Goodbye Sweetheart
Page 1
MARION HALLIGAN is one of Australia’s most important writers, with a long list of literary prizes to her credit. She has been shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize and the Miles Franklin Literary Award, and has been awarded The Age Book of the Year, the ACT Book of the Year (three times), the Nita B. Kibble Award, the Steele Rudd Award, the Braille Book of the Year, the 3M Talking Book of the Year and the Geraldine Pascall Prize for critical writing. She lives in Canberra and has an AM for services to literature.
ALSO BY MARION HALLIGAN
Shooting the Fox
Valley of Grace
The Apricot Colonel
Murder on the Apricot Coast
The Taste of Memory
The Point
The Fog Garden
The Golden Dress
Cockles of the Heart
Wishbone
The Worry Box
Lovers’ Knots
Eat My Words
Spider Cup
The Hanged Man in the Garden
The Living Hothouse
Self Possession
The Midwife’s Daughters (for children)
Out of the Picture
Collected Stories
Those Women Who Go to Hotels (with Lucy Frost)
First published in 2015
Copyright © Marion Halligan 2015
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. The Australian Copyright Act 1968 (the Act) allows a maximum of one chapter or 10 per cent of this book, whichever is the greater, to be photocopied by any educational institution for its educational purposes provided that the educational institution (or body that administers it) has given a remuneration notice to the Copyright Agency (Australia) under the Act.
Allen & Unwin
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Australia
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ISBN 978 1 76011 129 8
eISBN 978 1 92526 647 4
Internal design by Sandy Cull, gogoGingko
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For John
CONTENTS
This story begins by water
The gym is busy
Lynette plans a sale
Jack goes fishing
Ferdie and Berenice go on a picnic
Barbara waits
Ferdie arrives
Helen comes home late
Barbara pays a visit
Ferdie finds satyrs
Lynette has dinner with Jack
Nerys flies south
The garden is full of fog
Lynette gets up late
Janice goes out for lunch
Aurora drinks vodka
Lynette weeps
Barbara drinks the last of the wine
Lynette visits the shop
Pepita goes to dinner
To Eden
Ferdie takes the bus
Acknowledgements
‘One ray at a time day casts off its boredom, bursts into flame and spews incomprehensible splendour.’
—DIVAGATIONS,
STÉPHANE MALLARMÉ
THIS STORY BEGINS BY WATER
This story begins by water. William remembered reading those words, once, and presumably there had been a story to follow, but what it was he had no recollection. But water always made him think of them. This story begins by water.
Today the pool was empty of swimmers. He’d come in from the gym and there it was, completely still. But soon the whole surface quaked and heaved with his presence. Water slopped through the grilles, plastic imitating wood, that surrounded its edges. He trudged up and down, not in the lap lane, that was for serious swimmers, not walkers, and he’d noticed that a swimmer could do two laps in the time it took him to do one. The water offered a lot of resistance, that was the point. His was not the torpedo body of the swimmer cleaving through, it was a creature out of its element. Sometimes he trailed his arms and that made it harder, sometimes he used them in a finny manner, which didn’t make him any faster, but exercised them. Sometimes he skipped, bouncing up and down out of the water. Skipping: he couldn’t have done that on dry land to save his life. But the water as well as resisting buoyed him, he could do all sorts of things in the water that would have been impossible on dry land. Paradoxical, it was.
He trudged up and down. The pool was twenty metres long, so if he went along and back fifty times that would be a kilometre. He usually spent half an hour, that was enough. According to the noticeboard the temperature was 29.5 degrees, but it didn’t feel particularly warm, and when he skipped and bounced his shoulders got cold. The room that housed the pool was large and lofty. He remembered how nineteenth-century railway stations were called cathedrals of steam, with their towering iron arches intricately formed to support their roofs. Did that mean that for their architects travel was the new religion, not God? He looked at the tall roof. Was this a cathedral of swimming, for the new religion of fitness? A church perhaps, it wasn’t so large or grand as a cathedral. Or maybe a chapel. Faith through works. There were no mysteries in its vaulted spaces, unlike the great iron railway stations or the soaring stones of gothic buildings, more beautiful than ever their function required.
