Back to Fourth Adjustment (Scott)
Friday July 30
Saturday July 31
Sunday August 1
Monday August 2
Friday July 16
Bleak morning, rain and cold, with the common room full and stinking with wet. Richard hauled off his jacket and it dropped with a slap. He slumped down on the couch next to Scott and Adam, obviously tired. ‘I shouldn’t have come in today. Man.’
Scott raised an eyebrow. ‘You been drinking?’
Richard
shook his head. ‘There have been many excuses. But no. Stayed up real
late doing, I don’t know. Doing not very much at all. Just couldn’t get
to sleep.’
‘Is that stress I see on your brow, Mr King? Bloody hell. Thought you could handle anything.’
‘It just seems really soon. It is really soon.’
‘Two weeks, huh?’
Adam nodded. ‘That is soon. Wow. Are you nervous?’
Richard
didn’t answer. Scott followed his gaze, dripping classmates in swearing
circles as rain beat against the windows, and outside was the woodwork
shop and then the field, rain-churned, heavy. Eventually he replied.
‘Things will be different over there.’
Movement
by the door caught their eye. ‘Well, look who’s here,’ Scott said as
Dennis came in. They all watched as he went sideways to join Shane by
the stereo.
‘Hey,’ Richard said. ‘A thing. Caster are playing the Friday before the ball, before I go. I bought four tickets for us.’
Scott raised his eyebrows. ‘Are you serious? Caster are playing?’
‘Yep. It’ll be huge, and we’re going.’
‘How much do we owe you?’ Adam asked.
‘No, fuck, this is on me. Farewell gift.’
Scott broke out in a grin. ‘Damn! Thanks man! You said four tickets? Who, Lauren?’
Richard shook his head. ‘I’m going to invite Dennis. Is that cool?’
Adam nodded. ‘Yeah, great idea.’
Richard looked at Scott. Scott shrugged. ‘What am I, the wanker? Yeah, go ask him.’
Scott
watched as Richard went over. He wasn’t sure what the hell to make of
Dennis any more. It was like he’d gone over the dark side or something.
Whatever made him happy.
They
were only a few steps away, and Scott could hear everything. Shane
punched the air enthusiastically. ‘Richie Richie, is a boofie, don’t
look back he’s getting goofy!’
‘Hey Rich,’ Dennis said, ‘how are things?’
‘Good enough. You guys?’
‘Boofie! I made that up.’
‘We’re sweet, man. Wet, I guess.’
‘I’m like a condom!’ Shane rubbed his head vigorously.
‘Hey, Den, are you busy next Friday night?’
‘Why, what’s on?’
Scott watched as Richard adjusted around Shane’s presence. ‘A small farewell outing. The old foursome one last time.’
‘Boofie!’ yelled Shane. ‘Me wanna be old foursome! Ha ha ha ha!’
Dennis nodded. ‘Yeah, sure. I’m not busy.’
‘Good. I’ve bought tickets to Caster.’
Dennis was impressed. ‘Hell. Big man. Hey, don’t you guys have a game?’
‘We’re gonna go in afterwards.’
‘Yeah, that sounds excellent. Count me in. Hey, we’ll be along to watch tonight, too. Finals, huh?’
‘Finals,’ Richard said with a grin.
Tonight.
Scott took a deep breath. Lauren was coming to watch. That meant he
needed a plan. He’d fucked everything up last night, but that was okay.
Tomorrow was another day, and he was going to fire on all cylinders this
time. Nothing could possibly go wrong.
Damon
Taylor was shouting in Scott’s face. ‘What the hell do you think you’re
doing? Is there a big S on your underwear I’m not aware of? Get the
hell off the court and sit your ass down. I’ll deal with you later on.
For christ’s sake!’
Scott’s
face was burning red. Shame. He hated this feeling more than anything
else. He hated how it made him hate himself so bad.
He deserved every word. He didn’t know what he’d been doing.
Lauren was in the stands. With Dennis.
Lauren was in the stands with Dennis.
Lauren was in the stands with Dennis.
They weren’t going to win.
Disastrous.
They
should have won. Scott knew they should have won. But they lost. He
screwed up and they lost. Oh, man. He wanted to die. Death wouldn’t be
so bad.
Lauren. And Dennis. Dennis and Lauren. Lauren said, ‘Almost.’
Scott rubbed his neck. ‘We should have won that. I played like crap.’
‘Ease up, Collins. You did okay.’
Fuck you, Dennis.
‘It wasn’t my best game.’ Scott smiled to show he wasn’t taking it too seriously, although he was.
Richard
and Adam joined them, shaking heads and exchanging slightly rueful
pleasantries. Scott tried to get his heart slowed down and his head
straight. Dennis and Lauren, apparently. This wasn’t part of the plan.
Around
them were the dregs of the crowd. Through the door to the gym were a
couple of the sixth formers, laughing noisily and taking no-look shots
at the basket.
Shane
came up to them, bopping his arms about with enthusiasm. He went up to
Adam and poked him in the belly, giggling. Dennis and Lauren laughed and
joined in the chat, and Adam smiled too, but thinly, obviously upset by
the loss.
Fuck you, Dennis, and Shane, as well. The pair of you.
James appeared at Scott’s side. ‘Damn. This sucks.’
