I raced to bed, but Hana spent twenty minutes in the shower. Then I heard Mum speaking to her. I couldn't catch much of it, but I heard the phrase âonly sixteen' and guessed she was being told off for corrupting me. I was sick and frightened, not for what might happen to me, but for what happened to Hana. Could you really be raped by two disgusting men and be so matter-of-fact? And then I remembered rat-faced Udo with his fly undone, and how we'd asked him to dinner, and how he knew where we lived.
When I went downstairs for breakfast, Hana was still in bed, and Mum insisted we take Mickey to the beach. Nothing was said for four blocks, until at last Mum spoke. Hana had told her everything, and it wasn't my fault. What this âeverything' was, she didn't say. I knew what Hana hadn't told her.
âYour dad will call Rotary and say that if anything like this happens again, she's going straight home. We tried to call her parents, but they're somewhere in Egypt ⦠I've made it clear to her that you're still a child. Hana said you had nothing to drink, and I have no reason to disbelieve her.'
That morning, the bay was so glassy-still you could have skated from Black Rock to Williamstown, and the only thing cutting the silence was Mick's yelping when two pelicans swooped low overhead, teasing him.
âI don't like her,' I said.
âNo. You don't have to. But we'll do our best to make this thing work.'
Having had ten years to think about it, I still don't know what the facts were, or if the truth meant the same to Hana as it did to me. There was no obvious change in her mood that morning. By the time we returned with Mick, she'd made camp in front of the television, and was shovelling muesli into her mouth like someone who hadn't eaten for a week.
âHow about a trip down the Ocean Road?' Mum asked. âIt's one of the world's great scenic drives.'
âI get car-sick,' Hana advised.
âWe could explore some goldfields towns. Or visit the wildlife sanctuary at Healesville.'
Hana then left the lounge to throw slices of raisin-bread into the toaster.
âMaybe you'd prefer walking at Wilson's Promontory, or seeing fairy penguins at Phillip Island?' Mum called after her.
âI'd prefer to relax for a couple of days.'
Mum then fired her flame-thrower at the ice. âHana, I'm going to book you on a bus tour through Central Australia and Kakadu National Park. If you decide you're not interested, you can cancel, but if you cancel, Rotary said we should book you a flight home.'
Anyone else would have taken that as a kick in the teeth, but Hana spent the next few days gorging herself in front of the big screen as if nothing Mum said could make any difference.
One time, I asked if she wanted to see a doctor, and Hana laughed.
âYou're a fool. You'd believe anything I said.'
By Friday, Hana had exhausted our video collection, and the moment of truth was at hand. If she cancelled the outback tour before midday, Mum would lose her deposit. If she cancelled after that, Mum'd lose the full fare. Would Hana make an effort to save the exchange, or would she cancel and go home?
âWhat could be more boring than riding a bus through the desert?' Hana answered.
âHana, I think you're depressed, and I'm sorry about that,' Mum said. âBut now it's for your parents to sort out.'
âThey're in Egypt.'
âAnd what they think about it is their fucking business,' Mum answered. I'd never heard her swear at anything except traffic.
The slaves who built the pyramids saw time pass more quickly than it did for us those next few days. The family policy was to ask Hana if she was interested in doing something â whether that be shopping, or walking Mick â and to ignore her when she declined.
I'm not sure she believed Mum would re-schedule her flight home until Dad finally reached her parents in Luxor. When Dad passed her the phone, Hana went pale, and spoke to her mother in soft, compliant tones. After that, she hid in her bedroom. But for occasional trips to the bathroom and fridge, she wasn't seen again until the day she was due to fly out. But her bags were sitting neatly beside the front door several hours before we were due to leave for the airport.
âI'm sorry it came to this, Hana,' Dad told her as he left for work. âBut I don't think you wanted to come here in the first place.'
âNo,' she conceded.
After breakfast, Mum had to collect the revised ticket from the agent. Given the choice between staying with Hana or going with Mum, I chose the latter. Out of habit, Mum asked if there was anything Hana wanted us to get, and she actually smiled when she said, âNo, thank you.'
Much as I wanted to see Hana's huge arse vanish through the customs door, I remember feeling that I'd failed her in some way that not even she could understand. I wanted to ask if she hated me, but I was frightened she'd say yes. No one had ever hated me before.
We were gone an hour, and when we returned, Hana was seated exactly where we'd left her, remote in hand, flicking through the channels, hoping to find one of the low-brow talk shows she liked best. But something was different, and I noticed that she'd changed from flats into the heels she wore so awkwardly. I couldn't imagine why anyone would choose to wear heels on a long flight.
When the taxi tooted in the driveway, Mum called âAll set?' and Hana leapt to her feet. She then made the unprecedented gesture of turning the television off. We were at the front door, about to set the alarm, when Mum paused, unsure if the dog was inside or out.
After calling twice, she walked back through the house. From the front door, I could see down the corridor through to the family room window, and saw Mum walk out onto the back balcony.
âIs something the matter?' Hana asked in careful German.
âI don't know.'
âPerhaps you'd better see,' she said.
By the time I reached the balcony, I could hear Mum crying. I found her slumped in the garage, cradling Mickey's limp body. A kitchen knife had been forced through his throat.
I would have quit German, but Dad insisted that I continue. He was sure German writers must have written poetry to help one deal with darknesses that cloak the sun. I've since read my share of Goethe and Rilke without finding a thought that could erase the knife that killed our beautiful boy.
It wasn't until recently, while watching the sleazy character Robert Blake plays in the film
Lost Highway
, that I recalled something else from the bar in North Melbourne. Udo said that I should come too, that I'd brighten their party. But it was Hana who insisted, âNo, not her. She doesn't belong.'
She might have driven further south still, to Monkey Mia, to swim with the dolphins. But much as she loved dolphins, she couldn't cope with a tourist crowd. What she really needed was to have the water to herself, and there were hundreds of miles of beach to choose from along the western coast. Slow to sight a track off the highway, she nearly lost control making the high-speed turn, the car's back end drifting precariously. Only her intuition told her that there would be water beyond the dunes at the end of the track. The faintest whiff of Indian Ocean breaching a wall of heat.
She changed into a red one-piece in the car. Not even in remote areas would she swim naked. Especially not in remote areas. Then she grabbed her towel and dashed across the dunes, excited as a child, knowing that beyond them she would find the beach of her dreams: soft, white-hot sand, tall curling waves at the edge of an emerald sea. An ocean.
Throwing down her towel and kicking off her thongs, she drove her legs through the scorching hot powder until her feet hit the crust, then the firm wet sand. Waded through the shallows before diving headlong into the crashing surf, the water warmer than she'd expected, waves taller than she'd hoped for knocking her off her feet, then the surge of undertow as the next line of water collected and rose, whitening at the crest before it broke over her, forcing her head down into the blue-green riot, driving her knees into the coarse sand. Then, as the commotion stilled, she pushed her head back towards the sunlight. Nothing was composed or orderly below the surface. Sensational chaos.
When she found her balance and stood, he was standing next to her. A bald-headed man with a massive chest, calm in the face of her rapidly swallowed breath. He was a mature man, mid-to-late fifties, with a soft, American voice: âHello, I'm James. I'm an astronaut.'
The man spun around to catch the next wave, two or three elegant strokes, then, arms pinned to torso, he skied the breaking wave like a porpoise all the way to the beach.
Melissa saw him get to his feet and flick the water off his face as he adjusted the back of his blue Speedos. A giant man with broad shoulders leaving a trail of wet footprints behind him. And she was watching him cross the beach when the next wave broke over her, forcing her down into the churning water until her feet were above her head and she was slave to the motion of the surf.