Authors: Richard Yaxley
But she doesn't.
Brilliant, brittle, translucent people like Kaz can often be latent hypochondriacs. When we were first together, she was always rushing off to see Doctor So-and-so for advice about such-and-such: a sniffle, a flush, a calloused digit, a cut hand. It took a lot of re-educating on my part to stop her. Health, I trumpeted, is a state of mind. Think positively â there is no sniffle! â and your nose will take the hint and self-dry. Alternatively, think negatively â hmm, irregularity? â and your bowels will grin wickedly, flex their collective muscle and keep you back-filled for weeks. In those early days, Kaz always had a sore this or an aching that, she was always teetering on the verge of a virus or a rare strain of Mongolian flu or a publicly unmentionable plumbing issue. So I have had to work hard to keep her from doctors, clinics, hospitals; I have had to counsel her to think healthy.
Delphine is on the door-step, looking for her tribe. I pass them over, hear the steady rattle of her truck as she treks down the valley road. Lights on, darkness encroaching. In the distance the shadows of our land deepen. I can stand for a while, gaze over this dipping rising patch of the world, wonder how artists can ever capture that curious, transitory shift of light â the never-time between day and night. It's an awareness thing that amazes me; what skill there must be in mixing the exact quantities of colour and non-colour to fashion a wintry five o'clock in the countryside, or a sharp summer's evening in the city. I hope that someone will one day paint the familiar silhouette of the mountains before me, the faint orange lining the horizon like fruit-rime, the dullish glint of a scattering of early stars, the softness of the smoke that gathers like tulle over the town. And because a good painting, I think, will always project a sound of its own, then I hope also that they can snare this sudden onset of silence that engulfs me, that bewitching time between the sleep of the day-insects and the waking of their night colleagues. As a moment, it is both miniscule â and possessed of a totality that is overwhelming.
Back inside to microwave baked beans for Milo. Bang on the griller; ham-and-cheese toasted sandwich for Otis. Two big mugs of cold milk with Nesquik floaties.
âThey're crocodiles,' says Milo.
âDog turds,' counters Otis, making me feel inordinately proud.
Bath-time so I bung them in together and use a hose and nozzle to wash their hair. Pyjamas that smell like lavender and lost dreams, Otis's hair that combs long and straight in furrows like a ready-to-harvest paddock of gold, then I light the fire and switch on the TV we fall back, be-curved, watch cartoons. Angry beavers, funny little Dexter with the robotic voice, snickering scheming Rug-rats, re-runs of Bart's sweet inferiority complex and Marge's leaning-tower-of-Pisa hair-do. For an hour we remain motionless then I feel my children asleep against me, relish the warm heaviness of their bodies and their tiny o-shaped mouths sending out gentle coils of life. When I carry them to bed they nestle and roll; when I look in later, they are liquid beneath the doonas, limbs flung apart, soft and spongy-looking, eyelids like cusps of silk. I smile, close their bedroom doors gently, clamber to my own bed, slide in naked and feel Kaz's too-cold feet, adjust her pillows to help even her breathing, drop my arm over her waist and hug her smell to me.
Now, I think, I am perfectly happy. Nothing can intrude on the circle of our world.
Nothing can infect our cocoon.
And so it is odd then that the last thing I remember is beginning a dream in whiteness, like a mist that whirls about me â so maybe I am caught in a snowstorm; maybe frostbitten and blue-lipped, maybe alone, oddly vulnerable, nowhere near the home that I cherish.
Two
T
he house we live in is vast and airy. Once, it was a farmhouse. There are imperial gum-trees, a wind that is often blue and furious, lemon grass that whispers and genuflects. We wake to a cacophony of noise; lorikeets sucking the scarlet bejesus out of our bottlebrush, Delphine and Errol's barking scraping back-scratching dog, king parrots who drop from the clouds and clack the grain that Kaz faithfully leaves. The pleasure of a thousand insects drills each dawn moment. The sun's creaminess seeps between our curtains. In the distance, a glimpse of sea beckons. I watch my wife, my Kaz, my unfurling-stretching Siamese cat, as she welcomes the day, murmurs then rolls back to sleep some more.