Scott nodded. ‘I fucked up.’
‘Ah. Don’t worry about that. We all have bad days. Next week, huh?’
Scott
was glad of the distraction from Dennis and Lauren. Phil came over to
join them, and following along was Paula. Paula! As well! Everyone was
here to see his humiliation. Splendid. She looked younger here than she
had in the club. She caught Scott’s eye and smiled at him, and he gave
her a nod.
‘Hey,
what are you guys up to now?’ James asked. ‘We’re just gonna have a
quiet one at home, watch a video or something. Come over if you want.
I’m not in the mood for a party.’
Scott
blanked on this. He wasn’t in the mood. He wanted to crawl under a
rock. Actually, he wanted to drag Lauren under the rock with him so he’d
at least get a moment alone with her. Fucking Dennis.
Richard stepped in beside Scott. ‘Hey, what’s happening?’
Phil clapped. ‘Richard! You were devastating out there!’
‘Not
quite enough, though.’ He shrugged. Scott wasn’t going to argue. He
hadn’t been at his best. But if they had to rely on Richard being at his
best, they were screwed for semifinals anyway, because he’d be gone by
then.
‘Not
like this clown,’ Phil continued, indicating James, ‘he shouldn’t even
have shown up tonight. Couldn’t shoot, couldn’t defend, couldn’t pass…’
James started slapping his face but somehow Phil kept talking through
it. ‘Couldn’t do shit all except turn over the ball…’
‘You played well, James,’ said Richard, and because it was Richard the discussion ended there. ‘Hey, Paula.’
Paula smiled. ‘See, Phil? Everyone knows me.’ She glanced at Scott.
Phil admonished her. ‘You’re not as grown up as you think you are, little girl.’
‘Am too,’ she replied, then giggled. ‘I know precisely how grown up I am.’
‘And how grown up is that, exactly?’
‘Now wouldn’t you like to know?’
James said, ‘Video at my place. You guys should come.’
Richard glanced at Scott. ‘Yeah, that sounds cool. I’ll see how we go. See you outside?’
Phil
and Paula headed out, and James went into the changing rooms. They’d
only been gone a second when Shane appeared between Richard and Scott,
gently swerving his pelvis. ‘Ooh, that Paula. Do you reckon he’ll score
her tonight, Richie?’
‘Don’t ask me,’ Richard said.
Dennis joined them. ‘Why, you want a piece?’
‘I
could take a number! Ha ha ha! She is a fine piece of ass! Wasted on
Phil. Not that I don’t love the guy! But I wanna love the girl, you
know?’
‘She is cute,’ Richard said.
‘I’ll make her bark,’ Shane said, slapping his own behind and thrusting his hips back and forth. ‘Oh baby baby!’
Dennis
shook his head. ‘Good luck to him. Hey, come here. Sorry, guys, I just
want to demonstrate to Shane that it’s actually quite difficult to get
the ball in the hoop, you know?’
Shane growled, letting himself be led away. ‘Ha! I spit on you! How hard can it possibly be?’
When they had gone, Richard put a hand on Scott’s shoulder. ‘It’s not good news.’
Scott felt a familiar sinking feeling, although it seemed to be sinking deeper than it usually managed.
Adam and Lauren were talking. Adam broke off to beam at Scott. ‘So do you have a date for the ball organised yet?’
Oh, fucking hell. ‘No.’
‘You’d better get on to it, then,’ Adam continued. ‘Dennis asked Lauren! Isn’t that great? We’ll have such a good time!’
Scott
looked at Lauren, and Lauren looked at Scott, and she nodded at him,
and he had no idea what was going on in her head, and the last layers of
his self-directed bullshit got burned away.
Dennis.
Fucking Dennis.
A wild roar erupted from behind them. Everyone turned to look as Dennis bounced towards them, laughing hysterically.
‘What?’ Scott demanded.
Dennis pointed over his shoulder, gasping for breath. ‘Shane just hit a half court shot on his first try!’
Shane
stood at midcourt flexing his biceps, and his distinctive grin-shaped
voice echoed: ‘Francis uber alles! Ha ha ha ha ha! Francis uber alles!’
Scott went home.
He wasn’t angry, really. He was sad. He was unhappy and sad and it was all his fault, he was sure of it.
Dennis
and Lauren? Where had that come from? How had he not seen that coming?
He should have seen that coming. What was going wrong?
He sat in his room, in the dark, brooding.
Dennis,
who could have his pick of partners to the ball, had chosen Lauren.
Dennis knew Scott liked her, he’d called him on it before. So what was
this?
He
couldn’t find any anger. Not yet. Maybe what he was feeling was what
you get before anger really gets going. Because while he wasn’t fired up
with rage, he was, very definitely, not happy.
All
Dennis had done was ask a girl to a ball. He had perfect plausible
deniability. Scott couldn’t say anything because then Dennis would win.
Was it because Scott had given up on him? That big argument in town that time, was this revenge for that?
Dennis was making a point. He was trying to show that Scott had made the wrong choice.
The
phone rang and Scott sat up, surprised. He wasn’t in the mood. It might
be one of those people wanting his father, always so angry at reaching
the child and not the man. He sat there and let it ring on, waiting to
see if his father would get it. There were no sounds of motion from the
TV room. Seven rings now. Must be someone who knew the family to hold on
so long.
