahead of you. And just think what a smart girl like you could do. Endless possibilities.'
I close my eyes. âDid you know guinea pigs aren't actually pigs?'
âIs that right?'
âThey're not from Guinea either.'
âI didn't know that. How'd you get to be so smart?'
âOne word. Six letters. Scrambled vein can be changed into first part.'
âI don't know what the hell you're talking about.' She squeezes me tighter. âMy baby girl: the crossword goddess.'
I
am
the crossword goddess.
And I'm somebody's niece.
That's a start. That's a really good start.
A sharp noise turns my head.
Two guys in white jumpsuits are on either end of a stretcher, gumboots tearing through the tangled undergrowth as they pick their way downhill. A long black bag, matte plastic and smaller than you think it should be, is strapped to the stretcher.
They head toward Marzoli, smoking, leaning against a pylon. Behind him is the unfinished painting of a boy, his arms raised, captured right in the middle of beating the large drum strapped to his chest. It's almost the same as my album cover, except for the face. It's Xavier. And he's grinning, like he's never felt so alive.
We sprinkle his ashes in the river. Vinnie, Cara, Nate and me. The smiling drummer boy watches us. I guess he approves.
It's strange, doing this when we don't have answers, when Dave is still missing and no one can tell me anything more than âWe'll keep looking'.
Marzoli says helpful things like, âTV makes it seem like all crimes get solved when most of them don't,' and, âAt least you get to farewell him. How many families never get that?' In some ways I understand what he's saying, in other ways I want to cut off his nuts and feed them to a Doberman.
I know it was Dave â I'm certain of it â but I don't know if he meant to do it. One punch, they say. Massive trauma to the back of Xavier's skull from when he landed on the concrete.
One punch. Anger does crazy things to people.
Believe me, I'm kind of an expert.
Which is why I've decided to bring a little more forgiveness into my life and let some of that anger go.
The school can't forgive me for breaking Steve's nose but I forgive them for being a bunch of arsehats. Vinnie says good riddance to bad rubbish â I can finish my VCE at TAFE anyway. And I will. I told her I'm still going to be the person who makes up the crosswords in the paper and she told me, âPrincess, you can be whatever the hell you want.'
Except maybe a cop.
Cara forgave me. Turns out it's written in the BFF handbook: no matter how mad you get with your BFF, if they grovel and buy you more Spanish donuts than you can eat, you must forgive them. Besides, she needs me to hold the ladder while she paints an obscene statement about Truc on the art block later tonight.
I've decided it's time to forgive Mark, too. Sadly, I lost his number in a massive bonfire so I can't call and tell him he's forgiven. Shame about that.
Then there's Nate.
He took me on a tour of the city last night, showing me all Xavier's pieces so I could take photos. So Xavier can live forever.
The last one we found was a sea of all-seeing eyes but my favourite is his final piece â Xavier the grinning drummer boy.
Nate wrapped his arms around me as I gazed at the wall of eyes and I asked if he was sure he wanted to be with me. âI might not be very open,' I said.
âThat's okay. I'll try to stop breaking the law, but I can't guarantee I won't piss you off,' he said.
âThen I might hit you. Repeatedly.'
âI might laugh at your angry face.'
I hit him. He laughed.
âI might fall in love you,' he said and kissed me.
I guess I forgive him.
Daniel reckons that more than anything I'm supposed to forgive myself. I told him, âBullshit. It's Juliet I blame for skipping out on me,' but he just flashed me that knowing smile and started taking notes in his little book. In green ink.
I don't forgive Daniel.
But I'm working on forgiving Juliet.
Most important of all, Vinnie forgave me â for Steve, for The Meeting, for being a world-class brat. I had to promise to clean out the meat tray for the rest of my natural life but I don't mind. I think I might be able to be a crossword goddess
and
stink of garlic. I'm starting to think I can have it all.
The way I see it, my aunt is the Queen of Collingwood so the world is my oyster. Or maybe something less slimy. Churros. The world is my churros.
When I've scattered Xavier's ashes and cried and been hugged, and laughed and told them everything I know about my stupid, beautiful, talented, messed-up brother, Vinnie pulls out a small scrap of paper. It's old, torn halfway through the centre, curled at the edges and yellowing.
She holds it out for me. I take it, unfold and read.
It's a handwritten note â just Vinnie's name and a telephone number.
âI kept it,' she says. âI don't know why.'
I nod. It's kind of all I can do. I feel Cara's arms around my waist and Nate's chin on the top of my head as I hold out my hand and let the note go.
The wind catches it and it flies away.
Nothing gets buried anymore.