Authors: Joy Dettman
Dream and reality had intersected somewhere along the line. Stella heard the fire siren, but in her dream it came from an airfield, perhaps one she had seen in an old war film on television. The voices of men penetrated her dream; officers, shouting, giving orders. Then came the knocking. Persistent. And awareness of strange light. Flashing light. Still close to her dream she sat upright, her eyes scanning familiar walls.
In the week since her father had left, she had slept badly, and last evening, Friday evening, it had taken her hours to fall asleep. At midnight, she swallowed two Aspros â not for a headache, but in the hope of gaining some much needed rest. Deep sleep had taken her then, carried her away to that airfield and the burning plane she knew was her father's.
She slid from her bed and ran down the passage to her father's room. There was a wall of flame outside his window. The cypress hedge was burning; flames shooting metres into the sky dwarfed the men in her drive.
âStell. Are you in there, Stell?'
She pushed the window high and called down to the one knocking at her front door.
It was Chris Scott, head of the voluntary fire brigade. He looked up, saw her there. âWe're letting her go. Not much use saving a blackened skeleton. Some young hooligan's been getting ideas from his city friends.'
âI'm coming down, Chris.'
âBetter shut your windows or you'll end up with a house full of smoke.'
The window closed, snibbed, she dressed quickly, and hurried downstairs and out through the front door.
âIs the shed safe from sparks? It's old wood. Do you think I should move Father's Packard out?'
âIt's safe as houses. We got onto it early.'
âWho reported it?'
âOld Wilson. Said he got up to go to the loo, and saw the flames. Rang the brigade. But it's no bloody accident. Someone's doused the length of it with petrol. You could smell it when we got here. We found the can too, and Jennison reckons it's the one old Wilson gets his motor-mower juice in. I wouldn't put it past the old coot to have done it himself. Taken the opportunity to get in a hit below the belt while the minister is away.'
âNo. No. He wouldn't do that. He and Father mightn't be on the best of terms, but he is no firebug. Thank goodness he saw it.' She stood well back from the wall of fire, waving to a group of dressing-gown clad neighbours who were enjoying the pre-dawn drama from the opposite side of the paling fence.
The hedge was as old as the house. Stella had known for years that the dead wood in the interior would go up like a bonfire with the least provocation.
By dawn only the embers were left. The men went in with axes then, felling the last of the standing wood, knocking over charred gateposts, and what remained of the aged wooden gate. As the fire truck drove away, the sun came up to peer between Mr Wilson's forest of trees, and for the first time in her forty-four years of life, Stella could watch a vehicle drive beyond the hedge.
She stood on when the fire men had gone, stood immobile, watching the weak light grow stronger. She could see the post office on the corner, and the town clock, and the two church steeples. The sun was catching them, lighting sun fires on steel. It lit the Catholic steeple first, then touched its Anglican neighbour.
âMy God,' she breathed.
Light glowed like fire on the swimming pool across the way, and it painted the side wall of Jennison's service station. She could see the second floor of the new high school building. Then the cars began, cars full of people off to somewhere, but they slowed as they drove by, to peer in, to see what had been hidden behind the hedge, just as Stella was peering out.
To her, it was like looking at a scene through some formerly unknown window, some wide window that looked out from a secret room, to which she had only now found the key. She had been locked out of that room, its window hidden from her all the days of her life.
âI wanted that hedge gone. For years I have planned to cut it back. Now it is gone.'
She didn't return to bed, but continued the work of the firemen, raking up, encouraging the smouldering trunks to burn away by feeding the fire with smaller branches and garden refuse.
Many walkers stopped to stare, or speak. Miss Moreland walked over at ten. She found a different Stella, a girl with long wild hair and black hands; a smudge-faced, laughing Stella. They drank tea on the front porch, then together they toured the garden, propping up damaged plants, removing those too far gone to save, and just looking at the new vista while Stella spoke of a picket fence.
âGo and have a look at your garden from across the road, girl, then decide if you dare to lock it away again. There is little enough beauty in fair Maidenville.'
âI believe I am a little afraid of my new freedom â like a prisoner who has served her time and has now been tossed out on the street, unprepared. Perhaps I've become institutionalised, my dear.'
âWell, in my book, you've overpaid your debt to society. Both gate and hedge are ash, and you are free, girl, and I'm here to see you get used to it fast. Consider me your parole officer. Now if you've got a sharp pair of scissors, I'm going to cut a few inches off that hair. And if I ever see it pinned up in a bun again, you'll go back into solitary.'
