Read When Michael Met Mina Online
Authors: Randa Abdel-Fattah
Michael
I go to Terrence's house on Saturday night. His older brother, Mason, and some of his friends are there too, drinking in the backyard.
âYour parents home?' I ask as I grab a beer from the esky beside the outdoor table.
âNope. We're pre-fuelling under Mason's supervision,' he laughs.
âThey trust Mason?' I chuckle.
We hang out with Mason and his friends for an hour, have several rounds. They're okay, in their first and second years at uni. They make us laugh, especially Mason who's even more of a goofball than Terrence.
One of Mason's friends lights up a joint and passes it around. Terrence takes a few deep drags but I pass. Drugs have never interested me. I've tried dope before. I didn't really get high, just a little buzzed. It burnt the hell out of the back of my throat, gave me bad cottonmouth. Life can fog up enough by itself without me giving it a hand.
âLet's go into the Cross,' one of them suggests at around ten-thirty.
âWhat time do you have to be home, Michael?' Mason asks me.
âI could push it to two. Was hoping to play some GTA though.'
âNah, let's go out. Hey, Terrence, reckon you're up to it?'
Terrence looks a little spaced out. He takes a sip of his beer and bursts out laughing. âSure. I'll be Robin and Michael can be Batman. He'll look after me, won't you?'
Mason hesitates for a moment. â
Batman?
Christ. Didn't take you long to get stoned.'
âThought you said Brittney's meeting you at Heat?' Liam asks Mason.
âYeah . . .' He thinks for a minute, eyes fixed on Terrence.
â
And
her friends,' Noah adds, grinning at Liam. âCome on man she's hot for you.'
It takes about five seconds for Mason to cave. We order a taxi and pretty soon we're at the Golden Mile. It's a typical night. We've arrived right about when things start to get going. Mason and his mates are going to meet the girls at the club. Terrence and I have no chance of getting in underage. We agree they'll go in for an hour while we walk the streets, check out the scene.
âYou'll look after him, won't you?' Mason asks me, a worried look on his face.
Terrence is full-on stoned and is acting like a bit of a douchebag, laughing uncontrollably, saying stupid things. I've drunk quite a bit but I'm not hammered or anything. I can think of better ways to spend a Saturday night than babysitting a stoned Terrence in the Cross, but we're here now so I figure we might as well make the most of it. I reassure Mason that I have Terrence's back and they leave us.
âI'm STARVING,' Terrence immediately wails. After laughing uncontrollably for a little bit, he suddenly raises his arms with his palms facing out and says, âThese are
my
hands!'
âOh, boy,' I say. âYeah, those are your hands, you moron. Come on, let's get some food.'
We walk up William Street. Terrence can't resist commenting on every girl he sees â at the top of his lungs. âYou're gorgeous!' âYou're hot!' âGo easy on the junk food, sweetheart!' âCheck out those tits!'
âYeah? Enjoy the view, arsehole,' one of the girls shouts back.
We make it to a fast food place. It's packed with other mostly underage rejects like us, locked in nightlife limbo until we turn eighteen. I get us some vein-clogging burgers and chips and we sit down near the window.
Terrence has mellowed and is concentrating on scoffing down his food. When we're done, Terrence announces he wants to go for a walk. The street is crawling with people now. We're due to meet Mason anyway so we squeeze ourselves through the crowds towards Heat. At least Terrence's new nobody-loves-me mood means he isn't shouting out ratings for every girl who walks past us.
It's almost twelve-thirty when we meet up with Mason and his friends. They're standing outside the club, with some giggling girls off their faces.
We all walk together to a cab rank. The queue is insane. Terrence is just standing, staring at the ground. Liam and Noah are all over the girls.
It all happens so suddenly. I hear shouting from behind us: âWhat you fucking looking at my girlfriend for?'
Then I hear Mason yell out, âIt's a free country. Anyway, who says I was looking at her, you dickhead!'
Then the guy yells, âCan't handle an Aboriginal guy with a white chick, huh? You dumb racist fuck!'
âWhat are you on about? I didn't say you were Abo!' Mason yells back. âYou're fucking white!'
Things have suddenly graduated to weird.
