He heard sirens and, in the distance, doors slamming and feet on bitumen. There was a short silence. When he looked into the sky, with its lines and circles and scattering of stars, there was a figure beside him saying, âNothing broken ⦠do you think you can stand up?'
âYes.' He sat up, splayed his legs and stumbled to his feet.
âSteady,' the paramedic said, helping him.
âI'm okay.' He reclaimed his arm and looked at the car, mostly intact, its edges and corners crushed smooth. âEveryone's alright?'
âYou should go with your son.'
âRighto.'
The man led him towards the road. He looked back at the torches poking around inside the car. âWhat have I done?' he asked.
âDon't worry about that. Your son needs you now.'
âCarelyn?'
âCome on. We got him out, but his leg's smashed up.'
He felt the road beneath his feet. He was blinded by the light inside the ambulanceâclean, white, drugged and bandaged, electrical equipment packed into bays; a spot for the sheets and a shelf for the rugs; little blue boxes full of dressings packed in plastic; a drip stand, a bag of clear fluid and a tube leading to his son's arm; a catheter and his boy, bare-shouldered and flat-chested, lying on a chaotic bed of linen and torn plastic.
âChrist, Harry,' he said to him, climbing into the ambulance, sitting on a seat that was half as wide as his arse, squeezing in beside a second paramedic. This man smiled at him and said, âRelax, it's just his leg.'
Trevor met his eyes. Right, he wanted to say. Nothing serious? But he looked at his son and wasn't convinced. The paint on his arms and hands, his hair, wet with sweat, pushed back off his face by one of these strangers; the rug across his belly and the red cast clamped around his leg.
He leaned forward and ran his hand across his face. âHarry, can you hear me?' he asked, but the paramedic just said, âHe was awake ⦠but we've given him a sedative.'
The back doors closed and they drove off, quickly picking up speed, switching on their lights and siren and hurtling down the highway.
âYou the father?' the driver called back.
âYes.'
âWhat happened?'
âI don't know.'
He held his son's hand and stroked it. It was warm, and he could feel the bones and knuckles. He looked at his small lips, redder than usual, and his ski-jump nose with its little beads of sweat. His eyebrows, rising as they met in the middle of his face. âChrist ⦠sorry,' he said.
The world had stopped. There was nothing beyond the ambulance, the road, the two little tabs stuck to Harry's chest, the monitor and the numbers that meant nothing to him. âChrist.' He cried, placing his son's hand on his knees, dropping his head down onto it, smelling him, gasping.
The paramedic touched his shoulder. âPeople have accidents. He'll come good.' He indicated the trace that described the boy's will to live.
Trevor took a deep breath. He wanted to thank him. To say, Enough of this and you might make me believe. Instead, he said, âWhat about my other son?'
âHe went in the other ambulance. Seemed okay, but he'd knocked his head, so they put him in a brace.'
Harry opened his eyes and saw his father. He smiled.
âIt's just your leg,' Trevor said.
âAgain,' the paramedic said to Harry. âOne to ten.'
âNine.'
âWe're nearly there,' Trevor said, and Harry closed his eyes and took a deep breath from the mask over his nose and mouth.
âMy wife?' Trevor asked.
The paramedic looked at him, thinking, deciding. âThere was another ambulance.'
âSo?'
âThey've got her.'
âBut she's okay?'
He shrugged, slowly. âLet's just worry about the little fella's leg.'
Trevor stared at his son's closed eyes.
âWhere were you headed?'
But he couldn't answer.
Trevor stood at the hospital window, third floor, high dependency, watching 3 am Port Augusta struggle through another night. An ambulance pulled into Emergency.
Their
ambulance, most probably, tasked with someone else's disaster, driving from one nightmare-avoided (or realised) to the next, as if it were delivering bread.
He went into Harry's roomâsmall, stripped back, full of plugs and buttons and gas vents; monitors singing above the hum of the air-conditioning. He sat beside him, took his hand and studied his face. âI'm sorry,' he repeated. âI'm sorry.' He wondered if his hand would hold a whip again, or pluck lavender from its stem; if he'd ever jump back on his trail bike (and now he studied his trussed-up leg) or run around a paddock.
No, he told himself. He'll come good. Two days, a week, a month, a year; small bones had a way of fixing themselves; skin, of healing, hiding its history of trauma.
A nurse entered.
âWhen's the doctor due?' he asked.
âHe's still downstairs,' she replied. âI think they're busy in Emergency.'
âNo one's told me anything about my wife.'
âThe doctor will know. He's the one you've got to talk to.'
