Authors: Joy Dettman
Raelene would be out in July, or sooner. Dino Collins shouldn't be out before July â unless they gave him time off for good behaviour.
When had he ever behaved?
Everything could have been so different. If Morrie had kept his mouth shut at the hotel; if she'd flown with him to England . . .
She returned to bed but, unable to sleep, lay on her back until daylight began filtering in between the venetian blinds. And by dawn, she knew she had to go home. Had to move Miss Robertson into Robin's room and move into Unit Two with him. It sounded like a plan, until the doves started coo-cooing, until grey daylight washed away the shadows and weary eyes closed.
She dreamed she was at Amberley, as it was before the renovations, lodgers everywhere. And he was there, Collins, living in one of the downstairs rooms. Where was Robin? Ran through dark passages, looking for him. Came on Myrtle washing dishes in the parlour, watching Collins and Robin playing football on the front lawn.
Myrtle smiled. âHe needs his father.'
Woke, heart pounding in her ears. Woke to the splat-splat, splat-splat of her dripping shower and the clock's hands pointing to seven thirty.
She boiled the jug and made a coffee, then sat sipping and watching the hands of her wall clock jerk their way around to eight. She had to go to work. Had to find out if Dino Collins was in jail or out. What if he was out and Raelene in contact with him? What if her phone call had been a set-up, if he'd been parked outside the jail and had tailed her home?
Dave, Cathy's cop cousin, would know if he'd been released, or he could find out. He'd helped lock him up in '65 when Cara, Cathy and Marion had played bait in a trap Dave and his colleagues had set for Collins.
Phone Cathy.
Cathy hadn't spoken to her since last September.
Call the cops direct. Call Pentridge.
Call Cathy.
Couldn't dial her number when she'd been lonely enough to howl, but she did it for Robin. The phone was picked up on the sixth ring.
âWho wants me at this time of day?'
âIt's me, Cath.'
For a good thirty seconds, a baby's wail was the only reply. At eighteen, Cathy had said she wanted six kids. Her oldest was six months Robin's senior. She had a two year old and a new baby, all boys.
âSecretive bitch,' she finally said. She didn't hang up.
âI need to know if Dino Collins is in jail or out. His girlfriend contacted me and she knows where Robin is. I'm hoping that you'll get in touch with Dave for me.'
âI'm feeding Jamie,' Cathy said. Silence. Then, âDoes it ever end?'
âNot with him. And I'm so scared.'
âYou must be to call me.'
âI'm sorry.'
âYeah?' Silence again. Then, âThey should have hanged that mongrel back when we put him away the first time. I'll give Dave a ring when I can and get back to you. And you're still a secretive bitch and you always were. How could you have a baby and not tell me of all people?'
âI was going to give him up for adoption. You would have tried to talk me out of it.'
âOf course I would have, and why would anyone consider giving a baby away?'
âI was half out of my head, Cath.'
âYou're stark raving mad, not half out of your head. He loves you,' Cathy said. âHe's sick with it. Gerry reckons he's dropped three stone in weight. And you love him too, so what the hell does anything else matter?'
âSome things do.'
âI don't get you, and I never have â and I'm hanging up before I say something I might regret. I'll call you when I find out something.'
Cara placed the phone down and went about the business of a Monday morning. Made toast that she couldn't eat. Made more coffee and smoked a cigarette while dressing for work. She could leave this flat tomorrow, walk away from most of what she owned.
Couldn't leave her job tomorrow.
She should phone home and sound Myrtle out about swapping Robin for Miss Robertson. Since Mrs Collins's death, the old teacher had been eating her evening meals at Myrtle's table. They took her shopping, charged her next to nothing in rent, and Robin would only be a few yards away.
She stood looking at the phone, rehearsing her spiel for Myrtle, thinking further, thinking about applying for a single mother's pension, of putting a year into writing. That prison scene was writing itself; Rusty's mother was talking to her.
I don't get their names and addresses.
And her name was Valda. It had to be.
