Miles
At first light he hears the sound of a heifer in trouble. Never mind the empties in the kitchen or the one lying next to the lounge, he’s up and out in the cold and the dirt of the yards getting the beast in the crush so he can put his hand inside her and find the calf, working his whole arm deep in her womb where is jammed this extraordinary impossible bundle of legs that’ll kill her if he can’t get it to turn, she roaring all the while, he talking to her in a long, slow stream of profanity, an affectionate soliloquy of half-remembered obscenities, he is, after all, a doctor not a vet, but the truth is he loves his cows more these days, his cows and his dogs (they, lying in the dirt, heads across their forepaws, watching doubtfully from the corners of their eyes) more than any other thing; a man who hasn’t been with a woman since Sonia died two years ago and is unlikely to be with anyone else any time soon, with his arm all the way inside a cow in the early morning, groping for new life.
By the time it’s settled, the calf out, fawn fur curled, sticky with fluid, feeding well, butting its pink nose up against its mother’s udder like nothing ever happened – the sort of thing that can bring tears to a man’s eyes – it’s already late and he needs to wash and brew coffee, a bit of toast to settle the stomach, putting the bottles in the recycling out the back with hands he can’t help but notice shake, wondering if he can keep himself from it until evening, worried not by the wine but the spirits, his apparent inability now to stop once he’s started, lying on the couch into the small hours keeping himself just exactly where he needs to be with ever less carefully measured doses of brandy until it’s all gone and the television has descended into even more profound meaninglessness than when he started and he hies himself off to bed, the dogs ignoring him, the dogs out for the night by then, disdaining to follow him further down.
Showered, dressed in shorts and shirt (crisply ironed by Melanie, who comes in once a week to clean) white socks held up by garters, the vertical lines in the knitted-weave straight, his brogues with enough polish on them to last another day, his remaining hair brushed tight back against his skull, he takes the Hilux up the dirt to the main road and onto the Range feeling like something close to half a man. A new house being built on what used to be Carlisle’s, which twenty-five years ago was a functioning dairy – you couldn’t say thriving because none of them had, the dairies had only ever survived – bought now by in-comers from the city, the developers or hippies or tree-changers or retirees, buying them up for hobby farms or to build fancy houses, planting trees on land the old Scots worked so hard to clear, planting so many trees that now you can barely even see the shape of the place anymore. Not that he’s complaining. It’s just the irony of it, the unimaginable effort of cutting forest the size of which we’ll never see again in our lives, big trees, trees that took them days to fell with axes and cross-cut saws, hauling away the timber they wanted with bullock teams, sliding it down the hills to the coast, burning the rest and rooting out the stumps with mattocks, day after bleeding day until there wasn’t a tree in sight, until it was all rolling paddocks with fat cattle grazing, milked twice a day, by hand, only to have their effort spurned a hundred years on, to have it all replanted by these people who’ve arrived with their wholemeal roasted marinated Mediterranean focaccias and espresso coffees and pristine four-wheel drives, their ideas of an environment which doesn’t include people, which doesn’t even include birth and death or only in the abstract, well, that’s until it comes to them via the thousand different ways that ill-health visits the human form. Which wasn’t what he was thinking about at all. It was the calf in the early morning that’s brought this up; the fact of its life (and the life of its mother) given by him, and yet his clear intention to have it killed sometime later, to eat, without remorse or regret; the need to provide grass for its feed between these two events, grass grown on his own land, which had once belonged to another Scot who sold it for a pittance to his father; three hundred acres, not enough in this kind of geography – where the Range breaks away into ridges and gullies – to support anybody really, land that was most likely better served being covered in trees in the first place. It is both the requirement and the difficulty of straddling these different notions which is troubling his mind, the impossibility of their coexistence.
