âEver since Ben arrived, she's been weird,' I say. âIt's like I'm not allowed to have a boyfriend. She just wants to keep me in my little box where she can bring me out and play with me when she wants to. I'm not allowed to have a life of my own. Boys are her territory. I'm just there to be teased for not having one.'
I stop. I'm coming dangerously close to talking about the whole Imaginary Boyfriend thing.
âWhy are you friends with her?' George asks.
I shrug. âWe've always been friends,' I say. âSince kinder.'
âSo, you're just friends out of habit?' he says.
âNo,' I say. âShe's fun. She's always thinking up exciting things to do. Like when we went snorkelling in the fountain outside the Art Gallery. Or when we dressed up in our mums' fancy dresses and crashed a wedding in the Fitzroy Gardens.'
âBut is she a good friend?' asks George.
âWhat do you mean?'
âWhat's she like when you're not having fun? When you're sad?'
I think about this. âShe bought me a Snickers bar when I failed a Maths test last year,' I say. âAnd when I had tonsillitis in Year 7 she came over each day after school and told me what I'd missed.' I smile. She wrote me a letter in every class, and tied them with a pink ribbon for me to read the next day. âShe's a good friend,' I say. âOr at least she was.'
âWhat was the fight about?'
âI don't know,' I say. âShe was really drunk, and she wanted to dance with Ben. She was all over him, and I got angryâ'
I stop because I honestly think I might cry or throw up.
âSo she's jealous,' George says.
âBut that's not fair!' I say, my voice going wobbly. âShe has a new boyfriend every five minutes!'
George smiles his serious smile. âDon't you think that's why she's jealous?'
âWhat?'
âWhy do you think she has a new boyfriend every five minutes?' he asks.
I shrug.
âMaybe,' says George gently, âMaybe it's because she hasn't found the right one? And so she's trying and trying to find one she has a connection with, and you stroll in and find the perfect boy on the first go.'
I hadn't thought about it that way. I frown at George. âAre you gay?' I ask.
âWhat?'
âIt's no big deal if you are,' I say. âYou just seem awfully perceptive for a boy.'
He laughs. âI'm not gay.'
I'm not sure I believe him.
âCan I ask you something?' George says. âWhen Tahni was “all over” Ben â what did he do?'
I think about Ben's hands on Tahni's waist.
âDid he blow her off?' asks George.
âNo-o,' I say. âHe didn't want to hurt her feelings.'
âSo he hurt yours instead.'
âIt wasn't like that,' I say.
âBut he danced with her.'
âYes, but he didn't want to.'
George makes a skeptical face. âAnd he told you that.'
I bite my lip.
âSounds like a really nice guy, your Mister Perfect,' says George.
I think about Ben leaning towards the blonde girl with his special half-smile. I swallow.
âHe
is
nice,' I say. âHe
is
perfect. You don't understand.'
âUnderstand what?' George says. âThat he's a player?'
âYou don't know what he's done for me,' I say. I think about what would have happened if Ben hadn't kept my secret. Who cares if he was talking to some girl? He's allowed to talk to other girls. I talk to other boys. There's a boy in my freaking bedroom! Doesn't mean I want to pash him (shudder). I'm turning into one of those creepy overprotective girlfriends who deletes girls' phone numbers from their boyfriends' mobile. I need to chill. Ben wouldn't have kept my secret if he didn't like me. He wouldn't have spent almost all of the party kissing me on the couch. He wouldn't look at me the way he does if he didn't feel the same way I do.
âI don't expect you to understand,' I say to George. âRelationships are complicated.'
âWhy wouldn't I understand?'
I don't want to say this, but I do anyway. âIt's obvious you've never had a girlfriend,' I say. âYou're too much of a weirdo.'
George's lips go very thin. âOf course it is,' he says. âObvious.'
He reaches over and takes his folder. âI should go,' he says.
âGeorge,' I say. âWait. I'm sorry. That came out the wrong way.'
âNo it didn't,' he says, smiling a self-deprecating smile. âI appreciate your honesty.'
âDon't go,' I say. âWe still have work to do on the Secret Project.'
He shrugs on his backpack. âMy mum is expecting me home for dinner,' he says.
I tell Mum I'm not feeling well and go to bed before dinner. This has been the worst weekend of my entire life. I can't imagine how it can get any worse than this. I realise that having a good long cry might make me feel better, but I can't do it. There aren't any tears. I'm tired and empty and more than anything I just want to be asleep.
I wake up at 3 am, starving. I tiptoe downstairs.
As I'm walking through the darkened lounge room, I hear noises in the kitchen. The door is ajar, and the kitchen light is on. It's a strange, sniffling, choking sound. Our old dog used to sound like that just before he threw up.
I peer around the kitchen door.
It's Dad. He has a cup of tea in front of him, and his shoulders are shaking up and down and he's making this strange, gasping, gulping noise.
I wonder if it's Grandma. Maybe she's dead. I suddenly feel guilty for not visiting her.
I'm about to say something, but Dad looks so weird. I've never seen him cry before. Parents aren't supposed to cry. They're not supposed to have emotions, apart from anger, disappointment and pride. And fatigue. But they're never supposed to
cry
. It seems like such a personal, private thing. I wonder why he's crying down here. Why isn't he crying in the bedroom where Mum can comfort him? Does he think it's not manly to cry? Is he embarrassed?
Maybe he hasn't told Mum about Grandma. Maybe he's trying to figure out how to tell her. And me.
I feel cold and sick, a bit like I did last night at the party.
It's scary seeing Dad cry.
