Read The Best of Fiona Kidman's Short Stories Online
Authors: Fiona Kidman
Honor taps her long fingernails on the table top. âIt can't go on like this,' she says softly.
âLike what?' In the silence that follows he finds himself thinking, ah Honor, don't go on. You're my mate, what'll I do if I don't have a mate?
But then he remembers something. It's like a voice, maybe like one of Duane and Paula's voices, he doesn't know, but it just hits him with such blinding force he grips the table to steady himself. âSelby,' he says. âThat was it.'
âWhat are you talking about?'
âThe baby's name. My son. He was called Selby.' Eagerly, he explains to her how he had forgotten the name. He opens his wallet and jots the name on the back of his last week's pay slip, in case his memory closes in against him again.
âYou shouldn't dwell on things like that,' says Honor. âIt's unhealthy.'
âThere's a new ad on telly,' he tells her. âThere's this big flock of blue birds fly right up in the middle of the screen. It's real pretty.'
âSo?'
âSo that's what it feels like. See, I've been feeling so guilty and now I don't.'
She gets to her feet without a word, gathering her purse.
As they walk down the mall, he tries to compose some nice thing to say, but nothing will come.
âI'll see you soon,' he says, when they get to the corner.
Honor shrugs. The choice is his, he supposes. At the beginning of the lunch hour he might have jumped her way, but now he is light-headed with relief, it's like a benediction, remembering the baby's name.
She lifts her shoulder. âGoodbye,' she says.
âAh shit, Honor. Honor don't be like that.' He raises his voice, calling after her down past Cubacade. âHonor. Hon-ah.'
Still, he is certain he has done the right thing. It is Honor who cannot see the way things are.
Back at the shop, Gordon tells him lunch hours are cut to half.
Roy walks home, his feet comfortably encased in the familiar leather shoes, his heels ringing against the pavement to the tune of his steady sensible gait. He feels as if he is following an invisible ribbon threaded from one telegraph pole to the next, or a row of pebbles like Hansel and Gretel walking through the forest, that lead him straight back to La Jane.
How
can
I
tell
y
a,
how
much
I
lo-ove you?
Â
He
sings the words in his head, hears himself saying them aloud to her. In his pocket he runs his fingers over a scratch 'n' sniff perfume sachet he has filched from a magazine at the station newsagent.
The unit is very quiet. At first he thinks there is nobody home even though the door is unlocked.
In the bedroom La Jane sits on the bed, dressed as if for an outing, stripping polish from her nails. She smells of acetate and Charlie perfume and chewing gum.
âHi, been out?'
âNot yet.'
âSo how's your day been?' he asks. He is struck by uncertainty. There is something wrong. Clothes have been pulled out of drawers.
La Jane's movements are slow and deliberate. She studies her outstretched hands before she answers him. They are not a bit like Honor's; her fingers are short and rather blunt.
âAll right,' she says.
It's only then that he notices Victorias cot is empty.
âWhere's the kid?' He tries to keep the panic out of his voice.
âI told you she'd be gone.'
âShe at Paula's?'
âNah.'
Roy breathes deeply. Maybe he'll just strangle her. For a moment he wonders if La Jane knows of Honor's existence and is punishing him, but there is something passionless about the way she stares at him.
âIs she at the hospital?'
âNah, she's not at the hospital.'
âLa Jane, where's our kid? What have you done with her?'
La Jane's eyes are flat and grown-up. âDuane's got her,' she says. âShe's with him.'
He has to sit down, aware of his knees trembling like a kid's. Now he sees it all, Victoria on Duane's knee, Duane's tongue in La Jane's ear, La Jane's clothing on the floor.
âPaula'll kill you,' he says. He wouldn't mind doing it himself, but knows he never could. âIf you take her bloke.' Even then, he notices the way it's Paula's loss he acknowledges; he cannot begin to consider his own.
Her smile is sheer triumph. âShe'll survive,' she says.
He sees then that this defection, all of this, is not about him. It never was.
