Authors: Ilsa Evans
Ilsa Evans lives in a partially renovated house in the Dandenongs, east of Melbourne. She shares her home with her three children, two dogs, several fish, a multitude of sea-monkeys and a psychotic cat.
She is currently completing a PhD at Monash University on the long-term effects of domestic violence and writes fiction on the weekends.
Odd Socks
is her third novel.
Also by Ilsa Evans
Spin Cycle
Drip Dry
I
l s a
 E
v a n s
Pan Macmillan Australia
To my father,
Maurice Vivian Evans
(1927â1988)
I wish I could have told you . . .
First published 2005 in Macmillan by Pan Macmillan Australia Pty Limited This Pan edition published 2006 by Pan Macmillan Australia Pty Limited St Martins Tower, 31 Market Street, Sydney
Copyright © Ilsa Evans 2005
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
National Library of Australia cataloguing-in-publication data:
Evans, Ilsa. Odd socks.
ISBN 978 0 330 42219 2.
ISBN 0 330 42219 7.
I. Title.
A823.4
Typeset in Bembo by Post Pre-press Group Printed in Australia by McPherson's Printing Group
The characters and events in this book are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Papers used by Pan Macmillan Australia Pty Ltd are natural, recyclable products made from wood grown in sustainable forests. The manufacturing processes conform to the environmental regulations of the country of origin.
These electronic editions published in 2005 by Pan Macmillan Australia Pty Ltd
1 Market Street, Sydney 2000
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
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form (electronic, digital, optical, mechanical) or by any means (photocopying,
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publisher.
Odd Socks
Ilsa Evans
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Despite the efforts of
the following:
Lately I have come to realise that books are written not so much
because
of the efforts of many, but
despite
the efforts of many. Therefore, here is my list of those people/animals/inanimate objects despite whom this book was still written.
This book was written despite the fact that children expect three meals a day, preferably served in a brightly coloured box or wrapped in butcher paper. And despite the tendency of children to get sick every time you have (a) given them too many meals in brightly coloured boxes or wrapped in butcher paper; (b) a deadline; and/or (c) a particularly important meeting you were keen to attend without vomit on your lapel and a feverish child in tow.
This book was written despite the fact that all three of my particular offspring insist on using my computer despite ample evidence it loathes them. Thus, whenever I have carelessly left work up that hasn't yet been saved, the house echoes with phrases such as âBut I was
only
looking!'
This book was written despite the fact that these children, although very lovable, are all a tad faulty and therefore require regular visits to optometrists, speech therapists, podiatrists, dentists, ear, nose and throat guys, etc. And don't let's forget the mandatory activities! Tennis, karate, saxophone, swimming, pottery, chess . . .
This book was written despite phone calls from people I don't even know selling me things I don't even want and refusing to understand this is an invasion of privacy (you're all going on a list of companies I will never use!). And despite phone calls from people I
do
know, who, apart from all evidence to the contrary, remain convinced that I enjoy a chat.
This book was written despite bloody housework â and the bills to pay, washers to replace, walls to paint, bulbs to either change or plant (depending on the bulb) â and the myriad other incidentals that fill our days.
This book was written despite my inability to set mousetraps without endangering a digit or two, and the Band-Aids that make it very difficult to type efficiently.
This book was written despite ex-husbands. Full stop.
This book was written despite the fact that we own the stupidest dog in the world, who firmly believes that peeing on my bed is an expression of love. And despite the fact that we also have a cat against whom we should apply for an apprehended violence order. And despite the fact that some entrepreneurial possums have established a singles bar in the roof and it appears to be a thumping success.
This book was written despite the ongoing battle for âme' time, and all the things, like tennis, champagne, good books, friends, family and the occasional convivial lunch, which lure me away from what I
should
be doing.
Despite you all, because of you all, about you all â here is the book.
Handy Household Hint No IV:
Various stains of labour, including afterbirth,
cannot
be removed from pale-coloured carpets. Therefore, one is well advised to avoid the set of circumstances leading to the stain occurring.
