The Twyborn Affair (36 page)

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Authors: Patrick White

BOOK: The Twyborn Affair
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‘Why Marcia? You're the manager, aren't you?'

‘She's pretty possessive if she takes a fancy.' Don couldn't turn off the grin in the stubble which would have to wait till Saturday. ‘Well,' he said, ‘I expect it's up to you in the long run—if you want to take the leave that's due. And what odds any bloody Golsons?' His teeth snapped shut on his conclusion.

Eddie and Don stood looking at each other from opposite ends of the brown passage.

‘See, Eddie?
I
won't hold anything against yer.'

There was a whispering of dry-rotten woodwork, a dull protest from warped lino, the scratching, almost like spirit-writing, of hawthorn spines on glass. Prowse didn't approach any closer, but steamed outward, it seemed.

Eddie presumed he could take his leave at any moment and that Don was prepared to face Marcia's wrath. Eddie and Don understood each other in the brown, dry-rotted passage, while Peggy Tyrrell seared the mutton in a cavern beyond concern.

 

He set off the following day as Marcia, Joan, and Curly were hitting golf balls on the mini-course below the house. They were wearing the clothes, their limbs assuming the attitudes, of the Philistine upper class. Behind a hearty façade, they appeared somewhat lethargic as they put in time till lunch. (The Golsons would not have admitted to boredom because country life is virtuous.)

At that distance no one's attention was drawn to the insignificant figure of a horseman, and he was soon well along the road which stretched through the white tussock, skirted the emerald upholstery of a lucerne pasture, and wound finally into the hills.

He had taken with him in his saddle-bags enough salt tucker to tide him over if night caught him between townships. He did on several occasions camp out, more by choice than through necessity, the heat of day giving place to agreeable tremors of mountain cool as he lay in his blanket on the rough grass, head propped against his saddle's sweaty padding. He could not remember ever having felt happier. At the same time he wondered whether he could really exist without the sources of unhappiness. Half-dozing, half-waking to the tune of his horse's regular cropping, and in his half-sleep what sounded like a pricking of early frost or needling by stars, he knew that his body and his mind craved the everlasting torments.

He found himself dreaming, or thinking, of Don Prowse seated in sweaty pyjamas, the snapshot album open on his lap, revealing snaps of Eddie Twyborn as he had most surely never looked in innocence or wantonness, and one of Eudoxia Vatatzes in pomegranate shawl, the spangled fan outspread to screen her breasts.
Looks a regular cock-tease, eh?
Don again, standing at the end of the brown lino passage, the light from the doorway behind him opening like a giant camera-lens. Eddie Twyborn put up a hand to ward off the photographer. Who, more purposeful, was standing at the bedside, red nipples as unblinking as foxes' eyes in the surrounding fuzz of orange fur.

He was more amused than ashamed of his dream—or thoughts, if they were. He got up to re-tether his horse. She whinnied to see
him, and he stroked her muzzle. Theirs was an honest relationship.

On one such occasion he dreamed of someone, he could not at first be certain, this snapshot dream was something of a double exposure, till finally he saw he was sitting beside Helen of the Harelip. They were seated on the brink of a rock pool, its water so clear and motionless they dared not breathe for fear they might ruffle its surface into some ugly and disturbing pattern. Whether the emotions they shared were joyful, it was difficult if not impossible to tell, only that they were united by an understanding as remote from sexuality as the crystal water in the rock basin below.

During his ride it occurred to him that he did not dream of Marcia; he only thought about her, and then coldly, briefly, on the longer, burning stretches of road.

When he had been away a week, Eddie returned to ‘Bogong'. Peggy Tyrrell ran down to the bridge, her bobbled shawl spread like a crow's wings in flight, her thin black arms flailing at the evening. ‘Mrs Lushington just about threw a fit, Mrs Edmonds says. She's been lookun for yer. She's been onter Tumbarumba—Toomut—half the Monarer. Better make yerself good with 'er, love, or you're a gonner.'

And Prowse came out on the veranda. ‘Nearly got me the sack, you bugger. I told you Marce had taken a fancy.'

‘What about the Golsons?'

Prowse looked down at the meniscus of a slanted whiskey. ‘They drove off,' he sighed, ‘in the bloody Minerva. There was nobody to make a fourth at bridge.'

