Authors: Alice Pung
My encounter with Brodie showed me that there was something obscene about this school's idea that doing good somehow had to
feel
good too. I thought about the Laurindans and their charity events where they gained makeovers or lipsticks, and their afternoon teas with guest speakers who were missing arms or legs or who were of a color rare in these quarters. These events fostered a feeling of goodwill they could control, but Brodie had served herself a slice of our life and felt it too gritty to digest.
Meanwhile, in politics we were studying the maiden speech of a politician who'd announced that Australia was in danger of being “swamped” by Asians. “They have their own culture and religion, form ghettos and don't assimilate,” she had declared, and I heard an echo of what was happening to me at Laurinda. I was regressing back to my ghetto of one and not assimilating, even though the Cabinet had extended such a gracious hand to me.
And Mr. Sinclair. Over the course of the year, Mr. Sinclair had changed. No longer did he wear his smart suit jackets. He came to school in a shirt and navy trousers, sometimes even an ugly green cardigan with wooden buttons. He was dressing like an old man. And he was teaching straight out of books.
Introduction to the Three Levels of Government. The Federal Judicial System. The Small Claims Tribunal.
Admittedly, now that he was giving us the nuts and bolts, I was learning more about our political system. No longer could the Cabinet monopolize the class. But I was also saddened, because now Mr. Sinclair was teaching as if he were driving a car along a very narrow road, getting to the destination as quickly as possible. No more taking the scenic route.
One afternoon at school, Amber found me. “I need to talk to you, Lucy,” she said.
“What about?”
“I need to talk to you in private.”
“No, you can say it in front of other people.” I crossed my arms in front of my chest. I was having none of this, and I knew the other girls were interested in what was happening. They were always interested when the Cabinet cornered someone.
“Please,” pleaded Amber.
We walked toward the back of the bathroom.
“Lucy, I know Brodie came to your house to ask you not to do something.”
I stayed silent.
“The truth is, Brodie's in a bit of trouble with Mrs. Grey.”
Ooh, it was “Mrs. Grey” now, I thought. This was interesting news.
“It has to do with her chapel speech, and then Nadia Pinto. Mrs. Grey believes Brodie has crossed some sort of line.”
Brodie has always crossed lines, I thought bitterly. The only difference this time was that while the line was being sprayed, the paint had streaked across the pointy tips of Mrs. Grey's plum leather pumps. And for the first time, Mrs. Grey was worried.
“That's why Brodie came over to your house, Lucy. I told her it was a bad idea and that you were a very private person. But you know Brodie. She does what she wants. I know she came to shut you up, Lucy,” she told me, “and I know you don't like her. And if you don't shut up, it makes her look bad.”
“Look bad?” I asked in mock innocence.
“It will look like she orchestrated the whole thing to rub it in that the school has no control over anything that happens in the classrooms, bathrooms orâ¦how the school is represented to others.” Amber was trying to sound artless, but I knew she was choosing her words very carefully.
“I'm sorry, Amber. I don't understand what you're getting at.”
“Brodie was the one who put your name forward for the Equity in Education conference,” she confessed.
“Why would she do that?”
Brodie never gave anyone else an opportunity unless there was some direct benefit to the Cabinet. After her chapel talk, she had the students eating out of her hand, but that was precisely the problem: the administration could see that the Cabinet was now growing far too influential. Although Mrs. Grey was probably relieved that the unstable Ms. Vanderwerp was gone, Brodie's talk had been a direct demonstration of the Cabinet's powerâand Brodie had relished it a little too much for Mrs. Grey's liking.
The triangleâthe most stable of geometric shapes, with its wide support base and pointed tipânow needed one last element: the Cabinet needed to be seen as the
good
girls they thought they were. They wanted to show that not only were they mentoring the less fortunate girls here, but they were also concerned about sustaining the school's public image. At Christ Our Savior, you helped maintain the school's reputation by offering your seat on the bus to the elderly. Here at Laurinda, things were infinitely more complicated.
Amber took a deep breath and then blurted out, “I don't think you should listen to what Brodie says anyway.”
I looked at Amber. Beautiful, cowardly Amber. It had taken all her courage to say that to me. But this was not the real revelation. The real revelation was that Brodie had believed I was malleable enough to do her biddingâand that she thought my appearance at the university conference would change Mrs. Grey's belief that the Cabinet was becoming a threat to the school's unity.
“Amber,” I said, “do you really think I would get up in front of the academics and professors and principals of high schools and read a speech about how fifteen-year-old girls torment teachers with tampons and break little girls' hands? What kind of idiot do you think I am? I'm on a scholarship here.”
“Lucy, I know you wouldn't do that,” Amber said, although I knew this was news to her. “But if you'd like, my mum could help you. I know you've never done this sort of thing before.”
“Do you expect me to thank you?”
“Pardon?”
“To thank you, Amber,” I repeated like a speech pathologist. “Should I be thanking you for telling me to be myself?”
“What?”
“Would you like me to bow, like Harshan did?”
