Chapter Six
I
TOOK THE
button home and put it away in a box with my earrings. Flynn had given me a token of her feelings for me at exactly the same time that I had betrayed her trust.
I know this now: I will never again pry into the past of someone I love. I will accept their feelings at face value.
But then: I couldn't help wondering jealously who was the boy in the photograph.
When you're
in love,
other people fall away. Her flatmates, Caleb and Hannah, were fleeting presences â clouds of steam from the bathroom or kettles bubbling dry in the kitchen. The front door slammed and they were gone again, the last
CD
they'd put on playing itself out in the living room.
Flynn and I took to sauntering round town together, whenever we were free from work (work: that wretched thing that keeps two girls apart), as carefree as kingfishers, our happiness in each other flashing out in shades of blue and gold.
One day we passed two girls walking with hands held, and Flynn shot me a look of delight and caught hold of my hand and kissed my fingers. The moment was as brief as a bird alighting on a limb but my happiness lasted hours.
Everything she did charmed me. No one else was like Flynn â
could
be like Flynn. Each day she would go outside and look up at the sky, determining what the weather would hold so as to choose the right clothes to wear. (As though weather forecasters did not exist, and girls must be like wise women who read the sky for Signs.) I loved to see her selecting items from her wardrobe â she would wear
these
green trousers with
that
apricot cotton top, and it was the perfect, the
only
thing to wear on that day.
Her favourite place for writing songs was out on her roof, the teapot Lavinia propped beside her. Hugging Louise to her chest, a pencil by her side, she would strum and scribble, pausing every so often to pour more tea into her cup till eventually every drop was drained from the pot. It was then that I'd quietly go inside and make another, her cat and IÂ keeping each other company.
Early one Saturday afternoon, Flynn came to my door and said urgently, âCome with me.'
âWhere?'
âA surprise.'
âShould I wear a party frock? Or â¦'
âBring a towel ⦠Do you still have those swimmers I lent you? â And we might need another blanket. I don't suppose you have such a thing as a sleeping bag?'
She spoke with that frowning faraway look on her face, and she wouldn't say where we were going.
When we got out to the car I saw that the back was filled with stuff. There was a sleeping bag, and pillows, and a box with a pan handle sticking out.
Flynn drove us to the coast, and along a sandy track through the scrub, parking behind some dunes; I heard the sound of the sea and the warbling of nectar-feeding birds that flapped clumsily along the branches of the trees. We got out and walked through a stand of banksias and casuarinas. At the top of the dunes we could see the sweep of a long stretch of beach; the only other people were a few lone fishermen standing with rods at the edge of the sea.
Flynn ran to the water and waded in up to her thighs. She was wearing khaki shorts, and the bottoms got wet. I walked down to join her, my dress tucked into my knickers.
Further up the beach, we discovered a kind of hut that someone had built, tucked into the edge of a dune. It had a low, domed roof made of palm fronds and casuarina branches, and the front was open to the sea. Flynn crawled in and said, âWe don't even need to pitch a tent. We can sleep here.'
I crawled in beside her. The roof had a few holes where some of the branches had come away, but it was shady, a contrast to the glare of the beach. Outside, the sun glinted off the sea. I lay back on the cool sand, and closed my eyes.
We spent the greater part of the afternoon patching up the roof of the shelter. With that done, we wandered along the beach under the casual eyes of the fishermen, picking up shells and stones and putting them down again. Flynn could spend ages simply standing ankle-deep in water staring out to sea. She was so absorbed by her surroundings that I felt she didn't need me at all. I craved her touch, and her conversation, but she was as aloof as one of the seagulls that patrolled the shoreline.
Later, she collected sticks to make a campfire up behind the dunes; I could smell it as I stood at the edge of the water idly watching the last of the fishermen pack up and leave the beach. The sky had turned the deep blue that comes before the black of night. Turning around, I saw a few secret wisps of smoke.
âI bet you used to play cowboys and Indians,' I said, when IÂ went up and saw Flynn fanning the flames and putting on some heavier wood. âLet me guess. You were always the Indian.'
Flynn only smiled at me vaguely.
We put our bedding into the shelter while there was still enough light to see, and then Flynn remembered her fire, and raced back up to tend it.