H
ER FATHER SITS AT THE KITCHEN TABLE
. It's Tuesday, one of those cloudy days that lean heavily out of the sky over the Volcanic Plateau. The ritual, now that he is retired, is to visit her on Tuesdays. Her mother is away all that day, at her part-time job, and he can't bear it, being left alone for a whole day. On Tuesday mornings he says to his wife: âDon't leave me. I retired so I could spend all my time with you.'
âNo, you didn't,' her mother says (she tells her daughter this in whispered conversations on the phone), âyou retired early because everybody in your family died young â or so you say, though how would I know, I never met any of them, they're all history â and you want some time to put your feet up before you die. Well, go ahead, put your feet up, but don't expect me to sit around behaving like an old lady, not just yet.'
The daughter is making mint jelly. She has watched the Galloping
Gourmet
demonstrate the recipe on the television cookery programme. Everyone in the street is trying out his recipes. Normally she wouldn't have time to make fiddly things like mint jelly, all that boiling and straining, but on Tuesdays she has to do something or her father will expect her to sit for hours, being still, staring into space with him, contemplating the great unknowns such as death and silence. Her constant movement unnerves him. So she devises projects, projects that will distract them both from the weight of time, that will assert her right to move in her own home.
Besides, she has a cloud of mint growing at the back door; it is like a weed, pushing up through the cracks in the path, curling over the edge of the
wood-box
, there is even a tendril of it, fat and pale where it has grown away from the light, pushing up under the kitchen step. She might as well use it.
She washes out Marmite jars and sterilises them with slow heat in the oven. He starts to sort some coins on to the table, just as she strains the jelly, the tricky part.
He holds up a shiny penny. âLook at that,' he says, âit's like a new one.'
âIt probably is new,' she says, concentrating hard. The baby will be awake soon and then there will be no time for this inconsequential activity.
He peers at the date, pushing his glasses back above the bumpy ridge of his thin nose. âIt's quite old â 1931. Fancy a penny that old, and it's so shiny. How could that be?'
âMaybe it's been in a child's collection up until now.' She considers the problem of how to fill such tiny jars. In the cupboard beneath the sink she finds a jug with a thin pointed spout that she has forgotten she owned. She greets her discovery with a little snort of pleasure, it's ideal. âSomebody's just found their old collection and thrown it out.'
âI think it would have changed colour, even in a drawer,' he says. âCopper does you know, it ages. Perhaps somebody shone it up.'
âMaybe.' Carefully, she tips the hot green liquid into the jug and begins to pour it into the pots.
âYou'd wonder, though, why somebody would go to all the trouble of shining it up and then putting it out for change. With the other money. Don't you think that's peculiar?'
She sighs. Jesus wept, he used to say when he was a young man. Whenever he got impatient, that's what he used to say. Jesus wept. The shortest sentence in the Bible. The shortest complete sentence in the world. She says it to herself now. Jesus wept.
âMaybe,' she says, recklessly, âit's a penny diver's penny.' When she was younger, she had worked her summer holidays in a restaurant alongside the gates to Whakarewarewa, where busloads of tourists alighted before going on walking tours of sulphur pools and mud geysers. The entrance to the resort was spanned by a bridge over a deep river. Maori children dived from the bridge to retrieve coins thrown to them by tourists, holding them in their mouths, their cheeks stretched like silk pouches, until they were ready to burst. Then they came into the tearooms where it was one of her jobs to hold out a basin of water into which they spat streams of coins. When she had washed the money she counted it out and gave them half-crowns or florins in exchange. Sometimes when she counted the money she found bright shining coins. âWhy is this one so shiny?' she had once asked.
âIt's been in there a while, the sulphur has stripped it clean,' the children told her. She has no idea whether this was a true explanation or not, whether scientifically it stands up, but she thinks this may interest her father. He may even know something about it; he reads a lot.
But he isn't listening to her. Her system with the jug works efficiently and she fills the jars one by one with the clear, mint-green, clean-smelling syrup
and tells him about the penny divers but he doesn't listen to a word she is saying.
âIt's like a sovereign,' he says. âThat's what it reminds me of.'
âBut it's not,' she says, annoyed that she should have dusted off this memory for him, and he's not interested. She should have known better.
âI had a sovereign once,' he says dreamily. âWhen I was a child, and there were still sovereigns. My Uncle Abraham gave it to me.'
