âWhy are you yelling?' Zeynep enquired meekly.
âBecause I'm being persecuted! A ticket to where? Who?'
âTo Turkey. My parents. This Wednesday!'
âWell you just can't go! You'll miss the formal.'
âIt's so easy to say that.' Zeynep was sobbing.
The juicer started yet again.
âOh that is just it! Do you know what, Zeynep? We're both going to Sydney! I'll ring you back,' she snapped.
Chelsea stormed down the stairs. There he was in the kitchen in his hideous Daffy Duck boxer shorts. She knocked loudly on the open door. Her father never made breakfast in his underwear.
âEnter if you're gorgeous,' Craig called out.
She did and stared at him defiantly.
âI said enter if you're gorgeous. So how come you entered?'
â
What are you doing?
' Chelsea screamed.
âMaking everyone orange juice,' Craig said, surprise on his face. âYou're not a happy chappy in the morning, eh?'
She couldn't think of a response.
âMind telling me where you guys hide the sugar?' he asked.
âYes I mind.'
âAny Milo?'
âNo.'
He moaned loudly, arching his back and stretching. âI'm hangin' out for Milo. I'm a guy!'
There were squeezed half-oranges and splatters of juice everywhere, and a huge bowl of cornflakes sat on the table.
Now he was opening cupboards. He bent over and she stared at the Daffy Duck squawking from his backside.
They'd never had cornflakes in the house before â it had always been a Bircher muesli residence. Her whole way of life was under attack.
âCouldn't you put on a pair of pants, for heaven's sake? And a top?'
Craig rolled his eyes. âDon't perve at the goods, then.'
This was just too much! It was time for the list.
âBasically,' Chelsea said quietly, âit comes down to the fact that I was here before you. I'm an only child. I'd heard boys were ghastly to live with, but nothing they said ever prepared me for you, Craig Ryan. I have drawn up a list of rules.' She took the paper from her dressing-gown pocket and opened it up on the bench.
âHave some orange juice,' he interrupted.
She ignored the offer. âIf we are to live in harmony as a blended family, Craig, you must agree to the following demands.'
Craig Ryan's Rules
for Harmonious Living by Chelsea Dean
1 C. Ryan has exclusive use of the pool room and guest room, provided he doesn't use any other rooms in the house.
2 C . Ryan is never to answer the door.
3 C . Ryan is not to answer the phone or send text messages in the toilet.
4 C . Ryan is not to bounce a basketball while mounting the stairs.
5 C . Ryan is not to throw food in the air and catch it in his mouth.
6 The following words and phrases are not to be used in the house: scrotum, ma bitches, shake your booty, porker, buns, mighty fine ass, sis, babe. And the T-shirt with the slogan ' You've been a naughty girl, go to my room' is never to be worn again.
7 The police will be called if Matilda Grey is found on the premises.
Craig was looking a bit perplexed. She slapped the list onto the fridge door and pinned it with an
I
â¥
DADDY
magnet.
âAnd number eight: Never wear underwear in the kitchen.'
âYou're wearing underwear in the kitchen, and Matilda does what she wants,' Craig muttered. âI can't control her.'
âA dressing gown is
not
underwear, Craig. And you are so infatuated with that girl that you can't see how absurd she is.
A girl who thinks she's a dog? Get real!'
âFor your information, Matilda already stayed with me in the pool room,' Craig announced, crossing his arms. âYou've got the hots for me. Admit it.'
Chelsea shrieked and threw the closest thing at hand â his bowl of corn flakes â straight at his head. It missed and crashed to the floor. Then she unplugged the juicer and threw it at the fridge door.
Next she grabbed a wok. âI want you and your father and that dog OUT OF MY HOUSE!' she screamed and bashed the wok on her mother's granite benchtop. It chimed like a gong.
âOUT!' she screamed and bashed it again.
âOUT!' she bashed harder still. The wok had developed a major dent.
âOUT!'
Craig bolted from the room.
C
RAIG
R
YAN HAD
been shocked by Chelsea's tantrum. He wasn't going to live with her any more â stuff them all, he was moving out with Matilda. This would be his first experience of a mature relationship. The trouble was that he'd never actually slept in a TV box in the bush at night, and he wasn't sure whether he'd cope without
Counter-Strike
or a fridge.
But Matilda had her hideaway just down on the river, so you could probably hear traffic and see house lights. And if Matilda wasn't scared of snakes, spiders, serial killers, bag ladies and werewolves, he couldn't be either. Anyway, they would have Arnold with them.
So he had packed some TV Snacks, a six-pack of Just Juice, a couple of pairs of jocks, his toothbrush, his deodorant, his old man's condoms, his phone, two cans of Dingoes' Dinner for Arnold and the iPod into a backpack, and they'd left Matilda's place after a big feast of Fruitopia, bread and Nutella.
His note to his father had read:
dad, don't searc h for me. i've gone some place else to live because i ain't living with chelsea, no way. don't worry about me i can look after myself you can phone if you like, craig your son.
ps i've taken arnold and all the just juice
âI hope my mother is worried,' Matilda said as they made their way across the oval and down the track towards the river.
It was a pleasant evening and the sky was a gentle pink. So long as Matilda and Arnold were curled up beside him in their box, this would be fun. He was the only other person in the world who knew about this secret sleeping place.
âThey'll go nuts when they find you missing.'
âSuffer.' She laughed. âSuffer tourists. Suffer Chelsea Throwback Dean.'
