The Betrayal of Bindy Mackenzie (29 page)

BOOK: The Betrayal of Bindy Mackenzie
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‘I guess so,' I replied. There was laughter.

I was halfway through my Study Tips when Emily raised
her hand. She did this for humorous effect, pretending I was a teacher.

‘You really need to do all this,' she said, ‘to get those marks

you get?'

‘I think so,' I said.

Then she sighed, murmured, ‘FLAX that,' and let her notes slip to the floor.

At one point, my computer froze up and I panicked. (I suppose the FAD group make me nervous: it is clear that they still resent me.) Finnegan moved behind me, leaned over my shoulder, restarted the computer, and found the file again.

Afterwards, Auntie Veronica passed around her coconut cherry slice and tea. I could see they liked Veronica, but I wished that Bella had been home too, rather than at playgroup.
She
would have won their hearts.

Auntie Veronica wanted to slice some bread for Briony, because she confessed she's allergic to coconut, but Veronica couldn't find her chopping board. She opened every cupboard and drawer in the kitchen, and then looked up in amazement.

‘It's been stolen!' she said. ‘Why would anyone break into a house, leave
everything else,
and steal the chopping board? It just seems, I don't know, mean-spirited?'

She has a sincere way of talking nonsense, and everyone hesitated before they realised she was joking. Then they began to search the
house
for her chopping board. Some ended up in my bedroom. Astrid and Sergio stood staring, silently, at the study notes that cover my walls.

I noticed something: Toby Mazzerati paused by my dressing table, and touched my jewellery box. There was a glimmer of a smile. It is a wooden box that he himself made for me, many years ago.

It was Finnegan who found the chopping board, eventually, amongst Bella's toys.

Afterwards, when everyone had gone, Auntie Veronica looked thoughtful and said, ‘What's that girl's name? Astrid, is it? That silver stud in her eyebrow. Shouldn't she get it removed?'

I have always liked Auntie Veronica's sense of humour.

EFFECTIVE STUDY MANAGEMENT:
A GUIDE
BY BINDY MACKENZIE

OVERVIEW
°  
What do you hope to achieve today?
°  
Why?
°  
Why are you here?
°  
Why are we all here?
(Meaning of Life etc)

Effective Study Management: A Guide © Bindy Mackenzie

WHO ARE YOUR FRIENDS?
°  
Board of Studies resources
°  
Iced water
°  
Fish
°  
Grapes

Effective Study Management: A Guide © Bindy Mackenzie

KNOW THINE ENEMIES
. . .
°
Sleep (try gradually reducing the hours spent sleeping)
°
Parties (consider cancelling parties?)
°
Reverie (What is it? When is it okay? etc)
°
Intoxication

Effective Study Management: A Guide © Bindy Mackenzie

BINDY MACKENZIE'S STUDY TIPS #1
Never forget the Joy of Mnemonics:
Eg King Phillip Came Over from Germany Swimming = Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species
My Very Elderly Mother Just Sat Up Near Pluto =
Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
Neptune Pluto

Effective Study Management: A Guide © Bindy Mackenzie

BINDY MACKENZIE'S STUDY TIPS
#2
Think of maths formulae as your friends. Talk to them. Laugh with them. Choose a favourite. Buy them small treats.

Effective Study Management: A Guide © Bindy Mackenzie

BINDY MACKENZIE'S STUDY TIPS
#3
Summarise your study notes and
talk
about them. Talk about your study notes to:
  ° friends
  ° babies
  ° budgerigars
  ° the furniture.

Effective Study Management: A Guide © Bindy Mackenzie

BINDY MACKENZIE'S STUDY TIPS #4
Put your study notes onto index cards. Scatter the cards through the home. Glue them to the back of cereal boxes, and onto the side of the toothpaste tube. Now and then, mail yourself an index card.

Effective Study Management: A Guide © Bindy Mackenzie

BINDY MACKENZIE'S STUDY TIPS
#5
Now and then, eat your study notes.

