He holds up his hands in a gesture of retreat. âOnly wanting to help. Nothing more.'
Freya turns her blemished cheek away, confused, stammering thanks and apology in a single sentence. She stands rigid until Adam has gone. She looks back to her shining sky but not a wisp remains, nothing but stars strewn across the night, wind scouring the waves.
AURORA AUSTRALIS
LEAVES STORM AND darkness in its wake and moves through higher latitudes towards a summer of perpetual light. Within the course of a morning the air drops below freezing point, the sea chills to one degree Celsius, an indicator that at some intangible moment they have crossed the dotted line on the chart marking the Antarctic Convergence. With each changing minute of latitude illuminated on the GPS, the Southern Ocean yields to the influence of ice. Waves ease to ripples, ripples to calm, the ocean, punctuated with white, rises and falls lazily. Beyond the windows of the bridge, ice stretches towards the curve of the horizon. Ice in myriad forms. The ocean surface cools until frozen needles cluster together to form frazil ice. The ship crosses a thin sludge of grease ice that disintegrates on contact. At times they motor through pancake ice, lily pads that bob and turn.
Aurora
swings past crystal fields of multi-year pack-ice that rise two metres above the water's surface. Living up to its classification, the icebreaker shears through the stratum of first-year pack-ice. At the height of each day, channels of ocean thaw, only to refreeze into fragile sheets that raft one upon the otherâpanes of glass the vessel snaps in two. On the radar, a tabular berg edging the sky measures fifty kilometres in length; Freya mistook the berg for a long, low cloud.
Aurora
's captain, no older than she, has a pageboy haircut that moves in one slick motion with each turn of his head. He reminds her of photos of her husband Marcus as a boy. The captain veers the ship towards a stretch of âwater sky', an ominously dark band that on any Australian horizon would signal rain. Here, the sky is a chameleon, stained dark by an underbelly of ice-free ocean. âLook at the difference there.' The captain points to where the sky brightens to a luminous glow. This he calls âice blink', an upward reflection from pack-ice and bergs. âThat's where we don't want to end up, stuck in heavy ice and chewing through fuel. Ice blink and water sky were all they had to go on in the early polar days,' the captain says, flicking his hair as he leans down to scan the radar. âYou've got to hand it to'em, finding their way south through this.'
Aurora
eases past bergs whose skirts of icicles thaw in the late afternoon light. Freya sets up her camera on the flying bridge, wishing they could turn off the engines and listen to the streams of water, could simply drift awhile with no direction in mind.
Ice crunches beneath the hull. Squadrons of cape petrels keep pace with the ship, the small birds with their black-and-white chequered wings forming a graphic blur against the electric orange hull and crystalline ocean.
Behind the viewfinder her focus is rarely deflected. She has tempered the promise of the perfect photo into disciplined restraint, resisting the wonder of the moment to weigh shape against tone and texture, to balance shadow and light. Marcus calls her driven, seldom as praise. Freya is reminded of the difference between herself and her husband when she sees him in their overgrown garden where he will sit and read for hours, seemingly oblivious to a litter of leaves, the influx of snails and weeds. Occasionally she still arms herself with clippers and a faded memory of a garden once so lush with colour and native birds, she never questioned the time she used to put into it. She has let her photography become so consuming, she wonders has she lost the ability to be part of a world beyond the boundaries of a 4 x 5 inch transparency?
Not part of the
programme
, she averts the subject to stem her mother's not-so-gentle reminders of
time marching on
,
and women who want
it all then leave it too late
. This, she persuades herself, is all she wants. Thoughts of home and things she'll never have eased by the unutterable beauty of ice. Freya draws back from her camera to absorb the vision that spills beyond the frame. She turns slowly on the deck as she feels against her pocket for sunglasses. She had anticipated the glisten of white, the glare of ice painful to the unprotected eye. Her collection of oversized books picked up from discount bins had long since imprinted her mind's eye with the blue of bergs. Never had she expected this opalescence of light and colour. How can any camera capture such an impossible expanse?
