—How does she look? Does her hair still fall over her face?
Bob laughed.
—Too right, and she’s brushing it away. She reminded me of Chicks the way she brushes her hair out of her eyes.
—But the operation will make her even better?
—Of course.
And back in the small room, Daphne, being undressed and put early to bed ready for the next day was thinking, I think he told me a lie about my mother. I think she was washing clothes and darning socks and not making pikelets. And I think that man was my father, no matter how much he pretended to be no relation and didn’t kiss me hello and bring me a bag of fruit and a cake of chocolate; he was my father and couldn’t deceive me. And my mother is sitting at home now, with a handleless cup stuck in the heel of my brother’s thick grey work-sock, and darning the hole, criss-cross, criss-cross, the way snow falls like snipped white wool through an empty sky. And my mother is prodding the clothes that bubble in the copper, and feeding the fire underneath with sticks of apple-box and pine cones while the cat twines about her heavy varicose legs and her feet move like laden ships, burst at the side, on a forever journey across wood and concrete seas, where the only sails are sheets, pyjamas, underpants and towels, pegged up to slap the worn winter face of a snivelling sunlight.
All this, except that my mother is dead, and I die tomorrow when snow falls criss-cross criss-cross to darn the believed crevice of my world.
It was Saturday. Relaxed in a corner of their glassed-in verandah, the manager of the woollen mills and his wife were reading the morning newspaper. The manager lay upon a rubber mattress. He wore shorts. His skin looked brown and packed tight with body, like a chinese gooseberry grown arms and legs, and hairy. His wife sat in a deck chair, her hair bound with a many-coloured silk scarf that concealed and kept in place a dozen butterfly curlers, and that waved above her head in two peaks of silk like rainbow horns.
The manager covered his face with the newspaper.
—It’s hot, he said, through glass. I’ll lie down and get my violet rays.
His wife leaned forward,
—Give it to me, she said. I haven’t read it.
And she removed the newspaper.
The manager closed his eyes.
—There’s no news, he said.
But his wife exclaimed,
—Listen to this! and read,
SOCIAL SECURITY CLERK EMBEZZLES MONEY
—Anyone we know? asked the manager of the woollen mills.
—No. And his wife committed suicide, an overdose of sleeping tablets. What is the world coming to?
And their names were Albert Crudge and Fay Crudge, though the paper said other names
.
And the manager’s wife gasped again,
—You didn’t tell me about the murder, she said. On the news page.
—Anyone we know? asked her husband, half-asleep and warm like a hothouse plant.
—No one we know. A society woman found shot in the head, and her husband arrested for murder. Whatever is the world coming to?
And their names were Teresa and Timothy Harlow, though the paper said other names
.
And the manager’s wife, turning the pages, said,
—Did you read this? Epileptic convicted for being a vagabond and lacking visible means of support.
—Anyone we know? asked the manager.
—No one, said his wife.
And the name was Tobias E. Withers, though the paper said another name
.
—Well, said the manager, can’t you read out something
of local interest, I mean something more pleasant? You women, with your thirst for crime and bloodshed!
His wife studied the social page.
—This should interest you, she said. It tells of a social gathering to congratulate one of your workers on her promotion to assistant forewoman. Were you supposed to be there?
—No, the manager said. Read on. Who was it?
—Oh someone who just recently joined the mill. It seems she had been ill for a long time, some obscure illness, but recovered after an operation. Fancy being promoted so quickly to assistant forewoman! She must be enthusiastic about her job.
—I see they’ve given her a wristwatch with three diamonds inside.
—What’s her name again? the manager asked.
And the name was Daphne Withers, though the paper said another name
.
—What else is there? the manager asked.
—Oh. Nothing. You’re right, there’s really no news in the paper. That is unless you count things like this photograph.
—What photograph?
—The Old Men’s Home, and some of the inmates. Look at this old man sitting in the sun. He isn’t even bald.
—Anyone we know? asked the manager.
—Yes, you may have heard of him. It’s old Bob Withers.
And Bob Withers was sitting on a wicker-chair in the
sun, looking out across the harbour of Waimaru, for the Old Men’s Home was built on the cape, and all day and night the inmates moved within sound of the sea. And Bob was deaf, and he sat alone, and slobber trickled down his chin, and his voice had grown thin like a thread, and the day burned on him as hot as the stove that is ready for pikelets if there were anyone in the world to make them.
THE END
Dancing on Coral
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Introduced by Susan Wyndham
The Commandant
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Introduced by Carmen Callil
Homesickness
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Introduced by Peter Conrad
Sydney Bridge Upside Down
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Introduced by Kate De Goldi
Bush Studies
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The Cardboard Crown
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A Difficult Young Man
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Outbreak of Love
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Introduced by Chris Womersley
The Australian Ugliness
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Introduced by Christos Tsiolkas
All the Green Year
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Introduced by Michael McGirr
They Found a Cave
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Introduced by John Marsden
The Even More Complete
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Diary of a Bad Year
J. M. Coetzee
Introduced by Peter Goldsworthy
Wake in Fright
Kenneth Cook
Introduced by Peter Temple
The Dying Trade
Peter Corris
Introduced by Charles Waterstreet
They’re a Weird Mob
Nino Culotta
Introduced by Jacinta Tynan
The Songs of a Sentimental Bloke
C. J. Dennis
Introduced by Jack Thompson
Careful, He Might Hear You
Sumner Locke Elliott
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Fairyland
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Introduced by Dennis Altman
The Explorers
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Terra Australis
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Owls Do Cry
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Introduced by Margaret Drabble
My Brilliant Career
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Such is Life
Joseph Furphy
Introduced by David Malouf
The Fringe Dwellers
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Introduced by Melissa Lucashenko
Cosmo Cosmolino
Helen Garner
Introduced by Ramona Koval
Wish
Peter Goldsworthy
Introduced by James Bradley
Dark Places
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Introduced by Louise Adler
The Quiet Earth
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Introduced by Bernard Beckett
Down in the City
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The Long Prospect
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Introduced by Fiona McGregor
The Watch Tower
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The Long Green Shore
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The Mystery of a Hansom Cab
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The Unknown Industrial Prisoner
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The Glass Canoe
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A Woman of the Future
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Eat Me
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Julia Paradise
Rod Jones
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The Jerilderie Letter
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Bring Larks and Heroes
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Introduced by Geordie Williamson
Strine
Afferbeck Lauder
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The Young Desire It
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Stiff
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The Middle Parts of Fortune
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Selected Stories
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The Home Girls
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Amy’s Children
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The Scarecrow
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The Dig Tree
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A Lifetime on Clouds
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The Plains
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The Odd Angry Shot
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Life and Adventures 1776–1801
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Death in Brunswick
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Swords and Crowns and Rings
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The Watcher in the Garden
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Henry Handel Richardson
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The Getting of Wisdom
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The Fortunes of Richard Mahony
Henry Handel Richardson
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Rose Boys
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Introduced by Brian Matthews
Hills End
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Introduced by James Moloney
Ash Road
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To the Wild Sky
Ivan Southall
Introduced by Kirsty Murray
Lillipilly Hill
Eleanor Spence
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The Women in Black
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The Essence of the Thing
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Jonah
Louis Stone
Introduced by Frank Moorhouse
An Iron Rose
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Introduced by Les Carlyon
1788
Watkin Tench
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The House that Was Eureka
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Happy Valley
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Introduced by Peter Craven
I for Isobel
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I Own the Racecourse!
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