Cross-Country

by

Cate Kennedy

Rebecca is the protagonist and narrator of “Cross-Country.” She spends most of the story experiencing various stages of grief about the recent end of her relationship. Feeling despondent after her breakup, Rebecca takes time off from work to heal. Desperate for answers and for distraction from her pain, she shuts her friends out and instead resorts to obsessively Googling her ex-partner’s name online to find out what he’s been up to since he moved out. After sifting through pages of irrelevant search results, Rebecca finds something intriguing: her ex has joined a cross-country running club. Instead of filling her doctor’s prescription for antidepressants, Rebecca spends her time off work stalking her ex’s running club results online and listening to the music her ex hated to soothe her wounds. Like a dog with a bone, Rebecca takes a tiny scrap of information (her ex’s name on a cross-country running club roster) and squeezes every possible imagined scenario out of it. She luxuriates in all the possibilities it provides—maybe he has finally given up on his graduate thesis and stepped away from academia, or maybe he’s finding new satisfaction in physically exerting himself. But it’s not just a new version of her ex that Rebecca fantasizes about. Soon after these fantasies begin, Rebecca includes herself in them, easily outrunning her ex and impressing him with her athleticism and poise. These fictional scenarios become the stage where Rebecca plays out explanations for why their relationship ended. Ultimately, she finds out that her ex is not part of the cross-country club after all—he merely shares a name with a local 14-year-old runner. Rebecca is thus forced to recognize the futility of her fantasies, remarking at the human capacity “to invent what we need.” Kennedy uses Rebecca’s character to explore grief as it is experienced through a breakup (rather than a death), illuminating the unhealthy coping mechanisms that can go hand-in-hand with isolation after a major life change such as this.

Rebecca Quotes in Cross-Country

The Cross-Country quotes below are all either spoken by Rebecca or refer to Rebecca. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
The Internet, Cyber-Stalking, and Privacy Theme Icon
).
Cross-Country Quotes

Peeled. That’s how you feel, when it happens. Flayed. People who tell you to get out and move on, they’re standing there in a thick layer of skin, cushioned and comfortable, brimming with their easy clichés like something off a desk calendar. What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger […] You were too good for him anyway. There’s a queue of their text messages on my phone. Call anytime, they say, if you need to talk.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker)
Page Number: 110
Explanation and Analysis:

Live in the world, and there’ll be a trail you leave behind you, even if it’s a trail of crumbs. That’s what they call them, don’t they? Cookies. No matter how vigilantly you try to cover your tracks, they’ll be there. The recorded minutes of a meeting you attended, some team you’ve been; there’s your name on the screen. Try it for yourself and see. Google your name, in one of these extended empty sessions of free time when the cursor’s waiting like a foot tapping, and there’s nothing else in the universe you can think of that you need to find out about. There you suddenly are, undertaking all the trivial pathetic things you think are hidden, so that anyone in the world can see you exposed.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker)
Page Number: 111
Explanation and Analysis:

It’s not as if I’m going to go over there, drive past his house, lie on his lawn drunk and make a scene, harass him. It’s just a few shreds of information I want. I supported him for a year, after all; surely I have a right to know whether he’s finally submitted that thesis and where, incidentally, the graduation ceremony is going to be held. If he’s joined a church group or a golf club, I need to paste that into my new identikit. I’ll take any crumb, any trail, any vague lead.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Page Number: 112
Explanation and Analysis:

I don’t know why they call it surfing. They should call it drowning.

Down through the layers of US family-tree pages and rambling travel blogs of dull strangers, I hit paydirt at last. My heart knocks in my chest. I find he’s attended a conference but not presented a paper there. Thesis still unfinished, then. Too many emotional upheavals. His thoughts too scattered after a traumatic breakup, distracted by guilt and second thoughts. I’m settling into this train of thinking, hungry for its possibilities […]

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Page Number: 112
Explanation and Analysis:

It’s ten past four. Jittery with caffeine and MSG, I snoop in the desk drawer Google has no qualms about throwing open for me. He’s way down the ladder: coming thirty-fourth. That must be humbling. Thirty-fourth in a field of what—fifty or so? That would make anyone feel like a nameless nobody in a crowd, face blurry in the back of someone else’s photo, reduced to nothing but pixels.

