Authors: J.C. Burke
âI've found him,' she says to the mirror. âHis identity. I've got it, Caz.'
Victoria is stuffing things back in the drawer.
âDid you find it?' Evie stands behind her. She can feel her heart thumping in her chest. âHave you?'
âYes, yes. Ioan P. Stanciu is his full name.' She holds the business card out to Evie. âWhat is this all about, anyway?'
âHang on,' Evie whispers. Out loud, she counts as her finger points to each letter in his name. âOne, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine,' she pauses. âTwelve? No!'
âWhat?'
âNo! No! There are only meant to be nine letters in his name.'
âWho? Whose name?'
âIngy, that man!' Evie paces around the table. âHe picked Paris up this morning. I saw him. I heard his voice. It was the same voice. I know it was. It was the voice from my dream. He can't have twelve letters in his name. He just can't!'
âEvie, you're making me nervous,' Victoria says. âI think
I know what you're talking about now.'
Evie crumples into the chair and buries her head in her arms. âI thought ⦠I thought I was right. I listened so hard to myself. I've tried so hard, so hard but ⦠I'm wrong and now we're back to where we started. No. No!' Evie hears her feet thump the floor. âNo!' She sits upright. âNo! There's got to be something I'm missing. Something I haven't thought of. I know what I sensed out there at the Penis Abuser when, when I saw Dana. I know what I felt. I'm not going to just stop â'
âEvie! Slow down. They're people's lives, you know. You must be careful. You can't just â'
Evie stands up. âI'm going.'
âWhat!'
âI'm sorry, Victoria.' She pulls the cap back over her head. âI've missed something. I thought I'd find it here. But I â'
âEvie!'
âI have to ⦠It's Paris ⦠something terrible ⦠yes, I have to â'
âEvie, listen. Stop â¦'
But Evie is backing away towards the door.
âLook, take this.' Victoria hands over a piece of paper. Evie stuffs it into the back pocket of her jeans. âThat was from last time, with Nora. Evie, listen. If you're doing what I think you're doing, you must promise me to â'
âYeah, yeah.' But Evie isn't listening. She's opening the door. Stepping out onto the landing. âI'm sorry, Victoria. I just have to ⦠you know â¦'
âYou must promise to be sensible,' Victoria calls after her. âEvie!'
Â
Even yesterday, Evie would've deliberated over a phone call to Seb. Racked her brain on how to start the conversation, how to sound, what to talk about. Evie has never rung Seb before. It's just something she wouldn't normally do. But today isn't normal. Today's very different.
Evie almost jogs down the road, pressing the numbers of directory assistance.
âWhat name, please?' the operator says.
âGranger. Sebastian Granger.' Evie knows Seb's called after his father. âAnnandale Heights.'
âWould you like me to text the number through?'
âNo. No. Just connect, please.'
âConnecting you now.'
The phone rings. Evie kicks at the leg of the bus seat, waiting for someone to pick up. âCome on, come on.'
âHello?' She recognises Seb's voice.
âSeb, it's me. Evie.'
âEvie? You okay? You sound kind of â'
âLook, can you meet me at my place?'
âYeah. When?'
âI'm in Randwick now, so say â'
âRandwick? Did you see
her
though?'
âYeah. Yeah, I have.'
âAnd?'
âI'll tell you when I see you.' Evie spots her bus down the end of the road. âI've got to go. My bus is coming.'
âSo will I â¦?'
âJust come to my place.'
âOkay, okay. I'll see you soon.'
Evie sits at the very back of the bus, staring at the name on the business card.
âIoan P. Stanciu.' Again she counts the letters. And again they equal twelve.
She dials home.
âEvie!' It's her father. âWe've been expecting you to ring. Where are you?'
âI'm on my way back from Victoria's.'
âI said I'd pick you up there! What are you â'
âDad, chill.'
âDon't tell me to chill!' Evie hears her mother in the background. âHang on.' He speaks to her. âShe's on her way home now.'
âDad, um â'
âSo you're on the bus?'
âYes.' Where else do they think I am, Evie wonders?
âWhich number. Is it the â'
âDad, I've asked Seb over for dinner.'