The next thing I know, the guy lunges at Mason and takes a swipe at him. Then a couple of other guys join in and start laying into Mason too. Liam and I immediately jump in. I cop some good kicks to my ribs but I give some too. The fight doesn't last long. Security from outside the nearest club sweeps down on us pretty quickly and breaks it up. And it's just our luck â there are some cops nearby and they're on us in a flash too. You can't throw a stone without it hitting a cop in the Cross.
The cops have a bit of trouble restraining Mason and the guy who threw the first punch, seeing as they're both drunk. Liam and I don't bother resisting. Despite the cops holding them down, the guy and Mason are still mouthing off at each other. We get hauled off to the nearest station.
I'm underage so I have to call a parent to be with me when they question me. Dad comes.
âAre you okay, Michael?' Dad cries as soon as he sees me.
The cop, obviously experienced in dealing with hysterical parents, manages to calm Dad down. I feel awful.
Dad folds his arms across his chest and sits tight-lipped, nervously jiggling his leg up and down.
âI only joined the fight because Mason was outnumbered,' I explain to the cop. âThe other guy threw the first punch. Mason was just defending himself.'
âMy son would never start a fight,' Dad says. The cop raises his hand to silence him.
âWhat was the fight about?' the cop asks me.
âThe guy just flipped out. He thought Mason was looking at his girlfriend, then all of a sudden they're in a screaming match about him being Aboriginal. He called Mason a racist â'
Dad is suddenly animated. âIs that what the other guy is saying? That this was about
racism
?' He sighs. âEverybody loves a racism story, don't they? My son told you. The other guy
started
the fight.'
âSir! I need you to stop interrupting.'
Dad, bristling, nods and sits quietly. The cop writes down some more notes and steps outside to speak to the cop questioning Mason.
In the end nobody is charged. It's a first-time offence for us all, and nobody has been seriously hurt.
I have no idea at this point that Liam and the girls have filmed the fight on their phones and that later that night Noah will post the video on YouTube with the tagline
Reverse Racism
. I have no idea that someone from Aussie Values picks it up and tweets it:
They call US racists? Look what this âAboriginal' guy did to Mason and his friends.
I also have no idea
that the current affairs programs pick it up from there.
I go home oblivious to the furore to come.
Mina
Paula texts me on her way to school on Monday morning.
Good morning Mina. This is a public service announcement from Bus Route 419. Heard on the train just now:
Student 1 finds permanent marker in student 2's bag.
Student 1: What's this for? Are you in a gang?
Expect updates on further Gen Y embarrassments in the future.
PS I know we're Gen Y too but these sorts are a liability.
PPS Meet me at the café in ten.
*
At Auburn Grove Girls High I was always top of my class. My blazer was covered in badges. I was by no means the smartest girl, but I am a perfectionist and competitive and that helped. Mum's expectations that I take the title for the Afghan community's Best Academic Performer in New South Wales might have had something to do with it as well.
I feel a different breed of pressure at Victoria College. There's a competitive spirit among a lot of the students here that's both exhilarating and utterly terrifying. Some of the teachers have a
It's the journey not the destination
kind of philosophy. For some of the others, there's a little too much talk about ATARs and marks.
Everybody warned us about the jump from year ten to year eleven, but I truly never expected the pile of work to grow so high so fast, or the pool of competitors to be so big. These are kids who live and breathe success. I misunderstand a girl called Joy when she refers to her father working at Woolworths. My mind goes
things in common
and I casually mention that her father might know a family friend called Kamal who works at admin in head office. Turns out Joy's father might indeed. Given he's Woolworths' CFO.
Here, ambition isn't even a prerequisite. At Auburn Grove Girls High, ambition was a word you'd see in Comic Sans MS font on a poster stuck to the library door. But anybody with half a brain knew a brother or sister or friend who had the marks but not the contacts. Had the résumé with the wrong address and postcode. Had a cousin who was Raj at home and Ray at work.
I know I've got to work twice as hard as everybody else because I've got twice the distance to run just to catch up.
