Authors: Victoria Purman
Perhaps if she were in a relationship, she might feel differently. Then she corrected herself. A committed, loving relationship, not the train wrecks she'd had. She knew what a loving, committed relationship looked like. She hadn't grown up with one, but she could see it in Rose and David's marriage. They were lucky. They loved each other and, from the outside, at least, it was simple and easy.
Simple and easy, that's what she wanted.
And until that came along, she had plenty of things to fill her days with, now that she'd simplified her life. Teaching, painting, being an auntie. Staying away from men for a while.
âSo, now that we're alone, and I have emerged from some of my baby-fog brain, tell me again about your trip to the island. And by that I mean, tell me all about the fireman.' Rose lifted her feet to the sofa and stretched her legs out in front of her. With a contented smile, she watched Calla cuddle her son.
âWhat else is there to tell? You know about the boat and the supermarket and the car accident and the flight back to Adelaide.'
âCome on,' Rose huffed. âYou've bored me with those facts already. Humour me. I'm a breastfeeding new mum â and one who loves her husband like mad â but who fears she may never want to have sex again in case it leads to having more babies. I want all the gory details. What really happened to you on that island, Calla?'
Calla looked up to the ceiling to avoid her sister's scrutinising look. What had happened? She still wasn't certain. Sure, there had been kissing and sex. Spectacular sex. Laughs. Yes, there had been laughs. Shared secrets. Time spent together. It was easy to look back on it now that it was over.
âHe's really handsome.'
âTall?'
âWay taller than me; and that's what counts, right?
âOf course. Shoulders?'
âTwo of them.'
âAnd what does he wear?'
âClothes.'
âNo, I mean is he a checked shirt, rugged kind of country guy, or is he a metrosexual with fine-knit jumpers and R.M. Williams boots?'
Calla laughed. âJeans. He looks good in jeans. Big, warm jumpers.' Tight T-shirts. Lots of lovely naked skin. Calla shook those thoughts away.
Rose sighed. âHair colour?'
âDark hair, kind of wavy. Quite short around the back and sides. But you know what I found out? He's much more than all these pieces. He does this thing with his super dark eyes. He looks at you and kind of latches on and doesn't look away. I don't think he blinks when he looks at you, like it's some kind of superpower or something. And you feel like your eyes are going to burn inside your head unless you look away first. And when he talks to you ⦠it starts off loud but then gets softer, so you have to lean in to hear him and it gets quieter and deeper, and you feel like it's a crowded room but there's no one else around but the two of you.'
âOh,' Rose sighed. âThat. I remember that.'
âAnd he's good with his hands.'
âReally?' Rose's eyebrows quirked.
âUh huh. And he played with my hair all the time, tangled his fingers up in it. But it wasn't just that stuff. He ⦠he wouldn't let me go to see Jem alone.'
âSounds like he was a rock. When you called me that afternoon, you were pretty upset. It must have been awful. I wish I'd been able to go with you.'
âIt was good to have him there.' Calla remembered what he'd said when she was freaking out.
I'll be there.
And you'll be safe with me.
âI'm glad.'
âAnd we've made it right with Jem, Rose. That's all we could do. Though I've been checking the account and he hasn't cashed the cheque yet.'
âThink he ever will?'
âEven if he doesn't want it for himself, I hope he thinks of little Ella.'
Rose sniffed. âI don't know if it's because I've just had Flynn, but it kills me to think that Ella will never know her cousin and this whole side of the family.'
The doorbell rang and Calla glanced down the hallway. There was a shadow behind the stained glass of her front door. A tall shadow.
Rose stretched and yawned. âYou expecting someone?'
âNo, I wasn't.' Calla rearranged the baby in her arms. He smelt so beautiful, of baby powder and lotion, and he was pressing his tiny lips together in satisfaction over his full belly. She didn't want to hand him back to his mother just yet, so she stood, walked carefully down the hallway with the precious cargo in her arms and juggled him a little to open the door.
She swung it wide open and then lost her breath. âOh,' she said. âHello.'
