Tyringham Park

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Tyringham Park Page 26

by Rosemary McLoughlin


  Scottie double-clutched down to low gear as the rise became steeper. “We go up three thousand feet in seven miles. Must be some sort of Aussie record.”

  The road had been carved out of an escarpment covered by a rainforest. Rocks and trees above them seemed to be held in place by some gravity-defying mechanism. On the other side, Lochlann leaned forward to see bluey-green eucalyptus trees receding in successive drops hundreds of feet at a time into the pale blue distance that led ultimately to the Pacific Ocean.

  The labouring engine precluded conversation. Scottie concentrated on the bends, one of them a horseshoe and all of them blind because of the steep banks. At one time he had to pull over into the gutter to allow a bullock team pulling a load of cedar logs to pass.

  Halfway up the mountain they stopped at a waterfall to give the radiator a chance to cool. Lochlann extricated his arm from around the still-sleeping Charlotte. He crossed to the other side of the road the better to see the top of the fall, but it was so high up it looked as if the sheet of water was coming straight from the sky. The first thing he must do after they settled in was buy a camera. Not that a photograph could ever do justice to the sight in front of him, but he would like an image to bring back the memory of it after he returned home.

  Scottie was filling a can from a spring which gushed out of the rocks and into a stone trough beside the road. Lochlann joined him. He noted with interest that the overflow from the trough ran into the same pipe that drained the falls under the road.

  “Have a taste of that!” Scottie called to Lochlann over the sound of the falling water, with a jerk of the head towards the spring. “Can’t get purer than that. Straight from the bowels of the earth.”

  He went back to the truck and used a cloth to twist off the radiator cap in such a way the rusty, boiling water didn’t spit on him. He emptied the contents of the can into the steaming opening and screwed the cap back on.

  Lochlann cupped his hands and drank from the ice-cold spring, and made a sign of approval to Scottie.

  The men, damp from the spray, returned to the cabin, sitting on either side of Charlotte. Scottie drove on, constantly changing to low gear with a double shuffle to make it over successive crests, and dealing with the boiling radiator one more time. The temperature kept dropping.

  The steep incline gave way to a more gradual slope and then finally the road flattened out when they reached the top of the plateau. Lochlann’s first impression was one of space and light from the cleared pastures, with land disappearing into the horizon, and the second was the unreal vividness of the luscious red-ochre colour of the soil banked up on either side of the road.

  The engine, now cruising along in top gear, was quiet enough for Scottie to speak without shouting.

  “Nearly there.” They passed a little wooden church on the left. “Yours,” said Scottie, pointing. “We’re coming into the town now. Population, one thousand. Main industries timber, cattle, potatoes, dairy. Butter factory and a bacon factory. And there’s your hospital. Twenty-two beds. Plenty for our needs. Matron’s highly qualified – salt of the earth and all that, but a bit of a wowser.”

  “Can’t say I know that word.”

  “You soon will. Belongs to a bunch of misery gutses who don’t drink, smoke, gamble, dance, or want anyone to have a good time. Matron’s very strict. We’re all a bit afraid of her, but as I say, highly qualified.”

  The truck picked up speed on the steep slope into the town, which consisted of two wide intersecting streets with a war memorial in the centre.

  “I’ll just unload all this and then I’ll drop you off at your house. Might be an idea to wake up the missus now.”

  Charlotte shivered when she woke. Lochlann helped her on with her jacket.

  “Relief to get away from that coastal heat,” said Scottie, putting on a cotton shirt before he drove on. “Smell that air. Can’t get any fresher than that. Fit for the gods.”

  They were met at the door of their three-bedroom weatherboard house by a welcoming Jean, Scottie’s wife, who had lit the fire in the stove, filled the water fountain – a tall cast-iron container with a tap that sat on the edge of the stove and kept water hot – put flowers on the table and brought in essential provisions, as well as her own lamb casserole.

  “Just give us a shout if you want anything, Doc,” said Scottie as he drove away. “Chalk and cheese,” he said to his wife beside him, answering the question before she could ask him.

