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Apples Never Fall(81)

Author:Liane Moriarty

‘My mother got very sick on Father’s Day,’ said Brooke Delaney. ‘She collapsed. It turned out she had a kidney infection. We had to call an ambulance.’

‘That must have given you all a fright,’ said Christina.

Christina and Ethan were interviewing Joy Delaney’s youngest daughter at her physiotherapy practice, surrounded by exercise equipment. There were only two chairs. Ethan had accepted Brooke’s offer to sit on the balance ball, which he did with great aplomb, diligently taking notes. Christina would have fallen off.

They had met Brooke at the press conference, but it had taken a few days for this interview to be scheduled. Christina couldn’t be sure if Brooke had been deliberately delaying. Right now she seemed keen to be cooperative, or at least to give that impression.

‘Well, yes, it did give us a fright,’ said Brooke. ‘We didn’t know what was going on at first. Mum was behaving so oddly. We thought it was because she was upset, not sick.’

‘What was she upset about?’

‘I felt especially bad,’ reflected Brooke. ‘Because I’m the one with medical training. She had a fever. I should have realised.’

‘She was upset about something?’ pushed Christina.

‘Just family stuff,’ said Brooke. ‘My brother and I had both broken up with our partners. Oh, and Dad decided it would be a good day to do a comprehensive analysis of our failed tennis careers.’ She gave a faint smile.

‘So what was your impression of Savannah?’ asked Christina. She burned her tongue sipping the too-hot cup of tea that Brooke had made for her.

‘She was just a sweet, quiet girl. She’d cooked all this food for us but then she was kind of serving us, in our parents’ house. It was odd and uncomfortable. It was like she was Cinderella, barely eating anything herself, and both my parents had become strangely . . . enamoured of her. Dependent on her. It was like she’d turned up and solved a problem we didn’t realise needed solving.’

‘What problem was that?’

Brooke considered the question. ‘I guess, maybe, the problem of cooking? Or the problem of retirement? My parents aren’t the sort of people who dreamed of retirement. They loved to work.’

‘Has your mother shown signs of depression recently?’

‘Absolutely not,’ said Brooke. She blinked. ‘Things haven’t been great recently, but Mum is not the sort of person to get depressed.’

‘What about your father, then? Is he the sort of person to get depressed?’

‘He can get grumpy,’ said Brooke carefully. ‘But never violent. If that’s what you’re implying.’

‘I don’t want to imply anything,’ said Christina. ‘I’m just gathering information about your parents’ states of mind.’

‘I wish you could see my father coaching a child,’ said Brooke. ‘Even a child with no talent. Especially a child with no talent. He was so gentle and patient, so passionate about tennis, he just always wanted everyone to love tennis as much as he did.’

This told Christina nothing. Gentle people snapped. People who were patient and kind in some circumstances were cruel and vicious in others.

‘But he’s not coaching anymore, right? Your parents are retired and you said they loved to work. So I take it they haven’t been enjoying retirement?’

‘They’ve been floundering a bit,’ said Brooke. ‘They tried travelling, but they didn’t know how to holiday. We didn’t really do holidays in our family.’

‘You never went on a holiday?’

‘Well, we did. Every summer we went for a week to a caravan park on the Central Coast,’ admitted Brooke. ‘Which was kind of fun.’ She frowned. ‘Kind of not.’ She sighed. ‘But there was never time for many holidays because we all played competitive tennis. We were either travelling to a tournament or training for one, and my parents were trying to run a coaching school at the same time.’

‘Was it a happy childhood?’ asked Christina. She hadn’t got a handle yet on this family. On the surface they seemed loving and cheerful but she could sense dysfunction bubbling ominously beneath their sporty, matter-of-fact demeanours.

‘I don’t know,’ said Brooke. She picked up a ballpoint pen, chewed on it, and then seemed to catch herself, removed it from her mouth and put it back on the desk in front of her and pushed it away. ‘I mean, yes, it was happy. It was very busy. It was dominated by tennis. Tennis hijacks your childhood. There’s no time for anything else.’

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