Book Read Free

From the Ashes

Page 42

by Deborah Challinor


  Acknowledgements

  This is the important bit. Thank you to the HarperCollins Australia editing team, Katherine Hassett and Nicola Robinson, for making everything painless, and to my lovely freelance editor Kate O’Donnell, who as usual was spot on with all her comments, and to my agent, Clare Forster, for her encouragement and wisdom. A big fat thank you, also, to the HarperCollins New Zealand team, for constantly supporting and promoting my books. Special mention goes to Kelly Bold, who was responsible for turning the bleak wasteland that was my Facebook page into something that people actually click on now. Thanks, Kelly!

  Thanks too to the staff of the Sir George Grey Special Collections at the Auckland Public Library, who were very helpful when I was looking for maps and photographs of 1950s Grafton. Sorry about the mess.

  Finally, and as always, my enduring thanks and love go to my husband, Aaron. He’s the one who has to put up with snippy moods (I’m working!), dinners gone cold (I’ll be out in a minute!), and solo weekends (I have to get this finished!). And he always does.

  An Excerpt from House of Sorrows

  A Restless Years novel

  Chapter One

  Kings Cross, Sydney, 1964

  Polly Manaia swore as she dropped her bag of groceries, watching in annoyance as several tomatoes rolled into the gutter. Oh well, too bad, they’d wash off. This would all be a lot easier if her flatmates weren’t so insistent on getting their beauty sleep and managed to drag themselves out of bed before midday. She worked at night too, sometimes later hours than they did. And she had the dry horrors and a pounding headache, but there was absolutely nothing in the cupboard so someone had to buy food. She gathered up the tomatoes, wiped a bit of muck off one, and dropped it back in her bag.

  It was half-past ten in the morning and the Cross was just waking up. The night people, which should include her, wouldn’t be out for hours as the clubs and bars were shut, but the day people were in evidence, opening up the cafes and the delicatessens and the fruit shops. She waved glumly to a few people she knew, bought fresh rolls from the French bakery, and some cheese, and pastrami and salami from the deli. She ordered the spicy salami because she knew the girls didn’t like it, which would teach them for lolling around in bed.

  By the time she’d traipsed home she felt quite sick, and had been forced to eat a bread roll in an attempt to subdue her nausea. Nothing about her outing had cheered her up. It was a nice sunny October morning but the sun had been too bright and hurt her eyes and head. Every loud noise had made her jump then wince, it was warm and she’d sweated to the point that she could smell last night’s booze coming out of her pores, and the crows and pigeons that seemed to be forever squawking and shitting round the Cross had got on her nerves. It was a relief to step inside the cool, dim foyer of the big old house on Bayswater Road in which she, Rhoda and Star lived.

  They had the whole upper floor to themselves — three bedrooms, a small kitchen, a sitting room, a bathroom and toilet, another little room where they stored their costumes, and several balconies — though they did have to share a laundry with the people living in the two flats downstairs. There was a back lawn too, but not much of one, and no one cut the grass or took care of the shrubs and wildly overgrown flowerbeds, but there were a pair of jacaranda trees that bloomed gloriously in spring.

  The house needed painting inside, some of the floors were on a lean, a couple of the windows wouldn’t open properly, a dozen leadlights had been replaced with plain glass (or plywood), and mould grew on several interior walls in the winter, but she was still stately. There were fretwork arches, ceilings of fancy pressed metal — once white, now a bilious yellow — dark timber and panelling everywhere, picture rails in the sitting room and hallway, and great timber fireplaces that hadn’t been waxed or cleaned for decades. The flat’s shabbiness wasn’t helped by the fact that it was filled almost exclusively with furniture and bits and pieces from the St Vincent de Paul shop down the road, but everything was comfortable and serviceable, if not exactly stylish.

  Polly had moved into the house in 1956 when she’d arrived from New Zealand. She’d had different flatmates then. They’d left some time ago, to be replaced first by Rhoda the following year, and then Star in 1959. They’d shared the flat ever since, fairly happily despite their bickering, and had no plans to change their living arrangements. Polly counted Star and Rhoda as among her best friends, not that she had many. She had hundreds of acquaintances, but not many close friends. They worked in the same business, in the same part of town, during the same nocturnal hours, and they all knew the same people. Polly’s only other really good friend, someone she really trusted, was Evie Palmer, whom she’d known in Auckland.

