Authors: Tim Winton
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B
ILLIE SAW HIM COME OUT
handcuffed and bellowing like the Hunchback on the Feast of Fools, blurred by her crying. The crowd shivered with excitement and made way. They didn't know him. They thought they did but they had no idea. The van flashed and someone touched her on the shoulder and she climbed in front to the smell of cigars and disinfectant. The doors slammed. The police talked their bird language. In the back, behind the glass, he was laughing. Someone, the driver, passed her a hanky.
âYou know him?' someone asked.
Billie thought about it. She smelled the sweet soapy smell of the hanky and licked her lips. The narrow streets flashed by.
âYes,' she said, without her voice breaking. âHe's my father.'
S
CULLY WOKE WITH A HORRIBLE
, head-shattering start and immediately felt the raw bitterness of his throat. His face was hot. The vinyl mattress squawked under him as he sat up in the bare cube of a room. A key gnawed like a rat in its hole and the big door swung open with its sliding window agape. Shee-it! He scrambled sluggishly to his knees, trying to catch up.
âBillie?'
A woman in a rumpled corduroy suit and a bowl of ash- blonde hair stepped cautiously in. Behind her hovered a bloke in uniform. His moustache was downy on his firm pink face. So where was Billie? Oh God, oh God!
âHello?' said the woman. She was thin and handsome. In her forties, maybe. It seemed she had just climbed out of bed. Her eyes were red. âYou speak English, huh?'
Scully nodded gingerly, not liking this set-up at all. Billie!
âMy name is Van Loon. I am a doctor.'
Scully nodded. He was still on his knees before her. The door closed a little way.
âDoes your . . . head hurt?'
He put a hand to the side of his head and twitched.
âDildo,' he murmured, remembering.
The quack wrote something in a notebook.
âThey say you are upset,' she said. âYou are laughing.'
Scully looked at her questioningly.
âTwo hours you are laughing.'
By the feel of his throat it didn't surprise him.
âWhat is your name, please?'
âAnne Frank,' he said looking around the cell. âHave you got Billie?'
The doctor smiled. She pulled out some plastic gloves and put them on.
âPlease take off your jacket. Will you do that for me?'
âWhy?' he croaked.
âI want to see your skin. Your arms.'
âArms?' But he peeled off, stiffly and showed her anyway.
âWhat drugs have you eaten today?'
âBooze,' he said. âThat's all.'
âThis is why you fight?'
He looked at her hands in their plastic gloves and she shucked them off with a smile.
âAre you crazy?' she said kindly. âI am here to see if you are crazy. To help you.'
Scully squirmed down off his knees. Two hours of laughing he couldn't recall. A bloody gaol cell and a shrink. Not good.
âOkay,' he murmured. âI'm not Anne Frank.'
âAh,' she found the notebook again and squatted before him.
âListen, can you ask the cops about my little girl?'
âYou are upset about her, yes?'
âCan you just ask them? Now? Please?'
Over her shoulder the doctor called in Dutch to the uniform in the corridor. It was a strange, comforting sound. Sweat began to germinate all over him. Scully held his head.
âThey say she is upstairs yet.'
âIs she okay?'
âThere is someone with her, yes.'
He didn't like the way it sounded.
âHow old is your daughter?'
âSix. Seven, seven. In July. She's just a little girl.'
âYou are British?'
âAustralian,' he said.
âYou have no papers, no money, no ID?'
He swallowed. âBillie. Billie's got the bag, hasn't she?'
âWhat is your name?'
âJesus!'
The policeman leant in and murmured in Dutch.
âHe says there is a bag and passports.'
âI want to go now,' he croaked.
She backed away subtly.
âYou are depressed, yes?'
âOh yes,' he admitted. âYou could say that.' They'll take her away, he thought. These people will take her away if you don't straighten up. But he saw the quack's eyes on the straining veins in his arms, following them like a map of his hopeless travels. She was wondering if he would burst. He was interested himself. Was this when it would happen, when he'd burst like a watermelon under a car wheel, go off in a curtain of stale juice?
