âWell,' he said. âNice day for it.'
She scratched herself. âCraig,' she said. âYou want to rub my stomach?'
As soon as he'd arrived! This girl was obsessed with stomach rubbing. But hey, he could cope! He shouldn't really do it. Matilda's mother had warned him not to, even if she begged him. But her mum wasn't around. Then he remembered his old man warning him that he'd have Craig's gonads for breakfast if he didn't respect Matilda. He wasn't scared of his old man, but he listened to him.
Matilda looked at him with one eye and smiled as he dropped down on his knees. The grass was thick and green and he could smell it as his knees crushed the stalks. He looked at her. On her forearm she'd drawn a little heart, and in it she'd written in her very bad handwriting:
Rex 4eva
. It didn't worry him. He wasn't the jealous kind.
She grabbed his hand. âPut it there.'
If that was what she wanted â and he did like the feel of her stomach. It was quite hard, but soft on the surface. He began to rub fairly gently, watching her face as he did so. She closed her eyes and lay back with a blissful look, her mouth a little open. He wouldn't really admit it to anyone, but he found this a pretty big turn-on.
Craig was a good skateboarder and not bad at basketball, but he had a few freckles and he was never sure whether girls actually liked freckles. Some girls seemed to, though; Chelsea Dean, for instance, and this one especially. He wasn't that good at school stuff, but neither was Matilda â she was actually about the worst in Year 11. She could catch rabbits, though; and he could shoot baskets â they were pretty compatible.
âIs that good?' he asked, and his voice, he noticed, had become a little huskier.
She made a noise in her throat which he knew was contentment and which was, he had to admit to himself, a bit like a growl. He liked those tiny growls. She was holding her hands up in the air, too, and they were now flopping at the wrist, which was quite attractive in its own way.
âYou know why I like you, Craig?' She still had her eyes closed.
He was starting to go all shaky and his heart was racing.
âRub in circles.'
Sweat was forming on his forehead. âI don't know. Why do you like me, Matilda?'
âBecause of how kind you are to Arnold. That's one thing. And I like the way you go after the ball when you play basketball.'
He felt a little embarrassed. Not many people ever told him he was good at stuff. âWhatever,' he said and rubbed more vigorously.
She laughed. âSorry. I have to tell the truth. Now scratch just behind my ears at the same time.'
What the heck. So he was a natural masseur.
Get over it,
Dad. Get over it, Mrs Grey.
It was looking as if it might turn into quite a hot afternoon. Yeah. And anyway, if you didn't jump into the water, you'd never learn to swim. He stopped rubbing her stomach.
âNo! Keep going. Both together: stomach and ears!'
How to scratch behind her ear and rub her stomach simultaneously? That was like one of those things primary school teachers asked you to do to fill in time before the bell went. She was demanding. He leant over, hand behind the left ear, the other one on the stomach. She growled sweetly.
âCraig, would you like to have babies?'
His skin went tight. He wanted to say,
Yes, baby
, and see what happened next. And he also wanted to get the hell out of there.
âUmm!' he said, wondering what the smart thing to say was. Probably
yes
. But he didn't. She was pretty weird. He needed to be careful here. âNo way!' he said firmly.
âWhy not?'
âBecause I'm too young. We're too young.'
âYour sperms are high-speed when you're young.'
He stopped rubbing. Girls shouldn't say words like
sperms
. It wasn't nice. âYou're crazy, Matilda.'
âI'd like to have about eight,' she said, squinting up at the sky.
Perhaps he should kiss her and shut her up. He leant down. âCraig,' she said tenderly. âStick your tongue in my ear.'
Hell!
âGo on!'
He leant down and very gently licked her ear.
She wriggled. âMore!'
He did it again. This was so mature. This was man's work.
Rub the stomach. Lick the ear. Rub the stomach. Lick the ear
. If only the guys on the basketball team could see
this
! Or his best mate, Khiem â he'd be spewing.
Suddenly a rustle in the trees behind them caused him to freeze with his tongue in her ear. A snake? He sat up fast. But it was winter. They'd be asleep.
âWhat was that?' he asked in a whisper.
Matilda sat up, too. She was very still. Alert. She sniffed the air.
âSomething,' she whispered. âSmells like female.'
There was a snap and a crash and Craig jumped. A familiar voice exploded through the leaves. âCraig? Matilda! What in the worldâ¦?'
Bloody Chelsea Dean! She emerged from the trees. The queen of the school. He ran his hand through his hair. âWhat are you doing here?' he asked angrily. âSnooping as usual?'
âSnoopity bitch!' Matilda yelled.
Chelsea looked mean. âI should throw a bucket of water over both of you!' she announced.
âWhat's wrong with being down here? Why are you down here spying on us, anyway?' He and Chelsea had a kind of loveâhate relationship.
âI'm surveying the bank to find a place for a boat ramp!'
No way was Chelsea going to wreck his perfect afternoon. âCrap, Chelsea! Nick off, will you!'
She looked around. âI'm starting a rowing club and we'll need a boat ramp, won't we.' She gave Craig a major greasy and spoke quietly. âAnd what, pray tell, are you two doing?'
âJust enjoying the sunshine,' he said.
Chelsea screamed with laughter. âIs that what you call it?'
Matilda was starting to bare her teeth.
âMatilda Grey, Craig is not your boyfriend and never will be.
Why don't you go home now. Scram, girl!' Chelsea clapped her hands. Then she turned her eyes on him. She was a bit scary when she was mad. âCraig, you realise Matilda is carrying all sorts of diseases? And right now she's almost certainly on heat.'
Matilda growled, and Craig grabbed her.