Camping was new to me, but she had organised everything. There was plenty of food â vegetables and rice and tinned fish, with mangoes for dessert. We ate pretty much in silence, and I wondered why Flynn had invited me here.
When the fire died down, she threw her mango seed, sucked clean, into the coals, took a notebook from her bag and said, âI'm going to sit on the dunes.' I followed her. Staring out to sea, she scribbled in the dark.
âWhat are you writing?' I asked.
âI'm writing down what the sea says.' She sounded passionate and energetic, a little off-kilter. I felt lost and irrelevant.
I sat with her and listened to the sea for a while, though IÂ couldn't have put what it said into words. After a while I got up and walked along the beach, thinking that I should not have come. I wanted to walk along the beach with her, to talk, simply to
be
with her. I stayed away for a long time, feeling unwanted, hurt, unloved.
But when I got back she said, âWhere were you? I was starting to get worried.' And she drew me to her and kissed me.
All my worries melted away. I held her close, listening to the roar of the waves, and it seemed that we were all in the world that existed, just the two of us.
âCome to bed,' she said. So we crawled into the hut, got comfortable under the blankets, and lay looking out at the light on the water. Flynn took my hand.
And all the time there was the throb and roar of the water and the scent of damp sand, so that I was enveloped by sensation.
In the middle of the night I got cold, and hunted in the dark for some warmer clothes. When I came back to bed Flynn's arms folded me in, and I lay listening to her breathing. After a while, she rolled over and away from me, and I rested the side of my head on the back of her neck. I became aware that her breathing had changed, and knew she was crying.
But I didn't ask why, and we fell asleep eventually, rocked by the rhythm of the waves, which sounded so close that we might be engulfed at any moment.
Chapter Seven
I
N THE MORNING
, while Flynn collected sticks to start a fire, I stole a look in her notebook to see what she had written the night before. I still had the urge to know more about her than she ever told me, and after all, she had left it open.
I read:
a roar a roar arah aroo, gloom, boom, garoom
Shoo
Sham
shirsh
Plowsh
Shhh
Plosh
Ah boom
tears
sorrow
regret
despair
heartache
loss
We made toast on the campfire, and ate it sitting at the top of the dunes, squinting our eyes against the glare. With the sun not far above the horizon, it felt new, like the first sun, the original sun, the only sun that had risen over the earth. When Flynn stripped off and ran down to the waves, I followed her, and met the icy water with a shudder. She went out so far for so long that I thought she'd floated away. Aware of people already walking along the beach, I put my clothes back on and waited under the canopy of our little hut. The day was already hot. From the shade, the light striking the sand was incandescent.
She came in as though washed clean of anything that had ever troubled her, and we stayed at the beach till it was almost night. We walked along the sand together, ate a lunch of tinned beans, bread and chocolate biscuits, slept it off in the shelter, and then went into the water again. Wind and water and sunlight swept over me, and I gave myself over to it all. IÂ abandoned words, and allowed whatever I was experiencing to fill my head. I forgot to brood, worry, analyse â I forgot to think. I lived for the moment and in the moment. I was happy.
On the way home I looked across at Flynn. How I loved her! Her smooth brown skin and black hair caught up roughly in a ponytail, the intent way she kept her eyes on the road, glancing every so often into the rear-view mirror. She must have sensed me looking, because she glanced across at me and smiled. I thought about the words she'd scribbled last night in the dark and imagined the last ones, like a shopping list for grief, tattooed on my skin.
After we got back from camping at the beach, she became obsessed with writing songs. I knew that it was a private thing for her, and never asked to see what she'd written. But I remember her saying fervently, bending her head to her instrument, âI want to do this as much as I can. Because one day I'll be dead, and I won't be able to do it anymore.'
She took great pains, and it irritated and tortured her, this getting a song right. In the end, no one might be aware of the time she had taken in creating it, but she would know â and she would know if she was pleased with what she had made. And perhaps this was the most important thing I got from Flynn, this knowledge that a song, or anything, is not a small thing for the person making it.
It was Sunday, a week after we'd camped at the beach, and IÂ was lounging on Flynn's bed, headphones on. Flynn was on the roof, writing, strumming, then she appeared at the window. âIt's my mother. I'll have to go and let her in.'
âHow do you know?' I pulled the headphones off.
âShe came to the lane and called. She knows I'm often out on the roof when no one answers the door.'
