âNothing,' Denise said.
Larry stepped outside.
âNo!' Denise snapped. âLarry, inside. Now.'
Larry's brow scrunched. âWhat?'
âInside. Now.'
âBut . . .'
âNow!'
There was a brittle edge to her voice. It made the hair stand up on Larry's arms. He stepped inside.
Denise closed the door without another word.
Larry waited for an explanation but his mother turned on her heel and marched into the kitchen.
Larry followed.
She busied herself at the sink.
âWhat's the matter?' he asked again.
âNothing.'
âThen why can't I go with my friends?'
âThey're going to the weir.'
âSo? We've been there heaps of times.'
âI don't want you going up there unsupervised.'
âWe always look out for each other.'
âAdequate adult supervision.'
Larry's toes clenched in his shoes. âHow come?'
She didn't answer. She wiped the bench fiercely and didn't say a word, but Larry had guessed. It was the magazine. It was Guillermo's rubbish. Jemma wasn't a little girl any more, and Guillermo was a teenager. It was all about sex.
Nothing could have been further from Larry's reality. Larry was the opposite of sex, whatever that was. If his mother realised how much the idea repulsed him, she'd
have
to let him go. If she could see how much he hated it when his friends flirted, she'd be packing him out the door.
âMum, I . . .'
She held up her hand. When she looked up, her eyes were wet.
âI've lost one child this year,' she said. âIt won't happen again.'
Larry left the kitchen at a trot before his feelings of injustice found hot words. It was all about sex but his mother blamed the dead child. He had no defence against her sadness. He could see that the whirlpool of sorrow around the dead baby was dragging down his own happiness, his freedom. The ghost of the baby was wrecking the family. He slammed the back door and stumbled down the stairs and into the shadows of his father's shed. A hundred flies seeking shelter in the shade were put to flight as he approached. Gilligan, lying on his side on the cool concrete floor, lifted his head to inspect his visitor, then flopped down again, panting.
Under the bench with the red vice Larry found a long box draped with an old towel.
A telescope.
He was still crouching there feeling cheated by the world when his father came through the gate. Gilligan barked once â a high-pitched yelp of greeting â then sprang to his feet to meet Mal.
If the dog hadn't cut his father off, Larry wouldn't have had time to cover the box.
âOh! Hi, Larry. What are you up to?'
Larry shrugged. âNothing.'
âAre you okay? What's wrong?'
âNothing. I'm fine.'
âWhere's your mum?'
âInside.'
Mal nodded thoughtfully. âHow is she?'
âSame.'
âListen, Larry, your mother . . .'
âDo you want to come with me to the weir?' Larry interrupted. âJemma and Guillermo went up there for a swim and I . . .'
âI've got things to do.'
Larry saw him glance towards the box under the bench.
âYou can go if you want. Be careful. Look out for each other.'
Larry saw the door of his cell open. âOf course.'
He grabbed his bike and skipped to the gate before his father had a chance to change his mind.
âLarry?'
Too late. âYes?'
Mal tapped his head.
Larry's laugh was more of a screech. He collected his helmet and pedalled like an Olympian along Condon Street.
âLarry?'
He looked around in fright, but it wasn't his father or mother calling â it was worse than that.
âWait up!' Clinton hollered.
Larry pedalled harder.
Clinton caught up with him at the railway crossing. âWhere we going?'
Larry sneered.
âDid you see your present?'
âNo,' Larry lied. âIt wasn't there.'
âYes, it was. Under the bench.'
Larry shook his head.
âOh, well. It was a stupid cheap thing anyway. I'm getting a Game Boy Advance.'
Larry blew air from his nose.
âI am.'
âYou have to be good.'
âI am.'
Larry rode his dad's old bike hard but Clinton's bike â rusted and squeaky as it was â had gears and he kept up with ease.
Jemma and Guillermo's bikes were propped against the handrail that led to the picnic area.
Clinton jumped off his bike and let it plough into the bushes. He took the steps two at a time. Larry found him squatted behind a thicket of ferns, his eyes wide, finger to his lips. He was smiling, and Larry thought there was nothing in the world more repulsive than that broken boy's smile.
