The road hugged and then dropped between hills pockmarked with granite. A two-foot high stone wall was all that protected us from sheer vertical drops into valleys full of gum trees and brown snakes. We could see where cars had gone over and the wall been repaired. Bill didn't always keep his eye on the road. Still, no one seemed particularly worried. Sometimes the car would slow and almost stop on a steep hill and we'd hold our breath, as if it might lessen the load. And every time we'd just make it.
I sat next to Janice. She wasn't saying much. She held a bag of frozen peas over a large bruise on her arm, from where she'd been punched on the Dodgem cars.
We'd been waiting at the front of the line. When the gate opened we all ran for a car. Of course, I wasn't quick enough. I was just lifting my leg to sit in a car when a short, redheaded boy with freckles and pale skin jumped in. I stepped out. But Janice wasn't having any of that. She got out of her car, came over to the boy and said, âGet out, he had it first.'
âI did.'
âHe can't run.'
âSo what?'
She knew he couldn't be reasoned with. âGet out, now.'
Liz called from the gate. âJanice, Henry can wait.'
Janice was fuming. The boy was small and mean â no good to anyone. She grabbed his arm and started pulling him out of the car. He held onto the steering wheel and Janice fell back. She stood up, jumped onto the bonnet and tried again. He was older than he looked. He stood up and took a swing at her. She swung at him and collected the side of his face. The ride operator came over and grabbed them both by the shoulder and led them out.
I didn't know what to do. A choice of two cars. So I climbed in and waited for the power to come on. I drove around and around, banging into Gavin and Anna, looking at Janice and feeling guilty.
âYou've gotta stop doing that,' Bill said, as we drove home. âYou'll end up at McNally's.'
âWhat's McNally's?' Anna asked.
âIt's a little prison, for little criminals.'
âHow was I a criminal?' Janice blurted out. âHe was the one that took Henry's car.'
âUnfortunately, there's no law against rudeness,' Bill replied. âBut there are laws against hitting people.
âThat's not fair.'
âLife's not fair. Look at him, he was feral, where were the parents? He'll end up in Yatala. Whereas you . . .'
Anna smiled at her sister. âYou'll end up at McNally's.'
âShut up.'
âJanice!' her parents barked in unison.
We entered the city, travelling down a wide, empty arterial known as South Road. As we cruised downhill towards a distant Croydon, Bill pointed out his customers â who bought what and how many, whether they paid on time and if their wife was on with some other fella. At nine o'clock we pulled into the driveway of 7A Thomas Street. Dad came out to greet us. He grabbed my bag from the boot and asked, âDid he behave himself?'
âHe was fine,' Liz explained. âThis one here was the problem.'
She looked at Janice. Dad lifted the bag of wet peas off her arm and asked, âWhat happened?'
She smiled. âI got him better than he got me.'
No Mum, still. Dad said she'd be home any day. âShe's having a holiday,' he explained, somehow forgetting I'd seen everything.
âIs she still at Nan and Pop's?'
âYes.'
âCan we go see her?'
Dad stopped. âYes . . . soon.'
The house was looking grim. The kitchen was littered with dishes covered in food scraps: half-eaten bowls of Weet-Bix and bits of undercooked meat mixed with cigarette butts. Clothes were strewn over the floor and the holiday washing was piled up in the laundry. There was an empty beer bottle in the shower and a half-eaten packet of Milk Arrowroots beside the bath. The toilet smelt like piss and Mum and Dad's bed was full of crumpled newspaper where Dad had fallen asleep reading the obituaries.
The next morning I woke to the races on the tranny. Dad never listened to the races. I could hear him turning in his paper bed, occasionally mumbling something to himself.
I crawled to the window at the end of my bed and looked out. It was Sunday and there was no one around. I heard a train bell and the sound of a steam engine, and if I listened carefully, Con coughing as coal smoke settled in his hair and on his face, as he waited for the 8.15 from Grange, opened the gates and waddled back towards his cabin. In front of our house a dog sniffed the stump of a perfectly good wattle the council had removed at Mr Hessian's request. There was a bird in the leaf litter under our pittosporum and a van parked across from 7A. It had a faded sign on the side â
Derek's Carpet
and Rug Cleaning
â but it didn't look like it was used any more. It was rusted and the front fender was held on with twine. A side window was cracked and the right rear-vision mirror was missing. The muffler had dropped, and seemed to be held up with wire.
There was no one in the front of the van but there was movement in the back.
I wondered who would be getting their carpets cleaned. Perhaps the Housemans, they had money, but Ron didn't like to spend it, especially on something he could do himself. Carpet cleaning. Unusual, on a Sunday. Maybe it was someone visiting someone. Dad had taught me to be observant, and suspicious, so I tried to make out the van's registration. It had Victorian plates. I fetched a pair of Dad's old binoculars from my cupboard and tried again. Then I found a pen and scribbled the van's registration on the white paint of my window frame.
âWhere is it?' Dad asked, bursting in.
âWhat?'
âThat shit your mother made you wear.'
Dad was looking grimmer than the house. He was unshaved, wearing a singlet with sauce and coffee down the front; he smelt of body odour disguised with deodorant; he wore his shorts down around his hips, and pulled them up every minute or so; his hair was full of grease and lint, exploding across his scalp in every direction at once.
He opened my dresser and took out a cardigan my mum had bought me last birthday. âThis . . . you've never liked this. Makes you look like a pansy.'
I shrugged and he threw it in an old grocery bag. âOkay, what else?' The bag was already half full: a vest, some ties and a pair of shiny nylon pants she'd bought him, another cardigan, a jumper, potato sack undies and even some cufflinks that had been a Father's Day present.
âWhat's this?' he asked, looking at a shoebox in my bottom drawer.
