He suggests it so casually, but Desi is stunned. The image of her standing next to him on the boat in the dream-picture is suddenly extremely vivid. Is that really possible? She doesn’t dare believe in it. Her mind goes into overdrive with questions, and she has to force herself to listen to him.
‘… the pay is lousy – which means there isn’t really any money, but I can probably stretch to sharing my food. However, you do get to observe dolphins all day. Although you have to remember you can’t ride on these ones,’ he says, a teasing note in his voice, ‘or you’ll ruin my study. And it’s basic living conditions – you’ll need a tent.’
Desi’s mind is still whirling when he jumps up. ‘I realise that’s a bolt from the blue, and you might not even be interested. Are you interested?’
Dumbstruck, shading her eyes so she can see him against the sun’s dazzling corona, she nods.
He laughs. ‘Well, have a think about it. If you want to talk more, then call me at the Monkey Mia caravan park – there’s only one. It’s a tiny little place, but it’s paradise. I’m driving north tomorrow, so I’ll be there in a few days.’
He offers her a hand as she sits there on the sand. ‘Maybe I’ll chat to you again soon, Desi,’ he says. ‘I promise you, when you spend time with the dolphins up there, it changes your life.’
She watches him stroll up the dune path towards the car park. Only when he’s gone does she realise that, although they haven’t spoken in six months, he’s remembered her name.
‘T
here’s a couple asking about diving – can you take ’em?’
Charlie is standing at Jackson’s door, hands on hips, his baggy top already lined with a V of sweat despite the early hour. The craggy line of his brow is furrowed even more than usual as he waits for an answer, squinting into the early morning sun.
There is no ‘How was your trip?’. Jackson wonders whether Charlie even remembers he’s been gone, except the grim line of his father’s mouth betrays him.
‘Not today, Dad,’ he says. ‘I need time to get things organised. But tomorrow I could – if they’re still around.’
‘Right-o,’ says his father, ‘I’ll let them know.’ And he marches back down the path.
Jackson sits down on his bed and wearily rubs his face. His flight had landed at two that morning, and it has taken nearly three days of flying and airport layovers to get home. In Galapagos, every moment of his day on the boat had been timetabled by someone else, and he’d rather enjoyed that. Now
he is overwhelmed by the empty weeks ahead of him, and the pressure to fill them. He tries not to look too far ahead, just thinks about this morning. Should he contact Kate, or go and see Desi, or get the bloody diving equipment from a shop that’s a 45-minute drive away? Perhaps he should forget them all and get some more sleep – but he doesn’t want to spend days fighting jetlag.
He rolls his shoulders, trying to loosen them, and decides that an early swim must come first. He throws his case onto the bed and grabs from it a musky-smelling towel, which will have to do. Flinging it over his shoulder, he makes his way through the campground, listening to a crow cawing indolence to the sunrise. He passes Maya’s door, and wonders if she is awake, whether she might want to come. He could find out more about Desi, see if they have caught up yet, but he doesn’t want to wake Maya this early.
He strolls over the dunes towards the ocean. He loves this time of morning, everything fresh, the beach an unblemished stretch of sand, as though the sea has neatly remade its bed as it retreated. The water is beautifully calm, so he floats on his back for a while, hardly moving, staring at the sky, thinking about Kate, and everything she hasn’t told him.
A few days ago he had never heard of White Wave. But that’s who Ian said Kate worked for – at least, she had when he’d met her a few years ago in Thailand. There was a chance he might have his facts mixed up, but Jackson didn’t think so. His memory had been so specific. ‘It was 2006,’ he’d told Jackson that night on the boat, sitting down next to him, still absorbed by the picture, shaking his head. ‘I was on a trip to the Similan Islands off the coast of Thailand, surveying the whale sharks and the reef there, seeing what state things were in, a year after the tsunami. Kate was working out of the same dive shop in
Phuket. She was part of a group doing a series of clean-up dives to try to restore some of the damaged reef. I’d never heard of the group before, but I was full of admiration – they were all tourists or travellers, paying their own way, simply trying to help out. The stuff they were getting from the bottom, it was amazing: statues, beach umbrellas, televisions, you name it. Kate was leading the group.
