Authors: Claire Zorn
âYou can walk with me. But no more jokes.'
âWouldn't dream of it.'
Thirteen
âWhat do you think Katie thought of you?' Anne asks me.
âI don't know.'
âReally? You seem like a fairly emotionally intelligent person, Hannah. Take a stab.'
Yeah, Hannah
, says Katie.
Take a stab. Take a stab at me
.
âBecause do you know what it looks like from my side?' Anne asks.
I shake my head.
âIt looks like it isn't the accident you don't want to talk about. It's Katie.'
âMaybe.'
âI'm not letting you off the hook. What do you think Katie thought of you?'
âShe was disappointed in me.'
âHow?'
âShe said I needed to grow a spine.'
âWith regard to the bullying?'
âWith regard to everything.'
âYou're a gentle person, aren't you, Hannah?'
I shrug because I've never heard it described like that.
âAnd it sounds to me like there were elements of Katie that weren't gentle.'
Here we go
, says Katie.
Let's psychoanalyse the dead girl so we can hang all the shit on her, 'cause she's not gonna know, right?
âI wonder if maybe she saw something of herself in you sometimes and she didn't like it,' Anne says. âMaybe she saw you as vulnerable and vulnerability wasn't something she was comfortable with, especially in herself, so she tried to stamp it out. Maybe in a strange way she was trying to protect you.'
***
The beach house wasn't all it was cracked up to be. Namely due to the glaring lack of beach. My mother had stood on the back veranda examining the view of trees and rooftops, her handbag still over her shoulder even though we'd been there half an hour. She was reluctant to commit, I guess.
âIt said “water views”,' she said. âI double-checked, triple-checked.'
Dad gently slipped the bag strap from her shoulder.
âWell, I mean, it's still a nice view. Lots of trees,' he said.
âWe have a better view at home.'
Dad walked the length of the veranda, craned his neck sideways. âThere! I see it! The ocean! Through those trees, just next to that apartment block. Do you think it's an apartment block? Could be offices, I suppose. Council offices, maybe.'
Mum stood in front of him and he steered her shoulders in the right direction.
âDo you see it? Do you?'
âI see it.' She took her bag from him and went inside.
âKatie,' Dad called. âI found the view! Come see.'
âYou found the view?' Already in her bikini, Katie padded across the timber decking. âDoesn't inspire confidence, Dad.'
âLook.' He pointed.
Katie laughed. âWell, at least they made up for it with these very tasteful dolphin wind chimes. And so many. Just in case we forget we're at the beach.'
âDo not say that to your mother.'
It turned out the phrase âwalking distance to beach' was also largely relative. It was walking distance to the beach in comparison to our house, for example. The walk looked as if it would take about twenty-five minutes, so when you finally made it home after a refreshing swim you'd need another one to cool off again.
âIt's not a problem,' Dad said. âWe'll just go to the beach as a family. That's the point of a holiday.'
Katie didn't make an effort to hide her objections to all-in family beach time. It's hard to flirt with lifeguards when your dad is right there in a pair of ill-fitting Speedos.
So it was agreed that Katie and I would walk to the beach in the mornings. Mum and Dad would come and meet us in the afternoons for the quality family time Dad was so keen on.
On the first morning, Katie emerged from her bedroom wearing her chosen beach attire: a pearlescent white bikini, which was basically just a collection of strategically placed triangles.
âInteresting,' my mother said. âAnd what are you going to cover up with?'
âI have a towel,' Katie replied, as if Mum was a little on the slow side.
âMaybe a T-shirt and skirt would go nicely with the towel?' Mum suggested.
I, on the other hand, had the art of covering up down pat. A long tankini top and trusty boardshorts that almost reached my knees. There was zero chance of my attire becoming dislodged by a rogue wave.
âWhat are you wearing?' was Katie's response to my ensemble.
âIt's a tankini.'
âYeah, see, “tankini” is another word for middle-aged I'm-a-bit-dumpy-now swimsuit. Seriously, Hannah? Where did you get that? And are they men's shorts? Oh my God. I'm not going to the beach with you looking like that.'
