Daughter of Australia

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Daughter of Australia Page 45

by Harmony Verna


  James and Tom shot matching daggers. The man chuckled. “I know whot yer thinkin’. Yeh think Alex got me in his palm, don’t yeh? See why yeh’d think so. Cops in Coolgardie on his payroll, sure as ’ell is hot. I know Alex well. Think he’s a bloody prick. I know yeh didn’t steal that money, but I had t’get yeh outta there ’fore he killed yeh both.”

  Tom’s shoulders relaxed. The sheriff grinned. “We’ll take yeh to Gwalia to the station. Get yeh fixed up, James, bind up those ribs. We’ll get this mess settled. No worries.” He smiled. “Yer good boys.”

  “I got t’piss,” said Murphy, squirming in his seat.

  “Pull over there,” the sheriff said, pointing.

  Low, rocky hills lined both sides. Mulga roots veined across the boulders and wrapped like fingers into the cracks. A few ancient eucalyptus trees stretched to the sky. Crows, so black that their feathers gleamed indigo against the sun’s glare, dotted the limbs and turned their heads with the fluttering leaves. The air was still now, hot and dusty. The flies buzzed around the open windows, whizzed in and out. The deputy left the car, his head down, and walked slowly to the edges of stones. The sheriff craned his neck, looked at the sky from the open part of the roof. “Long day, eh?” he sighed. “Where yeh boys from?”

  “Wheatbelt,” Tom answered, rubbing his leg in tired strokes. “Outside Southern Cross.”

  The sheriff turned around with interest. “Yeah? Murphy’s wife is from there. Sweet girl. Jist had a baby, too.” He smiled as he searched his memory. “Abby? No, Ashley!”

  Tom stiffened. The spots of crows stretched wings and leaped from the tree limbs into the air in a cackling frenzy. The sky exploded with sound; the air cracked in two. The three men froze in the enormous split second, stared straight and motionless. The sheriff’s head dropped forward—the back of his scalp gone.

  The next shot bit James in the shoulder, sent him tumbling against the side, the door opening with the thrust of the weight. James spilled out to the ground.

  “James!” Tom crawled out and grabbed him, tried to drag him to the back of the car, dodged his head from another whizzing bullet.

  The gun’s thunder echoed, ricocheted between the hills of rocks and moved forward steadily. Murphy’s footsteps were slow and methodical, his arm outstretched, his lip curled above his top teeth. “She told me it was you!” he screamed.

  Tom stood up, opened his legs to shield his friend.

  “She told me whot you did to her! Told me how you paid her to keep quiet!”

  Tom stepped forward. “It ain’t what you think.” He raised his hands into the air.

  Murphy’s arm shook. “I saw that baby and I knew!”

  “No—”

  “Told me how yeh forced yerself on her! On my fuckin’ wife!”

  Tom’s arms dropped to his sides. His fingers stretched and fell limp. He stopped arguing. He looked back at James for less than a moment, his eyes clear to the future, clear with his truth, clear with waiting and surrender. “Under God, I swear I never—”

  The shots came swift, deafening:

  One—two—three—four.

  Tom’s body collapsed at James’s feet, his eyes empty as glass, the pupils still. “Tom!” James screamed. In a white fury, he was on his feet, charged at Murphy’s figure. The gun turned idly toward him. The black circle of the barrel smoked. The shots smashed the silence of the bush and ripped through his skin.

  The sofa was firm under Leonora’s back. A pillow propped her neck. She could not feel her body. Her eyelids rose and fell like cooking clams. Upon her eyes’ opening, a line of the dark room took shape before disappearing under heavy eyelashes. A lazy light glowed from a table lamp, the edges of the hazy orb ubiquitous. There were no thoughts—only numb, visceral images and sounds and textures that accented the distance.

  Dull footsteps traveled across the wood floor. Step. Step. Step. The movement ceased in front of the sofa. With a great pull, her eyelids cracked. A body blocked the light from the lamp. The pants were dark. A man’s hand fanned a square piece of paper above her face, sending short wisps of breeze along her nose. The hand stopped and released the card. The paper fluttered, danced on the air and landed upon her hip.

