Telling Stories

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Telling Stories Page 8

by Geoff Palmer


  Then again I look at the likes of that oik Donny and his girlfriend and think, why not? But maybe that's the problem. I'm not handsome, dashing and debonair, but I'm not a miserable thug either, just somewhere in between. Just ordinary, common and a bit shy. I guess even an oik with a motorbike is a little bit exotic.

  I keep telling myself not to be ridiculous. I keep saying to myself, 'How can you feel this way about someone you don't even know?' but you can't just rationalise these things away. Would I feel the same if she hadn't asked me about the book I was reading or had sat somewhere else in the cafeteria that day? She'd already been there two or three weeks before that whole business happened and I didn't feel that way then. I had noticed her, of course, I used to watch her secretly when she went past and did her filing and such, but that was different. And would I feel the same if everything that's happened had happened anyway except that she was plump, plain and had a hairy mole on her face?

  I see couples on the street, couples in shops, couples at the movies, and I often wonder how it happened. How did these people come together? Where did they meet? Who said what? Are they in love? It's all a bit of mystery to me.

  • • •

  It was Fletcher's birthday yesterday — well it's actually today — and he insisted everyone join him in the pub at lunchtime to commiserate. I don't mind going occasionally, and Fletcher was insistent. It's not as if I had anywhere else to go. Even Tom Coutts joined us later. He likes to play at being one of the boys now and then and, with his blessing, we didn't get back to work till after 1:30.

  Inevitably, I suppose, it didn't take long for the talk to turn to Marie.

  'Lovely looker,' mused Tom, sipping his second pint to a chorus of nods.

  'Bloody lesbian, mate,' snapped Fletcher.

  'There's no such thing where I'm concerned. She'd be putty in my hands.' This raised a few eyebrows and provoked a sneer from Fletcher.

  'I was quite a lad in my day,' Tom added.

  'Weren't we all,' said Fletcher.

  'Aren't we all,' said Philips. 'Present tense please, gentlemen.' Some of the younger ones nodded. Tom did too.

  'Don't know what you're nodding for,' said Fletcher. 'Or are you going to give us a lesson in ancient history?'

  'Not as ancient as you, you old codger. just 'cause you couldn't pull anything that doesn't wear a thermal vest.'

  'Oh, listen to bloody Romeo!'

  'I can still make it with the ladies if I put my mind to it.'

  'You're a married man.'

  'So? What she doesn't know doesn't bother her.' Then he added enigmatically, 'Never has in the past ...'

  This drew an 'Ooooo!' from the rest.

  'Talk's cheap,' said Fletcher.

  'Envy's cheaper.'

  'Okay then, prove it.'

  'I don't have to prove anything ...'

  'Well I think you do, doesn't he, lads? Coming here on a bloke's birthday, drinking his piss and rubbing it in about his age. Let's see what killer Coutts can do.'

  'I don't have to ...'

  'Oh, typical bloody manager. All mouth and no balls. If Reg Cotton asked you to do it it'd be "Yes sir, no sir, and should I enjoy myself while I'm doing it sir?"'

  Up until then Tom had been treating it all as a bit of a joke at Fletcher's expense, but I suddenly noticed that neither protagonist was smiling now. Everyone else seemed infected by the sudden tension too.

  'When's your birthday, Tom?' asked Fletcher, digging in his back pocket for his wallet. 'Beginning of June, isn't it?'

  As Tom nodded Fletcher threw a green note onto the table.

  'There's twenty that says you can't pull that bloody lesbian by your birthday.'

  Tom looked at Fletcher and Fletcher looked back at him. Everyone else was silent.

  'I don't want to take your money,' Tom said finishing his beer and straightening, 'but in this case I think I've got a point to prove.' He dug into his pocket, flicked down a matching bill, nodded at Fletcher and walked out.

  That, of course, was the sign for us all to leave. As everyone scurried to finish their drinks Fletcher pushed the money across to me, indicating that he wanted me to hold the bet. I've done it before when they've had their silly games but I didn't want anything to do with this one. I tried to decline but that wasn't an option. People were getting up to go and I was faced with either taking the money or leaving it on the table. I had no choice.