She checked Harry's pain reliefâdripping one clear, cold millilitre per minuteâand adjusted a red knob. âHe looks comfortable,' she said, but he didn't respond. He stood and walked across the hallway into Aiden's room. There were two beds. Another young man was listening to music through headphones. He sat beside his sleeping son, his eyes padded with gauze, bandaged, the paint still visible on his cheeks and neck. The young man slipped off his headphones, looked at him and said, âHe woke up for a while.'
âHow long ago?'
âHalf an hour, perhaps. Said he'd been in an accident. Nothin' too bad?'
âNo, I don't think so.'
âTold me he got some paint in his eyes.'
âYes.'
âThat'll come good, if that's the worst of it.'
He just wanted to say, Shut the fuck up, and perhaps the young man sensed this. He slipped the headphones back over his ears.
Trevor reached out and felt the bandage, soft and tight around his son's skull. That'll come good, he thought. The eyes too, he guessed, could handle their fair share: acid, diesel, metal splinters from grinders, Harry poking him with a stick, a face full of drench.
Anyway, they had to come good. Aiden himself had explained that he wanted, needed, to be a farmer. His eyes and hands would be his livelihood. There was no alternative, no other way to get around the problem.
âAiden, you awake?' he asked. He heard the response in his son's breath, saw it in his jaw, opening and closing.
âCan I take this stuff off now?'
âNo, wait for the doctor.'
âI can see light ⦠and the bandage.'
âThat's good, but you're gonna have to wait. Is there any other pain?'
âNo ⦠my arse and backbone's sore, but I can move.' He wriggled his hips to show him. âHow's Shit-for-brains?'
âHe's banged up his leg, but he's okay.'
âIs it broken?'
âSeveral places.' And he saw the door, crushed on Harry's leg. âThere were some gashes but they've fixed 'em.' He could see crushed metal hanging from the car and fragments of Harry's pants blowing in the breeze.
âAnd what about Mum?'
âStill trying to find out.'
There was a long pause. The prospect of bruises or a broken collar bone, concussion, or maybe, maybe she'd just walked away from the wreck? Of course; maybe it was worse; maybe she was dead; maybe the doctor was just waiting to tell them. Or nearly dead, strung up with a million wires and tubes? Maybe she was holding on, waiting for them, desperate to tell them how much she loved them.
âI'll go find out,' Trevor said, standing.
Aiden reached for him. Trevor took his hand and squeezed it. âI know it seems bad â¦'
Aiden, blinded by the bandages, didn't know if he could trust his father's words. âHarry's leg will heal?'
âYes.'
And then he asked, âDid we hit something?'
Trevor waited. âThere was a roo on the road.'
Silence; nothing except the cymbals and bass drum from the second bed.
âI must have swerved to avoid it.'
As Aiden thought, You should've hit it. You knew to keep going, Dad. Instead he said, âIt's just instinct, I suppose.'
Trevor leaned forward. âGet some sleep.' He moved closer. âI'll be back as soon as I can.' He went out and stood in the middle of the hallway. âHello?'
Nothing. There was a radio, somewhere, busy with country music. He approached the nurses' station but there were just piles of unfinished paperwork, a half-eaten yoghurt, and charity chocolates. âHello?'
He walked along the hallway, looking into each room. Darkness. Green and red light. A television left on. Someone smiling at him, asking when breakfast was due. He checked his watch. âIt's only three-thirty.'
Eventually he came to the television room. He slid the door open, went inside and a middle-aged man, wearing a singlet and pyjama pants, said, âHow are yer?'
âYou haven't seen the nurse?' He sat down beside him.
âHa! Good luck.'
The man was watching a black-and-white movie, John Mills, a few London gangsters, and the inside of a bank vault. âWarren,' he said.
âTrevor.' They shook hands.
âAbsolute shit at night,' the stranger explained. âIt's either this or how to flatten yer fuckin'⦠abs.'
âCan't sleep?' Trevor asked.
âSleep all day. Night time's better: no one to bother you.'
âI need to find a doctor.'
âWhat, y' sick?' He smiled.
âI wanna find out where my wife is.'
âWhat happened to her?'
âI rolled the car. They took her in a different ambulance.'
âYou should go down to the main desk and ask. Decent roll?'
âSorry?'
âYour car?'
Trevor shrugged. âI suppose. We ended up in ⦠the bushes.'
The man massaged the stubble on his chin. âI've rolled me car a couple of times. Dirt roads ⦠I mean, y' start off slow, don't yer, but the next thing yer doin' eighty and there's a bend and bam, over you go.'
