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Just Not Mine (Escape to New Zealand)

Page 30

by Rosalind James


  “Oh,” Charlie said. “I thought it would be fun, that was all.”

  “Just because you like tap,” Amelia said, “that doesn’t mean I like tap. If people like to do things, they should do them. Other people don’t necessarily want to do them.”

  “Wait,” Hugh said. “Charlie likes to do tap?”

  “Yeh,” Amelia said.

  “I do not,” Charlie said.

  “You do,” Amelia insisted. “You do it all the time. I’ve seen you.”

  “No I don’t,” Charlie said again. “Boys don’t do dancing.”

  “Don’t they?” Hugh asked. “That tap thing—haven’t I seen some fella doing that on TV sometime? Going up and down the stairs, things like that?”

  Charlie didn’t answer. “So you like it?” Hugh prompted. “When do you do it?”

  “While he’s waiting for me to change after class, and they have tap class next,” Amelia said. “He copies.”

  “I don’t,” Charlie said again, sounding a little frantic. “Boys don’t do dancing. I just … if I’m bored, because I’m waiting.”

  Hugh was starting to get the picture. “If you want to do tap,” he told Charlie, “if you think it’d be fun, why couldn’t you do it? You wait through Amelia’s class often enough, why couldn’t she wait through yours? I don’t see why a boy couldn’t do it, if he wanted to.”

  “Because everybody would laugh at me,” Charlie said. “They’d say it was for girls, and that I was …”

  “Why should they?” Hugh asked. “The time I saw it, it looked pretty athletic to me. Looked like some good footwork, like it’d make you a pretty good stepper. Good for rugby, eh. Just like some of the boys do yoga to stay flexible. Somebody could laugh about that too, but if it helps them play better, why not? And if they did laugh at you,” he said with inspiration, “you could show me how, and I could try, and they could laugh at me.”

  “You couldn’t do dance,” Charlie said, and he still sounded doubtful, but Hugh thought he might be smiling a little too.

  “Well, no,” Hugh conceded, “probably not. That’d be the point, wouldn’t it? Tell you what. We’ll ask Miss Chloe, you can take a class or two, teach me some moves, and the next picnic we go to, we’ll try it together. Get my mates falling about laughing at me, and all the more impressed with you. It’s all in the comparison, eh.”

  “Wouldn’t you be embarrassed?” Charlie asked.

  “Nah,” Hugh said. “Nobody thinks I’m graceful now. It’s not like they’d be surprised. Bet we could get Koti James up there tapping, though. I’ll bet he could do it, and there’s nothing a back likes better than showing up the big boys.”

  “If kids at my school found out, though,” Charlie said.

  “Then you tell them I tried it, and was rubbish at it,” Hugh said. “That’d stop them, I’ll bet. And they’d like to hear that.”

  “That’s gossip,” Amelia pointed out. “That’s talking about you, telling people things about your life.”

  “Sometimes,” Hugh said, “gossip’s OK. I’m telling Charlie it’s OK this time.”

  “I don’t know if Aunt Cora would want to take me,” was Charlie’s next objection. “She doesn’t like waiting for Amelia already. She complains because the traffic’s bad, and it takes too long.”

  “Ah.” No time like the present. They still had a couple hours to go, and talking about it in the car could be the best. Nobody could go anywhere, and everything that needed to be said could be said. He hoped. If he knew how to say it. “Aunt Cora isn’t going to be here, so that’s not an issue.”

  “Yes she is,” Amelia corrected. “She comes back next week.”

  “Well, no,” Hugh said. “She doesn’t. She’s marrying that fella, Henry. She’ll tell you herself today, but she rang and told me last night, and that they’re planning to stay in the UK. You’ll visit, and she’ll visit here,” he hurried to say, “but she’s not going to live here anymore.”

  “Then what happens to us?” Amelia asked, and Charlie hadn’t said anything at all. Hugh glanced in the mirror, and Charlie’s face had gone white and shuttered again.

  “You stay with me,” Hugh said, and he said it absolutely as firmly as he’d ever said anything in his life.