  Polly headed up the stairs from the foyer, still enjoying the cool respite. Doors to the left and right of the staircase were closed, indicating that the downstairs flats’ occupants were either out or still asleep. She plodded up to her own flat, wondering if Rhoda and Star were up yet, unlocked the door, and went in.

  No, they weren’t — she could hear them both snoring.

  She unpacked her purchases, put the cheese, meat and tomatoes in the fridge, and left the bread rolls on the kitchen bench. She thought about waking the girls, but instead went into her bedroom and shook four ten milligram Valium tablets from an unlabelled medicine bottle, put them in her mouth, and washed them down with a slug of bourbon. Then she carried the bottle, a sticky glass and her cigarettes out to the balcony off the sitting room and gingerly sat down in a wicker chair. It was ancient and the wicker was unravelling and someone’s arse was going to go through it one day. Rhoda’s, probably.

  She poured a drink, took a long sip, and waited for both it and the Valium to take effect. The Valium would help settle her jangling nerves, and the bourbon would at least postpone her hangover. The nerves, she knew, were left over from the Methedrine she’d had the night before, but she needed it, to work so late. She’d taken a couple of Quaaludes before she’d gone out this morning, to take the edge off her jitters, but all they’d done was make her feel confused about what cheese to buy at the deli. And she hadn’t had a drink before she’d gone out because she didn’t like to go up the street stinking of booze. She lit a smoke, sighed and wondered if she was getting too old for the life she was leading. It was too bad if she was, because she didn’t have any other kind of life.

  Eventually, as the rosellas flitted about in the jacaranda trees and the sun crept slowly across the long grass in the backyard, she nodded off.

  *

  She awoke with a start. Someone was banging about in the kitchen. She stretched, stood and wandered into the house. It was Rhoda, looking in the cupboards.

  ‘Morning!’ she said. ‘Have you seen the frying pan? I’m doing eggs.’

  ‘There aren’t any,’ Polly replied.

  ‘Aren’t there? Bugger.’

  ‘But I went out and got rolls and a few things from the deli.’

  ‘Thanks, darl.’ Rhoda opened the fridge door. ‘Ooh, pastrami!’

  Polly sat down at the dining table in the sitting room. Her hangover had receded now, though her head felt as though it were stuffed with cotton wool. She watched Rhoda as she fluffed about, artfully arranging the food on a platter.

  Rhoda was twenty-seven and stood six feet and one inch tall in her bare size ten feet. She had wide shoulders, a slender body and long legs. Her soot-black hair was shoulder-length, her eyebrows were plucked into dramatic arches, and this morning she had a hint of stubble along her jawline. As she moved about her pink nylon negligee and matching robe floated around her, creating an impression of casual glamour.

  Star’s bedroom door opened and she clomped out in her fluffy mules, satin robe fluttering, grumbling and scratching her head. Star was always in a shitty mood when she woke up.

  ‘Morning!’ Rhoda trilled.

  Ignoring her, Star sat down at the table, lit a cigarette, then launched into a protracted spasm of phlegmy coughing, which she did every morning.<
br />
  Once that was out of the way, she rasped, ‘Is there tea?’

  ‘Won’t be a tick,’ Rhoda said, setting the platter of food on the table. ‘Polly went out and got all this. Isn’t she a sweetie?’

  ‘You look like crap,’ Polly said to Star.

  She did, too. Her hair was flat on one side and sticking out on the other, there were smudges of black kohl and mascara smeared around her eyes, a glowing red pimple had erupted on her chin, and she looked deeply tired.

  ‘So do you,’ Star said.

  ‘I know.’

  At five feet eight inches tall, Star was shorter and more compact than Rhoda. She’d been taking hormone pills — bought off the street — longer than Rhoda so barely grew a beard at all. She also had the beginnings of breasts, of which Polly knew she was very proud. Her wavy hair was collar-length and dyed platinum blonde, though her arched, plucked brows were still their natural dark brown. She was twenty-four, though very occasionally she behaved as though she were fourteen, which could be quite annoying.

