Page 64 of Wake


Font Size:

He’s just waiting. For the right time.

I scramble on hands and knees towards the glitter of a shell. “Let’s bring something back to Grandpa. A shell, stone, piece of driftwood.” My breath hitches and I sift deeper into the sand. “See who finds the best?”

Trent rises to the challenge. He finds a smooth stone, I a spiral shell, and then he one-ups me with a shard of paua that catches every colour of the sky and sea. I scour the beach, picking and plucking, Trent outdoing me at my side.

And then. The sun brightens, suddenly coming out from behind a white cloud. Light glitters on a long, smooth stickahead. A bit of work, it might make a wonderful cane for Grandpa.

Trent eyes it at the same time, and the roll of his shoulders—he’s thinking the same. He looks at me.

I run for it. He runs for it.

I grab his sleeve, pull him back, slip a foot in front of him?—

He has me by the t-shirt, a sharp yank, and I’m losing my balance; he lunges, I thrust out a foot, and he eats grit too.

We eye one another, the prized wood, and the army crawl begins...

Arms outstretched, so close . . .

A kid barrels in from the side, snatches the stick, and brandishes it like a staff.

Trent and I roll onto our backs, laughing. The beach is cool against my shoulder blades; the air is warm; the sun presses like a palm to my chest.

Behind us a high ridge looms, a dune paused like a wave about to break.

And then it breaks.

Short and sharp. He, on held breath; me, on quiet exhale.

“You’ve lost a sibling.”

“Too.”

“You’re keeping it all inside.”

“Too.”

“You’re hurting.”

“Too.”

He swallows, his Adam’s apple jutting. And I turn my head towards the sky, like his. And I snort.

Snicker.

He digs in his pocket and gently throws me back my fifty cents, raising a brow.

I catch it against my chest. “I thought you were crazy, back then. When I entered your bunkbed-bedroom. Who was this guy, who could hold all this in?”

There is no touch.

Not a flicker of furtive contact.

He doesn’t pull me in, press me to a pounding heart, doesn’t feather a kiss into my hair.

He doesn’t murmur anything soft, anything sweet.

And yet?—