She was first drawn to Antarctica through the images of Frank Hurley, photographer on Douglas Mawson's 1911â14 Australasian Antarctic Expedition.
An Antarctic heaven
, he named the pack-ice. Freya was still a photography student when she gazed in wonder at Hurley's black and white photographs, fell through them as if to touch the ice. She wonders now how Frank Hurley reconciled himself to the knowledge that every nuance of colour displayed before him would be reduced to tones of grey.
Freya catches sight of a familiar face at the far railing. She knows Travis from her pre-departure training in Tasmania where he helped untangle her prusik loops and distinguish alpine butterflies. She makes her way towards him but is intercepted.
âFreya? I'm Kittie. Davis Station weather forecaster.
Fine-
weather forecaster, I'm known as.' Kittie holds out her camera. âI was hoping you could give me a rundown on my new toy.'
âHappy to.' Freya takes the camera.
âThey say when all else fails consult the manual. All else has failed, including the manual, which I managed to leave on the kitchen counter at home.'
âMind if I listen in?' calls Travis, holding up his point-and-shoot.
The three sit down on the flying deck in a circle. Freya could be running one of her university extension weekend courses, giving Travis tips on how to override the automatic settings in tricky lighting scenarios, working through the different modes and menus on Kittie's high-end SLR.
She glances up to see Adam Singer propped against the railing. He nods in her direction but declines her gestured invitation to join them.
âYou'd be all digital?' Kittie asks.
âFor small format work. And stuff I play around with in Photoshop. I still use film for images I want to enlarge into murals.'
âFilm?' Travis banters. âWe're talking acetate, chemicals, darkrooms? I wouldn't have pegged you for a luddite, Freya.'
Freya shrugs. âPart of me still likes the idea of creating an original transparency. Something you can hold in your hand.'
âDigital artist meets traditional craftswoman.'
Travis is a volunteer field assistant who will be stationed out at the Amery Ice Shelf. He looks scarcely old enough to have finished a science degree, let alone be sporting a wedding ring. Like Freya, it's his first time south. âFine-weather' Kittie, a title that seems to extend to a sunny and boisterous disposition, has summered and wintered twice before.
âAny tips for the uninitiated?' Travis asks her.
Kittie snorts. âOut at the Amery Ice Shelf all summer? An hour's flight away from the politics of the station? My advice, you lucky bastard, is to pinch yourself now and again.' She raises her camera in a toast: âTo Antarctica.'
âTo the Antarctic and success,' Freya seconds.
Travis checks his watch. âAnd to one more sumptuous five-thirty evening meal, never mind the nursing home hours. See you down there.' He springs to his feet and bounds away.
Kittie points at Freya's camera. âWhat exactly is your project?'
âMy husband and I are putting together a travelling exhibition of Antarctic images, my photos alongside Frank Hurley's first photos. A sort of Antarctica-then-and-now.'
âWhoo-hoo!' Kittie gives her a mock punch. âA breath of fresh air among the science and trades projects.'
Freya is tempted to explain more but thinks better of it.
Not everyone shares your passion for Hurley's art
, Marcus would caution.
In her first, unsuccessful application to the Arts Council she had worded her proposal
Themes from Hurley's photos
linking to my own
. When the Council recommended further development, Marcus had comforted her:
It's certainly not a
failure
.
What you have is the kernel of a very good idea
.
âIs he a photographer?'
âFrank Hurley?'
âYour husband, you schmuck!'
Freya laughs. âMarcus is an academic. Communications. Though in some ways he knows more about photography than I do: he taught visual theory in the early days.'
âDr Marcus didn't try to stow away as your field assistant?'
âHe has teaching commitments,' she offers, âand he's busy with some research.' Freya hesitates. âTo be honest,' she confides, âmy husband tends to be a bit of a homebody.'
âAh.' Kittie gives her a knowing nod. âMy partner's a
would-be
homebody. Has visions of being a stay-at-home parent with a brood of kids.'
Encumbrances
, Marcus had dismissed children the one time she broached the topic. âYou have children, Kittie?'