He watched an ad: a ladder being assembled, broken down and put back together.
âI just ducked, as we tumbled,' Warren said, remembering. âI's sure it was gonna crush me, so I ducked â¦'
Trevor saw his lips moving and heard sound but didn't really know what he was saying. He wanted to stand, find his wife, but something was stopping him.
âSo, who was in the car with you?' Warren asked.
âMy sons ⦠my wife.'
âRight.' He was watching the movie. âBoys okay?'
But he didn't want to answer.
âI'm off to bed. You want this on?'
âWhy not?'
Warren hitched his pyjama pants and was gone. Trevor was left with no excuse. âOne's fucked up his leg,' he replied, to the empty room. âThe other one's blind.' And then he cried, dropped to the ground and drew himself into his usual tight ball. Five, ten minutes. The storm of tears receding and overtaking him. Fence posts; distance markers; describing his journey towards darkness.
âMr Wilkie?'
It was a doctor, but not the reassuring, tweed-jacket, John Mills type. A young Indian in jeans and sandshoes.
âYes,' Trevor said, realising there was no escape from this room. He sat up, took a deep breath and looked at the doctor who, having put on his solemn face, sat opposite him. âYou have been in a motor vehicle accident?' he asked.
âYes.'
There was silence; nothing, except a strangely out-of-place chase sequence.
Part Two
2005
9
It had been a moderate summer. There'd only been a few days when they'd had to retreat indoors, switching on the backup generator, re-watching movies, staying out of each other's way. January had rolled towards its conclusion; the two month anniversary had come and gone (like some stranger waiting on their doorstep, never knocking). Then, a storm had arrived. Low, grey clouds spread across Bundeena. Sand had blown around the compound, filling the empty jars and bottles that had fallen from Harry's tree. Trevor had picked them up, once, twice, but had decided to leave the rest for now; he'd wait until Harry came home.
The muster crew's hut had filled with sand again. Chris had asked Trevor if he should sweep it out, but he'd just shrugged and said, âIf you feel like it.' Murray had overheard them and taken Chris and a couple of brooms and swept it out anyway. Chris had been surprised at how easy-going, how helpful his uncle had been. Something had changed.
Chris knew the old man had liked Carelyn. He'd often help her. More than Trevor, who was his son, which made it different. Fathers and sons had to be at odds, he guessed. Which perhaps was why Murray didn't like him. Maybe he'd become his son, somehow.
Fay and Chris had worked on the veggies and tended the chooks through this first part of summer. To Fay, it was important that when Harry returned everything was normal. He would want to come out and fill his tin with grain and sprinkle it; he would want to collect eggs and, she thought, it might be good for a laugh if he dropped a few, and said something like shit or fuck, looking at her apologetically, and of course she'd say (she could hear herself now), âNot to worry, Harry.'
She'd often think about her grand-nephew. How she loved him. More (she felt) since she'd visited him at the Children's Hospital; since she'd seen him, sitting up in bed eating ice-cream and jelly; since she'd heard him say, âIt's already better, Aunty Fay. They reckon I'll be back on my bike by September.'
At which point Aiden had just looked at him. âHighly unlikely, dickbrain.'
Aiden hadn't forgotten his brother. He'd cleaned and oiled his bike; emailed his teachers and friends with regular updates (âYes, unfortunately, he is just as annoying as ever'); given him his spare mattress so he wouldn't have trouble getting in and out of bed; bought posters and put them up around the room.
He, like Fay, and all of them, had realised how much he missed Harry. After Aiden's own week in hospital, and after the bandages had come off, the first thing he'd said to Murray (who'd been left in Port Augusta) was, âWhat time's the bus for Adelaide tomorrow?'
Carelyn was gone, and he'd spent most of the days since in agony, with a sore jaw from trying to stop himself crying. But now, he sensed, his thoughts should turn to the living.
âBill Clarke's comin' to drive us home,' Murray had explained, but Aiden was having none of that. âCan he drive us to Adelaide, or should we get the bus?'
So he'd caught the bus, or been driven to town by Trevor, every week over those first two months of holidays. He'd slept beside his father in his brother's room on a couch they made up every night. He'd spent his holidays telling his brother to get off his arse and hobble down to the cafeteria with him; to walk across to the gardens; to keep on with his physio, despite feeling like he didn't care about anything anymore.