Raelene would be given an unmarried mother's pension when they let her out, and they'd probably set her up in a flat where that mop-headed doll of a baby would grow up watching her mother and Collins shoot shit up their arms, until she was old enough to shoot it up her own. Who makes those grand decisions? Was God up there, playing eeny meeny miny mo with the lives of his children?
No time left to ring Myrtle. She picked up her keys, her handbag and ran. She'd locked her door, was on the top step when her phone rang. It would be Cathy. She ran back and unlocked, praying it was Cathy, praying that she didn't hang up before she got to the phone. Got there in time. Snatched it up.
âCath?'
âIt's Aunty Beth, love. John has booked you a seat on a flight leaving at ten fiftyâ'
âHe's got Robin!'
âRobin is right here by my side. You need to come home, love.'
âWhat's happened?'
âIt's your mum.'
âMum?'
A brief silence, then Beth's voice breaking. âJust get yourself up here, love, and we'll meet you at the airport.'
âWhat about Mum?'
âYour flight leaves at ten fiftyâ'
âWhat's happened, Aunty Beth? Tell me!'
And Beth howling. âYour mum left us this morning.'
What the hell was she talking about? Another woman might pack her bags and leave, but Myrtle Norris? Then she knew. She knew.
âNo. No. Please God, no . . .'
âI didn't want toâ' A howling Beth gave up the phone to another. Calm, efficient cousin-in-law Natalie.
âCara, we need you to hold it together until you get to us. We'll be at the airport. I'll bring Robin.'
âTell me!'
âWe'll talk when you get here. The ticket is paid for. Your flight is at ten fifty.'
âWhere's Daddy?'
âHe's here, and he needs you to stay strong. We're all here for you.'
*
She was shaking. She was walking in circles. She was breaking apart and she had to catch a plane.
Ten fifty. Two hours.
Had to pack her bag. Had to call a taxi. Call the taxi first, then pack a bag. Couldn't see to dial the number. Had to hold it together, stay strong until she got there. And she couldn't do it.
Had to.
Had to think of money. A taxi to the airport cost big money. How much was left in her purse? Couldn't count it. The numbers wouldn't sink in. Tears dripping onto crumpled notes. Her chequebook. She tossed it into her bag. Taxis don't take cheques. She emptied the contents of her fifty-cent coin jar into her handbag, then hauled her case down from the top of her wardrobe.
Little case in the larger case in the big case. Stuck. And bawling too hard to get it out. Pitched the lot at the door, and the smaller case popped free. Packed it and ran. Then remembered shoes. Had to run back, unlock her door, open her case, toss in a pair as the taxi beeped below.
You can't howl in a taxi, not when the driver wants to talk national anthems: âGod Save The Queen' versus âWaltzing Matilda'. âThere's not an Aussie alive who doesn't know the words to “Waltzing Matilda”.'
Watched the road ahead, tears leaking from beneath her sunglasses. Wiped them so she could watch the taxi meter. Too much traffic on the road at that time of day and every car trying to get to someplace. The driver got her there. She counted notes and fifty-cent coins into his hand.
Which airline? Probably Ansett. She tried Ansett. Ticket booked and paid for in Sydney.
You can't bawl at an airport while you wait in a queue. Your hands are allowed to shake, you can drop your handbag, spill fifty-cent coins everywhere, but you can't cry. Or lose your place in a queue to chase the coins that got away. A businessman with a briefcase returned two of the coins. He heard the tears in her âThank you' and remained at her side, his kind deed allowing him to jump a few spaces in the long queue.
Waiting then, in that place she knew so well, brushing away tears that rolled free of her sunglasses. She'd flown many times this past year, just a hop, step and a jump to Sydney, to Robert, Myrtle and Robin.
No Myrtle waiting in her kitchen today. No more Mummy to remind her to take a handkerchief. No hanky to wipe away forever's tears.
Plane too slow to load, too slow to move, to get its wheels off the ground, but the backs of the seats were high and the hostess gave out tissues, which sopped up leaks.
âBad news?'
âMy mother.'
Couldn't say those other words, not yet. Thought them. Thought them over and over.
My mother is dead. My mother is dead. My mother is dead
.