âI just want my daughter.'
âShe is safe,' she crooned. âShe is safe.'
He got up, unfolded himself, licked his lips. She watched him cross the cell and come back.
âCan . . . can you tell me your name, please?'
âYes,' he said. âYes.'
The floor was gritty and suddenly unbearable. The idea of Jennifer was simply a joke, just the notion of her. He was just a raw hole. There was nothing in him, he knew now, nothing to make an explosion, no mad fit of energy to bust him out of here. There just wasn't any juice left.
âYou are from Australia.'
âYes.'
She whistled. âSuch a long way.'
âYes,' he murmured, feeling it.
âHow . . . how long have you been in Holland?'
He tried to think, to find his way back through all those streets and lights and bars but he couldn't see where they began.
âI know,' he stammered. âI know that.'
âYou are restless.'
âScared,' he breathed.
The uniform opened the door and spoke to the doctor. Scully stopped and watched.
âCoffee?'
âWhat time is it?'
âTwo.'
âPlease. Don't take her.'
âBe calm.'
âYes,' he said. He began to weep and stopped.
âYou can cry.'
âToday,' he said. âWe came to Amsterdam today.'
âHere,' she said. âLie down.' Her hands were warm and kind. He felt the plink of his eyelids against his face. She knelt beside him on the vinyl mattress, her downy upper lip quivering into a smile. She looked rag-arsed with fatigue.
âTell me,' she said, âabout Australia. The animals with pockets. I want to know.'
A
FTER ALL THE QUESTIONS
, Billie sat with her mug of milky tea and ate the cake. It was dry and crumbly. People came and went. The police station smelt of disinfectant. The lights made her squint. She was tired. She thought about Dominique, everything she knew about her. Dominique was pretty. Kind of pretty. She had small hands and her apartment was full of sad photos. She was nice, Dominique, but she watched you. Carefully, like she didn't know what made you work, like she just didn't
get
kids. She looked at Scully sometimes. Billie saw her. He didn't know how she looked at him. Like he was a cake or something. Maybe she loved him. Billie didn't care. No one loved him like she did. That was a fact.
Dominique had a mole on her arm. Her shoes went kind of outwards when she walked. The floor of her apartment was all checked with wood. Sometimes, driving trucks across it Billie would look up and see the big poster on the living room wall. A dark face. White words,
ATELIER CINQ, PHOTOGRAPHIES.
And Dominique's name.
LATOUR.
That was it. That was her name.
Billie put down the mug and the rest of the cake and went to the desk. The phone book was there like a brick. Two policemen told jokes by the window.
AMSTERDAM SCHIPOL
TELEFOONGIDS
PTT TELECOM
She opened it, saying the alphabet in her head. Telefoonnummers. Alarmnummers. Phones rang at desks everywhere. A siren wound up right outside. Dominique had bad breath, that was the other thing.
latour, d herengr. 6 627 9191
The page sounded like rain as it tore softly down the spine. She folded it neatly down into a parcel and put it into her pack.
âYou want more cake, Billie?' called one of the cops, the one with all the questions before.
She shook her head. He turned away to finish his joke. Billie shifted the pack with the heel of her boot. On the strap was the number Scully had written that day on the road. The postman. Two numbers, she had. She lay down across the bench and went to sleep with sirens all around. In her dream she had wings, silver wings.
S
CULLY WOKE
and Van Loon was taking his pulse again. She had fresh clothes on and smelled of soap.
âAll that boose,' she said.
âYes,' he said. âIt was a lot.'
âYou are strong.'
He shrugged, tried to muster some confidence. âI feel better.'
âGood.'
âAm I crazy?'
âNot so much. Sad, maybe.'
âYou look sad yourself,' he said, surprising himself.
âNo,' she said with a chuckle. âCrazy to have this job.'
âIs Billie still here?'
She nodded. âShe is like you?'
âWhat will the charges be?'
âNo charges. Keep away from the dildos.'
âYes,' he said meekly. âYou too.'
