by Wendy Orr
Bronny and Vinita are flitting around in their leotards again when he picks me up—Dad asked Bronny to change ages ago, but here they are again, giggling, now that Hayden's here . . . 'They've got a crush on you!'
Hayden blushes and starts the car. 'Don't be stupid!'
Eight million eyes in one small cafe. Why does Jenny think this is good for me? Couldn't I do something simple like bungie jumping?
At least Costa's nice—or Jenny's briefed him well, or both. He manages to look me in the face when we meet, and finds us a table near the back so I don't put everyone off as they walk in the door. He and Hayden go up to the counter to order and Jenny leans across the table to whisper.
'So what do you think?'
'Definitely a guy, and you're right, his eyes are brown. I'll need a few more minutes for the full psychic profile.'
'Is everything okay with you and Hayden now?'
'I guess so. Well, we're here—it must be.'
'You know we could hear every word you said?' Costa says, sliding into the seat beside Jenny.
'Liar.'
She smacks his leg, he grabs her hand, and they sit there frozen for a moment, staring into each other's eyes, and it's as intimate and embarrassing as if we'd walked in on them naked. Maybe not quite. Don't think about it.
'Who wants a chip?' I suggest, and Jenny and Costa wake up. But their hands stay joined so Jenny has to drink her milkshake with her left hand.
'Where'd you live before?' Hayden asks.
'Sydney—Coogee. Could have done without changing school systems this year, but'—he looks at Jenny—'sometimes you've got to be unlucky to be lucky.'
'You left Sydney for Yarralong?’
'My dad got a chance at a franchise here—he'd only ever be a manager in Sydney. My mum thought a country town would be safer for my sisters—and there's a big enough Greek community to have a church, so she's happy.'
I have a feeling Coogee's on the sea. 'So do you surf?'
'Not any more! I keep taking my board down to the river, waiting for the swell . . . never seems to come up.'
'It's good for swimming,' Jenny says loyally.
'You and your river,' Costa teases, and they're off on another of those looks. His arm's around her shoulders now, his fingers stroking her neck under her hair, straying across her shoulders, while she relaxes and leans into him—their bodies look so comfortable together! On our side of the table, Hayden and I are sitting up good-children-straight; I'm on the right and I know he's too scared of hurting my thumb to hold my left hand, but I wish I had the nerve to rest my hand on his thigh, to do anything to be a couple like they are. Instead Hayden goes up for another coke, and I finish my coffee; it's hard to think of anything to say when the others have forgotten we're here.
Sometimes I feel so cheated. I'm not taking time off—I've had a whole chunk of my life stolen. Nobody's going to hand me a few months at the other end and say, 'Here you are, here's the bit you missed out on.'
The wheelchair's leaving. Cleaned; folded; packed into the boot of Dad's car like a guilty secret. Tough luck, chair—I win, you lose—I'm not a cripple after all.
'Keep it a bit longer, Anna,' Matt wheedles. 'You might need it!' He and Bronwyn have invented wheelchair surfing in the carport—one person stands on the seat; the other gives it a running push. Whoever falls off least wins.
'Or you might,' says Dad. 'Maybe we could go for a hat trick—all three of you with broken necks!'
Mum bakes an apple cake to see it off.
But physio Brian isn't celebrating. He's not happy about the way I'm walking. I don't like it much either—like carrying my own personal bed of nails; one goes through my foot each time I step on it.
He's more worried about the deformed way I put it down.
And how I put all the weight on my left leg. He's worried about the damage I'm doing to my hips and knees.
'Shit, Brian, my hips are the only things I didn't hurt!'
'So let's keep it that way.' And he hands me a stick. A walking stick, a cane. Like old people use.
'Or anyone that breaks a leg!' he says. 'Come on, the important thing here is to get you walking properly again.'
'But I didn't have one at first! I feel like I'm going backwards.' 'You weren't fit enough to hold anything at first,' he snaps.
'And you weren't moving around much, either. Now let me get the right height for you, and you can have a little practice.'
My stick is dark brown wood, the handle dips so that I can hold it without hurting my thumb. It's polished smooth and absolutely plain.
