Authors: Joy Dettman
âYou
bloody eavesdropping, obese old bastard,' Jack said, his eyes wide. âYou slimy bloody slug of a man.' It was some time before he ran out of adjectives, and when he did, he picked up battered Number 1 and began reading it again, but more slowly this time.
Twenty days at the motel cost Bill Dooley dearly. Samuel Burton plastic couldn't pay for him either. Jack footed it to a bank and the dame behind
the glass questioned his signature. He pulled out Sam's driving licence, and the dame questioned his photograph.
âI've been through bloody chemotherapy. What do you expect me to bloody well look like?' He flashed the skin graft on his arm, flaunted his scarred brow. âIt's in my bones. I've got a month to live. Do you want me to waste a bloody week of it standing here, for Christ's sake?'
She
paid up and he paid the motel bill, then caught the night train to Melbourne. By ten the following morning he was holed up again at Narrawee, his answering machine flashing at him every time he walked by.
His head felt spiky, but his moustache and beard had done better, and his eyebrows were growing back. He'd do okay. So Samuel had had a haircut, and about bloody time. He had his scars now for
identification. He didn't need his poofter hair and lice. Some primitive tribes shaved their heads when they were in mourning, so good enough for them, good enough for Samuel Bloody Burton.
The grey sports slacks had given him haemorrhoids and the business shirts had rubbed his neck raw. His feet, accustomed to spreading in canvas sneakers, hadn't taken well to leather, and for the first time
in months the corn on his smallest toe was throbbing. He'd left the black shoes in the motel room, with his grey slacks, three filthy shirts and several well-used black socks. He didn't want them. Jeans moved with him, bent with him, and looked better with his sneakers.
No doubt they'd post the clothes to Bill Dooley, Main Street, Goondiwindi. A lot of Bill Dooley's dirty laundry was probably
sitting in some dead mail department. Jack had used his name two dozen times or more when he'd gone on his benders, and Bill always left his dirty washing behind.
Monday 8 December
Malcolm was gaining some control over the beast machine that purred like a lion ready to pounce and gobble up his labour. The trick was to name the file before hitting the Control and S keys every five minutes. This pasted his words onto the internal disc, took them out of the ROM or RAM or whatever it was and solidified them
somewhere in bytes, to be called up again at his pleasure. Each day, just to be on the safe side, he also saved his work to a floppy disk, which was in fact quite rigid.
John had found the three lost chapters of Number 10; they'd been quite safe, down in the bowels of the beast. He'd found them in five minutes, using a search-by-date instruction. Once found he had somehow tethered and married
them, then named the single file Fletch.
Six skeleton chapters had joined fletch.doc since that day. Not a lot in each, but they'd grow, Malcolm hoped. He was becoming familiar with the keyboard, larger than the confounded typewriter's, and not as touchy either. And the text, once you grew accustomed to it disappearing off the face of the planet, was quite wonderful. He could make it small. He
could make it large, which he did. He also had control over the size of text in his . . .
âHard copy,' he said.
There was something almost deviant about selecting the print command then sitting back while his printer whipped out five pages a minute. He loved watching the pristine pages roll into the printer
and his words roll out. Never tired of it.
âQuite wonderful. A remarkable tool.'
There
were games on it too, as he had discovered when Ann and her entourage had called in last week. She had been surprised by his progress and he, like a small child, delighted in showing off his developing expertise. Then young Benjamin had wanted to look at the games and the small boy had become teacher of the man.
âYou have to try to fit all those blocks in, sir, and not leave any spaces.'
Sir.
âAh, but how do we decide where they fit, Burt . . . Taylor?' he'd said.
A fine boy, that one. He'd grow into a fine young man.
Long ago Malcolm had claimed Ann as his own. He'd planned for her, dreamed for her. He could see her young face in Benjamin, see her hands and quick mind in her first son. It would be a fine thing to watch him grow to adulthood.
And sweet Bethany. She may well be a
duplication of her mother. How wonderful it would be to see her grow, to watch a woman emerge from this small female cocoon. Already she wanted what she wanted when she wanted it, her determined little jaw working on the bottle, her little hands already speaking. Malcolm did not want the complication, but perhaps he was falling in love with her.
âBethany.' He liked that name. âBethany Taylor.'
It had a prophetic ring to it.
John was playing a large role in Malcolm's life these days. They spent many hours in deep discussion, and he'd read the three early chapters of Number 10. Malcolm could find no end for this novel as yet, so his fingers plodded on, hoping an end would present itself.
Hard, plodding work, this one. His characters refused to take off and run, to lead him a merry chase,
but at least he had some words on paper and his phone was back on the receiver.
