Authors: Georgia Blain
TWO DAYS AFTER MIKHALA'S opening, the call finally comes, and Matt realises he has been waiting, in a state of suspense, everything still, for an inevitable shift. It has been like the heaviness of a late February evening, the oppressive build, a slow gathering of thick clouds, the air low, wet and solid. And he has been anxious, each day half expecting to come home and find the boy sitting in their kitchen, sullen, quiet, with Freya trying to talk to him politely and Ella just staring at him shyly. He has been dreading this, not sure how he would deal with it, how they would all deal with it, and he has to confess that he's often wished he'd never begun this ridiculous journey of trying to find this young man who may not even be his.
At work, he's sitting out on the balcony with Lorna, the company's interior designer. The bare branches of the plane trees scratch the clear blue sky and the traffic below hums faint above the stillness of day.
It's early and they are both reading the paper, pausing to swap sections. She shows him a dress she likes and asks him whether he thinks it would suit her. She's always going out with different men, and often wants
his advice on her love life. They flirt slightly, and he enjoys her company.
âIt'd look good on you,' he tells her in all seriousness, and then seeing the price, he chokes. âYou wouldn't spend that much?'
She grins. âWhat else do I have to spend my money on? It's not like I have a mortgage and a child.'
He almost doesn't hear his phone ringing on the table next to him, but then he glances across to see the screen lit up, and recognising the Queensland number, he picks it up hurriedly.
The line is bad and he moves to the edge of the balcony, while Lorna folds up the paper and goes back inside. Her move to give him privacy makes him wonder whether she thinks he's having an affair. Lisa has rung him a few times at work and Lorna has often been nearby when she's called.
âHow are things?' he asks. âAny word from Lucas?'
And then he realises she is crying, or at least trying to stop herself from crying.
The rattle of a train below drowns out her words, and he has to ask her to tell him again.
âThey reckon he mugged someone near Central. He's being held by the police.'
Matt doesn't know what to say.
She can't get a flight until that evening, but in the meantime she wants to know if he'll go down to the station, if he will check whether Lucas is okay, if he'll try and organise legal aid for him.
âI didn't know who else to call,' she tells him. âI'm so sorry.'
He assures her there's no need to apologise, he wants to help, he's always told her that.
âI know.' Her voice is soft now.
And then, as she tells him where Lucas is being held, he writes down the details.
âDo you need somewhere to stay?' he asks.
She accepts, apologising again as she does so. âI don't have anywhere else,' she says, âand the airfare has just about wiped me out.'
She mustn't worry, he tells her. He can help out with money too. It will be all right, and the silence on the other end of the phone makes him think she must be crying again.
âWhen did you hear?' he asks.
She tells him it was this morning. He was brought in last night.
âI don't know all that much at this stage.' She breathes in, short, harsh breaths, her words once again drowned out by the noise of a train.
âCall me as soon as you see him,' she makes him promise, and he assures her that he will.
Â
Outside the police station, Matt waits for Shane. He had wanted someone with him, someone who would be better at this than he is likely to be, and he had rung on the way from the office. Shane was in a meeting, but promised he'd cut it short.
âI'll be down there in the half-hour,' he'd told Matt.
Leaning against the warmth of the brick wall, Matt watches the constant stream of cars surging up towards the traffic lights on the corner, the drivers trying to make it over the intersection before the red halts them. It's an endless stream of metallic colour, he thinks, and he counts each change of the lights while he waits.
Shane arrives more quickly than he'd said he would, and when Matt sees him crossing the road, he is relieved, the anxiety that he'd have to do this on his own dissipating. They walk towards each other, meeting a few doors down from the station. Shane drops his cigarette butt to the ground and checks his mobile phone before turning it off.
âHe's in there?'
Matt confesses he hasn't gone inside yet.
Shane will take charge. He knows how to deal with the cops. Not arguing, Matt just follows him.
The constable at reception is young, probably no more than twenty-one or twenty-two, and she barely glances in their direction as they enter. They have to wait until she's finished entering data onto the computer, and then she looks up, her blue eyes pale and watery, her cheeks and brow smeared with acne.
When Shane announces that they are here to see Lucas Holmes, that he is the lawyer appointed by the boy's parents â and he nods in Matt's direction â she just continues looking at them. The pause is strange, and Matt is uncertain as to whether they are meant to fill it with further information, but he says nothing. Shane, too, remains silent, waiting.
Eventually she checks the computer again, and sniffs loudly.