So today when Paula's in band practice (she plays the cello), I'm in the library at lunchtime, getting a head start on a major History essay due next week. Two girls from my History class, Zoe and Clara, are sitting at a nearby table, working on their laptops. From the titles, I can tell they're working on the same essay.
I know that these early days are critical. Mum and Baba have spent all week drumming it into me:
Lay a good strong foundation from the start.
They just don't think this applies equally to the social part of school.
I muster up the courage to pack my things and walk over to them. We haven't yet spoken, and Paula's not in History with me, so until now I've been sitting alone. From the classes we've had so far, I can tell these two girls are smart and driven in a slightly scary, if admirable, way. They remind me of the kind of girls you come across in a gym class: highly coordinated, perfect form, big energy, no sweat or frizz. The ones everybody else follows as they pant and trip their way through Zumba moves. That's okay though. I like the competition.
âYou're doing the Versailles Treaty essay too, yeah?'
I say brightly.
Zoe offers a fake half-smile. âYep,' she says. She continues typing, eyes glued to the screen.
âWe're in the same class,' I say, looking at Clara.
âYeah I know,' Clara says. She's friendly enough, but
there's none of Paula's warmth about her. âYou got a
scholarship here, yeah?'
I nod. âYeah.'
âWhere were you before?'
âAuburn Grove Girls High.'
Zoe raises an eyebrow. âCongratulations,' she says, facing me. âYou must be really smart to get a scholarship.'
Clara doesn't give me a chance to respond. âYou know, I've never been out to that part of Sydney.'
âWatch out, Clara,' Zoe adds. âWe've got serious competition now.' She laughs to herself, but there's no cheer in her.
There's an awkward silence. Zoe goes back to typing and Clara picks up her book. I hover for a second, embarrassed, wondering what the most dignified exit strategy is, when I'm saved by Paula who comes rushing towards me with her laptop open.
âDid you hear what happened?'
Zoe and Clara look up. âWhat?'
âDon't you have band?' I ask her.
âWe finished early. Mr Moreland's taking the year eights on an excursion.'
Paula places the laptop on the desk, closer to me. âHere, check out Facebook.' She scrolls down the page.
âYour profile picture is a cat,' Zoe says flatly. âI'm a dog person.'
âOh, me too!'
âYou can't be a cat
and
dog person.' Zoe rolls her eyes.
One of Paula's friends has tagged her in a post of a video clip. The video clip has the status:
My friends getting beaten up: but you won't hear about that in the media because they're white.
âOkay, girls, check this out!' Paula clicks play.
A bunch of guys are yelling abuse at each other. One of them yells out something about racism, then takes a swing. A fight breaks out. And then suddenly there's Michael, in the middle of it all. I just make out Terrence's terrified face as he stands to the side, watching.
âSeriously?' I shake my head in disbelief.
âYep,' Paula says, nodding. âThe Terrence connection I can understand. But
Michael
?'
âI hate seeing people fighting,' I say in disgust.
âMorons,' Zoe pronounces. She takes a closer look at the screen. âI'm surprised Michael's in on it. Just shows there's a dumb caveman in all guys.'
Clara clucks her tongue. âI can't believe Jane has the hots for Terrence. Sure he's okay-looking, popular, blah, blah, but where's her self-respect?'
âShe's never aimed high in anything so I'm not surprised.'
Paula flashes an angry look at Zoe. âThat's low, Zoe.'
Zoe pretends to look surprised. âSor
ry
. I get she's your cousin, but come on, even you can tell Jane's always been happy playing it safe and bare minimum.'
I want to laugh in her face. Bare minimum? Jane got fifteen out of twenty in a test and practically imploded.
âWhen I said that's low, Zoe, I didn't expect you'd sink lower,' Paula says quietly.
Zoe looks momentarily ashamed but then quickly regains her composure. âI'm not going to apologise for having high expectations.' She looks at me directly now. âBeing top of the year is not something I intend to give up.'
Paula's no longer interested and starts packing her laptop. Zoe's words float in the air and she seems suddenly uncomfortable. She sits up straight.
âLook, is it too much to ask that Clara and I can do our work without being harassed with gossip and idle chatter?'
Idle chatter?
Who talks like that?