  Jean wasn’t surprised when he couldn’t answer subsequent questions, knowing that he would have done most of the talking.

  “Did you find out when the baby’s due at least?” she asked finally.

  “What baby?” asked Scottie.

  56

  Lochlann held Charlotte’s arm to steady her. She was swaying as if she were still on board either the ship or the steam train. Every now and then the feeling of being in motion came back to disconcert him as well.

  “Let’s get you settled first,” he said. “Would you like a cup of tea and something to eat?”

  “Nothing thanks. Couldn’t face a thing. Still feel ghastly.”

  He guided her to the freshly made bed. They could smell the sunlight off the sheets when he turned back the covers. He retrieved her nightgown from the trunk and helped her undress. By the time he found a tap to fill a glass of water for her, she was asleep.

  Before attacking the casserole he went outside to have a look around. There were verandahs on three sides of the house. At the back were trees, on the left a water tank on a high wide platform, under which was parked a Buick, on the right the surgery, which was attached to the house but had a separate entrance, and to the front was a street and above it on the hill, the hospital. One of the sheds in the yard was full of chopped wood, and beside it a smaller open structure enclosed in wire netting, which he presumed was a hen house without hens. He couldn’t identify the birdcalls or the shrubs or plants or the trees. Despite his weariness, he felt a stirring of interest in the unfamiliar nature of everything that surrounded him.

  He re-entered the kitchen, looking forward to a bowl of lamb, with bread to soak up the juices, and strong sweet tea to finish.

  There was a whirring sound in the hall. He identified the telephone on the wall and lifted the earpiece.

  “Is that Redmundo 145?” asked a female voice.

  “I’m not sure,” he answered, leaning into the mouthpiece. “I’ve only just arrived.”

  “Are you the new doctor?”

  “Yes, I am.”

  “Putting you through. Go ahead, Matron.”

  “Thank you, Cheryl.”

  The matron was really sorry. She had seen Scottie drop them off and realised they must be feeling dreadful after their long trip but she had an emergency, a young man in excruciating pain with an appendix that might rupture. There wasn’t time to send him on to the next town and there was no one else to call. If there was any way the doctor could see him . . .

  “Of course, I’ll come straight up.”

  “You know where it is?”

  “Yes, Scottie pointed it out. I can see it from here. I’m on my way.”

  As he walked with speed up the hill he hoped he would be equal to the task ahead and that he’d paid attention to the demonstrations he’d watched as a student. If he were in a city hospital he wouldn’t be doing unsupervised surgery for years.

  He had reason to be grateful to Matron Grainger that day and every day afterwards. She was a stickler for cleanliness and procedure and was expert in the administration of chloroform. Her age (mid-thirties) and cold seriousness were the only impressions he had time to register before he scrubbed up.

  “Thank you, Matron,” he said many times during the operation as she anticipated what was needed. “How many times have you assisted at one of these?”

  “I’ve lost count. Over thirty at least.”

  He didn’t tell her it was his first, and she may not have guessed, as everything worked out with textbook pre
cision. He would have been unnerved by the unfamiliarity of the theatre if she hadn’t been there to guide him and deal with the practicalities.

  “Just think,” Matron said, tidying up and collecting all the instruments to be sterilised while Lochlann stitched the wound, “if you hadn’t arrived when you did young Billy Ericsson here wouldn’t have made it.”

  “He’s obviously destined for great things. We’ll have to follow his progress from now on to see what he achieves.”

  When Lochlann arrived back at his house, replaying the operation in his mind, he looked at the shape in the bed, and for a second couldn’t think for the life of him who the person under the coverlet could possibly be. He stood disorientated, swaying on his feet, trying to concentrate his mind and ignore his exhaustion. It was with a sickening jolt he remembered it was Charlotte.

  57

  After three days Charlotte felt well enough to leave the bed, and her determination to be a wonderful wife resurfaced. Groceries, milk, bread and meat were delivered to the door, so she didn’t have to face meeting any of the townspeople. She turned down Lochlann’s suggestion of bringing a woman in to help her.

