Afterwards, it would occur to him that her narrative too might have soared beyond control. Replaying the scene, listening yet again to the increasing urgency of Nelly’s whisper, he would ask himself whether her tale was only a by-product of bodily imperative, a device for ensuring his interest and her consummation.
Even at the time, as his sight adjusted itself to the dark, he was aware of her possession by an antique demon. He watched her gaze turn glassy and inward, and thought, She’ll say anything now.
When she spoke, it was Tom who shivered. ‘A child would be more frightened of a man.’
It was his mobile that woke him the second time. He traced it to
the kitchen table; answered it standing naked in radiant light.
‘It’s joy.’
It chimed, for a moment, like magic; like a message from the universe. ‘Yes!’ he cried. Thinking, Such joy!
‘I gave out your flyers to our drivers.’
‘Oh-Joy.’
She said, ‘Sorry I haven’t got any news’; and Tom recalled, vividly, her grave, well-mannered air. ‘I was just hoping he might’ve turned up? So I thought I’d give you a call.’
He was still smiling when he carried the dish of oats into the laundry. The dog’s tail beat in his basket. He lifted his head to quiver his nostrils about the man’s hand.
Tom said, ‘What went on out there, eh? What a story you could tell.’ The animal’s coat was dry under his fi ngers, leached of its natural oils.
Having bolted his food, the dog scratched at the back door. Tom left it open. Sunlight and the scent of mock orange blossom from the bush by the gulley trap poured into the laundry. It was a perfect day.
In the shower, there was the bliss of massaging shampoo into his scalp. The sun slipped under a cloud and the frosted shower screen turned into a miniature alpine landscape under a dull sky. Then the sun came out again and touched the small glass peaks with gold.
He was thinking about what Nelly had said; picturing Felix Atwood assuming femininity with a dress. It was possible, of course. But above all it was fantastic. In the bright light of day, it was the extravagance of Nelly’s conjecture that prevailed. Tom, turning his face up to steamy water, thought, She can’t really believe that stuff! And following the path that was opening before him, he found he had arrived at the theatrical.
The recent cabaret in his bedroom, with its drapery and candle
light, now struck him as supremely contrived.
But why?
It took shape all at once, as infused with design as a fl ower. From the press of motives that might have inspired Nelly, one sprang vigorously forth. Tom made himself consider it, the better to thrust it from him; but that only strengthened its hold. It carried the conviction of a thing half known and dreaded, and seen for the fi rst time.
He stepped out onto the bath mat and into a cube of vaporous light: a man strung with breaking beads of water. Posner’s visit came back to him in a new guise, his hints masking a confession Tom had not allowed himself to unveil. He remembered the dealer’s eyes, levelled at him like a gun. Posner knew what had happened to Atwood; Tom was sure of it. There had been something else in the room when Posner had called on him that night, something invisible and potent. Something Tom hadn’t wished to hear and so willed Posner to leave unsaid. A tiny noise burst from him-if only he hadn’t missed it!
At once the whole edifice collapsed like a pricked bubble. It was air and absurdity. It was contested at every turn by his sense of the woman in his bed; by all that was intangible in her makeup, and yet resisted, as if densely material, being modelled into a repulsive form.
And still doubt twisted in Tom’s mind; flashed like a fi sh. Almost, almost he let it go. But the world chose that moment to break in on his hesitations. A laboured breathing close at hand had been growing steadily louder. Now the exhaust fan screamed, shuddered a long moment, and died. Tom fl icked the switch but failed to bring about a resurrection.
The death rattle of that fan: it would turn up in dreams for the rest of his life.
The air in the bathroom was dense with misty wreaths. Tom went to the window and tilted it open. When he turned around, it was to the likeness of an incurably benign face. The next instant the haze thinned and Arthur was gone-if he had ever been present; dispersed like steam, before his son had confronted him, a sweetly ineffectual ghost.
Afterwards, Tom would ask himself if it had not in fact been a form of counsel: the silent advocacy of kindness that asked nothing in return. But at the time, in that scented room, he was seized by a live impatience. What he required was resolution, not the ambiguity of visions.
The mutiny of the fan played its part in what followed. As things do, needling us with the fickleness of our inventions, provoking displays of mastery.