Her eyes became unfriendly. “Don't forget what my mum's done for you, Lucy Lam.”
“What does that mean, Amber Leslie?”
“It means be careful what you say.”
“You wanted me to hang around with you because I make you look better,” I blurted out. This had never occurred to me before because it was a colossally immodest idea, but the moment I said it, I knew it was true.
Amber laughed. No one had ever said anything like that to a Cabinet member before.
“I make you guys look like you're not vicious. I make you look charitable. I'm like your pet, and you want me to be forever grateful for whatever scraps you throw my way.” Well, Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever and rich, I was thinking, I'm not going to be your Harriet Smith anymore. “It's the truth,” I told her, and walked away.
Still the Cabinet would not leave me alone.
Since Brodie's visit to my home, my life had suddenly become very interesting to them. It was as if an innocuous and uninteresting girl suddenly turned out to be an orphan, or to have cancer, or to have a secret life as an underage escort. For others, there was the vicarious thrill of being associated with her, but also the need to be careful, to make sure they didn't get too close, lest her sadness or sickness or depression rub off on them.
“What exactly does your mum do?” Brodie asked me the next day when I was pulling my bag out of my locker, getting ready to go home. The rest of the Cabinet was with her. I had stayed behind to photocopy a couple of pages out of the yearbook without anyone seeing. I quickly shoved the pages into my bag.
“You were at my houseâyou could have asked her yourself.”
“She doesn't speak English.”
“Why does it matter what my mother does, Brodie? That's a personal question. What if I asked you what your mum does?” I retorted.
“She's a professor of management at Monash University. If you asked, I'd tell you,” she explained reasonably. “That's what friends do. They talk openly about things like this because it's no big deal. Unless, of course, it is for
you.
”
That was unfair. None of the trio had been remotely interested in what my parents did until now.
“Mum works.”
“Yes, but doing what exactly?”
“She sews.”
“Well, why wasn't she at work when I came over?”
“She works from home.”
“Yeah?”
“Yes.”
“Amber told us that yesterday you were being evasive with her. We just want to make sure we don't end up associating with shady people.”
“What does that mean?”
“You should know.”
Rage was building up in me. And suddenly I felt as if you, Linh, were standing behind me, pushing me to be who I was before.
“What the hell are you talking about?”
“You know what I'm talking about. Who was that pimp guy I saw outside your house?”
She knew how to get to me. It was the most insidious, vilest thing anyone had said about my family. I hated these slutty virgins who knew how to aim prurience like a poisoned arrow, directly where it hurt most.
My hands were shaking. I wanted to spit in her face, pull her hair. I wanted to slap her senseless.
Instead, I replied, “He's the heroin dealer, you moron. He was giving my mother money for the shit. His name is Sokkha, and if you insult my mum again he'll kick you so far that by the time you stop rolling, your clothes will be out of fashion.”
I didn't need to punch her in the face. This girl, who calculated the effect of every word she uttered, finally understood that there was nothing random about either my speech or my silence.
“I wasn't saying anything!” Brodie protested. “I was just asking what your mum did.”
“But you think I'm dodgy.”
To reply in the most barbed way she could, Brodie said nothing.
I doubted that the Cabinet really believed we dealt drugs, but now they were looking at me as if I were rabid. I walked out of the locker room and toward the oval, to the back entrance of the school, where my bus stop was. I could feel them creeping up from behind like a cheap and ill-fitting pair of underwear.
“How dare you!” railed Chelsea. “How dare you!”
I turned around. “You think I'm feral, but you broke a girl's hand!” I said. At least three dozen students were milling near the back gate of the school, waiting for their buses, but I didn't care. “You bullied a teacher out of the school! You do evil things and get away with it because you think you're untouchable!”
“No student can bully a teacher, Lucy,” Brodie explained gently, as if I were a child. “She wasn't doing her job. She couldn't teach. If she could, none of that would have happened.”
“She was nice!” I retortedâbut I might as well have said, “She wears organic cotton socks!” or “She was clean!” for all the relevance it had.
“You're such a suck-up.”
Then, as I neared the fence, I thought I was imagining things. But there you were, Linh, standing among the kilts and blazers of glory. Soon we were standing on the same side. I could barely believe it. I had not seen you for so long, but there you were: an ally in the face of adversity! My heart rose. I did not have to battle these bitches by myself. There was no time for introductions.
We turned to face the Cabinet.
These girls knew that bad words were only truly bad if saved for special occasions. If you used them often, they lost their power and became like any other word that expressed annoyance or surprise, the two expressions that now pinched Brodie's faceâalthough, in her carefully controlled decorum, only her mouth twitched at the corners. Girls like her were always going to judge girls like you, and judge anything you said not by its content but by your Stanley accentâso you gave it to them, as loudly as you could.
“Fuck youse!”
Heads turned. Girls' jaws dropped. A few parents who were walking toward the gate looked on in horror. The after-school teacher, the poor soul vested with the task of delivering these girls safely to their buses, was Mr. Sinclair, and he was striding toward us.