Trevorâhis thoughts split between house, farm and black- dog hours spent sitting on a shitty public toilet (until the cleaner moved him on)âhad been there for the first two weeks. He'd watched the nurses remove his son's cast, adjust the metal pins, clean his skin, treat an infection and try to humour him. Helped him with his pain, and he'd cleaned his arse. Grown close, so that they were really just the same being. Washed him and dressed him and read to him, and played games that bored him shitless. Dealt with the voices telling him he'd had enough.
And later, he'd helped him with exercises; two, three, four times a day, telling him the more he did the faster he'd be home.
After Christmas and New Year he'd realised how much needed doing back at Bundeena. So he'd asked him if he minded if Murray came to stay.
âI suppose,' he'd agreed.
Murray, with his unsmokable cigarettes and transistor, had set up on the couch. At first Harry wasn't happy. âPop, can we play Scrabble?'
âNo.'
âPop, they got
Mad Max
on tonight.'
âWell ⦠you go.'
Then Murray would disappear for hours at a time, sitting on a bench just beyond the yellow line at the entrance, chugging away, making friends with every stray father and uncle he could find. Anything was better than
that
room, trapping him all day, every day (mostly). Just because his son hadn't taken out the roo. He couldn't stand the antiseptic smell, the nurses' fake smiles, the small servings of lean beef and mixed veg. The walls, closing in on him. âHarry, I'm just off for a smoke.'
âBut, Pop, I got physio in a minute.'
âThe nurse can take you. That's what she gets paid for.'
Harry felt like a chunk of his world had been surgically removed: the bottle tree, his whip and trail bike. Even his responsibilities: vacuuming his room, making sure his homework was packaged and addressed ready to be sent off to SOTA. And his rewards: building jumps with Aiden, helping his mum spoon mixture into patties. This is why he was lostâlying staring up at the ceiling of square tiles; watching, but not watching, the plasma in the television room. Looking at Murray and thinking, What have you got to say? What are we going to do?
Even the afternoon of his mother's funeral, as he sat trussed up in bed, reaching out through the air, the walls, the city, the hills, along the hundreds of kilometres of railway track. âWhat time does it start?' he'd asked Murray.
âTwo.'
As he'd looked at his grandfather, and asked with his eyes, Will it be better afterwards? Murray's face replying, Not necessarily.
Back at Bundeena, Aiden had retreated to the shed. To Fay's old Holden, its windows sitting loose in their slots, a heavy green tarpaulin pulled back to reveal an unfinished artwork along the body of the car: a house and a field of purple lavender; a bottle tree; a yelping dog; and a herd of stick-legged cattle wandering across the bonnet. There were people too: round-headed, big-bodied; a mum and dad, boys, an old man, a woman, a blur of paint disappearing into the wheel well.
Chris was drawing more flowersâhibiscus, and lavender.
âNot too small,' Aiden said to him.
Chris knew how they could paint them: olive-green stems, the florets, the small serrated leaves. His hand made long, flowing lines as his head tipped from side-to-side to follow his own music. âIt's quiet now.'
Aiden said, âWell, it's gonna be, isn't it?' He wondered how much Chris really understood. âShe's not coming home.' Dipping his brush, starting on a rose with a stem the size of a gum tree.
âNo one says much anymore,' Chris continued.
âI do. Dad does. Pop's always grumbling.'
But Chris was thinking about it differently: how they used to form groups and laugh or discuss cattle prices; how there was always a buzz; how Carelyn always seemed to be the centre of everything: cooking, SOTA, arguing with Murray, keeping the boys in line. He wondered who would do these things now; who would make Aiden polish his boots, remind Trevor about air filters and ordering diesel; who'd make Murray take his cigarettes outside. âWe need someone to take over,' he said.
âTake over what?'
âThe house.'
Aiden scraped the bottom of the tin for the last of the paint.
âSomeone to take Mum's job?'
âYes.'
âWho's gonna do that?'
Chris stopped to think. âMaybe it should be you.'
âI've got school.'
âMaybe you should quit.'
âI'm not allowed to.'
Aiden dropped his brush into the empty tin, placed it on the bench and wiped his hands on an old singlet. âThat's the last of it,' he said.
Chris stopped half-way through a flower. âShould we buy some more?'
Aiden couldn't answer. There'd been enough in the car to finish the mural. âWe should,' he replied. âPerhaps we can ask Dad.'
Chris couldn't see the point of drawing stems and leaves no one would ever paint. âI can pay for it.'
âHow much you got?'
âTwo hundred and ⦠fifteen dollars.'
Aiden smiled. âWell, if you'd like. You could choose the colours.'
