Praise
PRAISE FOR THE AMATEUR SCIENCE OF LOVE
‘All women with lingering illusions about the way men think should read this fast-moving, sharply focused, fantasy shattering little thunderclap of a book.’ Helen Garner
‘Sherborne writes so well that he cannot fail to include colour in the darkness…This is a masterful portrait.’ Sydney Morning Herald
‘Fascinating, funny and unputdownable.’ Sunday Herald Sun
‘Poignant…Little can prepare us for this fine novel’s “heartwrecking puzzle”.’ Weekly Times
‘Absorbing…I can’t fault this book—the characters are solid and believable, the storyline unpredictable and the rural Australian imagery vivid.’ Books+Publishing
PRAISE FOR CRAIG SHERBORNE’S MEMOIRS
HOI POLLOI AND MUCK
‘One of nature’s writers.’ Peter Craven
‘Gruesomely honest and very, very funny.’ Hilary Mantel
‘Mordantly true to life…one of the most interesting autobiographical projects on the go.’ J. M. Coetzee
‘He writes beautifully, especially when the material is not beautiful at all. He can make the cruel truth poetic.’ Clive James
‘Riveting…Moral courage has propelled this book to the page. Its execution is sublime.’ Scotsman
About the author
Craig Sherborne’s memoir Hoi Polloi (2005) was shortlisted for the Queensland Premier’s and Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards. The follow-up, Muck (2007), won the Queensland Premier’s Literary Award for Non-fiction. His first novel, The Amateur Science of Love (2011), won the Melbourne Prize for Literature’s Best Writing Award, and was shortlisted for the NSW Premier’s and Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards. Tree Palace, his latest novel, will be published in 2014. Craig has also written two volumes of poetry, Bullion (1995) and Necessary Evil (2005), and a verse drama, Look at Everything Twice for Me (1999). His writing has appeared in most of Australia’s literary journals and anthologies. He lives in Melbourne.
Title page
Imprint
textpublishing.com.au
The Text Publishing Company
Swann House
22 William Street
Melbourne Victoria 3000
Australia
Copyright © Craig Sherborne 2011
All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright above, no part of this publication shall be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.
First published in 2011 by The Text Publishing Company
This edition published 2014
Cover illustration and design by WH Chong
National Library of Australia
Cataloguing-in-Publication entry:
Author: Sherborne, Craig, 1952-
Title: The amateur science of love / Craig Sherborne.
ISBN: 9781922147776 (pbk.)
Dewey Number: A823.4
Ebook ISBN: 9781921834264
Chapter 1
They say men marry their mothers. Me, I fell in love with Tilda Robson.
Same eyes, I admit, but that’s about it: twin blues below tawny moustache-brows.
My Tilda had a masters; my mother had TV guides.
She was an artist; my mother a drunken farm wife.
I was born in New Zealand at twenty-one years old: up till then my life had just been practice. I was supposed to be a farmer, but I never had the heart. I had airs of being famous, of being an actor.
‘Pipedreams,’ my father said. ‘How could a solid man throw such a dreamer!’
I did so-so at school then dropped out of uni, which my father held against me but soon came round: I was home and he had hopes that home meant home forever. What a team we’d make—I was his only child—more blood brothers than mere son and father. ‘All this will be yours one day,’ he’d say, and fling his arm towards the jade-green vastness. The our jade-green, our thousand Waikato acres, our mountains where cloud-surf breaks on the peak and tears open with good steady rains.
He didn’t realise that pipedreams themselves are green; they have mountains of their own where you see forever. He’d never keep me there at the bottom of the world, anonymous for all my future. Only if God himself said the sacrifice would be worth it, and promised to put me in the Bible, the ultimate famous.
My first pipedream was officer in the navy, a commander of men in epaulettes and whites. A warrior hero like the ancients. When the literature arrived I put a line through the notion: it was 1984 and only peacetime. I’d float my years away in the middle of nowhere. No one would ever notice I’d been alive.
The acting pipedream came from staring in the mirror. I was good-looking enough, if not face-perfect. I had my mother’s ears, even though her ears were better. Mine stuck out too much, like capital Cs, the width of thumb and hooked forefinger.
I had my father’s nose, but his was straighter, shorter, thinner. Mine, I was sure of it, was worsening above the nostrils: the bulb there fattened each time I checked it in the mirror. And I checked it in the mirror on the hour.