I dress, paddle down the hallway, enjoy the half-light and stillness, listen to the house creaking like old joints and bones. When we first saw this house we both felt an immediate pull, as strong as the earth tugging tree roots. We stood tentatively outside, wondering whether it would rain much and whether the mountains behind us would change colour in autumn, then Kaz turned to me and said, âI love it. I have to live here.'
âMe too,' I told her. âI wonder why?'
âI think it's really grounded,' she said, after a moment's consideration. âIt makes me think of wood and stone and air, all becoming something beautiful.'
âIt's warm.' I sought her eyes. âThis house is warm. I don't mean warm as in pullover-warm â although it probably is that too â I mean spiritually.'
I suppose I expected mockery, but she nodded.
âIt's the colours,' she said decisively.
âMm. Like all the soils of the world have been drawn together and polished clean.'
âThat's lovely,' she whispered, hanging onto my arm. âI love it when you say things like that.'
We wandered the perimeter, found a chimney-stack, an old rusting plough jammed into the earth, a barn at the end of a track.
âWill it be too lonely?' Kaz asked. A note of doubt had crept into her voice.
âSplendid isolation.' I was at my reassuring best.
âSo lonely 'twas, that God himself scarce seemèd there to be.'
âBloody Coleridge.' She half-smiled, half-grimaced. âThought you didn't believe in God, anyway.'
âI don't. Sorry, it was shameless romanticism.' I grinned and held her to me until there was a glow between us that could have been caressed within the palms of our hands.
We moved in a month later. There were no curtains but we didn't care because the view was compelling and led me to understand how stark the Australian bush can be, how its beauty relies on shades of purple and olive, a thin haze and the suffusion of breezes and scents. Kaz was pregnant and the kitchen was full of scone-smells and I was happily building garden beds and we knew it all came from the house: sandstone, bluestone, box-brush, sandalwood, our temple of togetherness.
* *
Outside, there are fingers of new light stretching through the branches of eucalypts. Our house sits on top of a small, flattish hill. The gardens are surrounded by wild grass that is flecked with dew, an eruption of liquid diamonds. To the west are the mountains, still bleak in the early morning, lightly iced with fog. Eastwards the land pancakes as the coast beckons â from certain vantage points, we can see Barilba Bay and the bustling, burgeoning township that has grown up alongside its beaches. Several hundred metres away I can see smoke curling from the chimney of Errol and Delphine's modernist pole-home. They are our nearest neighbours, a pigeon-pair of semi-retired IT consultants. Delphine wears suits with shoulder-pads, even when she is mulching. Errol drives a late model Commodore with foils and mags. He's shiny-bald and sinewy, one of those my-car-is-an-extension-of-my-penis types. He has lots of unused electric tools, a wardrobe full of muscle-shirts with Outback Pub slogans and a NASA-sanctioned telescope. He is so pretentious that it is difficult not to like him.
The air is crisp and the day has a certain promise; already it smells clean and expectant. I wander into our barn, a ramshackle building full of old bits of machinery, boxes, rusting tools, fat contented spiders, crumpled biscuit tins half-filled with oils and screws. We have never worried too much about the barn â it just exists, in the same way that shells and stars and germs exist. But Milo and Otis have taken to playing in here, so Kaz decided that we should spend this weekend cleaning it out, discarding the rubbish, scrubbing then maybe even painting the walls.
âSanitise the barn?' I asked. âWhy?'
âThey play in it,' she told me patiently. âWe should make it safe.'
âThey play in it because it's not safe. That's the attraction.'
âYour point being?'
âMake it safe and they won't play in it. It's self-defeating.'
âSo, your solution is to leave it unsafe so they'll keep playing there?'
âYes. Yes, exactly.'
âVince, that's ridiculous. They might hurt themselves.'
