Friendship on Fire (44 page)

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Authors: Danielle Weiler

Tags: #Young Adult Fiction

BOOK: Friendship on Fire
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‘Well it's done now. If I could take it back, I'm not sure if I would. Is that sad?' I asked.

‘Listen to me. We all make mistakes. It's a part of life. Yes you should have been more rational about your decisions, but it doesn't mean you can't move forward with your head held high. You learn from the people you associate yourself with and try not to make the same mistake again. That is the best we can do under the circumstances.'

‘But everyone at school …' I began.

‘You aren't a victim; I refuse to accept that someone has destroyed your life or your confidence in yourself. It's his loss, and Rachael's, and anyone else's for that matter if they don't value you as much as they should,' she said, slamming a frozen loaf of bread on the counter. I wished more than anything else in the world, that I could believe her.

‘I'm sure I will agree with you one day. Just not now, Mum.'

‘I know. It will get easier, I promise you. One day you will look back on this experience with no emotional attachment and maybe even laugh.' Her attempt at encouragement was a little early.

‘Fat chance.'

‘I'm serious. It's amazing how time can heal things we thought would hang over our heads forever. Family support helps, too.'

She hugged me round the shoulders and I did feel a little better, but not much. Everything had become more confusing.

‘You know, when Roman brought you home …' she said quietly.

‘Excuse me?'

‘From the party. He left it to bring you home. He called Dad and asked him to come get you both because you'd passed out. Dad thought you'd been drinking …' she smiled at the memory.

‘I bet that went down well. So what else happened?' I asked, curious, but worried if she told me I'd remember myself and everything would become unbearable again.

‘Well, he found you in the sand, out cold, so he carried you to the car park and waited with you until Dad arrived.

In the back seat you leant your head on Roman's shoulder.

That is, until you got home.'

‘Oh no. What did I do?' I had visions of me throwing up in his lap or abusing him.

‘Nothing horrible. It was quite sweet, in fact.'

‘Well?'

‘When Dad opened the door to pull you out into the cold, you woke up slightly, put your arms around Roman's waist and said you didn't want to go, that you liked being with Roman.'

My face burnt with embarrassment. It was a true statement, but I didn't want the people who knew me the most to know about it.

‘I must have been pretty delirious,' I said, trying to make it sound less real.

‘He was very worried about you, Daisy. What on earth happened between you two that night? He was worse than a father in a delivery room.'

I winced at the idea. ‘I ran away from the … scene … with Rach and Nate and saw him at the top of the big sand dune and, well, long story short, he introduced me to his new girlfriend.' My head dropped at the last word.

‘What? Roman has a girlfriend? Since when?'

‘Your guess is as good as mine. He never told me. In fact, he hasn't been talking to me for weeks.'

Mum's eyebrows knit together. I frowned at her. ‘Oh it's just Lyn. She asked me a while ago why you two weren't hanging out and walking together to school like you normally do. I didn't know either. I guess we know, now.'

This new knowledge made me sad. He didn't even tell his mum he had a girlfriend. Who was she to him then? Maybe he was like Josh, after all his joking about his conquests, and Pam.

‘Never mind about the unknown now. It will come together one day. Talk to your brothers. They've been very worried about you. They act like meatheads but they do love you and want the best for you.'

Her warm hand patted mine; I put my other one over hers.

‘Yeah, yeah. I get sick of hearing, “I told you so” though.'

I put on a face. There was nothing worse than hearing
you should have listened to me
when you already knew it yourself. Allowing someone to retreat with dignity shouldn't go out of fashion.

‘Believe it or not Daisy, I think they realise now isn't the time to start with that. Treston was talking about going over to Nate's house and bashing him,' she laughed and I smirked. So much for him never interfering in our relationship. It was kind of sweet. ‘They are very protective of you and feel helpless when you're hurting like this. Haven't you noticed?'

Actually I had, but I was surprised. I hadn't considered that angle seriously before.

‘I never thought they cared. They are so busy telling me what to do with my life it's like the care factor gets sifted out.'

‘Don't you get it? That's how they show they care. You need to learn to read men better.' She looked like she wanted to slap me across the head and knock some sense into me.

Thanks, Captain Obvious. ‘Will I ever get there, Mum? I've made a right mess so far.'

I imagined myself donned in a nun's outfit, doomed to a life of abstinence and purity due to wayward sexual mishaps from my youth. I pushed the image back out of my head.

‘Of course you will. And when ‘the one' reveals himself to you, you will know. I can guarantee it.' She looked more sure than I felt.

‘Yeah? And what if I'm too stupid to know he's the one and keep going after retards like Nate?' It was highly possible if past behaviour predicted future behaviour, like Dr Phil always said.

‘Oh don't worry. That won't happen,' she suddenly grinned. ‘There are many of us who'd stop you from being so stupid.'

‘So now you agree that I'm stupid?' I asked her smugly.

‘You aren't stupid, per se.' She was serious again. ‘Some of your choices are a little silly. It's part of being young. Don't let it get you down. You are the best company and my favourite daughter.'

Dad was off the phone and walked back into the room. ‘What'd I miss?'

