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Authors: Murray Bail

Tags: #Fiction

BOOK: Eucalyptus
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A thin man and his three sons had been the original settlers. A local dirt road is named after them. In the beginning they slept in their clothes, a kelpie or wheat bags for warmth, no time for the complications of women—hairy men with pinched faces. They never married. They were secretive. In business they liked to keep their real intentions hidden. They lived in order to acquire, to add, to amass. At every opportunity they kept adding, a paddock here and there, in all directions, acres and acres, going into hock to do it, even poxy land around the other side of the hill, sloping and perpetually drenched in shadow and infected with the burr, until the original plot on stony ground had completely disappeared into a long undulating spread, the shape of a wishbone or a broken pelvis.

These four men had gone mad with ring barking. Steel traps, fire, and all types of poisons and chains were also used. On the curvaceous back paddocks great gums slowly bleached and curled against the curve as trimmings of fingernails. Here and there bare straight trunks lay scattered and angled like a catastrophe of derailed carriages. By then the men had already turned their backs and moved onto the next rectangle to be cleared.

When at last it came to building a proper homestead they built it in pessimistic grey stone, ludicrously called
bluestone
, quarried in a foggy and distinctly dripping part of Victoria. At a later date one of the brothers was seen painting a wandering white line between the brick-courses, up and along, concentrating so hard his tongue protruded. As with their land, bits were always being tacked on—verandahs, outhouses. To commemorate dominance of a kind they added in 1923 a tower where the four of them could sit drinking at dusk and take pot-shots at anything that moved—kangaroos, emus, eagles. By the time the father died the property had become one of the district's largest and potentially the finest (all that river frontage); but the three remaining sons began fighting among themselves, and some of the paddocks were sold off.

Late one afternoon—in the 1940s—the last of the bachelor-brothers fell in the river. No one could remember a word he had said during his life. He was known for having the slowest walk in the district. He was the one responsible for the infuriating system of paddock gates and their clumsy phallic-fitting latchbolts. And it was he who built with his bare hands the suspension bridge across the river, partly as a rickety memorial to the faraway world war he had missed against all the odds, but more to allow the merinos with their ridiculous permed parted heads to cross without getting their feet wet when every seven years floodwaters turned the gentle bend below the house into a sodden anabranch. For a while it had been the talk of the district, its motif, until the next generation saw it as an embarrassment. Now it appears in glossy books produced in the distant city to illustrate the ingenious, utilitarian nature of folk art: four cables slung between two trees, floored with cypress, laced with fencing wire.

In the beginning Holland didn't look like a countryman, not to the men. Without looking down at his perforated shoes they could tell at once he was from Sydney. It was not one thing; it was everything.

To those who crossed the street and introduced themselves he offered a soft hand, the proverbial fish itching to slip out under the slightest pressure. He'd smile slightly, then hold it like someone raising a window before committing himself. People didn't trust him. The double smile didn't help. Only when he was seen to lose his temper over something trivial did people begin to trust him. The men walking about either had a loose smile, or faces like grains of wheat. And every other one had a fingertip missing, a rip in the ear, the broken nose, one eye in a flutter from the flick of the fencing wire. As soon as talk moved to the solid ground of old machinery, or pet stories about humourless bank managers or the power of certain weeds, it was noticed that although Holland looked thoughtful he took no part.

Early on some children had surprised him with pegs in his mouth while he was hanging the washing, and the row of pegs dangling like camel teeth gave him a grinning illiterate look. Actually he was shrewd and interested in many things. The word was he didn't know which way a gate opened. His ideas on paddock rotation had them grinning and scratching their necks as well. It made them wonder how he'd ever managed to buy the place. As for the perpetually pissing bull which had every man and his dog steering clear of the square back-paddock he solved that problem by shooting it.

It would take years of random appearances in all weather, at arm's length and across the street, before he and his face settled into place.

He told the butcher's wife, ‘I expect to live here for seven years. Who knows after that?' Catching the pursing of her Presbyterian lips he added, ‘It's nice country you've got here.'

It was a very small town. As with any new arrival the women discussed him in clusters, turning to each other quite solemnly. Vague suggestions of melancholy showed in the fold of their arms.

They decided there had to be a woman hidden away in a part of his life somewhere. It was the way he spoke, the assumptions settled in his face. And to see him always in his black coat without a hat walking along the street or at the Greek's having breakfast alone, where nobody in their right mind took a pew and ate, was enough to produce in these dreaming women elongated vistas of the dark-stone homestead, its many bare rooms, the absence of flowers, all those broad acres and stock untended—with this man, half lost in its empty dimensions. He appeared then as a figure demanding all kinds of attention, correction even.

A certain widow with florid hands made a move. It didn't come to much. What did she expect? Every morning she polished the front of her house with a rag. In quick succession she was followed by the mothers of sturdy daughters from properties surrounding Holland's, inviting him to their homesteads facing north, where heaps of mutton were served. These were kitchen meals on pine scrubbed to a lung colour, the kitchens dominated by the flame-leaking mass of black stove; other houses employed the papered dining room, the oakish-looking table, pieces of silver, crystal and Spode—a purple husband looking like death at the head. And the mothers and daughters watched with interest as this complete stranger in their midst took the food in by his exceptionally wide mouth, mopped up with his hunk of white bread. He nodded in appreciation. He dropped his aitches, which was a relief.

Afterwards he took out his handkerchief and wiped his hands, so to these mothers and daughters it was like a magician offering one of his khaki paddocks as an example, before whipping it away, leaving nothing.

Almost five months had passed; on a Monday morning Holland was seen at the railway station. The others standing about gave the country-nod, assuming he was there like them to collect machinery parts ordered from Sydney.

