Michael put his hands in his pocket.
"Go," said Jamie.
Michael pursed his lips as though readying to whistle.
"Go!"
"Lester saw us. Before — with Alison." He glanced up ques-tioningly. "Just past the service station."
For a moment Jamie felt booted outside himself. His voice spacey in his skull. He heard himself say, "So what? Stop following me around."
Michael shrugged again. "I saw him, and he saw us," he said.
Jamie came at him and punched and pushed him against the doorjamb. "You better shut up."
"Sorry," Michael cried out.
"I mean it."
"I'm sorry I'm sorry."
At teatime, Michael ate by himself in the kitchen. Sulking in front of some TV show. Jamie joined his parents, who'd already started, in the living room. As soon as he walked in he could tell they'd been fighting. His mum sat facing the window under her striped blanket and his dad was angled opposite, feeding her. They ate in silence. A light breeze rumpled the curtains. Jamie watched the dull green of eucalyptus leaves bleed into the darkening sky. His mum started coughing.
"Are you okay?" his dad asked.
Once she'd fetched her breath she said, "Jamie."
"Yeah, Mum."
"You know what no one ever asks me?"
His dad stared straight ahead, over her shoulder. "Ask her," he said.
"What, Mum?"
"Everyone always asks me if I'm okay. No one ever asks me if I'm happy."
The sound from the kitchen TV faded, then amped into the voice-over for a commercial. His dad put down his plate and left the room.
She'd already made her instructions clear. She wasn't timid about these things. She didn't want a machine breathing for her, nor her body grafted into a computer. She didn't want any hoo-hah. She wanted to be cremated and then planted in the soil under the waratahs. Part of this was slyness — they'd be more likely to keep the property. She wanted this, and she wanted his dad to buy back his stake in the trawler. Jamie remembered their conversations, after her second relapse, about moving. Money. Dim voices and lamplit silences. One night he was in the driveway and glimpsed a slice of his dad's face through their bedroom window. It was hard and tear-smudged and sneering with hurt. Then he saw a dark shape flit in front of the window in the next room. Michael. Both of them, sons, watching their parents. One handful, his mum said, she wanted brought to the bluff, where she watched the storms come in, and she wanted it scattered — she said the word cheekily — into the ocean.
She was in fine form when his dad came back in. Teasing Jamie about incredible views at the courthouse.
"Jamie was up there today," she explained.
"Got some free time, has he?"
"That reminds me," she said. "Your holiday job, Jamie — when you get a chance, go talk to John Thompson at the wharf. Word is he's got a spot on his boat."
His dad made as though to say something, but didn't.
"Tell him I sent you. He might even start you straightaway."
"The final's coming up," his dad broke in. "Can't it wait till after then?"
"Fishing and football." She let out a dramatic sigh. "That's all this town cares about."
The room lightened, loudened, as Michael barged in from the kitchen. His expression anxious. "Thirty percent chance of thunderstorms tomorrow," he said. "But higher on the weekend."
His mum looked at him intently. She said, "Thank you, sweetie."
"I'll have your rocking chair done by then," said his dad.
It was dusk outside now — the window a square of black, brooding colors. Waratah shrubs lifting their scent of honey into the room. Hundreds of kilometers away the ocean streamed into itself, careening its mass over and over, sucking even the clouds down.
"Shall we open a bottle?" his mum asked.
"You sure, Maggie?"
"Let's open a bottle."
***
THE NIGHT WAS WINDY. Clouds hung low and fat, lit up by the massive bonfire in the backyard. People were feeding it anything they could toss a couple of meters: furniture, textbooks, beer cans and bottles, even their clothes. Farther back from the fire the darkness was crumbed with cigarette ends, glowing, fading, each time seemingly in different spots. People might have been dancing out there.
Cale quickly ditched him for some surfie mates-the bloke could trace a sniff of mull through a dust storm.
"Hey, Jamie!"
Someone lifted a bottle to his mouth. Jamie hurled his head to the sky.
"Jesus," he said, coughing, laughing as a hand thumped his back. He spun around and saw Billy Johnson — left half-orward flank, an ordinary player, but one of those blokes everyone got along with.
"Hell's that?"
"Bourbon, I think," Billy said, teeth gleaming widely.
"Fuck you," said Jamie.
"Stole it from my sister's room." He held it out like a handshake. "Have some more."
Jamie took another swig. The burning rushed through him, mixing with the fumes from the fire. He felt deeply awake.
"Thanks," he said. "Thanks a lot, man."
"Ready for the game next week?" He tossed the bottle back to Billy. "What game?" he jeered.
By midnight, the party was peaking. She hadn't arrived. He sat in a tight pack with the other Halflead High kids, drowsing in their cheap deodorant. Norsca and Brut and Old Spice. They had the next day off — curriculum day — and everyone was going balls out. They drank. They drank and talked about the upcoming game. Jamie watched the bonfire, gusts of wind playing havoc with the smoke, people gliding in and out of its thrown light.
Cale rocked up, off his face. He started making toasts-to footy, to cunt, to mates, to getting fucked with your mates — each word swerving in the smoke-dark wind. At one stage he threw himself to the ground. Everyone watched as he did a strange, simian dance across the lawn.
Jamie drank. The wind moved through the tall purple grass, sifting the light of an arriving car's high beam. Like the wind was made of light. Next to him one of those UV bug lights thrumming purple above a pit of carnage: skeletal legs, carapaces, wings.
Cale held something up: "Got it!"
Then he saw her. Trying to light a cigarette, her face in the brief flare of a struck match. White skirt and a boob tube. She looked somehow smaller-figured in the night. On an instinct she turned and met his gaze and then, bold as you like, started walking up to the group. Tammie and Laura close in behind her.
He looked away.
"Got a light?"
But she was talking to Cale, the twenty-dollar bill flapping between his fingers. Billy rifling through his pockets, striking, restriking the wheel of his lighter, hands cupped, body swiveling to shield the flame.
The girls waited and then walked off, giggling.
Cale whispered to him: "So?"
But he couldn't speak. His head teemed. It was late and he sensed all around, in the shadows, mouths straining against each other as though to breach, to break through to a clear feeling.
"So what?"
"So you gonna score with her?"
"What, are you stupid too?"
She was waiting out front. Cross-legged on the trunk of an old Holden, cornered by a chaotic blockade of cars and bikes. Someone next to her in the darkness. As he came closer, he saw that it was Tammie: she flicked down a cigarette, whispered something into Alison's ear before leaving. Under the cloud-strained moonlight Alison's skirt was hitched up past her gleaming thighs. Her two legs interlocked.
"You look different," she said.
"You too," he replied. He wasn't lying. Closer up, the light wasn't kind to her face. Makeup moved like a tight gauzy screen on top of her skin.
"Most of these things," she said, "no one even talks to me."
He nodded. Laughter spilled from the backyard. Then the smash of a breaking bottle. He spun around.