  “Your boyfriend’s dead.” The words floated on the air as the paper had done, turned and trailed behind Alex’s retreating footsteps.

  CHAPTER 62

  Ghan jammed his body against the rock face and slid down to the ground. Sand and dust crumbled from the stone and sprinkled down his collar. His mouth dried with held breath. His lips trembled. Gunshots still rang against his eardrum.

  Another shot broke the still air. Ghan grabbed his knees and rolled into a ball. More shots fired, each one jerking his body as if the bullets landed in his back. Then silence. Ghan’s ears strained against the drumming, soundless noise that kept tempo with his throbbing veins. An engine started, drove away. And still Ghan listened, kept crouched below the rocks. He didn’t want to look up—didn’t want to see what had happened.

  Ghan settled his insides, unclasped his knees. He closed his eyes, stretched his body up past the rocks, sucked in air and then opened his eyes. A sick wave rippled down his body. Three bodies lay flopped and crooked across the ground—a bloody massacre.

  Ghan peered down each end of the road and licked his cracked lips. Man might come back, he reminded himself. His gaze became more frantic. Might be a bunch of men. Ghan limped out to the open, his crippled body exposed in the wide terrain. He hurried across the dirt road, his peg leg leaving circles in the soft dirt.

  Sweat drenched his back, made his beard itch. He stepped up to the bodies. The first one was facedown, the back of his head open and raw, his clothes dark red down to the backs of his legs. The sickness thrust upward too quickly and Ghan vomited onto his boot. He bent over and gagged. He turned away, but the smell of blood hung to the heat, cooked under the sun.

  The flies began to gather and swarm. They flocked to the wound of the open skull. The crows flapped from above, their black shadows elongating across the bodies and the ground. The bile churned again. These men would be picked apart within the hour. The flies would start it, then the crows and the buzzards. Dingoes would smell the death and come running—growl and tear them apart.

  They needed to be buried. The fact poked Ghan with wizened fingers. No way, Ghan argued with himself. He was too old to bury one of these men, let alone all of them. Ghan stared at the sun. He’d die trying to dig the graves in this heat—four bodies instead of three. The crows watched him, wobbled sideways up and down the branch in wait. More flies came. Can’t let a man get picked away, though. Not right. Ghan could feel the burden of the shovel in his empty hands. They’re already dead! his mind shouted. Skin and bone were going to fall away whether buried or not. Not worth the sweat.

  Ghan slapped a fly, cursed the crows, then stomped to his tent for the shovel.

  CHAPTER 63

  Maybe she died first.

  Maybe she had always been dead.

  Perhaps the world had always been black, inside and out.

  Perhaps she had died with the child who had only begun to warm within her, the child who had never known a breath of air or her kisses or his father; perhaps she had died as a child, in that desert, and life had been a slow dream waiting for the final nail held in this moment.

  It was morning, but there was no light. Leonora could see through the window, the sun high above the trees—an odd, bright ball that did not belong in a world of darkness. Meredith, hunched and quiet, lifted the cold, untouched tea from the tray and replaced it with a new steaming cup, wiped a wayward splash with a napkin. But a dead body does not see things quickly and Leonora watched the woman and the activity absently.

  “Is it true?” Leonora heard her own raspy, dead voice—the question lifeless as a corpse.

  Meredith did not turn around. Her head dropped and nodded weightily.

  The monstrous black swirled. The hollowness spread to every dead limb. “Where’s T
om?” asked the dead, dry lips.

  The woman turned slowly now, her forehead wrinkled. “Don’t you know?”

  Leonora moved her chin up, the muscles in her neck weak with sedative. “Know what?”

  Meredith’s chin dented under the bulk of her frown. “Tom’s dead, too.”

  Leonora’s eyelids blinked—over and over and over again. Meredith left. And still Leonora blinked with blind sight. From far away, through the mass of closing eyes, she heard her heart beat. She waited for it to stop—waited for the deadness to reach the pulsing muscle and silence it.

  Blink. Blink. Blink.

  Wait. Wait. Wait.

  The strange ball of glaring sun moved along the fingers of the trees and slid to the back of the house. Rectangular shadows expanded along the floor in front of the French doors. Meredith returned and brought new tea. A bowl of soup steamed and then chilled on the tray.