Effective Study Management: A Guide © Bindy Mackenzie

BINDY MACKENZIE'S STUDY TIPS #6
Rename your pets.
Say you have a dog and a goldfish?
Rename your dog Nicholas II.
Each time you see him, say, ‘Hello there, Tsar
Nicholas! Thinking about the 1825 Decembrists' Revolt and the 1861 Emancipation of the Serfs and how they affected your reign? I thought so! How about Alexander II, eh? Swimming around in the aquarium there? What do you think of
him
?'

Effective Study Management: A Guide © Bindy Mackenzie

BINDY MACKENZIE'S STUDY TIPS
#7
After every shower, use your finger to write a date, a formula, or a fact in the steam on the bathroom mirror.

Effective Study Management: A Guide © Bindy Mackenzie

4

A Portrait of Emily Thompson
It is Friday afternoon and here I am on my shadow seat outside the library.

Tonight: our first debate of the year. It will take place at St Mark's Christian Brothers. (Their team, last year, was solid but lacking in vocabulary.)

Emily will debut as our second speaker. It is the time to consider the nobility within her.

She is average in height, broad-shouldered. She is always eating junk food, but she is slim enough. I believe she likes to ride horses.

It is hard to recall the colour of her eyes—I only see them flashing and sparking at me. I have also seen them brim with tears. I remember her crying when her friend, Cassie, sang at the Spring Concert last year.

I also remember her crying when the tuckshop discontinued stocking certain chocolates.

Like the boys at St Mark's, Emily struggles with vocabulary.

Yet, she seems ignorant of her own ignorance. She is always astonished when she gets a bad mark, gasping loudly, the tears brimming again.

She has never liked me much, and despised me last year when I made a mistake about a name.

To my surprise, she did take notes on Wednesday, when I ran the Study Management course.

It's much later—midnight.

What an extraordinary night!

The familiar flutter of the first debate of the year: my Ashbury uniform is freshly ironed, my hair neat in its coiled plaits. A St Mark's boy greets us at the school building, polite and reserved. He points the way along empty corridors, where footsteps seem too loud. Fluorescent lighting in a staffroom, tables set with cakes and sandwiches, milling adults, boys standing silent, girls with high-pitched giggles.

Ernst von Schmerz and beside him, Emily. (I had thought she would be late.)

Mrs Lilydale approaches with sponge cake on a paper plate, and presses this into my hands. Emily holds a chocolate cupcake but makes no move to eat it. She looks pale.

As usual, the small talk is forced and nervous until we get our topic.
That young people should be banned from participation in professional sports.
We look at each other, intrigued. Ernst says a few words which confuse the opposition. There is a coin toss. We lose. The others choose Negative. We are led to an empty classroom, and given one hour to prepare.

And then the debate—Ernst and his superb opening. Emily's surprise that Ernst can speak plain English. The first speaker from St Mark's—no match for Ernst. Me scribbling rebuttals on blank cards. Emily, white as paper, stumbling a little as she stands in the centre of the room. Then startling the room with a blaze of words—a shifting
in the audience, a straightening of the adjudicator's shoulders.

Ernst and I turn to one another. It's an understatement to say it, but Emily knows how to speak.

She returns to her seat, now her cheeks are flushed, eyes straight ahead. I take one of my blank cards and write: THAT WAS FANTASTIC. And slide it along the desk to her. She glances down and smiles.

And so it goes. The adjudicator stands to announce the results, and we have won our first debate. Mrs Lilydale rushes at us with excitement. We shrug, nonchalant. It is only the first round.

But now, later, it is not the debate that occupies my mind.

No, and nor is it our triumph.

What I recall most vividly is that hour of preparation time in the empty classroom.

It is Saturday. I wonder if Emily is a dog?

She is fiercely loyal to her two best friends. She bounces around playfully when excited, but growls and barks viciously when mad.

Would Emily like it if I told her that she is a dog? Perhaps not.

I'd better go. I need to be at Maureen's Magic (that is, her bookshop) in ten minutes. I wonder if I should try to learn to drive again.

Perhaps not.

Sunday now, and I'm just home from my job at Eleanora's place. Also dropped by Dad's house on Gilbert Road and worked on the wallpaper.

