âJust a little bit your idea. Might be I was thinking about it when your elbow was sticking into me, that time you were sitting in the middle, between the boss and me.' He lifted his arm and said, âHere, come here.' Bringing her closer.
She walked across the lawn, wondering how he could make her feel as though they existed somewhere entirely separate from everyone else. It was as if everything that had ever happened to either of them had been leading to this, to this one thing. She'd never been so happy.
The head had fallen off one of the sprinklers and it dribbled water into a widening puddle on the grass and little birds dipped in and out. The thick heat was almost impenetrable as she moved from the shaded area into sunlight, and it was all the more shocking for the contrast. Susannah looked up from the sink.
âCan you finish here?' she said. âI've got to go to the children.'
âTexas's back,' said Laura, squaring her shoulders.
Susannah expelled air noisily in a short, sharp sigh, ignoring Laura's eyes.
âI s'pose he'll need feeding as well. Get the salt beef out of the cool room and cut off some more,' she said before the flywire door closed behind her. âThe key's above the sink.'
Susannah was like that now, matter-of-fact and impersonal.
It was as though Laura had never sat at her table. In some ways she preferred it this way. At least she knew where she stood.
Since John had returned from the city, working for Susannah was more structured and Laura was to be in the kitchen by six every morning, except Sundays. Lists of jobs were prepared and she worked steadily through them; cleaning windows and washing walls and floors. The mindlessness of it all left her open to other experiences, fanciful journeys of thought, where she imagined a life with Texas in a grand two-storey homestead of stone with wide verandas and views from every room. Horses with gleaming coats grazed in the fields below.
Laura sat down with Texas on the veranda. Sometimes Gerry joined them but he had gone into town for a couple of weeks.
He was taking his time off before the wet. At times she was nervous of the heat, wondering how much she could take and how long it would be before someone would tell her that it was the hottest day, like the longest day of the year in the northern hemisphere. It was impossible to celebrate a hot day, it was enough just to endure, to maintain the boundaries between her and its increasingly physical presence. Texas took a piece of bread from the middle of the table and placed it on his plate and spread margarine over it.
Texas âIt must be hot out there fencing,' she said.
He looked up. âBloody hot on that rock.'
âIs John out there with you?'
âNot this week. Last week, he out for half a day.'
John had been back from his city trip for a couple of weeks. He rarely spoke directly to her and she wondered if her presence was tolerated for Texas's sake. Presumably she was still being paid but she wasn't sure whether there was a difference between a jillaroo's wage and a domestic's. She didn't want to ask in case they told her she wasn't needed any more. There were steps around the side of the cool room and John appeared, moving purposefully towards them. He nodded at Texas.
âI'll pick up that part on Monday,' he said. âHow long you reckon you got left out there?'
âThat ground too bloody hard for that digger. Need the rain, you know, soften it up,' said Texas. His eyes not quite meeting John's when he spoke.
âNo time mate, more cattle coming up, stud animals,' said John and he removed his hat. âWire it up to one of those snappy gums if you can't get a post in. Plenty of them out there.'
Although she was looking at Texas, she was aware of John and he leant down and pulled off his boots and placed them beside the kitchen door. Before he opened it, he turned back towards them.
âHave the day off tomorrow.'
âToyota need oil change and new filters,' said Texas.
âWhen you finish that then.' And he disappeared into the kitchen and they heard him talking to his children.
She wondered what she and Texas might do for the wet.
They should take a holiday, perhaps go to Darwin together.
There would be money for travelling in their bank accounts.
After board was taken out, cheques were deposited every month when Susannah or John went to town. Texas was staring past her, the whites of his eyes marked with tired tracks of red, then they returned to her face and the skin creased around them.
âWhat you looking like that for?' he said.
She was glad to have his attention.
âI was just thinking what we might do when we get some time off.'
âGo for a drive eh,' he said. âIn the afternoon.'
II
Laura opened the gate that led out of the homestead yard and crossed the dirt, and although the day was overcast, it seemed the heat was trapped in between. She walked slowly and precisely, her feet in hot socks and boots. Parched pieces of rock scraped beneath them and the memory of the nights sustained her. Of air that became softer in the dark. Air gently pushed around by the fan, the slow, languorous movement of curtain fabric as it let the outside in. The generator was off and the sound of a metal tool dropped on concrete rang out clearly, breaking the heavy muteness of midday. She was carrying a bag with a water container and salt-beef sandwiches that she
Texas had made herself. She stepped into the gloom of the shed and blinked, her eyes adjusting to the lesser light. The bonnet of the Toyota was up and Texas was leaning in behind it.
âAre you just about finished?' she asked.
He stepped back. âYeah, start her up.'
She placed the bag with the food and drink on the seat before her and climbed in behind the steering wheel. It reminded her of that afternoon at the end of the rodeo when she drove to the tank along the highway for a bogey. There were too many police on the road for anyone else to drive and the vehicle was crowded with people wanting to cool down. She was stopped, but even though they knew she'd been drinking, they let her continue. About ten kilometres or so down the road Texas pointed out a large concrete tank on her right. She parked close beside it and everyone climbed onto the roof and jumped into water that was cool and clear.
She moved over into the passenger seat to let Texas in behind the wheel. He reversed the vehicle out of the shed and into bright light and it seemed that in the short time they'd been in the shed the clouds had moved into one half of the sky and were thickening.
âDoes that mean it might rain?'
âJust build-up. No rain yet.'
They were in view of Irish's old caravan and the bough shed beside it and she remembered the old man and the way he'd died and the thought of it made her feel slightly ill. When John returned he'd called the ambulance to take him away and a few days ago police had come to interview Susannah. She was apparently in trouble for not reporting his death but she'd never spoken to Laura about it, and when Laura mentioned it to Texas, he didn't seem to want to talk about it either. Texas drove the vehicle towards the yards but instead of following the track beside it that led across the creek, he stopped in front of the gate on the other side.
