Seymour, Mary, Ellen and her children went into the church. The Millers lingered for a moment then walked off down the hill, through the old graves which William would sometimes stop to read. When they got to the road they held hands and walked home, down streets deserted in favour of worship: Tabor and Langmeil, St John's, Gnadenberg and Holy Cross, each as full as a Catholic school, people celebrating their oneness through hymns,
Silent Night
and
Hark! The Herald Angels Sing
, leaving hot houses full of hidden presents unlocked.
In the reserve off Church Avenue, Kilburn, people sat around on parched, dying grass singing hymns with all the lustiness of the Tanunda Lutherans. They were gathered in what had been shade, although the sun had gone, leaving its heat behind. They were singing
O Holy Night
, Bob Drummond leading them as a sort of spastic conductor. Nathan was matching Rose's lusty alto in the way he used to complement his mother's soprano. Things out of kilter. Finding their own equilibrium beside a hedge of hydrangea bushes which desperately needed dead-heading.
Back in the Millers' cottage, still ten degrees cooler than the outside world, Bluma descended into her cold cellar to fetch meat for tomorrow. Just enough for two.
No cut small enough. Standing beside the pork, holding a knife, she felt unable to go back up to
Wilhelm
.
Meanwhile, Arthur sat on the front pew of Langmeil church holding a long, hollow pipe. Small candles on the Christmas tree would occasionally catch and he'd raise his pipe and blow out the flame. The candles' heat rose towards the ceiling, turning ornamental wheels of angels circling central stars, a project the kiddies had done after the disaster of Nathan's Sunday School.
Night was invoked with an evening hymn, made lusty by the smell of honey cakes and sausage from the hall. Arthur closed the service, fittingly for many in light of what had happened in the last few months. He told the story of how a tyre company had offered to sponsor him, painting their name on his cross, photographing him holding it as it had a wheel alignment. Pastor Henry knew how to leave his crowd on a high, sacrificing a final benediction in favour of an encore from Arthur.
Bluma came up from the cellar, placed the meat in a pan and covered it. William looked at her and whispered, âI know it's hard to understand, but these are little things.'
She wiped her hands and said, âThey're not . . .' Returning to a vacuum of memories which had overtaken her, trying to find the words, and strength, to explain how she felt. How if they lost Nathan, they'd lost everything. How she didn't care about the End anymore. How even six months ago she could never have imagined it would be like this â Nathan a part of another family, a happier one. She sat down, but none of these words came out. She looked at William and sighed. After a long pause she said to him, âI need to talk to our son.'
William didn't argue. She stood up and walked out of the house, crossing into Arthur's yard and remembering he was still in church.
William sat silently, still. There was no noise. There were no smells apart from the lingering odour of smoke in their curtains and bed clothes.
Bluma re-appeared in the doorway. She stood staring at him and finally sat down, saying, âI'll try in the morning . . . will you talk to him?'
âOn Arthur's phone?'
âWe'll find another.'
She saw a piece of paper in the middle of the table. She picked it up and slowly read. It was a receipt for underlay and lino. William said, âThat's your present. I was going to show you in the morning.'
It had been a secret visit to Wohler's, William served by the younger Wohler, the one who'd found Nathan.
William handed him the measurements and he did a quote. âThat's fine,' William said, producing his grandfather's purse, counting the notes and coins.
âYou want to pay now?'
âWhy not? It's my wife's asthma.'
Wohler wrote a receipt.
âDoes that include installation?' William asked.
âOf course . . . how's that boy of yours going?'
âHe's in Adelaide.'
âDoing what?'
William didn't answer, standing up, folding the receipt and walking from the store. And with that, Wohler knew he'd done the right thing by helping Nathan out.
Back in her cottage, Bluma re-read the receipt but didn't feel as happy as she knew she should have, as she might have a few months ago. She went around to her husband and kissed him on the top of his head. âThank you.'
âYou need to go select a pattern. Then they'll make a time.'
âOf course. This is a lot of money.'
âYou only have one pair of lungs.'
She returned to her seat and made every effort to smile. âI'll put the kettle on.' William was silent. She fetched the kettle and went out back to the water tank. Standing, waiting, as it slowly trickled, she wondered how long she could be happy about linoleum.