Scott went downstairs and took the call on the tenth ring. ‘Hello?’
‘Hey, slowpoke! What, did I get you off the toilet?’
Scott grinned, his mood dispelled. ‘Hey Sands, how are you?’
‘I’m pretty good, big bro. Well, kind of good, I sort of sprained my ankle today playing netball.’
‘Oh yeah? Why’d you do that?’
‘Oh
I don’t know, because I wanted to see how far I could twist it? What do
you think, it was an accident, doofus! How about you then?’
‘All right,’ Scott said. ‘How’s mum?’
Sandra sighed. ‘Don’t ask so I don’t have to say. How’s Dad?’
‘Ditto. Why are you calling, anyway? Not to bitch about family.’
‘No, that’s what Christmas is for.’
‘Huh. Little sister, you have been practising.’
‘Lots of stupid boys at school, good to practise on.’
‘Lucky you.’
‘The
opposite, actually. Look, do you have the number for Auntie Cathy’s
bach? We need to talk to her and she’s there and we can’t find it.’
‘Oh, really? Hang on… got a pen?’ Scott read the number out. ‘Why is Mum after Cathy?’
‘Don’t
ask me. Some favour to be asked, no doubt. God save us all. Thanks bro,
anyway. Hey, that reminds me, have you had your formal yet?’
Scott’s eyes narrowed. ‘How does that remind you of my ball?’
‘Shut up! Okay, so Mum reminded me today and said I had to ask you. Is it soon?’
‘Yeah, it’s soon. But don’t make a big deal out of it, okay?’
‘You
kidding? It’s a big deal! We want to see lots of photos, okay? Scottie
in a tux, babe on his arm… Who are you going with? Anyone I know?’
Sandra waited for Scott to answer, and she noticed his hesitation. ‘Are
there complications?’
‘Yeah, sort of. The girl I was going to ask, I got beaten to.’
‘Bummer! So get over her and ask someone else. I mean, hel-lo! Formal!’
‘That’s what I’m thinking.’ Scott didn’t actually know what he was thinking.
‘Let me guess, you’d been planning on this target girl for ages, and now she’s out of the running you’re stuck for ideas?’
‘Fuck, you have been practicing.’
‘Women’s intuition. Who else is there to ask?’
‘I don’t know if there is anyone.’
‘That’s bullshit. There must be someone. Stop being such a prick.’
Scott heard himself say, ‘Well, maybe.’
‘I knew it! Ask her. No excuses. Do it now, hang up on me and call her. Now!’
‘Now?’
‘Easy, it goes like this, hi this is Scott wanna go to my formal?’ Sandra giggled. ‘Now now now! Bye big brother!’
‘Bye, little sister.’
‘Sometimes I wonder how the hell you get by without me telling you what to do,’ Sandra said. ‘Now call her!’ She hung up.
Scott wasn’t too sure about calling her.
He thought he might go around to her house instead.
She’d
smiled, recognising him, leaning in so he could hear her. ‘Oh yeah, hi!
I’ve seen you around, Scott, right? Are you going to buy me a drink?’
Scott
could smell her perfume when she leaned in close. Her arms were smooth
and pale and bare to the neck except for spaghetti-string dress straps. A
silver necklace, fragile-thin. The dress almost went down to her knees
and at the top displayed no cleavage, but it caught the light in strange
ways, shimmering metallic blue as it clung to her curves. Her eyes were
on him when he looked back up.
She drank her cocktail in delicate sips. ‘Thanks. I like it.’
He
watched her out of the corner of his eye. She was very pretty. She
caught him looking. He glanced away, then leaned back in, his lips
almost brushing the curve of her ear. ‘That perfume you’re wearing is
great!’
‘It’s my favourite,’ she said back to him.
‘May’s got such a thing for Dennis. I guess he is pretty hot.’ Paula
put her hand on the inside of Scott’s elbow. ‘Don’t you think?’
‘He kinda makes it hard for the rest of us to make an impression.’
‘Oh, I don’t know,’ Paula replied, curving like a cat in her little blue dress, ‘you’re not doing too badly.’
Arriving
at the Travers house, thoughts circling. He rode his bicycle around the
back and left it leaning against the house. He saw the pool through the
trees. What he’d seen that night, that party. Waking up in an armchair,
sleep-fugged, drunk, deciding to head home. Pausing, queasy, with his
hands on the handlebars. Looking through the trees.
Dennis
getting into the pool. A girl, naked, swaying drunk, getting in the
water with him. Them embracing, he kept watching knowing it was wrong,
embracing but Dennis held his head back from her. He held his head away.
Scott looked away from the pool. Betrayal both ways, then. He went inside.
It
was very strange to be in James’ house without a party going on. He
went into the kitchen, and Paula and James were in there. James was
organising beers, by the looks, while Paula just leaned against the
bench restlessly. She spotted him first, and smiled.
James checked him out. ‘Didn’t think you were coming, dude.’
‘Yeah, I thought I should. Is that cool?’
‘Sure. Give us a hand with these, eh?’
Scott
went to help with the carrying. As he did so he turned back to Paula,
who was waiting for him to look at her again. He found that
indescribably attractive.