âWhere are we going?' she asked, opening the door.
âMaybe go along that ridge there and out into that red flat country.'
She closed the gate, the metal almost too hot to touch, and the sweat on her back dried by the time she returned to the vehicle. The track was rough and rocky and they drove through black-soil country that was well wooded with trees she'd seen many times before, trees with butterfly leaves that were soft-colour green with blood-red pods and rust-tinted flowers, and among them were tall, wide bushes that were prickly. Through them, she caught glimpses of a black stony ridge and she remembered on a drive with John, he'd said they were basalt ridges, the oldest in the country.
âHold the wheel eh.'
She reached over to steady it while Texas cupped the match to light his rollie. She thought it too hot to smoke. Her elbow rested on the open window and her other arm hung loosely at her side; she was trying to keep it away from the heat of her body. She looked over at Texas, holding the wheel casually and capably, his checked shirt rolled above the elbows, and thought he looked no different to when he rode a horse.
Texas âThat old fella, he knew all the footwalking road through here. He learnt it from the old people.'
âWho, Irish?'
âBefore Toyota road, old people they walk the same way, except in different place.'
âWhere?' she said and looked to his profile that was turned away from her.
He glanced back. âThey walk that place, they know that tree, they know that hill and all around. Not any more. Most of the old people are gone.'
âDo you know where they walked?'
He stared ahead, steering the vehicle along the track.
âWhen I was a young fella, I was droving cattle.'
They continued for another hour or so. She found it hard to gauge time when everything they drove past seemed to stand motionless in the bleached light. The country was flatter and became redder and there were small rises which they drove over and through and eventually they stopped at some pinkish, pale-coloured rock.
âThis place, maybe nice and cool,' he said as he turned off the engine.
She looked out the window and saw nothing that resembled shelter or shade and the air that entered was thick with heat. He was climbing out his door and pulling the bag of food towards him.
âYou staying there?' Grinning beneath his hat.
Her body came away from the seat wetly and for a moment it was cooling. He was walking ahead of her towards the rock and after he climbed over the first few boulders she realised he was descending into a crack in the earth. She followed, clambering over the smooth hot stones, and gradually the rock became cool to touch the further down they went. The walls narrowed and she could touch each side with her hands and they rose almost vertically twenty metres or so and the sky could be seen, framed by the narrow ragged opening above.
The rocks were smooth and pale, marked with thin wavering lines of pink, purple and red, and they seemed to be formed in blocks, almost regular in shape. The gap between them widened and Texas was standing beside a circular pool, no more than ten metres across, deep emerald in colour.
âMy god, this is beautiful. Who would have believed it?'
Texas sat down against the rock and took off his hat.
âNearly lost a horse over the edge, my old man, that's how he found it.'
âLet's have a swim,' she said, resting beside him.
âThat water too deep. That water go a long, long way.'
She'd only been looking at the surface.
Descending at dusk into a plain surrounded by shapes that resembled mountains, only smaller. It was hazy with smoke or heat and it was like being in the bottom of a canyon. They drove through a gap in the hills and out into the wide country where the sun was still bright and she recognised the ranges ahead where at the base would be the homestead, the sheds and the yards. It seemed they'd driven in a circle and they would return in another direction from the way they had left.
Texas stopped for a gate. A bird of prey hovered, the tips of
Texas its wings trembling with the effort of staying above in one place. Through the trees on their left was a windmill. She climbed back in the vehicle and Texas drove forwards. He was looking across her and out of the window and she couldn't read his expression.
âWhat is it?'
He swung the vehicle away from the track towards the windmill. Crows spiralled and eagles flew up in wide swooping arcs, and the smell of putrid flesh crashed in on them, and the trees thinned, revealing a scene that was horrifying, of cattle barely standing above many that were dead, blank-eyed and hollow.
âCattle smash,' he muttered.
âWhat?' She immediately thought of a vehicle. âBut how?'
âThey got no water.'
Texas stepped out onto the dirt and walked towards the trough. They were the animals she had ridden with, the brahman weaners which had been so carefully looked after, fed mineral supplements and hay. She followed slowly, her hand over her nose, barely able to take it all in. There were maybe five or six alive, standing with front legs splayed, heads dropping to the ground, grey tongues protruding from their open mouths. The rest were bunched together, as though they'd fought one another, some on top of others in a sickening, stinking mound, where bones had been picked at and black flesh torn by birds, and maggots moved in the openings. Texas was staring at the trough blankly. There was dust where there should have been water. She followed his gaze as he looked up, and it travelled from the black poly pipe which snaked away from the trough in the direction of the windmill. In places it was submerged by sand and then it surfaced again near the fence and it was in that area that most of the cattle had died. Texas took off his hat, his eyes blinking rapidly. He looked over to the Toyota and back to the cattle that were standing. And then one of them fell, and dust filled its vacant eye.
âTwenty litres in the back. But it's too late,' he said and he replaced his hat on his head and she could no longer see his eyes.
âWhat about in the tank?'
âThat tank empty. Spilled out. See where that pipe broke.
Them poor little fellas trying to get that water coming out before it dried up.'
She realised what had happened.
âBut how long has it been like this? Doesn't Gerry check all the bores and the windmills?'
Then she remembered he was in town and John had been doing it. He told Susannah that was where he was last week.
âMaybe three or four days in this heat. That's all it takes for them little fellas.'
As they drove in the direction of the station, the hills beyond it edged in pale light, she realised the worst thing was that it was so close to the homestead. They didn't speak until he switched off the ignition.