Silence. She knew that'd stop his ranting. âYou've asked ⦠Seb, for dinner? Seb Granger?'
âYeah.' Now Evie can't believe what she's just said.
âEvie's asked Seb Granger for dinner,' Nick calls to his wife. She says something back. âYour mother wants to know what time he's coming.'
âNow.'
âNow?'
âYeah, well he might be there before, before I get back.' Evie bites her bottom lip. She can only imagine what her parents' faces look like at this moment. âUm, so is that â'
âYou should've told us earlier.' It's her mother on the phone. âEvie?'
âWell, I only just asked him, Mum.'
âOh? Does he eat chicken?'
âWhat? Yeah, I'm sure he does.'
âHe's not a vegetarian?'
âNo!'
âLook, your father â' Robin mutters something to him. âHang on, I'm putting your father back on.'
âEvie?'
âYes, Dad?' Evie has her eyes squeezed shut. She knows what's coming next.
âIs Seb involved in this ⦠in this Cuza business?'
âYes.'
âEvie! Evie, who else is involved?'
âJust Seb and Poppy.'
âAlex?'
âNo.'
âThis is a big call asking your friends to be involved. Did you think about that?'
âDad,' she lowers her voice. âI'm on the bloody bus. Can we talk about this at home?'
âSeb will be here then.'
âWell, after he leaves,' she replies. âAnyway, it was Victoria's idea.'
âWhat?'
âGetting my friends to help me.'
âWhat?'
âLook, Seb's just helping me with a word puzzle.' It's
stretching the truth, Evie knows, but she has to placate her father in some way. âWe'll just be up in my room looking at â'
âYou're not taking him up to your room!'
âDad! Dad, I'm hanging up. Take a chill pill.'
Evie sits back in the seat and contemplates staying on the bus all night. She could just miss her stop and go the full journey and back. Randwick to Ashfield, Ashfield to Randwick. Over and over, she could enjoy the trip and avoid facing the circus at home. But she knows she couldn't do that to Seb. She wants to see him. Any hassle is worth it.
Â
Seb's voice is coming from the kitchen. Evie's heart starts pumping again. She catches her reflection in the mirror by the front door. She's still wearing the hat. âMy hair,' Evie gasps. âI'm going to have hat hair.' She tiptoes towards the bathroom, hoping there's time to remedy the situation but her father is walking out of the kitchen.
âEvie?' he hisses. âSeb's here.' He gestures to the kitchen. âCome on.'
She pulls the cap back over her head.
âEvie?'
âDad?'
âI want to have a â' But Evie walks past him. She'll settle for hat hair over a lecture and the last thing she needs is for Seb to be stuck in the kitchen with her mother.
âHi, Seb.'
âHey.' He nods to Evie, his hands stuffed in his front pockets.
âHi, Mum.' She pecks her on the cheek before she's even aware of what she's doing.
Robin's caught off guard too. âOh? Evie, hi. I was just asking Seb if he eats chicken.'
âLove chicken,' he answers.
âAnd rice? You eat rice?'
âMum, everyone eats rice!'
âI love rice ⦠too.'
âIt feeds the world, doesn't it?' Robin adds.
Evie wishes the floor would cave in and swallow her mother in one gulp. Nick comes back into the kitchen.
âCome on, Seb,' Evie says.
âDinner'll be ready in an hour.'
âEvie?' her dad calls. But they're already running up the stairs.
âHey,' Seb whispers, âI didn't know I was invited for dinner.'
âSorry.'
âNo, it's good,' he says. âI'm glad. I just wouldn't have looked like such a slob. I pretty much ran all the way here after you rang.'
âSorry.' This time Evie giggles. âYou look fine.'
âNow you're lying.'
Â
Suddenly Evie feels self-conscious with Seb standing in her room. Her magazines, her drawings, her dirty washing, her photos â all on show.
âCool.' Seb points to one of her charcoal drawings. âIs that you?'
âYeah. Self-portrait.'
âThe mouth is wrong.'
âYeah?'
âYour bottom lip's fuller than that.'
âYeah?' Evie's fingers brush across her mouth as a warmth floods her belly.
