Authors: Dawn Farnham
Zhen was beside her, in dark silk, with the gold-and-silver Chinese dragon on his chest. She remembered seeing it in the room the day she had first walked into his arms. He wore a black mandarin hat, the top studded with a huge diamond. He looked straight ahead, not moving, as each guest passed before him. He had never looked so handsome: regal, a young emperor. Robert gripped his sister's arm and they moved slowly forward.
Zhen saw her. He felt moths fluttering somewhere in the base of his stomach. Her eyes were down, not looking at him. His face impassive, he waited, but Noan had suddenly noticed his hand grip the closed fan he held a little tighter. It was an imperceptible movement to anyone but her. She swivelled her lowered eyes to his face, but saw nothing to explain the movement. The next guest passed, and a pale yellow silk skirt came into view. She saw her husband's hand clench tighter. The skirt stopped in front of her husband, the black trousers of a man in front of her. Words were uttered which she did not understand, and then the skirt dipped slightly and seemed to sway towards the black trousers and departed. Her husband's hand remained clenched. She did not know what to make of this, had not dared to raise her eyes in this company of the
ang mo
.
Charlotte breathed deeply as she left the mansion. She had stood in front of him as Robert paid his compliments and congratulations. Then she had raised her eyes. He was looking at her, his gaze seemingly saying nothing, but knowing him now, she saw the intensity. Remember the words in the orchard, she had thought. They had echoed faintly in the back of her mind. Love, yours: pointless, meaningless words. Then, feeling faint, she had leaned onto Robert's arm, dropped a brief curtsy and Robert had taken her from the room. He had called for the carriage, and they were soon driving away from the mansion.
âA handsome couple, eh Robbie?' Charlotte was eventually able to say.
Robert said nothing.
âVery handsome, don't you think? The bride pretty, the groom manly, eh, Robbie?'
Robert heard the faint note of hysteria in his sister's voice.
âStop, Kitt. Stop it.'
Charlotte leaned her head on his shoulder and said nothing more. When they arrived at the bungalow, Robert showed her the clothes on her bed, told her to change. The
Sea Gypsy
stood ready, rocking against the jetty. Today they would go out on the sea, far along the coast to the house at Katong, and stay there, the two of them. First they would swim, the way they once had back on their mother's island, the feel of the warm water soothing her cares. He was taking whisky, and they'd talk and get a little drunk, eat fish and walk along the beach, draw solace from the beauty of the island, the curve of the leaning coconut palms, listening to the song of the sea, the white sand. They'd watch the little shells running back and forth with the waves, the crabs popping their heads from watery holes, the kites making lazy circles in the sky. There would be a big driftwood fire, and there would be no one else in the world but them.
41
Robert was with George at the Christian cemetery. The pure white twin rotundas were complete, standing together, shining against the dark wood of the banyan tree, the fresh green of the tamelan. George had not wanted his workmen to build them, and apart from preparing the ground on which they stood, he, Robert, John and his old friend, Billy Napier, had put down every brick and spread the thick white
chunam
over them. Now they were sweeping up.
âFine work, old friends. I thank you; I do indeed.'
They all gathered round and contemplated their handiwork as they drank the ale which George had ordered, brought from the tavern in earthen jars dripping with condensation. Six fluted columns with Ionic scrolls supported a frieze of flowers, and above that rose the curved and nippled domes of the rotunda. George smiled. The rotunda was an ancient and classical monument, a temple to cults of the earth goddess, to fertility, to life, not death. A sacred space, a sky within. There was a reason he had chosen the Ionic order for Tir Uaidhne, a private amusement shared with Takouhi. These two little temples to Meda and Takouhi were his tribute to love. He had buried the tokensâone for his daughter and one for his wifeâinside the brickwork, and now as he contemplated them, it was a small soothing balm on his heart.
George seemed to have revived, but all three of these men saw his eyes.
âThe heart will break, yet brokenly live on:
Even as a broken mirror, which the glass
In every fragment multiplies; and makes
A thousand images of one that was,
The same, and still the more, the more it breaks;
And thus the heart will do which not forsakes,
Living in shattered guise, and still, and cold,
And bloodless, with its sleepless sorrow aches,
Yet withers on till all without is old,
Shewing no visible sign, for such things are untold.'
