Read The Last Girl Online

Authors: Michael Adams

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The Last Girl (4 page)

BOOK: The Last Girl
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I might’ve pondered the mystery longer if I hadn’t been so blown away by what Dad said when we got home.

‘Danby.’ He looked at me sternly. ‘We’ve got to look into a new school for you.’

‘What? Why?’

‘Aristotle said the sun revolved around the earth. An A-plus is great but they really shouldn’t be teaching that stuff these days.’ He grinned and kissed me on the cheek. ‘Goodnight, smartypants.’

Dad went into the study to make a phone call. I stayed in the lounge room with a big smile on my face.

I had to speak to Mum. Not about anything in particular. But it was like talking to her would make this night about the three of us. Give me the same feeling I had whenever I thought about my most enduring image of them as a couple. Robyn in paint-flecked overalls, Brendan with ink-stained fingers, both drinking beer from bottles as they explained how they’d made my name from their own because we’d always be together. What sucked is that I didn’t know if that was a memory or something I’d imagined.

I reached into my pocket—then remembered my phone was off limits and up in my room. So I used our landline to call Mum’s landline. Talk about old-school.

‘Hello?’

‘Hi, Mum, it’s—’

‘. . . you’ve called Robyn.’

That damned pause got me every time.

‘I don’t want to get to the phone just now. If you know the meaning of life, leave it as a short message. If you saw my awesome flyer and are interested in turning your trash into treasure, please leave your name and number and I’ll call you back. Namaste, yo.’

The answering machine was an ancient tape thing. It clunked and beeped.

‘Hi Mum,’ I said. ‘Just calling to say hello. You’re obviously out rummaging for my Christmas present. I’ll see you on the twenty-seventh. Love ya.’

I waited till I sensed the machine was about to disconnect the call.

‘Oh, I’ve been meaning to tell you, the meaning of life is—’

Screeeeech
.

THREE

I had to come clean with my friends about my social media absence on the bus on Monday morning.

‘I’ve been thinking the word “screen” has two meanings,’ I started. ‘I looked it up—it can mean to show or to conceal. My theory is that our whole lives we’re—’

Blah-blah-blah
: that’s what they heard.

Jacinta said that with Finn on the horizon I’d picked the wrong week to give up social media. Emma couldn’t believe I’d actually brought pens and notebooks to school. Madison sniffed that I was being quite rude. It was so unheard of they couldn’t help spread the word. I gave up on trying to explain seriously. My friends rolled their eyes as I gave a different reason to each kid who asked me WTF. I told Marnie
Vogue
had called Disconnect Chic the New Black. Said to John that I was preparing for my new life in an Amish community. Claimed to Cybele that scientists had proved offline people produced more pheromones. Each of them looked at me funny and went off to make fun of me.

When the din had died down my friends went back to status updating, voting on
Instant Celebrity
, and watching
Amazing
Coinkydinks
. Without a screen, my attention was free to drift to two little kids playing a game a few seats away.

‘I spy with my—’ the girl said singsong.

‘Ambulance!’ the boy blurted.

She laughed and nodded.

‘Okay, my turn!’

He looked out the window at the world whizzing by. ‘I spy—’

‘Jogger,’ she said. ‘Too easy.’

He screwed up his face. ‘Hey! You have to wait a little bit.’

‘You didn’t. My turn.’

The answers kept coming—‘Hospital!’, ‘Helicopter!’, ‘Playground!’, ‘Gutter!’, ‘Clown!’—before either got to the letter clue.

Then they burst out laughing and blinked at each other like they’d just woken from a shared dream.

‘That was awesome,’ he said.

‘I spy—’ she said.

He shook his head. ‘It’s gone.’

I wondered how they’d done the trick and who they hoped to impress. They had no audience other than me. Virtually every kid on the bus had their face in a screen. I couldn’t see how they’d planned such a routine. Sure, some of the landmarks we passed every day, but half of the things they’d spied had been random.

My mystery train of thought derailed when Emma poked me in the ribs because she couldn’t do it online.

‘Know what I saw in my newsfeed this morning?’ she asked.

‘No.’

‘Well, you wouldn’t,’ Madison chimed in. ‘Miss Exile.’

‘That’s Miss
Self
-Exile,’ I corrected. ‘And it’s only for a week.’

‘Whatever, anyway, like, some maths nerd somewhere,’ Emma continued, ‘reckons in maybe a year or something, we’ll hit this tipping point and everyone on social media will know everyone else.’

‘Maybe not Dan,’ guffawed Jacinta. ‘By then she’ll be living on a desert island. Talking into a conch shell.’

I chortled along at that one.

‘But, like, everyone knowing everyone,’ said Emma. ‘isn’t that awesome?’

‘Totally noisome!’ I said.

At least one of Dad’s dictionary words had stuck.

The girls blinked at me.

‘It’s means “nice” and “awesome”,’ I said with a smirk.

I could be a real smart ass sometimes.

That was the day Troy Burke got busted for copying Jacinta’s A-minus English essay. The question had been, ‘What’s revealed about
Nineteen Eighty-Four
by George Orwell’s original title
The Last Man In Europe
?’ Rumour was that Troy had protested that, yo, everything he wrote, like, totally came out of his own head. His cause wasn’t helped by his admission that he hadn’t read beyond chapter three. The doofus wasn’t even smart enough to claim he’d seen
Big Bro
, the recent hip-hop movie adaptation about rhymin’ freedom-fighta Win-S. What no one could explain was how Troy had replicated Jacinta’s essay word for word when he was at a desk four rows in front of her. Then it was officially decreed: some ghost in the machine had merged his file with hers. Jacinta’s grade would stand. Troy would get a generous C.

