The Best Australian Stories (7 page)

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Authors: Black Inc.

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BOOK: The Best Australian Stories
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‘It's raining heavily,' he said.

I frowned. The clock read 11.44. ‘I thought you weren't coming until this afternoon.' It felt strange, after all this time, to be speaking Vietnamese again.

‘They changed my flight in Los Angeles.'

‘Why didn't you ring?'

‘I tried,' he said equably. ‘No answer.'

I twisted over the side of the bed and cracked open the window.

The sound of rain filled the room – rain fell on the streets, on the roofs, on the tin shed across the parking lot like the distant detonations of firecrackers. Everything smelled of wet leaves.

‘I turn the ringer off when I sleep,' I said. ‘Sorry.'

He continued smiling at me, significantly, as if waiting for an announcement.

‘I was dreaming.'

He used to wake me, when I was young, by standing over me and smacking my cheeks lightly. I hated it – the wetness, the sourness of his hands.

‘Come on,' he said, picking up a large Adidas duffel and a rolled bundle that looked like a sleeping bag. ‘A day lived, a sea of knowledge earned.' He had a habit of speaking in Vietnamese proverbs. I had long since learned to ignore it.

I threw on a T-shirt and stretched my neck in front of the lone window. Through the rain, the sky was as grey and sharp as graphite.
The fields are glass
… Like a shape in smoke, the poem blurred, then dissolved into this new, cold, strange reality: a windblown, rain-strafed parking lot; a dark room almost entirely taken up by my bed; the small body of my father dripping water onto hardwood floors.

I went to him, my legs goose-pimpled underneath my pyjamas. He watched with pleasant indifference as my hand reached for his, shook it, then relieved his other hand of the bags. ‘You must be exhausted,' I said.

He had flown from Sydney, Australia. Thirty-three hours all up – transiting in Auckland, Los Angeles, and Denver – before touching down in Iowa. I hadn't seen him in three years.

‘You'll sleep in my room.'

‘Very fancy,' he said, as he led me through my own apartment. ‘You even have a piano.' He gave me an almost rueful smile. ‘I knew you'd never really quit.' Something moved behind his face and I found myself back on a heightened stool with my fingers chasing the metronome, ahead and behind, trying to shut out the tutor's repeated sighing, his heavy brass ruler. I realised I was massaging my knuckles. My father patted the futon in my living room. ‘I'll sleep here.'

‘You'll sleep in my room, Ba.' I watched him warily as he surveyed our surroundings, messy with books, papers, dirty plates, teacups, clothes – I'd intended to tidy up before going to the airport. ‘I work in this room anyway, and I work at night.' As he moved into the kitchen, I grabbed the three-quarters-full bottle of Johnny Walker from the second shelf of my bookcase and stashed it under the desk. I looked around. The desktop was gritty with cigarette ash. I threw some magazines over the roughest spots, then flipped one of them over because its cover bore a picture of Chairman Mao. I quickly gathered up the cigarette packs and sleeping pills and incense burners and dumped them all on a high shelf, behind my Kafka Vintage Classics.

At the kitchen swing door I remembered the photo of Linda beside the printer. Her glamour shot, I called it: hair windswept and eyes squinty, smiling at something out of frame. One of her ex-boyfriends had taken it at Lake MacBride. She looked happy. I snatched it and turned it face down, covering it with scrap paper.

As I walked into the kitchen I thought, for a moment, that I had left the fire escape open. Rainwater gushed along gutters, down through the pipes. Then I saw my father at the sink, sleeves rolled up, sponge in hand, washing the month-old, crusted mound of dishes. The smell was awful. ‘Ba,' I frowned, ‘you don't need to do that.'

His hands, hard and leathery, moved deftly in the sink.

‘Ba,' I said, half-heartedly.

‘I'm almost finished.' He looked up and smiled. ‘Have you eaten? Do you want me to make some lunch?'

‘
Hoi
,' I said, suddenly irritated. ‘You're exhausted. I'll go out and get us something.'

I went back through the living room into my bedroom, picking up clothes and rubbish as I went.

‘You don't have to worry about me,' he called out. ‘You just do what you always do.'

