The water was hot for once. Violet fed in coins and stood under the thin stream for a long time with her mouth open, swallowing now and then, rotating slowly to spread the heat, her skin turning pink. She dried herself in the narrow cubicle and pulled on the polka-dot robe Macy had given her. Halfway up the stairs she met Macy coming down, a dark shape against the landing window, one hand groping in her bag, the other applying lipstick. Macy stopped and let out a low whistle. âHow's your head?' she asked.
Violet felt ashamed. âI'm sorry. I didn't mean to drink so much.'
As they drew level Macy peered at her; she looked distracted, but her voice was sympathetic. âDon't worry, love, happens to us all. Fun night. But I should have vetoed that last Mojito.' Violet held on to the banister while Macy rifled through her bag, pressed a blister pack into her hand. âIbuprofen,' she said. âEat a greasy breakfast, take two of these and drink plenty of water. You working tonight?' Violet nodded, swallowing the question she wanted to ask.
Did I do anything stupid last night? Did I embarrass you?
âYou should be right in a few hours,' said Macy. âTake it easy on yourself, hon. I'm running late for work, catch you later.' AÂ quick smile and she was gone.
Had Violet blown it? The anxiety niggled at her. Macy had seemed a bit distant, but then she was late for work. Anyway there was no point in dwelling on it now. She had a room to clean up, a head to nurse back to health and, in just a few hours, a job to do. On the dot of five, Merlin would be waiting for her in the foyer to run through tonight's act; the alarm clock by her bed was already sneaking towards midday.
Mopping up the mess on her floor, she decided the towel was not worth saving: the smell would stick in its fibres, a reminder of her own foolishness, her lack of control. She'd throw it out â she had a spare. She hid it in a plastic bag, washed her hands thoroughly and dabbed some rose oil on her neck, laced up her sneakers and padded downstairs. The desk clerk was in his usual position, listening to the greyhound races on the radio. He nodded hello, just like normal.
âHi Kev,' she said, clearing a rattle from her throat. âWhere are the bins â out the back?' He pointed to the fire exit: down the alley, hang a right.
It stunk out here. The ground was littered with detritus, and gusts of wind shot down the narrow chute between the buildings, stirring up litter and acrid smells. A can rattled back and forth, the sound bouncing loud against the concrete walls. In the gap overhead hung a thin strip of sky, grey and dirty-looking. She hurried to the nearest bin and lifted the lid.
There, on top of the rubbish, lay a spent white shape: feathers splayed and soiled, claws clenched shut, one dead eye staring up at nothing, absolutely still. Violet spun away as the nausea rose in her throat, and her empty stomach lurched against her ribs. Bent double, she placed her palm against the concrete wall and gave in to the nausea, her mind a perfect blank.
[Unmarked shopfront, shopping strip 3, Subzone 18: Milk | Chase]
âOh, Milkman ⦠it's you ⦠What's happening?'
âNot much, just dropping by to pick up my groceries.'
âRight â¦'
âOkay ⦠So are you going to let me in, or what?'
âSure, guess so.'
[â]
âWhat's up, Chase? You been getting high on your own supply again?'
âNo, Milkman. To be quite frank I'm not so happy with you right now. Come the fuck inside, hurry up.'
âWhat? I paid upfront last time, we're all square.'
âYeah, Milky, you're my number one customer, but I can't be having this kind of attention on me. Not from the straights, I got no credit there.'
âI don't know what you're talking about. I've got stuff to do. Please, Chase, just spit it out.'
âSome Polbiz chick came knocking here, looking for you.'
âWhat? Way the hell out here â she came to the outer subzones?'
âYep. Short little shaved-head chick, dressed all tidy like some lesbo crime-show bitch. Big old wide-eyed stare on her. She came to my door, my personal door, looking for you. So ⦠what the fuck?'
âWhat are you on about? That can't be right. Nobody knows I come out here. Exactly when was this?'