G
OD'S
M
ASTER
P
LAN
A
unty Beth and Natalie were waiting to hold her. Robin didn't understand her tears. She gathered him into her arms, sucking air through her mouth, determined not to drip on him. Little boys worry when adults cry. Little boys who are three don't understand that their nanny isn't coming home.
âA ambulance comed, Mummy, and it taked Nanny to the hopspital.'
He didn't understand why there were so many visitors at his house; why Papa stood at the window, his back to his visitors and to Mummy.
Concussed by shock, Robert didn't turn when she entered. She went to him. âDaddy.'
He looked at her, shook his head, wordless. She put her arms around him, needing him to hold her. He kissed her cheek, patted her back, then disengaged himself.
Beth made tea. Cara didn't drink tea. Drank it that morning; didn't argue when Natalie told her she'd take Robin home, that he'd be better tonight with his cousins.
âSit down, Bob,' John said. âDrink your tea.'
âHe woke up beside her,' Beth whispered to Cara. âThere was no warning. We saw her the day before yesterday and she looked so well. Her mother went the same way. She was running around after her lodgers one day and gone the next.'
Sudden death meant autopsy. Robert didn't want to know about it. He sat staring at the colours in the leadlight window.
âBob's not going to handle this,' John said.
âThey lived for each other,' Beth said.
The doctor made a home visit. He wrote a script. Thereafter, Robert sat.
John took charge. And Cara. They made the funeral arrangements. They spoke to the undertaker. They chose the coffin. Ugly things, coffins: the shape of loss, of emptiness, of excruciating, unbearable pain. Cara had to hold it together â for Robert's sake, for Robin.
Robin cried for Nanny at bedtime. âI want my nanny to come home from the hopspital.'
Cara reached for the old convenient lie. âNanny has gone up to live with the angels.' It had worked for one little boy, perhaps it would work for his son.
âI want Nanny to live wiff me and Papa, not angels.'
âPapa and Mummy want her to live here too, Robbie, but God needed a very special angel up at his place and he knew that your nanny was the most special of all. Weren't we lucky to have her as our own for such a long time?'
Just a bedtime story for babies. Cara knew where Myrtle was â in that coffin she and John had chosen â but for an hour she lay with Robin on her bed, weaving pretty tales of Nanny's angel wings.
âWiff feavers, like birds?'
âBeautiful white feathers.'
âAnd Nanny can fly down here wiff wings?'
âShe can fly around God's gardens. Remember how she loved pretty flowers? Well, heaven's garden is filled with giant flowers.'
âAn butterflies?'
âButterflies as big as eagles.'
She stayed strong for Robin and Robert; for Uncle John and Beth who came early each day and stayed late. They'd lost a sister-in-law. Pete, on his way home from England, had sidetracked for a month or two in Adelaide, where the Russian freighter had dropped him. He hitchhiked home the night before the funeral. And thank God for Pete, in a borrowed suit and his long ponytail. He allowed Cara to cry all over him.
A pill got Robert through the day. Another got him through the wake. Pete's cigarettes got Cara through, and a beer. The men drank beer, the women tea. Cara didn't drink tea, but had learnt to drink beer in London. She drank enough to escape to the neighbour's cypress hedge to light a cigarette while Beth and her daughters emptied Myrtle from wardrobe and drawer. That's what they did in the Norris family when a loved one died. Cara had been to her grandmother's funeral. She'd helped empty her room. She'd carried the bags and cases out to the car for transportation to the Salvation Army opportunity shop. No one spoke about doing it. They just did it.
In the early evening, when the rooms were empty of all but Cara and Robert, he swallowed another pill and went to his bed. Cara, wanting the escape of his sleep, swallowed one of his pills. It swept away the most painful day of her life, swept away the night and half of the next morning. John and Beth arrived with Robin at ten, and Cara attempted to wake herself with a shower. She wouldn't be swallowing any more of the doctor's zombie pills.
Beth was in the kitchen making tea, making toast. Robin stood at Robert's bedroom door, watching John, who sat on his brother's bed attempting to talk him out of that bed. This morning, Cara knew why he clung to his blankets.
âYou need to get up and have a shower, Daddy.'