Only three cars next to the surgery when he pulls up which is good, as long as there’s no disasters over at the hospital. Nick, the new locum, should have been able to deal with what’s come in, but when he opens the door he can see on Joy’s face that all’s not entirely well, there might be only three cars but half a dozen people look up from their Women’s Weekly and National Geographics to note his arrival. He nods to them, smiling good morning, as if to say he’s been off on other important doctor-business elsewhere. He picks up two files from his tray and takes them into his room, putting down his bag and looking around the confines, the high bed with the clean sheet laid over it, the little yellow two-step stool for getting up, the cluttered desk with all its pharmaceutical nonsense in jars and packets, the damn computer already switched on and ready, humming at him miserably from beneath the desk. The familiarity of the place exerting its own influence, calming his mind, as if all the years spent in here, the great stream of affliction which has passed before him, asking for his attention, has a force of its own which calls him out of self-destructive pathways of thought. But not his hands. When he goes to type in the password, single-fingered, the others curled back so as not to bump the wrong keys, they are still shaking. He can feel the sweat rise on his skin from the effort.
Joy standing in the doorway. Coffee in hand.
‘Trouble with a beast,’ he says.
She lets it pass. Joy being of indeterminate age. Two grown-up sons, one in the military, the other a fitter and turner in Sydney, married with children of his own. Photographs of them on her phone and desk, as screen saver. Prone to showing them. She is a woman of unparalleled efficiency from whom it would be difficult to hide anything should you even want to try, chosen years ago by Sonia, when Sonia was alive and choosing such things for reasons not all of which were to do with effectiveness as a practice manager. She is something of a tyrant with the patients, vetting them according to an arcane system of her own devising, but he does not complain; he could not operate without her.
She gives a run-down of the morning’s events, the two call-outs to the hospital which Nick has taken care of, the backlog of patients in the waiting room, his home visits which she has, she says, scheduled for the afternoon.
‘This is for you,’ she says, putting the coffee on his blotter. ‘Are you ready? Or shall I give you a minute?’
‘A moment,’ he says, opening the first file. ‘If you wouldn’t mind.’ When she’s gone he gets up and closes the door, gets out a half of brandy from the bottom drawer and pours a shot into the coffee. Enough to steady the hand.
The first patient, Harry Barkham, takes the offered chair with a mumbled comment about the lateness of the hour. He’s sixty-five, a former smoker, moved to Winderran ten years ago from one of the big cities after having reached dizzy heights in oil then getting a scare with his heart. Built a mansion overlooking the mountains with the proceeds in which he perches, now, watching over his stocks and shares or whatever it is that ex-oil men do when they’re not driving their Mercedes four-wheel drives. He’s not accustomed to waiting for anyone, and yet is humbled, as are we all, by our doctor, he who has the keys to our happiness. Or some few of them.
‘A difficult birth earlier today,’ Miles says, without offering further clarification. ‘What can I do for you?’
‘I have this persistent cough,’ he says, and the consultation has begun, the listening to symptoms, the discussion of history, habits, diet. Harry being fit for his age, only carrying a few kilos around his waist. He bicycles with a group of men. Miles sees them from time to time outside one of the cafés in the early morning, bikes leaning against the wall, men his own age unembarrassed by multi-coloured lycra, laughing loud, letting the world know of the ease they’ve bought with each other through shared exertion.
He lifts the man’s shirt to reveal a pale-skinned back with its unique constellation of moles, places the stethoscope on the various points and asks him to take a breath, listening, wondering, obtusely, if Deirdre, Harry’s wife, still runs her hands over this skin. You’d think, as a doctor, that you’d know these things, but it’s often not clear what people do.
‘You’ve seen the camp?’ Harry says. He wants to chat, he wants his money’s worth, or, having been made to wait he’s going to make sure that others will be similarly inconvenienced. Miles doesn’t mind, it’s part of the service.
He shakes his head.
‘Out along the Elmhurst Road? A bunch of hippies have set up against the dam. Aboriginal flags. Hand-painted banners. Tents, buses, water trailers, the whole disaster. Settling in for the duration. Not that it will do them any good, State’s committed. They’re not going to let rag-tags like that interfere.’
‘You’re in favour then?’ Miles says. A superfluous question. The man was in mineral extraction, familiar, no doubt, with the accoutrements of dissent.