‘When I came home, I always recommended White Wave to people – I’ve been on the website quite a bit, and seen her name mentioned there. The last time was on their home page, when they announced the deaths of Kate and four others in the Japanese tsunami. I was sure that’s what I read, but perhaps it just said they were missing. I don’t know what they were doing there, but I was upset to hear it. It was absolutely tragic after all she’d done. Life has a way of being completely fucking ironic, hey?’ Ian had added, rubbing his injured leg.
He had wanted to ask Ian to find out more, but knew how strange that would look. Why couldn’t he ask her himself? So on the journey home, Jackson had spent every spare moment on the internet, hunting down all the scraps of detail he could uncover about White Wave.
He has read their blurb so many times he knows it off by heart.
An environmental charity, White Wave was founded in response to the Asian tsunami of 2004, dedicated to community and environmental restoration projects. Run and staffed entirely by volunteers, our projects are hands-on, ambitious, and locally sustainable.
For moments as he researched, Jackson had almost forgotten
about Kate, finding himself wanting to join in with these skilled people making a small but meaningful difference to other parts of the world.
But absolutely nowhere on the website, or on any other site, has he found mention of Kate. Not even searching through their site history. The notification that Ian had seen has disappeared.
Back in his caravan after his swim, Jackson opens the photo of Kate again and stares at it. If Ian is right, and Kate has told him absolutely nothing of this, it raises a few uncomfortable questions. How close had they been, really, if she had chosen to hold back huge chunks of her life? How much could you understand someone in a few weeks? Jackson doesn’t like knowing so little about a woman who is on his mind so much. He tries to console himself, thinks about all the parts of his life that he hasn’t revealed to Kate yet. Hell, he hadn’t even told her that Desi was in prison, only that she would be home very soon.
Could Ian have got it wrong? But it matches so much of what Jackson does know about Kate. Her passion for diving and her obvious skill in the water. The stories she had told him about her travels, where she always knew an incredible amount about the locals she’d encountered.
So why hadn’t she told him about White Wave, when it was such a fantastic project? He thinks about the footage of the Japanese tsunami – the great black tide that carried boats and buildings far inland, the small specks of cars and people running for their lives ahead of it. The horror as the water chased down all in its path, and swallowed them up. Had she really been there? How had she got through unscathed? Wouldn’t she still be traumatised?
He goes to his inbox, hoping there will be word from her. But all he finds is a stack of emails from Ian, thanking him for his help and enthusing about the trip. ‘May be other possibilities
for you soon,’ he has written. ‘Come in for a chat when you have time.’ And he has added photos, lots of them. There is one of all the crew and researchers together. And there’s another he’s received from Sebastian, in which Jackson is tagging his very first whale shark. He stares hard at the image. This is the life he wants – on and under the water, working with like-minded people and learning more about the creature that fascinates him. Where do his feelings for Kate fit in with that?
He thinks about what Ian has in mind for him, and how difficult it will be to go on research trips like the Galapagos one if he has ties back home. He thinks about Desi and Maya. He can still remember how joyous Desi had been with Connor in Monkey Mia, and how impassive her expression was each time she served him at the petrol station. He still has his dreams; he doesn’t want to settle for less. If Ian is offering something, he has to grab it with both hands.
Perhaps he has built up his feelings for Kate into something far bigger than they actually are. But her absence will not bring any resolution to his worries. He needs to be with her again, and then he will know for sure whether any of his concerns are real.
He opens a fresh email, adds in Kate’s address, and switches to capitals for the subject line. ‘HONEY I’M HOME! WHEN ARE YOU COMING TO VISIT?’ he writes, then adds a smiley face to try to lighten the pressure of the question. Then deletes it. Adds it again, and taps send.
He leans back, crossing his legs and putting his arms behind his head, staring into space, wondering how long he will have to wait for an answer.
