Authors: Markus Zusak
Steve kept winning at football, working in his office job and living in his apartment with Sal.
Rube went out with Julia.
And I still wrote my words, sometimes in our bedroom, sometimes in the basement. I also went over to Glebe quite a few times, more out of habit now than anything else.
Then.
A day came that changed everything.
It . . . I don't know how to explain it.
It all seemed so normal, but slightly off-centre at the same time.
I walked the city streets, as usual.
I made my way over to the suburb of Glebe, without even thinking about where I was walking.
I went there, sat there, stood there, waited there, even
begged there for something, anything to happen.
It was a Thursday, and in the dying moments of day, when the last rays of light stood up to be killed in the sky, I could feel someone behind me, just to the side. I could feel a presence, a shadow, standing just obscured behind a tree.
I turned around.
I looked.
âRube?' I asked. âThat you Rube?'
But it wasn't Rube.
I was sitting down against the small brick fence when I saw the person step into the last remnants of light, and walk slowly towards me. It was Octavia.
It was Octavia and she walked over and sat next to me.
âHi Cameron,' she said.
âHi Octavia.' I was shocked.
Silence bent down then, just for a moment, and whispered to each of us.
My heart threw itself to my throat.
Then, down.
Down.
She looked into the window I'd been staring at. Stephanie's window.
âNothing?' she asked, and I knew what she meant.
âNo, not tonight,' I answered.
âAny night?'
I couldn't help it.
I promise you, I couldn't . . .
A huge stupid tear rose up and fell out of my eye. It
tripped down my face to my mouth and I could taste it. I could taste the saltiness of it, on my lips.
âCameron?'
I looked at her.
âYou okay?' she asked.
And all I did from there was tell her the truth.
I said, âShe's not comin' out tonight, or any other night, and there's nothing I can do about it.' I was even moved to quote Rube. âY' feel what y' feel, and that girl doesn't feel a thing for me. That's all there is to it . . .' I looked away, at the dying sky, attempting to pull myself together.
I began wondering exactly why I'd chosen this Glebe girl as the one I wanted to please, to drown in.
âCam?' asked Octavia.
âCam?'
Octavia kept asking me to look at her, but I still wasn't ready. Instead, I stood up and stared into the house. The lights were on. The curtains were drawn, and the girl, as always, was nowhere to be seen.
Yet, there was a girl next to me, who'd stood up now as well, and we were both leaning against the brick fence. She looked at me and made me look back. She asked one more time.
âCam?'
Finally, I answered, quietly, timidly. âYeah?'
And Octavia's face cried out to me in the silent city night as she asked, âWould you come and stand outside my house instead?'
Â
going home
I only know we're searching for something.
We sit still
â
me against the wall and the dog next to me.
Come on, I see the dog thinking. What are you waiting for?
Yet, I still sit here.
I want an answer. I need to know where we're going, and what we're looking for.
The breeze begins to shout. It works itself into a howl
â
a howling wind that drags debris and dust and sand along the streets.
The dog's eyes are on me.
They climb into mine.
And that's when I know. That's when I see the answer.
The dog's taking me home
â
but not to any place I know. It's a new home, and it's a place I'll have to fight to find.
S
HE BROKE INTO ME
.
It was that simple.
Her words reached into me, grabbed my spirit by the heart and reefed it from my body.
It was the words and the voice, and Octavia and me. And my spirit, on the silent, shadow-stricken street. I could only watch her, as slowly, she collected my hand and placed it gently in hers.
I took all of her in.
It was cold and her smoky breath flowed from her mouth. She smiled and her hair kept falling over her face, so beautiful and true. She suddenly had the most human eyes I'd ever seen, and the slight movements of her mouth reached for me. I could feel her pulse in my hand, beating gently onto my skin. Her shoulders were slight, and she stood with me on the city street that was slowly flooding with darkness. Her hand was
holding onto me. She was waiting.
Silent howls howled through me.
The streetlights flickered on.
I remained still. Completely still, looking at her. Looking at the truth of her, standing before me.
I wanted to pour myself out and let my words spill onto the footpath, but I said nothing. This girl had just asked me the most brilliant question in the world and I was completely speechless.
âYes,' I wanted to say. I wanted to shout it and pick her up and hold her and say, âYes. Yes. I'll come and stand outside your house any time,' but I didn't say anything. My voice found its way into my mouth but it never made it out. It always stumbled somewhere, then became lost, or was swallowed again.
The moment was cut open. It fell in pieces all around me, and I had absolutely no idea what would happen next, whether it would come from Octavia or me. I wanted to crouch down and pick up every piece of it and put it in my pockets. In a way, somewhere close to me, I could hear the voice of my spirit, telling me what to say, or what to do, but I couldn't understand it. The silence around me was too strong. It overwhelmed me, until I noticed her fingers wrapping tighter in mine for just a moment.
Then gone.
Slowly, she let her hand come loose, and it was over.
My hand fell back and gently slapped my side from the impact of her letting go.
She looked.
Into me and then away.
Was she hurt? Did she expect me to speak? Did she want me to hold her hand again? Did she want me to pull her into me?
Questions barked at me, but still I didn't get close enough to doing anything. I simply stood there like a hapless, hopeless fool, waiting for something to change.
In the end it was Octavia's voice that stamped out the burning silence of the night.
A quiet, courageous voice.
She said, âJust . . .' She hesitated. âJust think about it Cam,' and after a moment of thought and a last glance into me, she turned and walked away.
I watched.
Her legs.
Her feet, walking.