Chelsea stepped back against a tree, looking a little alarmed. âMatilda,' she said quietly, âwhy don't you just find something more appropriate to your real interests â what about a fox terrier?'
Matilda stood up and growled again, more deeply this time. This was going to be one heck of a bitch fight.
Realising that Matilda was about to attack, Chelsea started to back slowly away up the path, smiling uneasily at them both. She stumbled, and Matilda lunged. Craig grabbed for her. She struggled, but he had her around the waist.
Chelsea screamed and fled.
Z
EYNEP
Y
ARKAN HAD
finally convinced her mother to let her do all the family washing and ironing. With an angry shriek of defeat, her mother had declared: âYou do all the washing forever, girl!' and hurled a heap of sheets at Zeynep, leaving her daughter the smiling victor. Zeynep was overjoyed. At last the laundry belonged to her and all the washing, drying and ironing was hers forever.
She loved the laundry dearly. It was the centre of her life now. She found it so much more satisfying to do her homework in there, although her brother, Mehmet, had stopped her moving the computer in. She'd asked her parents if she could move her bed in, but they had threatened to send her to Turkey to live with her grandmother if she made any more crazy requests. Right now, she could hear the washing machine sloshing joyfully as her backpack rolled and plunged on the delicate cycle â a wise decision made after Mehmet's backpack had disintegrated last week during a heavy-duty wash.
In taking over the laundry, Zeynep had another agenda. It wasn't just that as an obsessive-compulsive she had a need to clean and straighten the world; she also needed a place to hide her boyfriend, Angelo Tarano, from her boy-hating parents. In fact, she was waiting for him now. She intended to spend this wet Sunday afternoon with him.
The doorbell rang and she rushed to answer it. There he was â Angelo. The cockatoo on his shirt stood out impressively. He was very proud of his football team and his success, and she was proud of him, too. Angelo was a catch. And they would be all alone with the washing for several hours before her parents returned.
She grabbed his hand, carefully avoiding the little finger, and pulled him through the door. Angelo moved to kiss her, but she moved back and led him into the house.
âNot the laundry,' he pleaded. âPlease not the laundry again.' âWhy not?'
âZeyâ¦'
âWhat's wrong with a laundry?'
âCan't we try something a bit more comfortable?'
She knew what he wanted: the bedroom. âYou can kiss me in the laundry but not in any other room.'
He sighed, but she could tell he didn't mind that much. Chelsea said Angelo was a pushover, and he was.
âHow about, like, adding a few other places: what about kissing you at school?'
âNo way,' she said firmly, dragging him through the door.
âYou can kiss me in the laundry anytime, night or day, but not in the street, not at school, not on the bus, and not at Doctor Donut.'
She opened the door to her laundry. He followed her and pounced. He was a bit of a pouncer.
He was holding her tightly and it was nice. He wasn't rough or too pushy, even though he was almost a football legend. Aussie rules, of course. Not her father's preference. Her father and Mehmet followed
SBS
soccer â so Angelo was not on her father's radar at all. Mehmet knew Angelo from school but said he was just a wanker. Little did Mehmet know that Angelo, the wanker, regularly pegged out his jocks! If her parents knew who he was they might be proud, but if they knew she hid him in the house and that their tongues had once accidentally touched, they would kill him.
She felt herself go a little bit weak now as his lips nibbled at her cheek. Her lips quivered. He began to squeeze her harder and his lips rubbed hers, gently. Combined with the symphonic sound of the spin cycle, it caused her resistance to weaken.
âBaklava?' she said, drawing away with a gasp. Chelsea said it was best to offer a guy food when he got a bit too frisky, because that suppressed their hormones.
Angelo looked frustrated as he stared into her eyes. âNo baklava,' he murmured. But she knew he had trouble choosing between a cake and a kiss. She stared back.
âSure,' he said finally. She grabbed his hand to lead him down to the kitchen. It was Mehmet's baklava, and he would curse when he found out it was missing. But it had to be done.
âAnd can we kiss properly afterwards?' he asked in his soft little-boy's voice. She knew what
properly
meant: it meant the open-door policy.
Not going there, boyfriend.
âMum's baklava,' Zeynep said as they entered the kitchen, âfor your shoelaces. A fair exchange.'
âWhat? You're doing something weird again.'
âI just want to boil them,' she said in her pretty-please voice, which he usually couldn't resist. âThey harbour germs.'
âNo way.'
âNo baklava, then.'
âI don't care.'
Suddenly out of the corner of her eye she saw someone move in the drive. Her mother!
Panic. âQuick! Out! Get to the laundry!' she whispered.
âWhy?'
âMum. The cupboard.'
âNot again.'
âNow, Angelo!' she whispered aggressively. He obeyed. There was a breathing hole in the door of the cupboard so he wouldn't die. He'd once had to stand in it for twenty minutes and was late for training.
Her mother flung open the door and bustled into the kitchen. She banged the CD player on. Turkish music exploded into the room. âWhere is my wallet?' she demanded. âI forget the wallet. You find it quick, quick, quick. Your father is waiting.' Her mother began pulling open drawers.
Zeynep saw it nestled on the dish rack and handed it to her mother.
âGoodbye!' Her mother left and Zeynep turned off the CD. Her heart was beating hard. Her father was waiting in the taxi in the drive. She watched them reverse, then grabbed a plate and put the biggest piece of baklava neatly in the centre before rushing down the hall.
âJeepers!' Angelo said, stepping out of the cupboard and blinking.
âSorry, Mum forgot her wallet.'
She handed him the baklava and he dropped the whole thing into his mouth. Then he threw his arms around her. âPayback!'
âYour mouth is full of nuts.'