  “But she’s our guardian,” Amelia persisted.

  “She’s been one of them. I’ve been the other, and now I’m doing it, and that’s all there is to it, because it’s all sorted. So,” he went on, and tried to lighten it up a little, “I’m afraid your days of fixing dinner and doing the shopping aren’t over after all, because I’m going to need your help. We can get better at it, if we work at it. And if you have problems, things you want to ask Aunt Cora about,” he realized he should add, “you can call her and ask them. Or if you just want to complain about me, because that could happen. If I won’t let you buy ice cream, you can tell her how mean I am, eh.”

  “But what about when you’re gone?” Amelia asked. “You still have to play. You still have to leave.”

  “We get a nanny for those times,” Hugh said. “Somebody to stay with you. I’ll get onto that straight away. You two can help me with the interviews. We’ll make a list of questions to ask, make sure we get the right one.”

  “What if you leave too, though?” Charlie asked. “What if you get married too? What if you go back to play for the Hurricanes again?”

  “It doesn’t matter what happens,” Hugh said, “because I’m not going anywhere, or if I do, you’re both coming with me. We’re going to work it out.”

  “What if …” Charlie began, then stopped.

  “What if what?” Hugh prompted when he didn’t go on.

  “What if you die too?” Charlie asked, his voice small. “Then there’s nobody.”

  That one threw Hugh, he had to admit. “I don’t know,” he finally said. “I make a plan for that too, I guess, and I tell you what the plan is. I’m pretty healthy, though, and people don’t normally die when they’re young, do they. I could break another bone and need help with the washing-up, get concussion and need help remembering the shopping list, but I’m not likely to die.”

  “Mummy and Daddy died,” Charlie said. “They weren’t old, not very old, but they died anyway.”

  “We’ll make a plan,” Hugh repeated. More therapy, maybe, he decided. With him there too, because he was going to need some help coming up with answers to questions like these. “All I can promise is that I’m here,” he said. “And that I’m not going anywhere. And with the three of us working on it, we’ll make it happen. I’m ready to get stuck in if the two of you are.”

  “Really?” Charlie asked.

  “Really,” Hugh promised. “I’m ready.”

  Maybe he was, and maybe he wasn’t. But he was going to do it anyway.

  What’s in Front of You

  The cyclone had threatened, the wind had blown, the rain had come in fits and starts all through Boxing Day, and now, on the twenty-seventh, it was here in force. The rain streamed down the windscreen of the big bus, forcing the wipers to work in frantic rhythm to keep it clear enough for the driver to see. Traffic on the motorway was so slow it was crawling, and Josie felt as if she were stuck in a dream, trying desperately to reach her destination, one obstacle after another in her way, never able to make it, never able to quite get there.

  She’d come back from her walk in the bush the day before, her thoughts still whirling, sure of only one thing, that she needed to talk to Hugh again and tell him how she felt, find out what he had to say. She’d walked up the steep path for nearly an hour, sorting it through, had reached her decision and turned around, and by the time she’d got back to the road, she’d been running, because she was too far away.

  But when she’d made it back down the drive, his car had been gone. She’d pounded on the caravan door, but had received no answer, had opened it and found they were gone. She’d run the rest of the way to the house, and known all along it was useless.

  “They left?” she pant
ed, standing sweaty in shorts and T-shirt and bare feet in the kitchen.

  Her mother continued sorting the washing into the machine. “About a half-hour ago.”

  “But … I can’t get back,” she realized. “I don’t have a car. And I need to go too. How could he just leave?”

  Her dad looked up at her from his spot at the table, where he’d been going through paperwork. “How could he have stayed?” he asked her quietly.

  “Oh.” She sank down into a chair opposite him, and her mum poured her a glass of water, set it in front of her. “Mum told you.”

  “She did.”

  Josie popped up again, unable to be still. “Then I need to go after him. Right now. But I don’t have a car. Can I borrow your car, Mum?”