âUncle Abraham? You never told me you had an Uncle Abraham.'
âOh yes, you must have heard me speak of him.' He is silent for a moment, thinking of something, goodness knows what. It is nearly fifty years since he emigrated. He has never been back to England. He calls it Home. Most of his family died before she was born and what was left of them were wiped out in the Blitz. There is nothing there, just holes in the ground, he has told them, her mother and her, though she is not quite sure how he knows even this, or if it is true. Someone once wrote to him, an old school friend maybe, and now this person has disappeared too.
âFancy me never knowing about Uncle Abraham.' The mint jelly looks beautiful, and it is starting to set already, perhaps because the jars are so small. She tries a bit of it off the tip of her finger. It tastes awful, like toothpaste.
âThere were three brothers in that family,' he says. âThe others were Nathaniel and Isaac.'
âLet me get this straight,' she says, walking the length of the kitchen. âYou had an Uncle Abraham, an Uncle Nathaniel, and an Uncle Isaac?'
âThat's right.'
âHow come you've never told me about them before?'
âOf course I've told you,' he says, shifting in his chair. His eyes aren't meeting hers. She feels tall and cruel, standing there examining him as if he's under a microscope. She sees all sorts of things about him she hasn't noticed before.
âThey were rich and they gave you gold sovereigns, eh?'
âJust one gold sovereign,' he says unhappily. âJust the once.'
âTell me about my relatives. Who were they?' When he doesn't answer, her voice is fierce, she speaks in a tone she hasn't heard herself use before. âTell me, who are the ancestors? Who?'
His smile is enigmatic, sly she thinks. âIsn't it about time you put the kettle on? I'll have to go soon.'
âYou didn't tell me.'
âYour mother'll be home in a couple of hours. You wouldn't want a fella to go without a cup of tea.' As he speaks of her mother, she hears his suppressed excitement.
âWhy don't you leave the shiny penny for Alice?' she says, as she fills the jug. Alice is her older child. She will be home from school soon.
But he has already pocketed the coin. He unfolds his coat and beret, ready to put them on the moment he has finished his tea.
When he is gone, walking very upright down the street, she goes to the bedroom and studies her face in the mirror. The pores of her skin feel strange beneath her fingertips.
S
OME PEOPLE CANNOT IMAGINE
how their parents ever conceived them. A lot of the kids I went to school with were like that. If they caught their parents making love, it was a big deal the next day. I thought it was embarrassing when they talked about it, and naive as well. I had often heard my parents make love. Their room is next to mine. They may not look passionate to others, I really don't know, because, the older you get, the more difficult it is to see how your parents stack up against others, but I knew that they were. They couldn't keep their hands off each other, even when there were people around. That did bother me a bit. My girlfriends said, they're so sweet, your parents, but I wished they wouldn't do it.
When I reached my teens, they became more careful in the bedroom. They knew I knew, though nothing was ever said. Not that it made much difference. There was a sort of a tension in the house, a charged atmosphere in the night. I lay awake and listened to the silence, in the same way that I listened to the wind in the trees outside, or the tide going out in the bay. In the morning, the effect would be the same. You couldn't see where the wind and water had been, and my parents were no different either. We all ate breakfast exactly the way we had the day before, with my mother urging my sister and me to eat more than we wanted, and my father telling us to hurry.
What I wanted to know, more than whether they âdid it' or not, as the kids at school put it, was why they did it. Why they had ever begun. What made them decide, out of all the other people in the world, that they would spend the rest of their lives as lovers? Why did they love each other? That was the question that really consumed me.
When I asked my mother about this she would try to tell me. She would describe their courtship. They lived in the provinces then. My mother was a school teacher, my father had come to town to work at the Maori Affairs Department. She said that right from the first moment she had seen him, she
knew he was different. He had Maori in his ancestry, and he took his work seriously. He processed valuable old documents about land claims at the Maori Land Court. People liked him, he had an open friendly way about him, although later we would all see the loner's side to him, too, the way he liked to hug some things to himself. He is still a bit like that about us and our mother.