George went over to the grave of Thomas Hallpike and looked down at it, remembering the day he had stood here with her. Then, together, they moved about the cemetery, contemplating the headstones and reflecting on the brief lives of those who lay there. So many children. Dr Montgomerie's little ones, who had died the same day, two years old and one, Margaret and Robert, next to their tiny brother, dead just two years later. The heartbreak spoken of by those three little graves. Here lay one three years, ten months; there, a child three months; eight yearsâCharles and Ella, two babies of Jose da Souza; and also his granddaughter, Maria, one year, seven days. It went on and on, the terrible toll.
âLet's talk of graves, of worms and epitaphs.
Make dust our paper and with rainy eyes
Write sorrow on the bosom of the earth.'
He took a long drink of ale.
âAh, boys. Poor Thomas, Maria, Margaret, all of them, never got to know the joy of love. We should be grateful, aye, we should, for what we get. Takouhi and I had eighteen years, and for most of them we had Meda.' He faltered at the sound of her name and drank.
âCount our blessings, eh? Not for sorrow, these two little temples.
Ad vitam. Ad amor aeternum
.'
He raised his tankard, and they all drank to Thomas, and missed love, and George's two loves, and loss, knowing he would go away too.
When the news had come of Meda's death, George had shut himself up in Tir Uaidhne. Charlotte had gone to the shuttered house, let in by one of Takouhi's young Malay servants. He was dirty and half-dressed, gone the pretty green jacket and white
sarong
. After he closed the door, he ran off, and in the dusty half-light she climbed the staircase to the bedroom.
âBlack Melancholy sits and round her throws
A death-like silence and a dread repose
Her gloomy presence saddens all the scene
Shades every flower, darkens ev'ry green'
She felt it in the house: black melancholy, a miasmic vapour trailing on the air. She opened the door to the bedroom. Airless, it smelled cloyingly of jasmine incense. He lay curled on their big bed, behind the mosquito netting, unmoving. When she went up to the bed, she saw that he was asleep, a bottle of whisky by the bedside, a book open on a pillow. Gaunt, unshaven, his head resting on Takouhi's silken gown, one of Meda's little English dolls held loosely in his hand. She lay down by his side. She was as utterly miserable as he, although she knew she had no right to compare his enduring love, his dreadful loss, to her brief encounter. Yet both seemed monumentally important.
The faint and haunting chords of the
gamelan
seemed to echo round the empty house, but she knew these sounds were inside her head.
She slept, and when George woke, befuddled, he imagined Takouhi had returned and took her in his arms. She woke then and held onto him, and he realised.
âI'm leaving, Kitt.'
âI know, George. You have to go.'
âWill you be all right?'
âYes, I will, George. I think I must go too, soon, to Takouhi. Would that be all right, do you think? Will you not come with me?'
âNo, Kitt. I cannot. It could never be the same between us. But will you tell me if she's well and where Meda is buried? Tell her about the temples on the hill. Perhaps lovers a hundred years from now will stop and gaze at them and wonder what they mean, kiss against them in the dusk. Ask her
dukun
to guide their spirits there to meet up with me one day. That'd be a comfort.'
âYes, I will, though I'm certain she will return. She needs time.'
She took his head in her arms, and they lay awhile together as shadows moved around the room.
Finally she sat up and took up the book on the pillow, opened at the page he had been reading:
âFor hearts so touch'd, so pierc'd, so lost as mine.
Ere such a soul regains its peaceful state,
How often must it love, how often hate!
How often hope, despair, resent, regret,
Conceal, disdainâdo all things but forget.
But let Heav'n seize it, all at once 'tis fir'd;
Not touch'd but rapt; not wakened, but inspir'd!
Oh come! oh teach me nature to subdue,
Renounce my love, my life, myselfâand you.
How happy is the blameless vestal's lot!
The world forgetting, by the world forgot.
Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind!'
The impassioned plea of Eloise to erase Abelard from her memory. âDesires compos'd, affections ever ev'n', the spotless mind of emptiness.