John had eaten dinner with Malcolm this evening. An interesting character. Assuredly his father's son, but with a depth to him and a pleasingly cynical outlook on life. A watcher of life, was John, as was Malcolm. They had much in common. But not the bottle.
Malcolm measured a portion of brandy into his glass, tipping
it down to meet, to greet, the beef pot roast, and a very nice piece of beef it had been too. The vegetables had soaked up its juices and flavour. He enjoyed a tender beef pot roast.
No more classroom to fill his days now. Perhaps he missed it. John was completing a revision course in primary teaching. The department bogged down in red tape as ever, had taken their time, but after the constant
stream of replacements they had posted to Mallawindy in the years since Malcolm retired, someone had seemingly recognised the value of taking on a home-grown ex-priest.
What was it that drove teachers to teach? Was it a fear of leaving that classroom, or perhaps a desire to control? A need to have some say in the future? What was it about this town that drove the teachers' wives away?
The single
men had done better here. They had adapted â for a given time they had adapted, then run willingly enough. The married male is not an adaptable animal, Malcolm thought. Take away his dream, rip the carpet out from beneath his feet and he stumbled, fell, where a woman would find a reason to go on. Give her a child and she'd survive all odds for her child, but take away that child. . .
The observation
of life was fascinating; watching the growth of those around you was a pastime like no other. He had spent some time spying on the Burton property last evening and through his binoculars, had seen Kerrie Fogarty's car arrive, and later he had witnessed two walkers and a brief kiss. It had pleased Malcolm well.
âA man with a quest,' he said. âAnd your quest, Malcolm? One hundred thousand words
and a title. And an end.' He only had twenty-nine and a half thousand. Still a way to go. Perhaps he'd get
there. Perhaps not. But he was out of words for tonight. His cursor honed in on
File
. Carefully he chose
Close
.
Do you wish to save changes to Fletch.doc?
âYes, you damn fool thing,' he said, clicking. His machine whirred, purred, double-checking his every move until it gave in and its
face went blank.
Always at this point Malcolm felt fear, which increased his heart rate. Would his words be there for him in the morning? He shrugged, turned the machine off at the power point and took a step away from it, waiting for it to complain.
Silence.
He'd dredged out seven hundred plodding words today. There had been days in the past when he'd churned out fifteen pages on the old Royal.
What a world he had known back then, his life spent in a wonderland of his own creation, words following him, waking him from his sleep, demanding to be set free. Such a pool of words to choose from back then. But the well was dry. And he was dry. He poured another brandy.
Dear Sam,
I am so sorry it has been so long since I have written to you.
I was very sorry to hear of your sad loss. May was a very nice woman. I'm sure you must miss her very much.
We are all well up here. Johnny is now teaching at the school, and looking so much better every day. Bronwyn is still keeping well, and also Annie and her family. I hope
you have gotten over your own injuries, and are feeling better now. Annie told me you were injured.
Half the reason why I am writing is to let you know we are having a memorial service up here for Jack on Christmas Eve. I am also having his name put on the children's tombstone. I know he'd want to be with Liza, and I like to think he is now.
I'm going to get a new stone, and it will say: âJohn
W Burton, [Jack] loved husband of Ellie, father of John, Ben, Ann and Bronwyn. Resting now with Liza, Linda and Patrick'.
A ghost walked over Jack's grave. He dropped the letter, shivered, then he picked it up and read on.
If you could get up to the memorial on Christmas Eve, it will be in the beer garden at the hotel. I know this is a bit strange, but my friend said that knowing Jack, it would
be more suitable to have it
there than at the church. As you would know, Jack was never a one for the church. Father Fogarty will be there to say a few words and as Granny Bourke said, Jack will be there too, and probably laughing at all of us. You would be very welcome to join us for the night, Sam. We've got plenty of spare beds at the old place.
All the best to you for Christmas. Love from
Ellie and family.
âBloody friend? What bloody friend? He's doing better than me, isn't he, getting you into a pub, you bitch,' Jack said, crumpling the letter, tossing it at the wall. But he picked it up and threw it onto the table with everything else. âCouldn't write a letter to a lost dogs' home.'
May and Sam had always replied to Ellie's Christmas greetings with a cheque. He had to play
the game out to the end. His cheque book was on the table. He wrote one for five hundred, then he ripped it up. She and her bloody friend would have his insurance soon enough. He wrote a second cheque, this one for one hundred, and he found a sheet of May's writing paper.
Merry Christmas to all, love Samuel
.
âLove?'
He'd loved her once. Loved May too. Loved his mother. Loved Liza. Maybe he'd
loved that black-headed little bitch, but he'd hated her too â seen too much of himself in that one. Seen himself and tried to kill it.
Bastard. He flinched from a memory, ran a hand across his scalp.
