Authors: Gail Jones
Perdita is tear-blinded and overwhelmed. Suddenly, too, she feels drowsy; her limbs are heavy and cumbrous; she wants to sink somewhere, slowly to release, to sleep, perchance to dream. It is as if a cloud has blown through her eyes and into her head, and she is struggling to see, and to think, and to stay fully awake. She stands upright, holding Mary, or being held, but wants nothing more than to fall into the oblivion of fatigue and forgetting. Perdita looks at her mother and her mother looks back. Stella, now self-conscious, stops her recitation. She halts, then she curtsies.
In this cloudy moment, Perdita sees her mother hold up the wings of her skirt, daintily cross one leg over the other, and bend low, supplicating, before her tiny audience. Behind her a breeze has entered the open window, lifting the corners of faded yellow curtains. A map of Europe, covered with spiders, also ripples and lifts.
In the town of Broome, everything had slowed down but the flow of displaced persons. With five hundred Japanese pearl divers and their families interned, things were quiet; the pearling industry was sunk. Luggers were destroyed, or towed south, anticipating invasion. Some of the buildings stood empty, or were looted. But as people flowed from Broome, moving to missions and to camps, boarding southward-heading boats, another population was passing through.
Since Broome was a refuelling depot on the way to somewhere safe, American service personnel from the Philippines, rich businessmen from Asia, stray families like Perdita's, were all in transit. So too were Dutch refugees from Java. Planeloads of them arrived in flying boats each night. Catalinas, Dorniers and Empires rested in Roebuck Bay, half a mile offshore to evade the worst vagaries of the low tides that might leave them stuck listing and useless in the mud.
It was a long trek across the sea-bed to the town, so most of the women, children and elderly stayed on board, waiting for the refuelling so that they could continue their journeys. The men came into the town, strolling around, looking lost, wondering what place they had come to that was at once so full and so empty. At night the sky throbbed with plane
loads of anxious people. The drone was of transience, suspension, the wish for safe haven.
Perdita was roused from her sleep to watch them pass over; they were like fat-bellied birds, impossibly cumbrous, descending at an angle to land with a splash on the ocean. Their mighty propellers shone silver in the moonlight. All over the world, no doubt, people were moving â armies in the night, forced transportations, the homeless pushing handcarts, men dragging a child, a mother. Even the nuns at the convent were planning to disperse: three more were leaving in the morning for Beagle Bay Mission, Sister Perpetua among them.
Having watched the boat planes descend, Perdita would return to her bed and lie awake listening to her mother's fretful sleep. It was dark in her part of the world so it must be light in Germany. Perhaps Adolf Hitler was at this moment eating a boiled egg, sitting perched on an iron stool with a silver spoon in one hand and a salt shaker in the other. Perdita realised she knew of no other German, not one, not a single face or name. War was like this, she decided. There were figureheads â aloof, magisterial, remote â who must nevertheless eat and shit and lie down at night-time to sleep, and then there were ordinary people, the collectivised enemy, the Huns, the Dagos and, much closer, the Japs. It was this effacement, surely, that made killing so easy.
Perdita wondered for the first time if she and her mother would be killed in the war. She had seen the small army contingent in town, relaxed soldiers hanging about, sitting on steps, sharing cigarettes, inexpertly playing cards, and not inspiring any confidence at all, and she knew of the Rising Suns extending their dots further and further south; they were now filling New Guinea like paper measles. Stella moaned in her sleep and turned this way and that, moving her head from side to side, slowly turning her limbs, as if she was floundering
in a body of deep water. Perdita was beginning to absorb her mother's doomed disposition. There would be subsequent ordeals, of this she was sure. A sound like a sob came from her mother's throat. Perdita pressed her face into the pillow and wondered what she was dreaming.
In those few days she spent in the town, which stretched in her memory disproportionately long, the way most children remember an extraordinary visit, or a birthday party, Perdita saw how tenuous was the social world torn by panic. She saw a scuffle between two soldiers outside Streeter and Male's store, a boulder thrown through an open window, the shattering consequence of which made her leap in fright, and an old Chinese man struck casually in the street.
As she wandered past William Dampier's chest â a monument to honour the English pirate who visited the bay in the 1600s â she knew with adult intelligence how historical heroes might shift in and out of focus, what folly might have attended choosing this fellow for commemoration. A dog began following her, a scruffy, limping creature, to whose misery Perdita would normally have been responsive, but she threw stones to make it retreat and felt a small immoral triumph when finally it slunk away. Horatio had to be left behind with Mr Trevor, and Perdita realised how much she missed her own dog, now that everything was gradually slipping away.
In the evening there was a glorious tangerine light, and in an episode of respite Perdita and Stella sat outside with the two remaining nuns and Mother Superior, sipping fruit cordials. They did not speak of the war, but of the weather and their garden. One of the sisters was particularly proud of her vegetable patch. Then Mother Superior changed the topic and asked Perdita about her faith, and when she replied that she had none,
interrogated her mother as to the neglect of her daughter's soul. Stella glanced sidelong at Perdita and they shared a moment of exasperation. Perdita looked up at the sky and saw banks of clouds growing a darker orange-red, lying in streamers, astray, stretching all the way to Japan.
When she attended again to the conversation Stella was declaring: âMy religion is Shakespeare. He answers all the big questions.'
The Mother Superior looked scandalised. Her blue eyes enlarged.
âThis is not a question of literature,' she responded. âIt's a question of the immortality of the soul.'
âQuite,' said Stella, conceding nothing.
But still the Mother Superior persisted. She bent her large body towards Perdita and asked: âHow old are you, child?'