In
the lounge, waiting, were Richard and Phil, already started on the
fruits of the munchie run – popcorn, chippies, other shit. Scott sat
down on the second couch. A moment later, Paula slid into place next to
him.
‘Could you pass me some of that chocolate stuff?’ she asked him.
Phil sniggered. ‘Yeah baby, we know what you like!’
‘Geez,
Phil! Do you always have to talk to me like that? Pervert!’ She stuck
out her tongue, which only seemed to encourage him. ‘Protect me, Scott!’
Scott, surprised, looked at Phil, who didn’t seem to notice.
James distributed beers, dimmed the lights and settled into the big armchair. ‘Let’s get this show on the road then.’
Scott
took a swig. He looked sideways at Paula, who was dimly lit by the
television. She was impossibly pretty. Genuinely gorgeous by anyone’s
definition. Any idiot could see that Paula was hot stuff. And she was
sitting next to him and smiling at him and asking him to protect her.
She was flirting with him. He hadn’t needed to even do anything.
Maybe Dennis had the right idea after all. Just go for it and let things fall into place around you.
After
the movie, everyone was sitting around, talking. The beers had kept
coming, which had got everyone nicely relaxed, and the disappointment of
the basketball game seemed quite distant. Plans and strategies and
effortful action all seemed faintly ridiculous. Scott was returning from
his second trip to the toilet when he came across Paula in the kitchen.
She saw him and grinned.
‘Hey, you. I want you to entertain me now.’
‘Sure,’
Scott said, pausing at the benchtop. He leaned against it and looked at
her. ‘Not sure what I can do to keep you amused.’
‘I hope you’re not still brooding over that whole basketball thing?’
‘Nah. Well, maybe a bit.’ He thought about it. ‘Nah.’
‘Great! I think you’d gloom up the evening if you kept that up, huh?’
‘Yeah.’
Paula bit her lip. ‘So, do you want to see my room?’
They
went upstairs. Paula held the door open for him, then closed it. She
kept the lights off, and walked over the window, drawing the curtains
wide open. ‘Do you want to come on to my balcony?’
From
the balcony there was a great view up into the sky, which seemed
particularly full of stars. Scott looked down. He could see the front
garden, green and fresh. He had an irrational urge to leap off the
balcony and land in the grass. He thought that if he did, he might sink
into the soil and become part of it.
‘I’m glad you’re here,’ Paula said. ‘I would have been so bored without you coming.’
‘Surely
not,’ Scott said. He was tempted to say more, but settled on holding
his tongue. It had worked so far. He was just rolling with things,
easing back and letting it happen. It seemed to be working fine.
It was working better than fine. He’d never felt so successful in his life.
Hell, go for it. ‘Do you want to come to the senior ball with me?’
‘Okay,’ Paula said, ‘I’d love to.’
‘Cool.’ Scott thought about it for a second. ‘You don’t think James will mind, do you?’
‘Pooh to James, he can’t stop me.’
‘No he can’t. Awesome. I think I have to leap off this balcony now.’ He grinned at her. ‘Give me a kiss for luck.’
Paula leaned over and kissed him on the cheek.
He put his hands on the railing and vaulted over it. The earth rose to meet him.
Thursday July 15
Training.
Coach
Taylor gathered them in. ‘All right, listen up. We’re doing fine so
far. We’re sitting in fourth place, but don’t be fooled, we’re going to
need to fight hard to get into the semis. There’s two games left, Taita
and Naenae. Taita are tomorrow, they’re tough but we can take them down.
Then Naenae. Naenae is a good team. The only game they lost was to Hutt
High who are also at the top of the table.’
‘We can take them down,’ Lio said to the group. ‘No worries.’
‘We
need to win at least one of these two games if we want into the finals.
Depending on how other teams do, we might need to win both. The season
is riding on these games. But be certain of this, we can do it. If we
want it enough. Do you want it?’
‘Hell yeah!’ Lio clapped hard, the echo ringing in the high ceiling of the gymnasium. ‘Finals, guys!’
‘That’s
right, get it in your heads. All of you get ready for finals. Get ready
for getting there. Come on, hands in, everyone. I want to hear that
desire right now, I want it to ring the rafters and shake the fucking
floorboards, finals on three…’
The
team was psyched up. They sprinted through warm-ups and passing drills,
slapping hands, calling support. A good win over Viard in the previous
week had knocked out that contender for their spot. Their form had come
together at just the right time. Scott had never expected the team to do
this well. It was a good thing. He took the ball, blazed down the court
and dished off to Viane to lay it in. There were encouraging claps and
shouts from the others, spirits were high and he couldn’t think of any
other group that had made him feel like this. Happy and succeeding. He’d
even been getting more game time and thriving in it, pulling down
rebounds and putting up good shots. Things were going his way. Going
their way.
‘Come
on!’ Lio called. ‘Work it, work it!’ Richard sprinted down the court to
be fed the ball by James, leaping high and laying in the ball, slapping
the backboard on the way down. Lio was hyped. ‘Yeeeah, Rich! Yeah boy!’
Scott watched Richard come back down to earth, remembering how high
Viane had jumped just before, and then watched Chris climb a good few
steps with his jumping lay-up. There was no simpler proof that morale
was high.