Stella showered all the ash away before Miss Moreland took up the scissors.
So soothing, those old hands combing her hair, touching, cutting. Stella relaxed, left the fate of her curls to the cavalier scissors, and when it was done and the scissors placed down, she felt the loss of those gentle old hands, if not of her hair. There was so much she wanted to say, wished she could say, but like her father, she was uncomfortable with personal issues.
âThank you, my dear. I believe you just saved Father thirty-odd dollars. I have been intending to have it cut these past weeks, but couldn't raise the necessary incentive.' It wasn't enough. It wasn't what she wanted to say. âThank you too for your care, and support, and for your friendship.' But it still wasn't enough, so she took the old hands in her own, and she kissed them.
âKissing, now is it? You'd better cut that out or you'll have this town calling us a pair of raving lesbians, girl,' the old lady said, but she left her lipstick smudge on Stella's cheek.
At one they drove to the coffee shop for a light lunch. Later, with the money Martin had left on the dresser, they bought a new letterbox from Steve Smith, and a bag of pre-mixed cement so they might set it in the ground.
All that remained of the old gatepost was the rotted wood beneath the earth. A small crowbar and a trowel removed it. The flashy red letterbox was put in its place and held upright by Miss Moreland while Stella tamped the earth around it, then poured in the mixed cement. By three it stood beside the drive, waiting open-mouthed for some long-banned junk mail.
The friends washed their hands and drove again to the centre for a well earned coffee, then for an hour they walked the long street, peering into shop windows and wandering into stores.
The shoe shop in Main Street was closing down. They had a bargain table out front and Stella picked up a pair of white sandals with five centimetre heels. âOnly twenty dollars, marked down from sixty-nine.'
âTry them on, girl.'
They felt right, made to order, made for narrow feet that had once looked fine in strappy sandals, for feet that had once loved to dance all night at church socials.
âI love them,' she said, and she paid for them with her credit card, just for fun.
They walked next door to the chemists. Miss Moreland wanted a new lipstick. She chose two, then chose a matching blusher and a brown eyebrow pencil, a light foundation, but when the assistant handed her the parcel, she removed the brighter lipstick and handed the parcel to Stella.
âThat is not my style, Miss Moreland.'
âThen it ought to be. Take it, girl. It matches your new shoes.'
âIt cost you a fortune!'
âMoney is only as good as what it will buy. Take it! Your parole officer has spoken.'
Stella smiled. âOh, well â if it will save me from another forty years in solitary.'
In the middle of Main Street, they laughed. It was very un-Stella. People turned to stare at her, so she hid in the electrical goods store. Miss Moreland found a rose pink lightshade there that she thought might add a bit of life to the lamp in the minister's lounge room. Laughing still, they bought it.
Money was fun. Spending it was euphoric.
They wandered to the whitegoods department, glancing at microwaves, then at the stoves.
âThat's the same as the one Bonny bought. It has a fan-forced oven, and it cooks so evenly.'
âThat's what you need, girl. So buy it.'
âHeavens no. The old one is . . . is still functional.'
âYou sound like your father.'
Stella ran her hand over the smooth white surface, allowing it to rest there. âIt would probably takes weeks to install it. I'd want to put it in the chimney. Get rid of the old wood stove â '
âAsk him.'
âNo. Father would have a fit.'
âBut he's not here. Be a devil. No harm in asking.'
Then the salesman was at their side and desperate for business. He kept dropping the price until it began to sound like a bargain, too good to miss out on, and somewhere along the line the decision to buy had been taken out of her hands. The only problem now appeared to be the installation.
âWe'll do it Monday. Rip out the old stove. Stick an exhaust fan in the chimney.'
âMonday? You mean next Monday?'
âThe one that comes after Sunday, girl. Sold,' Miss Moreland said, and in a smiling daze Stella followed her friend to the department store.
They looked at jackets, browsed amongst the hats. Miss Moreland bought a cheeky thing, as red as sin. âIt'll match my funeral dress,' she said.
They were laughing as they loaded their last purchases into the car boot, and when they were ready to leave, they didn't want to leave. This had been a day like none before. If this was freedom, Stella loved it and she wanted more.
âAre you tired, my dear?'
âTired? Me? Why should I be tired?' Miss Moreland scoffed.
âThen let's try the coffee shop's special. They've got savoury pancake filled with avocado and prawns. My shout. Or my bankcard's. Save us cooking dinner.'
They parted at seven-fifty at Miss Moreland's front door.