  “It can’t be too difficult with just the two of us,” she assured him. “It’s not as if I’ve never seen the inside of a kitchen.”

  He lit the wood stove in the morning before leaving to do his house calls. Arriving back at one o’clock he saw a concerned man hovering at the gate wondering if he should rush in with a bucket of water. He found Charlotte standing in the middle of the kitchen, her eyes streaming from the smoke, bewailing the fact she didn’t know what to do. Water in the vegetable and potato saucepans hadn’t come to the boil, and lamb chops were lying cold in the pan. She had forgotten to stoke the stove earlier and had crammed in too many pieces of wood at the last minute, cutting off air from the few embers that remained.

  “I’m sorry. I thought I’d watched Cook so often I’d know what to do, but she had a range run on anthracite and this is so different.”

  “Never mind. It will only take a minute.” He coaxed back the flame with kindling, an open flue and better placed wood, and was only thirty minutes late for afternoon surgery.

  During the next week she shrivelled a joint of roast beef in an overheated oven and burnt two saucepans dry. Potatoes welded to the bottom of one of them wouldn’t soak off, so the pan had to be thrown out. She scorched her hand picking up the metal tongs from the top of the stove, and dropped many slices of bread into the embers while trying to make toast. After a cast-iron baking dish slipped on to the floor and splashed scalding fat over her legs, she told Lochlann she had changed her mind about not accepting help. Lochlann, for safety’s sake if for no other reason, was relieved and employed Mrs Parker who had worked for the previous doctor and was thrilled to be asked. She started with two hours per day, but after adding shopping, cooking and gardening to her cleaning duties, was soon doing a full week.

  Every day, after their morning tea and a chat, with relief Charlotte took herself off to the back verandah where she sat on one wicker chair and put her feet up on another. Sometimes she read, but more often she stared at the trees and the blue sky and contemplated her impending motherhood with satisfaction.

  Mrs Parker felt honoured to be privy to the secrets of the house and especially enjoyed sharing the midday meal with the couple.

  Many people were curious about the doctor’s wife. Only Scottie the mailman, and his wife Jean, had spoken to her since she arrived, and both reckoned she was putting on the dog. Mrs Parker was proud to enlighten them that the doctor’s wife was not putting on the dog. Her accent was genuine, she explained. She was the daughter of a Lord. The reason she didn’t see anyone was not because of snobbishness, but because of anxiety about her approaching confinement, especially since she had been so ill for all those weeks on the trip on the way over. Mrs Carmody, as Mrs Parker called her, refusing to address her as ‘Charlotte’ seeing she was the daughter of a Lord, was ideal to work for as she never interfered or told her what to do. Mrs Parker didn’t add that Mrs Carmody seemed to know so little about running a house she wouldn’t know what orders to give – her loyalty to her employers precluded giving out any negative details.

  “Would you like to be my receptionist instead?” Lochlann asked Charlotte, thinking she might be bored. “It would be a good way for you to get to know the townspeople.” The startled look she gave him made him add, “It’s light work. You’d be sitting in a cubicle beside the phone so you wouldn’t have to move about or be on display.”

  “I wouldn’t know what to do. I’ve no experience.” Her eyes pooled with tears. “I’m sorry. I didn’t think anything like that would be expected of me.”

  “It’s not. It’s not,” he rushed to reassure her. “It was for your sake I was suggesting it. I thought you might be looking for a bit of diversion since painting has been ruled out.” Her paints and brushes remained unpacked as she said that, in her condition, even the thought of the smell of linseed oil and turpentine made her feel sick. “I already have someone lined up if you’re not interested, so don’t think I’m putting you under any pressure.”

  “That’s all right, then. I’d rather not expose our unborn child to infections brought in by shopkeepers and farmers when I don’t have to, if you don’t mind.”

  Lochlann told her to think no more about it – he sympathised with her misgivings. The position could now be offered to Marie Dawson, a kind intelligent widow whose children were reared and whose warm personality would be popular with the patients.