They, my parents, Norm and Marg, were their true likeness in photos, still handsome in their bickering fifties. I was puffier in pictures. Side-on I had a flabby double-up of jaw skin. The old girl envied that as baby fat, said she would swap it any day for her wrinkles. But I never saw much justice in the compliment. What were photographs to her with the old boy her main audience? Or to him with his public of cows, sheep and horses?
I taped the Cs flat, scrunched up rugby-like at night so sleep would make the ugly things go smaller. As for the bulb, I tried to clothes-peg it narrower. I learned to nod off through the watery pain. I wore a headband chin to crown as if I had toothache, but there was no sign the chin was going to lift. The clothes peg sprung free whenever I turned over. I had to sleep on my back, which made me snore my throat raw.
I had a real name I didn’t exactly spit to say, but I was no Colin any more than common. As for Butcher—it made me sound like sausages. I renamed myself after many tries—first Kirk Mane (too pretentious), Bradley Aurora (the same), Stephen Spire (too effeminate), Carl Tremain (not bad, not great). Then it came to me like a two-word poem: John Adore. John suggesting masculine. The Adore for what I wished for.
I didn’t know for sure if I had any talent. In school plays I always got applause—I could hold a tune, yell loud and get angry. One problem was I’d shake from being so nervous, as if the stage lights were shorting up through my shoes. That’s what I blamed—I blamed stage lights, I blamed incompetent electricians.
My father blamed school for putting ideas in my head. It put ideas in when it should have put in a few clues. For just as he invests in 300 acres, buys out neighbours to build a bigger pie, so a school builds a boy into a viable prospect: puts maths into him so one day he’s good with money. Science so he knows how his house and sheds keep standing. Good English so he won’t miss the fine print in a contract. What else is a private school for!
He blamed my mother for being Mrs Melodrama. Too much ‘If I had my life over again I would have aimed at better than a farmer husband.’ Too much buying me floral shirts and saying, ‘Oh, let him grow his hair.’ Too much swanning about pickled like those TV Americans, saying, ‘You be Snapper, honey. I’ll be Paige’ as if she’s in those idiot soap operas.
When the literature arrived to audition at RADA, my dad blamed her for being too encouraging. Too much rolling her g
in-drowsy eyes and Rs: ‘The R-R-Royal Academy of Dr-r-ramatic Art.’ The Peter O’Tooles and Roger Moores in the booklet made her swoon. Alumni, I called them. She called them a bit of all right. ‘My son is following in such distinguished footsteps. Next stop, Hollywood.’
She called my father ‘dense’ and ‘spoilsport’ when he told her to stop going off with the fairies. They were her usual trump words to best his ‘fairies’. He trumped back with his usual work speech: how he can take a broken water pump and make that work. He can run 600 dairy cows, 1.4 of them to the acre, and make that work. He’s bred twenty racehorses for a total of twenty-five wins from 150 starts. They know about work. But his own son? He can’t make him work. He thumped his fist into his hand on work.
I studied the slap-jab of that action and mimicked it in my mind. Same for the slit of his accusing mouth—his lips bitten together between words: ‘I can take a broken water pump (bite) and make that work (bite and thump).’ I memorised how frustration jammed his breathing. He took a deep breath through his nose, held it in, then sighed it loose. His eyes became a pucker of lid skin, the dark bullseye of his pupils set deeper in his head than normal.
Sometimes my mimicking slipped out onto my face and I puckered and bit and breath-jammed back at him. He’d make fists of both hands and warn me not to mock him or so help me. I wasn’t mocking him, just storing for acting what a face does when a man’s in fury.
I tried to tell him as much but he’d stomp off for a few strides. I took a stride after him, storing every tic and motion with my camera-mind. His left fingers hooked on his belt. His right hand lifting off his brown pork-pie, too old and finger-smeared now for race meetings, but still good enough to enclose his paddock-blown hair.
I took three hours to hose the dairy shed when it should have taken one. I didn’t muck out stables, I shirked in them. The definition of shirker, that was me, he bit and breathed. ‘What do you do in those stables all morning?’
Practise, I told him. Practise. How to bow to an audience (to the soaking muck sack). I practised bravos to the stable broom. I kissed my fingertips to the spotlight sun, thanking the experienced god who worked it and shone dust motes on me like confetti. I up-ended the yard rake for my microphone. ‘Thank you. Thank you,’ I bowed and begged. ‘Please, please, no more applause.’ My voice was getting toffier with each morning’s horse-box session as I ticked the days off towards London.