Larry hurried past him.
In the plunge pool beneath the narrow summer stream of the overflow, Guillermo and Jemma were wrapped in a big movie kiss. Jemma's eyes were shut, and the two of them seemed to be frozen together.
âAhh ha ha!' Clinton brayed. He pushed through, scooped up a handful of river sand and pelted it at the lovers. It didn't make the distance, but the commotion split their embrace. They broke apart, but their glowing faces were smiling. Proper smiles. Smiles of guilty pleasure.
âYou were kissing!' Clinton sang. âSaw you.'
âShut up, Clinton,' Larry said. âLeave them alone.'
He walked by Clinton and kept walking. Shoes and all, he trudged knee-deep into the water, then dived. He swam to the bottom and stayed down until his lungs were burning and his clothes had been drowned. He breached and sucked air like a whale, to find his friends' faces full of concern.
âDon't do that,' Jemma said.
âNo,' Guillermo said. âI didn't think you were coming back up.'
It was Larry's turn to smile. A loveless Clinton smile.
âWhat's the matter?' Jemma asked.
âNothing,' Larry said, and began paddling downstream to the rocky beach.
Guillermo and Jemma followed in the water â a guilty distance apart â and Clinton kicked sand and stones as he moved along the riverbank.
Larry came ashore on the shaded part where he'd learned to skim stones and sat with his knees tucked up to his chest.
Jemma beached on her stomach like a dolphin. She stared hard at Larry. âWhat's the matter?' she mouthed.
Larry shrugged. âNothing. Everything.'
He nodded at Clinton's back.
Jemma rolled her eyes.
âHey, Clinton?' Guillermo said, treading water.
âWhat?'
âWhy don't you come in? The water's beautiful.'
âI bet,' Clinton grumbled. He lifted a rock with both hands. It was the size of a loaf of bread and he heaved it with all his might at Guillermo. It fell short, but Guillermo drew a breath and lifted an arm against the splash anyway.
Clinton dusted his hands and laughed.
Guillermo's eyes narrowed and he surged at the shore.
Clinton ran towards the bikes, and Guillermo let him go.
A small rock cracked on the ground beside Larry, narrowly missing him as it skittered along the beach.
In that moment, the source of Larry's pain and confusion slid into focus. He lived in the middle of two triangles â one made of his mother, his father and him, the other made strong by Guillermo and Jemma. While Larry knew and trusted his father, his mother had been battered and marked like a lunch-box peach. She made them both weak and the triangle was fragile. He didn't want to think about what life would be like if that triangle fell over.
The closer Jemma and Guillermo got to each other, the further from Larry they both seemed. Their triangle was becoming more like railway tracks that merged in the distance.
And Clinton? Clinton didn't fit anywhere. He was garbage that couldn't be dumped, an illness that had no cure. He was like Jesus' cross, Larry thought.
Jemma's eyes were pleading. âWhat is it, Larry? I've never seen you like this.'
âDo you believe in Father Christmas?'
âI . . . we . . . Yes, I do,' Guillermo said.
âCan you explain how it is that he can visit every good child in the world on one night?'
âHe has helpers,' Jemma offered.
âLike my mum and dad?' Larry asked.
Guillermo smiled. âExactly like your mum and dad.'
âSo your mum or dad buy the presents and wrap them up and put them under the tree?'
âYes,' Guillermo said.
âThat's just lying,' Larry said. âRight in my face. Year after year.'
âThat's one way of looking at it,' Guillermo said. âYou could say they're doing it to keep Santa . . . the spirit of Christmas . . . alive.'
âFather Christmas is dead,' Larry growled.
âDon't say that,' Jemma said. âYou won't get any presents.'
âFATHER CHRISTMAS IS DEAD!' Larry screamed.
Jemma sat up, her face tight. âWhat is wrong with you? You sound like Clinton.'
âThat's because Clinton is my
boyfriend
,' Larry spat as he got to his feet. âWe normally go out in the middle of the river and
kiss
.'
Jemma's cheeks filled with blood. âI'm sorry, Larry. Larry?
Where are you going?'
