From where Pez sits he can see across into the hospital itselfâa casualty clearing station. The sides of one of the tents is drawn back for the light. Three or four white robed figures move around the table, bending over it. Red flesh is showing on the naked figure strapped to the table.
The plane comes.
On the trip down he crouches near a window and with hot, heavy eyes stares at the meaningless drift of jungle and shore that flows beneath himâthe long green shore that so painfully and darkly they had fought and marched along. All the weary weeks it had taken them and now it passes in a brief twenty minutes.
The first thing you feel when you get into hospital is a sense of your own dirtinessâthe grime that has been under your fingernails unnoticed for months suddenly seems gritty and itchy on the tips of your fingers.
There is no glory in the world like a hot showerâyou come out purged and cleanâyour whole body is light as in a dream. It must be a thousand years since you were clean before.
There is a rare pleasure in the lightness and cleanliness of unaccustomed pyjamas and your feet are shod with air in slippers after the heavy jungle boots.
For the first week, Pez slept, mostly. Sleeping for a couple of hours and waking briefly to drift back again. It is an unreal world of polite voices and soups and sweets with meals and lights at night and music from the loudspeaker beating softly through the long palm-leafed ward. This is peace and restâbut somehow it is further away from home and reality than the weapon pit is. Here are books and morning tea with biscuits and womenâbrisk and professionally tenderâso neatly starched in khaki, so sweet-smelling, so soft of faceâhow coolly warm their fingers are on your browâbut we are further from home, this is peaceful desolation.
Harry Drew and Regan visit Pez. They are on their way back to the battalion. He hears news of others. Some are dead, some have gone home, some are in hospital still, some have gone back up the track.
At the end of the first week they put a bloke with pleurisy into the end bed next to Pez. He was dying. For three days they fought for him. There was always a nurse by his side. Bottles of plasma and serum and glucose were suspended over his bed, the long red tubes snaking down. The life-liquids dripped into his veins hour after hour. The nurses sat by him and smoothed his brow and tried to calm him when he raved and brushed moist cotton wool on his parched lips when he begged and groaned for water.
The third night he called out a lot and the doctors came many times. When Pez woke in the morning the bed was empty and the bottles had been taken down. The little nurse called Bunty was sniffling and red-eyed as she remade the bed. She had been with him at the last. It must be hard to fight so long and passionately and skilfully and then have them die under your hands.
*
When Pez gets up and about again he makes way a bit with Bunty. They really got acquainted one day when he strolled into the storeroom out the back of the ward to get a fresh towel.
The linen cabinet was a dark little cubicle and Pez, groping his way in blindly from bright sunshine outside, ran bang into Bunty who was inside the cubicle doing a quick change act.
âHell! I'm sorry,' said Pez, retreating hastily from that disturbing soft nakedness.
He leaned against the wall outside the cubicle and lifted his eyes ostentatiously to heaven: âWhy don't you hang out a signâlady undressing?'
âWhat the devil are you doing here, anyway?' asked Bunty, amused. âYou're not supposed to be here.'
âI was after a clean towel,' confessed Pez. âI missed out on the issue.'
A suggestively naked arm came out of the cubicle with a laundered towel: âIf a towel's all you're after, that's a change. Usually you blokes are after something else once you get on your feet.'
âOh, I'm adaptable,' said Pez. âI can turn my hand to practically anything.'
Bunty came out of the darkness, buttoning her jacket: âIn that case,' she said evilly, âand on account of the embarrassment you've caused me, you can give me a hand to do some ironing.'
So Pez helped Bunty do the ironing and spent a lot of time talking to her casually and smoking her cigarettes as he worked. It was a very casual and comradely affair.
Once she did suggest that if he could dig up a bottle of whisky somewhere she was very partial to whisky and knew a very comfortable and private sandhillâbut Pez couldn't lay hands on a bottle of whisky.
When he was leaving she kissed him in a friendly fashion and they made a date for a pub crawl in Sydney after the war.
The ward next door was the troppo ward. It was closed in with heavy cyclone wire and guarded by provosts. Odd cries and yells came from it at times.
