diedâbut actually it wasnât that helpful to start remembering the deaths of loved ones, not helpful at all.
She looked around wildly for distractionâher phone, her book, foodâ and then she saw movement in her rearview mirror.
What was it? An animal? A trick of the light? No, it was something.
It was too slow for a car.
Wait. It was a car. It was just driving so slowly it was barely moving.
She sat up straight and ran her fingers under her eyes where her mascara had run.
A canary-yellow sports car drove down the dirt drive slower than she would have thought possible.
Frances had no interest in cars, but as it got closer even she could tell this was a spectacularly expensive piece of machinery. Low to the ground and shimmery-shiny with futuristic headlights.
It came to a stop behind hers and the doors on either side opened simultaneously. A young man and woman emerged. Frances adjusted her mirror to see them more clearly. The man looked like a suburban plumber off to a Sunday barbecue: baseball cap on backward, sunglasses, T-shirt, shorts, and boat shoes with no socks. The woman had amazing long curly auburn hair, skintight capri pants, an impossibly tiny waist, and even more unlikely breasts. She teetered on stilettos.
Why in the world would a young couple like that come to a health retreat? Wasnât this sort of place for the overweight and burnt out, for those grappling with bad backs and pathetic midlife identity crises? As Frances watched, the man turned his baseball cap around the right way and tipped his head back, arching his back as if he, too, found the sky overwhelming. The woman said something to him. Frances could tell by the way her mouth moved that it was sharp.
They were arguing.
How delightfully distracting. Frances lowered her window. These people would pull her back from the precipice, bring her back into existence. She would regain her self-identity by existing in their eyes. They would see her as old and eccentric and maybe even annoying, but it didnât matter how they saw her, as long as they saw her.
She leaned clumsily out the car window, waggled her fingers, and called out, âHelloooo!â
The girl tottered over the grass toward her.
5
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Ben
Ben watched Jessica walk like a baby giraffe toward the Peugeot 308âoverpriced piece of crapâparked at the gate, engine running. One of the Peugeotâs brake lights was gone and the muffler looked like it was bent, no doubt from that dirt road. The lady behind the wheel was leaning halfway out her window, practically falling out, waving wildly at Jessica as if she couldnât be more pleased to see her. Why didnât she just open her car door and get out?
It looked like the health resort was closed. A burst water main? A mutiny? He could only hope.
Jessica could hardly walk in those stupid shoes. It was like she was on stilts. The heels were as skinny as toothpicks. She would twist an ankle any minute.
Ben squatted down next to his car and ran his fingers over the paintwork, searching for stone chips. He glanced back at the road theyâd just come down and winced. How could a place that charged eye-watering rates have a road like that? There should have been a warningon the website. Heâd thought for sure they were going to bottom out on some of those potholes.
No scratches that he could see, which was a miracle, but who knew what damage there was to the undercarriage? Heâd have to wait till he could get it back up in the workshop, take a look. He wanted to do it right now, but he was going to have to wait ten days.
Maybe he should get the car towed back to Melbourne. He could call Peteâs guys. It wasnât the craziest of ideas, except that heâd never hear the end of it if any of his former workmates saw that heâd driven this car down that road. He suspected his ex-boss would cry, literally cry, if he saw what Ben had done.
Peteâs eyes had gotten
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