‘You’ll have to sleep on the couch,’ Cara told Danny. She was protective of her private room.
‘Will your mum let me stay?’ Danny was braver now that Rachel wasn’t there.
Cara shrugged, which meant yes. Why not? There were plenty of plates. There were already extra chairs at the table. Cara looked at Danny’s stomach and knew she would give up her room. Just until the baby came.
‘I have some money,’ said Danny. ‘For rent.’
And she began to cry again, so that Cara had no choice but to squat beside her chair, to hold her red hands and say, ‘You sure you don’t want some toast?’
Danny shook her head. ‘It’s just my mum,’ she said. ‘Should I tell her I’m safe?’
‘Maybe,’ said Cara. She was so exasperated by pink, dripping, pregnant Danny. ‘The phone’s on the piano.’
Danny, with some trouble, pulled herself out of the chair. She gave a little smile when this manoeuvre succeeded; then her face collapsed into tears and she said, ‘I can’t call while I’m like this.’
Cara shrugged. ‘We’ll be outside,’ she said. She took a half-eaten bag of salt-and-vinegar chips into the garden.
The children — even Cass — crowded around her. Their salty hands plunged in and out of the bag. Cara held it higher than their heads and distributed the remaining chips more slowly; the children accepted this ceremony and waited with their hands outstretched. When they dispersed, Cass took the empty bag, turned it inside out, and licked it all over.
Cara lay in the grass. She noticed a fantastic, bell-like lift to the sky, a pealing quality to the light, and she peered into this high, rising brightness hoping she might burn her retinas, just a little — just enough to see something different when she looked out at the world. She drummed her heels into the ground. If I sleep here, she thought, the day will pass by, and no one will notice. It’ll be like a fairy tale. And like a fairy tale, her belly swelled the way Danny’s had; she felt it rise, a fat loaf, and she rubbed at it as if she were pregnant. Then she let out her breath and flattened again. She felt the way she did in bed at night with no one looking or asking questions or needing her. She lifted her arms over her head and expected Wally or Elsa to fall onto her legs, but they were waiting by the door for Danny to come out.
When Danny came, she was no longer crying. She was prettier. There was a gravity about her, a sense of permission, and she shone with some other thing, some sweet sadness. It was sticky, and the children stuck. She knelt down to them. She let them take her hand and lead her through the garden, and she knew how to part a curtain of leaves so that the space on the other side became important. Cara was scornful of this indulgence. She never played with the children. She was for climbing on, for comforting, for giving orders, for hiding behind; but Danny knew how to play.
Cara closed her eyes. She was in the Mediterranean. Adam was there with her in some hazy form. He wasn’t a body, a lover, or even a ghost, but she could touch him and he belonged to her. There was something frightening about this belonging; it took on strange geometric shapes, so that she and Adam were only lines on a bell-shaped sea. But these lines fitted together. They were double, the two of them; they were like a solution written on clean paper. Cara’s eyes had been closed for hours, she thought. Perhaps, if she opened them now, there would be nothing there. There would just be nothing.
She opened her eyes. The garden was there, and the washing on the line, and Danny with the children. Also Rachel, unexpectedly, lying on her kimono in the middle of the lawn. She wore a green bikini and her stomach was flat and pale with little pleats of shiny pink. Her black hair funnelled into the grass. She was so white and red in the midday sun, and indestructible.
Cara made sure to raise her voice. ‘I didn’t know he had a sister,’ she said.
Rachel said, ‘He has three.’ She shifted her hips. ‘Three little sisters in a pretty little town.’
But none of this could be right — the sisters, the mother, the little town. Rachel formed Adam when she brought him to the house. She found him and formed him at the same time. The sisters and mother and the father who made him say ‘Ah’ didn’t exist when he was with Cara and Rachel and the children, just as Cara and Rachel and the children didn’t exist when he was with other people.
‘She doesn’t look like someone who’d run away from home. Or get pregnant,’ said Cara.
‘Anyone can get pregnant.’
‘I can’t.’
‘Don’t be so sure.’
‘I don’t have my period yet.’
‘Lucky you,’ said Rachel.
Cara closed her eyes again.
‘What do you think they look like?’ asked Rachel. ‘People who run away?’
‘I don’t know,’ said Cara. ‘Like you.’
Rachel laughed. She lay on the grass in the garden she grew up in, surrounded by the children she had made, and raised one hand to her forehead to block the sun. Cara saw black stubble in the armpit and was disgusted and this disgust felt righteous; she pulled a handful of shiny grass and scattered it in the hope it would fly across to annoy her mother, and when it didn’t she went inside and walked with purpose into Rachel’s room. She stood for some time looking at the messed bed, as if it might relate in some way to what she had seen earlier: the clean white paper and she and Adam, solved. And it might have, in a minute, except that the doorbell rang again, not so insistently this time; Cara thought they might not have heard it in the garden.
Two men stood outside, fuzzed a little by the flyscreen. They had earnest expressions, they stood with their shoulders pushed back, and they seemed surprised to see her. Cara thought this must be some kind of church door-knocking thing. It was Sunday, after alclass="underline" a day on which people might actually expect to be saved.
‘Excuse me,’ said the man closest to the door. He had the hopeful look of a visiting teacher. His lips were very wet in his brown beard. ‘I’m looking for my daughter — Danielle.’
The word ‘Danielle’ prompted the man behind him to take a step forward. He was revealed, then, as a sweet-faced tattooed boy, red-haired, with a reef of acne scars on his lower jaw. His expression wasn’t so much hopeful as pleading.
‘Danny,’ said the boy.
‘Come in,’ said Cara, and she even smiled, because they would take Danny away.
Both men wiped their feet before stepping through the door. They shuffled into the lounge room; the boy in particular looked bereft, as if he were used to carrying large objects and was startled to find his hands empty. The father didn’t seem the kind of man to make you run away from home, though Cara recognised in herself a tendency to be fooled by the kindliness of beards. She wondered what would happen if she offered herself instead of Danny. What would her life be like in the little town, with the fairy-tale sisters?
‘This way,’ she said. She led them through the kitchen and out into the garden, which she presented with a flourish: long Rachel on the long grass, Adam’s five shirts buoyant on the line, Elsa naked as usual, Cass furtive at the Jouberts’ fence, Wallis running, Marcus clambering over Danny, whose abdomen seemed larger, more obscene among the passion-fruit vine and the rusted wheelbarrow and lidless washing machine, and all the small grassy nests of cans and chocolate wrappers and junk mail that gathered and grew. Everything in the garden was moving, except for Rachel; but when Cara and the men came out onto the grass, all that movement stilled. Danny held Marcus tight against one leg and touched her belly. She looked at the top of Marcus’s head, but the way she looked at it was for the sad, red, tattooed boy.