The Forrests - By Emily Perkins Page 0,32

up that they’d found no sign of anyone, not in the back country, not on the black runs or in the valleys.

‘A chopper’s been out since light. Nothing. But Liam at the school reckons he was headed down the mountain, into town.’

‘Yeah. Thanks . . . Daniel left his phone here, so.’

‘Maybe he was hitting the casinos, didn’t want you checking up on him.’

‘No doubt. Thanks, Bernie.’

‘We’ll send him home soon as anyone lays eyes on him. Might have been an all-nighter.’

‘Ha ha.’

There was a clunk and grind and the patroller turned to watch the chairlift swing into action. Red- and yellow-coloured figures, riding on the air, skis pointing upwards. ‘Incoming,’ he said.

Evelyn left a note for the family with heating instructions and a promise to be back after lunch. She placed it under the whisky bottle, which she turned on an angle as though that might make a difference to how much was left. In the bathroom she took a couple of painkillers, the tablets’ smooth coating momentarily sweet, and washed her face with warm water. She checked Daniel’s phone again but there was nothing new and she tossed it back on the pillowy white duvet. Evelyn went downstairs to put her overalls and parka and hat and ski boots on and finally the gloves. About two inches of new snow was piled outside the front door. She lifted her feet in a small march through the powder to the rack, and her skis. A thick length of melting snow slid through the slats in the deck.

6. Mojo

What she thought of as her situation, a sleeping bag on her boss’s couch, no utility bills in her name, still living out of the knapsack that had accompanied her travels, Evelyn felt most keenly when visiting Dot. It was all very well being penniless and heartbroken and back in her job at the florist’s as though the past months had never happened, but the romance faded at her sister’s rented house miles from anywhere, ages on the bus to a neighbourhood of charity shops and the TAB, here in the constant turn of the washing-machine drum, the bottles forever sterilising on the stovetop. In this family home she was an alien, the night’s adventures clinging like foreign gas. Dorothy welcomed her, happy to have adult company that came without judgement, but Evelyn wished she would for once finish a sentence. Half the times Dot went to Grace there wasn’t anything the matter, and if she was being fed, or changed, or entertained, the conversation inevitably dwindled, funnelled into the baby’s endless need. It was a surprise of the mildly unpleasant kind, how time-consuming this small creature was, and Evelyn couldn’t help but suspect, punnishly, that Dottie milked it, let every spill and leakage require maximum clean-up, burped the baby at length, hand-scrubbed a square of muslin and pegged it out after a single use, because it was a way of occupying time. What else was she going to do, home all day long in the new-mum smock costume she had taken to wearing?

Andrew would come back from work each night and kiss his wife and cuddle the baby then disappear into the garage where his painting was set up.

‘Is it me?’ Eve wondered, and Dottie said, ‘No, it’s not you. He needs to do some painting every day. It keeps his head together.’

‘Like the karate.’

‘Yes.’

‘Whatever it takes.’

‘Yes.’

Sometimes they met in a café and just as Dorothy’s pot of tea or heated-up pie was served Grace would squall until Dot, refusing Eve’s help, took her outside. Mostly Evelyn wound up eating and drinking alone, reading the newspaper or watching her sister pace the footpath as she joggled the baby, and then Dot would flurry in all apologies and close to tears, slurp her tea, have a mouthful of cake and announce she had to go.

Despite being a colonised baby domain, some weeks Dorothy’s house was the only really human place Eve found herself. She had to admit that her social life was out of control. She also had to admit that social life was a euphemism. Her random fucking was out of control. They lived in a small place. Sooner or later she was going to fuck her way into a corner and would have to leave town. This was what she said to her sister one afternoon in the tiny back garden, Grace fatly in her nappy on a blanket, eating pieces of cut-up peach with her fingers, crawling to swipe

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