âIt's because of your dad being in the house.'
âI know.'
At this my anger turned to affection, then fear. Again I wanted to confess my secret to Tilly, but I was reluctant to confess until I could see her face. I thought about asking her to turn on the light, but she said goodnight and let herself out of the room before I could speak. I lay, stretched out on the bed, just as I had been before she visited. Only now I felt uncomfortable with everything that had taken place, the fact that I was naked, that I had entered her. I felt repulsed in fact. All lust had exited me in a single orgasm, leaving the sort of unease I usually only woke to after dreams. I got up to pee and, flushing, thought about Celeste, about love and lust. And nothing.
I climbed out of bed before sun-up, just in time to hear the back door bang shut. There was a gusting wind outside punching the house with hard-knuckled fists. The clocks rattled on the walls and the windows shuddered. Somewhere the cow was still bellowing. Pulling back the lace curtains I watched Mr Willoughby set out for the lavender fields. Around his neck he wore a camera, the sort a professional photographer might use. I saw the daybreak was going to be beautiful. The darkness was already receding. Posts and trees rose from an inky purple. I smiled. I rarely woke to such mornings and wanted to charge out into it like a child, leaving behind me forever the night that made it. But like all irrational surges of elation this one passed just as quickly as it had arrived and I began to get dressed. Finding my clothes in the dark room was difficult, mostly because of the way in which I had taken them off. Twice I stubbed my toe on the bed, hopping about like a fool before finally, blindly, groping my way through the gloomy house.
It was only in the alcove, warm, lavender-laden morning air on my skin, that I forgot the pain in my toe. I stared through the flyscreen windows searching for Mr Willoughby. The sun had taken its first tentative footing on the horizon and the fields, as if in greeting, were turning a lighter purple. A human shadow slid between the rows of flowers, moving at a fast but easily sustained pace, and without questioning the idea I set off after it. At the outer edges of the undulating lavender, it pressed on, down towards a gully.
This gully was easily the size of a football field and filled with fernery, a bed of green from which shot countless beautiful trees, mostly gums with their trunks pale and contorted. I looked them up and down, tan bark curled by the sun. From the soft green topsâthirty to forty metres upâcame the echo of birds squawking as if in argument. I noticed the area was fenced off, presumably to protect it from cattle. One cow, down on its front knees, its wet nose on an angle beneath the live wire, trimmed the gully grass. Othersâfat-bellied, older animalsâstood squarely in the paddock and munched methodically on what little pick was left. Mr Willoughby reached the fence, paused and turned to face me.
âMorning,' he called. âBe careful not to twist your ankle. When it's wet the cattle sink their feet in pacing the fenceline. Then it dries up and you're left with this crud.' I nodded, noticing yabbie homes amidst the potholes like nuclear chimneys.
âSorry to follow. When I saw you leave, I felt like a walk. What's the camera for?'
âGrowling Grass Frogs. In the swamp.'
We climbed through the fence and started on in. The foliage was thick and within a couple of metres we lost sight of both the fence and paddock behind. After a minute or two I stopped. Twigs had scratched my face and my sneakers were soaked. I peered up through fern leaves and vine to the tops of gums, bright and swaying in a gentle breeze unknown to me below. But Mr Willoughby did not dawdle.
He bashed his way around trunks and stopped at last in front of a wall of roots encased in thick black dirt. Vaguely circular, this wallâthe fallen tree behind it invisibleâstood guard like a parent over the swamp it had birthed.
âListen carefully,' he said.
I did and soon heard itâa soft growling. Mr Willoughby pointed and I spotted a bright green frog lazily floating in the water, barely causing a ripple. It had a number of brown, wart-like spots on its back and alert hazelnut eyes with two black strips for pupils. The camera clicked and Mr Willoughby wound the film on. The frog dipped beneath the surface.
âThat was the growling one?' I asked.
âYeah.
Litoria raniformis
.'
âWhy are you taking photos of it?'
âIt's dying out. I've relocated a few to this swamp. The photos are for records.'
By turning over fallen branches sunken into dry mud we found a few more frogs of varying breeds, some large and pot-bellied, others small and fit-looking. I picked up each in turn. They struggled between my dirty fingers and kicked free. Mr Willoughby, if pressed, would tell me where they lived, what they ate and when they bred.
Only one was of real interest to me. âWhat does that growling one eat?'
âMice. Other frogs.'
âYou're joking?'
âNo.'
As we returned for breakfast the weatherboard house looked like a cardboard box set on a lavender bedsheet. The sun was well up in the sky. Mr Willoughby and I walked side by side in silence and, oddly, I almost expected him to ask my intentions regarding his daughter. At one point he stopped and tore up a flower, as if deciding how to posit such a question.
âForty-five per cent open,' he said softly. âThat's good enough for me.'
âI beg your pardon?'
He spun. âThese flowers have been a little slow to open,' he said. âNow we can cut them along with the rest.'
We walked on in silence. When we stepped inside, having left our muddy boots at the front door, we could smell bacon and eggs. I crossed to the stove.
âWash your hands,' said Tilly, trying to scrape a charred egg from the pan and not looking up.