âKatherine,' Mum said. âLeave her alone.'
âI will. That is exactly what I will do.'
âYou're only going if you go together.'
Katie took my wrist and dragged me into her room.
âDo you seriously have nothing else you can wear?'
âUm. I have my racerback.'
âThis isn't squad training, Hannah.'
âI'm not comfortable just in, you know,' I motion to her
Sports Illustrated
ensemble.
âWhy? You don't wear frigging boardshorts at training. Oh. But you do cover your bum with your kickboard when you're walking over to the pool, don't you? Yeah, I've seen you doing that, not exactly subtle.'
She began to rummage through her suitcase.
âIt's lucky I have five bikinis.' She tossed one in my direction. Blue polka dots.
âJust put it on, Hannah. It's cute. You're cute. We'll be cute together.'
Katie chose a spot on the sand, spread out her towel and lay down on her stomach. (On top of the towel, rather than under it as Mum might have hoped.) I kept mine wrapped around me, like a thermal double-layer tube dress with extra padding â just what every girl needs on the beach.
âAre you just gonna sit there like that?'
âYes.'
âThat's a really big hat, by the way.'
âWell, it's a really big sun. And it's eating your skin while we speak.'
âI'd rather take my chances with the sun than cover myself with carcinogenic chemicals.'
âConvenient argument for someone so fond of tanning.'
âI'll make you give me my swimsuit back. Now.'
And then, five, four, three, two, one.
âHave I seen you here before?' Wetsuit rolled down to the waist, board under the arm, sun-bleached hair. Big smile. They were always so friendly. And inventive with their opening lines.
âOh, hey.' She sat up, shielded her eyes from the sun with one hand and removed her sunglasses with the other. She wasn't a
Sports Illustrated
model
. She was Elizabeth Taylor.
âMaybe. How's the swell?' Did she research the stuff beforehand? Get the right lingo?
âStuffed. Choppy as.' He dropped the board and sat on the sand.
âI'm Campbell.' (Like the soup.) He offered his hand, she shook it.
âKate.'
He turned to me. I shook his hand.
âH-Hannah.'
âAnd here's the dickhead who kept dropping in on me.'
Another one now. Darker. Tattoo climbing his calf. He dropped his board and reached behind his back to unzip his wetsuit.
âYa had no chance, Campbo.' He peeled the wetsuit from his shoulders, pulled each arm free. If these guys were our age, they were taking an awful lot of steroids. âWho're your friends?'
âHannah and Kate.'
âHeath. How's it goin'?'
âGood,' replied Katie.
âYouse aren't from here, are you?' he grinned.
Katie laughed. Not too much. She measured it perfectly. âYeah, we're on holidays.'
âSisters?'
âHmm. Cold in?'
âOh no. Campbo, whada ya reckon? Twenty-five, twenty-six?'
âTwenty-eight for sure. You gotta get in there.'
âHmm. Yeah right.' She stood up, adjusted a strategically placed triangle. âLet me guess, there's dolphins too, yeah?'
âHeaps of them.' Campbell got to his feet. The expression âkid in a candy store' wouldn't go astray.
âMind our stuff, Han?' Katie tossed her sunglasses to me.
âNo way,' Heath said and it occurred to me he was looking at me. âYou're not piking.' He held out his hand to help me up. (I obviously needed it, what with my beach-towel cocoon and all.)
âNo, no. I'll just stay here.'
âNa-ah. Can you swim?'
âShe can swim.' Katie fixed me in her gaze, raised an eyebrow, seeing if I would accept the challenge.
I took his hand and allowed myself to be pulled up, whilst keeping a firm grip on the towel. Maybe I could shout âlook over there!' and run into the water while they were distracted. Very sophisticated.
Campbell and Katie were already heading to the water. Heath was waiting for me. This was definitely the closest I had ever been to a half-naked male. I swallowed. Removed my hat. And unwrapped the towel. Just my fluorescent skin and a few polka dots. Excellent. He grabbed my hand and pulled me towards the water.