  Charlotte detected relief on Lochlann’s face after her refusal, and saw him jump the front gate when he returned to the surgery for the afternoon.

  “Someone’s in a good mood,” smiled Mrs Parker, watching from the kitchen window. “Oh, for the energy of youth!”

  58

  Charlotte was glad of Mrs Parker’s presence in the house when Wombat Churchill came into the yard uninvited and began to split logs that had been thrown over the fence early that morning by Billy Ericsson’s grateful father.

  Mrs Parker took out a pot of tea and some Anzac biscuits to share with Wombat while they sat together in the shade on the side verandah under a passion-fruit vine. His disfigured face made Charlotte shiver, and when he laughed – at least it looked as if that was what he was doing though it was hard to tell as his mouth had restricted movement, and there was no sound emerging – he showed a few blackened teeth among the gaps and looked as if he wasn’t the full shilling. He kept looking towards the kitchen window.

  Later, Mrs Parker asked Charlotte if she could spare the time to meet Wombat as he was too shy to come to the door.

  “I’d rather not,” Charlotte answered. “What if his disease is catching?”

  “He doesn’t have a disease,” Mrs Parker explained, keeping her voice low so that Wombat wouldn’t overhear. “He fell into a fire when he was four and was lucky it was only his face that was burnt. Hasn’t said a word since that day.”

  Charlotte experienced a flicker of fellow feeling.

  “No one knows if his vocal chords were damaged or if it was pure fright that struck him dumb, poor coot. Wouldn’t hurt a fly.”

  Reluctantly, Charlotte went out and offered her hand. Wombat didn’t take it, miming that his hands weren’t clean, and made an odd little bow instead.

  Next day she saw a dozen one-day-old chickens in the fowl pen, and a week later a pink and grey galah in a cage appeared on the verandah. Mrs Parker said to Charlotte that Wombat must have taken a shine to her.

  “I wish he hadn’t.”

  Charlotte was feeling vulnerable. Used to being surrounded by servants, thick exterior walls, upper storeys, anterooms and separate entrances, she couldn’t get used to living in a six-room wooden bungalow where every window could be looked into from the outside and where the paling fence, only waist high, left the garden exposed. “It’s not as if we want those things.”

  “He’s the town’s Good Samaritan,” Mrs Park
er explained. “Helps out everyone who needs it with gardening and chopping wood in his spare time after he’s done a full day’s work at the butter factory. The town would be a poorer place without him.” Mrs Parker voice had taken on a pleading tone. “Still lives at home. Parents are real battlers.”

  When Charlotte was young, Nurse Dixon rarely bothered to tell stories, but when she did they were always about ugly people who did nasty things to children. Looking at Wombat, the fear Charlotte felt back then returned unbidden and paid no heed to her adult reasoning.

  Keen to justify herself to Lochlann for rebuffing Wombat’s overtures of friendship, she said she was worried about the effect Wombat’s presence around the house would have on the baby. “What if it’s born deformed?” she asked.

  “That’s not possible. Pre-natal influences don’t work like that.” He did think her nervous attitude might be harmful, however, so asked Wombat if he would fence off a section behind the surgery, the part furthermost from the house, and plant a vegetable garden there. A project dear to his heart, Lochlann said, hoping it would keep the affectionate man occupied and out of Charlotte’s sight until after the baby was born. Wombat was grateful to be asked and was reluctant to accept payment. The pink and grey galah was removed by Mrs Parker when Charlotte complained about its noise.

  Charlotte could now sit undisturbed, picturing the look on her mother’s face when she returned home triumphant, enjoying the respect that would then be due to her as a mother.

  Standing back so she couldn’t be seen, Charlotte looked through the front window. Lochlann was at the gate in conversation with someone she didn’t know, which wasn’t surprising as she’d only met four people since she’d arrived. Lochlann was talking, gesticulating, listening intently, and every now and then throwing back his head and laughing. His eyes were lively and his body relaxed as he leaned against the gatepost.

 

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