They can take a seat, and she points to the orange plastic chairs behind them. She will be back in a moment.
Shane asks Matt to fill him in on everything he knows, which is very little. As Matt relays all that Lisa told him, Shane's left leg jiggles up and down, his foot tapping against the worn lino.
He wants another cigarette. âGet nervous in places like this.'
Matt has to agree that he also feels nervous. But it's not just being in a police station. It's the whole situation.
He tells Shane to go and smoke. He'll call him when the constable comes back.
When she does return, she again says nothing. She just takes her seat at the computer and continues with her data entry, not even looking in his direction.
âCan we see him?' Matt asks, his voice sounding unnaturally loud in the stillness.
The soft clatter of the computer keys continues as she tells him, still without glancing his way, that she'll let them know when they can go through to an interview room.
The smell of tobacco is thick as Shane sits heavily in the chair next to Matt.
âStill nothin'?' He nods in the direction of the young woman, shaking his head as he does so. âWhat's the hold-up?' he asks, his voice raspy.
She tells him there is no hold-up. They will be able to go through shortly.
Shane stands, walking slowly over to the glass window dividing her office space from the room in which they are waiting. Matt can see her pull back as he approaches.
He doesn't have all day, Shane says. How much longer will they have to wait?
Her sigh is audible as she stands up. She will check. In the meantime, could he please return to his seat?
Lucas has his back to them when they enter the interview room. Another young constable stands by the door, opening it for them and indicating the seats on the other side of the table. Matt barely dares to glance in Lucas' direction. Uncertain as to whether Lisa has said anything about the possibility of him being Lucas' father, he hopes that Shane has the presence of mind to hold his tongue.
He looks across as he sits. Lucas has his eyes fixed on the table. He is smaller than Matt remembered, pale and pimply, his greasy black hair hanging low over his forehead. There is a slight fluff on his upper lip, a smudge against the white of his skin. All his clothes are black; a T-shirt with a metal band insignia, and black jeans, and when he scratches his hand, Matt notices that his nails are painted black also, the chipped strips of polish chewed back to the quick. He smells musty, unwashed and afraid.
âYour mum asked me to come,' Matt says, and the boy looks up quickly. His eyes are red and glazed. âThis is Shane,' Matt continues, momentarily uncertain as to whether the boy even remembers who he is. âHe's a lawyer.'
Lucas just nods.
Shane leans closer and pushes his tobacco pouch and papers across the table. Lucas' hands tremble as he takes out a couple of pinches, spreading them along the centre of the paper. He rolls quickly, lighting the cigarette with obvious relief.
âThanks,' he says, and it's the first word he's spoken.
âThey bring you in last night?' Shane asks.
Lucas nods again.
âAnd they charged you?'
This time Lucas is a little more uncertain. âThey got some youth worker in. But I didn't want to say nothing. I was out of it,' he mumbles, and he scratches at a sore on his forearm, lifting the scab. A small pinprick of bright red blood appears on the whiteness of his flesh. âCan you get me outta here?' His eyes dart from Shane to the door, and he sniffs loudly. âI want to get out. I want me mum.'
Shane explains that Lisa is on her way and in the meantime he'll get a copy of the charge sheet. âThey'll have a committal hearing,' he says, âand we'll try to get you bail.'
âSo, you really my lawyer?' Lucas looks at him. He rubs at the blood on his skin, licking it off his finger. âYou don't look like a lawyer.'
Matt doesn't know whether he's referring to Shane's colour, or the fact that he's wearing jeans and has long dreadlocks. He doesn't want to know. He also doesn't want to look at Shane as he tells the boy that he can appoint someone from legal aid if he qualifies, which he probably will.
âI'm just here 'cause he asked me to come,' and he nods curtly in Matt's direction.
âHow's me mum?' Lucas eventually says, looking quickly at Matt before turning his gaze back to the table.
âShe's upset,' Matt tells him. âShe's getting here as quick as she can.'
The boy rubs at his eyes, and Matt finds himself remembering Lisa's photo album, the faded pictures of Lucas as a child, arranged beneath the crumpled sheets
of plastic. He thinks of Ella, too, in that instant, a sudden realisation that parents have no idea what will befall them; the extent of their potential vulnerability is too overwhelming to contemplate.
âShe said to say she loves you,' he adds, and the words aren't really a lie because he knows that Lisa does love Lucas, just as he loves Ella, just as he couldn't bear for Ella to become like this boy here in front of him.