The draft from the window was feathering Tom’s damp skin. He drew his towel close.
In his bedroom he raised the blind by fractions, so that light
crawled across the fl oor.
She didn’t stir.
He bent over her.
Nelly’s eyes flipped open, and what they held was alarm. Then she smiled, and said, ‘Hi.’
He was thinking, I can’t start-
She said, ‘What’s wrong?’
He sat on the bed.
‘What?’
‘Just-oh, you know, that stuff about Felix, what you said before, it’s sort of hard to credit.’
She half sat up. There was a small, faintly shiny smear where something had dried near her mouth.
She went on looking at Tom, who said in a rush,‘If that was you Morgan saw on the beach, if you were there, you have to say. Whatever it was, whatever happened. I’d understand. But I need to know.’
The bedspread had long since returned to the fl oor. After a moment, Nelly pushed back the sheet under which she lay, one leg folded at the knee. For a long minute she displayed herself to him. Her throat was fibrous, her breasts lolled. There were creases on her thighs, a silver filament of scar tissue below her navel, a roll of flesh at her waist. She was one of Balthus’s flagrant little models grown into imperfection. She was a timeless, female arrangement of ovals and planes, of triangles and moulded curves.
What Tom desired was a different clarity. Nevertheless, the luminous sight of her, falling across the question in his mind, somewhat altered it. He heard himself saying, ‘Swear it. Please. Swear by Rory that you had nothing to do with helping his father that night.’
Like most triteness, it was fed by genuine emotion. So he was unprepared for what came next.
Nelly began to laugh. Her head tipped back, her pelvis rocked forward and she laughed. It went on and on, the noise rolling and crashing about the frowzy room. It was like witnessing the materialisation of something uncharted: as if that indecorous cascade arrived independently of the figure convulsing against his pillows.
Yet Tom could have vowed the phenomenon was sane. And eventually, he was able to smile. One of the things he knew he was being was ridiculous.
‘I swear it.’ She held up her right hand. ‘By Rory.’
‘I’m sorry.’ He lowered his head and kissed the springy, delicate centre of her.
It set her off laughing again.
Three or four times a year, when Tom was still at school, Audrey would invite the Loxleys to join her on Saturday for afternoon tea. Bill was always out on these occasions, playing golf. ‘A man needs an interest to take him out of himself,’ said Audrey. Her eyes fl ickered over Tom, embedded in unmanly selfhood on the far side of her third-best tablecloth.
Tom would rather not have been there, but was at that stage of ravenous adolescence where he could not forgo the sponges, tarts and sliced ham that marked the ritual. There was always a plate of triangular sandwiches, another of tinned asparagus. A proper English tea: it was a ceremony dear to Audrey, setting her apart from mere Australians.
Shona, driven by the same sullen need as Tom, would slouch from her room. Silently they competed for but
ternut crackles.
It soon became apparent to Tom that these afternoons served an unvoiced purpose. Newcomers to the area, extravagantly welcomed by Audrey, in time always merited a good talking to. Shop assistants, bank tellers, tradesmen: Audrey assured the Loxleys that she stood no nonsense from any of them. Nothing cleared the air like a good talking to, she said; unless it was giving the offender a piece of her mind.
A summons to tea invariably followed one of these showdowns, from which Audrey emerged energised and triumphant. Over chocolate ripple cake and Scotch fingers, she went over the score: the kindness offered, the advantage taken, the forbearance shown, the treachery exposed. From time to time Iris murmured,‘No!’ or ‘What a thing!’ but these contributions were redundant. Her sister-in-law’s presence was all that Audrey required. An audience justified re-enactment, doubling the pleasures of victory. And then, Iris and Tom had a particular value to Audrey. Occasionally an adversary fought back, accusing her of malice or worse. But Audrey knew these charges were down to spite. She knew she was a good person. The Loxleys proved it. Here they were even now at her table, grateful recipients of her bounty. If now and then a wrinkle of self-doubt threatened her composure, it vanished under the glare of her benevolence. To give and not count the cost, remembered Audrey, while making a mental note that a cheaper brand of biscuit would do very well. The quantity Tommy ate while remaining bone thin! Worms, thought Audrey; a diagnosis that amplified her contentment.