âIt was exactly three days ago, Milk.'
âWhy didn't you message me?'
âI'm not your secretary or any other bastard's. I got a degree in chemical engineering. I've done time and I don't need straights sniffing round here. You want to be more careful who you mix with.'
âI don't know any tidy girl with a shaved head. What did she say?'
âSaid she was looking for this
super-talented
underground moodie
they call Milk
â that's her words, not mine. Said she had a job offer for him.'
âWhat did you tell her?'
âWhat do you think? Nothing, just played dumb. What's a moodie? Never heard of a dude called Milk. Stupid-sounding name.'
âThanks.'
âDon't mention it. Look, man, I don't mean to break your balls, it's just I thought we had a private arrangement. You know I'm undoc, and that was my choice, to start over. But I got rent and bills and â'
âAnd the last thing you need is Polbiz types sniffing round. I know. But I have no idea who you're talking about. Jesus, now you've got me worried. I'm so tired, Chase. Been burning the candle both ends, and I swear I don't know why anyone would be looking for me. I just make my living and keep my head down.'
âFine, let's just run through your order and get that sorted, okay? No hard feelings, you're still my best customer. Hell, you're a friend. But maybe you should use the back door from now on. And check you don't get followed.'
âChase, I'd apologise, if I had any idea what the hell you're on about. But I don't know this person and I can't take responsibility for them. My nose is clean and my conscience is clear. So can we just get on with it?'
âSure. Forget it, man. Alright ⦠check this out. I've got two newbies this month. I call this first one Purple Haze. Gonna knock your socks off, Milkman.'
âOkay, great. Talk me through it.'
âThink of it as the elephant tranquilliser of aromas: the big calm, eye of the storm. Subdue any fucker inside ten seconds. You with me? You ready?'
âYeah, okay, hit the button.'
âHey, pull that blind down, will ya? Your little visitor's put the shits up me.'
âShe's nothing to do with me. Better have a big sniff yourself. You need to calm down, this paranoid stuff doesn't suit you.'
âAlright, alright. Here we go â¦'
âUh. Yeah. Whoa. I see what you mean.'
âSee? Here, sit down.'
âDon't mind if I do. Whooooaaa! Oh yes, indeed that is, what do we call it, I mean it's ⦠Nice.'
âHehe. Told ya so. That feels better, huh? Much better. Lasts about ten minutes.'
âWhew, I'm sideways. Give me a minute or two.'
[â]
âOkay, the verdict: it's a fine piece of work, Chase. Might just be a curio, not sure where I could use it, but still a fine piece of work.'
âCome on, Milkman, you'll find a use for it. You always do.'
CHAPTER 9:
TALENT
[Old glue factory, Warde Street, The Quarter: Tally | Blue | Pearl | various undocs]
The party was roughly a twenty-minute walk from home, counting stops to hitch up pants and check their bearings; Tally's belt had broken and her jeans had developed a habit of trying to slither off. They got there just on dusk and picked their way through the gloom of the abandoned factory building, guided by a buzz of voices and music, Tally sticking close behind Blue.
A trail of sparks rose from behind a busted brick wall, and they walked through a gap into a shell of a room that opened onto the sky. There were figures scattered amongst the weeds and rubble, a fire burning in a drum, hip-hop clanking on a dinky stereo; cigarette smoke and the sweet stink of dope. Faces turned towards them, and someone raised a cup aloft in greeting.
There were twenty-five people tops, Tally guessed, perched on milk crates and piles of blackened bricks, or just standing around. Blue had heard about the party that night he didn't come home, when he was out searching for his old crew to ask them about that girl Junie who'd been found under the bridge. He said he'd know people there, but anyone was welcome. âOpen house,' he'd said. âGot no roof.' She liked to catch his rare smiles. His face creased up like a happy kid and that made her grin too.
âKeg!' called a voice. âGrab a cup, it's going fast.'