I sneak back upstairs and slide into bed. I squeeze Gregory tight. I don't want to turn the light off. I'm far too old to be scared of the dark, but all of a sudden I want to be a kid again. The party, Ben, Tahni. Mum acting strange. Dad crying.
Life used to be so much simpler.
âadjective; resisting authority; not obedient; rebellious.
â The Wordsmith's Dictionary of Hard-to-spell Words
The next morning I go downstairs with my face composed. I wonder what I should do when they tell me Grandma's dead. Should I act surprised? Should I cry? I'm not sure if I can cry, now that I already know.
Dad's sitting at the breakfast table, in almost exactly the same position as he was last night. Except now there is a newspaper spread on the table, and he's wearing a suit and has a bowl of muesli in front of him.
âHi, Dad,' I say.
He looks up and smiles. âMorning, chicken,' he says, then goes back to his newspaper.
I open the fridge and fossick around for the orange juice, waiting for him to tell me.
He turns a page of the newspaper.
I pour a glass of orange juice, and pull out last night's leftover curry and start to eat it cold.
Dad makes a face. Here it comes. âMidge, that smells revolting,' he says. âI don't know how you can eat that stuff so early in the morning.'
Maybe he's softening the blow. Maybe he doesn't want to tell me before school.
I can't stand the pressure.
âHow was Grandma yesterday?'
Dad shrugs. âOh, you know your grandmother,' he says. âIn her own happy little world. She asked me if I'd come to deliver the new bookshelves. Then she told me a story about when she used to live in Scotland.'
âGrandma lived in Scotland?'
âOf course she didn't,' says Dad. âShe's never left Australia.'
âOh.' I put the rest of the curry back in the fridge. âSo she's all right, then? Healthy?'
âAs a horse,' says Dad. âI think she'll outlive us all.'
This is weird. Surely Dad wouldn't lie to me about her being dead. But if she's not dead, then what was he crying about last night?
I get to school just as the bell rings, so I hurry to form assembly without going to my locker first. I try to convince myself that it's because I missed the tram, but actually it's because I don't want to run into Tahni. Or Ben. I don't really want to see George, either, but we're in the same form, so I can't avoid him.
Except it seems like I can, because he studiously ignores me throughout form assembly, and then runs off as soon as the first period bell rings. I'm ridiculously glad, because it means I don't have to confront the fact that's been churning at the back of my mind since last night. The terrible truth that George was right about Ben.
As I make my way from form assembly to History, I run into Nina Kennan.
âGreat party, hey?' she says. âI was so wasted.'
âYeah,' I say. âWasted.'
âHave you seen Tahni?'
I shake my head and feel guilty.
âShe must still be sick.' Nina leans towards me conspiratorially. âI heard her mum took her to hospital. After Chris dropped her home.'
âHospital?'
âShe got her stomach pumped. Alcohol poisoning.'
âOh no,' I say. I remember her, stumbling away with Chris Stitz. âI didn't realise she was that drunk.'
Nina winks at me. âI'm sure you had other things on your mind,' she says with a smile. âLike that gorgeous man of yours.'
I ignore this. âShe really had her stomach pumped? You're sure?'
I swallow. It wasn't my fault. Tahni's a big girl. She should have known better than to drink so much. And it still doesn't excuse her behaviour.
âYep,' says Nina. âI had to have it done last New Year's. They force a tube down your throat and put charcoal in your stomach. The charcoal soaks up the alcohol and makes you vomit up all this black stuff.'
Make her stop. I don't want to be here. I don't want to think about Tahni with a tube in her throat.
âI have to go,' I say. âI have a . . . a thing. See you.'
I flee, feeling like the lowliest, most hateful and awfullest creature in the world.
I don't listen in History. Not even when Mr Loriot misspells
goverment
,
disemmination
and
reccurrance
. I can't stop thinking about Tahni, lying in hospital with charcoal smeared around her mouth, the same way that eyeliner was smeared around her eyes at the party. I think about what George said.
Maybe it's because she hasn't found the right one? And so she's trying
and trying to find one she has a connection with, and you stroll in and find
the perfect boy on the first go.
But did I?
I think about Ben dancing with Tahni. And talking to the blonde girl in the kitchen. I think about all the times he called me on the phone or hung out with me. I think about him kissing me. I think about Imaginary Ben. He wouldn't have got me to keep doing his MySpace page. He would have done his own English project. He wouldn't hit me up every recess for a dollar to buy a Mars Bar.
When the bell goes, I wander out in a daze and shuffle towards my locker.
I feel hands on my waist and turn. It's Ben. He leans in to kiss me, and I pull away. I don't know why, but I don't want him to touch me. Every thing I ever found adorable about him now seems sleazy and repulsive. His perfect-fitting uniform and perfect floppy hair are annoying. How much time does he spend in front of the mirror every morning getting it to look like that?
âDid you get my email?' Ben asks. He doesn't appear to notice my repulsion. âI've got a few more suggestions for my project.'
He doesn't ask what happened to me at the party. He probably didn't even notice I'd gone.
I take a deep breath. âWe need to talk,' I say. âIn private.'
I drag him into an empty classroom. Ben smirks and reaches towards me.
âI like the way you think,' he says, pulling me towards him and leaning down to kiss me again.
I pull away. He raises his perfect eyebrows. I wonder if he plucks them. âWhat's your problem?' he asks.
I edge away until there is a table between us. âThis has to stop,' I say.
âWhat does?'
âThis. You. Me. Us. It's over, okay?'
Ben laughs. âDo you have your period?'
I shake my head. âJust stay away from me.'
Ben stops laughing. âWhat's your problem?' he asks again. âYou wanted the perfect boyfriend. That's what you got. So what's with all the angst?'