Read The Goodbye Girl Online

Authors: Angela Verdenius

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #General

The Goodbye Girl (11 page)

BOOK: The Goodbye Girl
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Her sneaker slipped in the thick mud and she pitched over, landing on her side, her head hitting the gravel.

“Ouch!”  Sitting up, she slapped a hand to her eye
.  The warmth of blood was against her fingers.

Eye? No, beside it.

Getting up, she made her way to the van and unlocked the big side door, pulling it back far enough to get inside, sliding it shut behind her.  Reaching up, she flicked on the light, flooding the back of the van with a soft glow.

Deciding that no one in their right mind would be travelling along the road to see her impromptu striptease, she s
hrugged out of the jacket, pulled off the wet blouse and slacks, and kicked them into a soggy pile on the floor.  Taking a clean cloth from a drawer, she held it to her eye.  Opening the wardrobe, she peered into the mirror on the inside of the door.

Oh boy, she’d gotten lucky.  Whatever she’d hit on the ground, and it looked like a
stick mark, she’d scratched herself badly along the bottom right of the eye socket bone.  Damn, any closer to the eye and she’d have been in serious trouble.

Digging
quickly through the wardrobe, she drew out a clean, long-sleeved blouse and stretch jeans, along with a clean set of underwear and socks.  Pulling them on, she was grateful for the warmth.  Topped with a thick jumper and her sock-clad feet in a pair of spare sneakers, she put the wet clothes and sneakers in a plastic bag

Next, she retrieved the first aid kit and washed the bleeding scratch, applying Betadine liquid along the scratch and then holding a piece of gauze to it to help stop the bleeding.  Luckily not too deep, the bleeding stopped within minutes.

Finished, she moved between the front seats to slide into the driver’s seat.  Starting the engine, she peered towards the dark hill.  “Next time,” she muttered.  “Next time, you bug-eyed greys.”

 

Chapter 4

 

Up early, Nick was standing on a ladder in the muddy yard sawing just above one of the broken limbs of a tree.  Weak sunlight was painting the tips of the leaves rose as it came up to break the dawn.

Breathing deeply,
he listened to the birds chirping in the trees, the distant sound of a cow lowing, and someone’s car driving in the distance.

So peaceful.  Yeah,
he could get used to this, used to the every day life.  Some people thought it boring, that his job was so exciting, but there was more to life than war, more than Army life.

The branch dropped to the ground and he climbed down,
shifting the ladder to the next tree.  There was this, peaceful surroundings, making your own decisions, going your own way.

“You’re up early,” Alex remarked.

Nick glanced over his shoulder to see his friend coming towards him, hands in his pockets.  “Early bird and all that shit.”

“Harly has an early shift at the café.”
  Alex stopped next to the ladder, reaching out to steady it as Nick climbed to the next broken branch.  “So, Bree.”

Straight to the point.  “Ye
ah?”  Lining the handsaw above the break in the branch, Nick started sawing.

“She’s The Goodbye Girl, isn’t she?”

“I don’t think there’s any doubt about that.”

There was silence for a few seconds, then, “You didn’t tell her.”

“Yeah, I did.  I told her my name.”

“But you didn’t tell her
who
you were.”

“Oh, she knows, don’t doubt that.”

“But she didn’t say anything.”

“Nope.”

“And you didn’t say anything.”

“I did.  I told her-”

“You didn’t tell her you knew who she was.”

Nick glanced down at Alex to find his friend leaning against the ladder, one hand hooked around a step as he looked up at him.  “I was waiting for her to offer that information.”

“So why didn’t she?”

“Now isn’t that the million dollar question?”  Nick looked back at the branch as he sawed.

“And the two million dollar question is why didn’t
you
offer the information?”

“I’m waiting for her.”

“You could be waiting a long time.”

“I’ve got seven weeks.”

“Seriously?  You’d wait seven weeks?”

“Maybe not seven.”  Nick was halfway through the branch.
  “Six and a half.”

Alex shifted, the movement causing the ladder to jiggle a little. 

Nick looked down at him.  “I’ve made it through Afghanistan and Iraq so far, I’d like to think I can be on your property for a couple of days without biting the dust.”

“You’d actually be biting the mud, but why quibble?”

Grinning faintly, Nick recommenced sawing the last half of the branch.  “You know,” he said conversationally, “I didn’t know she was living here until a few weeks ago.”