There were immense windows on each of the four sides, and from the north the late winter sun shone across the water in huge paned patterns. It was warm in the sun; did that mean that the windows weren’t double-glazed? It seemed extravagant with the heating. He confined his movement to a patch of sun, stretching his legs and swimming his arms as he basked in it. He lifted his head to its warmth and closed his eyes so the light broke into glittering iridescence on his eyelashes. He could be a young man, limber and lithe.
This story begins by water. What sort of a story? he wondered. A tale of smugglers and a rowboat with muffled oars, pulling into a dark cavern barely above water level? Of excisemen and torches and blunderbusses and muttered oaths? In that case it would be out of one of the boys’ own annuals passed on by older cousins. He felt the delight they’d been in his book-hungry post-war childhood. Or perhaps some naval yarn, of ships and sailors and one of the wars that provided such excitements, Napoleon and Nelson, or German U-boats, or Japanese submarines. Maybe Conrad and the yearning voice of his narrator summoning up his youth, the unforgettable odour of the East, and man being born to trouble as the sparks fly upwards.
He rested his body in the water, his arms and legs moving ably, gracefully; in the water he was not ungainly. A gainly fellow he is in the water, he said to himself, closing his eyes and rejoicing in the sun.
This story begins by water. The beach, and this gainly fellow standing on the sand, the waves breaking at his feet. A young woman who has been swimming stands up in the shallows and begins to walk to the shore. She is wearing a black bikini and is slender and shapely, her skin is pale brown, her legs long, her waist small, her hips curved out, her breasts lively. She has dark hair in curls that lie close to her head like a sculpture in marble.
A large wave comes crashing up behind her and knocks her over. She is unprepared for it and flounders, is swirled around and takes a minute to find her feet again. Nothing dangerous, nothing that needs a gainly fellow to rush and rescue her. Just an ordinary dumping. She stands up and smooths her no longer sculpted hair out of her eyes, rubs water off her face, and
it is only when she lowers her arms, brushing them down across her breasts, that she realises her bikini bra has come off, that she is quite naked down to her hips. She folds her arms across her chest and looks nervously around, maybe for the missing bit of swimsuit, maybe to see who is watching. This is the moment for him; he’s given himself a large blue and white striped beach towel and he steps forward and wraps her in it. He could let his arm brush her nipple as he does so but that would not be gallant. She gives him a tremulous smile. The sun shines benignly upon them.
You sit on the sand, he says, I’ll see if I can find it. He steps into the sea, which is quite cold. He doesn’t think there’s much chance of finding a skimpy bit of black bikini washing about in the surf like a piece of seaweed but it is the thing to try. He wants to bring it back to her, to hold the towel up for modesty while she puts it on, and sit on the sand beside her and talk.
The pain was quick and sharp. It came at him from his left arm, that had been making gentle comfortable arabesques in the buoying water. It pierced suddenly, shooting sparking up the arm, surprising him. He thought, what is this? but by that time it was not his arm it was his heart, and he could no longer think, the pain was a spasm through his whole body and there was no part of him that could do anything. There was a brief image of the girl, further up the beach, and the bikini top washing like seaweed in the retreating waves. There was a fragment of light, the warm sun on his body, graceful in the water, and then it was all lost.
Usually he did his exercises by the edge of the pool, holding on to it as he walked sideways, trudging up and down beside it, but today he was in the middle, by the floating barrier that marked out the lap lane, where the sun shone and was broken into a pattern of wavering rainbow lines of light on the blue and white tiled floor. He had pills, but not in the water with him. The pain came again, in a violent kick through his body that thrust him backwards, somersaulting him down into the warm water which was nowhere too deep to stand up in. But he no longer knew that, and nor did his body, it floated down through the water, turning idly, and finally surfaced again, face down.