When I walk out into the street after physio I feel as if it glows like a neon sign, a three-metre barber's pole flashing white and red with a siren on top. People stop what they're doing to stare open-mouthed at the freak teenager with a stick.
'It's not that bad,' Jenny tries to convince me. 'It's nothing like the neck brace.'
'But that's temporary; I'll be getting rid of it soon. A stick makes me look disabled—spastic!'
The very worst thing about the stick—and I don't even admit this to Jen—is that it helps. My foot doesn't hurt so much, I walk better—and I'm not as dizzy, though that's so strange I don't even like admitting it to myself.
Just when I think life couldn't get worse, Mum brings up what Mr Sandberg said about doing Year 12 over two years. Sensible, she says. The pits, I say: everyone going off to uni or whatever—and me still stuck in school with the Year 11s.
Maybe I could catch up if I had tutoring.
Mr Sandberg comes up with two names and Mum arranges appointments. Lisa Harris arrives that afternoon, complete with baby in a pram.
'I couldn't get a sitter at such short notice,' she says.
Mum doesn't seem to mind. Babies always make her go slightly soft in the head; she goos and peek-a-boos while Lisa and I struggle with maths and psychology.
'Twice a week?' Lisa suggests. 'We've got a bit of catching up to do.'
Which is a polite way of saying that she's noticed I haven't actually started the year's work yet.
'And little Miss Becky,' she adds, taking the baby back from Mum, holding her over her face and planting a kiss on the fat tummy, 'will go to her babysitter or we'll never get anything done!' Her voice has changed to a special mother to baby voice—for an instant they're as isolated and complete as Jenny and Costa at the Coffee Connection.
I can see Mum dying to offer—but she remembers in time that she's going back to work and won't always be here to play with babies.
The English and Lit tutor is Martin Weiss. He's short and wiry, about twenty-eight, and a sailor—a sail-boat sailor, not navy. He's just returned from taking a friend's boat from Florida to Seattle; I'd rather hear about the trip—through the Panama Canal, detour to the Galapagos Islands and Hawaii—than English.
He'll come twice a week too. Then there's physio three times a week, doctor or OT every couple of weeks—and somehow I've got to fit in school after the Easter break.
For Dad's birthday Mum makes French onion soup. Bronwyn's helping. She's wearing her most serious expression, a huge red apron—and her swimming goggles.
'Peeling onions makes me cry,' she says.
'Have you ever thought about meditating?' Luke asks, as we're waiting for Mum to come back from the supermarket and sort out a confusion over whether she had meant to add the extra zero when she ordered a hundred and twenty concrete sundials.
'You don't think I've got enough to do?'
'I just figured you were fighting pain the whole time—if you could give yourself a break, you might have a little more energy left over.'
'You're saying I can think the pain away?'
'What have you got to lose? Next time you have a rest, try visualising the pain—like a red mist, or a black liquid, whatever you like, and let it soak out of your body.'
I could almost imagine it while he's talking. He's got a voice like a singer, deep but gentle—or maybe it's just the sincerity that makes it so attracti
ve. Or the surprise—you never know what he's going to come up with next.
'How do you think of this stuff?'
'I had a friend with a brain tumour. He told me.'
'Had? Did he . . . ' 'No. He moved to Perth.' Dad comes home unexpectedly at lunchtime, pale and rather red around the eyes. He kisses me as well as Mum. Not normal.
'Jim Meissing came in this morning,' he says. 'Did you know his son died a fortnight ago?'
Mum goes white; starts stroking my shoulder as if she doesn't know she's doing it. 'How?'
'Car accident.'
'And Jim still came in for his appointment?'
Dad shrugs. 'Going through the motions. I don't think he understood one thing I said about his accounts; we just talked about his son.'
'An accident like mine?' Victim or murderer?
But it was a single-vehicle accident—high speed into a tree. No trace of drugs or alcohol in his system, his father said—simply a mistake in judgement.
I don't want to do this. My stomach's tensing and my head pounding. I'm not ready.