âCan we get you anything?' Matt asks, uncertain as to what they would be allowed to get for him in any event.
Lucas wipes at his nose with the back of his hand, and then he rubs at his eyes again. There are cuts along his forearm, slashes that look in danger of becoming infected. He clears his throat as he breathes in and Matt wonders whether he is about to cry. He is just a boy and he must be scared.
When they stand up to leave, he looks at them.
âWhen will me mum be here?' he asks.
âShe flies in tonight,' Matt reassures him. âShe'll be there for the hearing in the morning.'
âWill I get out then?'
Shane explains once more that it depends on whether they get bail.
Lucas is led out by the constable. He does not look back at them.
Outside, they sit on a bench under the giant knotted branches of a Moreton Bay fig. Shane explains the charge sheet. It's bad. Worse than Matt had anticipated. Lucas had been sleeping in the tunnel near Central since he arrived in Sydney a couple of weeks ago. Or at least that's what he told the police. He'd bashed an old
woman who slept a few metres up from him when she woke to find him stealing her money. She'd been taken to the hospital.
âWere there witnesses?' Matt asks, not really wanting to know.
There were. A young guy known to the police, and his girlfriend. He was called Stinky. He also slept in the tunnel. He saw it all happen. In fact, he intervened to stop Lucas really hurting her. Or at least that's what he told the cops.
âI reckon he's goin' to need legal aid,' Shane says. âThe bail hearing'll be tough. He's not got much chance with Lisa not living here.' Looking up at the weak winter sun, Shane squints.
Matt stands, kicking at the leaves at his feet. He wishes he hadn't got involved. That's the truth of the matter. He would like, more than anything, to not be here, to have not thought of Lisa again, to have never seen her, to have never heard of Lucas.
THEY HAVE ARRANGED TO meet at a cafe near the theatre. Freya chose the place, wanting to pick somewhere they would be unlikely to see anyone they knew, yet careful to ensure that it wasn't too out of the way, a meeting that couldn't be regarded as secret should they be discovered.
She has changed three times that morning, critical of each outfit she tried. Ella looked at her in bemusement as she came out in the last combination, a grey woollen skirt, red boots and a black jumper with a boat-neck.
âI like that one,' she said.
Freya kissed her on the top of her head, wanting to breathe in the still musty scent of her sleep â rich, warm and sweet.
âLast night I dreamt you were a dinosaur,' Ella told her. âBig and green and scary.'
Freya smiled. âI do write plays. Probably makes me as close to a dinosaur as you can get.'
Ella didn't get the joke but she still found it funny.
âWhere are you going?' she asked, looking Freya up and down one last time at the school gates. âA meeting?'
And she told her she was, a meeting about work.
At home alone, she considers getting changed again, but then decides not to. She has only just had her hair cut and it hangs sleek and perfect down her back. She pulls it back into a tight knot, not wanting its smooth gloss to make it look as though she is trying too hard. She wears only lipstick and mascara, rubbing the red into her lips so that it is more a stain than a full colour. At the last minute she puts a little powder on her nose. Then she takes one final look at herself in the mirror, breathing in as she does so. Try as hard as she can, she cannot get enough distance from herself to see her face as another would.
She reads the paper on the train, trying to calm herself, but the news of a leadership challenge within the Labor Party only makes her all the more agitated. She is astounded that it has come to this. How could the prime minister have gone from such extraordinary popularity to facing the real possibility of being dumped?
She wants to talk to someone, and so she turns without thinking to the man sitting next to her.
âHave you heard the news?' she asks, showing him the front page.
He gives it a cursory glance.
âDo you think they'll really get rid of him?'
The man doesn't care. âNever vote,' he tells her. âDon't trust any of them.'
Freya shakes her head in wonder, both at his lack of interest and at the incredible turn of political events. She leans against the window and looks at the rows of small terraces backing onto the railway tracks, their gardens overgrown with lantana. She likes trying to see inside,
a glimpse of any other domestic scene â a bike leaning against a hallway, a table, a reading lamp â always holding a certain sad beauty, calling up a sense of longing that comes with standing on the outside and looking in.
As they pass a park, she catches sight of herself reflected in the glass. She looks anxious. Her hands are sweaty. She rubs them on the front of her skirt, grimacing as she does so.