A heart attack, that was probably what killed him, said a doctor, later. But there was water in the lungs, and that was evidence of drowning, was it not, said the man’s wife, who considered suing the hotel for negligence. Somebody should have been there, somebody should have paid attention, he could have been saved.
THE GYM IS BUSY
In the gym the bodies are youthful: lean, tanned, muscular. Though sometimes the faces surprise: toned, taut, but oddly old. Tortoise faces growing out of dolphins.
The bodies in the pool are elderly, pale, plump if not fat, baggy if not plump. Like the woman who went padding carefully from the change room, pushing open the heavy door to the pool space. Straightaway she saw William, and straightaway she saw that something was wrong. His body floating face down just below the surface, his arms loose, the water rocking him in its gentle pumping tide. At her age she thought it was time to expect death, and there death was.
She began to scream and backed out the door and turned and ran. Tried to run. The floor was wet from all the dripping bodies that had traversed it. That floor was never dry, except perhaps in the middle of the night. She slipped and fell and broke her hip. Now she was screaming with pain. A blond guy came running out of the gym, his trainers gripping on the tiles, sure-footed, not slipping. I’m a doctor, he said. The woman stopped screaming on a breathless hiccup and moaned and fainted. People crowded. Is she dead? they asked. The doctor ran into the change room to get his keys out of the locker so he could go to his car and get his bag. Keep back, he said, give her air. Keep the people back, he said to a personal trainer and the receptionist, get some towels and cover her up. Don’t move her!
One of the crowding people looked through the glass door into the pool. He stared, and peered, and pushed the door open. My god, he said, some geezer’s carked it. My god, he shouted, and other people came. Don’t touch him, said the first man. A woman looked down at William’s speckled back. What if he’s not dead? she asked. Look at him, said the first man. William’s body rocked gently in the water. The movement of the water was like breathing, but it seemed clear that William was not. Nevertheless the personal trainer jumped in and turned him over, pulled him up the shallow steps and taking a little rubber protective device from his pocket, began mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
The doctor’s hands were careful on the body of the old woman, still lying unconscious. They knew what they expected to find. An ambulance came and took her away. William had to wait for the police. The doctor pronounced him dead. The manager, who had finally been found, felt pale. It’s a risky business, a broken hip at her age, said the doctor. It’s a dangerous floor you’ve got there.
The receptionist searched through the pigeonholes for the plastic cards which would tell him who William and the woman were. It would be the manager’s job to inform their families.
A daughter said, I’ve been afraid of this.
The wife was a voice on an answering machine. The manager could not talk to that.
LYNETTE PLANS A SALE
When I decide to go it’ll be ethnic, said Janice. Wine with meals, and the food should be better.
Imagine, just because you’re old, not having wine with meals, said Lynette. What kind of ethnic do you have in mind?
Italian, I think. Though Greek could be okay. Lots of vegetables. Very healthy, said Janice. In her teens she’d turned herself into Jan, liking the laconic monosyllable, but in her fifties she decided she preferred the prettier Janice after all. It had been years, and people were still not used to it.
Not that we’re going to need it for a while, of course.
Oh no. But you have to plan, so you don’t get carted off to some substandard hole. By the way, have you talked to Jilly Parker? She’s telling everyone about this marvellous Chinese medicine person she’s found, cured her menopause with herbs.
Cured her menopause! That’s something. They both laughed.
It’s enough to make you laugh like a drain, said Lynette.
She must be pushing seventy, said Janice. Claiming to be menopausal is big-noting herself.
When they calmed down, Lynette said, We should start our own. No, seriously. Get a bunch of like-minded friends together and set up our own place.
Angus was keen on that, said Janice. He wanted to buy an old warehouse in Newcastle and convert it into luxury flats, with lifts and terraces, and a caretaker’s quarters, to look after us. Could rent them out, be an investment, till we got old enough to need it. Too late, now. All the warehouses are snapped up. Already converted and costing millions. And now poor Angus has got too young to be thinking of retirement plans. He’ll be working till he’s a hundred to pay the school fees.