But Eleanora's place—such a strange job. To sit opposite
someone while she plunges her hands into wet dough. (She has moved on from gnocchi to linguini, winding wide white strips through a pasta machine.) If only I could meet her baby just once, it might seem a little less bizarre.

The baby's name is Calypso, you know. ‘Calypso!' I said.

But Eleanora did not seem amused. ‘Yes,
Bindy
?' she replied, presumably pointing out the strangeness of my name. But Bindy is a common abbreviation of Belinda! Nothing to do with the bindi-eyes on my lawn!

Mostly we sit quietly, and I answer her queries about school.

I told her about the first round of the debating competition.

But I did not mention the hour in the empty classroom. How the atmosphere changes at once when the door is closed. Plunging into a moment of relief—we are away from the opposition team and the formalities!—but even the relief is charged with tension. There is only an hour to prepare!

As usual, I rushed to the board and wrote up the topic, along with words and phrases to define:
Young people! Young! People! Banned! Participation! Professional Sports! Professional! Sports!
Frantically, I scribbled some ideas:
young bones; muscle damage; school work!; pushy parents; eating disorders; is ballet a sport?

There was silence behind me.

I looked back.

Emily Thompson was sitting on a desk, legs swinging, tears sliding slowly down her face.

3.00 am now, Monday morning.

Feeling ill. Might just—

Just threw up in the bathroom. Feel a bit better now but
can't stop trembling. How strange, this numbness in my cheeks. I sense it often, you know, and sometimes in my arms and legs—it's more than pins and needles—it seems to numb my mind.

I must keep working on my
character.
Eventually,
that
will cure me. As Dad always says, good health is nothing but good character.

I wonder if Emily might be a humpback whale.

That connection she has with her two best friends— I believe they could easily sing to one another, like whales, across hundreds of miles.

But, to my surprise, Emily's friends were not at St Mark's to watch the debate.

In the empty classroom at preparation time, I found out why.

Emily hiccoughed quietly when I turned from the board and looked at her. She blinked, turned away, and picked up a pen.

But it was too late.

I could not pretend I had not seen. I moved towards her, and hesitated. Ernst, who had been looking discreetly from Emily to me and back, took my cue and he himself moved closer. We both waited.

And Emily confounded us.

She apologised, in a whisper, for joining the team.

She said she was going to let us down.

She would try her best, she said, but knew we had always won before, with Kelly Simonds on the team. With her, she said, we would lose. And she had made Lydia and Cassie promise not to come tonight, because she didn't want them to see her fail.

‘You guys are just so professional at this,' she whispered. ‘I'm not even, like, an amateur.'

Well!

She felt
inferior
to Ernst and me!

It was a shock.

We assured her she could do it. She'd been a hit in mock trial with Legal Studies; she'd won the next stage of the oratory contest; she was famous for cross-examining Mrs Lilydale last year—how could she doubt herself?

‘But this is different,' Emily insisted. ‘You guys are gonna be wishing the whole time that Kelly Simonds was here. Instead of wherever she is. Overseas or wherever.'

At this,
Ernst
surprised me.

‘Who really liked Kelly Simonds anyway?' he said in a low voice.

‘What?!' I cried.

But that was what he said.

Emily giggled, and I felt a weight, such a curious burden of weight, lifting slowly from my shoulders.

Who really liked Kelly Simonds anyway?

Not me.

And then, as I stood, as I floated on the spot, Emily Thompson rushed to the board and began to scribble ideas.

Now, much later, I am intrigued by a vision of a bank of elevators, one sliding down on its shafts, another shooting up towards the roof.

I had believed that Emily was slipping
downward
into the debating world. It turns out she had believed she was climbing—ascending to the echelons of intellect.

She had been terrified of looking up there, but, despite herself, she had tried.

Emily Thompson may be many things, but above all, she is loyal, determined and brave.

Imagine if she were my friend.

A Memo from Bindy Mackenzie

 

To:
Emily Thompson
From:
Bindy Mackenzie
Subject:
YOU
Time:
Tuesday, 10.30 am

Dear Emily,
Once, I left you a message in which I said you are a komodo dragon.

Today, I write to assure you that you are not. (Unless, of course, you would like to be.)

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