Flynn leaned her guitar in a corner, pushed her hair behind her ears, and checked her face in the mirror, looking troubled. I straightened our tangled night-time bed of glee and bliss, straightened myself, and by the time Flynn came back with her mother I was perched on the windowsill, legs dangling, like someone popped round for a casual chat.
âMum, this is Anna. Anna â my mother, Patricia.'
âHello, Anna,' Patricia said, shaking my hand. Hers was very soft, quite friendly. She had a kind, rather plump and pretty face, but there were deep lines at the corners of her mouth, and shadows under her eyes that make-up didn't entirely conceal.
She looked at Flynn and smiled regretfully. âI called round last weekend but you weren't here.'
âYou should ring first.'
âYour phone's hardly ever switched on.'
âHello? Message bank?' said Flynn. She picked up her guitar from where she'd hastily left it and put it carefully on its stand. âWe should go out for a coffee or something.'
âOr breakfast,' said Patricia. âHave you eaten?' She turned to include me in her question.
We decided to head over to North Lismore to one of the few cafés that would be open on a Sunday morning. Flynn led the way and her mother and I walked along behind.
âAre you a student, Anna?' Patricia asked, as we crossed the bridge in blazing sunlight. The glare from the water made me squint my eyes.
âNo,' I said. âI work in a bookshop.'
âIs that interesting? I always thought I'd like to run a bookshop, but probably all passionate readers fantasise about that at some time.'
We talked on. Flynn's mother was the sort of woman used to making people feel at ease. Asking someone about themselves came naturally to her. And yet I was aware all the time of a weight inside her. Her face was deeply sorrowful, and though she responded to my answers as though she was listening, a part of her was absent. She seemed like someone to whom something dreadful had happened.
At the café, we sat out the back. Looking at the menu, I realised that I couldn't eat a thing, but I ordered a muffin anyway, for appearances' sake. Flynn asked for a muffin as well, without even bothering to look at the menu.
âJust a muffin?' said her mother. âTwo big girls like you? My treat. Look â free-range organic eggs on sourdough, any way you like.'
But we shook our heads, and she herself only ordered a flat white with skim milk.
Our order arrived. I sipped and nibbled, pulling the muffin apart and putting it reluctantly into my mouth. I couldn't help feeling that I shouldn't be there. I was just tagging along. Her mother had come to see Flynn, and I was somewhat in the way, though nothing she did or said implied that in the least.
I hadn't expected that Flynn would have
come out
to her mother, and told her that she had a girlfriend, but all the time there was an awful undertone of something kept hidden. IÂ was
just a friend
, though I always wondered whether people could tell what was between us. That day I was very careful not to touch Flynn, or even look at her for too long, in case I betrayed something.
And I can't even remember much of what we said â it was all just chat â except that at one stage her mother turned to Flynn and said, âWhen's Rocco coming home?'
And Flynn just brushed it aside. She shrugged and said quickly, âI don't know,' and turned the conversation to something else.
All the way back to Flynn's place I wondered,
Who's Rocco?
He might have been some casual acquaintance. Or was he the boy in the photo?
When we got back to the flat, we stopped at the foot of the stairs and Patricia said she must get home. âIt was lovely to meet you, Anna. Get Flynn to bring you out to our place some time.' She leaned forward and kissed me on the cheek.
Flynn gave me the key, and I went up to the flat so she could see her mother off. She took some time, and I had to fight the impulse to have another look at the picture of the boy in Flynn's drawer. Impatiently, I looked around me. Seeing the guitar sitting there on its stand, I picked it up.
It had never occurred to me to even touch Louise. My brother played guitar, but they were a mystery to me. I stood there and hefted the guitar's weight, felt the sheer mass of the solid body. It had a slight curve, like a human figure, but it did not easily fit with my own body. It felt awkward. And the strings: how did musicians coax a voice from these things? And yet I loved the music they made â it could be sublime.
âI don't know, Louise,' I said. âI give up. How do you do it?'
Louise remained inscrutable. In some ways I felt that that guitar was my rival, vying for Flynn's attention, whose ear was very often bent to listen with grave attention to what Louise said, rather than to what I was feeling.
Ridiculous to be jealous of a guitar! I put it back on its stand, switched on the
CD
player and plugged in the headphones. When Flynn finally got back I was apparently engrossed in music.