Women. No man in his life to care about, or to care about him. âNever has been â except old Pop,' he said as he stood and walked off to search May's office for envelopes.
He was folding the cheque
and note when he changed his mind. He'd buy himself a decent tombstone. That's what he'd do. He had money. Money to burn. He wrote a cheque for five thousand, signed it, and added a PS to his note.
Please find enclosed cheque. I'd like to buy a new stone for
Jack and the children. I will be out of the country over Christmas, so have a drink for him, for me
.
Sealing that envelope made the hair
stand up on the back of his neck. He walked to the television room and turned on the box, watching mindlessly. Spent a lot of time watching the bloody thing mindlessly, sleeping in front of it. At least it talked to him. But he nodded off while it was talking, slept through
Days of Our Lives
, and was dreaming of Ellie when the phone woke him. He woke sweating, breathing heavily â and un-bloody-satisfied.
âI said to do what needs doing,' Jack told the phone and his manager. âSell what you have to. Buy what you have to and send me the bills.'
âCan I come over and talk to you, Sam?'
âNo.' His hair was growing, but slowly. Over a week now since he'd returned from Sydney. Hadn't left the house by day, but he walked the property at night, emptied the mailbox at his gate and twice he'd driven to the
outskirts of Melbourne for a feed of take-away fish'n' chips.
âOld Harry has been around twice this week, Sam, jabbering about the garden.'
âLet it die,' Jack said. That gained him a few seconds' silence. He started to hang up the phone and he heard the voice again.
âDo you want me to organise someone to come in and cook you a meal â do a bit of washing for you?'
âNo.'
âYou've got to start
getting out. People care about you. They're worried about you, mate.'
âYeah. Right.' Jack wanted to laugh, wanted to howl at the âmate', but he hung up instead and went back to the kitchen to hunt for food. The room looked like a neglected pigpen, as did his bedroom.
He'd lost weight in Sydney, and more since his return. His jeans hung on him, and he hitched at the waist now as he searched the
pantry, the freezer. No sugar left. No bloody coffee. He made a cup
of tea. Black. No bloody milk.
âAh, shit.' Again his hand brushed his scalp. âBloody maniac bastard,' he said. âWhat the bloody hell were you thinking of?' He took the cup to the table and sat looking through his bills, ten deep.
âBloody manager. Got to pay him too. Can't post his bloody cheque, can I?'
Pen in hand he made
an attack on the bills, piled high since he'd been away. He'd never had to worry about bills. In Mallawindy, Ellie had paid them, and down here May had written the cheques. But he wrote them today, and signed Sam's name, not once, not twice, but again and again, whittling the pile and his cheque account down.
âBloody electricity,' he said. âBloody telephone. If a man didn't have a bloody manager,
then he wouldn't need a bloody telephone, would he?'
He'd been signing Sam's name for thirty years, signing tax returns, adding his signature to May's on many documents, but he, or his hand, didn't want to sign it any more. He stared at the signatures.
SJ Burton
. It was the J buggering it up. J was for Jack and Jack's hand had always been heavier than Sam's. No wonder the dame at the bank had
questioned his signature. He crumpled one cheque and wrote another, signed it, stapled it to a bill, then worked on.
The solicitors wanted to see him. He tossed their letter at the wall and considered his stomach. The bills pushed back to the general mess on his table, he stood and walked to the fridge.
Eggs. That's what he wanted. He knew how to fry an egg. None in the fridge. A tin of canned
peaches in the pantry and not much else he could do anything with. May had been big on canned fruit. She'd stockpiled the stuff, and he didn't want any more canned fruit. He wanted grease. He wanted butter. And bread.
Frozen peas in the freezer and a lump of meat. A leg of lamb. He balanced it on his palm, considering it â until his hand froze, then he tossed the meat back in with the peas and
headed for his
bedroom, searching the floor for clothing fit to be seen in. He picked up three shirts, smelt them, chose the cleaner of the three. The others were returned to the floor. He looked down at his jeans and decided to buy a clean pair, a size smaller. He picked up his hat and his sunglasses, his wallet, car keys and the manager's cheque, which he dropped into the Hargraves Park mailbox
before driving into town.
Sugar, milk, coffee, three loaves of bread and two tubs of soft butter, Solvol. He added a tin of apricot jam and a tin of fig, a large bottle of fake cream. He looked at the onions, tossed in three. Picked up a hand of bananas, a bag of potatoes, two packets of cornflakes and three tins of condensed milk. Then he had to queue to get out of the bloody place.
Queue too
close to the liquor department. Queue right beside a two-metre high stack of VB cans. Queue with six bottles of Jack Daniel's within arm's reach, and his hand reached. But he snatched it back, fixed both hands onto the trolley. He didn't have Sam's hair to hide behind now, but bastard Saint Sam had been a teetotaller. He could hide behind that.