It contained a heavy leather orthopaedic shoe Mum had bought me and tried to make me wear. It was made with a curve, to try and twist my foot back into shape. The doctor had told her that it wouldn't do any good but she wouldn't be told. The ad in the magazine promised normal feet in six months.
Dr Thyer's Miracle Orthopaedic Shoe, Black or Brown
leather, Children or Adult sizes, Made to Order, Delivery in
fourteen days
.
She'd even made me wear it to school. I felt like Frankenstein, thumping around in a two-inch heel as every bone, muscle and tendon in my left foot screamed out in pain. As other kids imitated me and called me names. As, once again, I made for the safety of a locked cubicle. As my desire to be a social creature evaporated like a puddle of piss. Janice was there, as usual, standing up for me, chasing off the riff-raff, as she called them.
Dad threw the shoe in his bag. âAnother one of her stupid ideas,' he said.
He finished going through my drawers and cupboards, picking out toys and socks and undies and asking, âAny good?'
As I just shrugged, confused as to why he was doing this and worrying that it wasn't a good sign.
I wanted to ask if this meant that she wasn't coming back.
âThat's enough for now,' Dad said.
I followed him out the front door and around the side of the house to the bin. He lifted the lid and threw the bag in. âThere, that's better,' he said, as if he'd just found relief from a lifetime of constipation.
I looked up at him. âWhy?' I managed to ask.
âWhy not?' he smiled.
Sometimes I couldn't work people out. Did he hate her or was he just angry? Did this mean he'd finished with her, or was he just indulging in his own dramatics? Of course, you couldn't ask, you wouldn't get the truth anyway. Just a version of the truth, discoloured with frustration and memory. I'd already learnt that it was best to let things be. People calmed down, eventually, and then you could get back to common sense.
âWhat about Glenelg?' he asked.
âOkay.'
Glenelg beach, with its ice-creameries and book exchanges, pubs and fish shops selling
Fresh Oshun Fish
. We walked up and down Jetty Road, browsing second-hand shops full of camp ovens, sausage grinders and Wermacht badges. Dad was quiet, but he was trying to be happy. Throwing away a few clothes hadn't done the trick (especially considering he'd decided to get them back out when we got home). Something more, or less, was needed. A confrontation or a retreat. After all, he seemed to be missing her.
âDad?'
âEh?'
âShould we head home now?'
âYeah.'
We stopped and waited for a city tram. âCan we go see Mum tonight?' I asked.
He looked at me and sighed. âDo you think we should?'
âYes.'
We caught the tram and it rattled, slow, heavy and hot, towards the city. I watched Dad looking out of the window, thinking, stroking his chin and licking his lips.
âWhat's my breath like?' he asked, breathing on me.
I pretended to cough. âYou haven't even washed your teeth?'
âI forgot.'
The tram waited at the Greenhill Road intersection. I saw people standing in the shade of a peppercorn tree. Get on, I wanted to say, but maybe they were there for some other reason. I looked at a sign further up beside the track:
1st
Fouling Mark
. And another one, beside the tram:
2nd Fouling
Mark.
I pulled Dad's sleeve and pointed to the sign and asked, âWhat's the second fouling mark?'
He shrugged. âWho knows? Something for the driver.'
I looked at the people on our tram: pensioners with string bags full of apples and carrots; a group of young girls, still in their bathers, dressed in wet frocks; a man in a suit smoking an unlit pipe, reading a paper in some foreign language.
I could ask them all, I thought, but none of them would know. The Second Fouling Mark. They might even see the sign every day. I could get out and ask them all, everyone under the peppercorn tree, the girl at the gate of the Methodist Ladies' College, road-menders, shopkeepers, gardeners, and they might say: The Second Fouling Mark, isn't that a movie?
A song?
A spy? Something to do with that fella at Somerton?
Even my own dad, a detective, didn't know, or care. The Second Fouling Mark was the atomic weight of Argon. It was the number of claws on a meerkat's foot; it was God and Buddha and the universe; it was the unknown, and the unknowable; it was something beyond the grasp of a few people on the 4.15 from Glenelg. It was the machinations of my dad's brain, as he sat wiping his nose with the back of his hand and staring out of the window; it was my mum, the Russian doll; it was the secret of Bill's shed, the mystery man and everything that ever has or will exist. Con and Rosa's healing tree. The poetry of Doctor Gunn's hands at work.
âSecond fouling mark,' Dad whispered. âNo, dunno.'
I looked at the driver. Only he knew. He looked back, pulled the bell-rope, met my eyes and winked. And I guessed the world kept turning in the presence of small mysteries.
When we got home our car was in the driveway. We found Mum in the kitchen washing dishes. Dad stood staring at her. âHello.'
âI got a mornay on,' she replied.
âTuna?' I asked.
âChicken.' She turned and looked at me. âYou like chicken better?'
I shrugged. âDoesn't matter.'
She continued with the dishes. âYou two are hopeless. Nearly tripped and killed myself when I came in.'
âI'll start on the bedroom,' Dad suggested.
âGood idea.'
He returned to his room. I picked up a tea towel and helped dry the dishes. âWhere you been?' I asked.
She didn't reply. As we stood there in silence I imagined the scene: Mum locked in her old bedroom, Pop trying to talk her around. âYou gotta go back, Ellen,' he says.
âI'm not interested.'
âWhat about Henry?'
Silence. Pop defiant, standing with his hands on his hips. âWell, if you won't go back, me and Mum will.'
âYou won't.'
âToo right we will. I can cook. I could just imagine what Bob's feeding Henry. I can. I will.'
Pop driving her home in our car to make sure she gets there. Then him catching a train home, stopping to ask Con to keep an eye on things for him.