Adam
was running the floor now. His game had come a long way, to the point
where he was pretty much indispensable. He still didn’t score too much
or block too much or do anything too much, but he hardly ever made a
mistake and other teams feared him. Kelvin brought the ball down centre
court to the top of the arc where a precise bounce pass fed the ball
right into Adam’s hands. Adam took a single step and leapt. Scott
watched. In fact everyone was watching as if they all knew it was
coming, as though the look on Adam’s face had warned them. Adam sailed
up into the air and brought the ball up two-handed and jammed it through
the hoop. He hung there on the rim, above everyone, out of reach, and
then he dropped to the floor. The ball bounced away.
Lio
called out, ‘Oh bay-bee!’ and Scott was laughing and the drill stepped
up a notch, intensity rising, people jumping higher and pushing harder,
and Scott got that feeling. They were going to go all the way, Scott
knew it, everyone knew it, and there was no point in ever looking back
again.
‘I
am fucked,’ Scott said as they trudged into the changing rooms. The
wood-panelled room stank of sweat and mud and the lights were broken
again. Sunlight pushed through from the shower run but not enough to
pull the heavy coolness from the dark. Adam collapsed on the seating
bench by his bag and Scott paced around, trying to relax his legs. ‘I am
absolutely fucked.’
Adam sniffed. ‘That was really hard.’
‘You’re
both little wusses,’ Richard said, wiping sweat from his chest with the
sodden T-shirt. ‘The first fifteen do worse than that every day.’
‘Yeah, but they get the exciting tours and bus trips and the dinky little bags, so don’t even try to get me guilty about that.’
Richard
threw his shirt at Scott’s face. ‘It’s not about guilt. We’re a good
team, and we’re on track for the finals. Let it be big if it can be,
okay?’
‘Ah, whatever.’
Adam
sat and let himself breathe. He clearly needed some time to catch his
breath but Scott saw that he was smiling. ‘Nice dunk.’
Adam shrugged. ‘I guess I’m more fit than I was, huh?’ He laughed at his joke.
Scott arched an eyebrow. ‘Looks like it. You on steroids? You’re looking kinda pumped.’
‘I am?’ Adam looked at himself. Richard’s shirt landed in his face.
The
rest of the team was departing, the usual chorus of tired farewells.
‘Right. Time for a nice shower and a nice big feed,’ Richard said,
stuffing the shirt in his bag. ‘I’ll see you guys tomorrow.’
‘Yeah,
get outta here ya bum,’ Scott said, kicking him goodbye. Richard
disappeared out the front and now only Scott and Adam remained.
‘I am tired,’ Adam said quietly.
‘So you gonna sit there forever?’
‘Maybe. I feel like I never want to move again.’
‘You got to get home somehow.’
‘I’ll fly home,’ Adam said distantly.
Scott nodded. ‘Uh huh.’
‘You guys the last?’ Taylor asked. He was silhouetted in the doorway.
‘Yeah, we’re almost gone,’ Scott said.
‘All right. Good effort today, guys. That kind of commitment is what we need. See you guys tomorrow, ready for action.’
‘Yeah. Thanks Coach.’
Coach
Taylor pulled the door to and locked it while Adam started to get
organised. Scott borrowed his deodorant spray, giving it a cautious
spurt. He checked the fragrance. ‘Nice.’
‘Yeah.’
There
wasn’t going to be a better time, Scott concluded. The plan might as
well go ahead, even if Adam was in a weird mood. ‘So, what are you up to
now? Maybe we could hang out for a while? Go back to your place?’
Adam looked up. ‘What? Why?’
Scott smiled winningly. ‘Do I need a reason?’
It
was raining so they caught the bus. As they were getting off Scott
finally asked about Lauren. Apparently she’d started her course and all
was well. ‘She’s got someone she knows doing it too, some girl from her
school I think. But Lauren thinks she’s a bit of a moron.’
Scott was pleased by this. ‘Oh, that’s no good.’
‘Yeah.
She came home last night really drunk… Mum and dad didn’t know what to
do! That was pretty funny. She was so embarrassed, though.’
‘Well,
she’s being dragged along to church, right? I guess that girl has a
serious sin backlog.’ Scott took off his shoes in the Curtis’ foyer,
like he’d done innumerable times before, but this time Richard wasn’t
doing the same and wasn’t coming to join them later. Just him and Adam.
It felt like it gave him a responsibility of some kind.
‘Mum?’ Adam called, going in.
Mrs
Curtis called back in her sing-song voice. ‘I’m in the kitchen. Oh,
hello, Scott. Why, you both look bedraggled! From the rain and the
basketball?’
‘It’s raining a little,’ Scott said politely. ‘How are you, Mrs Curtis?’
‘Oh, I’m fine. Are you staying for dinner, Scott?’
‘I don’t want to be any trouble…’
‘Oh, no trouble at all, we’d love to have you. Isn’t that right, Adam?’
Scott looked sheepish. ‘I just don’t want to be in the way.’
‘Not
at all. Dinner will be ready before too long, so you should both go and
have a shower and get cleaned up. Adam, show Scott where the towels
are, will you?’ Mrs Curtis was razoring apart some cabbage, the blade
moving up and down with mesmerising speed.
‘Sure,’ Adam said, pulling a jug from the fridge. ‘Do you want a glass of water?’
This was all a bit too fast for Scott. ‘Shower?’ he heard himself say.
