To walk out of the house in high dudgeon, I decided, would amount to a retreat where recovery would be difficult, essentially becoming a rearguard action.
Swallow your pride. Stay put, mate. Be patient â you can win this battle
. âWell, I guess lunch was why I came in the first place, doctor,' I answered, even managing to smile.
He swallowed the last finger of Scotch and placed the glass down. Then he actually winked at me. âLess said the better, eh? Think about it. My offer still stands.' He nodded in the direction of the surgery door. âYou can call me at my surgery any morning except Friday and Sunday, after ten.' He walked towards the door leading to the hallway. âOh yes, you've got until Monday. We're leaving for a holiday, a cruise to New Zealand, on Tuesday, and Mrs Kalbfell and I expect Wendy will accompany us. I'd like this matter cleared up before then.'
Christ! I'll say one thing for him, this bloke can hold his grog
. It had all been worked out in the good doctor's mind, even allowing for the fact that I might initially refuse his offer, then I'd get back to him, mumbling my acceptance in an attempt to conceal my latent greed. By making the deadline just five days away he'd obviously decided to put pressure on me, give me a bit of a nudge to hasten my betrayal of his daughter. Wendy would then be spirited away for a nice little holiday on the P&O boat sailing to New Zealand. Like a game of Happy Families, the ingredients were all there â loving and concerned parents, distraught but dutiful daughter, confrontation leading to a resolution, the storm clouds swept away with nothing but clear horizons ahead. Going in to lunch and pretending that nothing had happened was going to be harder to endure than the Chinese torture in the POW camp.
To my surprise, lunch was a formal setting in the dining room complete with lace tablecloth, Georg Jensen cutlery and bone china. My memory is pretty good, but I can't for the life of me remember what we ate â a big formal meal, certainly, but obviously my mind was elsewhere. I remember Wendy's mum was checking out my table manners. I was grateful for Gloria's early tuition by way of the
Women's Weekly
.
Wendy was her usual bright self and Mrs Kalbfell formally polite, with her old man contributing very little â an occasional grunt or âpass the salt', so that Wendy glanced at me several times, one eyebrow slightly raised.
âTell us about your latest visit to Government House, Jacko. When you had morning tea with Lady Cross,' she asked mischievously.
Once again she'd saved my life. This was something I could stretch out and tell in a light-hearted way that would get my part of the conversation over with, and at the same time reduce the tension I felt. Moreover, it balanced things up a bit. If I was good enough to be invited to have tea with the governor's wife . . .
With Wendy promoting me and urging me on, the good doctor grunting and Mrs Kalbfell asking pouty-mouthed questions, unable to restrain her curiosity, we managed to get through lunch passably well.
Directly after lunch Wendy grabbed a small canvas bag with her things. We got the bikes out of the garage and hit the road. It was mid-afternoon when we arrived at the shack.
Because of the busy weekday traffic forcing us to ride single file, we hadn't been able to talk on the way. Now Wendy wanted to know exactly what had happened in her father's study. I was determined not to exaggerate or get overexcited, but to give it to her blow by blow as it had transpired. That way I wouldn't be putting my own agenda forward. I remember we were sitting on an old leather couch, Wendy leaning against me with my arm around her shoulders so I couldn't really see her face. In a strange way this was good. Through the shack window I could see a wide stretch of the river with a small brush fire on the far shore sending up a steady twist of smoke into the pewter-coloured mid-afternoon sky. I could concentrate on the smoke and on what I was saying without having to react to her expressions. When I got to the bribe she gasped, and grabbed my hand. âOh, Jacko!' was all she said, but for poor Wendy it was downhill all the way from there. When I got to Bluey Walsh and the napalm she could contain her emotions no longer, and began to howl. I pulled her towards me and held her while she had a good cry. âI'm sorry, Wendy, perhaps I should have left that part out.'