She grew expansive. She grew vivacious. It should have been horrible but was in fact funny. Audrey was a good mimic: she could do Liberace, Kenneth Williams, old Mrs Godfrey next door. She hoarded jokes, and brought them out with inventive, po-faced embellishments. Even Shona stopped eating long enough to snicker.
Overnight Tom lost his taste for sweets. He was in his last year at school, and there was homework to excuse him from Audrey’s teas. Now the thought of them disgusted him, his aunt’s zestful detailing of her coups as sickening as spray-can cream, as the chemical sweetness of supermarket Swiss roll.
When Audrey’s next summons arrived, Tom pleaded his case. He remained in the annexe, bent over his books. Slowly light squeezed its way across the room. After a while there came the mutter of TV on the other side of the wall. Tom knew what it signified: his aunt was not ready to dispel the cosy fumes generated by goodwill and self-satisfaction. Tea had given way to sherry and re-runs of Benny Hill or On the Buses.
Tom went into the kitchen to make another mug of Maxwell House. It could not go on forever, he reminded himself. With his palms flat on the benchtop while the jug boiled, he looked out at the low evening sun. A nylon half-curtain was strung across the window. He noticed that the play of light magnifi ed the weave and overlaid the fabric with a faint moiré sheen.
He had returned to his essay when a sound fi ltered through his concentration. After a moment he carried his mug across the room and stood close to the wall. He could hear the canned merriment that greeted each quip, but what had captured his attention was the loose, round noise of his mother’s laughter. It was the rarity of the phenomenon that was striking. Tom couldn’t remember the last time he had heard her laugh like that with him.
With the ad break the volume went up and Iris fell silent. Still her son stayed where he was, resting the side of his head against the wall. From time to time he blew lightly on his coffee. When it was cool enough to drink he went back to his work.
Tom had left Nelly at the Preserve and was walking home, attended by a dwarf-double shadow-printed on walls, when he thought of the skipping girl. She had seemed corpse-like, deprived of animating light. Now it occurred to him that her neon had served to cloak the grubby relationship between buyer and seller with obscuring magic. With it switched off, she no longer dazzled her observers but displayed herself for what she was.
A silky, elongated column came into view on the opposite side of the road. It wavered before a window that was sprayed with stars of frost and promised Gift Solutions; Tom watched it rise and sway.
He dodged cars and a grim, lycra-ed cyclist. ‘Mogs!’ he called. ‘Mogs!’
‘Tom! What a super surprise!’ Under the brim of her pale straw hat, Mogs was gold-dusted across the nose.
She was saying, ‘I must say you do look well.’
Tom said, ‘A wonderful thing happened yesterday.’ He said, ‘Coffee?’
‘Well, I ought to be getting back to the gallery-’
But he had seized her arm, above its cuff of shining bracelets.‘There’s a place just past the lights.’A story has no meaning until it is told, and Tom was an Ancient Mariner, brimful of narrative. It overflowed and merged with the changeful kaleidoscope of the street, the cyclist’s turquoise rump poised above his saddle, a six-foot koala jangling a bucket of coins, the silver loop glinting on the lid of the manhole at Mogs’s sandalled feet. ‘Come on,’ said Tom. He considered reaching up and licking her freckles.
‘That’s the most amazing story.’ Mogs’s eyes were glittery. ‘It’s
just so Incredible Journey, plus plus.’
She asked, ‘And he’s all right?’
‘Seems to be. Exhausted, of course. And frighteningly thin.’
‘Oh, the poor love.’
‘He was walking so slowly. Barely moving.’ Tom said, ‘We could have missed him so easily. A few minutes later and we’d have been gone. I’m not sure he’d have had the strength to follow.’
‘Don’t, no. That’s so what you mustn’t do.’ Mogs raised her voice over the industrial gargling of the espresso machine. ‘Once you start thinking what might have happened, there’s no end to the horror. He did find you, the brave old thing.’ She blew her nose resolutely on a paper napkin. The green jewel flashed on her fi nger.
A waitress asked, ‘You guys right there? More coffee? Another wheatgrass?’