‘It’ll be the making of the place, I tell you. Think of the opportunities for tourism.’
Harry has the deep voice of a man who’s lived in the tropics, enriched today by catarrh and the need to stop and cough; there’s a definite infection but it doesn’t appear to have gone to the chest, the sort of thing a course of antibiotics was designed to address. Harry comes in two or three times a year with various ailments, bits needing to be checked – prostate, knees, hips, a great scar on his chest and belly where they went in to do the bypass but no problem since then. Harry assumes that he, Miles, is also in favour of the dam, which he’s not, he doesn’t have a position. He doesn’t have time for positions but if he did it would be against it, if only because Joy’s brother, Marcus, has a farm right in the way of it which he and his wife, Lindl, have spent the last three decades or so planting up, revegetating the banks of the creek.
Harry’s problem, Harry’s disease, peculiar to towns like Winderran, has its roots in boredom. He retired too soon. Came up here, spent the first couple of years building his pile, organising the landscaping (he has forty-three varieties of camellia in his ‘grounds’, which he opens to the public once a year) but once that was done had little else to occupy him. Now he plays bridge three times a week, sits on the committee of the Winderran Heritage Society where he holds forth with what he hopes is the same authority he held in boardrooms across the nation when making decisions that involved hundreds of millions of dollars, but which, ten years later, in a small country town, render him a pedant, a specialist on the musicals of Gilbert & Sullivan, his voice drowning out the others in the room, a spokesperson for a conservative point of view that, whatever his opinion on the damn dam, Miles has never subscribed to. A sometime friend of Guy Lamprey, whose wife, as it happens, Miles will be visiting later that afternoon.
Harry out the door with a script and instructions to alleviate the symptoms with old-fashioned remedies like steam inhalation, he invites in the next patient, and the next. Each with their own problems, many of which are within his scope to deal with, but others that are harder, needing referrals to specialists. These patients, as often as not, arriving with the dreaded screeds of paper bearing internet addresses as headers or footers. At one point he might have been able to dismiss them as hypochondriacs, holding to the pretence that he was the one with the expertise, but those days are past. Knowledge expands in every direction and there is no hope of keeping up. His own authority increasingly in question. It behoves him to take notice of what they bring to him, to sift through the nonsense, the snake-oil, cure-all, self-promoting healer sites to find those that offer new perspectives. Every day, too, the government and the pharmaceuticals deliver great swathes of paper with their lists of wonder drugs and regulations, their research data, their KPIs and side effects, their evidence-based outcomes. He is no longer anything like the doctor he once was, the doctor his father was – a good thing that – but is now a kind of cipher, an overloaded spigot whose function is to act as the local outlet for incalculable streams of information, supposedly tailored to each person who enters his room except that the weight of the unknown backing up behind him becomes ever larger, more pressing – talk about dams – and it’s no use to reassure himself that nobody can know everything because on the other side are the armies of lawyers (of whom Sonia was one, so it’s no use pretending he doesn’t understand) keen to capitalise on his mistakes and apportion blame for his failure to pick early-stage cancer from a back ache, to notice an irregularity in ionised calcium as a sign of this or that.
At lunch he drops down to the hotel for a bar meal and a beer, to rest, briefly, in the noise of sport and horse racing, in their deep simplicity. The problem being that the bits of the job he loves most, the interaction with people, have got lost. There are ever more screens between him and his patients, a raft of technology on which he is barely floating, whose bindings threaten to come loose beneath him with every new wave. The young bloke, Nick, has a handle on it. Never out of range of his laptop or smartphone.
In the afternoon he takes the Hilux out past Elmhurst, skirting the edge of this wide valley that the government, given the chance, will flood; noting the camp that so annoyed Harry, where people of all ages, not just hippies, have indeed set up in opposition. Colourful banners tied along the fence line, two people under a beach umbrella at a table by the gate.