  “No, darling,” her mother said, shoving the soap dispenser into place and slamming the machine shut, twisting the dial. “Sorry. Better to give Hugh some time, anyway. Wasn’t that the idea?”

  “The bus,” Josie said, because she wasn’t listening. “I can take the bus. That’s what I’ll do. When does the bus leave?”

  Except it had turned out that she couldn’t, because the bus had been booked solid during the rush of Boxing Day, the car hire firms closed for the holiday, and it wasn’t until an interminable twenty-four hours later that she climbed on board for the frustratingly, grindingly slow journey back to Auckland.

  She descended at last at the Sky Tower, pulled her wheelie bag down Queen Street through the late-afternoon crowds, her parka an insufficient shield against the blowing rain, her hair quickly growing soaked, and found she had just missed the ferry to Devonport.

  Another twenty-five minutes on a bench looking at the gray chop of the Harbour, the boats rolling and bouncing in the swell, another queue to board, a stomach-churning ride across the narrow channel with holidaymakers who had decided, for some obscure reason, to sample the delights of village life on a day wholly unsuited for it, and she was on the other side at last. Through the terminal building, down the path past the play structure, and then along the waterfront, the waves crashing, the wind buffeting her, moving as fast as she could pull the little suitcase, and it was nearly two full days now since she’d talked to Hugh, and she should have rung him after all, because it was too long to wait, and what if he’d changed his mind?

  She saw his car in the drive, the glow of light in the house, left her bag there at the bottom of the steps to get wet—to get wetter—and climbed up to ring the bell. Then stood there, her heart pounding, her entire body shaking, and waited.

  The door opened, and it was Hugh. Hugh, looking down at her in apparent shock, and she couldn’t tell. She couldn’t tell.

  “Josie,” he said. “What … what happened?”

  Her teeth were chattering, her hair streaming wet, her clothes dripping around her. “I came … I came …” she tried to say.

  Charlie and Amelia were there now, staring at her from behind Hugh, and he reached for her, pulled her into the entryway. “Come inside. You’re freezing. You’re soaked.”

  “The bus,” she said. “I was on the bus, and then the ferry, and then it was raining, and I …” She wasn’t coherent, and this wasn’t at all the speech she had intended to make.

  “Why didn’t you call me?” he demanded. “I’d have come and got you.”

  “I didn’t … I didn’t know if you … if you would,” she tried to tell him.

  He was smiling, and still frowning, all at the same time. “Of course I would. Don’t you know that by now?”

  “I came to tell you,” she said, “let me try again. Let me try to say, I know it was asking too much. I was too … too hasty. I came to ask … to tell you …”

  “You really need somebody to write your lines for you this time, sweetheart,” he said, and he was pulling her into his arms, not caring how wet he got, and she was hanging onto him as if her life depended on it, and she couldn’t tell what was tears and what was rain.

  “Come on,” he told her. “Let’s take you over to your place, and get you warm and dry, and then you can tell me, and I can tell you too.”

  “Josie came in the rain,” Charlie said. “She came in the rain, Amelia.”

  “I know,” his sister said. “And I was right. It is romantic. It is.”

  She was still trying to tell him, trying to think of the right way, but he wasn’t listening. He was helping her pull off her wet things, and she was shivering with cold, and nerves, and exhaustion from two sleepless nights, and he had turned on the shower and shoved her into it.

  “Stay in there,” he told her. “Stay in there until you warm up.”

  She cried a little more in the shower, because she’d stuffed up utterly, and all she’d been was pathetic, and she’d never know how he really felt now, because how could a man be honest with a woman who was clearly too distraught, too needy to hear the truth?

  She climbed out at last because she had to, her head feeling dull and stuffed but her body no longer shaking, toweled herself off and pulled on a warm dressing gown, combed her hair out and left it hanging, long and wet, and went out into the lounge to find him.

  He was sitting on the couch, but he smiled at the sight of her, stood up and put out a hand to draw her down with him.

  “I even made tea,” he said. “Sit here with me and drink it, and listen, because I have a few things to tell you.”

  “I want to tell you too, though,” she said.