  Star and Rhoda were a double act at Les Girls night club: Rhoda was Jane Russell and Star was the late and very lamented Marilyn Monroe, and they were really extremely talented. They wore gorgeous costumes that cost them the earth and both did their own vocals, and were paid quite well for their efforts. They weren’t female impersonators — they were men choosing to live as women, which is what they considered they truly were, and were both hoping, one day, to physically become women. Rhoda was known throughout the Cross as Rhoda Dendron, and Star as Star E Knight. Their ‘past life’ names were, respectively, Gary Hicks and Colin Jessop, which they loathed as relentlessly loutish and blokey. They were also camp, though neither currently had a boyfriend, and no one, Polly included, ever brought men back to the flat.

  In fact, Polly hadn’t been involved with anyone for a long time. When she’d arrived in Sydney she’d worked in a brothel for three years, and who had the energy or motivation for a love life while they were doing that? Then, after she’d saved a decent nest egg and chucked in the prostitution and gone to work as an exotic dancer, there’d been a man for about eighteen months, but that hadn’t worked out and there’d been no one since. She was happier by herself.

  ‘Good night at the club?’ Rhoda asked, joining them at the table and lighting a cigarette.

  ‘Same as usual,’ Polly said. ‘Busy. Rowdy. One of my pasties fell off.’

  ‘Embarrassing!’ Rhoda said.

  Polly shrugged. It hadn’t worried her. By law exotic dancers couldn’t strip completely nude and were required to wear G-strings, and pasties over their nipples, but one coming off was hardly the end of the world. ‘I didn’t even notice. I was a bit hammered.’

  ‘You’re always a bit hammered,’ Star said.

  ‘Not always.’

  Star took a big slurp of tea, then swore when she burnt her mouth. Eyes watering, she said, ‘You know, love, if you keep going the way you are, one day you’ll wake up and your lovely face and that beautiful body will be gone. And then you’ll be sorry. You won’t be Heliopolis the Dusky Maori Maiden any more, you’ll be Heliopolis the Raddled Old Bag.’

  Polly knew that — Rhoda and Star had told her often enough. And just as often she’d ignored their well-meant advice.

  She hated her stage name. Heliopolis was actually her real name, after the hospital in Egypt where her uncle had died during World War I, but she’d always been known as Polly. The ridiculous Dusky Maori Maiden part had been thought up by her boss, Sam Adler, at the strip club. It wasn’t fair; Evie worked there as well, and she hadn’t been lumbered with a stupid title.

  She changed the subject. ‘How was your show?’

  ‘Star sang flat during “Diamonds”.’ Rhoda said.

  ‘Well, I couldn’t hear the monitor. Anyway, you fell off your heels in the middle of “Bye Bye Baby”.’

  ‘That’s true,’ Rhoda said. ‘Got a round of applause for it, though.’

  ‘Crowd was good,’ Star said, making a neat little stack of salami slices, popping them into her mouth and chewing enthusiastically. ‘Shit, that’s hot.’ She spat them out. ‘God, girl!’ she said to Polly accusingly.

  ‘Is it too spicy?’ Polly said. ‘Sorry, my mistake.’

  ‘Fucking hell.’ Star shoved her chair back, clattered into the kitchen, ran the tap and drank a big glass of water.

  ‘Water won’t help,’ Rhoda said after her. ‘Milk’s better for spicy food.’

  Star opened the fridge, drank straight from the milk bottle, burped, then returned to the table.

  Rhoda said, ‘What a lady.’

  Pointing at the salami, Star said, ‘You try some. It’s diabolical.’

  ‘No thanks.’

  Star bit into a bread roll, then glanced out the French doors opening onto the balcony. ‘Nice day. I might go and get my nails done.’

  ‘I might come with you,’ Polly said. ‘Later, though, after I’ve had a sleep.’

  ‘Shall we go for coffee?’ Rhoda suggested. ‘There’s a new place open on Darlinghurst and I’ve heard the cakes are divine.’

  ‘I’m watching my weight,’ Star said.

  Rhoda said, ‘You are not. You had two kebabs on the way home last night.’

  ‘That was my tea.’

  ‘No, it wasn’t. You had a pie and chips for tea.’

  ‘Did I?’

  ‘We stopped at the chew and spew on Roslyn Street on the way to work, remember? And you had more chips at the club.’

