Read Gracie Faltrain Gets it Right (Finally) Online
Authors: Cath Crowley
âThat was really Martin, right?' I ask Jane.
âYep.'
âFrom the stands it looked like Flemming and I took Dan down on purpose, right?'
âYep.'
âTwo hundred and ten days of clean living, no fighting, almost-perfect behaviour and he comes back on the one day it looks like I broke Dan Woodbury's nose. What are the odds of that?'
âIn your life, actually, pretty good.'
âIt was an accident,' I tell Coach, not because I'm sure, but because I want to be. It all happened too quick to know. The truth is when Flemming and I practise, his face changes; he's lost to everything but the goal and the win.
âDid Mum and Dad see?' I ask Jane. They might not believe it was an accident after last year. I lied to them as well as Martin so my word's not exactly hard currency at home these days.
âLucky for you they left before the end; some problem at the nursery.'
Alyce walks over with Brett Mason. Flemming looks at their hands locked together and leaves. He's still got it bad for Alyce but it's too late. He dumped her last year because he didn't want to date the school nerd. Brett Mason picked her up. Flemming doesn't have a chance against him. The guy's good-looking, good at sport, and he's got an IQ the size of a World Cup soccer crowd. Flemming's IQ is more like the soccer score. If being in a bad mood was a subject at school, though, he'd get a tertiary entrance rank to rival Alyce.
He walks past Dan's team without a word. No, âSorry'. No, âAre you okay?' No nothing. The light switch in his head flicks off when he attacks the opposition. He doesn't see their faces; he sees them as shadows in his path. Playing like that doesn't help you win, though. Flemming ran as hard as he could at the opposition today and things turned out exactly like they did last year.
âI want to see if Dan's okay before we go.'
âGood idea,' Jane says as we walk across the field. âHe might need a little mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.'
âI told you. We're plutonium.'
âI think the word you're looking for is platonic, Faltrain.'
Alyce pushes up her glasses. âPlutonium is a radioactive element capable of self-maintained explosive fission.'
âMaybe I was wrong. The word you're looking for might actually be plutonium.'
âEven if I liked Dan I couldn't go out with anyone who dated Annabelle Orion. It goes against the laws of nature.'
âIt might surprise you, Faltrain. But you don't actually rate a mention in the laws of nature. You're free to date whoever you want.'
Jane's wrong. âThere are definite rules when it comes to dating. You don't date the ex of an enemy. Or the enemy of your ex. Or your enemy.'
âI'm surprised anyone's dating anyone,' Brett says.
âDo you remember in Year 10 Annabelle went out with Nick Johnson after I broke up with him?'
âYou mean they dated after you tried to kiss Nick and stuck your tongue in his ear by mistake and he freaked out?'
I don't answer Jane on the grounds that I'll incriminate myself.
Even if Dan hadn't liked Annabelle I wouldn't date him. Martin is my type. Dan and I are friends; nothing more. He worked all summer at the café near our nursery. Jane and I helped Mum and Dad over Christmas for some extra money and we'd go to the café for drinks most afternoons. On the way to the toilet I'd walk past the kitchen and see Dan washing dishes.
âAre you developing some kind of bladder problem?' Jane asked one day.
âCoffee makes me need the bathroom,' I said.
âWhich would make sense if you actually drank coffee.'
Jane had it all wrong. I didn't even look at Dan as I walked by the kitchen. I stared straight past his blue-black hair and his faded jeans and cool t-shirt. In fact, I would never have talked to him if I hadn't knocked those plates out of the waitress's hands. âDon't worry about it,' Dan said as I
helped pick up the pieces. âSaves me the trouble of washing them.' It was fate. We became friends.
The next time Jane and I went into the café Dan took his break. âSo, what's up?' he asked, putting a piece of cake and three forks in the middle of the table. It was weird for a bit, because of what happened last year and because he's good friends with Annabelle and Kally. But we talked about soccer and school and lip rings and by the time we got to
Who Weekly
's most gorgeous list it was fine. Better than fine. It was fun.
