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Authors: Patrick Holland

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There was no chance to answer. I believe he aimed at Phuong, but his hand shook so wildly the shot went wide. It cut through the wind, whistling passed my ear and Zhuan fell dead on the bridge, his eyes still wide and weeping, a look of infinite hope imprinted upon his face, for the last thing he saw was Phuong, was Thuy. His girl redeemed, healed, immaculate.

Hönicke did not lower his revolver but glared into the notch with eyes blank and insane. I went for the gun in my coat but I had only put my hand on the stock when he fired a second shot at Phuong. He fired a third shot into his own temple.

I crawled to Phuong.

It seemed she was hit in the heart. I put my hand over the blood on her breast.

‘Stay awake!' I shouted but was not sure she heard me.

I looked across at Zhuan, the wicked shepherd who had left all his sheep to find the one that he had lost. It was this that had brought about his downfall. But tonight, at last, he believed he had found her. Once he had thought he would save the lamb, but I knew by the ecstatic look that remained on his face that the lamb had saved him. And somewhere in the night were those who would kill him, they too risking much to find the one who had strayed from them. They could not know their work was already done by a guilty madman on a bridge in the middle of the night in Saigon.

38

It was mid-morning when I was released from the station. The sun was the same late afternoon sun that shines on Saigon no matter the hour of the day. Then came an unseasonal rain and the city's electric lights came on through the haze despite the hour. I went to the Cathedral Notre Dame and Christmas prayers were being chanted in the wet before the statue of St Maria and a woman shielded a candle above an Agent Orange–poisoned child.

I went in and sat down in a pew and prayed to the wounded and dying figure in plaster that hung above the sacrificial table. Dying for love.

We were all of us safer without love. Even Zhuan, steeped in crime, was safe until he had loved a girl. I stood up and lit a candle before the same Mother of God Elousa icon Thuy had prayed before in my room. She had died on a lonely road between bondage and where she did not know, driving in the dark, and I wondered if perhaps, if only for a moment, she was happy and thought she was going home.

I lit a candle for Phuong. Then a candle for Zhuan. Then I fought and then I lit a candle for myself. Forgive me, I whispered.

I walked across Han Thuyen Road to the French clinic where I had had Phuong transferred. I shook François's hand and walked past a pair of nurses to the bed where she lay sleeping with her shoulder bandaged.

‘We have removed the bullet,' said François when he came in to give her morphine.

I smiled.

‘Very good. And she is doing well?'

‘Yes,' he smiled, ‘Very well.'

I brushed her hair from her forehead and she woke.

‘Don't leave me,' she said.

I shook my head.

‘Never.'

François came back in an hour.

‘She will sleep through the night now. Go home and rest.'

‘She said not to leave her.'

‘You know what she meant.'

I nodded. ‘Yes,' I smiled. I kissed her forehead.

I walked out into hazy polluted sunlight that had begun breaking in shafts through the cloud. On my bike I sped over the bridges of Saigon and over the great brown river. I drank Saigon Beer in a bar without women. At some hour that night I returned to my guesthouse and slept and dreamt that I was in a room without light and, though it bore no resemblance to where I had been two nights ago on the road to Vung Tau, I knew it was the darkest little room, that it was called that and that it had always existed, even before time, though it had been called different names and been built in different places. I was there and I could not see anything for the room did not possess anything even as solid as a shadow. I was in the dark and was looking for Thuy. I searched for an hour, but there was no way to measure time in that place so perhaps I searched forever and at last I was searching by the candle I had lit for her at the Cathedral, but it burnt with a blood-red flame that had been born out of the darkness itself and then there was a crack in the door and a link in a chain broke and the sound of it breaking shattered the stars.

Patrick Holland grew up in outback Queensland, where he worked as a horseman, before moving to Brisbane. He has worked and studied in China and Vietnam and is the author of the travel book,
Riding the Trains in Japan
(Transit Lounge); a collection of short stories,
The Source of the Sound
(Salt, UK / Hunter, AUS), which won the Scott Prize and was shortlisted for the Steele Rudd Award; and the novel,
The Mary Smokes Boys
(Transit Lounge), which was long-listed for the Miles Franklin Award and shortlisted for the Age Book of the Year.

BOOK: The Darkest Little Room
11.33Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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