The Sunlit Zone

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by Lisa Jacobson


  —Well, come on then! Cello gave

  his bum a flirty whack. They slunk

  to the dunes without looking back.

  7

  I sat down on the wooden pier,

  my eyes brimful with unspilt tears.

  This was where my mum and dad

  first kissed, and I tried hard not

  to imagine this. But the idea clung

  like barnacles. Below me, waves

  slapped mildly against old pylons.

  A ship moved across the horizon,

  slowly. I could have gone home

  or just pissed off but I was a faithful

  kind of kid. Besides, I was half in love

  with Jack. It was just that I didn’t

  know it yet.

  8

  Next Friday after school Cello said

  —North, come to the beach, will you?

  C’mon, please? I really need you to cover for me.

  She stood silhouetted in the front door

  frame, all tendrilled hair and beads.

  —Cello…

  —But you have to. Please?

  —Shit, I dunno…

  I was sick of Cello and her perfect skin,

  the way I made a habit of fitting in

  with whatever she was doing.

  But Jack’s face had been haunting me.

  The night before I’d dreamt of him

  kissing me at some weird party.

  I read my ibook for company

  and waited on the pier.

  9

  —Guess what? said Cello next day

  at school, though she rarely talked

  to me here at all. Jack gave me

  a love bite. See? Right here.

  I saw the plum-coloured bruise

  and thought of Jack’s mouth resting

  there, his cheek on Cello’s pubic hair;

  dense as a forest, dark and thick.

  But already her crush was growing thin.

  —Anyway, she sighed, I’m tired of him.

  10

  When next Friday at last arrived,

  I trudged with Cello to the beach

  again, now knowing exactly why

  I went. I wondered if Cello guessed

  or cared. Who knows how that cherub

  brain of hers worked. But just then

  her mum pulled up by the curb

  as we traipsed down The Boulevard.

  —Cello! she called, Quick, quick. Jump in.

  We’re off to Grandma’s. She fell again.

  Sorry North, it’s an emergency.

  Cello scuffed one pink and pretty sneaker

  on the path. Beyond, the turquoise sea.

  —Can’t I stay here?

  —Cello Green, Jo said. Get in the car.

  And Cello did.

  11

  So I went down to the beach alone

  and waited on the wooden pier

  with a couple of retired fishermen

  until Jack appeared with his paper bag

  and tubes of drink.

  —No Cello? he said, and I explained.

  But we soon got on to other things

  like moon kids, God and boat building.

  Jack built a boat but it sank, he said.

  By the time next Friday came around

  Cello was hanging with a bunch of girls

  who’d finished school the year before.

  Somehow I didn’t feel the need

  to tell her Jack and I still met.

  He’d kissed me by then. His tongue

  was soft and sweet. Before that

  I’d never kissed anyone. Inside

  I felt a salty heat rise up. Slowly

  the friendship grew.

  Part 9: Fruit

  Angler’s Bay, 2050

  The nurse of full-grown souls is solitude.

  James Russell Lowell

  1

  Saturday, mid-afternoon.

  I rest my forehead on the desk.

  Just a short nap, I think, drifting

  into a lazy sleep till my skinfone’s

  frog trill wakes me and I stir,

  baffled by what time it is, or day.

  The frogs increase their chorus;

  electronic, shrill. A name appears

  on my lobal screen in candy font.

  —Yeah, Cello, I mumble. Yep, it’s me.

  —North, I’m in labour. Come over, please?

  My right eye twitches involuntarily.

  Birth and car accidents are the same

  to me. I glance at my work, unfinished.

  —North, says Cello. We agreed.

  She takes a sharp breath in.

  —Contraction, she gasps. Sorry. Shit.

  —Okay. I sit up groggily. Just give me

  a minute. I’ll grab my things.

  2

  I arrive at Cello’s place, shaking

  off shreds of sleep.

  —North, says Jo through the flexi screen,

  Come in. Not much happening yet, really.

  —Mum! roars Cello. Argh! Urrgh!

  —A little progress, says Jo Green.

  Big Cat’s tawny bulk pads to and fro.

  I step inside the house and follow

  where Jo leads, not ready for Cello’s

  nakedness engulfing the bedroom as she stands and leans down hard

  upon a chair. Her black hair’s damp

  and tangled. Her belly is immense,

  the button protrudes. Her flanks

  shudder. On her back, sweat gleams.