The next morning she went into Arthur's and talked to Nathan for an hour and a half as Arthur topped up her coffee, trying, in his own way, to show her that things hadn't changed so much, that all of William's confusion would sort itself out in the same way that his had. And then Nathan would come home, and they could return to church.
In the way Nathan talked, and what he talked about, she sensed she hadn't lost him. William was barely mentioned and when he was it was in the same vein as an Abbott and Costello film they could both have a laugh about. Rose came on to wish Bluma season's greetings and assure her, not in so many words, that she and Bob knew about the ups and downs of family life and that whatever and however long it took, they were willing to help. âAnd anyway,' she concluded, âit keeps Phil out of our hair. We've never had it so good.'
At the end there were promises of more calls. Nathan said that after March, âDad should come good.' Either way, he was happy, healthy, working and earning a decent wage. The rest would work itself out.
Within a week she'd had two more calls and her lino laid. Some consolation for her worst Christmas ever.
Arthur had pinned a map to his kitchen wall. His various journeys were marked in red texta, most noticeably a line which followed the road through Rowland Flat and Lyndoch, Gawler and Elizabeth, down the entire length of Main North Road towards the city. An arrow pointed towards another map, of the city itself, his route pockmarked with little numbers in circles which showed where he'd slept. Corresponding to the numbers were photos he'd taken with his box brownie: road-side rest stops, parklands, the banks of the Torrens on one of Joe Aronson's quiet nights. Each showing Arthur with his cross and sleeping bag, warming beans on a fire or posing with a local, such as the policeman he'd talked out of evicting him from the David Jones carpark. There was always someone willing to take the photo, to stop and talk and share hot, strong coffee.
But Adelaide was ancient history and he knew he couldn't rest on his laurels for long. It was time for another journey. He traced the road north with his finger: Greenock, Kapunda, Riverton, Auburn and Clare. Or whichever detours took his fancy; the destination wasn't so important.
On a Tuesday night, just before the new year, he decided it was time. Packing his few things in a swag, he rolled it tightly and strapped it on his cross. Singing leftover Christmas carols he oiled his wheel, attached a reflector for night walking and gaffer-taped a cushion to the cross's left arm. The following morning he pulled on his long, white walking socks, gym boots, skin-tight footy shorts and polo shirt. Pulling on a terry-towelling hat and coating every inch of exposed skin with zinc cream, he shouldered his cross and set off down Langmeil Road.
Passing the Apex bakery he found Bruno cracking peanuts on a bench, throwing them into the air and catching them in his mouth. Resting his cross and settling down, Arthur asked, âEdna inside?'
âShe is. Where you off to now?'
âClare.'
âThey say it'll be hot before the end of the week.'
Arthur shrugged. âPacked me Zam-Buk.' Bruno offered him a peanut. Soon it was the best of five, then ten, Arthur dropping nuts but picking them up and eating them anyway. Bruno managed a perfect score until Arthur said, âHey, what if your life depended on catching the next nut?'
Bruno looked at him scornfully then tried again. For the first time in three years he missed, his tongue attempting a late save. âBloody hell, Arthur.'
Arthur was doubled over with laughter when one of the Angaston Teppers came out of the bakery and said, âMr Blessitt, we read about you.'
Arthur smiled and Bruno continued throwing nuts in the air.
Mrs Tepper pulled her string bag closed and continued. âThey say you were offered a radio show.'
Arthur smiled. âI wouldn't know what to say.'
For the second time in so many years, Bruno nearly choked on a nut. Mrs Tepper leaned forward and kissed Arthur on the cheek and said, âThis'll be good for the valley,' and then began to stroke the cross herself. âIt looks bigger in the photos. Is it heavy?'
âTasmanian oak, but the wheel takes most of the weight. Unless, of course, it's a bad road.'
But Mrs Tepper was lost in the inscription, afraid to ask for an explanation lest he give one. âYes, very nice, we have a dresser like this.' Arthur signed her Apex bag and she passed on towards the Black and White.
Bruno said, âThey have no idea. Most of them think you're a bit loopy.'
