âYou'll get yours.'
âNot from you.'
âSome day.' The Sumpsucker feared heights and freely admitted he was a coward, but he was the only one there to talk back to the Glass Canoe.
âWhat you following Stillsons for? You after a dustcoat?' The position of foreman was an eminence few would reach but most hoped for. A permanent carrot before them. The Glass Canoe himself had a dustcoat in his sights. The waiting men snickered, but even the Glass Canoe despised their support. He grinned broadly at their group as if at one man.
Far Away went in the locker room to change. Dutch Treat was sealing his precious carton and stowing it in the false bottom of his gladstone bag.
âDid you make contact?'
âNot yet, no. What frequency do you think He'd use?'
âHe's God, isn't He? All frequencies at once. Tune it anyhow you likeâyou'll get Him. But why don't you try it up on top of the plant? You won't get much reception down here. You can see the sky from up there.'
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SOMETHING FOR THE BOYS Out in the dawn the Samurai came across a square of light-gauge welded guardwire left over by a construction contractor. Without thinking very much about it, he brought it inside, bent down both ends and had a toastrack. There was a small battered electric stove in the amenities room, the rack fitting neatly over the hot coil. Gunga Din was filling the urn so the next shift could have their cup of tea first thing.
With more satisfaction than he had felt about anything he had done for Puroil, the Samurai threw the old chicken-wire rack away and substituted his.
He had done something for the crews, it was a good feeling.
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MATES Fifteen minutes later they waitedâpale, blank-faced sheepâfor the company bus. They stood in line on Road Nine on the edge of a huge ditch ten feet deep, eighty yards wide and hundreds long, like prisoners on the lip of a mass grave. Behind them was a three million gallon tank floated into position in this ditch.
Since it was a refinery, Puroil allowed no matches within its gates. Or lighters, though the smart ones carried them. Matches had to be smuggled in. The smartest thing was to smuggle them out, for Puroil matches came in boxes of 1200. This was a real service for all ranks. Some jokers liked to throw empty match boxes about the refinery to nettle the brass, but the best joke was to plant them in someone's bag or coat then ring the guards at the gate to report the breach of rules.
Each man checked his bag for prohibited articles that might have been slipped in by a practical joker and gave his socks a last pull to hide the scar.
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THE SURVIVAL OF WEEDS The Samurai waited in line for the bus with the rest of the crew on the lip of the great ditch. Idly he speculated on methods of defence against an attacker from all eight directions. He had been a formidable player in his judo days and it was second nature to him to consider his position at any time in relation to any possible opponent. Since his training from childhood by his peculiarly unworldly mother was away from any show of aggression, he considered only defence. Ambition was a sin, and had been submerged so far under layers of studied inoffensiveness that now this potentially dangerous man had drifted into a job as a shiftworker, a nominally unskilled man, one of the deprived, subhuman mass on whom our rich civilization so tentatively seems to rest.
The soil he stood on was dead. On its surface miniature mountains rose above pink plains; canals and lakes formed from wheel-tracks, footprints. It was dead, waiting to be torn about by explosions, bulldozers. Inert, plastic.
There was little talk in the bus and it was confined to aggressive or defensive noises. He considered this soil from the window. Here and there on the mixture of pink clay and shale a tough weed made a way for itself and for a brief lifetime sucked up enough water to go on living. But only the most tenacious, only the toughest lasted through a Puroil summer.
Here and there was a weed of a different kind; spiky, symmetrical, strange. He had seen it often when he walked among the tanks and bent once to pull out a specimen. Its roots reached as far underground as its leaves did above, but as well there was a penetrating aromatic smell from it and everywhere he touched it his fingers felt sticky so that hours later he was reminded of it. As if it belonged to a different planet. It grew in oil-soaked sand surrounding the tanks. The Samurai was not self-conscious enough to see that something like this was the impression he made on all who came against him.
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BURYING GROUND The Two Pot Screamer's rumour said right from the start the new plant was Jonahed; it was built on an Aboriginal burying ground and the spirits of the dead would never allow it to go right.