  When we got back, Tom was at the reception desk talking to Marie. She laughed at something he said and barely glanced at us. He was probably just telling her a joke. When I came back from afternoon tea she was sitting in his office with the door closed and there was lots of elbowing and whispering going on among the others. As she left Tom stood in his doorway with a smug look on his face before going across to Fletcher's desk and dropping a piece of paper in front of him.

  'Stage one, son,' he said in a voice loud enough for us all to hear while tapping a finger on the page. 'Home address and phone number. I'll leave that with you in case you want to verify it, Fletch. I've already got it in my little black book.'

  Uncles

  I have always been fat, thus I have been spared the vicissitudes of varying degrees of largeness that curse those who develop girth as an adjunct to life, the nouveau gros. You can spot them on any street. Harrowed-looking creatures averting their eyes from windows of cream buns while clutching their illicit muesli snacks more tightly. Tubbies who groan at the odour of a passing fish and chip packet or flinch at the taste of their unsweetened, milkless coffee.

  Myths About Fat People #27: Fat people are fun.

  Fat people are most certainly not fun. Perhaps they were in the halcyon days of Billy Bunter, but modern fatties have lost all that. This means they spend far too much time worrying about their weight, diet, eating habits, exercise, calories and general health ever to have fun. As a consequence, most shuffle off this mortal coil well before their time from a lifelong anxiety about a problem that's really society's, not theirs, and a chorus of skinny doctors and wealthy diet-book writers chortle, 'See! Fat is unhealthy!'

  No, one can't dispute the facts. Observers from Hippocrates and beyond have known that the overweight are more likely to snuff it than the rest, but what is one to do? I can stop being fat about as easily as you can stop being tall. Besides, I don't have a problem with my weight, though everyone else seems to.

  But this is the Age of the Veneer. How you look is not just more important than who you are, it often determines it. Look at films and TV shows. When did you last see a fat film star who isn't a comedian? A handsome hunk who always plays a villain? An ugly heroine who doesn't turn out to be a beauty in disguise? Producers and directors and advertisers and con men all agree; the packaging is more important than the goods.

  Let me tell you about veneers. Let me tell you about seeming and being. After all, I am an expert on the subject, having lived within an unacceptable husk for thirty-plus years now.

  • • •

  After my father died there came a succession of supposedly new houses, which all seemed strangely older than the last, a succession of new schools, which all seemed strangely similar, and a succession of new uncles — who all seemed simply strange. There was Uncle Rex the carpenter, Uncle Harry the teacher, Uncle Doug the appropriately named ditch-digger, Uncle Cliff the clerk, and even — yes, I swear it — Uncle John the Baptist. I'd never had so many relations, nor had I ever had so many strange men trying to ingratiate themselves in the hope that my approval would yield the key to my mother's heart, or — at the very least — to her bedroom. And the way a good Kiwi male ingratiates himself with a good Kiwi kid, even a fat one, is through good old Kiwi sport.

  In a country that worshipped sport I was the anti-Christ. In a society where rampant homosexuality was defined as not having any interest in the national rugby team, I was a gay old queen at the age of eleven. My youthful vision of the hell preached by the itinerant religious instructors in our Thursday morning classes was of an
endless vista of steaming brimstone playing fields and an endless round of rugby, soccer, cricket, softball and phys ed. So what did these sycophantic uncles bring the pale, podgy, sport-loathing, uncoordinated kid who spent so much time indoors that his eyes teared in strong sunlight but a succession of boots, bats, balls and sporting banter. Who did they drag through winter drizzle to slushy Saturday matches between teams of Old Boys in their twenties? Who did they seat in scorching grandstands to watch little specks of white swat round a ball he couldn't even see? The poor fools didn't stand a chance. Even my mother started flagging in her quest. And then came Woz.