The truth was, he'd come at the worst possible time. I was in my last year at the Iowa Writers' Workshop; it was late November, and my final story for the semester was due in three days. I had a backlog of papers to grade and a heap of fellowship and job applications to draft and submit. It was no wonder I was drinking so much.

I'd told Linda only the previous night that he was coming. We were at her place. Her body was slippery with sweat and hard to hold. Her body smelled of her clothes. She turned me over, my face kissing the bedsheets, and then she was chopping my back with the edges of her hands.
Higher. Out a bit more
. She had trouble keeping a steady rhythm. ‘Softer,' I told her. Moments later, I started laughing.

‘What?'

The sheets were damp beneath my pressed face.

‘What?'

‘
Softer
,' I said, ‘not
slower
.'

She slapped my back with the meat of her palms, hard – once, twice. I couldn't stop laughing. I squirmed over and caught her by the wrists. Hunched forward, she was blushing and beautiful. Her hair fell over her face; beneath its ash-blonde hem all I could see were her open lips. She pressed down, into me, her shoulders kinking the long, lean curve from the back of her neck to the small of her back. ‘Stop it!' her lips said. She wrested her hands free. Fingers beneath my waistband, violent, the scratch of her nails down my thighs, knees, ankles. I pointed my foot like a ballet dancer.

Afterward, I told her my father didn't know about her. She said nothing. ‘We just don't talk about that kind of stuff,' I explained. She looked like an actress who looked like my girlfriend. Staring at her face made me tired. I'd begun to feel this way more often around her. ‘He's only here for three days.' Somewhere out of sight, a group of college boys hooted and yelled.

‘I thought you didn't talk to him at all.'

‘He's my father.'

‘What's he want?'

I rolled toward her, onto my elbow. I tried to remember how much I'd told her about him. We were lying on the bed, the wind loud in the room – I remember that – and we were both tipsy. Ours could have been any two voices in the darkness. ‘It's only three days,' I said.

The look on her face was strange, shut down. She considered me a long time. Then she got up and pulled on her clothes. ‘Just make sure you get your story done,' she said.

*

I drank before I came here too. I drank when I was a student at university, and then when I was a lawyer – in my previous life, as they say. There was a subterranean bar in a hotel next to my work, and every night I would wander down and slump on a barstool and pretend I didn't want the bartender to make small talk with me. He was only a bit older than me, and I came to envy his ease, his confidence that any given situation was merely temporary. I left exorbitant tips. After a while, I was treated to battered shrimps and shepherd's pies on the house. My parents had already split by then: my father moving to Sydney, my mother into a government flat.

That's all I've ever done, traffic in words. Sometimes I still think about word counts the way a general must think about casualties. I'd been in Iowa more than a year – days passed in weeks, then months, more than a year of days – and I'd written only four and a half stories. About seventeen thousand words. When I was working at the law firm, I would have written that many words in a couple of weeks. And they would have been useful to someone.

Deadlines came, exhausting, and I forced myself up to meet them. Then, in the great spans of time between, I fell back to my vacant screen and my slowly sludging mind. I tried everything – writing in longhand, writing in my bed, in my bathtub. As this last deadline approached, I remembered a friend claiming he'd broken his writer's block by switching to a typewriter. You're free to write, he told me, once you know you can't delete what you've written. I bought an electric Smith Corona at an antique shop. It buzzed like a tropical aquarium when I plugged it in. It looked good on my desk. For inspiration, I read absurdly formal Victorian poetry and drank Scotch neat. How hard could it be? Things happened in this world all the time. All I had to do was record them. In the sky, two swarms of swallows converged, pulled apart, interwove again like veils drifting at crosscurrents. In line at the supermarket, a black woman leaned forward and kissed the handle of her shopping cart, her skin dark and glossy like the polished wood of a piano.

The week prior to my father's arrival, a friend chastised me for my persistent defeatism.

‘Writer's block?' Under the streetlights, vapours of bourbon puffed out of his mouth. ‘How can you have writer's block? Just write a story about Vietnam.'

We had just come from a party following a reading by the workshop's most recent success, a Chinese woman trying to emigrate to America who had written a book of short stories about Chinese characters in stages of migration to America. The stories were subtle and good. The gossip was that she'd been offered a substantial six-figure contract for a two-book deal. It was meant to be an unspoken rule that such things were left unspoken. Of course, it was all anyone talked about.