Scott
stood alone in Adam’s room, the rush of the shower clearly audible. He
looked around for a place to sit. When there were others there watching
he’d happily plonk himself on the neatly made bed, but alone it didn’t
seem right. The computer desk had a chair but Adam’s schoolbag was on
it. Maybe he could turn on the stereo?
He
looked around the room. One neat shelf contained everything from Adam’s
music collection (sparse, mostly things Richard had recommended) to
books (mostly school texts) to tourist ornaments (a Hawaiian carving, a
Mexican doll). The bedside table was neat with a lamp and clock-radio,
but there was also something else that he hadn’t noticed before, a small
stone. It was gently weighted and sea-smooth with an Asian symbol
painted on. Curious, Scott pulled open the bedside table drawer. Papers
inside, neatly stacked but nothing more interesting than a school
newsletter or a bank statement. Around the computer desk were game
manuals and disks and printouts. Scott rifled through the papers with a
growing sense of disappointment.
Adam reappeared smelling of soap. ‘Here’s a towel for you.’
Scott blanched. ‘I don’t need a shower.’
‘Don’t be silly,’ Adam laughed.
‘No, we got rained on coming back.’
‘Come on, Scott. You can’t go to dinner like that.’
Hearing
Adam give him instructions was disturbing. The towel he’d been given
was larger and thicker than any Scott had used before. It was a very
demanding towel. He was almost afraid to use it. Scott held it out at
arm’s length, hoping Adam would relent it take it back. ‘I can eat in
here! You can bring me my plate.’
‘Mum will already have set an extra place for you.’
‘Well, that’s it then. I’m leaving.’
Adam shook his head. ‘Come on, Mum said to.’
‘It
feels really weird,’ Scott protested lamely. ‘Showers scare me! My
parents died in a shower when I was little. I’ll have flashbacks.’
Adam laughed. ‘Go on.’
Scott
sighed, took the towel and headed for the door. ‘Okay, but if I come
wailing out of the bathroom naked with a machete and kill you all, it’ll
all be your fault.’ He snatched up his bag and slipped across the hall.
He’d been in this bathroom once or twice before, of course, and it was
just a bathroom, no toilet. He’d come in to wash his hands, which was
not anything like… like this.
There
was a basin on one side and a shower on the other, a big frosted-glass
draped window to the darkened back lawn, and one wooden door in or out.
The shower door was a slider, yellow clear plastic. Linoleum floor. He
surveyed the shower, steam still gathered within it. The shower head was
higher than the one he had at home but the dial control was familiar.
Everything looked in order. He summoned his reserves of will and went to
lock the door.
The door had no lock.
‘Adam!’
he hissed, leaning out. Adam’s door was closed. Scott gave up on that
and shut himself in, back to the unlockable door. This, he reasoned, was
the Curtis household. If the bathroom door was shut they’d knock first.
Simple. This kind of home didn’t need locks.
This wasn’t the plan. The plan didn’t involve him getting naked in a room with no lock on the door.
Scott
turned on the shower and adjusted the nozzle. Then he pulled out his
change of clothes and stripped quickly. Naked, he tested the water with
his hand. As expected, too hot. He switched the dial back two notches
and tested the water again, and got another shock. The water was exactly
two notches cooler.
He
jumped in before the temperature changed. The pressure was hard and
pleasant and he let the water hose him off. It began to seem slightly
cold, so Scott crossed his fingers and bumped the dial up a notch. The
water temperature increased by one notch. He almost laughed out loud. He
shut his eyes and let the water run through his hair and down his
front. Soap and lather and rinse… it was an infinitely more pleasant
experience than the showers at home where the stream was weak and the
temperature had only two settings, scald and freeze.
She
had to be around somewhere. Maybe she hadn’t got home yet? This wasn’t
so bad. He would be ready to meet her, smelling like soap, and she’d
smile her smile and he’d send it back and then they’d be at the table
together and maybe his foot would be touching hers. And maybe later he’d
be sitting with her in her room, it all seemed inevitable in a shower
like this. Maybe her hands would slide down his belly. Down, gently,
gently, taking hold… in Adam’s house! He couldn’t believe he was
thinking it… But this was where she lived. She had her own little
bedroom in a private corner of the house. Her smile, he could see the
pleased look in her eyes, and her fingers –
The door crashed open and someone burst into the room.
Scott’s
immediate reaction was to put both of his hands above his head, which
he did with a crash of some kind, and it was the shower door he’d hit,
and it rattled along its rail in the direction it had been struck,
exposing him. Water bounced off Scott’s naked body into the bathroom. He
froze. His hands were above his head.
Lauren
was in the room. She was close enough he could reach out and touch her.
He was naked. Everything seemed to be happening very slowly.
She
was at the basin, scrabbling through cupboards, one eye covered by a
hand. ‘Sorry, I really need some eyedrops or something, ow ow fuck.’
Scott didn’t know whether to speak or stay silent. He reached over to the door to slide it back closed.
She
straightened, suddenly, and the eye that wasn’t covered looked into the
mirror and over her own shoulder and right at Scott. And Scott’s naked
chest. And maybe more. Scott wasn’t sure how much she saw. He saw her.
Their eyes met.
He slammed the door closed.
‘You’re not Adam,’ Lauren said.