âOkay, Kaz, listen to this. If a kid bashes their head against a wall, does it matter that the wall is painted?'
âNow you're being stupid â'
âCome on, Kaz, answer me. Does a painted wall hurt less than an unpainted wall? Is it more dangerous to fall onto a dirty floor than a clean floor?'
âYes, if you happen to cut yourself â¦'
âIs the gash made by an old nail more painful than the gash made by a new nail?'
âWhy do you have to turn everything into a stupid word game? Honestly, Vince â'
âIs it?' I insisted. âIs it?'
âYes!' she exploded. âYes, it is! A rusty nail is worse than a new nail! Don't you know anything about hygiene?'
âKaz, I'm not talking about hygiene here â'
âWell, you should be! Because that's the issue, Vince â that's the reality! Now be useful for once in your life and find a broom!'
âKaz?'
âA broom, Vince!'
We began cleaning the barn early yesterday morning. Impressed by her energy, I took a photograph of Kaz as she picked up, threw out, re-ordered and re-organised. Ironically it was she, not the children, who hurt herself, stumbling forward, tripping, falling hard and slashing the palm of her hand on the open blade of an ancient pair of shears.
âNasty,' I told her. âThose things were used for crutching sheep, weren't they?'
âShut up and get me a bandage,' she said irritably. I took a closer look. There was blood seeping into the creases of her wrist.
âWhen was your last tetanus shot?' I asked.
âRecent.' She grimaced and held her arm at an angle to slow the blood. âI'm sure it'll be fine.'
We stopped cleaning then, wrapped a bandage, drank some coffee, went to the supermarket, lived a more logical, ordered life.
There is a bird trapped inside the barn, a wagtail, swooping madly through the trusses and beams, cheeping distress signals. I pull the main doors open, watch as the rush of light draws the bird like a magnet. When it flutters through and lifts to the sky, I silently applaud its freedom.
Good start to the day, I am thinking. Symbolically promising; the ascent of nature. Maybe today ⦠maybe there'll be something for me to write. Perhaps a nice little description or two, a couple of couplets, dialogue that is shot through with satire, clauses to joust with. Maybe today I will finally create prose that will make people's vertebrae click and clatter, or verse that will shatter their world. I hope so, because it's been a while now, nothing coming, no clever phrases or silver sentences rattling down the conduits. I've always seen the mind as neatly compartmentalised, a bunch of different-coloured rooms jammed together. Green for my dreams, red for the work-room, lemon for love. And my ideas-room? Kaleidoscopic, I suppose, all shape and blur and moments of extraordinary brightness.
Which sounds nice, very comforting. Trouble is, at the moment, the ideas-room is cold and grey-white â the noncolour of negatives â and I feel like I should follow my mother-in-law's tart advice to âgo get a real job'. Emphasise
real
.
Nevertheless, today is broad and bright and the air sears my lungs. Maybe I will ring Stu later and say to him, âWe're on, O Agent Fair Foul. We're back! We're live! We're happening, baby!'
I can imagine the conversation. Stu, poor unfortunate Stu, has this habit of introducing LA trash-talk into his business dealings. People become âcommodities' (âAnd you are a commode,' I told him once, angry about some rather pertinent criticism of my work. âI'd like to shit in you.') Books transform into âunits' and the idea that has left me sleep-deprived and emotionally rabid for months is a âproduct'. People who read books are âthe market-face'. And â I swear this is true â for a while he did develop the grating habit of calling everyone âbaby'. It coincided with his Bret Easton Ellis phase. He wangled an invite to a publishing junket in NY and met BEE at a CP where the cocktails were gratis and the chicks all had BTs and QT asses.
âArses, Stu â not
asses.
In Australia, we cleverly broaden the pronunciation to reflect the shape of the noun.'
He wasn't listening.
âBret E.E. was a great guy, baby' he told me, arching his eyebrows impressively. âVery feet-on-the-ground. Definitely in-for-the-long-haul. Not at all what I expected.'
