In this next part we move onto the aftermath of their sexual encounter and it took longer than normal to do this part, I've had to compress a few years without neglecting important plot points. On a further note, Puffing Billy is a tourist steam train that operates between Belgrave and Gembrook, it runs several services every day and is quite popular with children.
It's a beautiful Saturday morning and I'm feeling oddly at peace with myself after writing about the first time I had sex. I emailed Astrid and told her what I'd written about and then went straight to bed and woke up at about half past seven to the smell of fried bacon. Anna was not beside me but I found her downstairs with Penny and Robyn, helping to cook breakfast. She's quite the gourmet cook! I've noticed that ever since her father left, she's taken to helping out with the cooking. I don't know if it's a sign of things to come but she certainly enjoys it. I was ordered out of the kitchen and so I sat in the living room with my laptop to read the email from Astrid.
She loved the fact that I'm writing about my first sexual encounter but she wants to know a bit more about what happened next. In some ways we both harbour a little guilt about it. So with that in mind let me begin, now that Penny has taken Anna out to ride on Puffing Billy. It's a group outing with Melanie, her grandkids, Josie, Annabelle and their daughters Jorani and Sokha. Puffing Billy is a Melbourne treasure.
Where to start? With the benefit of hindsight I can see a perfect storm was on the horizon, there'd been hints but in the aftermath I felt no great guilt about our encounter.
In my naΓ―vetΓ© I'd not taken into account a major factor. We'd gone from housemates to lovers in the blink of an eye and despite the romantic themes found in movies and books, when people cross that line there are always complications. In my defence, I was young and in love for the first time. Astrid tried to educate me but I only started to ask questions towards the end of the year when she was about to graduate. She was finishing her thesis and as anyone who's had to labour through a thesis can testify, it's a trying time.
However, the practicalities were fairly easy, she kept her bed but shared mine most nights and Shobi couldn't have been happier. It was one thing that had worried me but in her opinion it was the best of both worlds. She even went as far as to suggest that if Astrid extended her visa she'd discount the rent for both of us and make it cheaper.
That leads me to the first problem. Our visa system. I've mentioned it before but it's problematic to be kind, and downright inhumane to be brutally honest. I've met many people since who've run foul of the immigration system here. Our points-based system is designed to fail because it's an arbitrary number set for certain professions. It doesn't matter if you're an architect, if they don't need any of those then you won't get points for that but if they need hairdressers then they get the points. It gets even more complicated when couples emigrate here, one might have enough points for a working visa but their partner might not. No matter who is in power, Labour or the Liberals (conservatives), they all bow to the Murdoch press. The only party that had any compassion and common sense are the Greens and they're anathema to the political elites in Canberra.
The first we knew that things were going south was when Astrid was 'reminded' that her visa was about to expire in two months and so she applied for a bridging visa but because she didn't have the points she failed. The only way to get extra points was if she had a partner here and that's where I failed completely. You see, I had come out to her and Shobi, but they were the only ones who knew that I was out. My parents had no idea and in October my dad went in for a heart bypass operation, I didn't think it was a good idea to tell him that his youngest daughter was now gay at that point in time, it might kill him.
It left Astrid with no choice but to return to Denmark. I promised to follow her there but deep down I knew it wasn't just a case of booking a flight. I'd have to come out to my parents as well and despite my best intentions I could never find the right time. In hindsight I know that no time is the right time for everyone. I don't think a day went past without me considering it. I'd go over the speech one day but the next day it wasn't sitting right with me.
It caused a rift between us towards the end. The last two weeks Astrid took to sleeping in her own bed and I vanished into my own little world. I had no coping skills when it came to this, I couldn't talk to any of my friends from church, I hadn't been there for awhile and I knew what they'd say. I didn't feel like talking to Penny and Robyn, or Josie and Annabelle either. I felt like a fraud and a little awkward and self conscious but as I've already said, I was naΓ―ve.
I look back on those last two days with shame and regret but also, oddly enough a bit of pride. I was not about to be pushed into making a decision before I was ready and if I had, Anna would never have been born. If it's one thing I'm proud of it's the fact I gave birth to her but I'll get to her in a little while. In the meantime, let me tell you about that last day.
I'd been in hospital visiting dad. He was on the mend but feeling poorly, mum was fussing over him and he was pleased to see me. He actually asked me about my housemate, Astrid. I'd introduced her to my parents but it was as my housemate, not my girlfriend.
"She's okay, dad. I have to take her to the airport in a few hours. She flies back home tonight."
"She's not staying on?" my mother asked me.
"No, they wouldn't amend her visa."
"A shame," my dad mumbled, "nice girl like that and you two seem to get on so well together."
I didn't know how to reply to that but I must have blushed because years later mum remembered my red face but wisely kept her silence. I left not long after that and headed back home. Shobi was working at the time and so it was just us at home.
"Are you ready?"
"Yes, as ready as I'll ever be," she bit her lip, "I know I'll remember something when I'm in the air or landing in Copenhagen."
"Don't worry, if you've missed something I can send it to you."
"How's your dad?"