He might be tempted to concur with Harry and his friends and support the notion of development for development’s sake, he has, after all, seen the living standards in the town improve with the arrival of new wealth and the associated demand for better services, better food, more sensitive design. He’s been invited often enough to join them for boozy meals in attractive surroundings, but more recently, since Sonia, he’s stopped accepting. Opulence and fine wine aside he finds himself taken with a terrible loneliness around them. A loneliness even deeper than his own. These people always have something to say, but their banter skitters over the surface of things, it is the perfect embodiment of small talk, a constant and often nasty reiteration of the nothingness they’ve learned to master so as to get on in their world, to serve their own interests, but which has, over a lifetime, emptied them of humanity.
Margaret Ewart has the upper end of the valley, the near edge of her property dipping down into the area affected by the dam, but most folding away to the north and west. Last remaining daughter of Bill and Ida Tainsch, her husband, Jack, her brothers, sisters, cousins, all long dead. She lives by herself in the kind of rural squalor that was commonplace fifty years ago but is now, for the most part, long gone: a kitchen with worn linoleum on the floor, the webbing showing through beneath the plastic and steel chairs around the formica table; the old Rayburn on one wall going in any weather; the meat safe home to her limited selection of dishes; a geriatric fridge in the corner given to miserable sighs before the compressor cuts in and out; the walls dark from age and lack of paint, the only adornment a free stockfeed calendar with a picture of rape in flower, the yellow turned blue with age; light thrown by a bare bulb hanging on a doubtful lead. A radio burbles the local ABC in the corner. Vicious dogs chained up on a veranda, guarding her privacy. She comes to the door despite her hip, resting on a borrowed hospital crutch, wearing a skirt and blouse, a cardigan in need of darning at the sleeve ends. Her face a geological study, lizard-like weatherworn skin on neck and shoulders. She serves him a cup of International Roast and a slice of the cake she’s baked for her son who’s been up from Brisbane on the weekend to see she’s okay, no doubt eyeing off his investment, the millions that must be tied up in the place, never mind the unpainted weatherboard house on its sagging bearers or the tumbledown sheds filled with the bits of machinery Jack gathered over the decades. Martin will be wanting to get Margaret out of there and into a home to realise the profit while he can. The problem being she’s not for moving; despite her age, eighty something and in general disrepair, she still has all her smarts, still wants to drive a little white Toyota flatbed in and out of town, picking up her bags of dog and chook food, her staples of white bread and tea and canned ham, going to meetings of the hospital auxiliary carrying plates of cornflake biscuits. Living for who knows what reason. Although that could be said about most of us.
He sits across the table from her and hears the latest on Martin and his wife, the daughters off in other parts of the world, the grandchildren and great-grandchildren. There’s a machine working somewhere off in the distance, something large, he can hear its clanking, the occasional demonic beeping of its reverse warning siren.
‘That’s Mal,’ she says. ‘Putting in a crossing on the creek. We’ve got concrete trucks and the lot down there, hardening the lane.’
Mal Izzert, the neighbour, has one of the few remaining dairies on the Range.
‘He’s still improving then … even with the dam?’
‘You never know with Mal. Could be he’s just upping the price they’ll have to pay to get rid of him.’
Margaret never short of an opinion. Of the dam she says, ‘It’s progress, isn’t it? That’s the truth of it. You can’t fight it.’
‘So you’re not with the hippies on this one Margaret?’ he says, for the laugh of it, because they go back, he’s known her for as long as he’s been in practice, his father would have been present at Martin’s birth, almost certainly pulled him out from between her legs fifty years ago. The mystery of it. Martin runs a lighting business down in the city. Doesn’t, you’d have to note, stretch to a ceiling fitting for the kitchen, or for that matter to private health cover for his mother.
‘You wouldn’t know how some of them survive, would you? Haven’t the brains they were born with. I saw one girl the other day on the steps of the IGA,’ the supermarket, which she pronounces the same as the mountain, the Eiger. ‘Feeding her daughter – a wee thing, no more than three year old – raw spaghetti. I’m telling you, I saw it with my own eyes. If that’s the future I don’t want a part of it.’