There was one bloke Pez could see and hear through the wire. He was a big bloke. His left arm was smashed and in plaster.
He would stand for hours looking out through the wireâthe fingers of his good hand hanging onto the wire above his head, his smashed hand held against his stomach, his face pressed against the mesh.
For a long time he would stand quietly. Then suddenly he would open his mouth wide and give vent to a long animal scream that went on and onâat the same time seeming quite detached from him. His calmly insane face was visible through the wire, the mouth wide open, and those agonised shrieks seemed to be coming from some other being locked inside him.
He escaped one day.
The first Pez knew was when he saw him running. He came with a peculiar loping run, his smashed hand, weighted with the plaster, swinging pendulum-like. He was crowing in a thin wailing voice as he ran and chuckling with childish triumph.
He came running into the ward and went straight to the little bald-headed bloke in the bed opposite Pez. He lay down on the bed, snuggled down.
âI got away from them, Eddie,' he chuckled with childish triumph. âLook, see!' He was showing his dead meat tickets with a furtive, confidential air. âLook, Eddieâyou know meâI'm a Protestantâthey're all Hindus in thereâI'm a Protestant and they're trying to make me a Hinduâbut I got awayâ' he shivered again with delighted childish laughter.
âSure, sure, she'll be right, Happy,' said Eddie. âYou'll be all right here.'
Half a dozen provosts came running into the ward. Big, beefy blokes, panting from the run. They crowded round the bed but none of them seemed to be anxious to be first.
The man with the smashed arm cowered back on the bed, snarling. When they tried to grab him he kicked at them and beat at them with his plaster arm. He was shrieking incoherent filth at them, the teeth and red gums showing in his savage mouth.
Eddie had his arms around him.
âGet away from him! Get away!' Eddie was pleading. âLeave him alone! He'll smash his arm againâhe's smashed it three times already.'
There was an angry growl from the rest of the ward, a swift gathering anger: âProvost! Provost! Let him alone!'
The little dark-eyed Sister was in the middle of the provosts suddenly, ordering them back: âGet outside, boys,' she said. âI'll handle this.'
âHe's dangerous, Sister,' said one provost. âHe tried to use a knife.'
âGet outside,' she said.
The bloke with the smashed arm was still snarlingâwatching the provosts. They withdrew to the doorway.
The dark-eyed Sister walked calmly up to the bed and stood close to him. Everyone in the long ward held their breath. Slowly her hand went out and rested lightly on his forehead.
âAre you all right, lad?' she asked.
He looked at her a long momentâgradually the snarl faded, the distorted face relaxed. He looked at her with utter wearinessâthe tormented eyes finding rest in the cool and unpitying warmth of her.
âYes, Sister, I'm all rightâonly make them go awayâsee, I'm a Protestantâsee, I can show you my meat ticketsâthey're all Hindusâmake them go away, Sister.'
She ordered the provosts away. They go reluctantly. She stayed quietly talking to him. âHow do you feel?' she asked.
âAll right, SisterâI'm all rightâjust my head aches.'
She soothed his browâoh, those hands had the sweetness of a benediction and like cool water soothed our fevers.
âI just want to stay here with my mates, SisterâI know they want to put me on a plane tonightâI'll go on the plane, Sister, but I just want to stop here with my mate until thenâthis is my mate, EddieâI just want to stay here with him and sleep.'
The little bald-headed bloke, Eddie, had him in his arms, nursing him.
âHe'll be all right, Sister,' said Eddie. âI'll look after himâhe'll be all right until the plane.'
The Sister asked will she bring another bed in for him, to put alongside Eddie's bed, but Eddie said no, he's comfortableâhe'll look after him.
The little bald-headed bloke sat there holding the big bloke in his arms all the afternoon. Sometimes the big bloke slept, other times he talked in a swift confidential little whisper and showed Eddie his meat tickets.
He was calm in the evening but the provosts came in again and he kicked and screamed when he saw one of them with the morphia shining in his hand.
The dark-eyed little Sister came in again.
The provosts left him and the big bloke finally went quietly with Eddie.
âI know they want me on the plane,' he said. âI'll go on the planeâjust so long as they keep away from me.'