  A long, lean shadow passed the sofa, turned and passed it again, back and forth, over and over between her blinking. Finally, the pacing stopped. “I didn’t do this, Leonora.” Alex stared at her with a drained face, his words hollow and distant, only grazing a dying sense of hearing. “Say something, goddammit!” he shouted.

  Death was cold and black. Numb. The air moved slowly in and out of her lungs—two dead shells—each respiration strange and dull and foreign. And still she waited for the air to stop. And still she listened at the stubborn pulse ticking in her chest. The pain in her pelvis was detached—just there, sitting on a distant shelf with the obstinate heart and intrepid lungs.

  “I can’t take it.” Alex pulled at his hair, cried out, “Look at me!”

  Her dead eyes scrolled upward, set and hung on his. Alex stumbled backwards and clawed at his hair, began to pace back and forth again with long strides, unable to escape the dead, heavy eyes that followed him. Alex stopped at the window, forced an inhale. He clasped his hands behind his back. “I need you to know that I didn’t do this.” His voice calmed. “Part of me wishes I had. Part of me wishes I had been the one pulling the trigger.” He turned to her. “But I had no part in it. I swear it.”

  The sound of truth—pure, unfiltered truth—stabbed at the numbness. That strange organ began to beat faster and saliva wet her dry mouth. No! The word screamed in her mind, awakening it from its quiet. The life, the air, the pulse, was moving in the wrong direction, moving away from death. She pulled at the numbness, at the frayed ties. She could taste the pain that was hiding in the corners, waiting for her, and tinged her nerves with terror.

  Alex walked toward her, his face blank of ego or anger, his jaw and eyes raw and honest. He knelt and took her dead hands in his. “I didn’t do this. And I can’t live with that hatred in your eyes.” His voice crumbled. “The men attacked the sheriff, Leonora. Killed him in cold blood when they tried to escape. The deputy had no other choice but to shoot them.” He squeezed her hands. “Your precious James did this. Not me.”

  The name crushed her pelvis in a hard, tight fist and she cried out. The pain was breaking. Alex grabbed her elbows and his lips quivered. “It doesn’t have to be this way. Don’t you see? We can start over, Leonora. Now that you know the truth about him, we can start over. No one knows what happened except for us. No one knows.”

  The words swirled in her stomach, made her sick with grief. She covered her mouth with her hand, wanted to retch. Alex took her hand away and held her face. “I blame myself for this. I should have never brought you to Australia. It changed you.”

  His words spun around her temples, twisting her mind like a toy top.

  “You didn’t know what you were doing. I left you alone too often. I see that now. You’ve always been like a child. You needed guidance and I wasn’t here to give it to you.”

  Alex jiggled her arms as if she had fallen asleep. She looked at his face blindly, searched the distorted features for something that made sense and didn’t make her ill.

  “I forgive you, Leonora,” he said happily. “I forgive you. Don’t you see? It wasn’t your fault. You didn’t know what you were doing.” His eyes lit. “We’ll move away. Go back to America. Move to California. I’ll watch you better now, darling. I promise.”

  She watched as he formed each word with his lips, watched as the mouth moved with sound. She watched as his white teeth showed with some words and were hidden with others. His tongue was pink in his mouth. The hairs of his mustache traced each curve of his lips.

  “You understand now. Don’t you?” he prodded.

  “Yes.” Her voice was dead.

  His mouth curved with pleasure. “You see I won’t ever let you go again?”

  “Yes.” The sound of her voice echoed in her ears from a long tunnel.

  He squeezed her tighter. “We’ll start a new life.”

  She swallowed and croaked on the words “a new life.”

  Alex hugged her rigid body. He showered kisses on her forehead and cheeks and stiff lips. “It’s all going to be better now. You’ll see.” He propped up a pillow behind her head.

  The pain waited until he left. The cuts frayed and beaded blood. She clutched her stomach. The grief rolled over her now, clawed and tore with each wave, one on top of the other. Her mouth ovaled to a howl and her body shuddered under rupturing despair. James was gone. Dead. The thought wracked her tendons and wailed in the creases of her brain until there were no thoughts or feelings beyond the entity of pain.