Rafter's serve comes whistling across at a severe angle into the forehand court, and I've got to perform a desperate lunge to reach it. Then, because I've been driven so far out, the most logical place to hit it seems to be past that Minogue female at the net. So I execute a
perfect
sideline that screams down the tramlines and raises chalk when it lands. She shuffles her feet and looks embarrassed. But stuff sportsmanship, that little blonde had it coming â I call it
really
bad cricket to try to distract your opposition by not wearing knickers.
âGame over,' announces the umpire solemnly. âNewcombe and Diamond lead five games to love. Diamond to serve.'
âFan-bloody-
tastick
, Terry!' Newk comes trotting over and slaps my raised hand with a grin. âSheer brilliance!'
I smile happily back while the cheering in the crowd turns into a methodical chant of my name: Ter
ry
, Ter
ry
, Ter
ry
. As the ball-boy bounces a couple towards me for my serve, the chanting gradually dies off â except for one persistent female fan, who is not so much chanting as
screaming
my name. Her noise
makes it impossible to concentrate, so I practise my serving motion and take a few seconds to admire Newk's posterior as he bends over at the net. Not too shabby at
all
. The umpire sternly asks for silence in the stands, but it makes no difference. Instead the incessant screeching just gets louder. And louder.
I sit up in bed with a jerk â or rather, I sit up rapidly but by myself as I've been divorced for years. Newk's butt recedes as I fight my way out of the cotton wool of sleep with just the piercing shrieks accompanying me every step of the way. And then I'm out, staring around my bedroom groggily while I try to remember where I am, when I am â and what the hell is making all that racket.
My first clue is the realisation that it is not my actual name being screamed, just âMum,
Mum
,
Muuum
!' over and over from downstairs. Which rules out the chances of it being a persistent fan who has followed me back from the land of Nod. And, as I'll bet very few burglars accompany their nefarious exploits with loud pleas for their maternal parent, it only leaves one candidate: my twenty-one year old daughter, Bronte. Who just happens to be eight and a half months pregnant.
â
Mum â help,
help!!!
'
A sudden surge of panic catapults me out of bed and I gasp as the icy chill of the mid-July night slaps me vigorously, causing goose bumps to break out across the length and breadth of my naked body. As my breath puffs out into plumes of mist that hover in the air before me, I hurriedly pull on my white candlewick dressing-gown and look around for my slippers.
â
Mum, Mum, Mum, Muuuum!
'
âI'm coming!' I yell, forgetting about the slippers as I tie my dressing-gown cord securely and race out of the bedroom to attack the spiral staircase two steps at a time. âI'm coming!'
Just past halfway down I realise light is flooding out from the lounge-room, so I hike up my dressing-gown and take the last four steps in a single jump before sprinting in that direction. As I approach, the screaming suddenly stops and is replaced by a low keening noise, almost primeval in intensity, that sends a frisson of fear vibrating up my spine. Then, arriving at the doorway out of breath, I take in the scene before me with one incredulous glance.
Because there, on my pale moss-coloured, low-pile lounge-room carpet and lying flat on her back, is my one and only daughter. Which is probably how she got
into
this mess in the first place, but that's neither here nor there at the moment. Especially since it looks suspiciously like the culmination might be in process. Dressed in a pastel pink and blue maternity tracksuit, her knees are bent and she is staring straight at the ceiling with her hands clasped across her very pregnant belly. The droning, guttural hum she is emitting ceases when she registers that I've arrived in the doorway and, raising her head, she looks at me out of puffy, reddened eyes while holding out one hand in a pleading gesture.
âMum,
Mum
!' Bronte starts to cry piteously. âMum â oh god, oh
god
.'
âBronte!' I break out of my trance and move rapidly across the lounge-room towards her, squatting to take her outstretched hand and holding it tight. âBronte! What's going on? And what on earth are you doing
here
?'
