The Wilful Eye (11 page)

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Authors: Isobelle Carmody

Tags: #Young Adult Fiction

BOOK: The Wilful Eye
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T
hat brittle night they danced they danced they danced, their knees on springs on feet on wings. Gerda and Kai, naturally high. Their breath came out in cumulus clouds as the ramshackle house sucked people in and out through its large damp lungs. Faces blurred, simple sentences fractured and slurred. They clung on and spun, giddy to rhythms that couldn't keep up. They screeched and giggled and fizzled and sparked. Gerda thought someone in the corner nodded at Kai, but Kai just looked blank and shrugged:
I don't know anyone, either
. As long as they were together, Gerda felt safe. She didn't even know whose party it was, which suburb they were in. They came with some people who knew some people, but all of them had vanished. The house was half renovated, with excisions and entrails in odd little rooms. People looked up accusingly, as though you'd burst in.

Gerda shivered, inhaling the chill of the house. She caught a boy looking her up and down, dark and intense and that cool bit older. Their looks snagged and he glided up beside her. He was swarthy and shadowed and the creases in his face made him more man than boy. Close up he touched her fingers thrillingly and tried pulling her away to where he'd been sitting. Gerda made a spastic stumble, avoiding someone's empty stubbies. Then he offered something up, his fingers cradling the bulb in a way that reminded her of handling a pigeon. She saw it was a pipe:
a pipe made of glass. She shook her head emphatically.
Don't smoke
, she mouthed over a burst of electric guitar.
Suit yourself
, his shrug said, and his face closed up. His attention switched to Kai, who was hovering close.

Gerda did a double take as Kai took a pull – they
never
touched drugs – then sank onto the couch. The man offered the pipe again, and Gerda felt the clamour of her own urge to please. He had a face that was hungry for something. She took a few quick puffs, trying not to think too much. But a wrong feeling needled her: the man's hair was greasy and his collar was dirty. A wave of noise was breaking and she was tugged out on the tide. Then her mind just changed channels – she was off on a rollercoaster ride, avoiding a million collisions.

They danced they danced they danced, hurling themselves into hypnotic rhythms she'd never fully felt, never truly heard. The music spiralled around and above them, pulsing over them and through them, pumping out their arms, animating their legs and thrusting through their hips. The dark man breathed unbearably close, his eyes darting everywhere and blocking her way. He danced like burning newspaper and his smell hung sharp on the air. Exit – no exit – she'd better find a toilet and hide. The dance floor was suddenly crowded with her critics, eyes piercing Gerda's poise. Body slick, breathing hard, she tried pushing through the crowd to find her way to Kai. But Kai was somehow disconnected in a way that made her nervous, not seeking her out or meeting her eye. The shadow man was suffocating with his skin-crawler hands. Gerda felt all the lights exploding, and fireworks hailing down. She slid to the ground abruptly, spittle stringing from her mouth. Her shadow was behind her, lifting her too intimately under the arms. She pushed him away, panic roaring.

‘Bitch!' she heard, and sensed the man raise a hand.

Gerda ducked her head and slid under some other bodies, finding her way through them with desperate precision. Kai? Why so far away? Gerda saw the man hovering, hard-angled on the edge of the dancers. She scanned for Kai. He was
there
, catatonic near the centre of the floor. Gerda saw he was staring into the eyes of a very tall girl, a girl that nobody crowded. She was a stunning white-blonde creature with the long-legged look of a deer. The albino of some exotic species. No. Not a deer. Some lean kind of predator.

Eyes like a snow wolf
, the thought jumped into her mind. Then she wondered . . .
a snow wolf
.
Does such a thing exist?

Gerda saw the way Kai was looking at the girl, how his face seemed wreathed in starlight, some illusion of the room. Her eyes were slanted almonds, cheekbones high and broad and flat, her long hair fluffy dawn-clouds, snowy white. She stood lithe and elegant and still, inside a blizzard of swirling bodies. Gerda saw that Kai was her captive. She was glad the girl had kept him in the room. Gerda sidled over and touched his shoulder.

‘Earth to Kai,' she said.

Kai nodded, saying nothing.

Gerda looked from Kai to the girl, and a thought leapt uninvited into her brain.
The snow girl's eyes glittered like two bright stars
. Gerda was aware of a strange churn of thoughts.

‘Kai . . . introductions?' Gerda heard herself say, quite loud. The girl stared down an aristocratic nose. Still Kai said nothing: it must be the stuff.

Snow weighs heavy on branches in the laden silence of the night. Pine needles prickle the air, bright moonlight shivers silver on deep drifts. As you stop to listen harder than the hammer of your heart, a high faint keening carries on the air. Hugging your coarse cloak, you feel your feet stinging inside freezing leather. Gradually the ululation takes shape in your brain, hardens and intensifies into a howl. Pine needles carpet the wolf pack's approach. Fear tears at your belly. Legs leaden and brain burning, you stare up at the pines, straight and unadorned as sentries. They seem impossible to climb.

When the snow girl looked at Gerda, there was neither curiosity nor interest, but when she looked at Kai . . . it was as if a cold scatter of stars lit the brittle midnight sky.

‘Anya, this is Gerda,' Kai shouted, finally, putting his new friend first, Gerda noticed.
He should be introducing her to me.

Gerda nodded, and saw that there was neither rest nor peace in those eyes. She looked back at Kai and shivered. The thread between them told her he was scrabbling to get back inside his body. He was no match for this snow wolf.

‘Anya's from Norway,' Kai yelled suddenly over the music, as though this ought to impress her.