âWhy did I hate him again?' I asked after he'd gone back to work.
âHe tried to kill you last year. But nothing says sorry like free cake.'
Dan did apologise, sort of. One afternoon when Jane was sick he and I talked for ages, about things like who was our favourite character on
Sesame Street
and what was our favourite band. Before I left he said, âWe never expected you to fight back all season like you did. We thought it'd be over in a game.'
âWe got angry. All of us were stupid except Martin.'
âI guess you miss him.'
âYeah,' I said. âI do.'
He nodded and that was it. We haven't talked about last year again. It made me think, which is something I don't always do a lot of. I was so angry at Dan and his team that until the last game I never saw them as anything but the enemy.
He's sitting on the bench when we walk over today. âAre you all right?' I ask, looking at his blue-ringed eyes.
âMy nose isn't broken, at least. Coach's taking me to the hospital. He's worried I have concussion.'
âGood,' I say. âI mean good it's not broken, not good you're going to the hospital.'
âYeah, I got that.'
Usually when Dan and I talk it's like a great soccer match. I kick. He catches. There are no missed passes. No one standing in the midfield looking for the ball. Today it's weird.
âSo I see Knight's home,' he says.
âI don't know for how long. I haven't really spoken to him yet.'
âWell, good luck when you do.' He stands and walks slowly towards his coach's car.
âBrett and I have to leave as well,' Alyce says. âIf you need me, leave a message on my phone. We'll be at the pictures until eight.'
âLet's go home the long way,' I say to Jane. âI want to drag out the time before I have to do homework.'
She nods and we walk back across the field.
âDid Dan seem strange?' I ask.
âThe guy just hit the ground at high speed with his face. And your “sort of” boyfriend is back in town. It'd be strange if he seemed normal.'
âDan doesn't like me.'
âAnd sugar is good for your health. Do you want Martin back?'
âI do,' I say, even though it's clearer than a sunny day that it's not on the cards. Martin's dumped me twice. The first time I expected. He found out I'd looked for his mum and
he emptied like a container of three-flavoured ice-cream at a party. There were only hints of the sweeter bits, the chocolate and strawberry, stuck to the white. He ran away to the last place he remembered good times with his family. He came back. But not to me.
Things got better for a bit after the Firsts final. We played soccer in the half-light when the shadows were taking over the field. When we walked home he'd forget, for a second, that we weren't together. He'd hold my hand. I'd hold my breath. I kept hoping.
I know what you're thinking. Look up âdenial' in the dictionary and it says Gracie Faltrain. When Martin turned up at my house after his last Year 12 exam I thought he wanted to be my boyfriend again.
I noticed his hair, messy in the back like always. I noticed his smile, which had been missing-in-action for months. What I didn't notice was the car in the background packed up ready for a fast getaway. You'll also find a mention of me in the dictionary if you look up âidiot'.
âMe and Joe Davis are going on a road trip, Faltrain,' he said, shuffling around. âI came to say goodbye.' I couldn't say it back. The word got stuck in my throat and it's been there ever since. Martin sent me exactly no letters while he was away. No texts. And I'm fairly sure â because I've been listening for them â no messages via ESP.
Every day over summer I passed his house to get to the oval. On the way I'd think things like, if I don't step on one crack in the footpath, he'll be home again, sitting out the front with the soccer ball. The steps were always empty. His bike leant up against the house. Cobwebs covered the handlebars.
I'd pick up speed, then. I'd force my legs to thump hard against the concrete to outrun the memories scattered over the streets. I'd race past the milk bar where he kissed me and the corner where I waited for him before school.
Martin's voice was the hardest thing to outrun. âI know I said I couldn't understand how you leave the people you love,' he told me. âBut sometimes it's the only way to keep going.' They're the words I'd always hear as I reached the oval. I'd leap the rusty fence and toss the ball into the air before I'd landed. I'd race towards it and play soccer till it was past dark. I worked so hard to forget what he looked like running for goal and then today, he turns up and everything floods back. The hardest part about forgetting is that you keep remembering.