They met at a dance. My mother didn't tell him until long afterwards that she had seen him in the street, and already felt she knew him. Like any well-brought-up young woman of the sixties she wanted to let him think that he had found her all by himself. It was hard for her in the provinces then, being a teacher. There was very little to do, except go to the pictures or to parties, and hang out at the milk bars, but if you were a teacher people watched what you got up to. You could lose your job if you were seen to behave badly. People even thought you were peculiar if you went to the pictures by yourself. When you arrived in a strange town it was hard to make friends.
I wondered if my parents had just got together because they were both strangers in town, needing somebody. But she said, no, it wasn't like that.
The other morning, I asked her about it again. She gave me a funny look. She was making cheese scones. Lately, she has been doing a lot of baking, making kind of homely food. I don't know why she bothers half the time. She could go down to the bakery and buy half a dozen scones which are just as good as the ones she makes, and save herself a lot of time; it's not as if she hasn't got spare money these days.
Anyway, she paused with her hands in the dough, like some renaissance peasant woman, and said: âYou're a bit old for fairy tales aren't you?'
âAre they?' I asked. âIs that what they were?'
âYou want to hear happy-ever-after stories,' she said. She knows I'm seeing somebody, but she doesn't know who, not yet anyway.
âNo, I want to know about you.'
âOkay, okay.' She paused, a funny little smile hovering round her mouth, half amusement I think, half sadness that it was all so long ago. âWe went for a walk on the Sunday afternoon after I had met him. I was keen on him, but I'd had other boyfriends â and he'd had other girlfriends too, lots of them, he'd given two girls the same engagement ring, I can tell you I wouldn't let a chap get away with that â and I hadn't worked out how serious things were going to be between us. But I felt that I recognised something in him that was like me. When I had seen him in the street, and not known how to introduce myself, I'd been sort of surprised that he hadn't seen me straight away. I suppose that sounds silly?'
âNo, I know what you mean.'
âDo you?' I saw a tiny crease of anxiety developing in her expression, but she righted it.
âWe walked all afternoon. Both of us boarded with people in the town, so neither could have entertained the other. It was a lovely spring afternoon, and there were flowers out in the botanical gardens in the centre of town. We stopped, admiring all the plants as if we were veteran gardeners. I particularly liked the Iceland poppies â the colours were so wild â he fancied the roses, and wanted to pick some for me, but I was sure we would get caught, and I'd be disgraced. After a while, we ran out of things to say to each other, and he took my hand and we headed for the lake. Uh-oh, I thought, here we go, this is going to be trouble. But do you know what he did?'
âNo,' I lied, because of course I'd heard the story before.
âHe told me the great grey-green greasy Limpopo story about how the elephant got its trunk.'
âThe whole story?'
âYup. Every bit of it.' She shoved the tray of scones into the oven and shut the door, then turned and leaned against the bench, dusting her hands together to shake off the flour.
âHe told us that when we were kids, and it used to take hours.'
âWell, it took hours the way he told it that day. We went and sat by the lake, and he just kept on and on, and when he got to the part where the little elephant asks the snake if he's seen such a thing as a crocodile in these promiscuous parts, I began to laugh and I couldn't stop. O Best Beloved, your father said, in a crocodile voice, come hither, and I totally cracked up. I tried to say the great grey-green greasy Limpopo lines along with him, but I was laughing so hard I couldn't. But at last the crocodile stretched the little elephant's nose and the story was over. It was getting towards evening and the wind off the lake was cold, and I thought, what next, what next? Well, after a while, he walked me home.'
âDid you think that was weird?'
âI thought it was different. I thought there was maybe something serious going on between us.'
âOh Mum.' I burst out laughing. âYou're weird too.'
âThat's what I figured.'
âWhat happened next?' I really didn't know, she'd never told me the lot.
âThe next Friday night, we went up town. You can't imagine what Friday night shopping was like then. It was one of the most important nights of the week. We, um, strutted our stuff, you know?'
âEven people like you?'
âWell, I was only a girl really. I mean, everybody just went to town, it was one of the things you had good clothes for, no matter who you were. Your father had arranged to meet me. When I saw him, I couldn't believe it. He was wearing a red cardigan and a hat.'
âWhat was wrong with that?'
She rolled her eyes. âEverything. The cardigan was so bright. Chaps didn't wear clothes like that. And young men didn't wear hats at the time, only old men did.'
