‘I’m not taking your mango,’ he says. ‘We’re not friends.’
‘We’re not,’ August agrees, ‘we’re essay partners. I want good grades and you don’t want to get expelled.’
‘Why don’t you just ask Mr Boyne to swap you? With someone who cares?’
August presses her lips together. ‘You say you don’t care, but your eyes say differently.’
His eyes?
‘Dude,’ August says, ‘your eyes have this permanent devastated look, like someone stole your ice cream and stabbed your puppy and then told you sprinkles were illegal. Your eyes clearly say they want to pass this assignment.’
They’re at the school gate and Beck has never been so glad to see it. He could hug the broken wire fence right now. Being with August is like a hurricane of confusing emotions.
‘Maybe sprinkles are illegal,’ Beck says, ‘and no one’s told you yet.’ He grabs Joey’s hand and drags her towards the preschool.
Amongst the clamour of hundreds of kids elbowing their way to class, August shouts, ‘I’ll see you after school!’
Beck walks faster.
The high, primary and preschool are all squashed into two massive buildings. They’re old. The air conditioners never work, so forget about heating. Most of the bathroom doors don’t lock, if they’re lucky enough to have a door. There isn’t even a covered eating area, so rain or shine, kids wander about the sports oval and leave muesli bar wrappers everywhere they go. It’s a dump. Beck feels sick dread for when Joey graduates to primary school and has to face these horrors.
He leaves her behind the safe, high fences – covered in rainbow streamers – of the preschool and trudges to class.
While the teachers drone about maths or biology, Beck writes music. His pencil squeaks a vicious storm – but it doesn’t block out August.
She’s going to be sticky about this, isn’t she? And it’s not just the assignment; she seems hell-bent on prying into the rest of his life. Maybe she thinks he’s interesting? He’s tried to be unremarkable. But if she found out about the piano or the reasons behind his bruises or the Maestro in general and told people – he can’t even think about it. He’d be so embarrassed. What kind of fifteen-year-old guy is scared of his mother?
Beck tries to approach Mr Boyne – even though he has a strict no-teacher-contact policy – about changing partners to someone who doesn’t care about school, but Mr Boyne waves him away.
‘August is great. You’ll be fine.’
‘That isn’t what I—’
But Mr Boyne flaps off to accost a student stealing whiteboard markers.
Can nothing in his gottverdammten Leben go right, for once?
Even getting Joey out fast fails because her teacher corners Beck to give a disapproving analysis of Joey’s recent violent behaviour and how unacceptable it is. Beck has only just wriggled free of that when he realises Joey’s made a robot costume out of boxes and they have a long, heated argument about the fact that she can’t take it home. She howls at him for a few minutes and then goes boneless so he has to carry her out, which douses any notion of getting away before August can catch up.
August swings on the fence, a little less bouncy than usual.
‘Why is your foot bleeding?’ Joey demands.
‘I kicked someone.’ August gives a wan smile.
Beck hauls Joey up for a piggyback ride and tries to balance his backpack on one shoulder and hers on his other. He really doesn’t have time to focus on August’s freaking feet.
August reaches for his bag. ‘I can carry—’
‘I’m fine,’ he says sharply.
She pulls back and he asks himself, for the millionth time, why he’s such a devil. But it has to be this way. If she goes to Mr Boyne for a new partner, she’ll get her way. He just has to suck enough to drive her to it.
August limps – unusually quiet – a few steps behind them. Good, maybe he can lose her.
But Beck finds himself walking slower and slower and then finally turns back to see how bad it is.
She’s leaving bloodied footprints.
‘Meine Güte,’ Beck says sharply. ‘You could’ve said you were dying.’
August stops and looks down. Her face is paler than usual, freckles sticking out, and she winces every time she steps.
Beck drops Joey on her feet and dumps his packs on the sidewalk. He’s a jerk, yes, but he’s not the kind of jerk that’s going to let someone bleed to death.
‘Do you have a phone?’ August says weakly. ‘I could call my dad to pick me up.’
Beck hesitates. ‘Um, no. You don’t have one?’ Because he sure doesn’t.
August shrugs. ‘My family doesn’t really believe in them. I mean, we’re not living in a cave.’ She lets out a half-hearted laugh. ‘I have an iPod and we’ve got houselines and – sorry, I’m totally rambling.’
Beck tries to think if he has something in his bag he could wrap it in. His maths homework?
Joey creeps closer and squats in front of the battered foot. ‘What did you kick?’
‘Who, not what,’ August says. ‘Some idiot killing frogs in the guys’ toilets.’
‘You went into the boy toilets?’ Joey draws back, as if this kind of idiocy is contagious.
August shrugs and sits down in the middle of the sidewalk. She cradles her bloody foot – it looks like a complete toenail is missing. ‘You shouldn’t kill things. Not dreams or happiness or animals. I’m really anti-killing. So the disagreement got a little physical and some guy had a stupid steel-toe boot and—’ She bites her lip. ‘I think I might’ve deflected off him into the wall.’
‘You could wear shoes, you know.’ Beck is desperately trying to think of a way he won’t have to whip off his shirt and offer it as a bandage. Because – please no.
August grits her teeth. ‘I knew you’d say that. But you know what? I shouldn’t have to wear shoes to kick someone because they’re killing harmless frogs.’ Her face has gone red with the injustice.
‘OK, whatever.’ Beck turns around and squats down. He shrugs his shoulders. ‘Get on my back.’
‘What?’
Joey lets out a squeak of delight. ‘Oh, Beck’s gonna give you a piggyback!’
August eyes widen. ‘Beck, I’m way too heavy …’
‘Nope.’ Beck shrugs his shoulders again. ‘Get on. I lift weights, you know.’ He does not. ‘I’m not leaving you to bleed to death on the sidewalk.’
‘And here I was thinking that’d make you happy.’ She peels herself off the footpath and hops towards Beck. ‘I can call my dad from your house.’
And the Maestro won’t be in till late – what a relief.
August touches his shoulders tentatively and then, with an ‘I’m probably going to kill you,’ she’s on. Beck stumbles upright, stretches, and then hooks his arms under her thighs for balance. He’s holding a girl. Her arms lie loosely around his throat. The smell of her is all over him – part sweat and coppery blood and coconut. She’s no featherweight Joey, obviously, but he won’t drop her.
He’s got this.
He takes a step and then another.
Joey has picked up his backpack and has a look of severe concentration on her face as she trots doggedly after them.
‘Aren’t I great?’ August says dully. ‘A damsel in distress.’
‘Well,’ Beck says, unwilling to admit to her – or himself – that he doesn’t mind at all. ‘When I kick a wall, you can carry me home.’
‘Deal.’
Joey breaks into a jog to catch up, panting. ‘I’m gonna kick a wall too!’
Beck groans. ‘Oh, Joey, you Schwachkopf. I’ll carry you tomorrow, I swear.’
Although August doesn’t feel like an elephant on his back, Beck’s knees still go slightly weak when he reaches his driveway. She slides off and, hanging off his elbow, she hops to the front door. Beck tackles it open with the key and holds his breath for a second, praying desperately that the house is empty.
Because what if it’s not?
Hey, Mutter, here’s a bleeding girl I found who’s possibly a friend? But I don’t know. Jury’s out. Don’t kill me when she’s gone.
‘Um, come in, I guess?’ Beck holds the door open. He’s never done this, not once in his life.