âHome,' he shouted over his shoulder. âI have to bury Santa.'
Larry rode hard, breathing through his teeth and hating the world.
He realised when he got home that he'd barely dipped a toe into the depths of his mother's despair. She met him at the door, took one look at his damp clothes and flicked her head towards his room.
She left him there for the rest of the afternoon. He didn't mind. He stripped off his clothes and lay naked on his bunk.
He wished he could un-see things. He wished he could un-know and undo things. He wished he could take his stinky art eraser and scrub things from his experience, redraw his life all loose and silly and bright like a cartoon. Page after page of oversized smiles and âha ha ha' balloons. He'd draw his mother's mouth mended; the gaps between him and Guillermo and Jemma would be perfect again.
He was dressed and sitting at his desk when his mother arrived to deliver his sentence. He covered the page he was drawing on with his arm.
âYou can't play your father and me against each other,' she said. Her voice was flat and menacing. âYou can't get one answer from me, then ask him in the hope he'll say something different.'
Larry nodded.
âAs a punishment, if you want to leave the property, you must have an adult with you at all times.'
âFor how long?'
âWe'll see,' she said. âWhat are you drawing?'
âNothing.'
âShow me,' she said, and grabbed his arm.
Three stick figures with big heads. One wore a frown. He attacked it with his eraser as she watched and replaced the frown with an ear-to-ear grin.
She hurried from the room. She didn't smile.
Larry made his mother a jewellery box for Christmas. It didn't come out as neat as he'd planned but he gave it to her anyway. He gave his father a golf club â a putter he'd found in the park â and a golf ball, also from the park. Santa brought Larry a telescope, and he faked his surprise and delight. It must have been convincing â his father's eyes misted and he wiped his smiling face on the sleeve of his pyjamas. Santa brought his mother a DVD player and a collection of films by Krzysztof Kieslowski â
Three
Colours: Blue, Three Colours: White, Three Colours: Red.
âOkay?' Mal whispered.
Denise nodded and bared her teeth. It wasn't convincing at all.
While Christmas dinner was sombre and the surprises weren't really surprises, parts of Christmas Day rocked Larry onto his heels.
He didn't have to wait until dark to enjoy his telescope. He set it up in the yard and got a fright when he looked in the eyepiece and saw a sparrow. Sharp, in vivid colour, and so much larger than life. He only saw it for a second before it flitted off, but it was enough to encourage him to focus on the flowers in the vegetable garden, the microwave tower on the hill behind the shopping centre, and finally, a pigeon. It sat on the Hammersmiths' TV aerial and preened itself. The telescope turned a common pigeon doing its grooming into a fascinating and beautiful thing.
There was a loud crack against the park fence and the pigeon flew off.
âTold you,' Clinton said. His fingers were hooked over the top of the palings. Larry could only see the crown of his head and his eyes. âI knew you were getting a telescope. Can I have a go?'
âNo.'
âI've got a present for you.'
Larry stared. âWhat sort of present?'
âA Christmas present. Come over. Bring your telescope.'
Larry smiled to himself. Clinton's present was probably a handful of grass. âI'm not allowed.'
âNot allowed in the park? Why not?'
Larry shook his head. âI'm grounded.'
âAhh ha ha!' Clinton bellowed. âAre your friends allowed over?'
Larry thought he was talking about Jemma and Guillermo. âOf course.'
âGood,' he said, and disappeared.
Gilligan growled as Clinton unlocked the side gate.
He
did
have a present tucked under his arm, roughly wrapped in second-hand paper.
âHappy Christmas,' he said.
Larry accepted the gift warily. Squarish and heavy in his hand, it probably wasn't grass. In fact, it was a Game Boy Colour. The screen was scratched and greasy. The plastic shell was pecked and dented and closer to off-white than its original snow-white.
âIt's my old one. It's fully charged. I brought over my Advance I got for Christmas and the linking cord. If you want we can play Mario Kart together.'
Larry wanted to give it back. Even as a hand-me-down it was still too big to be given away. It complicated things. At best, Clinton was a dull ache, not a friend. A horsefly that hangs on for the ride, then bites you when your guard is down.