He’s here about her hip, she’s had a fall and now needs a replacement, can’t manage the ute anymore. He examines her in the bedroom. Most of the old Queenslanders in these parts are built of solid timber, the walls constructed out of single-skin, vertically fixed, VJ board milled on the Range, the sparse framing on display. At some point Margaret’s home has been lined – in a misguided gesture towards what must then have been modernity – with unpainted masonite, walls and ceiling, so it’s brown on brown and sagging, the air trapped in the rooms for decades, an internal bathroom with a toilet and a claw-foot bath stained with rust from the furious hot-water heater perched above it. There are other doors he’s never seen behind. There will be a parlour, and another bedroom or two, where Martin and his sisters were raised. Not a bookshelf in sight.
Her bed is a double and newer than everything else, its 1970s plush headboard, built-in radio and veneered side tables standing in sharp contrast with the walls and the wardrobe, the latter a looming presence in the corner of the room. The bed’s been made. He wonders how that happened, if she did it, on her crutch, one-handed, so as not to be embarrassed by the doctor. She lies down with much difficulty but no complaint and he gently pushes aside the voluminous old woman’s underwear to reveal the bruising from her fall, now fading to a jaundiced yellow, the skin, where it’s never seen the sun, soft and supple. The muscle starting to fall away.
In the absence of help from Martin or the girls it’s a case of waiting her turn.
‘I saw your new man in the hospital,’ she says.
He waits. She means Nick.
‘Handsome, eh? Cold hands.’
‘That’ll do now,’ he says.
‘Is this one going to stay around?’
‘I don’t know. He’s a wife and kids in Canberra. Separated.’ He helps her to stand again.
‘And what about you? By yourself down there?’
‘I’ve got the dogs,’ he says.
‘We’ve all got the dogs,’ she replies.
He takes the Stapleton Road back into town for the simple pleasure of circling the catchment. It’s longer and becomes single bitumen for a time, dipping steeply and rising again, passing through a nice stand of white-trunked eucalypts. It’s been a while since he’s been this way. Out on the ridge some mining magnate has built a vast pile. During construction they cut half the hill away, but now the building’s finished it’s tucked into the land, less formidable than it might have been, if you don’t count the painted timber rail fences stitching the paddocks around it, or the helicopter pad near the house, the imposing electric gates on the road, just to let everyone know.
Out into paddocks again there’s a long view to the west across the river valley, the hills beyond rendered flat by the heat of the afternoon. Sometimes, late in the day, they can step into the distance in different shades of blue, beckoning. Today they’re indistinct; no more than scenery. More houses have been built along this way, less grandiose these: one-acre blocks subdivided before the law tightened up, now home to website designers, artists, feng shui practitioners, young families. On a whim he goes up to the lookout above the old quarry, from where, when it’s clear, you can see forever. Today the flatness fallen over everything. It’s an excuse to have sip of something. To stop in the cabin of the truck and feel his pulse racing for reasons that are by no means clear, to tip a portion of the half of brandy into him while looking out towards the indeterminate sea and feel the alcohol enliven not just him but the whole extraordinary vista. Taking a piss through the fence onto the cobbler’s peg and desmodium the Council have left to grow on the other side. Back, what, twenty-five years it would have to be – that anyone might live this long – he came up here one night with Lindl, sneaking away, and kissed her in the glow from Brisbane in the south. Who knows where Marcus was. No doubt about his connection to the world then. Now it’s all at a remove. Sonia between him and everything else. Or perhaps that’s the alcohol. He fires up the truck and slips a CD into the machine. Crowded House thundering out of the dusty speakers, his musical taste, like so much else, locked in another era. Singing along with it as he winds down the steep track to the road.
Perhaps the pulse was to do with visiting Helen Lamprey, recovering from surgery to remove a tumour from her bowel, the diagnosis for which, it is hard to forget, came from the previous locum to Nick because he, Miles, was late on another morning and she’d taken the appointment she could get and Abbas had sent her off for all sorts of tests which Miles had thought were a load of nonsense, and told him so, cross with him for even seeing Helen. Then, of course, the tests were positive and it was all on.