âStu,' I said, âis that mascara on your eyebrows?'
He looked momentarily hurt.
âUm ⦠no. Actually it's kohl. Look, everybody's doing it. It's
the
major vibe in the States.'
I shrank in disgust.
Everybody's doing it
â the ultimate cop-out justification. Stu would try ovine necrophilia if he thought that everybody was doing it.
If I write something today, if I ring Stu and tell him that the dam is broken, the Muse smiling and the words flowing like shit from a Bondi drain-pipe, he'll say, âWhat sort of product are we talking here? How many units do we envisage? How's the market-face going to react?' Whereas I want someone who'll say, âCool bananas, Vincey boy. You write anything you like, anything at all â and I'll get it published for you. That's my faith in you, man, that's my promise to your talent.'
All of which begs the question: Why do I keep Stu?
He's cheap, that's why. A meagre ten per cent of any royalties and free representation until we crack another contract. Can't ask for cheaper than that â and I can't get near a publisher without an agent. Especially when the only book I've ever published is called
Pears Amid Paradisio: An Allegory By Vincent Daley
and no one I know has read it, and people I don't know who have read it haven't liked it, and the one critical review it received, courtesy of the
Coastal Daily,
denounced it as
unintentionally hilarious and pretentiously stylised
(thank you J.S.Cooper of âWeekly Book Review' fame).
Which begs another, more fundamental question: Why be a writer? Why not something simpler, like President of an African nation, or something more profitable, like insider trading? Well, truth be known, in former lives I was, albeit briefly:
i)Â Â a public servant
ii)Â Â a shoe salesman
iii) and a teacher.
Or, as I like to think of them:
i)Â Â alone and bored shitless amidst hordes of calorie-challenged troglodytes
ii)Â occupying the same evolutionary rung as an amoeba
iii)Â professionally emasculated and emotionally disembowelled.
Tedium, insignificance, no nuts or guts. You can't ask for more than that. Demented goldfish led more exciting lives than I.
It was Kaz who changed me.
âYou want to write?' she asked. âSo resign. Resign, and write.'
âThe money?' I remember protesting weakly. âMortgage, expenses, bills, insecurity ⦠?'
âSadness,' she sniffed. âA complete lack of fulfilment. Vince, most people work for around forty years and that is far too long to be unhappy. Jesus, what's the point in spending the most productive years of life in a state of catatonic misery? Piss the job off now, or I'll leave you. Oh, and make sure you dedicate the first book to me, okay?'
All her best qualities, I thought, rolled into one â care for others, empathy for their desires, decisiveness, perception, the ability to swear freely and with panache. How can you not love someone like that?
Love Kaz, love words, always have. Words are enticing: playthings, challenges, mysteries. Once, when we were courting, I was wrestling with her on the floor of her parents' lounge-room. I was twenty-two and horny; I reached beneath her skirt and touched silk.
âHm,' I muttered. âWhat secrets lie within?'
âNew undies' she told me, closing her eyes and smiling. âDo you like them?'
But my mind, ridiculously undisciplined thing that it is, was darting elsewhere.
âUndies,'
I told her, âis such a Westie kind of word. Totally blue-collar. Saying or wearing
undies
is like kicking a beer can along a gutter. I mean, only people from the poorer suburbs wear undies. Drive an old Toyota with bog-marks, drink VB long-necks, wear undies.'
âSuch a snob! Okay, if they're not
undies,
what are they?'
I paused, rubbed my nose, took in the faint whiff of her.
âNot
panties
,' I said. âToo delicate. Virginal. Abandon hope all ye who enter, for ye shall be stuck here unto eternity.'
âI agree.
Panties
is such a numbing word. Linguistic anaesthesia. Mothers buy panties for their daughters.'
âAnd for their sons, occasionally. How about
knickers?'
She shook her head vigorously.
âDon't ask me why, but
knickers
always sounds sort of dirty to me'
âI agree. It's the double K. Most words with a double K are dirty. Kacky, kookaburra, kink.'