‘Oh-no thank you. That was just great.’
‘Just the bill, please.’
Mogs, gathering up bag and hat and sunglasses, said, ‘You know, I’ve always meant to try this place. Isn’t that clock perfect? And these butterfl y coasters. Brilliant.’
The bill arrived on a hexagonal plastic saucer, khaki with narrow orange triangles around the rim.
‘ Carson comes here,’ went on Mogs.‘Rory likes it.’ She fi tted her hat over her glossy crimson head. ‘It’s so sweet, him and Rory, don’t you think?’
‘I guess.’ Tom was thinking, Sweet!
‘Oh, awfully sad, too, of course. You’re absolutely right.’ Mogs said, ‘I mean, I simply can’t imagine it, can you? Not being able to acknowledge your child?’
Tom had his wallet out. He went through the business of selecting a note and placing it on the saucer, actions he accomplished with the slow deliberation of a dream. Then he said, ‘Mogs, what are you talking about?’
Moments passed. Then, ‘Oh, lord. Oh, how frightful. I mean I just assumed …’ Mogs tugged on a pigtail. Her long cheeks were very pink. Tom realised that he had before him one of those rare specimens not enlivened by the dissemination of scandal.
He said, ‘Just tell me.’
‘It’s only talk. Nothing at all certain,’ wailed Mogs.
Tom waited.
‘I’ve heard-well, one or two people seem to have this notion that Carson is Rory’s father. Not that Rory has the least idea.’
The waitress picked up the saucer. Mogs said, ‘You know, I’d love a glass of water.’
‘Still or sparkling?’
‘Tap would be super.’
When she had drunk it, Tom said, ‘Why would they be keeping it under wraps? Who’d care now?’
‘Rory’s coming into money. Quite a lot, apparently.’ Mogs’s tone was apologetic, as if the sheer size of the sum made for questionable taste.‘One of those inheritance trust things. From his father’s peop- no, gosh, isn’t it a muddle? What I mean is, from the Atwoods.’
In the street she said again, ‘It’s really only speculation. I mean, I always just sort of put it together wi
th the way Carson is about Rory. But that could so easily be Carson. Such a sweet man. And if you know nothing about it-well, that tips it quite the other way.’
She stooped; pressed her cheek to Tom’s. ‘Lots of love to darling Nelly. And hug that brave dog for me.’ Her skin smelled of childhood: ironing and wooden rulers.‘The love we have for them,’ said Mogs. ‘Sometimes it’s almost frightening.’
In India, the Loxleys had lived half a mile from a large Hindu temple. It was neither ancient nor celebrated, but its tall gopurams, gaudily painted and ornately carved, delighted the child Tom’s eye. Pilgrims and sadhus and tricksters passed through its gates, generating noise and emotion. Now and then an elephant would sway forth from its fastness.
If Tom happened to pass the temple in the company of his grandfather, the old man would speak of primitivism and barbaric rites. Sebastian de Souza pointed out men with iron hooks in their flesh; described a reeking stone block where goats were sacrificed. If he caught his grandson looking towards the temple, he would slap him. He referred to fi lth, meaning the celestial and animal couplings depicted in the carvings as well as the rosettes of dung in the street, when it was in fact the busy little stalls selling coconuts and holy images and garlands of marigolds that had attracted the child’s interest. In this way Tom’s pleasure in the place was smudged, and the temple became associated in his mind with fear.
In his tenth year, the stories of Catholic missions he heard at school inspired in Tom an evangelising fervour. He longed to save a soul. He selected Madhu, a six-year-old whose family occupied a modest room in the de Souza mansion. In her gapped smile, he detected malleability. There was also the consideration, only half formulated but nevertheless present, that her low social status would protect him from serious repercussions should the enterprise go awry.
Screened by lush plantains, he spoke to Madhu of miracles. The child listened attentively, and repeated the prayers he taught her. But what zealotry fears is not resistance but duplicity. Tom sensed that his pupil was more interested in him than in the substance of his discourse. He felt, at the end of a week, that language alone was inadequate to his purpose. It came to him that if Madhu were to behold its images, the splendour and force of his faith could not fail to impress itself upon her heart.
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