M
aya wakes to the insistent buzz of her phone, its small screen flashing on and off in the dark. She pulls it towards her, sees Luke’s name, and is immediately alert.
His voice has a tremor to it. ‘I’m coming over, Maya. I’ve got an injured joey.’ Then he hangs up.
Maya is left with the phone pressed to her ear, listening to nothing. It has been almost a week since they last went out together, and she hasn’t heard from him since. She has been hoping that Hayden has been staying home, and Luke hasn’t had reason to call. She is worried her emotions betrayed her last time and made him doubt whether she could cope. Whereas, with every day that passes she becomes more determined to stop Hayden and his friends.
She climbs from her bed and peers out of the window. The caravan park is deathly still. A car at this time is surely going to attract people’s attention, and she baulks at the thought of Charlie striding rapidly across in the dark. She rings Luke
back, but he doesn’t pick up. She pulls her hair into a band, and tries to remember all she knows about caring for injured joeys. She has only ever seen others do it, and is nervous of this new weight of responsibility. She can already envisage Luke’s dark eyes on her, taking in every move she makes without a word. She briefly wishes she could call her mother and ask her advice. She imagines Desi’s soothing voice volunteering to jump in the car and come up to help, pictures her mother striding into the caravan and taking over, and finds she is clenching her fists. She switches on her laptop and tries to check the internet for useful information. There’s plenty of it, but while the words reach her eyes the content doesn’t register, and her mind swirls with random snatches of information. She grabs her esky and lines it with a jumper, as she’s seen her mother do before, grabs a pillowcase, prepares more blankets, and then waits.
Eventually she hears the car creeping along the track, cringes as she sees the glow of lights passing over numerous tents. She opens the door before Luke has a chance to knock. He is clutching his jacket, his hands so close together that Maya can’t make out much of a bulge against his chest. When he comes in, he sits down on the edge of the bed, and pulls his lapels a little wider so Maya has a chance to look.
‘They’ve only been drinking lately. I almost thought they’d given up the idea. But tonight they shot three. I watched them kill a joey as well, but they didn’t see this one. He must have been flung out when his mother fell. He was just lying there. I don’t think he’s big enough to be hopping in and out of the pouch yet.’
Two terrified black eyes meet Maya’s. Moving instinctively to quell the infant’s fear, she puts her hand in and touches the tip of his head. He wriggles and bucks frantically in panic, and Luke quickly closes his jacket and holds him tight.
‘I nearly didn’t see him,’ Luke continues in a whisper. ‘They won’t have been there long. The mum was still warm. There’s blood all over him, but I’m hoping it’s the mother’s – I haven’t seen any signs of damage, not that I’ve had much chance to look.’
Maya thinks about all she knows, and tries to take charge. ‘We need to check for dehydration.’
As Luke holds on tight to his cargo, Maya puts her hand inside his jacket again, becoming aware that her fingers are shaking. The joey has the beginnings of downy hair cover, and is velvety soft. She takes hold of the skin gently, pinching it between her fingers, and notes the small delay before it settles back into place. The little animal is already dehydrated. She pulls the edges of Luke’s jacket together and sighs. ‘Let’s try to give him a drink.’
She searches around her in despair. ‘I guess I could make some weak black tea – we’ll try that.’
‘Black tea?’ Luke looks sceptical. ‘Haven’t you got any milk?’
‘You can’t give him normal milk, it’s really bad for him – he’ll end up with diarrhoea, which will make things a lot worse. You need special formula for joeys,’ she says, already filling the kettle. ‘Black tea isn’t ideal, but I think it’ll work for now.’ She doesn’t tell him that she’s seen her mother do this before. ‘But I don’t know what to use as a bottle. They need special teats to suck on, too, or they can damage their mouths.’
Luke blows out a frustrated breath and glances around the cabin. His eyes fall on bottles by her bed. ‘What’s that?’
‘Saline solution.’
‘Could you tip that out and use it?’
‘I guess we could try. You have to drop the liquid in carefully, but this lid is designed for that – it might just work.’