âI thought . . . I just thought I'd â' Bronte's face suddenly goes pale and her mouth opens in a stretched, silent scream as her back arches and her body grows tense. I grasp her hand firmly to show support but she immediately grips it back with such unbelievable tightness that it cuts off my blood supply. My face goes pale too.
After a minute or two, Bronte's body begins to relax a little.
At the same time, her mouth closes slightly and she begins to pant shallowly and rapidly. I wrest my hand away and shake it to get some circulation back.
âBronte, we need to get you to the hospital,' I say, chewing my lip with concern â for her, for the baby, and for my pale moss-coloured, low-pile carpet.
âNo, no. I can't go,' pants Bronte rhythmically as she claws at my arm, trying to regain my hand. âAnd it's too late, anyway. And I can't get hold of Nick â I've tried and tried. And it's coming, Mum â it's coming
now
.'
âAll the more reason to get in the car quickly. Come on!'
âMum, it hurts â it
really
hurts,' Bronte sobs as she wipes her nose with one pastel-pink tracksuit sleeve. âMake it
stop
!'
âThey'll make it stop in the hospital.' I try to help her up but she resists with a considerable amount of strength for someone in the midst of labour. âCome
on
, Bronte!'
âNo! I just want it to stop! And I want Nick!'
âThey'll give you nice drugs in hospital, you know.' I stop tugging her and try a little gentle persuasion. âAnd the nice drugs'll be much better than Nick.'
Instead of answering, Bronte stiffens as yet another contraction begins to rack her body. And this time there's nothing silent about it as she lets out a wail that sends sharp chills through me. I lean forwards and hold her shoulders securely because I really don't know what else to do. As the contraction reaches its climax, she sits bolt upright and stares rigidly ahead whilst her breath whistles through her clenched teeth. Then the whistling gradually turns to panting as the pain starts to recede and she collapses back onto the floor, crying again.
âCome on now, Bronte.' I let go of her shoulders and, slipping my hands under her arms, try to pull her up off the floor. âCome on, we have to get to the car!'
âLeave me alone!'
âCome
on
!' I give up trying to lift her and instead start dragging her backwards, an inch at a time. âA tad of cooperation wouldn't go astray, you know!'
âI said leave me
alone
,' Bronte shrieks as she digs her heels in, âor I'll have it in your freaking car!'
âWhat?' I let go of her quickly. âYou'll what?'
âHave it in your freaking car!' she repeats hysterically as she wraps her arms around her lower abdomen and groans. âAnd I've changed my mind, anyway â I don't
want
to do this anymore! At all!'
âI'm calling an ambulance.' I get up without making even one sarcastic crack about how it's a bit late for regrets now, which just goes to show how worried I am. She can't possibly have the baby here â I don't know the first thing about what to do or how to do it. Because it's not like I was paying attention when Bronte herself was born â all I remember, between heady injections of potent painkillers, are my attempts to rally the medical staff with a rousing rendition of âShe'll be coming round the mountain when she comes'. And I can't even remember the words now. I pat Bronte on the shoulder reassuringly and head over to the phone by the armchair.
âMum! Don't
leave
me!'
âI'm not. I'm ringing an ambulance,' I reply soothingly. Now that I'm taking decisive action and feel a little more in control, I realise how cold it is down here. I also register that for some time my bare toes have been sending regular little distress signals that have been washed away by the adrenalin. Accordingly, I lean across, flick the central heating thermostat to full, and then flop down next to the phone and try to cover my feet with my dressing-gown hem. I pick up the receiver and the doorbell rings. For a second I stare at the phone in astonishment because it's never made
that
sound
before, and then the doorbell rings again and I grasp the fact there's actually somebody at the door. At four o'clock in the morning.
