âShut up!' I spluttered.
âYou fucking little hero!' She screamed and put both arms around me and carried me back to where our clothes were. âThat was the biggest buzz I've ever had in my whole life.
Thank you
, sweet Peach, for making me come!' She was drying me off with her own clothes by this stage. The special shirt she bought for the party was soaking within a minute. I wanted to kill her. I did. Seriously. She was a maniac.
âStop it!' I said, pushing her away. âFuck off!'
âOkay, okay!'
Teeth chattering, we put on our jeans and coats, picked up our boots and headed up the track.
It was hard going, but less stressful than coming down. In spite of being a smoker, Det led the way. By the time we reached the top we'd warmed up a bit and I was feeling more reasonable. We stood under the darkness of the trees and tried to tidy ourselves a bit. Det grinned at me in the moonlight, such delight in her face that I hadn't the heart to stay mad at her. We both looked like drowned rats but some of her exhilaration bounced onto me.
âWe could have drowned,' I said.
âAs if!' She poked me in the ribs, then looked past me towards the house and frowned. âIs that your boyfriend over there?'
I looked up and saw Fluke and the girl looking into each other's faces, arms around each other. We were well hidden by the trees and they obviously hadn't seen us yet. They pulled apart and started walking hand in hand down through the garden towards us.
âHey!' Det shouted. âOver here!'
I watched him let go of her hand, take a few steps away and look around, trying to locate where the voice had come from.
âWho is she?' Det muttered.
I didn't answer. My heart was hammering in my chest, so loud I figured it could be heard.
He came towards us, smiling, with the girl close behind.
âWhat happened to you two?' He reached one hand out to touch my hair and my wet clothes but I ducked away. âWe were just on our way down to join you.' The horrible girl in green was staring from one to the other of us.
âDid you actually go in the water?' she asked incredulously.
Det laughed. Fluke shook his head and tried to touch me again but I moved away again.
Det must have picked up on the tension between us. She pulled away. âI need to get dry,' she said, stumbling off towards the house. âGoing to see if I can snatch a shower,' she called back. âYou need to warm up too, Peach. Soon.'
âOkay.'
There was so much I wanted to say, but not with the green insect there so I said nothing. Fluke moved over to me again.
âPeach? We were ⦠I was just about to â¦' âPiss off,' I hissed furiously.
âListen, it's not what you think.'
âHow do you know what I think?' I was so furious I could have hit him.
I ran after Det and when I caught up I thrust my arm through hers and we marched off across the lawn.
âHey,' she said as we reached the decking, âwho the hell is that chick?'
But I didn't answer. I went inside to look for Nick.
I found him standing inside the back porch talking with some other guy. âAre you okay to drive? Can you take me home, Nick?'
âWhat, now?' He took in my bedraggled appearance.
âYeah, now.'
He looked at his watch. Then back at me. âShould be fine,' he said, after a pause. âI'll ask Dicko for the Honda.'
âThanks.'
Det was watching this, and I think she was really upset, but I didn't care.
âYou want me to come with you?' she asked.
I shook my head. âNo, thanks.'
I slipped into one of the bathrooms to clean up a bit and wash the salty water from my face and hands and then stared at myself in the mirror above the sink. I looked so freaked-out that I shrank from my own image. My face was peaked and white. Bits of dirt, twig and seaweed had attached themselves to the clumps of soggy hair hanging about my neck. My blue eyes were the only things I fully recognised. Even so, the red rims and smudges of black mascara made me look half mad. I felt a bit like one of Shakespeare's witches.
Nick was waiting for me in the car when I got outside again. I saw Fluke standing nearby too, this time without the girl.
âWhy are you going?' He tried to grab me, but I slipped under his arm. âCome on, Peach!'
âDon't,' I snapped furiously as I got into the car.
Within moments we were sliding through the front gates. I turned at the last moment to see him standing there staring after us, and this incredible feeling of loss exploded inside me. Within a minute it had seeped out into all the outlying areas of my body, filling every nerve ending that only a few hours before had been tingling with excitement and joy.
I cried on and off most of the way back, and Nick was the best. He hardly said anything, just kept the music rolling, one CD after another, all of them beyond poxy. Dicko's mum surely had the worst musical taste in the universe, but I didn't care. Anything was better than silence. Every now and again Nick smacked my knee.
âHey, Peach, you're going to
love
this one.' And it would be Sinatra or Rod Stewart or early Madonna. Then he found a little stash of old musicals.
Hair
.
Sweet Charity
and
The Sound of Music
.
And by the time we hit the city we were both singing along with the words, and although I was still crying I was laughing too.
It was after three when he pulled up outside my house.
âYou got your key?'
âYep.'
He got out and saw me to the door.
âI love you, Nick,' I said as we hugged each other.
âThat's what they all say.' He pushed me inside. âListen, have a hot shower and go to bed. You'll feel better in the morning.'
âOkay.' So that's what I did.
Over the next few days Fluke rang and sent texts, then he called around. He spilt it out on our front doorstep. The girl had been his first girlfriend, they'd grown up together, both of them foster kids in the same house for a while. Both their mothers had bailed. He had deep feelings for her, but there was nothing between them anymore. Hadn't been anything between them for years. Yeah, of course he loved her. He would never lie to me.
He loved her.
That was the part I heard.