Maya pours the saline solution into a jug and then does her best to sterilise the bottle. Then she fills it with weak black tea,
and they put it in the fridge to cool it down. Luke opens up his jacket a little and the roo peeps out but makes no attempt to move.
‘He’s gone quiet,’ Maya says. ‘Do you think that’s a good thing or not?’
‘Not sure.’ Luke glances at the downy creature. ‘Perhaps I should move him. Let’s sort out the esky.’
‘Hang on.’ Maya fills a hot-water bottle, and adds it to the set-up, laying another blanket on top of it. She grabs the pillowcase. ‘Put him in this – the shape of it helps re-create the pouch, stops him moving too much.’
Luke takes the joey out of his shirt, and the tiny creature begins to squirm again. Quickly, Luke places the joey in the pillowcase, pops the bundle into the esky, and Maya rearranges the blankets. ‘Jeez,’ Luke says, stretching. ‘That got uncomfortable.’
It is hard to resist checking the joey, but Maya doesn’t want to keep frightening him. She imagines what he might have experienced tonight, pictures him lying on the ground in the dark next to his mother’s body, and can hardly bear it.
‘Has the tea cooled down?’ Luke asks.
Maya swallows her emotions and checks the bottle in the fridge. ‘Not yet.’
They both contemplate the esky, but nothing moves. In the silent space, Maya becomes more aware of Luke’s presence as he sits on her bed. ‘You have blood on you,’ she says, noticing a few streaks on his neck.
‘Yeah, and check this out.’ He pulls open his jacket and his shirt, and she is shocked to see there are long streaks of dried blood against his dark chest.
‘Do you want to borrow a towel and have a wash? You can use the communal showers, over there.’ She points out the window into the darkness.
He looks out. ‘Nah …’
‘You do remember that kangaroos are covered in ticks?’
He frowns. ‘Well, okay then, I guess.’
‘Here,’ she throws him a towel. ‘I won’t give him a drink until you get back.’
While Luke is gone, Maya lies on the bed, staring at the box. What kind of cognition does a joey have – can he have any idea that his mother, the whole source of his protection, is gone forever? Does he feel the unending fear of her absence in each moment? Is there anything more frightening than to be so small and helpless and alone, reliant on the goodwill of others to make it through the night? It was chance that this one was found by Luke, that the joey isn’t still lying there, waiting, while hungry creatures catch the scent of blood and circle closer in the darkness. That is the cruel cycle of life, after all. A battle in every moment; death in one place extending life in another. Isn’t railing against it in the way she and Luke are doing, by rescuing one animal out of millions, a futile, endless quest? And doesn’t it make her just like her mother?
Maya is grateful that Luke comes back and stops these thoughts, though his presence replaces them with another set no less troubling. He has put his jeans on, but carries the rest of his clothes in his hands. She knows this is not the time to be drawn to put her hands against his smooth chest but, God, she wants to.
‘Are you cold?’ she asks. ‘I might have something you can borrow.’
‘It’s all right.’ Luke goes over to the esky and gently lifts out the joey, still wrapped in the pillowcase and blankets. ‘Hey there, little fella,’ he whispers, ‘let’s see if you’ll have something to drink.’
He looks expectantly at Maya and she gets the bottle. She
shakes it up and squirts some onto her hand, checking it is tepid. Then she kneels in front of Luke.
‘He won’t be able to suck it – I have to drop it into his mouth,’ she says. She tries to ease the joey’s small lips back, and accidently touches his nose with the bottle. The little creature jumps in shock and begins to wriggle again.
‘It might help if you cover his eyes,’ Maya says. ‘They’re used to the darkness of the pouch. It makes them feel safe.’
She grimaces at her words. Why does everything she utters tonight ring in her ears as an echo of Desi’s voice?