âWould you cut them from your remembrance, George? As if they'd never been?'
âSometimes, when the longing is strong. When I think of sweet Meda and in what shades she might lie.'
He sat up now too, against the pillow.
âShe would not want it though. “Silly-billy, George,” she'd say. But the Javanese are the most gentle people, locked into eternal rhythms, accepting what we white fools cannot. As if we can change the way of the world.'
He stopped for a moment, then continued. âPlato said that death is not the worst that can happen to men. It is either a dreamless sleep or else a passing to another place where all the dead are, the poets and heroes, wise men of old, children, lovers. Either way it is not a loss but a gain.'
He paused, then looked at Charlotte. âOf course, you might find all the long-departed, pale and pompous governors of the East India Company, and that would not be such a blessing.'
Charlotte smiled. âAnd their wives.'
They both laughed.
âWhen will you go, George?'
âWhen I've found a tenant for me house. Not Tir Uaidhne, not this one. I don't want anyone living here. Put things in store, lend Matahari to Robert. I might go to Europe, cultivate meself, do the tour. A thousand miles or one, what does it matter if she won't be with me anymore?'
He moved away and sat up.
At the mention of Tir Uaidhne, Charlotte suddenly remembered that she had never had an answer about the name written large across its portal.
âGeorge, may I ask about Tir Uaidhne? What does it mean? I asked once before, but you never told me, and Takouhi didn't feel able to explain properly.'
George rose and got off the bed, offering her his hand.
âI'm as dry as a nun's cupboard. Pardon the vulgarity. And I surely smell like Father Flaherty's goat as well. Come, we'll get some coffee, and I'll tell you the story.'
He smiled at her, and they went down to the kitchen.
When she left George, she walked down Coleman Street to the Armenian church and sat inside. It was always so peaceful inside this lovely building, and she felt close to Takouhi here, able to reach her through a mist of Javanese spirituality. Alamah, she heard her say, don' be silly-billy, for goo'ness sake.
Charlotte smiled, lit a candle for Meda's sweet soul and leant her head against the back of the pew, filled with the futility of it all, remembering her voice: â
Bonjour. Comment allez-vous
?'
The wedding was over and this was the first time Zhen had been free. He was in his house. The shop was being fitted. Tan was passing over some of his business to his new son-in-law, and Zhen was also using part of the shophouse for Chinese medicine. The final night of the wedding he and Noan had moved back into the bridal chamber. Her period was over. This time he had lain next to her when she got into the bed. He had decided that he would have sex with her regularly until she got pregnant, but quickly, no lingering around. Zhen knew he would have to sleep in this house until that time. Tan would not bother him after that. He would be freer to come and go.
Noan lay still as he moved on her. She did not know if he wanted her to touch him, so she lay passively, scared he would repeat the rough intensity of the first night.
Zhen finished as quickly as possible that first time. The second time, though, he began to like the feel of her soft and full brown body and had begun to touch her gently. He realised, despite everything he had told himself, he could not lie with a woman, any woman, without using his skills to arouse her. Without her response, it made everything too ugly. The third time, Noan had begun to react, happy beyond anything that Zhen allowed himself to be touched.
Now, weeks later he had grown sick of her. He could see she adored him. She could not hide it in the way she served him food, poured him tea, turned her body to his each night, desperate to touch, be touched. She sought his lips, but this he could not bear. There was no passion in this lovemaking with her. Her red mouth repelled him, and her cloying attentiveness had begun to irritate. He needed to see Charlotte. Since his marriage, she had not once come to Boat Quay.
Tan, by contrast, was delighted. In the morning, at the breakfast table the two men shared, he could see his daughter's happiness. She served her father and husband with devotion. Nothing was too much. Zhen only had to raise his head for Noan to run to his side, waiting to answer any call. He certainly had a way with women, for all the daughters got slightly giggly when he was in their presence. He could see that it might be time to look for a husband for his second daughter, for the marriage of her sister seemed to have unsettled her. She was not yet fifteen, but after her birthday he would start to look around. Zhen had been a good choice. As soon as a pregnancy was announced, Tan intended to settle a sum of money on him for his new business.