I look down at my clothes. They are fine. Adequate. If I dressed as Gypsy Rose Lee, Greta would think I was in a burka. âWhat do you suggest I do?' I say. âClub him over the head and drag him back to my cave? That'll make me look like a serious researcher.'
âDon't be ridiculous,' she says. âYou know exactly what to do. First, listen to him. Uncle Laurence taught us that. Rule number fourteen B or whatever. It's the listening, not the speaking, that draws them in. Then lead him down the path until he takes over, until he thinks it was all his idea. Then scurry away like a delicate little flower who doesn't want to unfairly influence his decision because of your so-called ethics.'
She is right about the listening. That is what wins someone over, although it isn't as easy as it sounds. Agreeing with every lame political opinion or implausible religious view. And never appearing bored, no matter what idiocy comes out of their mouths.
âWe're doing well enough with the science,' I tell her. âI won't need to do anything else.'
She grunts and pulls at her ponytail. âClosing something this size is half logic and half emotion, you know that. OK, the logic half is going well. But you
have
to look after the emotion. You have to make sure he's gagging to give it to you. And the money as well. Stop him thinking with his brain. Get him thinking with something else.'
âIt's not that easy.' I sound pathetic. Whiney.
I don't feel the physical reluctance to touch him that I felt earlier. Now I still want to keep my distance until I work out what's going on. But my intuition about Daniel makes it all the more important that I engage his feelings, throw him off balance. In a closer contest he might make a mistake. I know Greta is right. This cannot be avoided any longer.
âOf course it's that easy.' Greta snorts. âIt always has been before. But I'll admit it doesn't help that you're dressed like that.'
She stands in front of me and closes one eye like she's judging Best in Show. Then she pulls my T-shirt down at the front and tucks it in tighter, and she pushes up my breasts so more cleavage is exposed. Then she stares, and freezes.
âWhat?' I say.
She looks like she's about to faint and peeks down my top. âThick straps, mesh. No shape. Beige. Don't tell me you're wearing a sports bra. What in God's name were you thinking?'
âIt's hiking, Greta. Camping. I'm like a method actor. It's about characterisation.'
âIt's about stupidity, that what it's about. Wait here,' and she stomps back to the camp, returning with a bundle clasped tight in her hand. âHere,' she says, handing it to me. âIt's clean.'
I can feel the lace. I look downâit's fire-engine red. I'm not moving.
âIt's French. Push-up. Come on, Nanna. Put it on.'
âWe're camping, not pole dancing,' I say.
âPut. It. On.'
There's nothing for it. I duck behind a tree, strip off and change bras. I hand Greta the sports bra. She hesitates before touching it.
âThanks,' she says. âI'll treasure it always.' She rolls it into a ball and shoves it in her pocket, then she tightens the belt of my shorts and kneels so she can fold up each leg higher. I hold on to her shoulder to steady myself.
She stands again, and frowns. âHold still,' she says, and takes a tube of lip gloss from her pocket. She holds my chin and applies it. It wouldn't be my choice, I can see from the tube. Too shiny. Then she stands back and admires her handiwork.
âThat's better. I'm beginning to think Sam was right. You're not yourself on this job. There's some reason you're not playing this right. You're chilling.'
âAll right, all right. But how do you expect me to do anything with you two around? In dirty hiking clothes? In tents? I do better work with champagne and soft music.'
âYou have stars. You have wine. You have everything you need. After dinner Julius and I will wander down to our German hiking friends for a few quiet drinks. You'll have the whole camp to yourselves for at least a couple of hours. Long enough to lead him on, not long enough to get yourself into trouble. We'll be back to rescue you if things go too far. Just do it, Della. We're all counting on you.'
We walk back up the track and stop when the camp is just in sight, then Greta holds me still by the arm again.
âAre you going to ask him about the tiger? About the time that he saw it, when he was a kid?' she says.
I shake my head. âThere's no way I can know about that. It'd give the game away. I'll try and encourage him to tell me. That's all I can do.'
