Authors: Jennifer Down
âHe sounds amazing.'
âHe was. I don't really remember him. He died when I was little. He was sick a long
time, and Mum and Dad used to visit him without me. I think they thought I'd be frightened
of all the hospital stuff. They just wanted me to remember him as, you know, my grandad.'
Claire and Julian must have reached a ceasefire, because she arrived with Elliott
and an armful of shopping bags. Elliott sat on the linoleum, right by Frank's feet,
and listened to the conversation. Claire made scones like it was nothing: âIt's just
flour and milk and sugar and cream. You chuck it in there, and beat it like it owes
you money.'
They spiked the lemonade. They left the dirty dishes in the sink and traipsed down
the hill to the main beach, Julian with the cricket bats and plastic stumps under
one arm, Frank and Tess hauling the esky between them. Oleander the colour of musk
sticks behind the fences, grimy frangipanis on the footpaths.
At the beach they spread out their things. Claire rubbed sunscreen all over Elliott's
back. He sat obediently, gnawing on a piece of watermelon, in a floppy black hat
of Claire's.
âYou look like Bob Dylan,' laughed Tess.
âI've got extra,' Claire said. She turned to Audrey, hand cupped. âHere, let me do
you.' Audrey held her hair out of the way while Claire smoothed the stuff over her
shoulders. She did it like a mother, moving the straps of Audrey's bathers to the
side to make sure nothing was missed. Frank and Julian had already gone for a swim.
They ate dripping all over the sand and their towels.
After lunch Elliott and Julian went off with their bodyboards. The conversation turned
sporadic and drowsy. Audrey ate watermelon lying on her back looking up at the sky.
The juice ran into her ear. She wiped it with the back of her hand.
Propped up on her elbows, Claire admired the boys hurling their bodies into the waves
over and over again.
âI'm glad they're spending time together. Elliott really misses him, but Julian's
a fair-weather friend. He always gets to choose.' She rolled over onto her belly,
rested her head on her long freckled arms. âI can't remember things being easy with
him. I can't remember what he was like before we had El.'
Audrey pulled her hat down over her brow. She hovered lightly above sleep, strange
visions. A field on fire. Shadows over a skylight. She dreamed she was living in
the country, a town on a river, with a group of friends. Katy was there; it was her
sister who was dead. Audrey was wearing the same perfume Katy's sister had. All of
their friends were working in shifts to sleep beside Katy and take care of her. When
it was Audrey's turn, she upset Katy with the perfume, and it started a fresh onslaught
of grief.
Audrey lurched awake. Sweat was running down her ribs in the sun.
Claire smiled at her. âIt's called a hypnic jerk, when that happens,' she said. âWhen
you're almost asleep and you think you're falling.'
Julian brought a woman home from the consultancy firm where he worked. The
two of them finished off the wine cask Audrey had bought, and ate the rest of the
picnic leftovers.
The girl was gone in the morning. Julian ate fistfuls of cereal from the box, looking
pleased with himself.
âHow's your lovelife?' Pip asked.
âGet fucked.'
âI was
joking
.'
Audrey had the impression she'd missed something between them, another tiny earthquake.
Julian and Pip fought like siblings.
Julian shoved the cereal packet back into the cupboard. He grabbed his keys and called
over his shoulder:
âI can be prickly, too. Be friends or don't be friends.'
They listened to him stump out of the house.
âO-o-o-o! He's in a real
shit
!' Pip said, and clapped her hands.
It had been years since Audrey had lived with someone whose moods she could not trust.
She'd almost forgotten about those roads with the hairpin turns.
You Were So Alive
At Tullamarine Audrey picked at her cuticles, shuffling from the plane to the terminal.
She was hungry for the bay, the suburbs she knew.
Adam ran to her across the carpeted floor. She dropped her bag and caught his embrace.
âFuck it's good to see you,' he said.
His face was pressed against hers. She was suddenly, surprisingly knocked for six.
She said
I missed you.
It was hard to get the words out.
The city came into full view as they crossed the Bolte Bridge. Everything shimmered
through the car fumes.