He is already in the cafe when she arrives. Sitting at a table near the back, the newspaper open in front of him. His head is bent so she cannot see his face, just his long lean legs in jeans, a charcoal jumper and a red scarf draped over the seat next to him. She wants to look for a while, to fix him in this picture of right here and now so that it will become vivid and strong enough to remove any memory of kissing in the taxi. It is all so adolescent. Oh God, she thinks. What on earth am I playing at?
As he glances up, she knows she is blushing and she hates the paleness of her skin, the pink flush that betrays how nervous she feels.
He stands to kiss her on the cheek, smiling as he does so. âNot really sure how to greet you now,' he confesses. âBut it's good to see you.'
He is smooth at this, she realises. Much more so than she is, and she sits down, asking if he's read the news.
âIt's so hard to believe,' she tells him. âI had no idea until this morning.'
âI guess the polls have made them lose their nerve.' He raises an eyebrow. âAre we here to discuss politics?'
Her smile is wry. âI'm just trying to make it unweird.'
âThere's no such word.' He looks at her directly now, eyes kind. âEverything's been all right?'
She nods, and then shakes her head. âI'm sorry,' she tells him. âI've actually felt very strange about what happened. I tell myself a kiss is nothing, which it is, but then if it isn't anything why do I have to keep quiet about it? Which of course I do. And why do I feel so awkward seeing you again like this?' She meets his gaze. âI just wanted to try to get back on an even keel, and really, I should order a coffee and keep talking politics.'
He reaches for her hand and as he does so, her phone rings. It's Matt. His name is there on the screen. She picks it up without thinking, relieved that there is some distraction from this moment, and then, as she answers, she wishes she hadn't because it is wrong to be sitting here with Frank while she talks to Matt.
âAre you at home?' Matt asks her, and Freya tells him that no, she isn't, and she is about to pretend she is having a coffee with Anna before she realises there's no need to do this. He isn't interested. There's something else, an edge in his voice that makes her stand, covering her other ear with her hand as she heads to the door, to take the call outside.
âIs everything okay? Ella? There's nothing wrong with Ella?'
No, he tells her. She's at school. He needs to talk. Can she get home soon? He's heading back there himself and will be waiting for her.
âNow?' she asks, exasperated.
If she can, he replies.
âYou can't do this,' she tells him. âYou can't just call and say it's time to talk. Tell me what about. Is it Lucas? Has he shown up?'
He has, Matt answers. But it's complex. He would much prefer to sit down with her and discuss it before Ella gets home from school.
Freya feels sick.
âWhat kind of complex?'
âPlease,' he asks. âLet me just see you and talk about it face to face.'
âWhat have you done?'
âNothing,' he promises. âWell, not nothing, but I don't want to discuss it on the phone. I really need us to speak.'
Back inside the cafe, Frank waits. He has ordered her a coffee and she holds it, warm in her hands, unable to drink as she explains that she can't stay. She begins to tell him about Lucas, when he reminds her that she has already told him a little, and she remembers that she has indeed spoken of this before, back in the time when they were simply friends.
She turns the sugar bowl around on the table, and says she is sorry but she really will have to go.
âAt least have your coffee.' He sits back, legs crossed in front of him, paper folded up.
She takes a sip and then puts it down again. âAre we going to be able to be friends still?'
He ponders the question, mock serious as he rubs at his cheek with his hand. âIt depends on whether we were friends in the first place or just pretending â in a feeble attempt to deny the attraction that was there, all the time, simmering under the surface.'
She smiles, glancing down at the table. Beneath the lighthearted flirtatiousness, there is a truth to what he says. âI guess that's just something we're going to have
to find out.' She looks at the smooth line of his face and the softness of his lips and knows she would like to kiss him, to lean across right now and take his face between her hands and feel his skin again, and she also knows that part of the pleasure would be in travelling so far from where she should be â at home, talking to Matt. So, she reaches for his hand instead, and takes it in her own, lifting it to her lips, before telling him that she does have to go, she really does, and she is sorry she is so bad at all of this, but that just seems to be the way it is, and she is sure they will find their way back to an ease with each other.
âIt's not the end of the world, you know.' His eyes are hazel in the softness of the light through the window. âPeople do this kind of thing often. No one need know, and no one needs to get hurt.'
There's a seductive ease to his words. She would like to believe them.
âWhy not? We like each other. The small teaser we had was fun. We don't have to get attached. I have a lot to sort out and you can carry on with your life just as it is â using me as a little break from it all.' His smile is hopeful.
She looks at him. âDon't tempt me.'