In the camp, Julius is kneeling by the camp stove, cooking sausages and instant pasta. He and Daniel are talking, laughing, but I can't hear what they're saying. Then Daniel walks back to his pack, lying beside the tent. His back is to us. He feels around for a moment and brings out a clean T-shirt, then he whips his shirt off in one smooth movement. We can see the flat plain of his back, the brown muscles as they slide over his shoulder blades, the shadow in the channel of his spine.
âOh, and Della, remember,' Greta says. âIf you really don't want to do this, that's fine. I'll be more than happy to step in for you.'
It is done, just as Greta said it would be. We have eaten a simple camping dinner and the cleaning up, such as it is, is finished. Greta and Julius have retired to the backpackers' camp on the beach. No doubt Julius will make new friends and tell them all about the pitfalls of carrying water from a well. Greta will have shed her Amish exterior and be surrounded by a legion of tipsy German admirers.
It is dark and Daniel and I are alone. Aside from the occasional cheering in the distance that may be part of a drinking game or a welcome for a late-comer, we might be the only people alive on earth. Daniel lies on his side on a rug in front of the lamp, a plastic tumbler of red wine in his hand. I also have a tumbler of wine, but no possessions: no keys or handbag, purse or mobile or lipstick. It has taken me some time to realise that the incredible lightness I feel is in part due to this lack; the absence of things that couldn't weigh more than a few hundred grams but that no modern woman would consider being without.
There is no wind. I can smell the sea and a lemon-scented gum not far down the hill above the creek. I have drunk more wine than is sensible and even as I register this I take another swig. The horizon tilts slightly when I turn my head. I can delay no longer. It is time to begin.
âThe scar,' I say. âOn your hand.'
He holds his hand out straight with the palm toward me. Perhaps this gesture is meant to show me the scar, or perhaps it is a stop sign. But it is too late. I cannot stop.
âHow did it happen?' I say.
He rubs the scar with the thumb of his other hand, as if he has been derelict and it is a stain he could scrub away with enough effort. âIt's painful to think of,' he says. âI don't talk about it often.'
I say nothing. I make space for his words to come.
All at once his face looks gaunt, his eyes hollow. âI was on a bus in the city. It was just a normal day. Then this bomb-squad cop jumps on board. One thing leads to another, and the bus driver gets shot so I take over the steering. Then it turns out that there's a bomb planted on the bus, and we can't slow down below fifty miles per hour or it will explode and kill us all. I have to drive and drive. Until eventually we get to the airport where we can go around in circles and if the bomb goes off no one will die but us. It was horrific.'
âThat sounds vaguely familiar.'
âWhen we finally get everyone off the bus, me and the bomb squad guy get kidnapped and forced into an abandoned railway car, which explodes. That was the first time I kissed another man.'
âThat must have been very traumatic for you.'
âIt was. That's why I always drive. Me and public transportâit's not good.' He shudders. âAfter all this time I still can't bear to get on a bus or train.'
âJust as well you have a nice new BMW.'
âLucky, isn't it?' he says, sniffing and wiping his eyes on his sleeve. âBut emotional scars take a long time to heal. I still can't see Sandra Bullock on the cover of
Who Weekly
without sobbing.'
âAnd where did the scar come from exactly?'
âOh, this? I did it when I got home. Broken wine glass in the sink.'
I stretch out on my back for a moment, hands behind my head, looking at the stars. âAnd are you always this flippant? Or just with me?'
âAnd are you always this serious? Or just with me?'
âI'm serious because life is serious. I have responsibilities.'
He puts his hands behind his head too. He is mimicking me. âNot now you don't,' he says. âNow there's just the sea and the stars.'
âMy work is serious, I mean. I do serious work.'
âIt's just a job, Ella. It doesn't define you.'
I have no idea how to reply to such a ludicrous statement. What does he think defines us, if not our work? I'd like to tell him that he's never had to work a day in his life. That he can joke around all he likes: he's never had to worry about money or if all the deadlocks on the front door are bolted properly or if he can pull off one great big deal to buy a bit of pride. He can spend money where he chooses, give it to whomever he likes.