  He shook his head. “I promise, from now on, you can go first. But right now, you need to listen to me. You’ve known what was right all along, and I haven’t, so I have more to say.”

  “But I haven’t,” she protested, and her chest was filling, her throat tightening, and she could hardly dare to breathe, but with joy this time. With hope.

  “Me first,” he said. “Please, because I’ve been waiting so long to tell you. I thought about the phone, but I wasn’t sure you’d want to hear it, and I thought, better to wait until I was with you again. I thought I had a better chance,” he said with a little laugh that didn’t sound very steady, “if I could hold your hand while I said it.” He took it lightly in his own, ran his fingers over the backs of hers. “This is my speech. It’s a bit corny, maybe, but it’s the best I’ve got.”

  He took a deep breath and began. “There are these things you say in sport. People think they’re clichés, and I guess they are, but you say them so often, for so long, they sink in all the same.”

  He paused, and she waited, her eyes on his face. “One of them is,” he said, “you play what’s in front of you. What it means is, yeh, you’ve got a game plan. You train, you study the other team during the week, you do your very best not to leave anything to chance. But then you turn up on the night, and you play what’s in front of you, whether it’s what you planned or not. Somebody gets injured, you’ve got a man in the bin, doesn’t matter. You don’t get to stop and ask the ref to start again because you didn’t plan for this. You just keep playing. You may win, and you may lose. But if you stop playing, if you stop trying, you’re sure to lose, aren’t you? So you don’t stop trying, not until the ref blows the whistle. Because even if you lose the game, you didn’t lose …” He stopped.

  “Your self-respect,” she suggested.

  He shook his head. “I guess … yourself. And your team. You don’t lose them, you don’t lose each other. Next time, you know they’ll be there. You know they’ll front up, be there all eighty minutes for you, the same way you will be for them. And if it’s hard, well, it’s always hard. Anyway, you’d think you’d want the easy game, and maybe you should, but you don’t. You want the tough ones. Those are the ones you want to play, the ones you want to win. That’s why you play, to put yourself to the test, see what you’re made of.”

  “And that’s what this is,” she said. “With you and the kids. Since your dad and stepmum died. You’ve been playing what’s in front of you.”

  Another shake of the head. “No. I haven’t been. That’s what this is.”
>
  “But you have,” she insisted. “Of course you have. I see that now. When your father and stepmother died, you told me you were here the next day. You flew all night to get to your brother and sister. And you’ve been with them ever since, as much as you could be.”

  “Helping,” he said. “I always thought I was helping. Paying the bills, being there—when I was able to. But not fronting up, not really. Somebody needed to step up.”

  “And you did.”

  “I’d say that Aunt Cora and I each took a half step up. That’s not fronting. Not even close. You were right. I’m not good enough, I know it, but I’m what they’ve got. So it wasn’t the game plan. So I have to readjust. Doesn’t matter. It’s what’s here. It’s what they need. It’s what I need. Because I’ve realized, in the past couple days, what if Aunt Cora had rung to say that she wanted the kids with her in the UK? What if she’d said, put them on the plane, and I’ll meet them, and I’ll love them, and you’re done? I thought about that, and I realized I’d have said no. I’d have fought to keep them. I realized—that I could love them, I guess. Both of them. That I may not be their dad, but in a way … I am, now.”

  “Of course you are,” she told him, and she couldn’t believe she had ever doubted it.

  “I’m the closest thing they’ve got, anyway,” he said, “and even if Aunt Cora came back, it wouldn’t matter. They need one person who puts them first. That person’s going to be me. Because that’s what’s in front of me, and because that’s what I want. To take care of my family.”

  “I know it’s going to be hard, though,” she said, “half the time away.”

  “The other boys do it. I can find out how. There must be a way. A nanny, or whatever. But also—give them what they’ve been missing. A brother who’s willing to step up and be a dad. Whatever that means, and however rubbish I am at it at first. I can get better, and that’s what I mean to do.”

  He looked at her again. “And you know the other thing I realized, all this time I’ve been thinking?”

 

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