Authors: Nova Weetman
Chapter 7
Joely's putting the last of her clothes away when she hears her best friend laugh. She scurries across Frankie's bed and peeps out through the thin cotton curtain. She can't see Frankie, but she can hear her talking, her singsong voice rising up and down, charming whoever it is that she's with. She looks over at the shed, wondering if it's Mack or Thommo.
There's a revving of an engine and time seems to stop. She kneels higher, pulling the curtains aside so that she can look out properly and, just as she does, a motorbike shoots out of the shed. As it flies past the window, she sees Thommo with someone on the back. She sees long hair flying out of a helmet, bare legs and she knows, without seeing her face, that it's Frankie. Of course it's Frankie! Holding onto Thommo like he's her own personal chauffeur.
Just like that Joely's left behind and watching like the world out there is too dangerous, too fast and too out of reach.
Joely stomps out of their room and bangs into the kitchen. Jill looks up but says nothing, just passes Joely a peeler and lets her get to work.
âThought we'd have a potato salad tonight. What do you think?'
âSure,' says Joely, hating the fact that Frankie has changed her mood.
âWhere's Frankie?'
âGone for a ride with Thommo.' Joely wishes she could keep the anger out of her voice, but she's so cross that she wants someone else to judge Frankie too.
Her aunt slips her arm around Joely's shoulders, and pulls her close. âSo I get you all to myself. That's nice.'
âYes.'
âHow long have you and Frankie been friends?'
âA while.'
Jill nods. âYou still friends with Tess and Lucy?'
Joely's surprised Jill remembers them. It's not like Joely ever really talked about them that much.
âYes. I see them at school.'
âBut Frankie's the closest?'
âYes.'
Jill smiles. âHaving a best friend is nice, isn't it?'
Joely's pleased she understands. But then Jill always does.
âCome on, peeling time.' Her aunt nods towards the bowl of potatoes. Joely can smell their dirty jackets. She reaches out and chooses the largest potato she can find. She can't wait to slide the peeler around and around, and try to take off the skin in one long strip.
Before Joely can start, the wire door bangs. She knows that it's Frankie coming back because she doesn't hear boots being kicked off in the hall. She doesn't want her friend to come in right now, so she's sure it will be her. It always works like that for Joely. The thing she wants least is what happens. She used to try to trick her mind to think the opposite, so that what she really wanted would happen. It never worked.
Frankie walks in smiling. She kisses Joely on the cheek. âCan I help?'
Joely watches as her aunt turns and looks at her best friend. Frankie shuffles her feet and looks down. Joely's not used to seeing Frankie like this. It pleases her more than she knows it should.
Jill breaks the silence and says, âJust in time. Grab another peeler from the drawer, Frankie.'
Frankie opens the drawer, takes out a peeler and sits down next to Joely.
Joely wonders why Frankie came back so soon. She hopes it's because she remembered the potato peeling and not because Thommo had other things to do. âRace?' says Joely, desperate to win something against her friend.
âNah,' says Frankie picking up a potato and starting on one end.
âChicken.'
Jill laughs. âRemember you and Mack used to race each other.'
âYes. 'Til he cut his finger,' says Joely, remembering the red blood on the white potato.
Trying to join in the conversation, Frankie asks, âDo you eat lots of potatoes?'
âOne of the benefits of living on a farm. You eat what you grow,' says Jill defensively.
âI like potatoes,' says Frankie, wondering why she seems to say the wrong thing all the time.
âFine if you don't. Joely likes them.' Jill smiles at her niece. âAnd she needs a bit of fattening up. She always comes here looking all skinny. I like sending her home with a bit of meat on her bones. Drives her mum mad.'
Joely laughs. âEverything drives Mum mad.'
âHow is your mum?' Jill sounds so serious that Frankie wonders if she's asking for a reason. Joely's mum might not be much chop, but at least she's around and she seems to care.
âI don't know. I don't see her much. She's always working or on her computer.'
âAnd your dad? Seen him lately?'
âI think he's okay. He's had a baby. Did you know that?'
The look on Jill's face confirms that it's a surprise.
âSo I have a brother. Half-brother. Whatever. His name's Donnie. I haven't met him yet, but I saw a photo. He's cute,' Joely starts on another potato and adds, âfor a baby.'
âAre you going to go and see him?' says Jill.
Joely nods. âDad said he'd send money. I'll go up next holidays and stay for a few days.'
Frankie has stopped peeling. She hasn't heard about any of this and she can't believe Joely hasn't told her. She wonders if Joely's talking about it now because she wants Frankie to know, but she just doesn't know how to tell her. They've never really talked about their dads before.