  Uncle Warren — Woz we used to call him — was a flashy, handsome, used car salesman, as smooth as his Brylcreemed hair. It has often occurred to me that Palmerston North revolves solely around the buying, selling, refurbishment, wrecking and racing of used cars. Even today there's bugger all else to do there and a car is about the only means of escape. But contemporary Rangitikei Street has been invaded by businesses and buildings that dot its once almost unbroken panorama of car yard upon car yard upon car yard. A four-lane highway, a major entrance to the city, that gleamed on either side with polished paint and glinting chrome. To Woz it must have seemed like the promised land. He drifted into town one day in a powder-blue Jag and decided he'd found heaven. Within a month he had a house, a job and my mother's heart while the latest of my new-found uncles wandered around his lot kicking tyres.

  She was in awe of him. Not only did he look like a movie star, with his pencil-thin moustache, but he dressed, moved and talked like one too. One or two of the uncles had, I suppose, been okay, but it was a Kiwi handsomeness, wrapped in ragged rugby jerseys and grass-stained shorts. A night out to them was a comb through the hair, a clean pair of socks and a trip to the pub. To Woz it was a dinner jacket, champagne and a moonlit picnic on the shores of the lagoon.

  'He makes me feel like a million dollars,' my mother said. Indeed, his first words to her in the sprawling car lot were, 'I'm sorry ma'am, I only sell cars. Surely angels ride on clouds ...?'

  Nauseating stuff, but light years away from the usual, 'Gidday. You wanna drink then?'

  It was the wooing of a country girl. There she was, still in her thirties, a widow with two growing sons, a state house and a part-time job with little prospect for the future. The men she met through her lonely hearts in the personal column of the Evening Standard were either quiet misfits, nice-enough-but-oh-so-ordinary uninspiring types or smoothies only after what solo mums are supposed to be begging for. They took her to look at used cars, for heavens sake! And then she stepped into fantasy land.

  Flattered, she modestly declined his advances.

  He sent her flowers. There were roses on our doorstep every day for a week till she begged him to stop because the house was overflowing with them. 'On one condition,' he relented. 'That you allow me to accompany you to dinner.'

  My mother's friends were in awe of him and, by reflection, of her too. He drove the flashiest of cars, took her out to all the right places, and drank cocktails. In a town of country casualness he always wore a suit.

  I was in awe of him. He bought me flashy presents — not balls or bats but chemistry sets and water-powered rockets — and seemed to take as much delight in them as I did. The latest toy would hit the TV screens and within days I'd have one without so much as asking. Often they'd already been unpacked as he'd been trying them out at work and he'd bubble in a childlike haste to show them off. What's more, though he claimed he hated sport, he made an almost religious study of it, memorising scores and race winners and jotting down commentators' views in a notebook. Homework, he called it. It was the main topic of conversation for the bulk of his clients. 'You must always take an interest in your client,' he would say. 'And that means being interested in what interests them.' No one ever asked if a car was clapped-out, but they all wanted his thoughts on the umpire, the All Blacks or the green-and-whites' performance.

  My classmates were in awe of him. He worked odd hours and spent two days each week scouring the lower North Island for what he called his 'prime movers' but was often home when I got back from school and sometimes even used to pick me up. The scruffy kid from the scungy suburb became a snappy dresser, had all the latest toys and got collected in a Jag. Suddenly I started making friends They rediscovered my first name — the real one — became willing to help out with class projects, sided with me against school bullies, and even ensured I was no longer the last left behind in picking teams in phys ed. And after school my fair-weather friends would cluster round one of the first colour tellies in town. In awe I learned the rich were different, that money talked.

  The only one unawed by Woz was Pid. He had no time. for him, caught as he was in the angst and nihilism of middle teenage. He was finishing school and practically a grown-up by now, but did let Woz find him a good cheap car before escaping in it to Donnington, a student flat and varsity. 'The man's not real,' he used to say on his occasional returns from the world of unreality, 'He's just too ... too ... you know ...'