We ignored him.

‘I'm your only daughter, Mum,' I said, rolling my eyes.

‘Doesn't mean you're any less of a favourite to us,' she giggled at Dad. It was an old joke between them and the nerds still laughed about it. ‘Go see your nanna. She misses you. And she's worried about you.'

‘You told Nanna? Mum, that's so embarrassing. How can I tell her anything?' My heart dropped. I had nothing against Nanna. It was just awkward when we tried to talk about deep and meaningful stuff.

‘You'd be surprised what she has been through. She might have more words of wisdom than you think,' she said meaningfully.

‘From three centuries ago,' I muttered under my breath.

‘Daisy Renae.' Mum slapped my forearm gently.

‘Fine,' I groaned. ‘But not today. I've had enough of today already. I'm going back to my bed and …'

‘She's expecting you at five.'

‘Mum!'

‘What?' she asked innocently.

‘You're so annoying,' I slipped off the stool and walked off, calling back over my shoulder, ‘Just putting it out there.'

‘You'll thank me for it one day. Come back here a minute.'

‘What now?' I said, turning around.

‘Love you.' She kissed me on the ear.

went to change. It was courtesy to put on some of the clothes Nanna bought me for our arranged visit. I wasn't sure what to expect. Actually, I couldn't remember a time when Nanna and I had talked about something particularly deep. She had helped me with the whole ‘girl turns woman' talk when I was thirteen — how embarrassing — and a little about Ryder last year, but other than that it was always surface stuff. What could she bring from her experiences in medieval Europe to my life in the modern day, on my terms?

Apparently, a lot. I had been missing out on this side of Nanna.

She knew how to make someone feel better.

Food solves all problems.

It could save the world.

By the time I arrived, she already had out her best china. Set out on her outdoor setting was the prettiest white embroidered tablecloth I'd seen, filled with scones, cream, jam, hot chocolate, custard and apple pie. She ushered me to a chair and immediately started to fill my plate with goodies.

‘Comfort food for the lady.'

‘Wow, Nanna. You've gone to so much trouble for me. It really isn't necessary …' I began.

‘Nonsense,' she used a slight tone to silence me. ‘Every woman at some point in her life, if she's worth her salt, has had a broken heart by someone who didn't deserve her in the first place.'

I shuddered at the thought. She didn't notice.

‘I have, your mother has, and now you have. It's not that it runs in the family, it's that bastards are everywhere and they always manage to suck us in.' She slapped down my plate in front of me and said fiercely, ‘Now eat.'

I stared at it miserably. My appetite had all but disappeared. ‘He's not exactly a bastard, Nanna. I don't know what to think about him right now but I can't call him that.' Picking up a dessertspoon, I waved it in front of me. ‘The best way to sum him up is that he's a victim of his upbringing.' 
And not having enough restraint to keep it in his pants.

Nanna was serving her own dessert. ‘Aren't we all? We have choices, Daisy. We have an option in everything we do. The difference between him and others is that some people have enough foresight to predict the consequences of their actions and the impact our decisions will have on those we come into contact with more seriously. Obviously, this boy isn't very adept in that way,' she said with a disapproving look.

‘No, I guess not,' I said. She had me thinking. ‘Does that make him a bad person?'

‘Not necessarily. I mean yes and no. Don't talk anymore. Eat your food before it spoils.' I don't think she's ever been so bossy with me. Strangely, it made me feel safer than I'd felt in a long time.

‘OK,' I said in a small voice.

‘When I was your age, I met a gorgeous young fellow by the name of Gerard. He came from a wealthy political family, whereas I came from a lowly market farmer. We met by chance when my old little rust bucket of a car broke down on a main road. He was so charming and handsome that I fell for him instantly, although I tried not to show it so blatantly, as girls do today. Anyway, I told him I had to thank him for helping me with the car and demanded that one night the next week he come over for dinner for a home-cooked meal. He agreed and I warned my family he was coming.

‘Well, the day came and I was horribly excited. My food was perfect and the house was as clean as I could make it, without scrubbing the floorboards away. He got along so well with my whole family that I thought he must have dropped out of heaven just for me.'

I smiled at this comment. It was hard to believe love existed on the same level for me as it did sixty years ago.

‘He told me at the end of the night he would like to see me again, if I wanted to, and I fell in love with him then and there. We dated for six months; him taking me out to the theatres, walks along the valleys, me cooking for him at home, until he went away to war, the second world war, in Europe.

‘Before you ask questions, he was only gone for a year before he was sent home with a wounded leg. I waited for him faithfully and wrote him every day. I got a few letters back in the first little while and then I didn't hear anything. He hadn't proposed before he left, but he had promised that if I could wait for him he would come home and marry me properly. Well I waited and dreamt of our wedding day every night for a whole year. He wasn't the same man when he got home. Don't get me wrong. He didn't have shell shock or anything like that, unlike many of his friends who fought in that war. He was distant, cranky and there was no more talk of marriage.

‘I tried to be patient with him and understand what he'd been through until, one night in the summer, he called me over to his house and broke it all off. Can you imagine the two reasons he gave me for not wanting to marry me?'

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