Authors: Bill Condon
I lean my head against his.
âThanks, Lanny,' I say. I realise at once that it's a very stupid choice of words. When you kiss someone you don't need to say thanks. The kiss is supposed to say it all.
He doesn't answer.
We're in the car and he's in shorts. Haven't seen him like that very often. Now I see his pale legs. Dad with sandals on. He's dressed for a holiday but that's not what's on his mind.
âWhat was it she said to you? Your grandmother?'
He stops at an intersection. The road is clear but he doesn't move, even when a car pulls in behind us.
âUm, you know, it was just talk.'
âAbout what, David?'
âShe said you wouldn't go to a counsellor and get any help, and you and Mum wouldn't get back together and â¦'
âThat's enough.'
He hits the accelerator and the car explodes across
the intersection. Suddenly he's in a hurry and speed limits don't matter. I know where he's going.
âGran really didn't say much,' I tell him. âI was probably exaggerating a bit. She was only sticking up for Mum.'
âI should have had it out with her years ago. Interfering bitch. All my married life she's been doing this and getting away with it, but not any more, not any more.'
I feel sick in the stomach.
âShe didn't mean anything, Dad. Lots of times she's said good things about you.'
He doesn't speak again until we get there.
âWait here.'
Dad steps over the small front fence, marches up the path and pushes on the doorbell.
I've got the mobile in my hand just in case I have to ring Mum, the police, an ambulance â I don't know. Just in case.
Gran opens the door and he attacks her straightaway, with words. I keep my window rolled up because I don't want to hear what he says, but his voice still carries to me. It's muted but it could be in another language and I'd still understand it. Rage. Nothing but. In seconds it's over. An image of Gran looking frail and shaken as she stares into the car at me is burnt into my mind. I mutter
I'm sorry, I'm sorry
. She has no hope of hearing me. Doesn't understand. She thinks I'm part of this. I look away from
her. Have to, because I
am
part of it. This wouldn't have happened if I'd kept my mouth shut.
Dad comes back, talking loudly. I don't know if it's meant for me or himself.
âTo think I used to mow that woman's lawn. Every week. And not once did I get any thanks.'
He gets into the car and slams the door.
â
NO BLOODY THANKS
!'
I buckle up as the car jerks forward, before he reverses into Gran's letter box, knocking it flat.
âShe might think twice now. Wicked Meddling Hag!' He sticks his head out the window and bellows, âDon't you
ever
try to turn my children against me! You hear? Stay out of my life!'
We spear off down the road. The anger isn't left at Gran's. It surges again when his mobile rings.
âYes, Lorraine, I did that.'
âThat's correct, I said that.'
âNo, no, you listen to me. The only thing I'm sorry about is that it didn't happen a long time ago.'
âDavid's fine! He's â talk to him yourself!'
He shoves the phone at me.
âHi, Mum.'
âAre you all right?'
âSure I am.'
âDid he make you go with him?'
âAre you kidding? Noo.'
âDo you have any idea how worried I am?'
âEverything's sweet.'
âSweet! God, David! It is not sweet! Didn't you see what he just did to your grandmother?'
âHe didn't do anything to her. He only â'
âOpen your eyes â he's out of control!'
âNo, he's not.'
âHe's taken you from school!'
âBut I wanted to go.'
âLook, I don't care what you want! You are not allowed to be with him! That is final!'
âBut I don't get what the problem is. We're only going fishing.'
âDon't argue with me! Just tell him you want to get out of the car! Tell him right this minute! Go on!'
âI can't do that, Mum.'
âPut your father back on the phone â I'll tell him!'
âShe wants to talk to you, Dad.'
He takes back the phone and switches it off.
Thirty seconds later my phone rings. Dad holds out his hand and I give him the phone.
âLorraine. No. No. No. This is not about getting even with you. Just listen. For once. Just listen! This has nothing to do with you. I want to spend some time with David. Would it hurt you so much to give me that?'
He turns the phone off.
âShe's just worried, that's all, Dad. You know what
she's like. Maybe we could give her a ring later. Leave it an hour or so. You think?'
He answers me by taking his phone, and mine, and flinging them out of the window.
âThat's what I think, David. That's what I think!'
I sink a little lower in my seat as we rush past town after town, the silence blaring. Half an hour goes by before I try to make conversation.
âDid I tell you I got an A in Science, Dad?'
I ran screaming around the house so I'm sure he must have known about it.
âWell done.'
âRight ⦠you know this play I'm working on?'
He nods, only vaguely interested.