âNice to see you out and about, Mr Burton. And how
are you managing?'
Jack unloaded his shopping onto the counter, tossing the cans and containers down while Saint Sam simpered his Ss and kept his eyes away from the grog.
âJust scraping by, Mrs Simpson. Just scraping by.'
âTime heals, Mr Burton. We don't think it will at the time, but it does. When I lost Martin I thought my world had ended.'
Until you found Clarrie, Jack thought, but he paid
with Sam's plastic, poked in Sam's pin number, then pushed the trolley before him as he walked to his car. He unloaded his bags into the boot then walked into the menswear shop. Two pairs of jeans, three shirts and half a dozen pair of Bonds size 16 briefs and he was out on the street, walking by the butcher's shop. Steak. Steak and eggs for dinner.
Another bloody queue inside. More eyes to
stare at his missing hair and eyebrows.
âGood morning,' someone said.
Jack glanced at the woman's grey head and he didn't know it. He looked at her hand and he flinched. âMorning,' he said, his eyes staring at the plastic splints on the woman's wrists, then quickly away to the butcher.
âWhat will it be, Mr Burton?'
âGive me a couple of slabs of steak,' he said, and Sam added, âAnd some sausages,
please.' He didn't like sausages, but sausage started with an S and everyone in the shop was staring at his hat. Sam used to have long hair and he'd never worn a hat. Today he needed those sibilant Ss. And he could probably fry a sausage anyway.
The butcher was shaking his head. Something wrong with that order. Jack scratched beneath his beard as he met the butcher's eye. He was some blow-in
from Melbourne.
âI've got a nice bit of silverside this morning, Mr Burton. It's easy enough to cook.' Sympathy in the pale eyes staring out from beneath the bushy brows.
They all looked at him with sympathy. The bastard in the menswear shop had shaken his hand, his pop-eyes watering. âA lovely lady,' he'd said. âThe town will miss her smile, Sam.'
Jack had never had much sympathy, and sympathy
hurt. He wished they'd all stop looking at him with their hangdog bloody eyes.
âHow do I cook it?' he asked.
The women with the wrist splints smiled, but her eyes, her voice held that same sympathy. He knew her too. Didn't want to know her, remember the last time he was this close to her, but he did.
It was Barbara Dean.
He cringed internally. Bloody memory like an elephant. Why couldn't he
go senile and forget? But he'd never forget Barbara
Dean. He'd caught Sam molesting her when he was sixteen, and he'd belted the shit out of him. And here she was, bloody near sixty years old, riddled with arthritis and standing at the side of the man everyone thought was Sam Burton, telling him how to cook silverside when she should have been spitting in his eye, screaming âpervert'.
âPop it
in your biggest saucepan with a good inch of water and a dash of vinegar, Mr Burton. But don't boil it too hard or it will go raggy.'
âBoil meat? In a saucepan?'
âYes. But with the lid on. Add a touch of mustard and a dash of vinegar,' she said.
His face felt hot, and his spiked hair crawled beneath his hat. âThanks. I'll have a bit then.'
She smiled at him, then glanced at the offered lump
of bloody red flesh on the butcher's hand, measuring it with her eye. âHe's giving you a nice bit there, Mr Burton. It shouldn't take more than two and a half hours to cook,' she said, and she smiled again and patted his arm. Patted the arm of the bastard she thought was Sam.
Nobody touched him.
Nobody.
Touch of forgiveness in that crippled hand.
He thought of the touch of that other hand
in that grey dawn, on the morning May had died, and he wanted to howl.
The plastic bag of meat passed over the counter, he grabbed it, and too eager to get away, forgot that he had to pay. Halfway out the door he turned, like a lost bloody fool. And they were all staring at him with their hangdog eyes and if he didn't get a-bloody-way he was going to bawl.
His hand went to his wallet pocket,
and the butcher said: âNext time you come into town will be fine, Mr Burton.'
Jack put his head down and walked half-blind to his car, drove half-blind back to the house, where he howled. Walked and howled.
He'd taken on Sam's guilt and worn it as his own. And she'd
forgiven him. Or maybe he was the only one who remembered that day. Little blue-eyed Barbara Dean and the bastard with his hand
in her pants. Maybe his father had planted that image indelibly in his brain with the belting he'd handed out because bad Jacky had bloodied little Saint Sammy's nose.
Forgiven for what he'd never done.
He blew his nose and lifted his shoulders.
âYou crazy bastard,' he said and he turned on the hotplate, found a dirty frying pan, added a lump of butter to it, and started looking through the
plastic bags for his eggs.