It was Sam, dressed not in the familiar jeans and hoodie, but in his uniform. Calla's heart betrayed her, thudding behind her breastbone. The simple dark-navy short-sleeved shirt, the word
Fire
emblazoned on the left pocket, revealed tanned and strong forearms. Calla decided she was glad to be holding the baby. It gave her something to do while she decided if she should hug him or smack him. It had been a week since she'd seen him, since he'd walked out of her house with a look of thunder and a voice to match. When he acted as if she'd overstepped some boundary she wasn't aware of in talking to him about Charlie and Roo's Rest. He hadn't called since and she hadn't bothered to either. It had seemed to be over before it had really begun. Their accidental island fling had well and truly flung.
âHey.' Sam ran a hand through his hair, looked into her eyes for a moment, and then dropped his gaze to take in the bundle in her arms. âIs that your nephew?'
âYes. Rose and I are having some quality sister time. Flynn, meet Sam. Sam, meet Flynn.'
Sam could barely manage a smile, leaving Calla to wonder if maybe he was one of those people who believed themselves to be allergic to children. When he lifted his eyes back to hers, she could see the change in him. This wasn't the sexy, smiling Sam she'd met on the island. This man was stricken. Haunted. She could see the muscles twitching in his clenched jaw and there was defeat in his hunched shoulders.
âSorry to come over without calling,' he said quietly, cautiously. âI can see this is a bad time. I'll go.'
âNo, please.' She stepped outside on to the veranda. âSam, what is it? What's happened?'
He took a deep breath, turned back to the road.
She juggled Flynn into the crook of one arm and shot out a hand to his arm. âTell me.'
When Sam turned back to her, tears filling his eyes, she knew. âIt's Charlie. He's dead.'
âRose, this is Sam.'
He walked over to the sofa where Rose was sitting and shook her hand. âNice to meet you. Handsome boy you've got there.'
âThank you. We think so,' Rose said. âSo, you're Sam.'
Calla knew where her sister was going, judging by her tone and her wide smile. Rose shot a teasing glance at Calla but she reacted quickly to Calla's stony face. Her expression changed from knowing smile to an instant awareness that something was wrong. She stood and took the baby.
âI think it's time for this one to have a sleep.' Rose smiled politely at Sam. âIt was very nice to meet you too.'
A moment later, the bedroom door closed and Calla was alone with Sam. She wondered if he wanted to sit, or if he wanted a coffee or something stronger. Probably not if he was still on his shift. She watched him, looking for her cue. His eyes darted around the room. He pocketed his hands, then withdrew them, tangled one in his hair. He turned to her, looked as if he might be about to speak, then quickly looked away.
All the pressing her tongue to the roof of her mouth didn't work. It had never worked. Not only could she see Sam's pain, she could feel it in her own heart too. The tears welled in her eyes. For Sam. For Charlie. âOh, Sam. I'm so sorry.'
He looked at his feet.
âCan I get you a cup of coffee? A glass of water?'
âI can't stay long.'
âOh. You're at work. Right.' Calla wondered how much he wanted to tell her. Decided she needed to know anyway. âWhen did he â¦?'
âYesterday.'
âWhat happened?' Calla hugged herself, held back from comforting him. She wasn't sure what he wanted from her.
âSince I've been back, I've been ringing him every day. In the morning and just before the ABC News at seven p.m. Like clockwork. Just to check he's all right. Give him someone to talk to. But yesterday morning, I didn't get an answer. I called Auntie Ruth and Uncle Clive, asked them if they could drive out to Roo's Rest.'
Sam's voice, while still matter of fact and procedural, was quiet. Calla took a step towards him to make sure she didn't miss a word.
âThey found Charlie on the front veranda. In his chair. At first they thought he was having a snooze. But no. Seems he'd had a stroke.'
Calla's hand flew to her mouth. The tears drizzled down her cheeks and she removed her glasses to wipe them away. When she slid them back on, Sam's face told the real story of what was going on inside the brave firefighter. He looked pale against the navy of his uniform. His hair was a mess. His eyes were lifeless.
He looked like a man who'd lost everything.