Angus had run off with one of the young interns in his practice. He had a new baby now. Janice liked to make bitter jokes about this but she didn’t care much any more. She enjoyed her freedom from Angus’s demands, and there was the shop, and a pleasant chap, a widower, younger than Janice though you’d never guess, well enough off, and he liked to travel. He’d have liked to live with her, too, but Janice said she wasn’t having that, she’d been there done that, BTDT as her children had once said, but wouldn’t now; an attentive companion and lover who didn’t live in, that was perfect.
The business was a kitchenware shop, the scene of this conversation. It was Wednesday evening and the shop was closed, they were working on the sale starting Friday.
I think the melon ballers should go in, said Janice. Nobody ever buys them.
No, it’s odd. I remember when I bought mine, how thrilled I was, such a good thing to have.
Do you ever use it now?
Can’t say I do.
So, you see. I think melon balls are in pretty much the same league as radish roses. Far too artificial.
These wine sealers—down to half? Nobody likes them, it’s obvious at a glance that the vacuum sets are better.
&nb
sp; We need some loss leaders too. We can’t just mark down the junk that nobody wants.
Even if it’s the only reason for having a sale in the first place? Okay, what?
I wondered about some of the linen tea towels. People tend to resist them. Think they’re lovely, but too dear.
Will that be a loss leader?
Not knives, said Janice. Never knives. What about some of the Moroccan tagines, down to cost?
Oh, they’re so gorgeous . . .
I reckon the main point of this exercise is what we’ve bought that doesn’t sell. And not do it again. Be ruthless on both counts.
Only up to a point. I think a good kitchen shop has to have a good range. Even if things hardly ever sell, we should stock them.
This was a conversation they had every time they had a sale. They always enjoyed it. Lynette thought they never came to any useful conclusions, but Janice said they did. And the fact was that the shop, called Batterie de Cuisine, was a good business, it did its job well and made a lot of money. Lynette was pleased that she had turned her old job of cooking and her fondness for buying curious objects overseas into a commercial success, especially since at the beginning their husbands, who were colleagues, had been hugely sceptical of the whole business and made endless jokes about it. The graveyard of good money, they called it. The sink. Lynette’s husband called it the Junket Shop. Angus said it would be a failure even as a tax dodge. Aren’t you lucky we give you a chance to sharpen your wits, said Lynette. They need it, said Janice, being so very very dull.
Janice and Lynette were equal partners but Janice did not ever feel so equal as Lynette. Janice had wanted some sort of business; Lynette had wanted this one. The shop’s name was her idea; Batterie still gave Janice the notion of fighting going on, cannon shots and shouting, the racket of instruments of war. And it was Lynette who loved the things they sold, all the intricate, erudite, abstruse objects, for which there was such an enthusiastic market. Janice never ceased to be amazed by the people—it wasn’t just women—who coveted these things. Lynette walked through the shop touching them for the sheer pleasure of it. The nutmeg graters, in the form of lids to small satiny steel boxes in which the nutmegs could be kept. The new range of baking pans that looked like rubber and were as flexible, so you could cook little cakes or tarts or whatever and with a bend of the pan out they would pop. In gorgeous colours, especially a dark crimson. Supposed to come out of space technology somehow. Dozens of whisks; just to look at them made your wrists want to start beating something. A big copper jam pan, with two black iron handles. If somebody didn’t buy that soon Lynette would. Janice teased her: how could she make any money if she kept buying the stock? Iron omelette pans; Lynette already had several, but not in every size. Quasi-professional espresso coffee machines; her family already had one of those, too, she’d given it as a house present last Christmas. Wooden spoons: never can you have too many wooden spoons. The naming and ordering and pricing of these things, laid on industrial metal shelving or in big willow baskets, gladdened Lynette’s heart.