Jill stops chopping and walks close to Joely, rubbing her shoulders. âI'm sure he'd love you to go and stay. You could help out. Change a pooey nappy.'
Joely smiles as Jill kisses her on the head. âHe's a lucky boy to have a big sister like you, Joely.'
Frankie can't believe how Jill seems to know just what to say. She wonders if Joely knows how lucky she is to have an aunt like Jill, and how much Frankie wishes she was hers.
Frankie starts peeling again. She finally finishes and drops her potato into a bowl. She holds up the long ribbon of muddy potato peel. It's a perfect coil. She bounces it slowly up and down, watching the dirt fall onto the table.
Joely reaches over and gives the end a yank, ripping the peel in two. âGet on with it. There's another kilo to go.'
âSorry,' says Frankie.
Jill opens the fridge, takes out the jug of lemonade and, without asking, pours them all a glass.
âCheers. Thanks for having me,' says Frankie, tapping the side of Joely's glass, and then Jill's, hoping that Joely will forgive her for whatever it is she thinks she's done.
âPleasure, Frankie,' says Jill. âJoely's friends are always welcome here.'
The sound of boots stomping down the hall interrupts everything. Joely jumps up, sending her glass of lemonade flying. The glass hits the table hard but doesn't break. Jill tries to right it, but she's too late and lemonade fizzes everywhere, streaming along the table and dripping onto the floor.
âSorry, Jill!' yells Joely as she hightails it down the hall.
âHello little Joely,' says a man's voice. âYou're getting tall. Be as big as me soon.'
âHardly.' Joely laughs.
Frankie looks up as Joely skips back into the kitchen, a large-framed, tall man behind her. He ducks to get through the doorway and looks just like Mack but even bigger and stronger. Frankie knows she's staring but can't help herself.
âJust in time for some lemonade,' says Jill, looking up with the most genuine smile Frankie has ever seen.
âI'd prefer mine in a glass,' says the man watching Jill wring out a dirty cloth into the sink.
âReally? You don't like dirt in your lemonade? What's wrong with you!'
He laughs and notices Frankie sitting at the table. He fixes her with a smile that's almost the same as Thommo's.
âSo you're the reason my boys have done no work today,' he says walking towards her. She stands up. He's so tall that if she stays sitting she'll only come up to his waist.
He shakes her hand, his skin like sandpaper. âHi Frankie. I'm Ged.'
âHi. Nice to meet you,' she says, sounding like someone different.
âJill's got you working already I see.' He nods at the potatoes.
âYeah, but I'm a bit slow.'
âDon't worry, you'll get there.'
Jill hands him a fresh glass of lemonade. Ged bends over and kisses her on the cheek. âI'm heading into town to see Riley about a fence.' He smiles then downs the glass in one long gulp. Jill laughs and takes the empty glass from him.
Frankie doesn't know what they're talking about, but she doesn't care. She wants to watch them being nice to each other, soak up what that's like. Embarrassed, she picks up the smallest potato she can find and starts peeling, liking the earthy smell of the dirt on the potato skin.
âSee you ladies later,' says Ged as he ducks out the door.
As his boots stomp off down the hall, the fan whirrs, working hard to turn the hot air. Frankie listens to the sounds of the kitchen work being done without words: Jill chopping the vegies on the wooden board, the hum of the old fridge and the squeak of the potatoes being peeled.
Chapter 8
When Joely walks into their room after dinner, Frankie is lying on her bed in an old grubby singlet and a pair of men's checked underpants. Joely is used to this outfit. Frankie always changes into these clothes whenever she's finished with the day. It puzzles Joely because Frankie spends so much time perfecting an image to present to the world that it doesn't seem right to see her so casual.
Frankie moves over, making room for Joely to sit down. Instead, Joely lies on her own bed, still cross that Frankie disappeared with Thommo today.
Over dinner she worked out why she was so mad. Frankie's her best friend, hers to introduce to the world. Thommo jumped the queue and spent time with Frankie that didn't involve Joely. She wasn't expecting that would happen so quickly and it hurt when it did. It also worried her. If Frankie could slip under the radar and be that comfortable with her cousins then what was Joely supposed to do? Watch from the window?
Still, Joely's relieved that Frankie knows about her dad and step-brother now. She wanted to tell Frankie before, to explain how weird it felt, but they don't really talk about their dads. Frankie never mentions hers, so Joely didn't want Frankie to feel left out if she admitted that she talked to her dad all the time on the phone. She's glad that Frankie found out about it in front of Jill so that Frankie didn't have to say anything. That way they could both pretend it didn't mean anything.
