Read All These Perfect Strangers Online
Authors: Aoife Clifford
He reached into his trouser pocket, held the keys in his hand, dangling them so I could see. With a sudden movement, he threw them past me and moved forward. Panicked, I squeezed the trigger hard. A crack, and he was on the ground, clutching his chest.
He looked up at me. âStupid bitch,' he murmured. I could see his shirt beginning to darken.
Scrabbling in the dirt for the keys, I ran around to the other side of the car and unlocked Tracey. She wobbled as she stood. Her voice was hoarse but calm. âGive me the gun.' I handed it to her without question. I didn't want to touch it any more.
Tracey walked around the car to face him. He was making these soft keening noises of pain. I knew what she meant to do. Put him out of his misery. She raised the gun, holding it steady with two hands. He realised as well and began pleading, his voice wet with blood. I shut my eyes and put my hands over my ears.
·  ·  ·
I sit there until I cramp, my body heavy with the memories. It takes a long time to trudge back.
At home, I pull off the gumboots and leave them outside on the verandah that will never be a sunroom. The rain can wash the mud off them. I hang up my coat in the bathroom but I am wet through so I walk down the hall into my room to get changed. The house is quiet and I wonder if Mum has gone back to bed.
I open the door to my room and see clothes all over the floor. Every drawer has been emptied. My university books have been pulled out of the bookcase. Some of their covers have been ripped off. Scraps of grey are everywhere. I pick one up. My new suit shredded. So is the pink bag it came in and the receipt for good measure. Immediately, I run to the cupboard, empty of clothes and shoes. Boxes have been shifted but my hiding place has not been noticed. The plank is undisturbed and my book is safe.
Sitting on my bed, I clutch a piece of the suit in my hands. Running a finger along its edge, I pull at it and see how it frays. Nothing is ever a clean break. Everything has threads, even if you cannot see them.
I take a long time getting dressed before I go find Mum. She is sitting on the couch in the living room, waiting for me. On the coffee table in front of her, next to the ashtray half full with fresh cigarette butts, is a piece of paper, the letter that I had placed in the bottom drawer on top of my suit.
âSmoking again?' I say.
âCan you blame me?' She picks up the letter and waves it like a starter's flag.
âHad to hear it from Terry,' she says. âMy own daughter wins a settlement and I'm the last one to know.'
I should have known she would find out somehow. This is a town that spends its life peering out from behind the curtains at other people's business.
There is a silence that threatens to grow and fill the room. I am waiting to see what she will say but she just keeps staring at me.
âWhat was he doing in my room?'
A flicker of uncertainty from her.
âRan up to the shops to buy some cigarettes. Thought I'd give him time to grab his stuff. When I got back he showed me this.'
I stop myself from screaming at her. Terry must have been in there for ages. I try to work out what he was doing in my bedroom again. If trashing my stuff and destroying my suit is his version of a goodbye kiss then I'll live with that. With the amount Bob got, I could buy countless suits. I'm glad Terry knows how much money I'm getting and how he'll never see a cent of it.
âWell,' she says, waiting for an answer from me. âMore than I've ever had in my life and all of it yours.'
âI only found out a couple of days ago.' This sounds weak, even to me.
She flaps the letter again. There are two separate pages. One is the settlement offer on Bob's letterhead. The other has the Southern Cross around an open book at the top of it. The emblem from Marcus's office. I have been accepted into the fancy sandstone university he had worked at before coming to Scullin. Bob sent them letters threatening to publicise the fact that they hadn't investigated Marcus's drug activities but instead let him resign and then arrive at Scullin with an unblemished record. Still, their offer didn't go so far as to include free accommodation or a scholarship. All my settlement money will have to pay for it.
Seeing it in her hand makes me wonder about Marcus. His court case isn't going to be heard for another year. I have made it through unscathed, and he is the only one being held to account and will probably end up in jail. Despite everything, I almost feel sorry for him.
âWere you going to tell me before or after you left town?' Mum asks. âI expect you'll be running away the moment you can.'