I understand all this on one level, but every time I think about it, I am flung back to that night on the beach, the full moon, those two in the kitchen, the blank look, the terror, the icy water, the wanting to die and ⦠I just can't.
Fluke and me are finished.
Breda tapped on Cecilia's door. âTea before I hit the road for work?'
âOh, yes please,' Cecilia called back. She lay there feeling a little groggy but luxuriating in the cosiness of the room and warmth of Breda's welcome. She sat up when Breda came in with two cups of tea and a thick slice of buttered toast.
âSo, how did you sleep?'
âGood. Only woke once with my dream but then went straight back.'
âA man?' Breda grinned.
âI wish,' Cecilia smiled, âalways a baby.'
âOh?' Breda sat on the end of the bed.
So Cecilia told her about the mixed-up dream of being back in the convent on the first day and being filled with anxiety about the baby.
Breda listened intently.âAre you worried about your daughter?'
âYou know, Breda, I can't even answer that question.' Cecilia sighed. âI don't know the first thing about myself.'
âNone of us do, kid.'
âYou do.'
âI just muddle through each day,' Breda said, âlike most people.'
They sat for a while in silence.
âDo you think I'm crazy to want to find her?'
âYeah. But that won't stop you will it?'
âYou're a nurse, Breda. What do I do first? Is there some place I go? A form I have to fill out? I was so crazy when she was born that I didn't even want her to know my name. Imagine how she'll feel seeing that when she tries to find out about her origins.'
â
If
she does.'
âHow do you mean?'
âShe might not ⦠want to find out anything.'
Cecilia tried not to be shocked by this. âI know she might not ever want to meet me, but she would probably still want to know basic stuff, even for health reasons.'
âMaybe.' Breda shrugged.
âSo what do I do?'
Breda sighed and looked down at her mug of tea and then she looked at Cecilia.
âThink about doing nothing for a while,' she said quietly. âFind your feet. Get a job. Catch up with your family and then ⦠see how you feel.'
âShe
is
my family. Sheâ'
âNo, sweetheart.' Breda reached out and touched her hand, âShe's
not
your family.'
Cecilia looked away, the old familiar weight settling down into her chest, the awful heaviness of having failed at every important juncture of her life.
âYou think that it is wrong of me to want â¦?'
âGood God, no. Nothing is
wrong,
Nuncie!'
âSo where do I start?'
Breda frowned and picked up her tea and took a couple of sips.
âI know where she is,' she said softly.
âWhat?'
âShe's at the convent.'
â
What
?'
âMad, isn't it?' Breda shook her head as though she couldn't believe it herself.
âDoing
what?
'
âShe works there.'
âBut last I heard it had been sold to developers.'
âNo, no, it's all markets and artist studios and cafes now. Your daughter works in a cafe.' Breda stood up. âI'm not sure if I should have told you that. You've got to promise me that you won't do anything silly. You've got to go through the right channels.'
Cecilia's heart felt like a tennis ball belting against a brick wall. âWhat else can you tell me?'
âNothing.'
âHow do you know it's her, then?'
Breda looked at her watch.
âI have to go to work. Can we talk about this when I get home?'
âOf course.'
Breda bent to kiss the top of her head. âSee you around five, then.' When Breda was at the door she turned around.
âRelax. Go for a nice walk. Reacquaint yourself with your country.' She smiled. âHave coffee in the little place around the corner and just try to ⦠enjoy yourself and ⦠go easy. I promise we'll talk.'
âWhat does she look like?' Cecilia whispered.
âJust like you.'
âHave you spoken to her?'
âNo.'
âDo you ⦠do you know her name?'
âPerpetua.'
And they both smiled.
Then Breda disappeared out the door, closing it softly behind her. Cecilia lay in the warm bed listening to her friend running around before leaving. The front door closed and Cecilia was alone in the house. She sat up and picked up the cup of tea.
Of course she knew she could make no claim on the girl. Whatever her feelings, the child didn't belong to her and any connection had been broken the day she'd willingly given her away.
Except
â¦
It was Cecilia who'd carried her for nine months inside her own body. It was Cecilia who had pushed her out into the world. It was Cecilia who'd first held the tiny squirming body in her arms and watched in wonder as the child's eyes opened and she calmly surveyed her mother's face. No one else's. She was the child's mother. And so she had the most fundamental claim of all.
Over the next week Cecilia and Breda caught up properly.
âWhat about that girl, Ida?' Cecilia wanted to know. âDid you really run away with her?'
Breda nodded. âI knew I was going to have to leave or else I'd go insane. We planned it together.'
âBut she was a laundry girl!' Cecilia said incredulously. âHow could you possibly have confided in her?'
âI don't know how it happened.' Breda shrugged. âBut she was bright and funny and so unhappy. One night I just took the risk and told her I was thinking of nicking off. I asked her if she wanted to come with me.'
âBut how did you know you could trust her?'
âGut instinct.'
âHow old was she?'
âTwenty-three. She had no family or friends to look out for her. And none of us bothered to tell her that she was actually free to leave. Isn't that just so â¦
incredible
?
'
âShe wouldn't have had anywhere to go.'
âTrue, but ⦠it was criminal what went on there, Cecilia. You know that, don't you?'
âAt least she had a roof over her head and three meals a day,' Cecilia muttered. âIt beat being on the streets or being raped by your stepfather. So many of them came from that kind of thing.'
âI know, but she was a bright young girl and the only education she got was folding up clothes!'