After the prodigal had bathed, the manager came into his room. ‘We did miss yer,' Prowse said. ‘We wondered what 'ud happened to yer—down on the Murray.' Eddie felt the finger, apparently checking on vertebrae. ‘Could 'uv got murdered or somethun …'

Mrs Tyrrell came in, but retreated on noticing nakedness. ‘Come on, you men,' she shouted. ‘There's a shoulder of mutton and baked pumpkun for tea.'

Before obeying her summons, Prowse advised, ‘I tell you, Ed, make it up with Marcia, and make it quick.'

Eddie decided to wait, which was what Marcia herself must have decided.

 

Denny and Eddie had been moving the wethers from Bald Hill down to the woolshed for crutching the following day. The men's faces were pale with dust, each a different kind of clown.

‘Ever done any crutchun, Ed?' Denny sniggered. ‘Break yer bloody back—snippun the dags off a sheep's arse. Just you wait. You'll be sore enough termorrer evenun.'

‘Have to get Peggy to rub my back.'

‘Wouldn' like Peggy. Too bony.' He hesitated thoughtfully. ‘Missus is bony. But Dot wouldn't rub, I reckon, even if you asked 'er to.'

Dot's husband sounded more resigned than sad.

‘You never know if you haven't asked. You never know of any body what they'll come at till you've tried it on.'

‘You reckon?'

Eddie had developed an affection for his simple mate, which he believed was reciprocated. They were brought closer by the evening light, and on Eddie's side, the melancholy knowledge that the chasms created by language and class must always keep them apart.

When they had yarded the silly wethers (what was worse, in the presence of sheep Eddie always ended by convincing himself of the silliness of his own existence and human behaviour in general) his mate suggested with furtive pride—Denny did in fact glance over his shoulder, ‘Why dontcher stop off at our place, Ed, an' drink a beer?'

‘I mightn't be welcome. Your missus'll be getting the tea. Or changing a nappy. Or washing one.'

‘Dot's all right. She don't wash too many nappies. She 'angs the same one out ter dry. Dot's not as bad as they make out.'

So Eddie couldn't let Denny down, the couple of clowns slouching in their saddles as the newcomer had seen the natives on his approach to ‘Bogong' that first day, only that the native skin was now toned down from bacon to beige.

Despite acclimatisation and acceptance, he experienced a faint tremor of discovery approaching the Aliens' huggermugger shack, Cortes, as it were, playing on both sides of the fence. But Denny did not notice, which made his mate, whether Cortes or First Clown, the more regretful of his isolation.

Dot came out. She was looking smaller, sharper than on the occasion of their first meeting, during her pregnancy. Tearful then for a moral lapse, she had grown fierce in defence of its fruit. Like the rickety shack she had acquired with marriage, her legitimised child was a property.

Denny quailed somewhat, but found courage to ask, ‘ 'Ow is she?'

‘ 'Ad the colic all evenin'. She's sleepin' now.'

The mother might never have seen Eddie before. Dot Allen had probably dismissed him to the limbo of foreigners and amateurs.

‘Thought you was gunner be late,' she told her husband, ‘when I've almost got yer tea ready.'

‘Well, I'm not late, am I? An' tea's not ready.' His burst of logic was unassailable. ‘You know Eddie, Dot. I've asked 'im back to drink a beer with us.'

‘Not with me, you haven't. Haven't the time for swillin' beer.' The shack shuddered as she swept inside.

Denny brought a bottle that had been hanging by its neck at the end of a rope inside the iron water-tank. He ventured into the kitchen and returned with a couple of chipped and stained enamel mugs.

‘No time!' Dot shouted from within.

The beer was warmer than one would have hoped, and its head rising, slopped over into wasted pools.

Dot called, ‘Hope you men aren't gunner get drunk an' wake 'er up.'

‘Not enough ter get drunk on.'

‘I've known you do pretty well on a little.'

Encapsulated in evening light, the two friends sat looking out across the plain. From the shack drifted the eternal smells of boiling mutton and burnt cabbage.

‘Don't wanter wake the baby,' the mother shouted between bursts of hardware.

The baby had begun, indeed, to cry.

Dot came out. She was carrying a plate, on it a used paper doily she must have scrounged from a great house, and on the doily, some fingers of yellow cheese of varying thickness and length.

‘They say,' she said, ‘if you eat somethin' fatty …'

She returned inside. The baby was by now in tongue to split the shack's buckled boards.