In the small bay of the island where the convalescent camp was, a rough wooden jetty jutted out from the shrill white sand. Draped over the rail of the jetty was a long, lean American. He stared morosely down into the clear water and, with backwoods accuracy, spat from time to time at the coral-coloured fish that drifted up to the surface and flicked away.
Another American came down onto the beach. âHey, Hank!' he yelled through cupped hands. âThe Cap'n warnts you!'
The tall, morose citizen spat into
-
the water. âGo tell the Cap'n,' he yelled back, âtuh take a flyin' fark at a gallopin' gooseâI ain't a'comin'!'
This pleasantry so intrigued Pez that he sought further acquaintance: âWhat's the matter, Yank?' he asked. âYou sound browned-off.'
âMan,' said the American, âI been goosed and gart atâthis here base ain't nothin' from beginnin' tuh end but hart cark!'
âWhat?' queried Pez.
âCark!' said the American. âC-O-C-Kâcark!'
âDon't you think the Captain might be disturbed that you won't join him?' asked Pez.
The American spat again. âHe's a cark sarker from Fifth AvenooâI know him frum way backâwhen I tell him I ain't a'comin' he knows I ain't a'comin'.'
âYou've got your army organised properly,' admired Pez.
âWe gart organisation,' said the American. âWe gart organisation like I gart a hole in the headâit takes a whole garddamn army to organise me so I set on my ass arn this gard forsaken pimple arn the ass end uv the world, while I gart a redhead waitin' for me back at Kings Crarssâ¦man, she's hart and she's strong for me! She's gart legs like Grable and tits like you never saw in a dream. And I set here on my ass on a pimple on the ass end uv the worldâand the Cap'n warnts to see me!'
âI got a girl up near the Cross myself,' said Pez. âIt's all rightâshe's not a redhead.' He pulled his wallet out and opened it at the photo of Helen.
âSay, she's sharp,' admired the American. âShe's gart class.'
He dug out his own wallet. âNo, nart that oneâthat's muh wife. This other oneâthat's muh Bella.'
âI see what you mean,' admired Pez.
âOh man, she was hart,' mourned the American, âand strong for me. Incidentally, my name's Hank.'
âMine's Pez.'
âLook, I gart a case uv canned beerâtastes like parrot's pissâwould you care to join me?'
âNever knocked one back yet,' said Pez.
âWell, carm onâwe'll go arp round the back wayâI wouldn't drink with any uv the cark sarkers hereâthey all like to play soldiersâso long as the garddamned war ain't too close, they like it fine.'
âSay, Pez,' said Hank, a couple of nights later. Whut's this garddamned swyâthis two-arp you basstuds play?'
âCome and I'll show you,' offered Pez. As they struck off across the island to the swy school, he instructed Hank. âNow, you've seen the game, haven't you?'
âYes, uh've seen it,' admitted Hank, âbut I never gart close enough to itâlooks like all cark to me.'
âWell, you see, you've got a ringâyou've got a boxer, he holds the stake moneyâyou've got a ringie, he hands the kip on and calls the betsâa spinner comes in with two pennies on the kipâ¦'
âWhart's the garddamned kip?'
âA little piece of board that you rest the pennies on when you toss them. Then when the guts is set and you're set on the sideâ¦'
âWhart's this garddamned guts and side?'
âWell, the guts is the centreâthe stake your spinner is spinning for. That's got to be set first and then any bets on the side are set. The spinner's usually for headsâif you're a tail better you set the centre or bet against another headie on the side. Then the ringie calls, “Set in the guts, all set on the sideâcome in spinner,” and up go the pennies. You can bar them if they float or if you don't think it's a fair goâbut you've got to bar them in the air. Down they come and the ringie calls the resultâheads or tailsâor ones, no result. If you're spinning for a head and you do them, she rides and you double up to the third, then the boxer takes his drag. On the fourth you can drag some yourselfâbut if you let her ride she doubles every time. If you can do a dozen in a big school you got a fortune.'
âWhart happens if you tail 'em?'
âYou pass the kipâyou've had it.'