Chris thought again. âNo, we gotta keep it the same.' He stood, gathered the empty cans and said, âI'll write down the names.' Then he turned and walked from the shed. Threw the brush back at Aiden. âAren't you gonna clean it?'
âYes,' Aiden replied, holding the brush, studying it.
It was khaki. He could still see it, dissolving in his eyes; the following few days, on his face; even a week later when the dressings were removed. A translucent green, filtering every object he saw in his room, as his new roommate (a tyre-fitter named Sterry) said, âGood as new, eh?'
âSort of.'
âStill not clear?' the specialist had asked.
âClear enough.'
The doctor had looked at Trevor. âIt'll fade over the next few weeks.'
Aiden hadn't been too concerned. He was studying his good pants and jacket, lying across his bed. He'd looked at his father and asked, âWhat time does it start?'
âTwo.'
âDo we gotta get there early?'
âI suppose we should.'
Although he really wanted to ask, Do we gotta go at all? Do we have to make a public display of all this? Why? What will it achieve?
Trevor, already in his own suit, had ironed his son's clothes. âYou'll feel better when it's over.'
After everybody's watched us, with false pity, Aiden wanted to say. When they've seen us blubber, and break down.
He looked at the brush, ran the bristles over his hand and threw it across the shed. He wondered why he was bothering. The mural, by necessity, would have to remain unfinished. He picked up the singlet and smeared the fresh paint across the door.
Trevor was standing beside him. âYou okay?'
He looked up without speaking.
âCould you help Fay get tea started?'
Then studied his mural.
âWell?'
âOkay!'
Trevor stood his ground. âThere's only one of me,' he said.
âI know.'
âYou know that Chris is next to useless.' He reminded him of the day he'd asked Chris to hang out washing and found him, an hour later, carving flowers out of cheese slices, sticking them onto windows and watching them melt and peel off. He turned and walked away, stopped and looked back. âCome on then.'
âI'm coming.'
âYou got the shits on?'
Aiden just stared at him, thinking, You are the reason. You.
âWell?' Trevor asked.
He dropped his head into his hands. âFuck off,' he whispered.
âWhat?'
Don't make me say it, he thought.
But Trevor was gone, into his ute, throwing up gravel and dust as he disappeared down the hill.
âFuck!' He stood, kicked the side panel of the car, two, three times and stared at it. Some of the paint had flaked off but the scene was mostly intact, remade with new hills and valleys. He kicked it again, this time on the passenger door. âFuck you!' he shouted.
He walked to the front of the shed, sat on his trail bike and started it. Then he revved the engine and drove off, almost immediately at full speed. Fay came out of the house, calling something to him.
He rode down the hill onto the main bore run. Then, travelling on the verge, opened his throttle and shot across the desert. He squinted, but there was no wind, no sand. He knew there wasn't any danger; knew he'd be fine. Accidents only happened to the old, and soft, and stupid. He leaned forward and, for the first time in months, felt good. Angry-good. Dropping his head he worked the throttle and rode the bumps and clumps of bluegrass gently in his saddle. The horizon kept receding, as he hoped it would. There was no limit to this world, to its sand and gidgee trees, its bushes and dried bores. It just accepted him as he went further, but no further, into it. It had no life, no death, no love; no understanding and no forgiveness; it had nothing; no morals, values, compassion. It didn't like him, it didn't hate him; it refused to know anyone or anything.
He saw a few kangaroos and set off into the grass, chasing them. They fled then stopped and looked back at him. He kept moving. Full throttle. They jumped away. He closed on them. They stopped. He kept moving. They started again, but he was up to them.
There was a single juvenile at the back, by itself. As he caught up to it he kicked it in the back of the head and it tumbled. He stopped, turned and went back to it. The other roos stood watching. âFuck off,' he shouted. He got off his bike, killed the engine and let it fall into the sand.
The juvenile had just got to its feet, but he kicked it in the head again and it fell over. He stood watching, detached, unaffected by the animal's plight. It kicked its legs, making a long, deep arc in the sand, unable to stand up.
He took a deep breath, found his knife in his pocket and opened it. Then he knelt down beside the animal, grabbed its scrotum and cut into it. The roo struggled and made a series of low, guttural moans. Only wanting to finish the job, he castrated it, stood up and threw the warm, bloodied sac onto its body.
He waited for a moment, satisfied. Saw it bleed from the wound, and noticed how the sand welcomed the blood. How it stopped moving, mostly. Breathed deeply; seemed to be asleep.
He looked at the other roos. âWell?'
They turned and hopped off, occasionally stopping to look back.
He saw that the animal was still moving, but didn't care.