But her voice cracks as she whispers, and the fault line throws her slightly, enough to make her realise she has to push back her chair and get going. She shouldn't and cannot stay.
âYou'll call me soon?'
She can only nod in reply.
Outside, she walks quickly back to the train station,
and then runs down the escalator, just getting through the doors of the carriage before they slide shut.
Â
Matt is in the kitchen, also reading the news. She sees him as soon as she opens the door, sitting in an almost identical pose to the one in which she found Frank earlier, head bent forward, legs stretched out in front of him.
He looks up, reaching out for her to sit with him. âIt's unbelievable, isn't it?' He points to the front page and she is irritated.
She hasn't come back to talk leadership spills.
He apologises, turning immediately to all that has happened.
He has made promises â a room to stay, an offer to cover bail money. He doesn't confess them all directly, and with each one she opens her mouth to protest but he asks her to just wait until he has finished.
âShe will pay us back,' he assures her. âShe needs to draw down on her mortgage and it takes a few days.'
And then, when he finally finishes, Freya is too angry to speak. She wishes she had fucked Frank the other night, embarking on a betrayal far less puny than the one she had attempted, relishing the destruction, both hands on the frayed edges of her life as she pulls it apart, the rent jagged and mean. Instead she is here with Matt, listening to his attempts to explain why Lisa will be at their house, potentially with Lucas, and why they will be as good as standing bail for someone she doesn't know.
âHow could you have made these decisions without even telling me?' she eventually asks.
âI had no time to call you.' He is opposite her with his hands on her shoulders, his palms warm, his grasp firm, but she pulls away.
âDon't touch me.' Her voice is tight.
âI don't understand why you need to be so angry about this. We're only putting up the cash until Lisa's money comes through and then she'll pay us back straightaway. They'll be here just until they find a place to rent. And that's only if he gets bail, which he may not.'
âYou don't even know her.' Freya looks out the back door to their garden, a small square of lawn bordered by an old tin fence, most of the grass taken up by Ella's trampoline and the two citrus trees. There is no space, she thinks, no place to get away from each other, and that's what she wants, to be anywhere but here. âYou don't even know if he's your son.'
It isn't the first time she's said this. She's uttered similar words before, aware of their power because they make all this seem so very foolish, but also aware that she feels ashamed of herself.
He is silent for a moment, running his fingers through his thick brown hair, a hard emptiness in his gaze. âDoes it matter?'
His words are petrol to her, a rich, oily slick ready to burn. âOf course it matters. Do we need to put up bail for every delinquent child belonging to someone you fucked â very briefly â a long time ago? You're not responsible for whatever he's done. And she should be ashamed of herself for making you feel like you are, when she's not even prepared to say whether he's your child or not. She should be asking someone she knows. Surely she has her own family? Why the fuck does she want ours?'
Matt doesn't move. âYou finished?'
Freya just glares at him.
âChances are I am his father, not that I've ever been one to him. But you're right, I don't know for sure. I don't want to make her have a paternity test. I've told you that. But am I only allowed to help if there's a genetic link â is my care and compassion limited to that? You and your friends sit around complaining about how little is done for others and you never look at yourselves. All I can do is make a decision about the way I think I should behave in the circumstances â and I want to help.'
In the silence that follows, Freya keeps her eyes fixed on the toes of her boots, soft leather that she polished that morning in anticipation of her meeting with Frank.
Matt reaches for her hand. âCan I touch you now?'
When she had first found out she was pregnant with Ella, he had told her he wasn't ready to have a child. She remembers that as she looks at her feet. She had been so angry then, a pure white rush of fury engulfing her as she had said it was too bad. They were having a child and he'd better get ready. It was, perhaps, the only other time her anger had matched the rage she'd just experienced and as she stares at her boots, she feels the same sick thud of descending from the dizzy spinning heights of the flame, the same tasteless smear of ash as she surveys the damage they've both done.
âNo.' She pushes her chair back and stands.
On their kitchen table, Ella's homework is gathered into a pile, Matt's coffee cup is still there, notes from the school and fruit in a bowl, apples and pears. It's a domestic scene so ordinary it hurts.
âYou never consult me,' she says, looking across at him. âYou just do what you want to do. And then you make me feel small.'
His eyes meet hers, his mouth in a straight line, his features immobile; an expression that does little to hide his anger, and it is too much to look at, this hatred, which she knows is also there on her own face, so she just walks up to her studio, slamming the kitchen door shut behind her, and sinks to the floor, knees to her chest, stunned.