ââand I'd always imagined Minh to be sort of hard and inaccessible somehow,' Adam
said. âYou see him playing a gig and he looks like he's having a good time, but he
always stands up the backâwhen we first started hanging out I thought he was so restrained,
so cool about everything. But he's not at all. And neat, the little prick; he's always
picking up my shit and putting it away, and then I can't find it. Like Katy used
to.'
Audrey's head snapped sideways, but Adam's hands were relaxed
on the wheel. He could
say her name without flinching!âShe triggered in him a tender memory! ââ¦neither
of us can cook, so I got mum to make a ratatouille the day before and I zapped it,
and his parents thought I'd made it from scratch!'
He laughed, and Audrey did too, the sound peeling away from her.
He took her to a new place in South Melbourne. It had appeared where an old pharmacy
had been in the time she'd been gone. They sat for hours. Adam was boisterous and
flirtatious, the way Audrey always thought of him. She could barely remember him
as he had been in March, a husk of a man.
She wanted to speak about the things they never spoke about on the phone. She wanted
to say something about how change had beat away at him since she'd moved. She wanted
to tell him about hypnic jerks, spider tumours, symbiosis, artificial lakes. She
wanted to ask when Katy had passed from a friend to a memory.
But there were no spaces for those things in his conversation. She was afraid that
she could say Katy's name aloud and Adam wouldn't blink.
They scanned the bill standing by the register. Audrey looked up to see their images
in the mirror behind the counter. Her own face, impassive. Adam, serious only for
a moment, hairline receding slightly.
âYou going to call Nick while you're down?' he asked as they fumbled for change.
âAdamâ'
âYou could be friends. Heaps of people are friends.'
Audrey swung the café door wide. She tilted her face to the dry afternoon.
âIt got pretty ugly,' she said. âWe haven't really spoken since. Come on, let's go
for a walk. I've missed this.'
Adam kissed her smackingly on the cheek.
He drove her all the way to Sylvie's that night, through the suburbs along the beach.
Warm air at the window, caravan parks, ti-tree. Audrey felt nostalgic for something
she'd never had, suburban delirium and fast car rides at night, soft-serve summers.
She propped her face on the window.
Sylvie was waiting on the porch, cigarette between her knuckles. She was barefoot
and coltish. Her hair tumbled from its knot.
âP'tit lapin,'
she said when she saw Audrey. She stood to embrace them both. âCome
in, Adam, how are you? Do you want some coffee?'
âThanks, Sylv, but I have a hot date.'
âHow is your mother?'
âShe's good. My dad had a triple bypass about a month ago, but he's doing well now.
Mum can't wait to get him out of the house, she's going insane. She's taken up painting.'
âMen, they are all the same,' Sylvie said with a congenial eye roll.
âThanks for driving me all this way,' Audrey said.
âNo worries. I'll call tomorrow. We'll go out.'
âI want to see Minh.'
âI'll phone. See ya.
Au revoir
, Mrs Spencer.'
Audrey put her things in her room. She opened the wardrobe. There was an old jacket
hanging there, dark green, hooded. She could almost hear Katy's laughâ
Oh yairs, very
narce, it's vai-r-r-y nineties teen witchâ
coming from the part of her brain that
had still expected Katy to be waiting at the airport beside Adam.
It was a kind of doublethink, the bargains and lies she'd been fashioning since Katy
had gone. If Audrey always switched off the bedside lamp with her eyes already closed,
Katy might reappear. If she could guess the seconds left on the microwave until her
coffee was finished reheating. If she could hold her breath for half a lap of
the
pool, if she could make it home without seeing any brown cars, if there were no messages
on her voicemail at the end of the day. The superstitions were crushed as soon as
they proved untrue, but she invented new ones each day.
She sat down on the end of her bed, smoothed the bedspread. Everything was covered
in a thin layer of dust. The evening light streamed in.
Sylvie leaned in the door. âHow are you?' she asked.
âI'm good. It's nice to be home. I didn't realise how much I'd missed it.'
âYou're thin.'
Audrey looked at the mirror. âI've been busy.'
âDo you have a boyfriend?'
âNo, Maman. I'm just taking things as they come.'
On the dresser was a glass case with a painted figurine of Jesus on a cloud. âThat's
new,' Audrey said.