They live in a house that could not be more different from the Ewarts, on the north-east, the better side of town, views to the sea, architect designed. Built long before anyone else lived out that way. When the locals thought they were mad. The living room’s long and wide, with lots of glass on the coast side, books and paintings on the others, shelves and shelves of books despite Lamprey having his own studio.
There are low rectangular Italian couches with, at their centre, Helen, a small woman, made smaller by the surgery and the chemotherapy, which is not going well, by herself today it seems, even in these dire circumstances, Lamprey off on one of his projects down in Canberra. The fine bones in her fine face revealed.
He’s surprised her husband isn’t with her.
‘Oh, I’m okay,’ she says, ‘really I am. I have lots of help.’
She wants him to sit with her, to have a drink.
‘I can’t drink,’ she says, ‘but I’ve got some lovely white in the fridge. It would give me pleasure to watch you.’
She’s always been the perfect hostess, brisk, efficient, but now her movements are slow and studied, as if even raising her arm is too much and, after accepting her offer (has she smelled the brandy on him? Is she alert to this weakness?) he must open the bottle and pour for himself, bring her a wine glass with cold water in it (‘so I don’t feel left out’), wrap the blanket around her shoulders although it’s not cold in the house. When he was younger he’d lusted after her. That’s not the right word. He’d lusted after several women, and known some, too, even in a small town like Winderran, but Helen had exerted a more significant force. Not simply because she remained aloof. If there’d been any woman for whom he might have settled, but she was already taken and anyway she’d been one of his patients. He’d been obliged to admire her from afar. Later, after Alan was killed, he’d had to watch her disintegrate.
‘Guy’s too busy at the moment,’ she says. ‘Dabbling in politics now. It seems he’s being tapped.’
‘By who?’
‘Oh, Bain, I suppose. And the Leader of the Opposition.’
‘Lonergan?’ He can’t keep the surprise out of his voice.
‘Nothing too grand for our Guy.’
‘For what?’
‘The Senate, I believe.’
‘But, the Liberals?’
‘Don’t sound so shocked.’
‘How’s he going to write if he’s a Senator?’
‘He hasn’t written anything for a long time. Other than opinion pieces. Can’t, won’t.’ She pauses. ‘My fault, I think.’
He waits to see if an explanation for this last will come. The sun has started its tilt towards the west, somewhere behind the house, and the slanting light enhances the view towards the sea, throwing the shadow of the Range across the lowlands, darkening the remnants that linger in its creases.
‘Your politics are showing,’ she says. ‘I’m not keen on Bain and Lonergan but they’re not quite the dark side.’ She laughs briefly. ‘Although, now you mention it, my husband quite possibly went over to that years ago, before I met him. It would explain the gift of those early books, wouldn’t it?’ Holding the glass against her chest with both hands, her fingers entwined around its fragile curve. ‘We met in London, me, a girl from down there.’ Nodding towards the coast. ‘I’d escaped. I mean really. I had a position with Pan Macmillan. How remarkable is that? As an editor. Do you remember Picador? I was with them. Great writers. Have I told you this before?’
‘Only the bald facts.’
‘That’s where I met Guy. A skinny young man, very passionate about things. When he asked I went home with him. He had such ambition. He wanted to recreate the world, reimagine it. I mean, that’s what all writers want isn’t it? It’s what they set out to do. But with Guy it was something more. It wasn’t enough just to lift himself, he had to take the entire country with him. Like a kind of Atlas figure, raising the whole continent. Now look at the company he keeps.’
Helen still has remarkable presence, despite the illness, or perhaps because of it. Lamprey must be a fool not to be sitting where he is. But then it’s easy to think that when it isn’t you. Besides, he’s an imposter, the one who didn’t pick up on the early symptoms. He feels a sudden overwhelming desire to confess, which he supposes means he wants forgiveness. Not hers to give.
He lifts his glass and empties it, leaving the condensation gathered in a small pool on the table, its meniscus picking up the late silver light.
‘Have some more,’ she says. ‘Please. I think you can manage, can’t you? How do you survive without Sonia?’