“Really?”

“Yeah.  I’d just gotten my ‘goodbye’ letter and was sitting on my bunk thinking about things, and I suddenly noticed the postmark.  It was here.”

“And you thought she’d still be here?  Kind of a long shot, don’t you think?”

“I had a feeling she’d still be here.”

“Why?  Everyone knows she moves around a lot.

“Yeah
, most of her letters are never from one town more than two or three times, but this time there were quite a few letters with Whicha on them.”  Nick shifted his hand.  “Branch coming down, Alex.  Watch it.”

“Mate, I’m right behind you at the ladder.  Unless you plan to throw it at me, I’m safe.”

“You’d think so, but who knows?” Nick watched the branch hit the mud before he climbed down.  Resting the saw on the rungs of the ladder, he scratched his jaw. “A lot of strange things are happening in Whicha.  Why not Bree?”

The corners of Alex’s eyes crinkled in amusement.  “She is some crazy sheila.”

“Entertaining,” Nick corrected.  “Different.”

“Different is right.
  UFOs, of all things.”

“In all the letters
and emails we shared, mate, not once did she ever mention UFOs and little grey men.  Not once.”

“Not everyone says everything in their letters
.  Some things we keep back.”

Nick slanted a look at him.  “Do you keep anything back from Harly?”

“No.”

“Sure about that?”

“Absolutely.”


You mean not once in your whole marriage have you ever kept anything back from her?”

Alex looked at him steadily.  “
I trust her.  She trusts me.”

“Huh.  Does she know you have shares in her name?  A
lot
of shares?”

“That’s insurance in case I die.”

“But does she know about it?”

A muscle tightened in Alex’s jaw.  “My job is dangerous, we both know that.  Harly knows that.  I need to make sure that she’s taken care of financially if anything happens to me.”

Nick laid a hand on his shoulder.  “If anything happens to you, Alex, Harly will have not only your family and her family to care for her, she’ll also have me watching out for her.  You know that.”

“Yeah, I know.”  Alex took a deep breath.  “I know.  I just need to know for my own peace of mind that I have taken care of her, that she’ll want for nothing.”

Nick smiled slightly.  “Don’t worry, only the good die young.  You’ll live forever.”

“Jesus, when did the subject turn so bloody morbid?”

“When we started talking secrets.”

“Oh yeah.”  Alex visibly relaxed.  “Your secret.”

“And Bree’s.”

“Nick and Bree
sharing a secret.”

“We’re not exactly sharing it, you drongo.”

“But both of you know who each other is, yet neither of you will admit it to the other.  And you both suspect each other of knowing that.”  Alex pursed his lips.  “That’s some secret.  Kind of like an open secret, isn’t it?”

“My, look at you.  Mr Psychology himself.”

“Don’t be bitter.  I know the truth hurts.”

“I’ll hurt you in a
minute.”

“And make
Harly cry?  I doubt it.”  Alex smirked.  “But go ahead.  Try.”

No way would he make Harly cry, but he wasn’t above wiping the smirk off Alex’s face.  Dust or mud, it made no difference.  Nick dove for Alex.

Wrestling in the mud was actually a little better than the dust, it didn’t get into ones lungs.  Into ones shirt, squashed between ones fingers, and slithering down ones jeans, yes, but definitely not sucked in.  Look, it didn’t even fill the air as they flailed around in the mud.

They were still wrest
ling and trying to push each other’s faces into the mud when Alex suddenly looked up.  “Oh - uh, hi, honey.”  His hold didn’t loosen around Nick’s throat.

Nick squinted up through the mud on his face.  “Hi, Harly.”

Standing not far from them, her coat wrapped tight around her and belted at the waist, car keys dangling from one hand, Harly looked them over slowly.

Alex rolled into a sitting position.  Nick sat up beside him, shoving his muddied hair back.

“Okay,” she said finally.  “I’m off to work.”

“All right,” Alex said cheerfully.

Nick grinned.  “Have a nice day.”

“Right.”  She looked them both over once more, shook her head and walked over to the shed where her car was parked.

“Want a hand to open that, heart of my heart?” Using Nick’s head for leverage, Alex pushed upright.

“No, you boys just continue playing.”  Harly swung the
shed door open.

“How about a little kiss to get me through the rest of the day?”  Alex started walking towards her.

Nick laughed as Harly yanked the door of her car open, jumped inside and slammed it shut.  He didn’t hear the locks click down, but he knew she’d done it.