Joely looks across at Frankie. She's reading her tatty old book again, but Joely won't interrupt her. She doesn't want Frankie to think she cares about what she's doing so she stares at the cobwebs instead. The spiders have long upped and left, but she likes looking at the sagging reminders of their home. It's better than looking at Frankie with her serious expression and her beloved book that has taken her more than a year to reach the middle.
Joely can't be bothered with this tonight. She wishes she were more like other girls who could just tell their friends how they feel. She wishes she were able to make demands. But it's all stuck inside. Stuck in her chest like it's suffocating her. The only way she can make a stand is to lie silently and stare at the forgotten webs, hoping she falls asleep first and doesn't have to watch Frankie reading all night.
She can see Frankie's nose piercing from where she lies. The shining stud is pressed in to the side of her perfect nostril. Joely wonders where Frankie got the money for it. And why she has money to do things like pierce her nose but never any to buy something from the school canteen. Suddenly, Joely's cranky enough to demand change.
âCan you turn the light off?' says Joely.
âI'm reading.'
âWell, I'm sleeping, but I can't if the light's on.'
Frankie rolls onto her side and looks across the room. She smiles and Joely wishes the smile were for her and not about her.
âIt's not even nine o'clock,' says Frankie.
âSo? I'm tired,' says Joely, closing her eyes.
Joely hears the click of the light and feels the room go dark around her. Now it's her turn to smile.
Chapter 9
It's scorching even before the sun comes up. Flies circle when Frankie opens the wire door, reminding her of a zombie film. She doesn't bother swatting them away, knowing they'll call their friends if she does.
Off to the side of the house she notices a bare brown leg hanging out of a hammock. She wonders who it is as she sits on the back step, minding to avoid the nail heads that need knocking back in. If Frankie were at home, she'd stay in bed until after lunch, sleeping and reading and thinking. But here she isn't ready to share her space in the mornings with Joely. Outside where it's light enough to read by the waking sun, she can ready herself for the company of others.
Jasper curls around her legs, meowing and purring. She runs her hand down his back, feeling a bumpy spine hidden under fluff.
The wire door bangs behind her, sending Jasper burrowing under the house.
âMorning, Frankie.'
Frankie turns and smiles at Jill framed in the doorway.
Even looking up at her, Jill still seems small. All those
potatoes must be hiding somewhere.
âCup of tea?'
âNo thanks.'
âJoely up yet?'
âNo. She's still sleeping.'
âBrekky's on if you're hungry.'
âToo early for me.'
âNever too early for bacon and eggs,' says Jill.
Thinking the conversation is over, Frankie turns back to the farm. She waits to hear the door shut, wanting to be alone again so she can think. But Jill doesn't leave. Now Frankie doesn't know how to turn around again and continue talking. She sits in silence, wanting this moment to be over, annoyed at Joely for not waking up and coming to her rescue.
Jasper creeps back to the bottom step, sniffing around Frankie's toes. Frankie smiles, relieved to have something intrude on this conversational standoff. âHere, Jasper,' she says. He circles and tiptoes delicately over for more rubs.
âHe's a beautiful cat,' says Frankie.
âTypical male, he likes beautiful girls.'
Surprised by Jill's tone, Frankie turns to see the expression that accompanied the words. But Jill just smiles at her. Frankie tries to smile back.
âDon't give him too much attention. He'll come to expect it. Then you'll leave and I'll be stuck having to pat him all day.'
Frankie nods, not knowing how to answer.
âI'll drop you girls into town later. You can go to the pool,' says Jill.
âThat'd be great.' Frankie's careful not to comment on the heat or the bus in case she offends Jill like she did yesterday when she said something about eating potatoes.
âWell, when you get hungry, come inside.'
âThanks.'
Finally Frankie hears Jill open the wire door. As if waiting for the audience to leave, Jasper immediately nuzzles up, wanting more than a rub on his back. She lets him crush against her leg, liking the softness of his fur, and the heat coming off his little body. She tickles the folds under his chin, hoping that Jill's watching and can see that she's chosen to ignore her words about Jasper.
Frankie tries to enjoy the morning again, but she feels irritated. The sunrise is now dull, the dry paddocks ugly and the flies swarm around her in a thick pack.
The door bangs again. Thommo dashes down the steps, grinning at her as he runs over to the hammock. With one quick move, he flips the hammock over and Mack hits the dirt, naked and swearing.
âYou fucker, you little fucker.'
Thommo laughs. So does Frankie. Mack jumps up and lunges forward, trying to grab the laughing Thommo.
