Dear readers.
This is ninety-five percent story and five percent sex. If you're looking for a case of tennis elbow, find more of a flogger.
Trigger warning. References are made to fictional combat casualties resulting from an RPG attack on a plane. Trauma is described briefly.
All rights reserved.
Rollinbones.
~*~
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Wings
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"Oh, they tryna shoot down angels
They tryna pull their wings off
So, they can't fly"
'Can't stop the girl.' By Bebe Rexa.
[Oh man, that's fucked up. I'm so sorry.]
I stare at the text message for a while. Tracey has been one of my friends all the way through high school. She's generally of sober character and I've never known her to use recreational drugs, so the nonsensical message out of the blue is quite disturbing.
[The fuck you on about girl?] I reply.
[Oh god, the news Jax, it's all over the news. Fuck it, I'm on my way over.]
Good, she can fucking explain herself when she gets here. It's Friday afternoon. I'm just home from work and my frazzled mind and tired limbs just can't invest in her random outburst. There are six beers left in the fridge from a party a month or so ago and I take one by its neck and drag it back to the lounge, where I turn on the television and promptly let it fall from my shaking hand to smash on the tiled floor.
"...of Toowoomba businessman and property developer, Mr Peter O'Rielly is confirmed as the Australian pilot killed in the RPG attack. The other victim is believed to be a red-cross volunteer and two remain in critical condition..." There's more. It's on every channel. It can't be real and yet it is.
I see a burning Hercules. Flames billow from the wing and cockpit. The tarmac underneath it burns. Fire crews... Smoke...
"...air force spokesman released a brief statement to media this morning saying that relatives of the deceased persons had been advised earlier in the week at the time of the attack, but footage withheld due to the sensitive nature of..."
"...one Flight Lieutenant Samantha Jane O'Rielly. Formerly of Toowoomba, Queensland and one..."
The room spins and I turn off the television.
Sammy. Angel.
"-xon... Jaxon!" Sound returns and I turn slowly to find Tracey shaking my shoulder and yelling my name. "Jaxon, honey. They didn't tell you? They would have known since... Fucking cunts. Stay there, I'll get a mop."
I don't think I could move anyway. I float in some surreal place where my Angel is dead. Some bizarre world where she's gone.
Tracey hands me another open beer and I stare at it while she cleans and taps at her phone.
"Mrs Waters? Yeah, he's... um just sort of staring. I can stay for a while. Ok good."
Curiosity, or morbid disbelief urges me to turn the television back on. I switch from one channel to the next and know it's real. It's not a cruel joke. My Angel is gone. Grief washes through me. Waves of anger and sadness toss me about like an abandoned liferaft. I always thought we'd get our moment in the sun again one day. "Tiocfaidh ar la." As she would have said. Hoped anyway. But now...
"Okay boy. You turn that trash off now, 'ere la!" Mum is here. I look up at her through my wet eyes and turn off the television again. "Give it, boy. Your thing hey? Your phone."
I fish it from my trousers and hand it over wondering what sort of world doesn't have Sammy in it.
"You put Kathleen on right now, you pompous cock-head." Oh dear. My mother is a lovely quiet Kamilaroi woman. Unless someone messes with her children.
"When is the funeral?"
"No, now listen here. I'm sick of the way yous mob treat my boy like he's not fit to piss on. You've known about this all week and haven't had the common decency to let him know. He found out just now from the bloody television. I know you lost your daughter and I'm bloody sad for you, but you know how he feel about the girl. You know, damn it. So tell me, when is the funeral cause by god we both comin' bitch."
"Thank you. I really am sorry for your loss. She was like my daughter too."
Then she's just standing there staring at me with her hands on her hips like I just walked mud through the house or something.
"Well? You gonna sit there drinking like your father did when anything go to shit, or you gonna get up, take a damn shower and change into some home clothes. You look like shit."
Silently, I just fall into the cadence of home. Just like when I was younger and you just marched along with the rest of the house to the beat of Mum's drum. Tracey stops me on the way to the shower to hug me and kiss me on the cheek.
"Sorry for playing the Mum card. Just worried about you Jax. You call me if you want to talk. Hell, call me if you want to scream and throw things. Jace and I are just a call away."
I nod. She's a lovely friend. So is Jason. It's all so empty though. I feel like I'm in a hollow log. There's light at either end and I don't know where to turn. There's just nothing out there for me.
In the shower I just lean on the wall and let the hot stream wash the salt from my face. It stings with heat but feeling anything is good. I've been numb since I turned on the television. There was always the risk of this. I knew it. Sammy knew it. We didn't speak about it. Hell, we hardly even spoke. Now and then a letter or some facey chat. But it's how things had to be.
I remember.
Like I was standing there all over again.
It was first day of grade two for me at Gabbinbar State School. Mum dropped us all off like any other day. As I walked in the gate, I saw her. A little thing with flaming ringlets to her shoulders. She was sobbing and holding onto a tall woman's legs. She looked just like a little angel with her wild hair and little school dress; the light behind her turning her red locks to a flaming halo.
"Mummy has to go Samantha. Let go now. Don't be a baby."
I stopped close by and looked up at the angry looking woman who scowled back down at my brown eyes and looked haughtily over my brown skin.
"Come on little angel girl." I said quietly and took her hand. "Come on. It's okay here. You'll make lots of friends. I got friends and I'm black even. You're pretty, you'll get heaps of friends. Come on, I'll show you where to go." I told her frightened eyes. She wiped at them and squeezed my hand.
Neither of us saw her mother go, but she was gone in an instant. She cried so hard and held me in a hug so needful that I almost started crying too. Then she did what I would learn she always did.
She wiped her eyes. She stomped her foot, and she said, "Hmmph."
Then she stoically held my hand and kissed my cheek and followed me to her classroom. I helped her put her port away and showed her to the teacher. I thought that was the end of it. But I was wrong.
Every lunch time she sought me out. Every morning from that day on, she waited for me at the gate and held my hand all the way to class.
Now who would hold my hand.