âShe was my world,' Robert said.
They got him up, dressing-gown clad. He drank a cup of tea, then swallowed another pill and sat in his chair in the parlour to watch the kindergarten program with Robin.
*
Beth had called Cara's school and explained her niece's absence. Cara gave no thought to school, to her flat, her future or Robin's â or to Dino Collins and Raelene. Her mind had been washed clean by a death she hadn't foreseen. She'd ignored Myrtle's age and worried about Robert's. Hadn't considered what his reaction might be to Myrtle's death. In the tales she'd written about the distant future, Myrtle and Robin had been there, and she was the new breadwinner, the cheque-writer, the loan-payer, the decision-maker. She'd got it so wrong and her mind was incapable of altering the ending.
Hid from it, behind the cypress hedge, her smoking place.
Beth found her there. âRobin needs you, love.'
Cara nodded.
âHe doesn't know what's going on with your dad.'
âHe's hiding from it behind his pills, Aunty Beth.'
âWe need to get him off them, love. He's swallowing them like he used to swallow those painkillers for his knee.'
Cara remembered those months, the pain Robert had claimed long after his knee had healed. She'd spent as little time as possible with him; had gone to work, slept in Mrs Collins's room, left him to Myrtle, his brother, his doctor.
No more Myrtle.
âWhen are you thinking about going back, love?'
âI'm hiding from the decision, Aunty Beth.'
âWe'll look after your dad. You know that.'
âYou look after everyone. How do you do it?'
Beth kissed her cheek then returned to the house. Cara lit another cigarette and stood on alone, watching the road from behind her smokescreen and wondering how she'd manage a three-year-old boy in an upstairs flat â with a balcony â and work five days a week so she could pay the rent, the loan.
Have to find a crèche. Pay for it too.
Or stay here.
Didn't want to think that far ahead. Maybe tomorrow she'd be ready to think.
Tomorrows turned into days much the same as yesterdays. Not quite the same.
Pete turned up in the rattletrap Holden he'd driven before he'd gone to England.
Guess What I Ate
, Cara had named it, its registration numbers GES 188 â and it was still wearing its old plates. John had paid the rego while Pete was away.
She was sitting in his car when Miss Robertson wandered out to eye the multicoloured '53 model Holden, with its red bonnet, green driver's side door, the rest cream and rust. Miss Robertson wasn't rusting, but was out of milk and bread. Last week she would have told Myrtle. Today she told Cara. Pete offered her a lift to the shops. The old dame's expression suggested she may have preferred to mount the pillion of a Harley, but, desperate enough, she got into his car. And Cara got out. Watched the old lady clinging on to what she could as they rattled away.
She went inside, picked up Robert's pill bottle and read the label:
Take one tablet daily or as directed by your doctor.
Placed it back in the medicine cupboard. Cuts heal if given time, bruises fade, pain eases.
She waited until the Sunday, until John started packing Robert's clothing, until Robert started digging in his heels.
âI've asked you to leave me be!' he said, and he sounded like Gran Norris.
âCara has to go back to work, and you can't stay here alone,' John said.
âJust leave me be!'
âWe've left you, Bob. Now it's time to move on.'
âI'm taking Robin back to Melbourne,' Cara said.
Robert went back to bed and Cara walked out to the hedge to light a cigarette.
Robin followed her. âWhy did you put that fing in your mouf for, Mummy?'
She tossed it and took his hand, walked with him up the hill.
âWhere will we go?' he asked.
âJust for a walk, pet.'
âNanny sayed “pet”.'
âNanny said “pet” to me too when I was a little girl.'
And when I was a big girl, and when I was a woman. No more Myrtle. And I can't stand it.
Walked on, too fast for small legs to keep up. His step faltered, but she was holding his hand. She stopped his fall.
âWe're going to get into a big aeroplane and fly down to where Mummy lives.'
âAnd Papa?'
âPapa is going to have a holiday with Uncle John and Aunty Beth.'
âI want Papa to come in the airplane wiff us.'