‘It's hot,' a writing instructor told me at a bar. ‘Ethnic literature's hot. And important too.'

A couple of visiting literary agents took a similar view: ‘There's a lot of polished writing around,' one of them said. ‘You have to ask yourself, what makes me stand out?' She tag-teamed to her colleague, who answered slowly as though intoning a mantra, ‘Your
background
and
life
experience
.'

Other friends were more forthright: ‘I'm sick of ethnic lit,' one said. ‘It's full of descriptions of exotic food.' Or: ‘You can't tell if the language is spare because the author intended it that way, or because he didn't have the vocab.'

I was told about a friend of a friend, a Harvard graduate from Washington, D.C., who had posed in traditional Nigerian garb for his book-jacket photo. I pictured myself standing in a rice paddy, wearing a straw conical hat. Then I pictured my father in the same field, wearing his threadbare fatigues, young and hard-eyed.

‘It's a licence to bore,' my friend said. We were drunk and wheeling our bikes because both of us, separately, had punctured our tyres on the way to the party.

‘The characters are always flat, generic. As long as a Chinese writer writes about
Chinese
people, or a Peruvian writer about
Peruvians
, or a Russian writer about
Russians
…' he said, as though reciting children's doggerel, then stopped, losing his train of thought. His mouth turned up into a doubtful grin. I could tell he was angry about something.

‘Look,' I said, pointing at a floodlit porch ahead of us. ‘Those guys have guns.'

‘As long as there's an interesting image or metaphor once in every
this
much text' – he held out his thumb and forefinger to indicate half a page, his bike wobbling all over the sidewalk. I nodded to him, and then I nodded to one of the guys on the porch, who nodded back. The other guy waved us through with his faux-wood air rifle. A car with its headlights on was idling in the driveway, and girls' voices emerged from inside, squealing, ‘Don't shoot! Don't shoot!'

‘Faulkner, you know,' my friend said over the squeals, ‘he said we should write about the old verities. Love and honour and pity and pride and compassion and sacrifice.' A sudden sharp crack behind us, like the striking of a giant typewriter hammer, followed by some muffled shrieks. ‘I know I'm a bad person for saying this,' my friend said, ‘but that's why I don't mind your work, Nam. Because you could just write about Vietnamese boat people all the time. Like in your third story.'

He must have thought my head was bowed in modesty, but in fact I was figuring out whether I'd just been shot in the back of the thigh. I'd felt a distinct sting. The pellet might have ricocheted off something.

‘You could
totally
exploit the Vietnamese thing. But
instead
, you choose to write about lesbian vampires and Colombian assassins, and Hiroshima orphans – and New York painters with haemorrhoids.'

For a dreamlike moment I was taken aback. Catalogued like that, under the bourbon stink of his breath, my stories sank into unflattering relief. My leg was still stinging. I imagined sticking my hand down the back of my jeans, bringing it to my face under a streetlight, and finding it gory, blood-spattered. I imagined turning around, advancing wordlessly up the porch steps, and dropkicking the two kids. I would tell my story into a microphone from a hospital bed. I would compose my story in a county cell. I would kill one of them, maybe accidentally, and never talk about it, ever, to anyone. There was no hole in my jeans.

‘I'm probably a bad person,' my friend said, stumbling beside his bike a few steps in front of me.

If you ask me why I came to Iowa, I would say that Iowa is beautiful in the way that any place is beautiful: if you treat it as the answer to a question you're asking yourself every day, just by being there.

That afternoon, as I was leaving the apartment for Linda's, my father called out my name from the bedroom.

I stopped outside the closed door. He was meant to be napping.

‘Where are you going?' his voice said.

‘For a walk,' I replied.

‘I'll walk with you.'

It always struck me how everything seemed larger in scale on Summit Street: the double-storeyed houses, their smooth lawns sloping down to the sidewalks like golf greens; elm trees with high, thick branches – the sort of branches from which I imagined fathers suspending long-roped swings for daughters in white dresses. The leaves, once golden and red, were turning dark orange, brown. The rain had stopped. I don't know why, but we walked in the middle of the road, dark asphalt gleaming beneath slick, pasted leaves like the back of a whale.

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