“I’m hurt.”  Alex placed his hands on his hips.  “Fancy my beloved wife not
wanting to give me a little cuddle.”

Walking past him towards the house, Nick cast him a sidelong look.  “No way it could have
anything to do with that beauty mud pack on your mug.  Or chest and shit.”

Laughing,
Harly drove past them.

They both waved cheerfully before striding towards the house.  By
unspoken agreement they veered around to the back.  Undressing on the veranda in the cold air was a nut-shrivelling experience, but no way could they go into the house covered in mud.

“I own the place,”
Alex declared without shame.  “I’m having first shower.”

“Just don’t use all the hot water.”  Shaking, Nick clutched his arms around himself, following Alex into the warm kitchen.  At the sight of Sunny watching him, he pointed at her.  “Don’t even think anything funny, cat.’

Alex tossed him a blanket.  “Wrap yourself in that before you give the cat nightmares.”

“Like your bare arse parading around isn’t worse.”

Grinning, Alex disappeared.

Nick stood in one spot, not wanting to spread
the water and mud on the clean floor, the warmth of the kitchen and blanket not enough to drive out the cold from the wet mud that still coated parts of him.

Alex,
thoughtful bloke that he was, had a fast shower, yelling out to Nick when he’d finished.  Within minutes Nick was sighing with relief as the hot water warmed his goose-bumped flesh.

By the time he got out, dried and dressed, Alex had a pot of tea brewing and a saucepan of porridge warming up.

Chuckie, the one-eyed tom, Sunny, old Pepper, and Buffy the dog were watching him slop the porridge into two bowls.  Without blinking an eyelid, Alex put a small spoonful into their dishes, adding milk.

“Never knew cats ate porridge.”  Nick poured the tea into two mugs.

“Neither did I,” Alex agreed.  “Guess we know now.”

 
They ate in silence, enjoying the morning.  Once finished, Alex washed the dishes while Nick put their clothes in to soak, then they shifted the ladder to the house and climbed up to check the tin on the roof.

They were still up there when Paul’s work ute pulled into the driveway.  Getting out, he crossed to the house and looked up, hands on hips.  “
Becky’s hormones are out of control,” he announced.  “I need coffee.”

“What did you do this time?”  Not finding any holes or rust in the roof, Alex climbed down the ladder.

“What makes you think I did anything?”


Because you generally do.”

“I only suggested she get stretch pants.  I only said that it was time she put fashion aside for a bit of comfort for her swelling belly and get elastic
waisted pants.”

Nick started laughing.

“What?” Paul demanded.

“What was her reaction?”  Nick came down the ladder.

“Well she certainly wasn’t laughing like you two hyenas.”

“Let me
guess.  Someone went without breaky this morning?”

“I couldn’t have breaky!  S
he was throwing pots and pans around, practically foaming at the mouth.”

“B
ecause you suggested she was swelling like a watermelon?”  Alex tsked.  “Whatever is wrong with her?”

“Yeah, that’s what I said.”  Paul nodded.  “I said ‘Sweetheart, you know you’re
going to get big.  It’s happened before, it’ll happen again.’”

Nick gave a snort of laughter.  “I bet that went down well.”

“The woman went just about haywire.  Said she wouldn’t get fat again because she’d make sure I was castrated before I touched her again!”  Paul shook his head.  “I guess the little love fest we planned tonight is down the gurgler.”

“You
didn’t by any chance mention that to her, did you?”

“I was trying to make her laugh, lighten the mood, you know.”

“You are such a drongo.”  Picking up the ladder, Nick started towards the work shed.  “I’m not married and even I know what you
don’t
say to a woman.”

“Hormonal or otherwise,” Alex added.
  “Paul, you’ve been married longer than me.  You’ve known Becky all your life.  When will you ever learn?”

“I’ve learned that hormones make a woman crazy.”  Paul twirled his finger near his temple.  “They go all gonzo on a man.”

“You’d make anyone gonzo.”

“Don’t you start.  I get enough of that from my
mother-in-law.”

“Becky’s mother loves you.”

“She loves Becky more.  Always takes her side.”

“Oh, diddums.”  Alex fluttered his eyelashes.  “Does someone feel all unloved?  Are someone’s
widdle feelings hurt?  Does someone need a widdle kiss?”

BOOK: The Goodbye Girl
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