âSure, sure,' Paula says drily and we move to another table.
âWhat's her problem?' I ask Paula. âI mean with me specifically?'
âZoe's been the top of our year since forever. That's her role, that's who she is. Then along you come from gangland Sydney with a scholarship that puts you in the same league as a girl who's had tutors and study plans since she was a toddler. You haven't seen anything yet. Hold steady.'
I raise an eyebrow. âDon't worry. I can handle competition. In fact, I love it. As far as I'm concerned, bring it on.'
*
One of the current affairs programs picks up the fight in a story that manages to mix several hot topics at once. First it's âyouth street violence', then it's âbinge drinking', then it's âbystander racism'. They show the YouTube clip but the images of Michael and Terrence are blurred, I guess because they're underage. Then they interview some experts and finally a guy called Mason, who was at the centre of it all.
â
So he accused you of racism? Just out of the blue like that?
' the reporter asks him.
â
Yeah. I wasn't even staring at his girlfriend. It was obvious he was looking to start a fight. I had no idea he was Aboriginal. He doesn't look like one. He's got light skin. I mean, he's probably not even really Aboriginal, they claim it sometimes so they can get benefits and stuff. For some reason he'd decided I had a problem with him and his girlfriend.
'
â
And he swung the first punch?
'
The reporter then interviews a guy from some new lame organisation called Aussie Values.
â
There's no excuse for alcohol-induced violence. We certainly don't condone that kind of behaviour. But what this footage clearly shows are the double standards in our community. It's reverse racism.
'
â
By Aboriginal Australians you mean?
'
âYes, although whether that thug who punched the young man really is Aboriginal is another question altogether.
'
â
Could you elaborate?
'
âThere's a lot that can be said about the identifying-as-Aboriginal industry in this country and I'll just leave it at that.
'
â
What do you mean â
'
My bile production escalates and I switch channels, lose a few brain cells watching the latest season of
The Bachelor
, and eat a block of chocolate.
*
I'm on my way to my locker the next day when I pass Michael in the corridor. He's got a cut on the side of his face, a bit of a swollen eye.
We haven't so much as spoken a word to each other since our argument after Society and Culture. But seeing his face, and knowing he's friends with that idiot on TV, makes it too hard to resist. A strange confidence takes over me.
âWow. That's pretty bad,' I say feigning sympathy.
He seems surprised and then pleased. He touches his face. âOh, it's nothing,' he says bravely, squaring his shoulders. âJust a small fight.'
âYeah, I saw,' I say. âWith a
so-called
Aborigine, correct?'
He peers at me as if he's trying to figure me out. He's suddenly defensive. âThat's got nothing to do with me.'
I smirk. âSo is that Mason guy your friend?'
âHe's Terrence's brother.'
âOh!' I say knowingly. âWell that explains a lot I guess.'
âTerrence's not that bad,' he says. âHe doesn't mean half of what he says.'
A small growl escapes my mouth. âWords. And meaning. You can't own one and not the other.'
He holds his hands up in surrender. âWoke-up-on-the-wrong-side-of-the-bed kind of day?'
â
That's
your rebuttal point? And they said you're one of the smarter of the male species in our year.'
âWho said?' His grin indicates that what was meant as an insult has been interpreted as a compliment. He flicks back his dark tousled hair. He's quite attractive up close, I catch myself thinking. Light brown eyes, good skin, height â
Wait a second. Why am I checking him out?
âAnyway, I'll leave you to bask in your masculine glory.'
âMason didn't start it, you know,' he explains. âAnd I only jumped in to help him out. He was outnumbered.'
âVery heroic.'
âYou're full of compliments today.'
I hold his eye for a moment. âCan I give you and your friends some advice?'
âDo I even have a choice?'
I lean in conspiratorially. âBeing an Indigenous Australian has nothing to do with skin colour.'
Surprised, he frowns for a moment. âYeah, I know
that
,' he stammers defensively.
I raise an eyebrow sceptically. âYou might want to pick up a history book some time. I mean, I'm just a boat person from Afghanistan and even I figured that out.' I flash him a big smile. âAnyway, see you!'
I quickly walk off, unable to wipe the grin off my face.