‘It’s you doing the talking today, Helen,’ he says.
‘It is, isn’t it? But do fill your glass again.’
He goes to the fridge. Places the glass on a benchtop made of some polished black stone. Everything about Helen has always been exquisite. Expensive. The song he was singing in the truck now lodged in his brain as soundtrack. Whenever I fall …
‘It was me who brought him back here. Otherwise I think he’d be living somewhere else. Provence, maybe.’ Laying on the sarcasm. ‘He had an affair. I wasn’t going to hang around for that sort of thing, so I flew back here. He followed and by then, of course, it turned out I was pregnant. With Alan. So we stayed.’
That would have been in the late seventies, their arrival not the sort of event that went unnoticed in Winderran. The hippies had a wholefood shop in the main street (The Store) with barrels of brown rice and oats, chickpeas and flour, local provenance vegetables, a poor stunted crop that, at least in the early days. Helen worked there. The beautiful wife of the famous writer who’d come to live in a fancy house out on the hill. As much a reason as any other to shop there. It had been some months before he realised she was also responsible for the books on the back shelf. Amongst the copies of Our Bodies, Ourselves and Spiritual Midwifery were literary novels, and not just Lamprey’s.
It is difficult to recall the strength of emotion which certain women provoked in him during those years. A disabling intensity. It’s not that his sexuality has disappeared, it’s still there, latent, but the force of it has dropped away, like a shroud or a veil, so that the world is revealed in an utterly different light. He is not sure if he is the better for it. Certainly it is easier. Women are just people now, like other, more attractively shaped men, with different, and sometimes curious, takes on life. They do not command him by their simple existence. He can see that even if Helen had not been the Beautiful Ice Queen, if she had succumbed (had she ever even noticed his desire? She was always smiling, always friendly, but to everyone, you couldn’t take it personally) nothing would have come of it except sex – some passionate exchanges in the front seats of cars, people’s bedrooms – because the person he’d been fascinated by had not been this woman (with, presumably, some leaning towards the politics of the Right, otherwise how could she have survived all these years with Lamprey and his steady march towards the reactionary) but some other ideal.
After Alan she had come to him several times. He had prescribed various different drugs to help her sleep. She had stopped working at The Store. She hadn’t been seen much about town. From all accounts the focus of her life became Sarah, her daughter, now living in Western Australia, something in IT.
‘It can’t have been all bad for him, to be here, can it?’ she says. ‘I mean there were some good books written in this house. And now, to be considering politics. The thing is he likes to be liked, you know. All writers do. And he’s had a bad run with his acolytes.’
‘I’m sorry?’
‘His young men. He likes to mentor young talent. The trouble is they have a tendency to bite the hand that feeds them, a way of proving they’ve outgrown him. They write bad reviews. It hurts him more than he admits. Recently it’s got worse. I have the sense he has become unmoored.’
‘From what?’
‘Oh. From his work, I guess. From me. No. More than that. From everything. He always had such a sense of things. That’s what made him good.’ She pauses, seems to consider saying something more but then rejects the notion. ‘It’s so kind of you to sit with me like this,’ she says. ‘I’m sure you must have places you’re supposed to be.’
‘I’m getting less good at being in the places I’m supposed to,’ he says.
‘Life can be so unfair, can’t it?’
‘Why do you say that?’ he asks, thinking she’s still talking about Guy, that maybe she’ll articulate the withheld thought; not realising she’s turned her attention to him.
‘I’m just rambling,’ she says. ‘But for many years I played the good wife. Guy was so big, there wasn’t really any room for anyone else and to be honest I was happy with that, the local girl made good. That’s something we have in common isn’t it, Miles? Not so many of us locals around. I had my children, he had his books. But the years went by and things changed and I decided to become a bit bigger. Or at least a bit more me. And what happens? I get ill. It must be like that for you, too, I guess, with Sonia? You find something valuable and then it gets taken away before you even begin to appreciate it. You don’t mind me saying that? These days I discover I’m becoming terribly blunt.’ She puts on an English working-class accent. ‘I say things as I shouldn’t. I always liked you, Miles. It’s an intimate sort of relationship this one, isn’t it? You know all my secrets. My pregnancies, illnesses, diseases, losses, unhappiness. I was very pleased when you got with Sonia. She was such a strong woman, a real person, not these bits of fluff you used to go around with. It’s strange being from a place and watching it change so much, so many strangers deciding to call it home.’