âNo, Jacko â you mustn't,' she sobbed. âI must know . . . everything.' She was a bit of a mess by the time I'd related the entire conversation with her father, and I simply held her in my arms and rocked her. We had a fair bit to sort out between us and there was still a good part of the afternoon left, as it was only just past mid-summer and the sun didn't set until much later. âC'mon, let's take the dinghy and see if we can catch supper. You make a thermos of tea and I'll go dig for river worms.' I knew she'd want a little time on her own to regain her composure. Wendy wasn't one to cry at the drop of a hat, and she was feeling pretty miserable.
We fished for a while and although I didn't even get so much as a nibble she caught a couple of small salmon just the right size for our dinner. âWhat about
us
, Jacko?' Wendy asked at last.
âThat's the question I haven't been game to ask, Wend,' I said, trying to smile.
âDo you love me?'
âWendy, you know I do, more than I can say. I can't bear the idea of you not being with me. It's just . . .'
âJust
what
?'
âWell, your dad's right. I have nothing to offer you â I don't even have a job yet!'
âI can feel the little house with the white picket fence and two nice kids coming on,' she said, grinning. âJacko, can't you see â it's
you
I want. Romantically silly as that sounds, we'll work out the rest.'
I looked at this most beautiful creature sitting alongside me in the dinghy. Even though her eyes were still a bit puffed-up from crying, she was exquisite. She had a river worm in one hand and a hook in the other and her wonderful green eyes looked at me in a way that, had I been standing, would have made me weak at the knees. Thirty-odd years later she still has the same effect on me. âWendy, will you marry me?'
âI thought you'd never ask, Jack McKenzie,' she said, suddenly laughing. âYes, yes,
yes
!'
She said yes.
Overjoyed, I dropped what was in my hands and threw my arms around her and held her tight. Not wanting the moment to end, eventually the question had to be asked. âWhat about your parents?'
Wendy gave a sigh of despair then a tiny shrug. âDaddy's an alcoholic and Mummy's a dreadful snob â both conditions are very difficult to cure. I wish she'd leave him, but she won't. You see, she came from a very poor family and being a doctor's wife is important.'
âYou mean my kind of family?'
âShe should have been so lucky. Both her parents were alcoholics, and her father interfered with her.'
âShe told you all this?' I was surprised. People like us didn't talk about things like that, particularly if we'd managed to escape as Wendy's mum obviously had.
âNo, of course not. I found out from her sister who lives in Burnie. I was on a publicity tour there as Miss Tasmania. She came to see me at my hotel.'
âAnd she told you about your mum?'
âNo, not at first. She'd simply come to congratulate me â something good happening in the family, she said. I remember we were together for an hour or so and Agnes smoked twelve cigarettes. I counted them in the ashtray after she'd left.'
âWhat was she like?'
âQuite nice â very nervous.'
âDid you recognise her? She look like your family?'
âCertainly. She was younger than Mum, but looked older â very thin and worn out. I still write to her, and I've seen her several times. Her husband Cec is an alcoholic, and both her kids have been in trouble with the police.'
âWhat's he do?'
She laughed. âHe's a fisherman.'
âHis surname isn't Kelly, is it?'
âNo, Drummond. So you see, the swanky Kalbfells are not entirely what they seem.'
âWhat I
can
see very clearly is why your mum is panicking over having someone like me in the family.' Wendy didn't reply, deep in thought. She had completed baiting her hook. âC'mon that's enough,' I laughed. âLet's go back to the hut and make passionate love, after that I'll cook your hard-earned fish for supper, sir . . . er, madam!'
âNo, Jacko. I want to tell you about Harry.' She put down her rod and reached for the thermos.
âWendy, you don't have to. I don't believe what your father said was true about me being the backlash because of Harry.'
Wendy gave me a grateful look, and handed me the mug of still-steaming tea. âIt was Harry's idea to join K Force. It wasn't the other way around â us having a row, me ditching him and him going off to fight in Korea. I just wanted you to know it was over between Harry and me before he left.'
âYou mean he didn't just run away without telling anyone?'
She shook her head. âThat's just Daddy's version.'
