car driver.
The words hit me like a punch in the stomach. I feel like throwing up. I canât breathe and then Jess comes pelting down the hill, her face as white as a ghost.
The driver hands her his mobile as he crouches downbeside James. âRing the emergency number,â he says. âWe need an ambulance.â
Itâs one of those flip phones and, when sheâs got it open, she stares at it for a second.
âZero, zero, zero,â the driver says. Then he goes back to James. âCan you hear me?â
James moans a bit and nods his head.
âGood,â says the driver. âDoes anything hurt?â
I canât believe he just asked that question of a boy lying there like that. It looks like everything hurts.
James nods.
âYour back? Your neck?â
James shakes his head.
âCan you move your arms?â
James doesnât answer. He looks like heâs gone to sleep. It scares me more than when he was moaning.
Carefully, the man lifts Jamesâ right leg up and tips him more onto the side. He gets one of Jamesâ hands and puts it under his cheek.
âJust lie still,â he says. âDonât move until the ambulance drivers have checked you out.â
Ranga is still making this keening noise, hugging his knees and rocking back and forth, his eyes fixed on James.
Jess walks over and puts an arm around his shoulders.
Just to make things worse, a few big drops of rain splatter on the road while weâre waiting. The sky is so dark it feels like the end of the world.
20
Iâve never seen Dad so angry. Mum either. They look even angrier than the sky outside.
âHow could you be such an idiot?â Dad says, and they both glare at me as though Iâm some sort of mass murderer. I want to try to explain how we thought we were doing something good for James and that we didnât think anything like this would happen. I think about saying how much James wanted to do it after he saw the couch, but I donât.
âDonât you realise what could have happened?â Dad doesnât wait for me to answer. âHe could have been killed. If his pump was damaged it could still do a lot of harm.â
âWhat really hurts,â Mum says, âis how you deceived me. You got me to move my car out of the garage so you could fix the couch, not turn it into a skateboard. Then you wag school and now this.â
I know I should be feeling guilty but I donât, not about that anyway. Technically we did fix the couch, but I know better than to try and say that. I do feel sort of bad that I didnât tell her what we were doing, but I know if we had, sheâd have stopped us. Turns out it would have been better if she had.
âIt seems like every time you hang out with Warren, you do something stupid. Youâre grounded â and donât ask for how long! Iâm too upset to make that decision at the moment.â
What? Thatâs not fair! Itâs not like we planned to do anything bad. It just turned out that way.
âYouâre just lucky the car driver was a doctor and that girl came along when she did. Otherwise things could have worked out a whole lot worse.â
I keep my face straight. At least they wonât ban me from seeing Jess if they donât know she was part of it. I donât know what to say, nothing that would help anyway, so I just keep looking at the ground.
âLook at me when Iâm talking to you!â Dad yells.
I look up, but not at his face.
He lets it pass. âWeâve been talking to Warrenâs mother and we all agree that you boys need to apologise for your stupid, irresponsible behaviour.â
I donât know where exactly this is heading but I nod to show Iâm listening.
âTomorrow, Iâm taking you to the hospital. Warren will be there too. You will both say sorry to Jamesâ mother and to James for what youâve done. Is that clear?â Mumâs
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