They were holding hands now and she squeezed his hard. That was a good sign. She was wearing a windcheater with a hood and had her own backpack, and she walked with her other hand on Arnold's back.
They descended a path and the air got a little colder. The sound of traffic diminished and darkness descended. Matilda had a torch. They reached an area of dense bushes.
âIt's here. Now we have to crawl.' She indicated a small opening in the foliage. âYou'll have to take your backpack off and push it along the secret path.'
âAre there snakes?'
âNo, they're asleep, but I reckon there's a fox somewhere.
I can smell it.'
âDo foxes attack?'
âOnly if you corner them and go for their testes.'
âIt would be scared of Arnold,' Craig said nervously as he followed her example and got down on his knees.
âIt would be.'
He looked at her bum: pretty sweet. She was wearing jeans.
âFollow me,' she said and disappeared into the black little opening in the bushes.
Arnold squeezed in front of him, following Matilda. Craig pushed his backpack along before him, following them both.
This was kind of insane, like playing mums and dads, but there was some chance it may turn into doctors and nurses, and for that reason he wasn't chickening out.
His good jeans were going to be wrecked crawling up and down this little path, and he was missing the semi-final of
Australian Idol
. Two days living like this would probably be enough. By that time, the TV Snacks would be eaten and the batteries in his iPod and phone would be flat. Then they'd have to return to civilisation.
âWe're here,' she called from somewhere in front. He could now see a little better. There was Arnold, sitting beside Matilda, and they were both smiling at him. Her nest.
She had made a little round room and built up walls of branches and a kind of roof. On the ground were a couple of blankets. On one side was the TV-box bedroom, barely big enough for one, let alone the three of them. He couldn't work out how she'd got it in there. She'd even found some plates! On a branch was a picture of Inspector Rex. She'd been collecting this junk from along the river and dragging it into her hideout.
âWhat do you think?' she asked proudly.
âNot bad.'
She had her arm around Arnold. He patted Arnold too and felt safer. Arnold would get a fox for sure.
âWant to see my Inspector Rex collection?' She unzipped her bag. He'd seen it all before several times, but he had to humour her.
âWant some TV Snacks?' he asked, opening his backpack as well.
She got out the folder of photographs, and he handed her the box of biscuits. Arnold licked his lips and stared intently at the box. He had a big tongue, too.
He and Matilda shared a Just Juice. âThis is just perfect,' she sighed and lay back on the blanket.
That wasn't quite how he would describe it.
Arnold curled up beside her. âHere we are in our new home and I have my two husbands.'
âTwo?'
âYou and Arnold are my husbands.'
âArnold is a dog! Who brought you the TV Snacks and the Just Juice? Not Arnold.'
She leant over and rubbed her hand up and down Arnold's back. âHe's a very special dog.' She leant over and kissed Arnold on the nose.
âHey, stop it. Don't act weird. Act like a girl. Kiss me on the nose too if you kiss him!'
She did.
âArnold is important, Craig. He's more than a dog. He has talents,' she said.
âLikeâ¦?'
âDigging talents.'
âBrilliant.' He felt like challenging Arnold to a digging competition.
He suddenly wanted to go home. This wasn't going to work out. Maybe they weren't compatible. Fifteen minutes in their love nest and they were having a domestic.
âOkay,' she said. âYou are good at tummy rubbing. I'm sorry.' She lay down. âWould you like to rub my tummy and my ears now?'
Craig looked at her lying on the old blanket, her head partly in the cardboard box, and she was pretty damn attractive. But he decided to make her wait. âMaybe in a minute,' he said. âOr you can get Arnold to do it, if he's so special.' Maybe he was a little jealous. Was that normal?
âDon't be crabbity,' she said. âBe nice.' She closed her eyes.
He leant over. This was what he'd been waiting for, after all.
He began to rub and a little smile appeared on her face. She really was so pretty with that little smile.
Suddenly she hoisted herself onto her elbows and started to sniff the air.
âWhat's wrong?'
She sniffed again. âA rabbit!' she whispered. Arnold had pricked up his ears. âSomewhere quite close. Come on, Arnold.'
She got on her knees and vanished down the little secret path, with Arnold right behind. He was left in the dark, alone.
He could hear them both jumping about in the bushes not far off, so he shone the torch in that direction. There was nothing but a black wall of trees. He really wanted to be back home now. He couldn't compete with Arnold, and psychopaths could be lurking out in those trees.
How long could you live away from home? Just long enough to get your point across to your old man. He would probably be mad when he found his condoms missing.
The scampering sounds increased; Matilda and Arnold were returning. He focused the torch beam on the tunnel and suddenly they both appeared out of the dark.
He yelled as the torchlight illuminated them. In Matilda's mouth was a rabbit!
âWhat the ⦠? Get it away from me,' he cried as she dropped the thing in front of him and then grabbed hold of it when it tried to jump. Arnold was growling and watching it closely.
The poor thing's eyes were red in the torchlight.
âDinner!' said Matilda.
âYou have to be kidding.' Craig panicked. âGet it out of here.'
âCome on, Craig and Arnold. We'll slaughter it now!' she cried enthusiastically.
Craig grabbed his backpack and, shoving it down the secret path, he fled into the dark.
C
HELSEA'S HOUSE IN
Sydney was not unlike the one the Deans owned in Kew, noted Zeynep Yarkan. This was a house for movie stars. Clearly rich people all went in for the same type of house: ultra white, wall-size windows, sparkling ensuites, views, intercoms, espresso machines and sloppy bright paintings.