âWhy did he dress like that?'
She laughed. âHe just hadn't got his student days out of his system. But they weren't like that in this town. It was Auckland clobber, you know? Well, I looked at him, and he said, are you coming, and I took his arm, and we set off down the street. We hadn't gone very far before I saw a little group of people standing chatting on the footpath outside the public library which was an important stopping off point on Friday nights for older people. I recognised the group from a distance, it was men from the School Committee â there were no women on the committee, they all had to belong to the Ladies' Auxiliary. I looked at your father's hat, and I thought I'd die.'
âBut there was nothing disgraceful about him wearing a hat.'
âHe looked different.' She gestured, still helpless after all these years, as she remembered. âI thought about wandering off and looking in a shop window and then walking on a bit ahead of him, as if I had sort of not noticed that he hadn't caught up. Then, as soon as I thought that, I knew that it was decision time. I knew that if I was embarrassed by him then, it would never work. I thought, if I love him, this is it.'
âHad he said he loved you by this stage?'
âNo, no, I hadn't seen him since the great grey-green greasy Limpopo River.'
âYeah?'
âYeah,' she imitated me.
âSo?'
âSo, I took his arm, and I walked down the street with him, and I smiled at the School Committee and said good evening to them, and he raised his hat, and we kept on walking.'
âAnd then he said he loved you, and you got married?'
âNot quite like that. He didn't say anything for ages, but then the Maori Land Court got burned down, and he was just beside himself. Really
devastated
, you see. Because there were all these old papers and things that no money in the world could have replaced. He took it very personally, the loss of history like that, as if something of himself had been lost. Some of the staff
got transferred, and he was one of them, he got sent back to Wellington. It all came to a head. I just went with him.'
âYou're strange, you two,' I said, and slid off my stool at the table.
âWhere are you going?' she asked.
âI dunno. Down town maybe.'
She put out her hand and touched my cheek. âYou look pretty today, actually you look beautiful.'
âThanks.'
âDon't cut your hair any shorter, will you?'
âMum, give over.'
âYou'll find a nice boy of your own some time.'
âI don't want â¦' I stopped. âI've got plenty on my plate right now without that,' I said. âI've got that many essays to write.'
âWhat's troubling you?' she asked.
âNothing,' I said, turning away.
After all that talk, I knew I was being rotten to her but I couldn't help myself. I picked up my bag in the hallway, and just kept on going out the door. I told myself I'd just been filling in time anyway, because of course I knew all along where I was going. I'm not an aimless sort of person.
I walked into town, and sat down in Boulcott Street outside St Mary of the Angels where the choir was rehearsing, in their pure high sweet voices. I wanted to cry. Inside my head, a kind of poem was forming. It went: âDo not say that fatal word/ beloved, beloved, beloved.'
I didn't know where it had come from, and now that it was there I could not think where it was taking me.
Then I saw Naomi coming. I knew she would; when she finishes her history lecture she usually takes this route down to Willis Street. Her course is different from mine, we don't usually end up at university at the same time, but we nearly always meet up, without actually saying where we will be.
She was wearing the same old black gear that she always wore â baggy black sweater and leggings, like a large dark chrysalis, and heavy boots. Her hair is so short you can see her scalp through the yellow bristles. She wears a long earring in one ear and a row of studs above it.
Naomi had brought me a gift. Her manner was quite offhand when she gave it to me, but I could feel her watching me. It was the mate to the earring she was wearing. I stood there holding it in the palm of my hand. I didn't particularly like the earring for itself, but I knew that being given it was important. Naomi stood there waiting for something. âYou're a cool little creature,' she had said to me once, in exasperation. I knew that that was how it looked to her because I kept my distance from her when there were people
around, so that nobody was ever sure about us. Of course, Naomi is not stupid, and she knew that it was also because I wasn't sure myself.
I could have put the earring in my pocket and said I'd put it on later, but I didn't. I felt around for the pierced hole in my ear.
âHere,' said Naomi. She reached out and slipped the earring on for me, there in the middle of the street. I kissed the air beside her face, promising more. Then I took her hand in mine and we walked down the street.