âFell off the back of a truck,' said someone else.
Introductions were brief but friendly enough. The burned-out factory was on the edge of the forgotten Maribyrnong River, a dank and boggy waterway that smelled like it had taken its last gasp; the occasion was Easter, whatever that meant. As a friend of Blue's had put it when he'd passed on the invitation: âAny excuse for a piss-up!'
You could see the city from here, a cluster of bright stalagmites. Despite the location, there was something lovely about the geometry of the ruined factory, a set of shapes that had not quite succumbed to the forces of destruction.
Blue was busy exchanging a complicated handshake with the guy who'd invited them, so Tally found a vantage point near the fire to assess the situation. She recognised a couple of faces and saw one of Diggy's crew members, a chubby kid called Ralph, the one Moz always picked on worst. He nodded at her; she nodded back, then stood there wondering if she should go over and say something, or find a seat, or what. Hard to tell what the rules were.
When they were younger, Max had dragged Grace and her along to a few parties, rowdy nights full of spilled beer and smoke butts, lurching bodies and shrieking laughter, sometimes a fight out in the backyard, but this seemed like a more subdued affair. It was early, Tally reminded herself. Parties always started off quiet.
Two dark-skinned girls were toasting marshmallows over the fire, and the sweet smell of burned sugar gave Tally a familiar pang.
We used to do that
. A white blob caught alight; there was a hiss of blue flame and a squeal of laughter. âBlow on it, quick, blow on it!' said the older girl.
âPour them kids a drink,' instructed a weathered old man sitting on a milk crate near the fire. His teeth were chalky stumps, but he perched on the crate primly, like it was some kind of throne. He should have looked ridiculous, but there was a kind of dignity about him, although Tally could pick no reason for it.
Blue handed her a plastic cup of beer and took a seat, waved her to a nearby crate, still talking to his friend in a low voice. She waited to be introduced, but they were deep in discussion about people she did not know. Conversations rose and fell from nearby huddles, but nobody was looking her way.
âWhat happened to the roof?' she said loudly to no one in particular.
The old man grunted. âSome kids were living here last year, with tomato plants and chickens and everything. Fell asleep and didn't put the campfire out properly. Bloody lucky they didn't get barbecued.'
âWhat about the chickens, did they escape?' asked Tally. She'd always liked those goofy birds.
âChickens? Went up to the great Kentucky Fried in the sky,' said the old guy, wheezing at his own joke. âStraight to drumstick heaven!'
That was the kind of crack she'd never found funny. âWell, I hope they got out,' she said. âWe had chickens once. This one called Mindy was real smart â we taught her to be a stunt chicken. She'd balance on your head.'
Nobody said anything. The girls blew on their marshmallows.
âYou can train chickens,' added Tally. âThey're actually quite intelligent.'
âTrain 'em into a frypan,' chortled the old man. âThat's my kind of chicken.'
More people showed up, the stereo got louder and the party spread further into the roofless room. A man with matted hair busted up a wooden chair and put the bits into the fire drum. Sparks flew into the sky, and Tally watched them snaking upwards, a line of dots and dashes vanishing on the wind. She sipped her beer and watched new faces emerge from behind the wall, into the light and sound.
âKeg,' she remarked casually to a couple of new arrivals. âFell off the back of a truck, grab a cup.' Her position, to one side of the hole that served as a doorway, meant she could monitor all comings and goings.
The old man squinted at her. âWho ya barrack for, kid?'
âEh?'
He repeated himself, but still it made no sense. Barack, she thought â that old president guy, the one who got shot in the leg?
âRichmond, St Kilda, what? Ya bloody footy team. Who's your team?'
âOh,' she said, âI don't have one.'
The old man looked offended. âWhat, you're an Aussie, aren't ya? Not like these bloody raghead tunnel kids, wouldn't know one end of a footy from the other.' He jerked his head at the marshmallow girls, who ignored him.