Mum pulls up in front of the Senior Wing. Chris and Thula spot us and charge towards the car. Too late; can't chicken out now.
'Jenny said you'd be here today!'
'Back in time for the holidays!'
'Only for home room.'
'Great idea. I think I'll try that too.'
'God, you're so skinny!'
'Come on, we'll go over now. Can you walk that far?'
'How long do you have to wear that collar for? Is it better than that metal thing? That must have been the pits!'
Conversation swirls, too hard to catch; I'm concentrating on walking. Don't want to fall over, my first day at school. I'd never noticed how uneven this path is. Funny the things your body takes for granted, when everything's working the way it's meant to.
Twenty-five people makes fifty eyes and they're all on me. I know them all, this shouldn't be so hard—thank God Caroline's in the other class this year—but everyone thinks I should be better now, they want me to be better, they're my friends—but I'm not better, I'm a fraud and a failure. Hurry up, Mr Sandberg, this was your bright idea.
Here he is, welcomes me with the 'little break' joke I expected. On through the daily rubbish. A reminder that the school colours are green and gold and that any hair accessories must conform or be confiscated. (I came back for this?)
'Sorry, Jason—I know how much your pink hair ribbons mean to you.'
Which is meant to show us that he thinks the rule is as dumb as we do. Thula's getting worked up about the pettiness of dress rules. Jenny and Costa are trapped somewhere in each other's eyes—I don't think they're worrying about hair accessories. Brad is folding a paper aeroplane. Mia thinks we should get up a petition. I'm a hundred years old, listening from another planet.
The bell goes; I stay where I am as everyone rushes past, goodbye, great to see you, see you soon, have a great Easter.
After all that the real work—the meeting with Mr Sandberg and my tutors—is easy. Actually a bit pointless. They'll have to contact the subject teachers later; and we already know that I need to catch up a term's work. I think Mr Sandberg just decided it would be good for me to come into the school for a morning.
Great. Done that. Now can I please get better?
Hayden hasn't been to karate all week. He says he hasn't made up his mind yet. Funny how hard it is not to say anything, sometimes.
Bronwyn comes in with her arm in a sling.
'What happened?' Hayden asks. He hasn't seen her in a sling as often as I have.
'My finger's sore. I think it's infected.'
'It's a mosquito bite,' I say, but Hayden studies it seriously.
'Kiss it better!' Matt teases, hopping out of the way as Bronny rushes at him in fury.
Hayden winks at me. 'Do you want me to put out the rubbish?' he asks, and lunges at Matt, who squeals and leaps over the back of the couch; Hayden follows with Bronwyn swinging off one hand. The couch topples over.
Hayden shoves it upright as Dad rushes in. 'What's going on? Are you kids bothering Anna and Hayden?'
They're still giggling as Hayden and I escape for a walk. 'Don't take your stick,' he says. 'You can lean on me.' We reach the footpath and he takes my hand. It sends warm shock waves through me, the feel of his fingers around mine. They're strong, square hands; his skin's a bit rough. They feel just the way a man's hands should feel.
'You're good with the kids,' I say. 'They really like you.'
'I'm used to kids; I reckon it's an advantage of having a big family. It'd be good, one day . . . ' His voice trails off. I realise I'm holding my breath. 'You want to have kids, don't you?' he asks.
'Not right now!'
'No, but you know—one day?'
Does he mean with him? He'll have to kiss me then . . .
'One day. When I've worked for a while and got my black belt, travelled through Europe—I want to cycle around Holland and meet my mum's relatives . . . all that stuff.' The pictures go on at the back of my mind: living with Hayden, travelling with him, being together. We've already been through so much; nothing else could be quite so hard.
We reach the end of the block, shoulders rubbing as we walk. This is the best day we've ever had together. I wish we could go on walking, but we've got a lifetime, when I'm stronger we can be together as much as we want. There's a bench just around the corner. We can sit down for a bit before we go back. 'You know Lisa, my maths tutor? She's a single mum. That'd be so hard.'
'It's wrong.'
'It can't be wrong to have a baby, not if she wants it. She really loves her; she's a good mother.'