âShe is eleven,' Stella answered.
Perdita knew then that in all the negotiations between them, Stella would always take precedence with speech. She had often before felt puny in her mother's presence â confounded by some of her Shakespearean assertions, oppressed by her rules and incessant admonitions (âdon't blink so much', âsit up straight'), driven miserably inward by the din of such a verbally expressive woman; but they had also had the hours and hours of lessons, in which they had discussed the world and everything in it, in which any topic was splendidly complex and open to discussion. Although she had always longed to go to school, Perdita had also loved her mother's idiosyncratic lessons, the degree to which she explained arcane details, her cheerfully protracted explanations, her volcanic spilling-over of peculiar knowledge.
Perdita watched as Stella pulled the small table between them closer, took a pack of cards from her pocket and, without reference to the assembled company, began a game of solitaire. It was her way of finishing the conversation. Perdita watched her
mother shuffle, and riffle, and deal to herself; then watched the suits of cards begin to emerge and form pillars of meaningless, ephemeral value. Her hands moved quickly and she did not take her eyes off the cards to glance upwards as the Mother Superior pushed back her chair, mumbled something and left. Then the two young nuns, smiling shyly, also departed. Perdita remained watching her mother complete the integrated circuit of her game. Its neatly interior system was a kind of reassurance.
When it was over Stella said: âThere!' and lifted her head to smile at Perdita. Her daughter smiled back. She felt proud of her mother, even as she was aware she had offended their hosts and acted with rude and unreasonable stubbornness.
Early in the morning of 3 March 1942, Perdita walked by herself, and secretly, down to the bay. It was her intention to see if she could break into a sorting shed and steal some pearl shell, a piece for her and one for Mary. Since the pearl industry had shut down, she reasoned, no one would miss two pieces of shell. The mother-of-pearl particularly attracted her. It had a beauty she mostly associated with light: the lustre of moon-lit clouds, beam-shot from below, the strange coiny iridescence on the bellies of fish, the glittery traces threaded in the border of her mother's Spanish shawl.
She walked through the sleepy streets, crossed the road down to the beach, and made her way towards the water. If she felt any trepidation at all it was not for her anticipated crime, but the problem of where she might hide the shell on her return, so that her mother wouldn't find it. A single plane flew high overhead, curving through, then around, the perimeters of the town. If Perdita had glanced up she might have seen that it was unfamiliar. The plane that flew overhead at 8 a.m. was a Japanese fighter plane, a Mitsubishi Zero. A little later, at 9.15, nine Zeroes
would sweep across the sky, bringing with dreadful upset beams of piercing bullets.
For now it was quiet and the sheds were deserted. Perdita walked around the rusty iron walls of the two largest sheds and saw, to her surprise, that both were accessible. One had a padlock and chain, but the padlock was unclosed; the other simply had a chain caught on a hook. As quietly as she could, Perdita unhooked the chain and entered the building. It smelled like the ocean, briny and piquant. Morning light flooded in through a high, barred window. Most of the pearl shell had been cleared away, but there remained a small pile pushed against a wall. From it Perdita selected the two most impressive pieces. They were coarse and ugly on the outside, but their inner nacre was lovely. One of the shells had a pearl blister: she would keep that one for herself. Perdita held them together, as if they were the sides of one shell. They almost fitted.
She was thinking of Mary, thinking in a speculative, floating way about what she might say when she presented the gift of shell, when she heard the faint sound of another intruder outside the door. Perdita instantly felt guilty and afraid she would be discovered. She did not replace the shells, but crept towards the crack in the iron doorway and, taking care not to rattle the chain, pushed at it gently to see who might be there. It was the scruffy dog, the one she had earlier flung stones at. The dog looked up at her with timorous entreaty, wagging its tail in a slight, interrogative way. Perdita hesitated for a moment, then bent to embrace it. Its fur was greasy, and it stank a little, but she clutched at its scrawny body as if it was Horatio returned.
She could not say how long she stayed on the beach, but she was there when the Japanese planes approached. She heard them first, a mechanical hum, dull and menacing, and then at once saw them lined in formation in the sky above her. There was a moment of unreality when she watched them tiny,
suspended, then Perdita heard gunfire as seven of the Zeroes flew directly overhead. They had divided, two heading to the airport, the others circling to destroy the flying boats settled in the bay. There was a sound of dense, strafing fire and distant screaming.
The flying boats were invisible in the distance, but Perdita believed she could hear human voices lifted in the wind, transported by terror. There were explosions and she saw smoke in black clouds rising above the water. Behind her was the sound of men shouting and starting Jeeps and running for their guns, and further away, the boom of planes exploding on the tarmac at the airport.
The attack lasted an hour. Sixteen Dutch refugee planes were sunk in the bay and six military planes were destroyed at the airport. Of the Japanese planes, one was shot down; it flew out into the distance, aflame, then plummeted into the ocean.
History records what Perdita could not see from the shore: that the refugees trapped in the planes were bombarded as they leaped into the water, or burned to death as their planes exploded. That there was undignified scrambling, anguished mayhem, and appalling suffering. Almost one hundred people died. Later a mass grave would be dug for those whose names and faces had been so swiftly obliterated, who were now simply charred or mutilated bodies, simply the Dutch.
When Perdita made it back to the convent, still clasping her pearl shells, her mother wept when she saw she was safe. The scruffy dog had fled when the planes roared overhead; so it was just she and Stella again, clinging to each other, pleased at least to have each other alive, and wondering together what on earth would come next. Perdita had been expecting a scolding, but found instead the unusual gift of her mother's tears. But Stella was blowing her nose and wiping her eyes, and already beginning to turn away.