Holland took a cigarette.

The heavy rails went away parallel to the platform on the regularly spaced sleepers darkened by shadow and grease, and darkened further as they went away into the sunlight, the rails converging with a silver wobble in bushes, bend and mid-morning haze.

The train was late.

Those darkened sleepers which cushioned the tremendous travelling weight of trains: they had been axed from the forests of Grey Ironbark (
E. paniculata
) around hilly Bunyah, a few hours to the east. The same dark eucalypts felled by the same axemen filled export contracts for the expansion of steam across China, India, British Africa. Most of the sleepers for the Trans-Siberian railway were cut from the forests around Bunyah, and so—here's poetic justice—carried the weight of thousands of Russians, transported to isolation and worse. Truly, Grey Ironbark is one of the hardest woods available to man.

Faint whistle and smoke. The rails began their knuckle-cracking. The train appeared, grew, and eventually came to rest alongside the platform, letting out a series of sighs like an exhausted black dog, dribbling, its paws outstretched. For a moment people were too occupied to notice Holland.

Holland tilted his bare head down to a small girl in a blue dress. As they left the station he was seen taking her small wicker case and doing his best to talk. She was looking up at him.

Soon after, women came out in the sunlight on the street and appeared to bump into each other. They joined at the hem and elbow. The news quickly jumped the long distances out of town, and from there spread in different directions, entering the houses Holland had sat down and eaten in, the way a fire leaps over fences, roads, bare paddocks and rivers, depositing smaller, always slightly different, versions of itself.

She was his daughter. He could do anything he liked with her. Yes; but weeks passed before he brought her into town. ‘Acclimatising' was very much on his mind.

The women wanted to see her. They wanted to see the two of them together. Some wondered if he'd be stern with her; the various degrees of. Instead Holland appeared unusually stiff, at the same time, casual.

Traces of him showed around the child's eyes and jaw. There was the same two-stage smile, and the same frown when answering a question. To the town women she was perfectly polite.

She was called Ellen.

Holland had met and married a river woman from outside Waikerie, on the Murray, in South Australia; Ellen never tired of hearing the story.

Her father had placed one of those matrimonial advertisements.

‘What's wrong with that? It has a high curiosity value for both parties. You never know what's going to come up. That's what I'm going to do when you're old enough. I'll write the advertisement myself. I'll try to list your most attractive features, if I can think of any. We'll probably have to advertise in Scotland and Venezuela.'

It is still the custom for certain rural newspapers to run these advertisements, handy for the man who simply hasn't got around to finding himself a suitable woman, or one who's been on the move, doing seasonal work. It's a custom well and truly established in other places, such as Nigeria, where men are given the names of flowers, and in India, one newspaper especially, published in New Delhi, is read avidly just for these advertisements artfully penned and placed from all corners of the sub-continent. There it's a convenient service for marriages arranged by others, when it becomes necessary to cast a wider net.

Worth mentioning in this context. In circular New Delhi, wherever the eye turns, even as a bride tilts her cloudy mirror-ring to glimpse for the first time the face with pencil-moustache of her arranged-by-others husband, it invariably picks up the Blue Gum (
E. globulus
)—they're all over the place; just as the tall fast-growing
E. kirtoni
, common name Half Mahogany, has virtually taken over the dusty city of Lucknow.

Of the three replies to Holland's one-liner clearly the most promising was the childish rounded hand on ruled paper. Some suggestion here about being a fresh widow: hers was another man who'd ended up headfirst in the river, still in his boots.

She was one of seven or eight. Holland saw bodies draped everywhere, pale sisters, transfixed by lines of piercing light, as if the tin shack had been shot up with bullet holes.

‘I introduced myself,' Holland explained. And your mother went very quiet. She hardly opened her mouth. She must have realised what she'd let herself in for. Now there I was, standing in front of her. Maybe she took one look at my mug and wanted to run a mile?' Daughter smiled. ‘A very, very nice woman. I had a lot of time for your mother.'

Sometimes a sister sat alongside and without a word began brushing the eldest sister's hair. It was straw blonde; the others were dark. The kitchen table had its legs standing in jam-tins of kero. The father would come in and go out. He hardly registered Holland's presence. No sign of the mother. Holland presented an axe and a blanket, as if they were Red Indians.

At last he carried her back to Sydney.

There in his rooms, which was more or less within his world, she appeared plump, or (put it this way) softer than he imagined, and glowed, as if dusted with flour. And she busied herself. Casually she introduced a different order. Unpinned, her hair fell like a sudden dumping of sand and rhythmically she brushed it, a religious habit in front of the mirror. Amazing was her faith in him: how she allowed him to enter. His hands felt clumsy and coarse, as did sometimes his words. Here was someone who listened to him.

What happened next began as a joke. On the spur of the moment he took out, with some difficulty, insurance against his river woman delivering twins. He was challenging Nature. It was also his way of celebrating. The actuaries calculated tremendous odds; Holland immediately increased the policy. He waved the ye olde certificate with its phoney red seal in front of his friends. Those were the days he was drinking.

‘I'd emptied my pockets, every spare zac I had.'

Ellen had little interest in the financial side.

‘You were the first born,' he nodded. ‘We named you Ellen. I mean, that was your mother's preference—Ellen. Your brother lived just a few days. Something broke in your mother. No one has ever seen anyone cry as much, I'm willing to bet. The top of your head, here, was always wet. And blood, a lot of blood. She just lay there crying, you know, softly. She couldn't stop. She grew weak with it. As I watched, her life seemed to leak away. There was nothing I could do. I'd hardly even got to know her. I don't know how it happened.

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