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T
HEY LED HIM UP THROUGH
the tunnels into the fresher air. Amidst the snarls of desks and glass partitions he signed forms with his hands shaking. A meek daylight tinted the windows. He saw Billie standing by the glass. She waved minutely, face compressed. He felt a kind of remorse he had not felt before, a sense of humiliation that flattened even his relief. They could have taken her. He would have deserved it. He dropped his head a moment, unable to look. The cops seemed relieved to see the back of him. He watched her shaking their hands. A new shift straggled in. He stepped out to meet her.
F
ROM THE BIG HIPPED LINE
of mountains a mist comes rolling and turning in the frozen light of morning, the sky grinding silent against the earth like the dead against the living. The stones of farm walls creak. Ice holds the grass stiff; the hoofprints of cattle are dead with it. At the head of the valley the lichened crosses lean into the sod and the lanes and boreens meander after their own shadow. In the sheds the slurry steams and the milk comes hot and ringing. Fields hummock and slant all the way to the bare and overreaching oak, it's a lake of frozen, stippled mud. Above it, the sunless monolith of the castle is ruled by the weft of birds. Rooks launch from the sills of a hundred slots and windows, across ash wood and lane. They settle on the smokeless chimney of the bothy on the ridge, cranking their heads warily. A sculpture of frozen tyremarks is set in the mud before the house. A vapour rises from it, from every surface, every thing. The day hesitates a moment. Nothing moves. Then, from the north, from someplace else, a wind springs up and day comes.
A
SILKY DRIZZLE WAFTED DOWN
through the shadows of busted empty warehouses and ships' masts in the morning light. Billie and Scully picked their way round ochre puddles and crippled bikes with the salty stink of the sea blowing in their numb faces. On the scabby embankment above the wharf were ragged deck chairs and rusted barbeque grills and weeds. Sticking up out of the dirt was a silver slipper. The whole dock looked like a war had been there. Piles of sodden clothes, mattresses, a clock, bent sunglasses, books lying open like fallen birds, a flat soccer ball with a pool of frozen rainwater melting in its cavity. From huge smashed windows hung twisted banners and stained bedclothes. A dog pressed against a wall, wary, and some scruffy boats lay on the water like more rubbish.
Neither of them spoke, they just walked. Billie listened to the snap and flick of her unravelling shoelace. They couldn't talk, she knew that. It was just too hard. They weren't really looking for anything, just walking. At first she had been following him, but now it was her leading. She steered him past the floating shed with the
BAR
sign hanging off the end of its slippery gangplank.
The seagulls sounded like TV seagulls. She held his hand. Money lumped in her pockets.
In a windswept square where pigeons bent their necks for shelter and newspapers eddied and wrapped themselves shamelessly about the legs of passersby, a young man with a sheet of livid hair and a windripped kilt played bagpipes. His gingery legs stepped a beat and his red hair was beautiful in its train behind him. The wheezing drone of the pipes wound through the puzzled crowd and hung in the air above them, a sound lonely here amongst the sober bricks.
They walked on.
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A
T THE END OF THE
alley was a sign and Billie heard a swell of old music, music from black-and-white movies and suits and ties, so she tugged him in out of the wind, beneath the street sign that he mumbled dully in passing.
âGebed Zonder End.'
A great gush of warm air blew in their faces as they entered the café with its smells of coffee and cakes and perfume and denim.
Billie felt the sand underfoot and saw the warm wooden walls, the stools, the human faces, round and shiny-cheeked. She met a little table with battered edges and ran her hands along it and sat down. For a moment Scully stood there above her as if he'd forgotten how sitting down went, but he touched the table and slid onto a chair, blinking. Billie put money on the table and they ordered breakfast. Coffee, rolls, cheese, jam, cold cuts of meat.
âNo more chasing,' he said. âI promise.'
Billie put her fingers through holes in the cheese. âThey wanted to know things,' she said. âAll kinds of things.'
He pressed brown bread into the plate. She could see his prints in it when he pulled his hand away.
âBillie, I'm so ashamed.'