  ‘I don’t remember that.’ Star looked at her platinum and diamond Rolex watch, which she’d recently bought at the market for three quid. ‘Shall we aim for two? I absolutely must shave my legs before I even think about going out the door.’

  Rhoda said, ‘Fine, but don’t even think about using my razor. I’m fed up with you wrecking it on your hairy legs.’

  Polly listened to them bicker while she finished her tea, then left them to it and went to her room, desperate for sleep. Opening the drawer of her bedside table, she looked through her stash for something that would send her off quickly. She sorted through bottles and packets of Methedrine, Dexedrine and Drinamyl — all amphetamines, or speed, so of no use — and considered Seconal, Mandrax, Quaalude, and the Valium again, which were sedatives. Valium never lasted long, so she chose the Seconal, which should give her a good couple of hours. She took four and lay on her bed, curling herself into a ball, then closed her eyes and waited for the drugs to draw her down into darkness.

  *

  Star knocked on Polly’s bedroom door and opened it a few inches. ‘Pol, darl? You awake?’

  No answer. Behind her Rhoda said, ‘She’s probably knocked herself out.’

  Star opened the door all the way. Polly was on her bed, lying on her side, knees drawn up, her long, dark hair fanned across her shoulder and the pillow. She lay very still.

  Peering in, Rhoda asked after a moment, ‘Is she breathing?’

  Star crept into the room and bent down, her face inches from Polly’s. Then she straightened, gave a thumbs-up and crept out again, closing the door behind her.

  ‘Phew,’ Rhoda said.

  ‘Should we just leave her to sleep?’ Star suggested. ‘She must be knackered.’

  ‘Full of drugs, more like.’

  ‘Doesn’t mean she isn’t worn out.’

  ‘That’s true,’ Rhoda agreed. ‘I don’t think she’s very happy at the moment.’

  ‘We’ll bring something nice back for her,’ Star said, collecting her handbag from the table and doing a twirl. ‘How do I look?’

  She was wearing a short-sleeved shirtwaist dress in blue and white-striped poplin, high-heeled navy-blue sling-back sandals, and one of her many blonde wigs. She prided herself on being able to buy her clothes straight off the rack, whereas poor Rhoda, being so tall, often had to sew her own. But then Rhoda was an excellent seamstress, which came in very handy when it came to their show costumes.

  ‘Fabulous,’ Rhoda said. ‘Me?�


  ‘Gorgeous.’

  Rhoda’s outfit was a teal-coloured shift dress with a cowl neckline, three-quarter sleeves and a matching fabric belt, and white court shoes with two-inch heels and a white vinyl bag, and she’d teased up her hair and curled the ends out in a jaunty bouffant style, all of which gave her the appearance of being almost six and a half feet tall.

  ‘I couldn’t decide between the teal and my new burgundy two-piece,’ Rhoda said.

  ‘We’re only getting our nails done, aren’t we?’

  ‘And having coffee. Where is this new place, anyway?’

  ‘Darlinghurst Street. Well, I say Darlinghurst but it’s more like Williams. It is Williams, actually, near the intersection with Bourke.’

  ‘Are we walking?’

  Rhoda said yes.

  Star looked at her feet. ‘In these shoes?’

  Rhoda made a face. ‘Should we get a taxi?’

  ‘Well, I’m not walking all that way in high heels.’

  While Rhoda rang a taxi, Star re-did her lipstick, then they clattered downstairs to wait outside on the street.

  ‘I feel a bit guilty now, leaving her behind,’ Rhoda said.

  ‘Polly?’ Star said, lighting a cigarette. ‘She’s better off catching up on her sleep.’

  ‘Has she heard from her brother lately?’

  They were aware that Polly had a large family in New Zealand from whom she was more or less estranged, but not the reason why, though God knew they’d nearly killed themselves trying to find out. They suspected Evie knew, but she was as close-mouthed as Polly. They also knew Polly had a daughter, a girl named Gina aged eleven, who was being raised by her grandmother, because Star had once sneaked a look at a letter that had come from Polly’s brother, Sonny, apparently the only member of her family who ever wrote to her. It was all a fascinating mystery and they couldn’t understand how Polly could keep all those secrets to herself. If it was them they’d have told everyone. After all, a trouble shared was a problem halved, but Polly seemed to think that a trouble shared was a trouble doubled.

 

‹ Prev