Every instinct Calla had was telling her to hold him, to reach for him and draw him into her arms. But when she moved again, took another step closer, Sam stepped back from her. She felt it like a slap to the face. Maybe it was the uniform, but he seemed remote and distant. Official and formal.
âPoor Charlie,' Calla said. She could see him, clear as day. Charlie in his chair, with his dogs by his side, looking out to the farm and the view of the island and the ocean he'd always loved. âWhen is the funeral?'
âTomorrow. I've been arranging it all today. And while I was sorting everything out, I realised ⦠Charlie would want you to be there.'
âMe?'
Sam shoved his hands in his pockets. âYou were all he could talk about after you left. I think he fell a little bit in love with you.'
It wasn't hard to like Charlie, even to love him a little bit too. Of course she would go to his funeral.
âSo, will you come?' And then, Sam met her eyes. His own were shiny with tears and Calla felt his pain all over again.
âOf course,' she said, her voice catching in her throat as she tried to suppress the sob that was so close to the surface. âWhen are you going?'
Sam let out a huge sigh of what looked to Calla like relief. âTomorrow morning. Can I come by and pick you up at six-thirty? We're on the nine a.m. boat. I hope that's not too early for you.'
âI'll be ready.' Sam didn't know her at all if he thought she'd get any sleep that night.
âI'll see you tomorrow then,' he said.
Calla nodded and tried to find a smile. âSee you tomorrow.'
âPack an overnight bag. We'll be coming back the day after tomorrow, if that's all right.'
âOf course.'
Sam gave her a quick nod, turned and walked off, his heavy boots thudding on the floorboards on the way to the front door. She followed him, taking extra steps to keep up with his long-legged stride.
At the front door, he turned. He opened his mouth to speak but nothing came.
Calla didn't wait for permission this time. She went to Sam, buried her face in his chest, threw her arms around his waist and clung to him. She cried into his shirt, openly, unapologetically, let the sobs shake her shoulders. Sam's strength wavered. She could feel him uncoiling, first a pat on her back, then a stroke on her shoulder. Finally, his arms were around her too, one hand on her hair, holding her tight to him. He rested his chin on her head and, as his shoulders moved and fell, she could feel the breath leave his body, as if he were letting go of a lifetime's worth of hurt and loss.
He held her until she stopped crying.
After he'd slowly, reluctantly released her, his soft, dark eyes met hers. For a moment, neither of them said a word. An understanding was being created between them in that moment, one that Calla recognised in her heart, if not her head. We are two people connected in some mysterious way. We have seen each other's pain. We have shared our secrets. We can't control what is drawing us together. Calla felt it as strongly as she'd ever felt anything. And by the look on his face, he was feeling it too.
She reached up to kiss his cheek. âI'll be there. I promise.'
Calla closed the front door and leant back against it, her glasses in one hand, wiping her tears with the other. She let out a deep breath, trying to stop the shaking she felt all over her body. No matter how much she wanted this thing with Sam to be done, it wasn't. Not by a long shot. Her heart had betrayed her head and she felt so close to him it ached that he'd just walked out the door.
She might have sworn off complicated, and he might not be easy, but that didn't stop her heart beating faster when she was in his arms. It didn't stop her taking on his pain over Charlie's death, feeling it as strongly as if she'd known his father her whole life. It didn't stop her wanting to be by his side during the funeral, to hold him, to be there for him.
And after that?
The bedroom door opened and Rose poked her head into the hallway. âI heard the front door close. Is he gone?'
She nodded. Rose went to her, put a consoling hand on her sister's shoulder. âWhat's wrong, Calla? What did he say?' Her voice was a whisper in the quiet house.
âIt's not what you think,' Calla said, shaking her head. âIt's his father. Charlie died.'
âOh no.' Rose's bottom lip trembled. âPoor guy.'
âAnd he ⦠he's asked me to go over to the island with him for the funeral. He said Charlie fell a little bit in love with me.'
Rose looked into her sister's eyes. âI don't think he's the only one, do you?'
Calla felt fresh tears. âOh, Rose.'
âYou love him, don't you?'