âWell, I met a girl â one of the actors. Her name's Glenna. She writes poetry.'
âDoes she?'
âIt's not rhyming poetry. She showed me some. I thought it wouldn't make any sense, but it did. She thought I was just saying that I understood it â because that's what her friends do â trying to be nice, you know? But I really meant it.'
I pause so he can say something and when he doesn't I let myself drift back to that moment with Glenna. I'd gone around to her place to pick up the DVD of
Cyrano.
She got a surprise when I asked to see her poems. And when I actually read them and told her what I thought they meant,
her eyes welled up. I kissed her. In those handful of seconds Glenna and I had our own world cut off from everybody else. I remember how quiet everything went.
âWe hit it off pretty good, Dad. She's not like a big party girl or anything. Just likes quiet stuff â a bit like me. Be great if you could meet her.'
âYes.' He reaches across and pats my arm. âThat's great, great.'
Everything I say runs into a dead end. It doesn't stop me.
âDidn't expect I'd see you today. Never thought I'd go for a drive with you ⦠I'm glad you thought about going on this trip.'
I want him to say that he's glad too, but he doesn't say anything. When I look at him I see the same grim face I saw after the fights with Mum.
Â
We're on a long stretch of road with bushland on both sides of us. Heading for the south coast. It's all familiar except that the ground is black now and there are so many dead trees from the fires. We were there at Christmas three years ago. Had a picnic on Austinmer Beach. The countryside was green on that trip and we were happy. Now a fire's gone through the land. Through us, too. But I know the bushland does come back. I see patches of green to prove it. I know people come back, too. And I'm not
giving up. Not ever. I touch Dad's arm to let him know I'm still with him. That's all you need sometimes. Just a touch from someone. He looks at me kind of curiously, as if he's surprised to see me. I don't know where his head's taking him these days, but it must be a lonely ride.
Down the winding Bulli Pass. No trucks to slow us. No braking. The tyres squeal around tight corners as the speedo climbs. Dad leans forward in the seat, intense. He grips the steering wheel tightly.
Have to start him talking again. Get him focused on now, not on Gran, not on last night.
âHey, I was thinking â we need to stop somewhere and get some bait. Will we be going out on a boat, or fishing from â¦'
The sentence stays unfinished because I know I'm yabbering on to myself.
I put my hand on the steering wheel, right in front of his eyes.
âWe're not in a hurry, are we, Dad? We've got all day. It's just that we're goin' kind of fast.'
There's a slow realisation of where he is and what he's doing. A sorry. And he gradually drops the speed down.
âI shouldn't have asked you to come with me,' he says. âI'm not in a good place right now ⦠I don't know what I'm going to do.'
âYou don't have to do anything.' The smile. The cheery voice. âLet's just go fishin'. How hard is that? We
can work on the rest of the stuff later, but today's for us. Right?'
He nods uncertainly and we drive on at a steadier clip. In only moments we sweep around a corner and crest the last hill of the Pass. It always amazes me, this part. There has been nothing but bushland for so long except here and there a hint of water glimpsed through the trees. Now in front of us is the huge ocean, blue as ink and endless.
âLorraine always loved seeing that,' Dad murmurs. âNever tired of it.'
Much further on we pass steel mills and a dirty sky. Sulphur fumes seep into the car even though the windows are up. At last we break free of the suburbs and now there are open fields between the houses with cows and horses grazing behind falling-down wire fences.
âI'd like a place like that.'
I follow Dad's eyes to a white house with a veranda running all the way around it. A weeping willow is near the front gate; drooping branches like seaweed hung up to dry. It's shady and there's a jet black horse under it picking at the grass.
âIf I could start again,' he nods to himself, âthat's what it would be. A little place in the country.'
âWhy don't you, Dad? I'd live out here. So would Allie. Be great. Mum could get a transfer from her school. Maybe that's the answer. Start all over. You could make it work for sure, and I'd help. We could grow vegetables.
A whole new life. Allie could have her own horse. She would so love that. What do you think?'
âI think it's a wonderful daydream. And I wish it could happen. But I know it can't. Unfortunately, David, one of the hard things you learn as you get older is that life doesn't give you a second chance.'
Bullshit, I say, but only to myself. I decide not to fight openly with Dad. I can't beat him that way. I'll pick my time and sneak up on him. I don't know how yet â whatever it takes. Because I know there
is
a second chance there for him if he'll only reach out for it. I know because when I look behind me at the house fading into the distance, I see Dad on the veranda. And Mum is there too.