Her hair, echoing down her back in the dark.
I also remembered her voice, and the question, and the feeling I felt rising up through me. It shouted in me and warmed me and chilled me and threw itself down inside me. Why didn't I say anything?
Why didn't you say anything?
I abused myself.
I could hear her footsteps now.
They lifted and scratched just slightly as she walked away in the direction of the train station.
She didn't look back.
âCameron.'
A voice called to me.
âCameron.'
I remember clearly that my hands were in my pockets,
and when I looked over to my right, I swear I could make out the figure of my spirit, also standing against the brick fence, also with its hands in its pockets. It looked at me. It stared. It said more words.
âWhat the hell are you doing?' it asked me.
âWhat?'
âWhat do you mean
what?
Aren't you going after her?'
âI can't.' I looked down, at my old shoes and the jaded bottom sleeves of my jeans. I just looked, and spoke. âIt's too late now anyway.'
My spirit came closer. âBloody hell, boy!' The words were brutal. They made me look up and stare, to find the face connected to the voice. âYou stand and wait outside some girl's place who couldn't care less, and when something real arrives, you fall apart! What kind of person
are
you?'
It shut up then.
The voice ended abruptly.
What it wanted to say was said, and we resumed standing against the fence, with our hands in our pockets, and silence feeding on our mouths.
A minute passed.
Then another came and went, and another. Time scratched itself through my thoughts, like the sound of Octavia's feet.
Finally, I moved.
It was after about fifteen minutes.
I took a final stare at the house, knowing it was probably the last time I would ever see it, and I began
walking towards Redfern station, under the electric wires, and through the cold of the street. The leaded windows of houses glimmered when the streetlights rushed at them, and I could hear my feet lifting and then clawing down onto the road as I started running. Behind me somewhere, I could hear the footsteps and breathing of my spirit. I wanted to beat it to the station. I had to.
I ran.
I let the cold air splash into my lungs as I thought the name Octavia, over and over. I ran till my arms ached as hard as my legs and my head throbbed with the blood rushing into it.
âOctavia,' I said.
To myself.
I kept running.
Past the university.
Past the abandoned shops.
Past a few guys who looked like they might try to rob me.
âCome on,' I told myself when I thought I was slowing down, and I looked hard into the distance to see the legs and footsteps of Octavia.
When I made it to the station there were hordes of people pouring through the gates and I managed to slip through between a guy with a suitcase and a woman holding flowers. I went to the Illawarra line and sprinted down the escalator, past all the suits, the briefcases and the different day-old perfumes and hair spray.
I made it to the bottom.
I nearly tripped.
Look at this bloody crowd!
I thought, but slowly I edged my way along the platform. When the train arrived all the people crammed and crushed and shook their heads when I got in their way. There was even a pretty bad smell like someone's underarm sweat. It licked me in the face, but still I looked and rushed through the crowd.
âGet out of the way,' someone snarled, and I was left with no other choice.
I got on the train.
I got on and stood in the packed middle compartment, right next to a guy with a moustache who was obviously the owner of the putrid underarm sweat. We both held onto the greasy metal pole until both the train and I got moving.
âExcuse me,' I said. âSorry,' and I made my way through the carriage downstairs. I figured I'd do all the lower levels of the train first and come back on the upper levels. This was the only train going to Hurstville. She had to be on it.
She wasn't in the carriage I got in on, or the next.
I opened the doors between each carriage and went through, with the cold tunnel air shrieking around me before I entered the next carriage. Once I nearly slammed the door in my spirit's face as it closed in on me.
âThere!'
I heard its voice point her out to me in the crowd of humans locked up in the suburban train.
I saw her just after the train rattled and burst out of
the tunnel and into the paler charcoal colour of the night. She was standing, just like I'd been standing a few carriages back, but facing the other way. From the lower level of the train, I could see her legs.
Footstep.
Footstep.
I edged my way closer and made it to the stairs and started climbing them.
Soon I could see all of her.
She stood and looked out the smeared window of the train. I wondered what thoughts she was thinking.
I was close.
I could see her neck and the movement of her breathing. I saw her fingers holding the pole as the train stuttered and the lights flickered and blinked.
Octavia,
I said inside.
My spirit shoved me forward.
âGo on,' it said, but it didn't dare me, order me or demand anything. It was just telling me what was right, and what I needed to do.
âOkay,' I whispered.
I walked closer and stood behind her.
Her flannel shirt.
The skin of her neck.
The ruffled streams of hair landing on her back.
Her shoulder . . .
I reached out and touched her.
She turned around.
She turned around and I looked into her and a feeling lurched in me. God she looked beautiful. I heard my
voice. It said, âI'll stand outside your house, Octavia.' I even smiled. âI'll come and stand there tomorrow.'
That was when she breathed, closed her eyes for a moment and smiled back.
She smiled and said, âOkay.' The voice was quiet.
I moved closer and grabbed hold of her shirt at her stomach and held onto her, relieved.
At the next stop, I told her I'd better get out.
âSee you tomorrow?' she asked.
I nodded.
The train doors opened and I got out. When they closed I had no idea what station I was at, but as the train pulled and dragged itself along, I walked with it, still looking into her through the window.
When the train was gone I stood there, eventually realising how cold it was on the platform.
Something struck me.
My spirit.
It was gone.
I searched everywhere for it, until I realised.
It didn't get off the train with me. It was still in the carriage, with Octavia.
Â
tracks
I stand up and there's urgency in the dog's step now. He's dying for me to go after him.
Feeling rushes at me.