  The only hint I had of you-know was after the affair of the cigarettes, which even today takes on an unreal air. They were out for the evening, the house was mine alone and I was up later than I should have been, mesmerised by a graphic and horrific documentary on the effects of smoking in living/dying colour: death-rattle lungs, faces, tongues and jaws cut out to try and stop the march. In a moment of panic — but also of love for the both of them — I seized every packet I could find in the house and torched them in the fireplace. Two full cartons made a healthy blaze but that was nothing to the fire their loss unleashed in Woz. He thrashed me with an old fan-belt dragged from the boot of his car. He was like a man possessed; there was madness in his eyes and spittle on his chin. In spite of the pain I feared even to cry out and screamed myself hoarse into the pillow, then sobbed the night away, unable to even roll over. The welts he raised on my bottom, back and shoulders lasted weeks — though I told no one of their existence, half in fear of further punishment, but more in fear of the you-know in his eyes. My mother was too far gone in the haze of her romance to notice and even Woz seemed his cheerful, unaffected self next morning, showing no sign of either remorse or even remembrance, leaving me feeling, in spite of the evidence of my tiger-striped back, that it had all been a bizarre and frightful nightmare.

  We were all in awe of Woz, even after they led him away to a grey police van, his hands cuffed together and the jacket of his suit still on a peg in the hallway. Two detectives arrived to question him — Warren Arthur Mason, my mother's fiancé — while a third nabbed him as he sprinted from the back door. He'd have made a lovely husband — his wife from Taihape said so in court, and his other wife from Feilding backed her up. But there was worse to come: an almost-teenage girl dead from septicaemia after a backyard abortion, a foetus buried at Himatangi Beach. Then there was embezzlement, theft, possession of stolen property, car conversion (one powder- blue Jaguar XI6), bookmaking, misappropriating funds, forging documents for pecuniary advantage, attempting to pervert the course of justice ... the list was so long it was hard to believe they were the work of a single man.

  'But he seemed so nice,' was the oft-repeated phrase.

  And then, just days before the trial concluded, he gave his captors the slip and casually walked out a side door in the courthouse. Witnesses described his air as jaunty and unhurried; he even nodded to a disbelieving court reporter before slipping down an alleyway. Six months later he turned up on a TV documentary filmed somewhere in Asia, reformed now, so he claimed, a new wife in tow, confessing, even bragging, of his crimes. When asked about the fiancée he left behind he simply asked, 'Which one was she?'

  The world loves illusions, the something that is not, and that's what we were left with: a dream, a magic act, a void beneath the mask, the magician vanished in a puff of smoke. Though in my mother's case that miasma came from a some what more tangible source.

  Monday, May 4

  I've had a lazy
week. Things have been ticking over at that steady, average rate — no highs and lows, no dramatic or particularly interesting turns of events, just a kind of intermediate humdrum. The one minor blip on the flatline of my life was a birthday present from Betti. (Of course it was ostensibly from the pair of them but, reading between the lines of her comments, Stu is so enmeshed with some secret PR programme at the moment he hardly remembers he has a wife, let alone a brother.) She turned up one evening last week with the present and a bottle of wine and we got a bit tipsy together on the sofa.

  Actually, I saw another side to Betti. She was at her least bimboish and we had quite a reasonable conversation. Things are apparently a bit up and down with Stu these days — as if I hadn't noticed — and he's spending all his time at work. I suspect there might have been an ulterior motive in her visit but, as I told her, I would be the last person on the planet Stu would confide in.

  The present was a book on the universe and at the weekend I read about a constellation called the Coma Berenices. It's just visible to the naked eye as a faint splotch in our sky but is really a collection of over ten thousand galaxies (galaxies not stars) and it's taken 220 million years for the light from them to reach us. I thought about what that light had left behind that immeasurable time ago. What lives, what turmoils had also bathed in it? Then I thought about the light that's leaving our own sun and combining with the light from all the other suns in our galaxy, and that, combining with the light from thousands of other galaxies and travelling that inconceivable distance to form just a tiny, insignificant, barely discernible flicker in their skies. Where will we be when our light reaches them? What of our lives and dreams, our art and music, our precious civilisation? In a sense it doesn't matter what any of us do because we are all so utterly insignificant.

 

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