She flings down the pages on to the table in a dramatic gesture, but paper like that only flutters. They separate and zigzag gently through the air, miss the table and end up on the floor.
âYou can't expect me to stay here,' I say, reaching down to pick them up, tucking them safely into my back pocket. âA place where half the people hate me.'
âThey hate me too. Had plenty to say to me over the years. That you were raised all wrong by a stupid slut. Think I don't hear that?'
âYou could leave,' I say.
âWith what? All my savings went on paying Bob Cochrane to keep you out of jail.'
I have no answer to that, because it's true. I can't even bring up the suit now, because she's got me. Checkmate.
âYou know, the day I found out I was pregnant with you, I was actually excited. I mean, I knew that there would be a fuss, but I didn't care. Thought we could be our own little family. And then your dad's parents arrived in their shiny car, taking charge. Money to shut me up and your dad transferred to another boarding school in a different town and none of this ever to be mentioned again. That's when I thought about running away. I was dumb enough to think he'd want to go too. But he was on their side. Said he'd pay to get rid of you. I told him I was having the baby and didn't need his money.'
My father was more generous than Terry, I think. Not the highest standard.
Mum isn't going in for the kill. In fact, she's looking pretty defeated. The fight has gone out of her and she sits back on the couch, grey-skinned without her war paint. I've seen her act this way about a boyfriend, but never over me. Normally, it's all slamming doors and shouted exchanges. I stare at the mantelpiece because I don't want to see her like this. I concentrate on the tarnished silver photographs: my grandparents' wedding photo, the picture of Mum as a debutante. She looks peaky, morning sickness, and then next to it is a photo of a pigtailed preschooler hugging her and she is laughing at the camera.
Once we were happy, just the two of us.
âBut I decided the only place to bring you up was here, a proper home to live in, with your grandparents. Had to grow up and make the best of it. That's why I stayed. Everything has consequences. If you don't deal with them, others will have to.'
Her words sting.
âI've dealt with what's happened,' I say.
âReally?' she says. âI've always told them you didn't do it, Pen. That Tracey Cuttmore was the troublemaker. But I don't know. Tracey's not here any more and you still get into trouble.'
âI'm the victim,' I say. âThat's what this settlement means. That I'm the one who got hurt. That it wasn't my fault.'
âReally?' she says. âLook me straight in my face and tell me you didn't do anything wrong.'
I don't do that because I can't. Instead, I pick up the china shepherd I gave to her that year for Mother's Day.
âYou know, I heard you that night, sneaking out. Tap squeaks when you step on it, climbing out the window.' Rubbing the side of her face with her hand, she looks old. The smoker's pucker has reappeared around her mouth. âI did it heaps when I was at school to see your father. Didn't go to sleep until I knew you were back home. Two of you next morning, all pale and quiet. Telling me Tracey had to go back to the farm early to do homework. Should have known something was wrong but I thought you were hung over. And instead . . .' She shrugs her shoulders. âMaybe they're right. I am a bad mother.'
I didn't know the answer to that. I'd never thought of her as bad or good, more as an obstacle in my way. Something to get around. Perhaps I should say I'm grateful that she didn't disown me like Tracey's father did, that she paid for Bob, but the words disappear before they can reach my mouth. That just isn't who we are.
âOh well, off you go then. Better start packing. Terry says the north road may be reopened in the morning. The two of you are so alike. Rats deserting a sinking ship.'
Her voice cracks and I wonder if she is going to start crying, but her eyes are dry and somehow that feels worse.
âI've got my appointment with Frank in the morning,' I mumble.
âDoes he know you're leaving?'
I shake my head.
âYou tell him the truth. Should tell someone.'
She closes her eyes like she is sick of the sight of me. The room is even quieter than before and I realise that the rain has stopped.