Evie hasn't really kissed a boy before, or rather, nothing that meant anything. She kissed Alex's cousin a few times in games of Spin the Bottle and last New Year's Eve some guy grabbed her at midnight and stuck his tongue down her tonsils, but, as far as Evie's concerned, that didn't count.
âSo what happened? You saw her and what'd she say?'
âHuh?' Evie's still pondering Seb's observation of her lips. âYeah. Yeah, I saw Paris but she didn't speak to me.'
âSo what happened?'
Evie passes Seb the business card. He looks at it. âIoan P. Stanciu?'
âHe's the man we're looking for. The identity.'
âShit!' Like Evie did, he starts to count the letters.
âThere's twelve, not nine,' she tells him. âThat's the problem.'
âSo what makes you think it's him?'
âI just know it is.'
âBut the letters, the whole anagram thing, doesn't make sense if it's him.' Seb opens Evie's book of messages, placing the business card next to them. âLook. There's no “O” or “U” in what Caz gave us. And this bloke's name has two “I”s. The “H” is wrong, too. We have an “H” and this name doesn't.'
âSo, we're missing something.'
âLike what, Evie?'
âI don't know,' Evie shrugs. âI hoped you'd know.'
Seb flicks through the pages, carefully studying each anagram. With every one, he shakes his head.
âHey,' he turns to a page with a drawing. âWhat's this?'
âThat's the sketch I was telling you and Poppy about. Not the real one. I just made a copy from memory.' The black lines made by Evie's hand show cube upon cube slashed with darker vertical lines. At the front of the first cube is a little circle. Evie's finger traces around its circumference. âExcept I don't remember drawing this circle in the original. But I just knew it was meant to be there.'
She catches Seb looking at her. âI just knew,' she whispers.
He lies down on the floor, leaning on one elbow. âWhat do you think it's meant to be?'
âThe cubes or boxes or whatever they are still remind me of cages.'
âYeah.'
âI don't know what the circle's meant to be, though.'
Evie reclines on the floor too. Their heads are almost touching as they lie in silence, staring at the sketch spread out before them. Their hands are so close. If Evie stretched her middle finger as far as it could go, the tip would just reach the curve between Seb's thumb and index finger.
Evie stares at her finger, willing it to move. When she looks over at Seb, he's watching her. âAre you going to take your hat off?' he grins.
Evie rolls onto her back and starts giggling. âAw shit, Seb, what are we going to do about this?'
âAbout this or about ⦠us?' Seb answers. His eyes haven't left hers.
The blood seeps into Evie's face. Her cheeks burn hot. âUm?' She rolls back onto her stomach. âUm?'
A sharp knock on the door interrupts the moment. âEvie?' The tone in her mother's voice is different. Quickly, Seb sits up while Evie opens the door.
âEvie, I need to speak to you. Now,' she says. âSeb, I'm sorry, just excuse us for a moment.'
Evie pulls the door closed behind her. âWhat?' she snaps.
âVictoria's just rung. Nora Cuza has called her,' Robin speaks in a loud whisper. âShe's furious.'
âWhat about?'
âAbout you visiting Paris today.'
âOh?'
âI mean, you did see her, didn't you?'
âYeah.'
Her father appears at the top of the stairs. âVictoria's going to ring her. Then call back,' he tells them. âHopefully that'll sort it out.'
âI don't get it,' Evie starts. âWhat ⦠what did Victoria say?'
âIs Seb in there?' her father asks, pointing to the bedroom.
Evie nods. He shakes his head and opens her bedroom door. âI think we all need to have a talk,' he says, walking in.
Seb stands there, his hands in his front pockets again. He shrugs at Evie.
âParis's mum has hit the roof,' Evie tells him, shrugging back.
âIt's serious, kids,' Nick says. âShe's threatening legal action if you approach Paris again.'
âBut Dad, I didn't even talk to her. She doesn't like speaking, to anyone. I just stood there â'
âIt doesn't matter, Evie. If Nora Cuza doesn't want you approaching her daughter, then there's really nothing â'
âBut I didn't do anything!' Evie throws her arms up. âGod, Dad. I did nothing!'
âSeb, did you see this girl with Evie?'