  3

  It’s hot in Cello’s house. Heat lamps

  suck all moisture from the air. I peel

  off my jumper and just stand there,

  unsure of what to do or say now

  that I’m here.

  —North! says Raoul. Excuse us please

  but Cello insists she be in her own skin.

  He clutches a white sheet anxiously.

  Ah well, we’re all girls here…I mean,

  not me. I try to cover her with this

  but she gets, how do you say…

  He scans the walls, as if they will

  assist his search for a word in this

  new language.

  —Cranky? I say.

  —Yes, yes! That’s it!

  4

  Cello lets out a groan. Her eyes

  are closed. Her fists are clamped.

  I place my hands uncertainly

  across her own, which grip the chair

  like a boat’s railing. Besides empathy,

  there’s not much else that I can offer.

  —Breathe, says Jo. Breathe, Cello, breathe,

  Because look, Raoul, she’s not!

  —Yes, yes! But what?

  —Shut up! screams Cello.

  Another contraction comes on her

  and falls away. Her fingers loosen.

  Her breath grows strong as a westerly

  taking ships out to the open sea.

  Already she’s someplace far from me.

  5

  The security sensor scans and beeps.

  —That’s Sarah, Jo says. I’ll get it.

  —About fucking time, says Cello,

  —Cello, says Jo, labour is no excuse

  for belligerency.

  —I’ll get it, I say and exit before

  an argument erupts. I know how

  they end;
molten, volcanic.

  —Sarah! Sarah! Raoul says,

  over-demonstrative with relief.

  He grabs her hands and pulls her

  into the maelstrom where Cello

  is labouring. The room assumes

  a new order then, neat as the case

  Sarah carries lined with vials,

  forceps, gloves, syringes, sharps

  and other scary things.

  6

  —It’s okay, darlin’, Sarah says

  Let’s take a look down there.

  She snaps on gloves, her gestures

  efficient as her hair, a neat helmet

  of green implants. She inserts a hand.

  Cello grabs my wrist, inhales a short

  unsteady breath and emits a moan;

  bestial and deep-wounded.

  Sarah withdraws bloody fingers.

  —Well, says Sarah, that all feels fine.

  But Cello’s hand is woodlouse-tight

  around my wrist. I uncurl it but she

  resumes her grip. My left arm aches

  with old and undiminished bruises.

  And in the soupy warmth, nausea

  rises and crests in me just as I reach

  the garden where I hurl up breakfast

  and all remnants of anything else

  that was not digested.

  —North, says Raoul. Are you okay?

  As if that’s not obvious, I think.

  Dickhead.

  7

  The clock reads four a.m. and yet

  it seems time loses all artifice.

  The hours elongate and shrink,

  the clock’s hands wheeling past

  unnoticed by those who gather

  in Cello’s house. Light wards off

  the winter dark. The fog that drifts

  upon the lawn settles and disperses,

  unobserved. Even the bone-white sky

  of dawn feels leached and insignificant.

  A child is being born, I want to shout

  to the sleeping world. But the world

  keeps sleeping as if it hasn’t heard.

  8

  All hangs then for three more hours

  on the pain that flowers inside Cello

  and subsides, blooms and subsides

  until the baby’s head at last appears

  at the bloody rim. Sarah pulls it clear.

  The newborn’s wail undoes the spell

  that Cello’s labour has cast on us.

  Then everyone’s crying: Cello, Raoul,

  Jo, Sarah and me, cleaved open

  by this infant who rests on Cello’s

  abdomen, traced with membranes

  and fluid.

  9

  They name the baby Ambré

  after Raoul’s father. Ambré Eliot.

  —Good strong names to see him through,

  says Raoul on the fone to France,

  twirling an eyebrow with one hand.

  —Well, that has truth, I murmur,

  thinking of this broken thing we call

  the world and its almost untenable

  future. Yet the world still turns.

  Raoul holds Ambré in his arms

  like a bowl of exquisite fruit.

  —Oui, oui, Mama! Un petit fils!

  The baby’s legs kick out at air.

  One star fish hand lies open

  and the other’s curled up tight

  beneath its chin as if in embryonic

  thought flying towards words

  unknown yet felt: milk, sleep,

  mother, warmth and breath.

  10

  It’s seven a.m. and fourteen hours

  since Cello first went into labour.

  —I’m so hungry, she says, I could

  eat my own placenta.