Arthur shrugged. âPerhaps I am.'
âOne minute they see you with William . . . then . . .' He threw a peanut at the cross and it hit Arthur's swag. âStill, I think you got out just in time.'
Unsure, Arthur looked at him. âHow do you mean?'
âWell, how's it gonna look for the kiddies, Joshua's lot, and Ellen's and . . . what's his name?'
âJoseph.'
âHow's it gonna look after . . . the big fizz?'
There was silence for a minute or so, broken by a muffler blowing smoke on Murray Street. Bruno offered him another peanut but this time Arthur refused. âWhat if he's right?'
Bruno laughed, putting down his peanuts. âThose that stay around Goebbels too long will regret it. Them kiddies will be the ones that suffer. I'm not telling you anything new, am I, Arthur?'
Arthur sighed and crushed peanut husks under foot.
âI suppose not.'
âHe'll turn out to be one of the worst things that's happened to Tanunda.'
âMore than Tanunda.'
âPerhaps.'
At length Arthur said, âWhat's happened with Nathan, that's what's got me.'
âThere you go. I used to watch you lot, over there on a Saturday, and I'd think, how can they allow themselves to be led? Intelligent people, like Seymour. He's got a diploma in something.'
âWhat?'
âElectronics . . . or was it floristry?'
Which meant that Arthur knew what Bruno had been thinking about him, and maybe still did. âI was never comfortable,' he continued, âbut it's always been my weakness, following. That's why I'm gonna keep to myself now.'
Bruno nodded. âI used to watch you over there, hammering away, building this and that. And then when William spoke, everyone was hushed, and I'd think, Spare me.'
In his defence Arthur said, âIt was a hard business for me to break with him. Our families have been close for years. His dad and mine.' Still, time has a way of fixing these things up, he thought. Looking at Bruno he wasn't so sure others would understand; he might have got out just in time, but apparently he was still tarnished. No amount of lugging around a lump of Tas oak could change that. According to Bruno it might even make it worse.
âPeople do understand,' Arthur said, wiping dust from his cross. âThey tell me, this is what the preachers should be doing.'
Bruno turned his head and smiled slyly. âWhat people say and what they think . . .'
Arthur stood up. He wasn't going to be defeated again, Bruno's lack of faith substituting for William's excess. âYou still on to water my lisianthus?' he asked.
Bruno started tossing nuts again. âI'll water your lissies.'
âSay g'day to Edna for us.'
âWhere'd you say you were going?'
âClare.'
Bruno smiled and nodded his head. âThey'll find you dead beside the road.'
Arthur walked off towards Murray Street, smiling, singing, â“We wish you a Merry Christmas, We wish you a Merry Christmas . . .”' Gunther Fritschle, driving his near-new Vanguard ute, crunched gears, sounded his horn and waved. Ron Rohwer, sitting beside Gunther, looked up from tuning the radio and said, âThat man's a marvel.'
Their cabin was filled with the static of the Talmadge Sisters attempting Lerner and Loewe. âHe'll end up with the bucket back,' Gunther replied, watching Arthur stumble in the rear-vision mirror. The sisters started an upbeat number as the Langmeil Elders turned down Hobbs Street towards Joshua Heinz's house. Pulling up in front of number seventeen, Gunther waited for K,K,K, Katie, Beautiful Katie to finish before he switched off the ignition.
Joshua's second youngest ran out and opened the gate for them. âAre you here to see Dad?' he asked.
âYes, is he in?'
âHe's practising.'
Joshua was halfway through Franck's
Panis Angelicus
when Ron, mounting the front steps, matched him with a harmony of a third. Joshua was oblivious, climbing to the crescendo, â“Hear us, hear us, hear us when we cry to thee!”' Sarah, his eldest daughter and accompanist, struggled to find his variable tempos, tapping out, as she always did, the beat with her foot, calling, âOne two three
and
. . .' but eventually giving up. Like Ron, unable to match Joshua's top C with his creaky baritone.
When Gunther eventually knocked he heard Joshua say, âBloody hell,' stamping down the hallway and peering out into the light. âGunther, Ron, come in.'