There was something in the Australian temperament that rejoiced in thinking the odds were against them. They liked to start behind scratch. The Two Pot Screamer, amateur columnist of the house journal, was aware of this. He'd written a short story on it, just to collect more rejection slips. He persisted in thinking of himself as an artist and only submitted his stuff to arty magazines and what did they care for factories? The first Australian factory, at Parramatta, was a place of correction.
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ACROSS THE RIVER The Great White Father wasn't on the bus that morning. No one knew who clocked off his card; maybe he didn't bother.
There were some mangroves grew aslant the creek and he was waiting under one of them for Cinderella who was standing at the foot of Boomerang Street, waiting for the Volga Boatman to ferry her across to the Great White Father's refuge from the Termitary and Grinding Works. He touched the leaves of those trees. Barely warm. They'd sucked in all the light they could get and were greedy for more.
On Saturdays and Sundays you heard the roar and echo of the power boats using this end of Clearwater Bay for their derisive turns. On the smelly mud green crabs slid under the blanket of water.
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A LARGE DOB Volga dipped the oars in without a splash, the muscles on his neck strained, the oars bent. He sang, she whistled; both in perfect time. You could hardly hear the sound of his strokes.
Far out on the bay, mullet rippled the skin of the water. Water slapped the boat with little chuckles, the rowlocks made hardly a creak. Volga had them lined with cord and smothered with Puroil grease. The inshore blade bit mud and blacked the water.
The Great White Father watched the Volga Boatman's thick back coming nearer, and Cinderella in the back of the rowing skiff. Volga's coming on well; he had character enough to have nothing to do with the company, but he's only happy when he has a boss to look up to. Poor sodsâthinking of the men herded inside the high cyclone wire fence topped with tight barbed wireâthey have to be told they're human. Where had they all got off the track? Was it when they were children, forced to knuckle under in the schools, made to leave their humanity outside the well-drilled classroom with their lunchbags, hanging on a nail? Why did they have to be taught again later that their humanity could be brought inside the classroom and the factory fence? Sooner or later someone has to teach them freedom. He smiled. Not a secret smile. When he smiled it was for all to see. He was no frustrated missionary like the Samurai. He was teaching these poor wretches, trained to captivity, to make life bearable. It was a shameful and unblessed thing to take the scum of people and wicked condemned men to be the seed with which you plant a nation.
The sun was hot. Trees shook out their shadows like skirts to keep the soil cool. He slipped under one, touching its naked trunk.
He'd get them pining for the natural state of man. Where they would start to do what they wanted when they wanted; acknowledge no man's orders simply because they were orders; where women were easy, as they are if you treat them right; and where you can always get a drop to drink when you're dry. For my jokes are dirty and I travel light.
He had no misgivings about freedom. He knew you could never get so much of it that it became a kind of death. He knew, too, that you can always squeeze out a bit more for yourself than you think.
He thought of Far Away Places who had broken his glasses at two in the morning on a rod welded to a stanchion just where it would poke your eye out. Being the sort he was, he put the compensation papers in but didn't make a nuisance of himself at the office, pushing his claim and asking questions continually. He had some idea there was a system and if you did your part others would do their part and justice would bring you a new pair of lenses eventually. That was the law, wasn't it? He didn't realize justice has to be pushed and teased and prodded and reminded, that the system won't work without your efforts. Your push is what makes the wheels turn. Without your shove there is no system.
He thought of Dadda, who had slipped on the polished corridor of the testing lab. Fell sideways, putting out an arm to break the fall. No one else in the corridor; none to see him fall. Hurrying to get done an extra test they put on him at the last minute. Men like the Sleeping Brute or Big Bits were never asked to do extra tests; they always argued. Why should argument exempt a man from work? The answer was built into Puroil; the foremen had to be men with no guts. If they did their job fairly, their own superiors said of them, âThere's always trouble wherever he is. Arguments. Complaints. Fuss.' Superiors wanted quietness and peace, and thought an absence of noise indicated a smooth-running machine.