âNot yet. Diana and I are hoping to adopt.' Kittie registers Freya's blink of surprise. âBelieve it or not,' she says, âI do tend to be closeted when I'm at the station. Doesn't pay to stir up the homophobes.' She taps a finger in the direction of Adam Singer at the opposite railing. âCase in point,' she whispers.
âHow do you mean?' Freya leans closer, curious in spite of herself.
âI get the weirdest vibe from that dude. I'm here to tell you, I can pick out the egomaniacs and misogynists from a hundred paces.'
Adam? She can't be serious. Freya is unsure whether to laugh. âThat's a bit harsh. You make the place sound like a hornets' nest.'
âNah, there's always one or two that come crawling out of the woodwork. The difference from home is there's no ready means of escape. As for the rest of us, it's a mandatory requirement to be off-centre. You would have had the unspeakable joy of the psych assessment?'
âOh, yes.' Freya shudders, remembering the written test, the hour-long interview, the evaluation.
You appear to be fiercely
independent and professionally self-assured
,
yet the written tests
indicate a tendency to be submissiveâat times you operate out
of a sense of duty.
âIt went on forever,' she recalls. âHow would I integrate into a tight-knit community after working so long on my own? Did I have my husband's full support?' Who wouldn't feel on edge with some of the intimations?â
an underlying vulnerability,
a lack of self-esteem
âthe psychologist's focus all the while honed in on her birthmark. He had quizzed her at length over Marcus, interjecting:
But outside of the house, what do you
do togetherâfor fun?
Freya had found herself back-pedalling, defending her husband and her marriage. âI half-expected to be told I wasn't suitable.'
âAt mine,' Kittie says, âthe security guy escorted me up in the lift. When the interview was over I said to the psych,
Shall I let myself out?
She gives me this go-crawl-back-under-your-rock look and says,
Unless you'd rather jump out the
window
.' Kittie twirls her fingers. âAnd a good day to you too, DrH appy!'
Freya drums her fists on the deck with a peal of laughter. She opens her eyes to catch Adam's smile.
âSo there you have it,' Kittie says. âWe're both certifiably insane enough to go to Antarctica.'
FREYA ARRIVES AT THE DINER table in time to hear Charlie, the Davis Station radio officer, expound on the pros and cons of modern-day communications compared to earlier technology. âTelegraphy, it was back then at the Melbourne GPO. Twenty years before I started coming south.' His weathered face bears a kind smile.
âPhone calls, emails, faxesâand now bloody sat phones and SMSs,' Charlie emphasises each word, âthe ruin of many a relationship, in my opinion. These days you get wives and partners calling up all hours of the day and night, checking up. Coming to Antarctica won't solve any problems you've left at home.'
âA somewhat cynical view, Charlie,' says the woman at the end of the table whose name eludes Freya.
Charlie shrugs. âThree decades south.T hree marriage bust-ups.' âWhy do you keep coming down?'
âThe buggers won't let me retire! Each time I tell the Division this is my last yearâ
yes
,
yes
, they say, then call me up four weeks before the start of a new season, knickers in a knot because someone's pulled out. Gave the winters away a few years back,' he says. âA lowly summerer nowadays.'
Freya laughs. âPlenty of us would kill to have your kind of summer every year.'
âWhat about the female perspective?' Travis says. âYou're married, Freya. Your other half mind you running away to Antarctica?'
âHardly running away,' she tries not to sound defensive. âI've been freelancing for ten years. Marcus is used to me going away for work. Though, admittedly, not for five months straight.'
âYou're on a humanities grant?' says the woman, a PI as she introduced herself yesterdayâPrincipal Investigatorâ distracting Freya from remembering her name with yet another Antarctic acronym.
âA Commonwealth arts grant. I'm working on a photographic collection for an exhibition.'
âCourtesy of the Australian taxpayer.' The woman sniffs. âWhat a lark.'
Charlie winks at Freya sympathetically. âAs I understand it, that privilege extends to us all, sciences and trades.' He leans conspiratorially towards Travis. âThey've got a cubby hole set up for Freya above the helipad at Davis Station.'