'Wrong for the guy, I mean. The father. The baby's his responsibility too—he can't just walk out on it.'
'But—' There are a thousand answers to that, but I let it drop. I'm too happy, sitting here with him, hands joined, knees touching, to worry about the rights and wrongs of other people's problems.
Mum's in the kitchen baking a millionth batch of biscuits, the radio on in the background. I've read a chapter of Tess of the d'Urbervilles and finished the first question on Martin's sheet; I deserve a reward by the time Mum calls to say the meringues are out of the oven and she's putting the kettle on.
k.d. lang finishes; an earnest discussion begins. Suicide; teenage suicide especially. Australia the worst of the OECD countries; not a biggest and best statistic to be proud of—and the true figures worse than the records, the speaker explains, because so many suicides are recorded as accidents. 'Much easier on the families that way,' she says. 'Of course it's impossible to prove, but many young men in single-vehicle accidents may in fact be suicides.'
We think of Dad's client's son. No drugs or alcohol, the father had said, just a mistake in judgement.
How do you dig up the nerve to drive into a tree?
And what if it didn't work? If instead of death you got paralysis? Or just ended up like me, crippled with pain and wondering if it'll ever end.
I suppose you could always try again.
Rerun of the kitchen-Mum-mixing-up-biscuits scene.
An indescribable noise, a boom that fills the world, a sound that blacks out light and vision. The stove has exploded—and woken me up. But I know that the noise had nothing to do with exploding stoves—it was the sound of two cars colliding.
HOw do I know that when I can't remember the accident? Are all those memories tucked in my brain waiting for me to stumble over them?
Jenny's mum's friend the faith healer comes to pray for me again. Mum, agnostic and uncomfortable, welcomes her and whisks promptly out to the garden.
Maybe I'll go too. It's not the praying that's so bad—it's the failing. I was so sure I'd get better fast, last time I met her; now my thumb's stuffed and my ankle's not looking crash-hot either. It gets harder to hope when nothing works out.
But I don't have to believe in something to want it to work. I try and relax into it and nearly do—as the hypnotic voice takes effect I
feel the pain starting to float out of my bones. Is this what Luke was talking about with meditation?
She finishes and sits quietly, holding my left hand between both of hers. 'You have to stop fighting, Anna, if you're going to let the healing in.'
The warm feeling disappears like a popped balloon. This is the last faith healing I'm having—the woman's nuts. I'll never stop fighting my injuries; what am I supposed to do—give in?
CHAPTER 8
'I've been talking to Mark's dad,' Hayden announces without saying hello—Mr Ryan is a policeman who knows more than anyone would ever want to about crashed cars and the smashed people inside them. 'Asked him if we'd have to go to court when Trevor Jones is sentenced.'
So that's why the flush of anger, the set shoulders and thrust jaw. His tension springs to me and snatches, though I'm not sure if mine is rage or fear.
'And do we?' Exhibit A, the victim . . . I couldn't take it.
'He doesn't bloody go himself! He does this to you and you know what he gets? An on-the-spot fine! A hundred and sixty-five bucks for failing to give way!'
Is that what my life's worth? A slap on the wrist? Naughty boy, don't kill anyone again. Never mind, it was only Anna.
'... bloody dickhead bastard,' Hayden is saying.
Mum, coming in, raises her eyes at the language, but at the explanation, starts swearing under her breath in Dutch.
But Dad's obviously gone into this one too. When we tell him he says, his voice bitter, 'The law looks at it that a $165 fine is a reasonable price for a careless mistake. It's the victim's bad luck if she pays a higher price—the law is interested in his intent, not Anna's luck.'
'Even if I'd died?'
'Apparently. I gather that in that case there would have been a coroner's inquest—but unless he could be charged with culpable driving it'd still be the same—failing to give way and a $165 fine.'
Coroner's not a word you usually associate with yourself. It makes me shudder; Mum too—'It doesn't bear thinking about.'
'That's why I don't care what happens to him,' says Dad, hugging me carefully, 'as long as you're okay.'