That's what Myrtle would want, would expect. Morrie's mother had extracted a deathbed promise from him, and if Myrtle had seen death heading her way, she would have extracted that same promise from Cara. No one had seen her death coming. Cara had seen Myrtle left behind, as helpless as Miss Robertson without Robert to drive the car.
Does anyone see what is coming? Had the twelve who had lost their lives in the Brisbane floods? The sixty trampled to death at a soccer match in Glasgow? The honeymooners dead in a car crash? Had the hundred dead when their plane fell from the sky seen it coming? Just a part of God's big master plan, and never revealed to his children.
She carried Robin home. He belonged to her now. She could fly to England with him. Robert had his pills.
*
Beth was at the parlour table, sorting through a variety of spectacle cases, eleven of them, some obviously Myrtle's. Cara stood a while watching the opening of cases, watching Beth peer through a lens then place the glasses to the left or to the right. Robert's keys were on the table, his wallet, chequebook, bankbook. Cara picked up his bankbook, opened it. Not a lot in it. Funerals cost big money. Opened his chequebook. Not much in it either.
John came out of Robert's room with a large case, and Cara took his place, though not by Robert's bed. She stood before the dressing table, staring at Myrtle's jewellery box, at the tiny key attached to the case by a faded blue ribbon. Myrtle had misplaced that key for a week when Cara had been eight or ten years old. When they'd found it, Cara had looped that blue ribbon around the hinge so Mummy wouldn't lose the key to her magic box again.
She placed the key into the tiny lock and turned it, lifted the lid. String of pearls in their grey case. Cara's pearls now. Not made by man but by oysters swimming free in the ocean.
They'll be yours when I'm gone, pet.
I'm not a pearl person, Mummy.
She took them from their satin-lined box, allowed them to run a while through her fingers. Given to Myrtle on her wedding day; immortalised in her wedding photograph and unworn in years. She opened a heart-shaped gold locket and found a minute photograph of Robert's face inside the heart. Turned to the bed to stare at the aged reality of him, and wonder how the fresh-faced boy of the locket could have become that white-headed old man.
This is the moment, this is the page in my book of life where the child becomes the parent of her parent, she thought.
Robin came in. âPapa. Get up now, Papa.'
No comment from the bed.
Cara locked the jewellery box and took it out to the table to place beside the spectacle cases. âI'll take him home with us, Uncle John,' she said, and went to her room to pack her few items, to empty Robin's drawers into Myrtle's old grey case, pack his books, his bedtime friend, Bunny Long-ears.
She heard Gran Norris's whine. Robin had climbed onto Robert's bed and sat astraddle him.
âTake him,' Gran Norris whined.
âHe's missing you, Daddy.'
âAll I've asked of all of you is to leave me be.'
âIf you want to die, the place to do it is in a hospital. You've got until I pack our cases to make up your mind.'
She took Robin out to Beth. âHe's got until midday to decide between the living and the dead, and if he hasn't by then, I'm calling the ambulance.'
Shouldn't have said that word. An ambulance had taken Nanny away.
Robin started crying. âI want Papa to stay wiff me, not bird's wings. I want Papa. I don't like birds.'
âYou go in and tell that to Papa, Robbie. And you're allowed to jump on his bed as much as you like.'
The little boy got Robert out of bed.
It took two hours, but they got him out to the wagon, with three cases, five of the eleven pairs of spectacles, the jewellery box and Myrtle's prized hand-painted bowl. They got away, left John and Beth to lock up the unit. Left Miss Robertson wandering around like an aging sheep that had lost its shepherd.
The HG Holden with the 186 motor had been born to fly. On good sections of the Hume Highway, Cara gave the car its head and when the speedo crept high, she didn't rein it in. Only one thought in mind: to get them home. After that, she'd worry about what to do.
Hour after hour of near-blinding truck lights on a road that chopped and changed from potholed dual highway to the bliss of a four-lane freeway where she could fly past road-hogging, road-clogging trucks. Two toilet breaks, more petrol, a bucket of hot chips and two ice-creams at one stop.
She was on the outskirts of Melbourne before one, Robin sprawled full-length across the rear seat, Robert sleeping where he sat. They were still sleeping when she parked the wagon in the visitors' parking bays.