My hand shook so much that the torch's light danced around Nico's room. When I could get my legs to move, I stumbled back along the corridor, ricocheting off walls. Moving through the front room, something snagged my foot and I kicked out in terror at the hand I thought that held it. But it was only one of the chairs, which tipped over and fell as I stumbled towards the door. I stood there bent over, waiting to be sick.
Nico died the day he went to the police. He had talked about people being killed. There had been no sign of a struggle but the room was so bare it was hard to tell. The marks on his arms suggested that shooting up was a common occurrence. But it would be so easy to get rid of an inconvenient junkie. Give them something too pure or something not pure enough and they'll do the job for you. I tried to picture the look on his face the last time I saw him alive, clutching something in his hands, a perfect mixture of greed and fear.
There was no point getting an ambulance and I didn't want to bring myself to the police's attention over another body. Whatever else I did, I had to make sure that when he was found, I would be far away. But first I had to give back the torch.
I had no idea how much time had passed but the boy was still cooking when I entered the room.
âFind him?' he asked, barely glancing in my direction.
âI knocked on his door but no answer.' I sounded choked, but he didn't seem to notice. âThanks for the torch.' I laid it down on the bench near him.
âWhat college are you at?' he said.
A pause. âMaggies,' I lied. âWhy?'
âYou're a law student, aren't you? Might be needing a lawyer pretty soon to help me with these criminal damage charges.'
âOK,' I said. Relief made me sound over-bright, the way Leiza used to talk when she was trying to get you to do something for her. âI'm only a first-year, though. You might be better off finding someone who has passed Criminal Law. The student law clinic at the Union might be able to help.'
He didn't seem to think that sounded useful.
As I began to walk away, he started humming to himself and then began to sing out loud. He had a good voice and it echoed through the room. The sound was unexpectedly comforting and I stood there in the shadows listening to him, wanting him to keep on singing. It wasn't until well after he stopped that I stepped alone into the dark.
A thick ribbon of bushland ran along the entire back of campus. Parts of it were expected to disappear by the end of the year with rumours of new buildings, but it was still dense enough to walk through unseen at night. I had to put as much distance between myself and Nico's body as possible without being noticed. I could follow it from where I was until I reached Scullin, about a twenty-minute walk. I just needed to get to the trees.
The moon had already been out for most of the day, overshadowed by the sun. Now it lit the sky to a rich dark blue. The trees were a stark black up ahead. I chose the tallest one I could see and started walking. Running might attract a roaming eye. My legs wanted to do neither. I stumbled as the ground became rougher, feeling every stone under my shoes. When I reached my tree, all I wanted to do was sit down and never move again, but I had to keep going.
Heading east, I stayed within the tangled line of trees. I could smell the tang of eucalyptus and the dried leaves under my feet cracked like delicate bones. I concentrated on a tree ahead and then another, but I was starting to shake.
âYou're too soft
,' came Tracey's voice in my ear.
âDon't spoil the fun,' she said, as she pulled a silver hipflask out of her pocket.
âWhere'd you get that?'
âWas on special. Five-fingered discount.'
âYou shouldn't have done that. Not after last time.'
Tracey had been caught the week before with the china shepherdess in her school bag. The owner had called the police but in the end hadn't pressed charges.
âI've told you already the copper didn't take it seriously. When we got outside he asked me why I had stolen something so ugly and then said I owed him one. He was all right.'
I said nothing.
Tracey looked stubborn. âStop being so paranoid. Didn't say anything about you. We're fine.'
âYeah, I guess.'
I thought about the stories Mum had brought back from work about that policeman. His wife worked with her at the Cannery. âShe wouldn't say boo to a goose,' Mum told me. âNever comes out to the pub so we gave up asking. And the bruises on her. I saw them all around her neck when she was getting changed. Asked her about it, but she clammed right up.'
I tried telling Tracey but she didn't want to hear. âHe was a good guy.' She went back to making the fire. âShould have brought marshmallows,' she said, looking at the twigs beginning to catch with flames and the bigger sticks starting to smoulder. âCould have made a party of it. Proper fire mountain now. This was a great idea.'