‘See, you can reduce all this to just a system of binaries,’ I remember him explaining […] ‘Just infinite combinations of zero and one.’ I wonder if he understands that better now, struggling home in the middle of the pack. How it feels to be rendered, finally, to those low-resolution dots of shadow and light, a conglomeration made up of nothing and one.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner (speaker)
Page Number: 114
Explanation and Analysis:

See, this is the difference. Your partner dies, and everyone comes over with casseroles; they clean your house and hang out your washing. Your partner leaves, though, and you don’t need nurturing apparently; you need avoiding. Your washing grows mouldy in the machine, your friends who told you that what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger look at you uneasily, taking in your greasy hair and unwashed pyjamas, and leave you to go back to bed at 5p.m. Impossible to explain to them the humming, welcoming warmth of the screen later, the peaceful blue light, the endless possibility of an explanation that would make sense.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker)
Page Number: 112
Explanation and Analysis:

There’s a short film looping in my head and, in it, I’m pounding easily along over a hilltop in an interclub event. I’m not even puffing as I overtake him, despite the spurt he puts on. He glances sideways; he sees it’s me. I flash him a surprised-yet-calm smile of recognition, a flutter of the fingers, and pull away. Later, at the picnic, I’ll turn when he approaches, and let that awkward moment stretch out. In some versions, I have a little trouble placing him so that there’s the slightest hesitation before I say his name. Then I ask him how his thesis is going, and watch his face fall.

Any day now, I think as I lie heavy as a stone under the quilt, I’ll go out and buy those shoes.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Related Symbols: Cross-Country Running
Page Number: 115
Explanation and Analysis:

From the stack of discarded CDs, I pull out the country-and-western collection a girl group sold us one night at the pub. They were great, those girls. Big hair and pointy boots and, up close, plenty of in-your-face eyeliner and juicy-fruit lipstick as they laughed and signed my CD. He hadn’t liked them. Didn’t like the venue (too smoky), didn’t like the audience (nobody there to converse with about Thesis), didn’t even feel comfortable ordering a couple of beers at the bar. All twitchy about the two guys playing pool, the ones who might have even had a dance with me or at least found it in themselves to relax and enjoy some live music.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Page Number: 115
Explanation and Analysis:

What do you do in a cross-country run? I have a hazy picture of splashing across streams and jumping fallen logs, slogging up muddy hillsides and crashing down the other side through rugged bush. […] I wonder too if there’s a back-up vehicle, some support staff who tail-gun the runners, just in case you fall into a puddle or a ditch and lie there overwhelmed with the pointlessness of it all, the ludicrous challenge you’ve imposed upon yourself; your foolish desperate need for purpose. I imagine being lifted from the first by kind hands, and given a bottle of Gatorade and a sympathetic pat on the shoulder. Oh, I would give in without even a pretence of fighting spirit if someone offered to drive me to the finish line. Who wouldn’t?

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Related Symbols: Cross-Country Running
Page Number: 117-118
Explanation and Analysis:

I wander into the study as he talks, my fingers absently, lovingly, grazing the keyboard of the computer. Double-click on the internet icon, go straight to the club site. Last week’s results are posted, and there he is, placed forty-second now. A nagging cold, maybe. Slipping down the ladder into numb mediocrity, driving back to his new Ikea sofa and wonder bleakly whether he should open a couple of those cardboard boxes, pull out the old photos from where he’s hidden them, and then, and then…swallow his pride to pick up the phone. He’ll ring late, sheepish and sad, voice thick with tears. Ask me if I feel like some Thai takeaway, or just a bottle of wine. If we could talk. It seems so possible, so likely I feel my throat tighten in anticipation.

‘Rebecca? Hello?’ My boss is still on the line.
[…]
‘I’ll bring something in for morning tea,’ I say.