âI won't be going to church tomorrow. That crazy old Willy Macy is leading the service. Percy's psalm-singing I'll tolerate, but I refuse point-blank to sit through Willy Macy's twaddle.'
âDo I have my parole officer's permission to stay away too?'
âYou set one foot inside that door and I'll see you go down for life.'
âIf you put it that way.'
âHave you heard from your father?'
âNothing. Still it's only a week since he left Maidenville. Then the flight out of Sydney was not until Sunday afternoon, so I dare say they wouldn't have arrived in Africa until the Monday. He would have been exhausted. Lord, I hope he is up to this trip.'
âHe's tough as old boots. They made us to last in the old days.'
âI thought he might give me a call, let me know he had arrived, but he's more likely to send a postcard. Bonny was saying at the meeting on Thursday that it takes over a week to send a card from America. When her mother flew over for John's wedding, Bonny said she was back before her postcards.'
âDon't you go worrying about him. Thanks for lunch and dinner, girl. We'll have to do it again. I'll come around and have a look at your stove on Monday.'
âHe said it could take two days.'
âThen I'll see it on Tuesday. Enjoy your freedom, girl.'
Mr Wilson never went to church, and he'd found himself a tree cutter who didn't mind working Sunday. At seven-thirty, a chainsaw began its roar outside Stella's lounge room, and limbs began falling.
She took her breakfast upstairs to her father's study. Its window looked down on Wilson's property, and from her seat at her father's desk she could watch the worker, at home in the trees, his chainsaw, when not in use, dangling from his belt on a long rope.
He is in his natural element, she thought. A young Tarzan. He worked with a safety belt, snibbing it to a limb below, before beginning to cut the limb above. One hand above the cut, he sawed through, or almost through the branch, then pushed it from him to crash to the earth below.
She stared like a child, afraid for the worker, but enthralled by his lack of fear. There was no-one to comment, no-one around to ask if God might deem it a suitable occupation for a woman of her maturity, no-one to care if she sat at the window for one hour or three, staring at the agility of the worker, who looked more primate than man, swinging from limb to limb, from tree to tree.
He saw her there in the late morning and he waved to her, then mouth grimacing, he mimed the cutting off of old Wilson's head. The old man was standing well back, bellowing instructions that couldn't compete with the chainsaw.
Stella laughed, reading the worker's hand signals clearly, and laughing at the final mimed punt kick of an imaginary head. She couldn't recognise the worker beneath his cap and ear muffs, but he looked like one of Percy White's boys. Probably the youngest, she decided. Parsimonious Percy had been the town woodman for years. He had handed the business over to his sons.
She placed her two hands to her ears, miming earmuffs. The worker smiled, and held up a thumb. âGood.'
She repeated the sign. âGood.'
The two, high above the ground and Mr Wilson, shared a private joke, laughing at the self-important little man down below.
âSilly woman,' she castigated herself. âYou're acting like a child this morning,' she said. âHe must think you quite moronic.' But it was not her opinion, only the opinion of her conditioning, and her inner voice replied. What rubbish. He likes the fact that you are watching him. He is proud of his skill, his ability in the trees. And rightly so, he's an artist of sorts. By watching him work you are admiring his art no less than you might admire the skilled paintbrush of an artist.
âYes,' Stella agreed, and she sat on. âPerhaps I should consider the purchase of earmuffs. They may save me from unwanted advice when I am trying to weed along the fence.' Mr Wilson was over-generous with his doubtful wisdom; one of the few areas of garden Stella neglected was beside Wilson's fence.
âOr perhaps I'll get one of those radio things with earphones, like Bonny's boys always seem to have attached to their heads. I'll buy myself one. Yes. On Monday I'll march into the electrical shop, pay for my stove and ask to see their range of radios . . . and I might look at their cordless phones while I'm about it. Have one installed in here, in the study. It would save Father's poor old legs.'
She went off to collect her knitting. It appeared that the White boy intended felling her neighbour's entire forest. It could be a long and noisy day, if an interesting one. But she should keep her hands busy while she watched the timber fall.
The Wilsons had lived next door since before her birth. They had planted, or allowed nature to plant, a miniature forest in their backyard. The trees were old. Dead branches fell at will, and frequently over the minister's fence. Mr Wilson had long been a thorn in the side of her father. A loud little man, he called himself C of E, but he hadn't been inside a church since his wedding day fifty years ago, and he'd told Martin he didn't intend seeing the inside of a bloody church again until they carried him in, feet first.
Martin had sworn he wouldn't bury him.
âI've got ten years on you, you cantankerous old coot. You won't get the bloody chance.' Wilson always got the final word.