Gerda caught herself feeling a stab of . . . what? Jealousy? No! Since they were little, they'd been best friends. They'd lived in next-door terraces all their lives, and gone everywhere together.

Kai and the girl . . . they just didn't plait. The girl looked somehow otherworldly in her exquisite fur-lined coat, whereas everything about Kai was average. But did people less familiar see him differently? He had blond board-rider good looks, but so did every third boy in the city. A chill of insight told Gerda that the snow girl wanted something specific, yet she couldn't have said what it was. The snow girl seemed to stand at the centre of a storm of white bees, and Gerda saw that Kai was spellbound.

Don't be uncool
, she told herself.
Leave him to his one-night stand
. The snow wolf might maul him for a while – but she'd leave his carcass in the snow. Gerda wanted to giggle hysterically. Should she take a taxi home?

But she knew Kai would never leave
her
on her own and not quite in control. Gerda still felt high and strange and shattered, and wondered if the stuff was making her see the girl as some kind of ice queen, when she was perhaps just quiet and contained. Maybe even shy.

Kai was valiantly trying the conversation thing, in a way he never needed to with
her
 – they'd always been in tune. Gerda decided to keep watch from a distance. She wandered into a group discussing the American pariahs, trying to keep Kai in sight.

‘The terrorists don't even have to do anything anymore,' a tall, red-headed guy was saying, jabbing the air with his finger. ‘The environmental disasters and the food riots. They're imploding all on their own.'

Kai and the snow girl were drifting down a hallway sardined with bodies, and Gerda was about to lose sight of him. She slid along behind them, keeping her distance, feeling more a spy than a friend. The snow girl had taken his hand possessively. They slipped into a small side room, a bathroom: damn. Gerda couldn't follow without being obvious. She hovered in the doorway, the weight of prowling bodies pressing in.

Kai stood with the girl, holding up a bag of white stuff they'd been handed by two men who were watching them intently. One plucked the bag back from Kai and shook some kind of powder onto the vanity, then gave Kai a straw. The powder sparkled, dirty little diamonds under the light. To Gerda the men seemed hovering hawks, watching for prey with a raptor's intensity. The ice girl stood stock-still, an accomplice. Gerda took a deep breath and stumbled in, fake drunk. Kai looked up angrily but the snow girl's ice-blue eyes were unreadable. Gerda was stung.

‘Kai, please take me home,' Gerda whined, in a way she never did, desperately hoping he'd understand. Kai hesitated, and Gerda could see he was torn. She stumbled again deliberately, and this time Kai stepped forward to steady her. But he bumped the mirror above the vanity and it crashed to the floor, scattering the coarse grimy crystals. Everybody jumped back, and Gerda gasped. The look that came from Kai was . . . pure
loathing
.

Gerda burst into tears, hating herself. Hating herself for crying in front of the ice girl who had no compassion in her eyes, in front of the cruel men who hadn't even blinked. They only had eyes for the powder. The cheap-shit mirror lay shattered at their feet in ten thousand ugly shards. Kai had blood on his shirt and a red bubble mushroomed in his eye.

‘Kai – you're
hurt
!' Gerda heard herself shriek.

‘Come
on,'
Kai said, jerking her arm, ‘you bloody
idiot
.'

They crunched out of the bathroom and he pulled her this way and that, dodging an army of bodies, down the stairs and out onto the street. Gerda tripped down the last step and the blast of cold air felt so intense she couldn't catch her breath. She was sniffing and the tears kept snailing down her cheeks, but his face was red and rigid with anger.

She knew she'd done right but to him it was wrong. Somehow someone had stolen the old Kai away. The snow wolf, the ice girl from Norway.

‘Come on, get going,' was all he would say. Then she heard him mumble, ‘Technically it was still theirs. Can't afford to pay for something I didn't get.'

As they tramped under a streetlight, Gerda noticed the blood on his shirt, just under his pocket.

‘You're bleeding,' she panted, ‘the mirror . . .'

Kai turned and she saw his alarming red eye. He shook his head dismissively.

‘Hurry
up
. They might come after us.'

The harbour bridge would be icy. The streets were slippery and bare, and the only sound was the dripping of icicles, and the miserable march of their feet.

Gerda heard a thump through her bedroom wall: Kai's room! Loud enough to be loud in her room. She heard a rumble of voices, and another
thunck
. Jesus . . . had those drug dealers followed them home? Were they trying to make Kai pay for the stuff she'd spilt? She strained to catch the words, but her heart thumped too loud to hear. Crash – was it Kai being thrown against the wall? It was all her fault. Kai. Was his grandma caught in the middle? They must be frightened out of their minds! Gerda ran for the telephone, then stopped herself, nearly falling down the stairs. If she called the police, she'd have to make a statement. Saying what? She'd stopped her best friend making a deal? And when the cops made enquiries, someone would say they'd used some . . . whatever it was. Not in the bathroom, but before. Gerda knew about druggies – they were being set up. They'd be blackmailed, or maimed, or killed. God, she couldn't go to the cops! She remembered those men and their hard stares. There'd be no pleading. But somehow she had to help.

Now Gerda understood Kai's rage. Somehow he'd known this would happen. She sprinted downstairs, pushed past her mother dawdling in the hallway, and was at the door of the next terrace in three seconds flat. As always she let herself in. What the hell could she
do
? She heard another
thunck!
from the top of the stairs. She
felt
it. She had to stop him being killed. They wanted money. She'd empty her bank account, give them her secret stash, the coins lying lost under the couch, everything. But she'd heard about drug pushers. It'd never be enough. How could she be so stupid? Kai's grandmother stood at the bottom of the stairs, her eyes round as a possum's.

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