  Weeks or months passed. Leonora fell dully into the folds of grief as a pebble falls into the murky dark of a bottomless lake. She did not try to fight the pain any longer, for it was part of her now, part of her skin and blood and organs.

  Alex watched her always. She could not move from one room to the next without him asking where she was going. He was hiring a new manager to run the Coolgardie mine. He was making plans to divide and sell Wanjarri Downs. And Leonora knew, even in her grief, she would not leave Australia, even if it meant she had to be buried under its soil.

  “Where are you going?” called Alex from his office.

  “To take a walk,” she answered hoarsely.

  “Good.” Alex tucked his nose back into his papers. “Fresh air will do you good.”

  The sun mauled her sight; the dry heat engulfed and stuck to the skin. Her limbs felt the pull of the managers’ quarters, but she pulled back, forced her head toward the west. But it didn’t matter; James was everywhere and the missing pressed into her temples and her gut and her shoulders. Dust climbed up her ankles. Bull dust, they called it, she remembered weakly. Leonora kicked it idly. She was blind to direction, put one foot in front of the other. Step. Step. Step.

  The sun burned the back of her bent neck. Her breathing was shallow. Step. Step. Step. The dust lessened; the ground grew more compact and cracked, reddened. Step. Step. Step. Sweat inched down her nose, soaked the collar of her dress. Her chest thickened with awakened grief. Her footsteps quickened. Step. Step. Step. Sobs broke with the energy. She ran. Her lungs fired with fast, searing air. Tears fell and dried before they reached her neck and still she ran. Step, step, step. She stopped. Shade covered her head. A wail left her lips. She grabbed at her hair and curled into the grief. Her knees gave up. She fell at the base of the lone tree, scraped her cheek against the warm bark and twisted her legs around the roots. Sinking. Sinking. Sinking.

  Her body chilled. She had been here before. The same tree, a different tree—it was all the same. The memory left her cold. Old terror wrapped fingers around her shoulders. Leonora looked up through wet tears and she was a child again. Her eyes searched the barren land for a figure. Her body shook. It was the same. The panic, the swirling sick, the gaping loss. The same.

  Her hands convulsed as she brought them from her lap to the air. She stared at the shaking, thin fingers, stared at the wavering palms. A jolt. And then something shifted. It was not the same. Her hands were not those of a child. Her fingers spread and stilled. I’m still here. The thought entered like a rush of fresh, pure oxygen. I’m stil
l here. Her rib cage expanded; the hot bush air filtered into her lungs and flooded the rims. I’m still here. And it all came quickly now. The catalog of images fanned under the shade of the moving tree limbs. Left to die in the desert. Thrown from the sea. Raised to wilt under soot-filled skies. Scorned in marriage. A torn love. A baby’s loss. But I’m still here. And at that moment, in the still of the silent bush, Leonora was not her grief or her pain or her loss. She simply was.

  The answers came. As loud as if they had been words, the answers thumped in her chest and screamed in her mind and breathed in her lungs and cushioned her heart. The answers came now. And they were so easy. For so long they had been out of reach, and here they were sitting before her as clear as if they had been written in the red ground.

  She could leave now. She would tell the Aborigines. She had land to offer. They would not take it; this she knew. To present them a deed for land was like having them sign a contract for air. But she would tell them. They could choose to stay or to leave. But she would not stay. No more. The rest of the land she would give to Tom’s mother. She remembered the woman’s prophecy—Tom, a fleeting wind.

  Leonora rose to her feet and grew again. Grief had not left, but she was not the grief; she was the one who carried it. She would sell her jewelry. She would take what money was rightfully hers and she would leave. Even penniless, she would leave.

  Leonora walked, clutched her grief like a handbag but did not fall into it. The Aboriginal camp glared in the distance, the metal roofs pearly and white under the sun’s unstoppable rays. She swallowed. For she saw the sun now, saw the blue that surrounded. The gray was leaving.

  A group of Aborigine women washed clothes in a rusty tub between the shacks. They watched Leonora approach and this time they did not turn away. Their dark pupils were calm and the whites of their eyes held her. For they saw the lines of her loss, the grief-drooped lids, and they knew this look. Perhaps knew this look better than anyone else on the planet.

 

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