‘There!' the mother shouted. ‘You've waked 'er! I knew you would. Bringin' back mates. You don't 'ave no consideration, Denny.' She choked on that.

Denny was smiling, lips a glutinous mauve, the sunset glinting on spectacles mended with string as grimy-greasy as the wool on a sheep's back.

‘Wot's wrong with my choo-choo?' he called back. ‘My little choo-choo!'

He went inside, and returned with the screaming, congested infant.

Denny sat on the edge of the veranda dandling a tantrum. ‘Choo choo choo!' At one point his love dribbled down from the violet lips in a slender thread of saliva, while the baby thrashed around, revealing that her nappy was out to dry.

She was a sharp-featured child, as sharp as her mother, but the little scalp already showed a drift of golden down.

Dot had emerged preparing some fresh outburst, only to find the baby laughing up, parrying the last traces of saliva, her tender, gummy smile related at the other end of time to Peggy Tyrrell's toughened grin.

Dot stood looking down on Denny, on the black, cockerel's feathers plastered by sweat to a balding skull. ‘He's good with the baby,' she conceded. ‘Denny's good,' she murmured.

Her person might have trailed after her voice, withdrawing into everyday life from a moment of revelation which was almost inadmissible, if there hadn't been an intrustion, an active violation of grace.

Eddie was the first to notice the approach of Dick Norton the rabbiter, mounted on his skeletal nag, the rabble of his mongrel pack at heel.

Dot was not long after in spotting her dad. ‘You keep off!' she shrieked. ‘We only want peace in this place. Fuck off, dirty old man!'

Though into high summer, the rabbiter was dressed in a cardy the colour of split peas and a cap with ear-flaps in fake fur.

‘I'm yer father, ain't I?'

‘Yeah, Dadda, we know!'

‘I'd of thought everyone knew about everythink. You're no saint yerself, Dot.'

‘We try, don't we?' Dot screeched. ‘Anyways, from time to time. An' we've got Mr Twyborn 'ere—on wot was a social visit till you showed up.'

Purple in the face, the baby had been handed back by Denny to the mother.

He had risen, very dignified, his head trembling, with its wisps of damp black cockerel's feathers. ‘Yes,' he golloped, ‘you fuck orf—fuckun old Dick!' the spittle flying in all directions.

He whipped inside the shack, returned with a gun, and fired a couple of shots at what was by now practically darkness.

There arose a yelping of dogs, the whinge of a spurred horse. ‘ 'Oo'd want a social visit with a bunch of bastards like youse?'

The baby shrieked worse than ever. Again Denny let off the gun.

There were sounds of retreat. If it hadn't been for the baby's screams, silence would have descended on a landscape reduced to formlessness except where the last embers smouldered on a distant ridge.

‘There! There!' the mother coaxed in a burnt-out voice.

‘Choo choo choo?' Denny giggled, still exhilarated by his masterful initiative.

Dot sighed. ‘What will Mr Twyborn think?'

She didn't stop to consider for long. The Aliens were going inside to their overdue meal of boiled mutton and cabbage, or breast.

As Eddie Twyborn untethered his horse and rode away, he wondered whether he wasn't leaving the best of all possible worlds.

Peggy Tyrrell was waiting for Eddie. ‘You've upset 'im,' she said.

‘Upset who?'

‘Prowse,' she said. ‘I never seen 'im so upset. Couldn' eat 'is tea. Went to bed. Thought you must 'uv been throwed again. Or went for a swim and drownded.'

‘It's not all that late. I stopped off for a beer with Denny.'

‘But you was expected. Mr Prowse is the manager, and responsible for those under 'im.'

Mrs Tyrrell sounded unusually prim. She was on Prowse's side all right, perhaps with some axe of her own to grind, or perhaps it was only self-righteousness raising its head.

He ate his stuffed mutton flap and would have gone to bed while she scraped the dishes if he hadn't heard a sighing, a groaning, a jingling of the bedstead, from the manager's darkened room.

He paused in the doorway before entering his own. ‘What's wrong, Don? Not sick, are you?'

There was a prolonged silence meant to impress. ‘There's nothing
wrong—
Eddie. We were only wonderin' about you—those who have yer interests at heart.' A pause, a cough, then the sharp hissing. ‘Cripes, I got a pain in me guts!'

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