My conspiracy scenario was he’d paid someone to hack the school’s systems and the powers-that-be knew but didn’t want to: a) admit a security breach; b) embroil the school in a scandal; c) expel their best sportsman. If I was really smart I might have been theorising that his bizarre plagiarism was linked to the I Spy game and the Rubber Thaime waiter and the squabbling Grocery clients. But I didn’t even see them as dots to connect.

After our last day at school, I took every shift I could at The Grocery, adding another five hundred dollars to my escape fund. When Jacinta and I weren’t working, we were giddily discussing Mollie’s party.

To avoid curfews cramping our style on the big night, I told Dad I was staying at Jacinta’s and she told her folks we’d be at my place. Oldest trick in the book. The plan was to meet at TYZ and get changed into our party clothes. But first I had to endure an early pizza dinner with my family. At least I didn’t have to worry about being interrogated. We were together in bodies only. Dad used his least-greasy finger to navigate his tablet. Stephanie read a gossip site on hers. Evan was lost in
Snots
on the Shades that seemed to connect with his mind better than we could.

Me? I’d lasted six very long days without my screens but caved when I heard that Finn had friended me. Since then we’d been sharing a few snarky laughs. Tonight we’d be finally face to face. As I ate my seafood slice, I hoped he liked my last comment about
LOLZ2
being for ‘Lame-O-Loser-Z-Squared’.

Newsblurb
burbled on the lounge-room wall, its fast-talking anchor taming current affairs into sixty-second segments with the help of her guest experts.

What did the Mercury mission mean for astrology? Best-selling skywatcher Bella said we were on the cusp of a transformation! Could the humble sardine turn the tide on the great oceanic extinction and save you dollars at the dinner table? Eco-economist-turned-celebrity-chef Tenzing Gumbo had just the recipe! Was it true that Hollywood babies were being born with gray hair? Celebrity stylist Zeus had teased out the truth!

The ‘mad media minutes’ raced by in a blur until one got my full attention.

‘They say that dogs come to resemble their owners,’ the anchor babbled, ‘but could people come to think like their devices?’

The screen split to show another talking head.

‘Research shows that people are increasingly able to predict who’s calling or messaging them,’ he said. ‘We got friends to call other friends from private numbers.’

A third pop-up screen showed folks staring into MobiFfone flexis and tablets and Shades.

‘Up to four times out of ten,’ he continued, ‘those on the receiving end correctly predicted who was calling or texting!’

A stat-strap appeared:
40% predict phone peeps!

‘The evidence suggests our senses are evolving to understand the electronic impulses given off by our favourite devices. The implications for the future of thought-comms are staggering.’

The newsticker summarised:
Science: we sync with fave fones!

Then the anchor was back with a report about a new service that let people 3-D print their perfect match. But I was still wondering about the last story. If there was anything to the experiment—apart from MobiFfone’s marketing dollars— then wasn’t it possible we were tuning into people instead of products? I almost always knew it was Jacinta messaging before I saw her ID.

My phone tinkled. Finn liked my LOL comment and left a ‘LOL’. Nice irony—at least I hoped he meant it ironically.

Then Finn’s first-ever private message popped up on my screen. ‘Wot U drink? @ Store.’

What did I drink? Only the occasional glass of wine with Mum because it made her happy.

‘Pinot noir?’ I messaged Finn, hoping that didn’t sound stupid.

His response arrived a second later.

‘Classy!’

I was off to a good start because classy was the theme of the party.

Mollie had initially tried to keep her big bash hush hush and exclusively for the interlocking flower of cool kids at the centre of our school’s Venn circles of cliques. But the secret had quickly reached the likes of Jacinta and me and then spread to even more distant points on the social circumference. The word was that Mollie had said we were all welcome if we followed the dress code and behaved ourselves. Guess she was trying to cultivate a supernice attitude to go with the supermodel looks.

Mollie lived in an old-money suburb and she greeted us at her front door wearing a dazzling evening dress and diamond choker. She held a champagne flute in one hand and a cigarette with holder in the other. Over Mollie’s creamy shoulder I noticed her mansion was packed and Princess Hellbanga throbbed from the stereo system.

‘You look amazing,’ I shouted. ‘Thanks for this.’

‘Upstairs is VIP only,’ she said, inspecting our outfits. ‘As long as that’s clear.’

We nodded.

Mollie stepped aside to let us enter before shining her radiance on the next arrivals.

‘Can’t she afford a door bitch?’ Jacinta whispered as we walked into the grand foyer.

I laughed. ‘Every peasant must bask in the splendour.’

‘Wow,’ Jacinta said, doing just that.

I agreed. ‘Wow.’

Where Stephanie had made our house look like a virtual mall, Mollie’s parents had turned their place into an art gallery. The walls were adorned with huge abstract paintings. Furniture and sculpture flowed one to the other. Even the rugs looked like masterpieces. More amazing was that everyone had followed Mollie’s style directive. Hoodies and T-shirts and jeans and baseball caps had been swapped for designer dresses and high heels and suits and shirts with collars and ties. None of us looked as awesome as our hostess but we’d all scrubbed up nicely. Especially Finn, who was on the other side of the gleaming kitchen, being all handsome in a charcoal suit as he drank beer with some of the sports guys.

‘Let’s grab a seat,’ I said.

‘Uh-uh,’ Jacinta replied. ‘Gotta mingle if you wanna tingle.’

‘Oh shut up!’

I dragged her back into the lounge room and we perched ourselves on a pop art sofa.

‘Drink, ladies?’

BOOK: The Last Girl
3.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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