Scott squeezed his eyes shut. This was not part of the plan.
‘Uh, well. How... um, how about I go and fix this intense pain I’m suffering somewhere else?’
He heard her move to the door.
‘You just, you know. Carry on. Have fun.’
The door was shut for maybe five seconds before Scott was out of the shower with his underwear back on.
The
dining table was polished so well Scott could see himself. The
placemats were large and everything matched everything else. Scott felt
like one of those people in movies who found themselves faced with a
whole bunch of unfamiliar forks. He was at a corner between Adam and Mr
Curtis, and Lauren was about as far away as she could be at the corner
between Mrs Curtis and Michael. Greg was directly opposite and watching
him with an unnerving intensity. The meal was steak, and Mrs Curtis
served broccoli to accompany it from a steaming bowl that matched all
the plates. Scott looked over at Lauren and caught a full-on glare from
Greg. Perhaps, he thought, it would be easier to just gaze at the plate
until everyone else started eating. Besides, he really really didn’t
want to catch her eye. That would only remind her of the last time their
eyes met, which was not something he wanted to get her thinking about
ever again if at all possible. He had enough problems.
At least, he supposed, she hadn’t, like, thrown up. Or laughed at him. It could have been worse.
Mr
Curtis ahem’d attention. ‘Dear Lord, we thank you for these your gifts
which you have placed on our table, help us to truly appreciate them.
Thank you for the additional gifts of our guests tonight, Scott and of
course Lauren. I hope they also enjoy the meal your bounty has provided.
Amen.’
The
rest of the family, Lauren included, echoed the amen and then began to
eat. Mrs Curtis waited a moment to be polite, then spoke up. ‘Of course,
Lauren isn’t really a guest, she’s more part of the household, isn’t
she.’
‘I
understand that,’ Mr Curtis replied. ‘I just wanted to make sure
everyone felt welcome. It can take some effort to adjust to a new place,
can’t it Lauren? Everyone needs to adjust to a new arrival.’
Lauren
nodded agreeably. ‘Oh, I know. It’s just like when a new baby arrives
and all the older children get worried that they won’t be important any
more.’
Mrs
Curtis smiled, ‘Oh yes! When Adam was little and Michael came along he
was none too impressed! You put your hands into little fists and told us
to take that baby right back! It was so charming.’
Adam shifted uncomfortably. ‘Please, mum…’
Scott
was sure Lauren had prompted that story deliberately. She was the odd
one out in this household, that much was clear. He noticed Greg eyeing
him suspiciously and returned his attention to his food.
‘So,
Scott, you’re in the basketball team too?’ Mr Curtis had timed it
perfectly, forcing Scott to make ‘I’m chewing’ gestures for far too
long. ‘And how do you think it’s going?’
‘Fine,’ Scott managed at last. ‘We’re doing well.’
‘Adam tells me you might get into the finals.’
Scott forced himself to be an interesting guest. ‘That’s right, if we win one of the next two games we should go through.’
‘Oh, that would be good, wouldn’t it?’ said Mrs Curtis.
‘Good,
good,’ Mr Curtis agreed. ‘Setting goals you can achieve.’ Scott
couldn’t think of anything to say to that so he just nodded. Mr Curtis
continued to ask Michael and then Gregory about their day. They related
the latest developments in their junior school lives, an area of St
Francis that Scott didn’t miss in the least. Then Mr Curtis moved on to
Lauren. She downplayed her first proper day of the course, amusing
everyone with some of the anecdotes passed on by the co-ordinator, a
Texan who was apparently something of a raconteur. Scott was quietly
pleased to note that her supposed friend in the course didn’t figure in
her stories at all.
Mrs
Curtis had managed to replace the empty plates with dessert without
anyone noticing, a steaming lemon pie. Scott tucked in eagerly,
surprised to be having dessert at all. As he did so, Mr Curtis moved on
to Adam.
‘Nothing much happened,’ Adam shrugged.
‘Why, something must have,’ Mrs Curtis probed. ‘What did you learn in your classes?’
Adam looked at his plate blankly. ‘Nothing interesting.’
‘What, nothing at all?’ Mr Curtis persisted.
‘Do
you know,’ Adam said, suddenly looking up, ‘that the school bell rings
ten times in a single day? So we hear that school bell about two
thousand times every school year?’
Scott and Lauren looked at each other. The moment passed. They both looked down at their food.
Scott
suggested a three-hand card game and Adam quite liked that idea. He
left his room to find Lauren and while he was gone Scott worked on
details. It had been well over a year since the last time they’d done
this, played cards on the floor of Adam’s room, and that time Dennis and
Richard had been there too so it had been crowded. He’d spent the whole
evening trying not to stare at her, her wicked little smile as he lost
game after game. They’d been sitting so their legs were touching. Only
three people, this time. How could he get that happening again? He’d
want to sit over on Adam’s bed, maybe, that way he’d end up right next
to her if she wanted the bed. He had to ditch the computer chair, Adam
could have that. And then they’d play.
Then
he’d need to get rid of Adam somehow. Maybe he could ask her to show
him her room? God, why would she do that? Plus it would no doubt break
every rule of propriety in the Curtis household. No good. Getting rid of
Adam was something he hadn’t thought through in advance. He’d have to
wing it. Even though what usually happened when he winged it was a big
crash and burn. Without a plan, his chances of getting Lauren alone were
somewhere between slim and none.