I put the phone down and hurry over to the front door instead, glancing quickly at Bronte, who appears to be mid-contraction again. While I try unsuccessfully to smooth my hair, I send up a brief prayer that it's someone useful. Like perhaps one of those multiskilled male doctors from
All Saints
, who are apparently capable of performing everything from a facelift to brain surgery. One measly baby would be chicken-feed. He'd probably deliver it with one hand while the two of us sit on the couch, having a glass of wine and a convivial little chat. After I do my hair, that is.
But it's not one of the good doctors and, in fact, it's not even close. It's my plumpish, thirty-something neighbour, Stephen, dressed in a pair of black satin pyjamas with black fluffy scuffs on his feet and a fluorescent green beanie on his head.
â
Teresa!
' Stephen grasps my hand, his normally ruddy complexion pale with concern. âAre you okay, schnooks? I heard screaming! What on
earth
is happening?'
If the situation wasn't already so fraught, and if Bronte hadn't chosen that moment to begin crying again, I probably would have burst out laughing. Because, of all the people I know, Stephen is almost certainly the most useless in the current circumstances. Apart from the fact his intimate knowledge of females is non-existent, he's the first to admit that even ads for sanitary napkins make him feel faint. But beggars can't be choosers, so I reach out, grab his arm and drag him across the threshold, shutting the door firmly to cut off any escape route.
âI
need
you.' I lead him towards the lounge-room. âBronte's having the baby and you'll have to hold her hand while I ring an ambulance.'
âWhat!' Stephen grabs the doorframe with both hands, plants his fluffy feet firmly and starts shaking his head as soon as he spots Bronte lying on her back next to the couch. âOh, no. Oh, no. Anything but
that
â because I can't. I just can't!'
âWell, you have to.'
âWhere's the father then?' Stephen looks at me accusingly, as if I've just buried him under the hydrangeas. Which, tempted as I have been over the past eight months, I haven't. It'd be far too messy.
âDon't know and don't much care.' I leave him in the doorway and head back to the phone, calling over my shoulder, âCome on, Stephen, you don't need to deliver it! Just hold her bloody hand.'
âMum!' Bronte hefts herself up onto one elbow and fastens me with a glittering eye. âI want this to
stop
â NOW!'
âI
really
need you.' I look at him beseechingly as I pick up the receiver. âPlease?'
âOh . . . all right! All right!' Stephen grimaces at me and then lets go of the doorframe and, flexing his fingers as if he is about to perform surgery, advances across the room towards Bronte. âNow then â'
âPiss off!'
âWell! No need for language, love,' Stephen replies as he touches her shoulder gingerly with a fingertip. âI know! What about an aspirin?
That
should help things.'
âI don't
want
a freaking aspirin!'
âHow about two?'
I try to tune them out while I dial 000 â and get an engaged tone. I sit for a minute, tapping my fingers on the phone and staring at Bronte, who is clasping her stomach and groaning loudly while watching me over her shoulder. After taking his beanie off for a moment and running his fingers agitatedly through his dark hair, Stephen is now squatting
down by Bronte's side and ineffectually patting her while pulling weird faces at me. I think he's trying to convey that he is out of his depth. But tough luck, so am I. I try 000 again and this time I get put straight through to a rather nasal female operator who asks me brusquely whether I want police, fire brigade or ambulance. I request the latter, give her my details, describe the situation and hang up. By this time, Bronte is in the midst of yet another contraction and Stephen has turned an ivory colour that looks positively sickly under his fluorescent beanie. I hurry back over to them just as the spasm starts to leave Bronte's body and she flops back, quivering.
âAre you all right?' I ask inanely as I kneel down next to her and grab her hand. âCan I get you anything?'
âJust air,' says Stephen, standing up and putting his hand delicately to his forehead. âI need some air.'
âNot you, dork!
Her!
'
âTowels!' states Stephen as he clicks his fingers emphatically. âTowels! Hot water! That's what we need!'
âWhat for?' I query, mainly because I've always wanted to know.
âFor â um, well . . . ' His face falls. âI'm not quite sure.'
âExactly.' I turn back to Bronte. âThe ambulance'll be here soon. Just hang on.'