The war had been raging for most of Stella's life, and she could understand her father's attitude towards him and his trees. The forest had annoyed her. Their lounge room saw no sunlight at all, and falling leaves constantly blocked the spouting. Martin was too old and heavy to climb these days, so the ladder work fell to Stella; however, the forest annoyance had recently become danger. A huge branch had come crashing down while Mrs Wilson had been hanging out the washing. Her clothesline, an old but solid contrivance, saved her from certain injury.
But I doubt it was your near miss that did the trick, Mrs Wilson, Stella thought. More likely my hedge fire, and fear of the local firebug. Whatever it was that encouraged her neighbour into parting with his dying forest, it could only be looked on as a plus. He may even get around to mowing his grass.
I'll have so much more light in the backyard; although it is beginning to look quite bare. Won't Father be in for a dreadful shock when he returns? No forest beside him, and no hedge before him. While he is not here to hold it back, the outside world is encroaching on his own secret little realm.
âMy goodness,' she said. âPerhaps I should take up my pen again.
His Secret World
, by Lea S. Temple.' She could see it, just as she had in her youth. The idea always came with a cluster of words, then imagination began filling in the spaces.
Deranged wife stalking the dark rooms at night with a kitchen knife. Minister screaming into the telephone in the wee small hours of the morning. The child . . . the small child hiding in the dark garden . . .
âStop this nonsense,' she said. âThis is a childish habit you have long put behind you. Stop this nonsense now.'
It was late afternoon when she saw the birds gathering outside her window. Their trees were gone, their nests, their perches now a pile of timber in Wilson's backyard.
âPoor birds,' she whispered. âI had given no thought to my birds.' Each time she looked outside there appeared to be more gathering. The branches were thick with birds. Strange. Like heavy fruit weighing down the boughs of the apple tree. Feathered fruit.
A shiver travelled down her spine. She thought of a picture show she'd been to with Ron. The birds gathering, attacking.
His secret world
.
Again the words played in her mind. The scene was coming, the words spilling, wanting to spill to paper, but this would be no love story, no Mills and Boon.
The house loomed like a dark entity behind the hedge. Birds gathered, their small beaks blood-flecked â
Again she shook her head.
How odd, she thought. There are hundreds of birds. I hadn't realised that Mr Wilson's trees would have given home to so many. But of course. Of course they must have. Where else have my birds lived? Oh, you poor dears. Where will you sleep tonight?
So many different varieties. She walked across to her own room and looked at her jacaranda trees. Birds by the score were perched there and more kept coming. As they flew in from their day of play and feeding, they circled and called, then came to jostle for position on the boughs, and to glare at her window with their wide accusing eyes.
âSome portent of doom . . . the gathering of birds,' she said. âStarlings? Sparrows? Didn't I read somewhere that they are the harbingers of death?'
Sparrows pecking at the window, trying to get in. The child, hammering at the window, trying to get out. Daddy. Daddy. Daddy.
Silly woman. Your imagination is running away with you. And why not? Why not indeed? Wasn't it always a better world?
Slowly she returned to the study, her fingers running through her hair. Freedom. She liked the bounce of her neck-length bob. Where Miss Moreland's scissors had not cut so straight, the curls had sprung up to conceal the mistakes.
âSamson in reverse,' she said. âMy imagination stolen by my hairpins.' Her hand reached out for paper. She shrugged, inserted it into the old typewriter and she began.
Time went away to that other place.
Â
So carefully she removed the white stockings and the pintucked frock. Now her small hands folded them, then placed them carefully on the chair. She felt cool in her pretty white briefs, her legs delightfully bared to the breeze. But shouldn't she remove her white briefs too? Mustn't get them dirty. Dirty was bad.
The oak was a grand climbing tree, and she a small bare monkey, free in her natural element. Green leaves rustled around her like the pages in her favourite book, and the birds, initially afraid, lost their fear of this small intruder. Soon they went about their business of love and courtship. The child sighed too deeply for one of her tender years. How she envied the birds their wings to fly.
Daddy said they flew south for the summer, flew to where it was cool. She liked cool. She flapped her small arms. âI'm a birdy. I'm a birdy.'
The voice from below startled her. From her perch high in the branches, she looked down now at the greying hair, and at the mouth screaming its words.
âDirty, filthy naked little slut. I'll show you naked. I'll show â '
Â
The town clock and the fading light halted her fingers, but beside the typewriter were seven double-spaced text-filled pages. Where had they come from?
âGood Lord,' she said. âGood Lord. Where have I been?'