The door opened and Lauren came in. She was alone. ‘I bet you wish I’d stop doing that,’ she said, sinking down on Adam’s bed.
Scott’s mind went blank. ‘What?’
‘Walking in on you! Where’s Adam?’
He
cursed himself for not having moved to the bed when he thought of it
before. He couldn’t do it now. He was trapped on the seat! Fuck this
seat! Why had he ever sat down here? ‘He went to find you. Haven’t you
spoken to him?’
‘He must be looking in the wrong places.’
‘Isn’t that where you usually are?’
Lauren
smiled. ‘They’re usually the most fun…’ She threw back her head lazily.
‘God, I wish I was getting drunk tonight. It would help a great deal,
you know?’
‘Yeah, I know what you mean,’ Scott said.
‘Today was such a terrible day. It was sooo bad…’
This sounded like something Scott could work with. ‘How come?’
‘Where
do I begin! First of all I get completely lost around campus even
though we just got the tour yesterday. And then the people I asked for
help were no help at all, in fact I think some of them deliberately sent
me off on a wild goose chase. And then the big party that’s on tomorrow
night, you wouldn’t believe it, I’m two people from the front of the
queue when they sell the last ticket.’ Lauren sighed. ‘It’s just one of
those days when nothing’s going right.’
‘Well, that at least means you can come to watch the basketball, huh?’
‘Yeah,
well I might as well. God, that doesn’t sound encouraging. Sport isn’t
really my thing, you know? But why the hell not, see you guys running
around. Could be a laugh.’
‘See?’ Scott said, trying to be casual. ‘Silver lining.’
‘Oh,
don’t be too hasty, I’ve only just started the story. Then my wallet
gets stolen! Luckily, thank God, it gets handed in to lost property two
hours later so I didn’t need to replace the cards, but all the cash was
gone and I did spend two hours panicking like a fucking kid. All my
money gone! I don’t have that much to throw around, so that was a real
crash.’ She shook her head. ‘I hope Welly doesn’t stay like this.’
‘It’ll
get better,’ Scott said. This would be a perfect moment to put his arm
around her, except he was on the chair not the bed, and because she’d
probably get angry if he tried. ‘At least you’ve got us around to cheer
you up,’ he said instead. He watched her carefully. Things were in a
very delicate balance. She smiled and seemed about to speak.
Adam crashed back into the room. ‘Oh, here you are. I couldn’t find you.’
‘Yeah, I was on the phone,’ Lauren said, instead of whatever else it would have been. Scott cursed.
‘You could have called me, you know,’ Adam said to Scott.
‘Hey, I knew you’d work it out. So, are we up for some cards?’
‘Sure, what are we playing?’ Lauren said, brightening up. ‘Because if you like, I know a game or two…’
‘I’ve had enough of this,’ Adam said, bewildered. ‘I can’t seem to get anywhere at all.’
‘Unlucky night,’ Scott said, meaning both of them.
Lauren totted up their points. ‘Luck has nothing to do with it.’
‘Could I have something to drink?’ Scott asked.
‘Sure,’ Adam said. ‘How about a hot chocolate?’
‘Sounds great.’
‘Lauren, do you want one?’
‘No, I’m good thanks. Unless you have bourbon.’
‘I’m
not getting you bourbon.’ Adam grinned and disappeared out the door. It
hung half-open, which Scott realised was not ideal, but it would have
to do. It had been good, the cards, they’d had fun, Lauren had kicked
their asses, no knee-touching on account of her being on the bed and him
on the chair but it was okay. She was great fun to be with. She was
even more like he remembered than he remembered her being.
‘Well,’
Lauren said, shuffling the cards absent-mindedly. ‘I’ve pretty much
ridden this pony as far as it’ll go. I might mosey on out. Thanks for
the game, it was fun.’
‘Okay, see you,’ said Scott.
Lauren went out the door and pulled it closed.
Scott realised what he’d just done and slapped himself in the face. ‘Fuck. Brilliant. Nice one. Quick on your feet as usual.’
The
door opened again and Scott slammed his mouth closed. ‘Uh, sorry about
that shower thing, by the way,’ said Lauren, peering around. ‘That was
pretty rude.’ She smiled sheepishly.
‘No worries.’
‘Awesome.’ Lauren nodded, and went to leave again, but Scott seized the second chance.
‘Could I have a word with you for a sec?’
She nodded and came back in, shutting the door behind her. ‘What’s up?’
Scott
looked her in the eye. He remembered her looking at him in the
bathroom. That look on her face, which was sort of, horribly, amused and
bemused, and how she’d seen it all before. He’d been – she must have
known what he’d been doing, about to do – how much had she seen? She was
looking him right in the eye, right now.
‘Uh, I was just wondering, you know, what happened to your eye? And if it’s all right?’
Fuck.
He’d
lost his nerve. This was the plan, the moment he’d been building to,
and he couldn’t do it. He’d wrecked it now. It was too late. It was all
over. God.
He
wasn’t even listening as she answered him, and the weird little look on
her face, fuck, she had written him off as a dick. He’d given her every
reason to. It was a disaster. A complete disaster, and there was no-one
to blame but himself.
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