So what I’m going to do, I’m thinking, since I have every right to, nothing to do with him, is ring the number and ask about joining. I’m looking for a phone number I can try, and I refresh the screen and start again.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s boss (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Related Symbols: Cross-Country Running
Page Number: 118-119
Explanation and Analysis:

Just two small words again, going off in a blinding flash like a grenade. What they say is: Under-fourteens. I sit staring at them, dully open-mouthed. It’s like being doused with a sheet of muddy water, like a final jarring stumble on wrenched ankles […] Click the icon, close the screen. Windows is shutting down. I almost hear it, the decisive thud as it hits some imagined sill somewhere. I need a shower, and then I need a long cold drink of something at an outdoor table, but first I linger, watching the innocuous sky-blue screen. I’m waiting for the little melody it always plays before it sighs and switches itself off, that melancholy minor-key tune that tells you that whatever you’ve been watching, ready or not, it’s time to roll the credits.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Related Symbols: Cross-Country Running
Page Number: 120
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire Cross-Country LitChart as a printable PDF.
Cross-Country PDF

Rebecca Quotes in Cross-Country

The Cross-Country quotes below are all either spoken by Rebecca or refer to Rebecca. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
The Internet, Cyber-Stalking, and Privacy Theme Icon
).
Cross-Country Quotes

Peeled. That’s how you feel, when it happens. Flayed. People who tell you to get out and move on, they’re standing there in a thick layer of skin, cushioned and comfortable, brimming with their easy clichés like something off a desk calendar. What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger […] You were too good for him anyway. There’s a queue of their text messages on my phone. Call anytime, they say, if you need to talk.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker)
Page Number: 110
Explanation and Analysis:

Live in the world, and there’ll be a trail you leave behind you, even if it’s a trail of crumbs. That’s what they call them, don’t they? Cookies. No matter how vigilantly you try to cover your tracks, they’ll be there. The recorded minutes of a meeting you attended, some team you’ve been; there’s your name on the screen. Try it for yourself and see. Google your name, in one of these extended empty sessions of free time when the cursor’s waiting like a foot tapping, and there’s nothing else in the universe you can think of that you need to find out about. There you suddenly are, undertaking all the trivial pathetic things you think are hidden, so that anyone in the world can see you exposed.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker)
Page Number: 111
Explanation and Analysis:

It’s not as if I’m going to go over there, drive past his house, lie on his lawn drunk and make a scene, harass him. It’s just a few shreds of information I want. I supported him for a year, after all; surely I have a right to know whether he’s finally submitted that thesis and where, incidentally, the graduation ceremony is going to be held. If he’s joined a church group or a golf club, I need to paste that into my new identikit. I’ll take any crumb, any trail, any vague lead.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Page Number: 112
Explanation and Analysis:

I don’t know why they call it surfing. They should call it drowning.

Down through the layers of US family-tree pages and rambling travel blogs of dull strangers, I hit paydirt at last. My heart knocks in my chest. I find he’s attended a conference but not presented a paper there. Thesis still unfinished, then. Too many emotional upheavals. His thoughts too scattered after a traumatic breakup, distracted by guilt and second thoughts. I’m settling into this train of thinking, hungry for its possibilities […]

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Page Number: 112
Explanation and Analysis:

It’s ten past four. Jittery with caffeine and MSG, I snoop in the desk drawer Google has no qualms about throwing open for me. He’s way down the ladder: coming thirty-fourth. That must be humbling. Thirty-fourth in a field of what—fifty or so? That would make anyone feel like a nameless nobody in a crowd, face blurry in the back of someone else’s photo, reduced to nothing but pixels.

‘See, you can reduce all this to just a system of binaries,’ I remember him explaining […] ‘Just infinite combinations of zero and one.’ I wonder if he understands that better now, struggling home in the middle of the pack. How it feels to be rendered, finally, to those low-resolution dots of shadow and light, a conglomeration made up of nothing and one.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner (speaker)
Page Number: 114
Explanation and Analysis:

See, this is the difference. Your partner dies, and everyone comes over with casseroles; they clean your house and hang out your washing. Your partner leaves, though, and you don’t need nurturing apparently; you need avoiding. Your washing grows mouldy in the machine, your friends who told you that what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger look at you uneasily, taking in your greasy hair and unwashed pyjamas, and leave you to go back to bed at 5p.m. Impossible to explain to them the humming, welcoming warmth of the screen later, the peaceful blue light, the endless possibility of an explanation that would make sense.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker)
Page Number: 112
Explanation and Analysis:

There’s a short film looping in my head and, in it, I’m pounding easily along over a hilltop in an interclub event. I’m not even puffing as I overtake him, despite the spurt he puts on. He glances sideways; he sees it’s me. I flash him a surprised-yet-calm smile of recognition, a flutter of the fingers, and pull away. Later, at the picnic, I’ll turn when he approaches, and let that awkward moment stretch out. In some versions, I have a little trouble placing him so that there’s the slightest hesitation before I say his name. Then I ask him how his thesis is going, and watch his face fall.

Any day now, I think as I lie heavy as a stone under the quilt, I’ll go out and buy those shoes.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Related Symbols: Cross-Country Running
Page Number: 115
Explanation and Analysis:

From the stack of discarded CDs, I pull out the country-and-western collection a girl group sold us one night at the pub. They were great, those girls. Big hair and pointy boots and, up close, plenty of in-your-face eyeliner and juicy-fruit lipstick as they laughed and signed my CD. He hadn’t liked them. Didn’t like the venue (too smoky), didn’t like the audience (nobody there to converse with about Thesis), didn’t even feel comfortable ordering a couple of beers at the bar. All twitchy about the two guys playing pool, the ones who might have even had a dance with me or at least found it in themselves to relax and enjoy some live music.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Page Number: 115
Explanation and Analysis:

What do you do in a cross-country run? I have a hazy picture of splashing across streams and jumping fallen logs, slogging up muddy hillsides and crashing down the other side through rugged bush. […] I wonder too if there’s a back-up vehicle, some support staff who tail-gun the runners, just in case you fall into a puddle or a ditch and lie there overwhelmed with the pointlessness of it all, the ludicrous challenge you’ve imposed upon yourself; your foolish desperate need for purpose. I imagine being lifted from the first by kind hands, and given a bottle of Gatorade and a sympathetic pat on the shoulder. Oh, I would give in without even a pretence of fighting spirit if someone offered to drive me to the finish line. Who wouldn’t?

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Related Symbols: Cross-Country Running
Page Number: 117-118
Explanation and Analysis:

I wander into the study as he talks, my fingers absently, lovingly, grazing the keyboard of the computer. Double-click on the internet icon, go straight to the club site. Last week’s results are posted, and there he is, placed forty-second now. A nagging cold, maybe. Slipping down the ladder into numb mediocrity, driving back to his new Ikea sofa and wonder bleakly whether he should open a couple of those cardboard boxes, pull out the old photos from where he’s hidden them, and then, and then…swallow his pride to pick up the phone. He’ll ring late, sheepish and sad, voice thick with tears. Ask me if I feel like some Thai takeaway, or just a bottle of wine. If we could talk. It seems so possible, so likely I feel my throat tighten in anticipation.

‘Rebecca? Hello?’ My boss is still on the line.
[…]
‘I’ll bring something in for morning tea,’ I say.

So what I’m going to do, I’m thinking, since I have every right to, nothing to do with him, is ring the number and ask about joining. I’m looking for a phone number I can try, and I refresh the screen and start again.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s boss (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Related Symbols: Cross-Country Running
Page Number: 118-119
Explanation and Analysis:

Just two small words again, going off in a blinding flash like a grenade. What they say is: Under-fourteens. I sit staring at them, dully open-mouthed. It’s like being doused with a sheet of muddy water, like a final jarring stumble on wrenched ankles […] Click the icon, close the screen. Windows is shutting down. I almost hear it, the decisive thud as it hits some imagined sill somewhere. I need a shower, and then I need a long cold drink of something at an outdoor table, but first I linger, watching the innocuous sky-blue screen. I’m waiting for the little melody it always plays before it sighs and switches itself off, that melancholy minor-key tune that tells you that whatever you’ve been watching, ready or not, it’s time to roll the credits.

Related Characters: Rebecca (speaker), Rebecca’s ex-partner
Related Symbols: Cross-Country Running
Page Number: 120
Explanation and Analysis: