Authors: Georgia Blain
THE LITTLE MENTION MATT has made of Lucas' name over the last three months doesn't mean that he hasn't been on his mind. Since his return, Matt has thought of him often, the brief intensity of those few days in Queensland bleeding into the edges of his daily life with Freya and Ella.
Flying home, he had composed a letter to Lisa. He wanted to tell her he was there if she decided she needed him. But each time he attempted to write the words, he faltered. The relationship they were trying to navigate was too intimate for the scant knowledge they had of each other.
âI find it hardest now,' she'd told him on their last morning together.
They'd been sitting at the Laminex table in her kitchen drinking a peppermint tea she'd made for him, her eyes fixed on the caravan in the yard, the metal door shut to the world, Lucas presumably inside, lost in the deep, sweaty sleep of a teenage boy.
âI know kids of this age don't talk to their mothers, but he's so uncommunicative.' She'd looked down at the table, scratching at a stain on its surface. âHe smokes a
lot of dope. And some nights I hear him out there.' She shook her head.
Matt had waited for her to continue.
âHe laughs,' she said. âOr talks. And I think someone is there with him, but there isn't. He's all alone. And I worry, and I wish there was someone else who could calm me.' She looked up at the ceiling, biting on her lip as she did so. âBut there's only me.'
He opened his mouth to speak, aware that he couldn't make promises.
âYou need to get him to a doctor. Get a psychiatric assessment, for your own peace of mind. Or if you don't feel comfortable with that, maybe even see a counsellor â for you.'
She smiled, shaking her head. âI told you how hard it is when you live here. I'm on three waiting lists with doctors in Brisbane. Ones that I know are good. But even when I get to the top of a list, I've got to get him there. He doesn't think he needs any help. He won't want to come. I could try to get the GP here to convince him, but he's hopeless. He didn't even want to give me the referral. He just thinks Lucas needs a father and discipline.'
Later, when Matt had carried his bag to the car, Lisa told him it had been good to see him.
âI know you want answers,' she'd said. âBut I just need to take this slowly. To think about how to play it.'
She was squinting in the harshness of the Queensland sunshine, the flies buzzing around her face, and she'd seemed, in that instant, so alone, there in that house, at the end of the road, on the edge of the town. As he'd driven away, he'd glanced in the rear-vision
mirror, watching her, the pale hair, the lilac cotton top, her slight frame â until she'd disappeared from view.
It was that image of her that had remained, grainy, the colours saturated, in his mind each time he thought of her. In the end, the letter he wrote was brief. He understood that she needed time to work out what to do next. She could contact him whenever she wanted. He, too, was glad to have seen her again; they could take it step by step. He wrote down his work and mobile number and then sealed the letter in an envelope. The next morning he posted it on his way to the office.
The first time she rang him, he was out on a site inspection. Standing on the edge of a cliff that looked across the deep blue of the surging ocean, he could barely hear her above the roar of the wind and the waves. He stepped back towards the curve of the road, and then into his car as he recognised her voice with a slight lurch of his stomach. Perhaps something was wrong? But no, she seemed simply to want to talk. She told him she was at the community house, and he phoned her back, aware of how expensive a call to his mobile would be.
That first conversation barely touched on Lucas. He was okay, she said. Still wanting to leave school, and she didn't know what choice she had but to let him. It was hot up there, she said, the summer never-ending, and they talked for what seemed a long time about the intensity of the heat and the effects of global warming. And then she asked him how he was since he'd got back. Everything okay?
He wanted to tell her that he felt thrown, flip-flapping like a fish in a bucket, but he just said he'd been working hard.
âDesigning fancy houses?' she asked.
âDoing that.' He grimaced.
They promised each other they'd stay in touch and, as he hung up, she told him again that it had been good to see him.
âYou too,' he said.
He thought about ringing her in the following weeks, but he didn't want her to feel as though he was putting pressure on her, forcing something that may not be there.
He was at home looking after Ella when she rang the second time, the sound of his mobile harsh in the still of the early evening.
âYou know you can just call me here,' he told her, and he gave her his home number.
âI'll ring you back,' she said.
He was drawing with Ella, a strange underwater kingdom, peopled by plant-like creatures that swayed in fluorescent Texta swirls. Ella kept colouring while he and Lisa talked. Lucas had given up all pretence of going to school, Lisa said. He had no friends and she was worried about the amount of time he was spending on his own. She had told him he needed to get a job.
âAnd has he?' Matt asked, knowing what the answer would be.
There was no work up there. It was a shithole, Lisa said, a death trap for young kids. He was spending most days asleep in the van, heading out when the sun went down.
âI've got no idea where he goes or what he does,' she said.
Matt wanted to offer to help, but again, he felt
useless. He'd already made it clear he was there for her; it was up to her to decide when and how to call on him if she felt it was needed. At the moment, all he could do was listen.
âBedtime,' he told Ella after he hung up.
Looking across at him, her wide green eyes directly focused on his, Ella put the lid back on her Texta. âWho was that?' she asked.
It was an old friend of his, Matt explained. A woman called Lisa.
âWhy did she call?'
âShe wanted to talk.'
âWhat about?'
âNot much. Her kid, her life.'
âHow old is her kid?'
âHe's a teenager.'
âWhy did she want to talk about him?'
She was worried, Matt explained.
âWhy?'
âBecause he's left school and doesn't have a job.'
Ella considered the information for a moment. âIs he in trouble?' she eventually asked.
âI don't think so,' Matt told her.
âSo why did his mum want to tell you about it?'
âIt helps,' Matt said, âto talk about things.'
As he kissed her goodnight, her small arms around his neck, she giggled. He looked at her quizzically.
âDad and Lisa sitting in a tree. K-I-S-S. L-O-V-E.'
âGoodnight,' and he turned the light off in her room and shut the door softly.
It wasn't until a couple of weeks after his return that Matt felt more capable of speaking about Lisa
and Lucas, but it was Shane to whom he talked, not Freya.
Out in Shane's garden, in the middle of the overgrown stretch of lawn, they sat on old vinyl couches that had cracked in the heat. Shane had built a fire in a rusted drum, and its warmth was welcome now that the nights were becoming cooler. Sparks shot across the blackness of the sky as Shane poked the embers with a stick and talked.
The young bloke he worked with was continuing to cause trouble.
Shane shifted closer to the fire. âI've had enough. I've told 'em all I'll stay till July and then I'm heading home.'
âReally?' Matt helped himself to the pouch of tobacco lying on the ground between them, the caramel of the leaves sweet as he rolled out the strands into the paper.
Shane nodded. âGot a few ideas for some work up north. With me cousin.'
Archie came out from inside the house, his eyes sleepy, his pyjama bottoms on inside out; he crawled into Shane's arms and lay there, still, while Shane continued to talk.
âReckon your missus will be glad to see the back of me.' He glanced across, shame-faced, at Matt, who didn't understand.
âThink she got the shits with me,' and he explained briefly about the riots.
âNah,' Matt said. âShe was just worried.'
Darlene came out of the house next. She wore a pink satin nightie under an old windcheater and in one hand
she clutched a magazine. She, too, curled up next to Shane, taking up the little space that was left on the couch. Archie was already asleep, arms flung out, fingers trailing in the grass, his head back on Shane's lap; he didn't stir as Shane shifted to make more room.
It was Matt who had to bring up the subject of Lisa and Lucas. Shane wouldn't. And he told him about her and the boy with the hesitancy of someone who hadn't yet moved beyond initial impressions. She seemed pretty together, he said. But the boy worried him.
âI haven't had much to do with teenage boys, but he looked like he was heading for trouble.' Matt rubbed his chin, staring up at the sky as he continued speaking. âIt's not so much wanting to leave school, although of course that's not great. It was more that he was completely shut down. You know, I talked to him but I felt like the whole time I might as well have been talking to a wall. He gave nothing. No indication of any awareness of my presence at all.'
Shane didn't speak. He just hunched forward, smoking. But he was listening.
âHe doesn't know who I am,' Matt continued. âSo it's not like he was angry with me for being his father and never being there. I feel like I should help her, but I don't know how.'
Flicking the end of his rollie into the fire, Shane stretched his legs. Neither Archie nor Darlene stirred from the depths of their sleep. He didn't look across at Matt, and when he finally spoke, it was not about Lisa or her child.
âDon't think you ever met their mum,' and he nodded at his kids.
Matt shook his head.
âShe's a good woman but she's got her problems.'
From over the fence, a cat howled, a wild feral screech that broke the stillness of the evening. The next-door neighbour's dog barked in response, continuing in its frustration at being unable to get to the cat until Shane eventually banged on the tin fence with his fist â and all was silent again. Matt looked at the kids sprawled next to their father, amazed that they were still asleep.
âShe took 'em a couple of times. Came in the middle of the night and just took 'em.' He shook his head. âI had to call the cops to get 'em back. Had to go to court.' Running his hand through Darlene's hair, Shane looked across at Matt and then back at the fire again.
âBut you're sorted now?'
Shane nodded. âThey go up there for the holidays.'
âDo they miss her?'
âYeah. Reckon they do sometimes.' Carefully extracting Darlene's limbs from across his lap, Shane leant forward and reached for another beer. There was a sharp hiss as he opened the can, flicking the ring pull into the brightness of the fire. He poked at the coals once again with the stick. âI've told her she can have 'em.' He sat back, letting the stick fall in the dirt at his feet. âShe's just got to get it together. Soon as she does that, they're hers.'
A little unsure as to why Shane was telling him this now, Matt only nodded.
âAll you can do is just take it day by day,' and Shane scratched his forearm. âDay by day.'
Picking up the stick that Shane had dropped, Matt also stirred the embers of the fire, watching the glow of
the coals, brilliant orange from grey ash, as he poked at the few burnt ends that lay scattered on the edge, pushing them back towards the centre.
âWas that your way of giving advice?' he eventually asked, smiling slightly as he did so.
Shane's grin was slow. He held up his hands, as though backing away from the accusation. âAnother beer?'
On the edge of getting very pissed, Matt declined. Tonight he wanted to go home.
âTold Freya I wouldn't be late,' he explained, and Shane just grinned once more.
âYeah, don't want her getting the shits with me again,' he said. âParticularly now we're getting good, her and me.'
Matt smiled. He would see himself out, he said, and he stood slowly, stretching as he did so. Looking down at the kids curled around Shane, he offered to help him carry them inside.
âNah.' Shane shook his head, shifting his body weight back into the couch. âReckon we'll just sleep out here.'
âShall I get you a blanket?' Matt offered, aware of the chill now that he had stepped a few feet away from the warmth of their fire.
But Shane shook his head again. He'd go himself. In a while. âThey won't wake now,' he said, looking down at his kids. âNot even if a bomb went off.'
As he walked home in the darkness, the street quiet and empty, the vision he had of the three of them, all in that one couch by the last of the fire, made him smile again. He would take Ella camping soon, he thought. Perhaps go with Shane and his kids. She, too, would be fast asleep, unlikely to stir as he crept into her room to
give her a kiss goodnight, and he quickened his pace, wanting to see his daughter now, his heart warm with the wonder of her, with the wonder of all children â and he realised he was drunker than he had thought, but also slightly calmer. He could deal with Lucas. It had all got out of proportion. It was a matter of letting it be, taking it as it came. The tightness in his heart loosened slightly, and he pushed the front gate open, the hinges squeaking in the stillness, his footsteps loud on the stairs, his fingers clumsy as he fitted the key in the lock.
The hall light was off. From down in the kitchen he could hear Freya talking to someone on the phone. In Ella's room, the darkness was thick but he could see her. He bent over her, kissing her softly on the cheek before stepping back to just look at her, a beautiful burning in his heart as he soaked up the sight of her. His daughter. And sliding down against the wall, he sat on the floor, knees to his chest, listening to the softness of her breath, the steady flow of air entering and leaving her as she slept, arms flung out to the night, unaware of his presence there, in the corner of her room.