âIt's from when I was a little girl.'
âI meantâ' Audrey meant
It must have been in hiding all this time
, since her father
would never have allowed it, but she stopped herself.
Sylvie nodded and shifted. âLet me get you a cup of tea,' she said at last.
âMerci,'
said Audrey. Sylvie left the room. Audrey lay back and put a hand over her
mouth.
When she got out of the shower she could hear the television onâevening news, bushfire
alertsâand Sylvie talking to the budgerigar in French. She sat at the kitchen table
with her towel around her shoulders. She watched her mother prepare dinner. It was
almost nine o'clock. Sylvie had been waiting for her.
âHow's work, Maman?'
âI received a promotion,' Sylvie said. âI'm a team leader now.'
âThat's fantastic! You didn't tell me,' said Audrey. âWhen did that happen?'
âLast month.'
âCongratulations. You should've said!'
Sylvie's back was to Audrey. Her knife went
slock-slock-slock
over the asparagus.
âYou all probably thought I wouldn't even keep the job,' she said.
âNobody ever said that.'
Slock-slock-slock
went the knife.
Audrey watched her mother's neck; she watched the muscles working.
âDon't sit with wet hair,' Sylvie said without turning around. âYou'll catch a cold.'
After dinner they hauled the grey water outside to pour over the garden beds.
âI've started gardening,' Audrey said.
Sylvie seemed pleased. âHow is it?'
âI haven't planted much. Just a few tomatoes, some azaleas.'
â
Ben
, anyone can grow tomatoes,' Sylvie said dismissively.
Audrey reached down to tug a withered flower head from its stem. It fell away in
her hands, dry and without perfume.
âA gardenia,' her mother pronounced. Audrey let it fall.
She'd almost forgotten Sylvie's turbulence. She felt that skin forming, that hard
outer shell: the part of her she needed to weather it. Audrey lay on her bed and
looked at her watch. She'd been home for two hours. She opened the window, changed
into her pyjamas. She read for a while, and when she went to the kitchen to get a
glass of water the lights were off. Her mother had gone to bed. But coming back up
the hall she heard Sylvie call out for her.
Audrey went to her room. Sylvie was propped up in the double bed. The room was dark
but for the television. There was a black- and-white film on. A man and a woman standing
in a ballroom or a parlour. The subtitle at the bottom of the screen read
You're
thinking
of someone else.
âCome here,' Sylvie said, and held out an arm. Audrey tucked
herself in its curve. âDo you know this film?'
âI don't think so.'
âIt's
Last Year at Marienbad
.
L'année dernière à Marienbad
.' Sylvie looked younger
in the dim room, her eyes fixed on the screen. âYour papa took me to see it once
at the Astor. It was screening for a festival. He loved it. I thought it didn't
make sense.'
Sylvie's skin smelled of rose-scented talc and cigarettes. She stroked Audrey's hair
in an absent way, held her close. It was everything Audrey might have wanted as
a child. The subtitle read
You were so alive
.
Audrey took her brother's old bicycle out of the shed, pumped its tyres and pedalled
to the beach at Balnarring. The hardy families were just getting to the beach, setting
up their sun shelters, toddlers with fat legs tugging at their hats. Audrey watched
the surfers, the big breakers. She liked the uncomplicated camaraderie they had,
going in and out,
How's it today, mate
; their healthy bodies beneath their peeling
wetsuits, their dripping hair. Audrey waded to her chest. Nick had taught her how
to recognise riptides once. Already it felt strange to be in the water here, uncertain
in the surf, when she'd stroked away safely in the sea baths.
Riding home in the shade the sweat cooled on her neck. Sylvie had left for work.
Audrey phoned her brother. He was at home, he said; he'd be home all day.
He looked the same. That mop of dark hair, that thin face that shone at her when
he opened the door. He gave her a quick hug. They examined each other: it seemed
longer than a few months since she'd seen him. They hustled down the hall and into
the kitchen, where they sat and spoke greedily. Bern told her about his exams, about
the parties afterwards, about Hazel, about Irène's family and the new baby. Audrey
listened, leaning forwards on her elbows.