He's sitting in the kitchen with Mum when Jane and I walk inside. My heart rockets like the NASA space shuttle. I've missed him smiling; showing that chipped tooth from the time Flemming slammed him in the face with a ball. I've missed hanging out in the park till the light drops. I've missed him standing in the tuckshop line to pick up my lunch because I got detention. Let's face it; I've missed the kissing part, when Martin slowly heated my blood to toffee.
âIt's good to see you,' Jane says.
âYeah, you too.' He looks at me. âKick in the park, Faltrain? And when I say kick I mean, kick the ball.' He grins. â
This
ball.'
Mum doesn't tell me that the weekends are for study. She doesn't tell me what time to be home. She kisses me on the cheek and says, âTake a jacket. It's going to rain.'
Like old times he and I are off, racing each other along
the streets I've been running on alone since last year. Martin is back. Martin is here. With me. I want to tell him everything that's happened since he left. I want to tell him all at once.
He's out of practice at soccer. It's easy to steal the ball but I don't. I pass it and clap as he kicks into the net. I'd clap if he missed. Let's face it; I'd clap if he scratched his nose. You might find my name next to âdenial' in the dictionary, but you won't find it next to âdignity'.
We run around each other in the cold until it's dark. I stop the ball with my foot and grab his hand. When I first kissed Martin it was under the stars. It's fate that it happens this way again. I move closer.
âWait,' he says. âI need to tell you something.' A door slams in the background. Someone reminds someone else to put the rubbish out. A porch light goes off across the street. And Martin says, âI can't hang out with you anymore, Faltrain.'
I feel stupid, standing here with my lips cut off mid-kiss. If he was planning on dumping me again, why bring me to the park where we've hung out almost every day since we were kids? âYou don't want to be my boyfriend, I get it.'
âNo, I mean, I can't hang out with you at all anymore,' he says, and a fog creeps in under my skin.
âBut you're back. We don't have to date but we can still talk.' He's moving slowly away from me, though. One shuffle at a time.
âWe can't be like we used to, Faltrain.'
âWhy?' There are some questions you have to ask before
you know the answer. And once you know the answer you wish you hadn't asked.
âBecause I don't want to,' he says quietly.
I feel like I do on the last night of daylight saving or the first cold day in winter. This is worse though. Summer comes back. âI guess that's why you didn't write while you were away.' I might not be the smartest girl but you don't have to dump me more than three times.
I leave. My legs and arms ache and I tell myself it's because I didn't stretch after the game. âFaltrain?' he calls. âI wrote you postcards.' His voice dips low. It's a full stop at the end of a sentence. âI just never sent them.'
Mum was wrong. It doesn't rain on the way home. But it should.
âYou look like crap,' Jane says.
I hold up three fingers and she gets it. âHe dumped you again? That guy needs a book on dating.' Jane's right. Being dumped is like skydiving with some weights and no parachute. Once is more than enough.
âHe says we can't be friends anymore.'
âThat doesn't make sense.'
âYeah, it does.' If you want a person gone for good, you have to stop remembering them.
Jane picks up a photograph. It's of me and her and Martin two years ago, before she left for England. We'd played this great game of soccer. He'd kicked one goal and I'd kicked two. We were laughing because of that and because Jane kept cutting off our heads when she held out her mobile phone to take the picture.
We were laughing for reasons we didn't know, too, if that makes sense. We were happy because Jane's parents hadn't told her she was moving to England. I was happy because I had no idea that one day Martin would leave.
âIs looking at that photo supposed to make me feel better?'
âI was planning on hitting you with the frame and giving you amnesia.' She holds it over my head. âIt'll only take a second and Martin won't even be a memory.'
âIt's him you need to hit. Make him lose the parts of his life when I acted like an idiot.'
âThat leaves him with one plus one and how to make toast.'
âIt's really over,' I say. After all these years. Martin is gone.