Everyone left. That’s what his generation had done. They turned eighteen and got up and went off to university or to work somewhere else. It was only the timid who remained. Of which he was one, he supposed. After university and his internship Winderran hadn’t seemed like such a bad place. His father already suffering with his heart. He was timid, always had been. Never mind the women of which there were less than the small town likes to think. Most of the time they chose him. He’d been needed in the practice. This is something he can say, that he is already older than his father was when he died, which, according to the cliché, means every year is a bonus, except he doesn’t think that; really, it’s just more life, indistinguishable.
He met Sonia at a conference in Sydney, she was a lawyer for a firm that specialised in compensation cases, a career woman, the same age as him, no children. They slipped away. The Manly ferry on a bright day, the Harbour all around. They made each other laugh. She was moving to Brisbane. They ended up living half in her flat, half on his farm. She loved having cows and dogs. He had never known a woman change so much in such a short time. When they met she was, not slim, but well apportioned. Over the next decade she became positively Wagnerian, as if her position in the company and her relationship with him allowed her to grow in physical stature as well as in personality. A force unto herself. He didn’t mind. The sex had remained tremendous. A woman of appetites. Then she got cancer. Being a doctor no help at all. Within months it had all fallen away. Reduced. Fifteen years from go to woe.
The shadow of the hinterland has spread all the way to the sea. Only a container ship halfway out to the horizon – heading south for the Port of Brisbane – still in sunlight, glinting. They are in their own pool of twilight in the wide room, the glass table now liquid black. It seems tears are running down his cheeks. He can feel them wet around his mouth, on his chin. His glass empty again.
‘Guy and I barely live together,’ Helen says. ‘He’s away a lot, and when he’s here he sleeps in his own room. I think he finds me a bit abhorrent. The sick wife. Like my cancer to me. He’d like to simply excise me but can’t find the way to do it neatly, without embarrassment.’
She doesn’t seem to have noticed his tears, for which he is glad. Twice in one day.
‘I think it would be convenient for him if I was just to slip away, but I don’t think I’m going to. Not yet anyway. Do you?’
He doesn’t answer. There is no good reason for destroying hope.
She talks across the silence. ‘If you’d asked me a couple of months ago I would have said it was a close thing. But now, I’m not so sure. Do you want some more wine? There’s sure to be some left, it’ll only go to waste.’
He does want more. His mind has been measuring the contents of the bottle in the fridge door. But he knows he needs to go, and that he cannot afford to be caught, again, driving like this. Even the local doctor cannot push these rules too far. He needs to go back to his own lair. To his dogs.
‘The thing is,’ Helen says, speaking from her dark bundle of rugs, he can barely see her anymore. ‘I’m on my own now. I’m not complaining. It’s my choice as much as anyone’s. I wouldn’t want it any other way. But I worry about Guy. I no longer know who he is. I don’t think he knows either. He seems to be confused about people and wealth. Perhaps he always was and I just didn’t notice.’
Behind the wheel of the truck, its headlights following the narrow curves of the road with less certainty than he’d like, he takes note of his condition. He is on the edge of competence, having difficulty making the turns at the right speed, the lumbering beast beneath him lurching unnervingly on the much-repaired road. Pulling himself together so he can at least make it home in one piece. Concentrating on the task at hand. Not so hard really, except that the sleepless nights seem to be catching up with him on this winding road along the top of the escarpment, waves of exhaustion interfering with his will.
A car appears from the opposite direction, its headlights sudden and painfully bright, causing him to brake sharply, and then it’s gone, leaving a wash of colour in his eyes. The road straightens and he changes up a gear, gives it a little juice, letting the machine take him home.