I bite my tongue because telling him all this will not help me seduce him and find out what he is hiding, and also because I remember just in time that his father is dead and so is his mother. Then I want to tell him that he has it easy because his father is dead and he doesn't have the weight of history and expectations and tradition on him and he has no Thursday-night meetings to report to and can do what he likes because no one is watching, but I don't say this. Perhaps, from the perspective of someone whose parents are dead, it might come across as a little insensitive.
âTell me something serious,' I say. I wriggle a little, cross my legs, lean forward. Sitting on the ground is uncomfortable. It didn't mention that in my research on camping. âTell me something serious, something you have never told anyone else, and I'll tell you something flippant.'
âA challenge,' he says. âOK. Something serious.' He pauses for a while, then, âHow's this? When I was eleven I was madly in love. Andrea Garida. She was an older woman. She was thirteen.'
âA friend from school?'
âNo, no. There were only boys at my school. She was a friend of my sister's.'
âDid you propose? Is this story about your elopement?'
âA little sensitivity, please. My heart was broken. Andrea had this tiny button nose with freckles, and a little gap between her front teeth. That gap drove me crazy.'
âSounds like a perfect match. What happened?'
âMy mother had a pendant in her jewellery box that she never wore. She always had a lot of jewellery, rings, necklaces, earrings. This one pendant wasn't even a pretty colour. It was clear, like glass. Like a big piece of glass. I thought Mum'd never miss it. I gave it to Andrea.'
âAnd?'
âAndrea was thrilled. She let me kiss her and I thought I'd died and gone to heaven. At home, things weren't so good.'
âYour parents didn't think that it was a fair trade, the pendant for a kiss?'
âBy the time the police were called and the staff were questioned and the security people had been to check all the locks, I was frantic. I think I wet the bed. By the time I confessed I'd seriously considered running away to join the circus. Andrea's parents were very understanding. Andrea, not so much. She didn't want to hand it back. My mother bought her something more reasonable from a department store to make it up to her, but she never spoke to me again.'
âOuch.'
âYou know, when my mother died, most of the jewellery went to my sisters. I only kept a few things, for sentimental reasons. I kept that necklace. The house, well, you've been there. It's not exactly me. It doesn't really seem like mine, but upstairs I have a study that belongs to me. I keep everything that's important there. I keep the necklace to remind myself that stuff like jewels and money aren't that important.'
âStill, it was your mother's necklace. Weren't your parents mad?'
âNot overly. They thought I was being generous, and after all I was pretty upset. I was the baby of the family, got away with murder. If they had thought I was stealing, then lying about it, they might have been a little cross.'
âThey thought stealing and lying were bad things?'
He laughs. âWell aren't they?'
âIt depends,' I say, and I know this is dangerous territory, but perhaps he will reveal something. âRobin Hood is always the hero of the movie. The sexy, courageous one. The Sheriff of Nottingham was always the villain, plus he was ugly. Of course Marion preferred Robin. And Robin was just a thief and a liar with good PR, so I guess everything is relative.'
âI guess it is.' He smiles and narrows his eyes. âI didn't realise you were so fond of liars. Sexy and courageous indeed.'
This is almost a confession. I almost have him. âIt's nothing to do with me. It's a fictionalised historical fact.'
For a moment I think he's going to take it further, but instead he says, âNow you. Something flippant.'
This seemed a good idea at the time, this stupid game of swapping confidences. But now I can't think of anything flippant, true or invented. âUm. I still have all my teddy bears from when I was little, in my bedroom,' I say.
âBoring,' he says. âNeurotic, not flippant.'
âOnce I went through the twelve items or less lane with thirteen items. And I didn't even care.'
âYou rebel.'
âYou're right. I'm nowhere near as good at flippant as you are.'
âTrue. King of flippant, me.'
I'm quiet for a moment, and then I say: âI suppose you'd become pretty good at being flippant, over the years. After the first few girls said they liked you but really just wanted the necklace.'