âHey big boy,' says Thommo, âbetter put it away. You've got an audience.' Thommo points to Frankie who realises she's staring. Mack tries to cover himself with one hand while grabbing at the sheet inside the hammock.
Frankie doesn't turn away. Instead, she watches Mack, taking in his body, his muscles, his embarrassment, and it makes the morning sweet again.
Joely is curled up in a sheet when Frankie walks into their room grinning. When Joely sees her friend so close to the verge of laughter, she forgives her immediately for yesterday, and is pleased she's decided to love her friend again.
âWhat's so funny?'
âJust saw your cousin in the nude. Not bad either.'
âYuck. Which one?'
âMack. I don't want to see Thommo nude.'
âI don't want to see either of them nude.'
âHe's not bad, really. He's muscly. Sort of cute,' says Frankie as if she's trying to wind Joely up.
âOh don't.'
âWhat?'
âHe's my cousin,' says Joely, realising that how she felt yesterday about Frankie riding on the back of Thommo's bike hasn't gone after all.
âYeah. So?'
âWell, I don't want to hear that he's cute,' says Joely, cross and grossed out all at the same time.
âWhy not?'
âIt's ⦠creepy.'
âNo, it's not.'
âYes, it is.'
And then Frankie laughs and laughs. Pretty soon, Joely's laughing too and the pair of them can't stop.
âHow did you see him nude?'
âHe fell out of the hammock.'
âWhat?'
Frankie shrugs.
âWhy did you get up so early?' says Joely.
âI don't know. I like it when it's quiet,' says Frankie.
And then Frankie grins again, straight at Joely, like she's the most important person in the world.
âActually I got up hoping to see your cousin nude.'
âYeah right.'
Frankie shrugs again. âBetter than watching you sleep in.'
Joely rolls over and untangles her legs from the sheets. She almost falls out.
âI'm up.' Joely smiles at her friend. âWhat are we doing today?' Joely hopes the answer is nothing.
âGoing to the pool?'
Joely groans. She looks at her pale, spotty arms. âI'm going to be one big freckle by the time we go home.'
âIf they all join up it'll look like a suntan. Jill said she'd drop us in, but we'll have to get the bus home,' says Frankie as she riffles around in the drawer.
Joely can't believe how comfortable Frankie is as she talks about Jill. It's like Jill is Frankie's aunt not hers. Joely decides that, as of tomorrow, she'll get up earlier. She'll make sure she's part of the day's plans before Frankie can lock in everyone else around her, and come back to tell Joely what they're doing.
Joely looks away as Frankie strips off. She wishes she could be as comfortable as Frankie is, but the room is so tiny that seeing Frankie change just in front of her is all a bit much. To cover her discomfort, Joely starts chattering about the house and the heatwave and the drought. âI know I've been coming here forever, but I've never seen the grass so dry andâ'
âWho's Bluey?' interrupts Frankie as she bends down for Joely to tie up her bikini strap.
Joely pulls tight, avoiding having to answer.
âOw,' says Frankie.
âSorry.' Joely can't believe how smooth Frankie's skin looks.
âJoel? Who's Bluey?'
âJust a cow I used to ride sometimes.'
âYou rode a cow?'
âYes. When I was really little. We all did.' She doesn't want to talk about Bluey because she knows how ridiculous it sounds being upset about a cow dying, and she's worried that if she starts talking about Bluey she might cry. âNice bathers,' she says, changing the subject.
âSavers,' says Frankie with a smile. âI boiled them, cos I was bit worried about who they used to belong to. You know, second-hand bathers and all!'
âEw, gross!'
Frankie shrugs. âThey were only four bucks. Hot water would kill germs, wouldn't it?'
âI think so.' Joely laughs at Frankie's disgusted face as she thinks about wearing someone else's bathers.
âIs there an op shop here?'
Joely nods, realising she's never been inside. âIn the main street. It's only little.'
âI thought I saw it yesterday. That's great. Country ones are the bomb. Can we look?'
âSure.' Joely had never been op shopping before she started hanging out with Frankie. It wasn't that she thought there was anything wrong with it, just that her mum always bought new things. She still wasn't sure if she really liked it, but she's not about to tell Frankie that.
âMorning sleepyhead,' says Jill from the doorway, handing Joely a plate. âMade you a bacon and egg toastie.'
âThanks,' says Joely, immediately forgiving her aunt for organising their day with Frankie instead of her. Just the smell of slightly burnt bacon is enough to make Joely forgive anyone.
Frankie grabs a t-shirt from the drawer and quickly finishes dressing. Joely wonders if she's embarrassed at Jill seeing her in her bathers.
âI'll give you girls ten minutes,' says Jill. âI've got to meet a friend in town.'