Heath asked a lot of questions. What was surprising was that he addressed them toward me. He also offered to put sunscreen on my back, I responded by opening my mouth in an effort to speak. And failing. When I think back to that day on the beach I can barely believe I was even there. It feels like the chunk of a film that never makes the final cut. Arrangements were made. They would be back at the beach at six-thirty, would pick us up, we would go to a pub, have drinks.
Katie told Mum and Dad that the two of us were going to walk into the town to catch a movie (not about to engage in some sort of drug-fuelled orgy as
Cosmo
would have them believe). If they were suspicious about the amount of preparation time that we put in, they didn't let on. I was, after all, the perfect accomplice for Katie.
The dress was blood-orange, a fingertip hem. Strapless. Tiny blue buttons in the shape of sparrows ran down the front of the bodice to the waist. It wasn't mine, of course. She said the colour went with my dark hair. Complemented.
We stood in the tiny strip of space between the two single beds. Starfish-patterned curtains drawn, a pastel painting of a little girl with a basket of seashells looking over us. Katie was twisting her curls into a side knot below her left ear. She took a bobby pin from the selection she held between her lips and pushed it into the coil of hair.
âYou want earrings?' she asked.
âI don't have pierced ears, remember.'
She took the last bobby pins from her mouth and slid them into her hair. âHoly shit, Hannah. What century do you live in? It's not illegal, you know. You have shaved your legs, haven't you? Show me. You did behind the knees, yeah? Oh God, Hannah. Here's a razor â can you hurry?'
âIs he really going to be looking at the back of my knees?'
âHe's a guy. He's going to be looking everywhere. You look pale. Are you going to pass out? You need to look at this as an opportunity, yeah? This is experience. You need experience. You might even enjoy yourself.'
She sounded like our mother.
The twilight air crawled over my bare shoulders. We walked the edge of the road, sandals scattering the gravel. The girl who was playing me was trying to look confident.
âHow old are they, Katie?'
âYou don't want to be with guys your age. Trust me. We mature earlier, anyway. Heath's gorgeous. Like it matters how old he is.'
âIs he driving? Do you think that's because he's older?'
She gave me a sideways glance. âAre you peaking out on me? I can't go unless you do. You know that. You look pretty. It'll be fun.'
âWhat about Jensen?'
âFuck, Hannah. We're not going to marry these guys. Look,' she stopped walking, stood in front of me. âThis is practice. You have to take every opportunity you can to get practice. These guys are a rehearsal, someone like Jensen â¦' she sighed. âJensen is ⦠he's a whole other level. If I get it wrong with Jensen, I'm not going to get another chance. This is as close as I get to sisterly advice, Span. Take it. Experience is everything.'
You could feel the air thickening with salt as we neared the beach. The grumble and sigh of waves pounding soft sand. I felt as though my heart and lungs had packed it in and left me. Given up already. The girl who was playing me was losing her place. And then she turned and then she was running. There was someone calling after her. But she didn't stop.
Furious doesn't quite cover it. She was so pissed off she didn't talk to me until the next day â the beach again, no sign of Heath and Campbell.
âI do not understand you. What the hell was that about? Shit. No wonder, Hannah. No wonder you cop so much crap at school.'
âI'm sorry.'
âI thought you liked them. Seriously, what's not to like? Are you gay?'
âNo.'
âThen what?'
âI don't know. I just, I just freaked out.'
âYeah, you did. What? You think you were going to get raped or something?'
âI don't know.'
âWhy do you have to take everything so fucking seriously?'
âI just didn't want to have to â¦'
âTo what?'
âI'm not you.'
âYou're not me? What the fuck does that mean, Hannah? You mean you're not a slut, like me? That what you mean?'
âI didn't say that.' I was crying. Sitting on the beach in a polka dot bikini crying.
âDon't you dare judge me. What? So if you're the smart one, does that make me the bimbo slut, does it? You think I'm so stupid all that's left for me is to screw around?'
âNo. Katie, I don't think that. Please. I'm sorry about last night. I was ⦠I don't know.'
âYou ask me what you should do, you're always like, “Katie, how do I get them to stop picking on me.” Well, I don't know, Hannah, maybe stop acting like you've got such a big stick up your arse. You are so unbelievably stuck up.'