  She plonks Ambré into my arms

  and takes the tray of sandwiches

  and cake Jo carries in. I make

  an awkward cradle of my arms

  and somehow hold the baby there,

  feeling the hammer of his heart;

  mottled, ancient, new-boned thing

  no heavier than a handful of earth,

  emitting bird-like squeaks.

  11

  It’s ten a.m. before I leave, the sky

  swaddled with clouds. No sun.

  My left wrist aches from Cello’s

  monkey clamp. I wrench the Flute

  eastward to Angler’s Bay, tune in

  to yesteryear’s soft rock: Pink,

  The Veronicas, Britney Spears.

  When Jewel sings Save Your Soul

  I’m bawling, and I keep on bawling

  till I get home.

  12

  And somewhere on the edge of sleep

  I dream I give birth to a foal that leaves

  my body galloping, circles the garden

  and returns. Its mane and tail blood

  clotted, pelt unlicked. I’m uneasy,

  not knowing how to raise a foal

  or feed it. Yet it knows exactly

  what to do and tugs hard at my teat

  until the hot milk spurts. Its teeth

  clamp on my breast so urgently

  I wake and feel them still.

  13

  Waverley’s given up the reefer

  sticks and only eats organic food.

  She seems to be getting over Jill,

  but I’m vigilant. She’s vulnerable

  and liable to topple without warning.

  I watch her wiry legs as she assumes

  the down-face dog, a pose her yoga

  coach advised was good for grief

  and hepatitis.

  —Bloody hippy scientist! I say. What next?

  —It works! she says, and flips herself

  back off the bench. You should try it.

  Perhaps. But yoga’s not for me.

  Too contemplative for my liking.

  If I empty my head the thoughts

  rush in. Memory is a lethal thing.

  14

  Waverley dips a slender hand

  in the closest tank and peels

  a star fish from the wall of it.

  —Good star, she says, as if she’s

  talking to a dog and rubs its belly

  with her finger till its five feet curl.

  —Look, she says, it’s laughing, as she

  points to the mouth in its abdomen

  pulsating in and out. Oh, my little star,

  she croons and rocks it like a baby

  in her skinny arms. Just imagine,

  she says, if you healed hearts.

  15

  She puts the star fish back. It sinks

  down into sand. It’s almost dark.

  The chill of night seeps in. Beyond,

  the stars hang sharp as brittle shards

  of glass. A cold moon wanes.

  —Ah well, says Waverley. There goes

  the mother gene. Back into the big blue sea

  of my stupid dreams. Jill wanted kids.

  Waverley can’t. I know that much,

  even with the latest surgery.

  It’s too expensive anyway.

  —Do you want babies? she asks.

  —Babies are for grown ups, I say.

  —You’re all grown up.

  —I’m not, I say.

  —Me either, says Waverley. I cry too much.

  I
think of the tears I’ve yet to shed.

  —No one can cry too much, I say.

  16

  I enter a final stat and put the lobal

  screen to sleep.

  —Come on, I say. Cook you a meal?

  —Macro? says Waverley.

  —Yeah, yeah, I say. We’ll stop and grab

  some things.

  I pack my satchel, grab my coat,

  put my heat wrap on.

  —Ready? I say, but Waverley doesn’t

  answer. Just makes a muffled sound.

  She’s crying again. I sigh.

  —Look, Waves, this’ll take some time.

  I lead her out into the night. Bloody Jill,

  I think. Hope her ovaries fry.

  Part 10: Bones

  Angler’s Bay, 2035

  We have lingered in the chambers of the sea

  By sea-girls wreathed with seaweed red and brown

  Till human voices wake us, and we drown.

  T S Eliot

  1

  Fridays in the dunes with Jack

  continued; sweet, soft-centred

  hours that were never long enough.

  The abrasions of school diminished

  with Jack’s quiet hands. His touch

  filled me like bread and yet I went

  home hungry, but not for food

  or family. Friday was pizza night

  but even Finn ate more than me,

  gobbling up shrimps and anchovies.

  I fed mine to Rosie, who lurked

  beneath the table at my feet.

  It was an arrangement we had,

  the dog and me.

  2

  I pinned a calendar to my wall

  and shaded in five special squares

  beneath a chestnut horse, November’s

  poster girl. On this I counted down

  the days until Fridays came eventually.

  A delicious sense of expectation welled.

  Even my bones anticipated it. I scarce

  touched breakfast and spent instead

 

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