âThank you for telling me, darling.' I was having trouble with the word âdarling' â not that I didn't like it. I did, a lot â it was just that, well . . . it sounded pluralistic, like I wasn't alone any longer.
At last a bite, and moments later I landed a cod much too small for the pan. âC'mon, stupid, let's go before I'm tempted to throw you back as well,' Wendy said, grabbing the oars and laughing. I unhooked the little fish and placed it carefully back into the river, where it floated motionless for a moment, then, with a flick of its tail, disappeared in a flash of silver.
Look Where the Sun Don't Shine
Australia Will Continue
to Keep Door Shut
COLOURED PEOPLES NOT WANTED
(From Our Correspondent)
canberra
,
mar
26
IMMIGRAT ION Minister Harold Holt is convinced
that Asian people understand Australia's restrictive
immigration policy.
He said in Melbourne yesterday that Government would continue to âKeep the door shut' to coloured peoples.
Mr Holt was answering Lord Hardwicke, who said the Sydney Government could stop the drift from farms to the cities by permitting the controlled entry of coloured farm and domestic workers.
He added that the âWhite Australia Policy' was an affront to all coloured nations.
SUPPORTED BY ALL
âAustralia's policy of restricted immigration,' said Mr Holt, is supported by all political parties and classes of the country. The policy laid down was in the interests of Australia and no government found any reason to alter it. âRealistic people understand its importance to Australia's economic and social needs.' Mr Holt added that Australia's birthrate was climbing steadily. Half a million were born in the last three years. A record number of British migrants were arriving and immigration from non-British countries was at a high level.
Lord Hardwicke, who is visiting Australia in connection with a commercial flotation, emphasised that he was expressing his own views, which did not represent the attitude of the British Government.
ELBOURNE
D
AILY
N
EWS
, 26 March 1954
You can imagine how distressed we all felt. Here was Harold Holt spelling things out loud and clear, and his meaning was unmistakable â his government, and the Labor opposition for that matter, wasn't going to budge an inch. If a bigwig like Lord Hardwicke could be rebuked in such a blatant manner, then what hope had we? We still hadn't heard anything from Zara Holt after her initial telephone call to Lady Cross. The fact that Jimmy's visitor's visa had been renewed had raised our hopes tremendously, but now they were dashed again.
And then, out of the blue, a telegram arrived for Jimmy â and for once Busta Gut was prompt with the delivery.
SUGGEST WE MEET APRIL 5 AT ARMY PERSONNEL DEPOT LAUNCESTON RE YOUR REQUEST DEPT IMMIGRATION STOP SPONSORS MAY ATTEND STOP PLEASE CONFIRM TEL. MELBOURNE MXY 440 OR BY TELEGRAM STOP COL MARK STONE STOP ARMY HEADQUARTERS VICTORIA BARRACKS MELBOURNE
Jimmy made a trunk call to Army Headquarters and a time for eleven forty-five a.m. was agreed. We â that is, Nicole Lenoir-Jourdan, myself and of course Jimmy â caught the Douglas DC3 to Launceston and arrived with an hour to spare. We took the bus into town and picked up Wendy, whom Mr Walsh had permitted to come along. âThe presence of a pretty woman can't do any harm,' he remarked.
When I suggested to Nicole Lenoir-Jourdan that Wendy wanted to come she thought it a good idea. âOlder women like me can be seen as viragos in a situation such as this one; Wendy will ameliorate my presence.' Of course, she was incapable of simply saying, âYeah, that would be good', so there was Wendy ameliorating her presence.
Wendy and I had become engaged, not secretly but in a very low-key fashion â no ring or anything, that would have to wait. We made the news public when we returned from the fishing shack, just before her parents were due to go on on their cruise to New Zealand. It was news they definitely didn't want to hear, and they postponed their trip. Wendy wasn't the kind of person who went around defying her parents, so they knew she meant business. Dr Kalbfell threatened to throw her out and Wendy's mum stayed in her bedroom for days refusing to come out. It was an awkward time, with Gloria and our family over the moon and hers sulking and recalcitrant.