Dadda's wife worked and was changing her pants at work, as they say; he was full of troubles and moody, and when he got into a fight outside a shift workers' pub one morning a week later, he found his arm was broken from that fall. Fractured radius.
âWhere's your accident report?' they said.
âIt didn't feel broken then. I didn't know it was broken. Do I get the foreman to write out accident reports every time I bump something?'
They said yes. He did that until they told him to stop it. He tried to explain that he fell trying to get an extra test done quickly, but the people he explained to were personnel peopleâcouldn't care less about lab tests. He told the lab boss, but he couldn't do anything about compo claims, he wasn't in Personnel. There was no one to listen. He got nothing. They even told him to go off work and not come back until he had a certificate to say he was fit. It didn't pay to have pride, like Far Away, and it didn't pay to be big and tough, like Dadda. It paid to be weak, cunning and gutless, like the Slug. The Slug was in business outside and although slimy, amoral and a foreman, was always lucky. He won a 16,000 dollar house in an art union, but still collected other men's empty soft drink bottles for the deposit. He shuffled about with his face rigged in a full, meaningless smile. As if he carried it in his hands and constantly made adjustments.
When the Slug had a backlog of orders and instructions for his three outside business enterprises, he would equip himself with an audience of white shirts, cause a panic somewhere, have it announced, then run up steps with the white shirts, working himself into the lead. A dramatic collapse, a clutching of the shirt front and there he was breathless and pale, a dead ringer for a heart attack. Good for five days off with pay while he caught up with his outside work.
The Great White Father eased the bow of the skiff expertly into the bank of the river Eel with a carelessly extended foot. He shoved the boat about, headed it upstream and stepped aboard.
âHow many?' kicking the sacks of beer.
âFour dozen,' rolling the words against his palate as if he could taste them.
âGold Label?'
âHalf and half.'
âGood man.' He kissed Cinderella on the nearest strip of bare flesh that presented itself, her cheek. Too late she turned her lips to him; he was looking away across the water through a gap in the oil-coated mangroves. It was an interesting view. A foreman called Samples was creeping along slowly on a motor-scooter looking keenly westward. He was shifted from distillation work to tankage and knew nothing about his new job, but instead of asking questions he would tell an operator to get him a sample of something, then follow discreetly to see where he got it. The Great White Father smiled. The world was normal.
Volga aimed the skiff for a spot on the eastern bank where a large overhang of branches hid the stone-slabbed landing-place. There was a narrow canal dug into the bank so the boat could be hidden. The tide ebbed miserably, baring hydrocarbon stains. Muttering rose from the oil-dark waves.
As he lifted Cinderella on to the stones, the Great White Father got a powerful whiff of talcum powder undoubtedly applied on top of yesterday's layer. Looking into the blue iris of his eyes that contained the dull black pupil she felt warm and close as if his arms were round her and after uncounted anonymous embraces treasured the touch of his surfaces on hers. He kissed her again, this time on her smeared, shiny mouth. As he did so, his eyes were held by a large dob of sleepy dust which she had moved from the inside corner of her eye on to her dry, thickly coated cheek. His lips must have narrowly missed picking it up when he kissed her before. It seemed to have a hard end of a light brown colour, like a head. And a greyish-white body and wet tail. Almost as if it were alive and had crawled out from her eye.
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FUNCTIONAL MAN Cinderella walked ahead on the twisting secret path to the hideaway. The two men carried the beer.
âWhat's all this about making the shacks bigger?' she asked tactlessly. Shacks! In reproof, a branch whipped back on her face and neatly cleaned her cheek of a patch of make-up.
âThe hideaway is going to be extensively redecorated, remodelled and so on,' said Volga, injured. âI like the idea of ranch style,' he added, lobbying for his own view.
âI like the white look,' said the Great White Father. âSpanish hacienda. White for purity and human buttocks.' Cinderella waggled hers. âBut we'll have it green to match the mangroves.'