She served a blackened breakfast and afterwards went to collect eggs from the chook yard. I found Mr Willoughby watching her through a living room window. Unaware he was being watched himself he looked miserable. He ran an index finger up and down one thigh. When he heard me he turned and cleared his throat. âThere's coffee in the kitchen, Noah.'
âThanks, but I'm fine.'
This reply, and my walking towards the window, seemed to irritate him. Outside Tilly was playing with a pup. A larger dog bounded around her, ecstatically yelping and snapping at her heels whenever it found a chance.
Mr Willoughby drained the last of his coffee and turned to leave.
âShe's a real farm girl,' I observed.
âI suppose.'
âWas she always like that?'
âNot really.'
âWhy? What was she like as a kid?'
âSick mostly.'
He walked away without another word. I heard him put his coffee mug in the metal sink, then the click of his study door.
For a while I watched Tilly tend to chores around the house. Depending on what she decided to do I changed windows, standing at each, hands deep in my pockets. She knew I was there. Occasionally she looked up to find me at a new window, quietly watching, and she would laugh mutedly on the other side of the glassânervously, too. To distract me she had the salivating, delirious dogs perform tricks, but they either refused or muddled her commands.
Eventually, unable to tolerate my curiosity, she hid.
The following morning, well before sun-up, I wandered the house. One room led to another until I found myself conducting a tentative investigation of Mr Willoughby's study. It was cluttered, but not like my father's study. Whereas my father's belongings held no obvious purpose, everything Mr Willoughby owned appeared to be essential to his daily life. Documents of various colours were sorted into an array of cut-down cardboard wine casks. Pigeonholes were filled with stationery and unused envelopes. And there were two bulky filing cabinets, keys in the locks. Everything was perfectly still in the pre-dawn. My breathing, loud to the point of seeming rude, stirred tepid, cooped-up air.
I went to the bathroom and slowly brushed my teeth. I brushed them far more conscientiously than usual, taking care with the chore until they felt slippery beneath my tongue. Then I went back to bed and, finding I could at last sleep, dreamt of a house devoid of things. There was absolutely nothing in this house. The floor stretched out endlessly. But when I climbed out a window, only just squeezing through, I fell into a world full of thingsâall the contents of all the rooms in all the world piled carelessly. Everyone went about their daily routine amidst prams, dishwashers, phones, cupboards, tapes, books, beds, condoms, keys, cutlery, medicine, computers, tables, bags, fridges, chopping boards, carpet, socks and dictionaries, without concern.
It was just after seven when I tripped on a desk lamp and awoke with a comical jerking of my legs.
I showered, dressed and ate another chargrilled breakfast. The toast was hard and cold, especially the crusts, and there was no margarine to have with the Vegemite. Feeling I had stayed long enough, I announced my intention to return to Melbourne that morning. Tilly, far from objecting, offered to drive me to the station. We left the farm hoping to catch the ten o'clock service.
âI never knew you were sick growing up. What was it?' I asked on the platform.
âWho said that?'
âYour dad.'
âIt was nothing serious. Chronic fatigue. It came and went.'
âDo you still get it?'
Tilly shook her head, looking out along glimmering train tracks.âListen,' she said, âI'll need to stay a few more months andâ'
âA few months? Why?'
She remained silent and watched as a toddler broke free from its mother and ran dangerously close to the sharp edge of the platform before being scooped up. Off in the distance the train appeared, rippling in the morning heat. It sounded its horn defiantly and we both watched it pull in, wheels squealing, the unnatural sound of weighty metal on metal. Tilly had to raise her voice to be heard over the engine.
âTake care,' she said.
âTake care?'
A loud whistle blew.
âYou have to get in, Noah. Good luck in Melbourne and back in Tokyo.' Tilly kissed me on the lips, but only quickly, pulling back.
I stepped up into the train.
âBye,' she said.
âThat's it? You didn't answer my question. Why a few months?'
âThe train's going.'
Angry, I shrugged, turned and without saying goodbye found a seat in the carriage. By the time I settled Tilly had gone. Up in the car park I could see the ute reversing, one tail-light flickering. The sight of the thing, small and miserable in the vast day, left me feeling desolate. A sudden burst of sun washed the scene of all colour.
I was oddly comforted by a desire to double back, and likewise by the impossibility of doing so. I sat and thought about Tokyo, about Mami, the hostel and the cats, until at last I was too tired to think. Gums began to roll by, faster and faster. Then came the edge of a town: a greasy garage, a milk bar, a school bus merging onto the highway and paddocks cut into hills. I let my head fall back and tried desperately to sleep.
I
returned to my father, as I was expected to do. But, having noted my absence, he spoke to me only when it was unavoidable and we kept to opposite ends of the apartment. In deference to his mood I did not visit my mother again. Instead, having made a note of Celeste's number, I phoned whenever he went out shopping or to church.
The day of my flight back to Japan I dropped my suitcase and backpack at the front door and sat at the table. My father said grace and we began slurping at tinned soup. There was no bread.
âDo you remember Miss Sinclair?' he asked.
âYes.'
Noting my tone, he looked at me threateningly, then went on. âI meant to tell you, she passed away the other day.'
I said nothing.
âI said she passed away, Noah.'
âOkay.'
âWell, she was your prep teacher. You could send a card before you scuttle back.'