Luke puts one hand over the kangaroo’s eyes, and pulls the little body tight into his lap. This time Maya manages to open his mouth, and carefully releases a droplet of tea through a minuscule gap between his teeth. By repeating the process they manage to get a little of the liquid into him, but it becomes harder and harder to pry the joey’s mouth open. ‘Should we let him rest?’ Luke asks. ‘I’ll find something better as soon as it’s light and the shops open. I can go and ask the vet if he has anything.’
‘Hang on,’ Maya says, as he moves to put the kangaroo back in the esky. She snatches up some tissues, wets them with the water from the warm kettle. ‘We have to toilet him,’ she says, pulling the pillowcase down a little. ‘You need to sit him on your lap for a moment.’
She arranges the joey so that Luke is holding it close, its legs up and its tail hanging down, then gently dabs between the joey’s legs. A trickle of urine emerges, followed by a small amount of tar-like faeces. ‘They don’t go on their own. His mother would normally do this by stimulating the cloaca.’
As soon as she has finished, they pull the pillowcase over the joey, and settle him back into the esky. Luke stands up, stretching.
‘You can stay if you like,’ Maya says, trying to make the offer sound casual.
Luke shakes his head. ‘I’ll go and find some supplies – I’ll be back as soon as I can. Keep in touch by phone, yeah?’
He grabs his clothes and goes to the door. Maya follows, unable to help noticing the ripples of well-defined muscles in his back. He turns around as though he’s about to say something, but then shrugs. ‘See ya later then.’ And he is gone, leaving Maya to a restless night full of longing and fretfulness, her ears constantly attuned to the small box at the end of her bed.
As light begins its cautious glow through her window, Maya drifts into a delirium, coming to and floating away again so often that she cannot tell where sleep begins or ends.
She is semi-aware of some soft noises, like barking coughs. They are small and wretched – she can hear the desperate call for his mother in them, and her heart breaks for him. Not knowing what else to do, she eventually gets up and rearranges the blankets, topping up the hot-water bottle, grateful when the sound stops. Back in bed, she sleeps a little longer, but then becomes disturbed by how quiet it is. She climbs to the edge of her bed, and gently pulls the covers up.
Something is wrong. At first, she cannot pinpoint what it is, since there is no outward sign of injury or distress. The joey has his eyes closed, appears to be asleep. She picks him up, and he is floppy in her hands. He is warm, but doesn’t move when she gently pinches his skin again, and she is alarmed at how long it takes to settle back in place.
Panicked, she calls Luke’s number. ‘There’s something wrong – I mean, really wrong.’
He sounds groggy. ‘Shit. I can’t get any supplies yet. It’s too early.’
‘I don’t think there’s time for that.’ Maya looks down at the little creature and makes her decision. ‘It’s okay, I’ll go and get help.’
‘Maya –’ Luke says, but she ends the call before he has a chance to object.
She puts the joey in his makeshift bed and covers him well with the blankets. She throws a T-shirt on over her singlet, but doesn’t bother to change her pyjama bottoms. She pushes her feet into her thongs, and then grabs the esky and rushes out to her car. She wedges the esky between the seat and dashboard on the passenger-seat side, pulling the seat forward to hold it tight. Then she climbs in and sets off down the track as fast as she dares, cursing every bump, glancing anxiously at the mound of blankets in the small box, and having to remind herself to keep her eyes on the track. She slows slightly at the turning to the local vet’s, but it is too early for anyone to be there. She makes her decision and presses the accelerator down hard.
Now that she is on sealed road, the low bushland flies by and before long she sees the gate. There is a hand-painted sign on one of the slats: ‘Hoppers Rest’. Perhaps this is a terrible idea, but she has no choice. She climbs out to open the gate, drives through and then gets out to shut it behind her again. Then she steers the car carefully along the track to the low-lying, single-storey house. A couple of kangaroos move slowly away, shifting their weight idly between their front paws and tail, no urgency to their movements. A third lolls under a tree, surveying her as she passes.
There are people on the front verandah before she has even stopped the car. The man is rubbing his eyes as though he’s been woken. The woman is squinting in the early light. Perhaps she
cannot see who it is yet, or maybe she cannot believe it.