So that’s what I do, I said. Practise. I had perfected a pitchfork as a soldier’s spear (I stood to attention, an invisible pitchfork to my shoulder to demonstrate). I’d have to start out in small roles and develop things from there. The better parts will come one day, the ultimates, the Hamlets.
‘Wouldn’t you like a famous son?’ I winked.
He said he wouldn’t know his Hamlets from his arsehole.
But he stopped asking ‘You a queer?’ after the Caroline business.
Three wild knuckle-knocks on the door and there stood vengeance, a fist-clenching ape-man, our cleaner’s husband. ‘If that boy ever comes near my missus again, then I, Stan Muller, will cut his nuts out like a pig’s.’
He lifted his shirt to show his hunting knife holstered. His black-haired gut hung down like a carried animal.
For the first time my father said fuck in front of my mother. ‘Our Caroline?’ he rasped. The old boy’s eyes had filled with water. His puckered lids were red from it. ‘She’s almost twice your age. She’s got grown-up children.’ He added fucks and Christs to the sentence and doubled over as if I’d hit him. He’d raised a home-wrecker for a son, he groaned. Had I no decency in me, no shame? He told me to get out of his sight. It made him sick to utter my name. I’d never amount to anything, it was plain to him as day.
I tried the line that I was practising cads for acting. That just made him chase me to knock some sense into my skull. It was the kind of sense he called ‘some medicine’.
My mother turfed my bed sheets in the rubbish, though I confessed that we never did it there. It was four times in the garage; three in the garden shed; twice on the cellar stairs. She had the carpet dry-cleaned and vowed never again to ride in the Statesman. ‘How can we ever show our face in town again!’ She poured Beefeater after Beefeater, and fell asleep in front of Coronation Street.
Chapter 2
If I was practising with Caroline, I was practising for Tilda.
They say we’re ninety per cent water. But that’s only our bodies. It’s the other ten per cent that causes bother. If we could x-ray inside there we might see a person’s thinking, spy out the bits of feeling in them that apply to us.
If I learned anything from Caroline it was the basics of taking x-rays.
I learned a blouse is not just a piece of clothing, it is a signal of information. If it Vs open to halfway then it’s for my sake. Between hoovering and brushing the loo she reapplied makeup: my sake. Her rump of jeans was filled tight but not too fatly. When she kicked off her shoes she had glisten-gold toenails. Her skin was many colours, from mottled pink on her ankles to oak-leaf brown on her arms. I didn’t desire girls the same age as me. They wanted to get pregnant and call me husband. Caroline had done all that. She wanted lust with me, not a family. I learned I had a thing for older women. Pleasure with no responsibility.
When she got sweaty from scrubbing she stripped to a bra-less frilly top—my sake. She cooled off at the clothesline hanging washing. Always my clothes first—was she giving them extra handling? Her nipples showed out like two permissions. At least, they read that way to me.
I recited my audition for RADA for her—all that clever-sounding schoolboy Shakespeare: the put money in thy purse speech; the why should a rat have life? She called them heavy and a little over her head. ‘You must be so smart to remember such old words.’ Smart. When had I ever been called smart! It’s like being looked up to, and having the right to look down your nose.
Whatever stewy part of our ten per cent works out the rights and wrongs of our actions it didn’t qualm us from starting kissing. She had the use of me, and left her wedding ring on, and twenty-one’s too young to have morals.
I had never felt so…so…sophisticated. Movies, TV and books and I were now related. The sins in their stories had become my own. ‘As long as my kids don’t find out.’ That was Caroline’s only worry. That’s the rule, that’s the small-town code.
Chapter 3
That’s how I got there, in short: London, 1985. In short, and yet it’s perfect—my life shrunk down to this written form. Here I am in my home on Main Street in Scintilla, Australia. It is 1993. I am sitting at my little wood desk, upstairs in a nook beside the bathroom. I may be in Scintilla but right this minute I am in London in my mind. I am about to fall in love all over again in sentences. Fall in love, fall in pity, fall in anger, hate, fear, pain. I bet Shakespeare that’s all writing is: you live life out a second time, make sense of it to clear your conscience, square your soul.
To start with, the thrilling part, the love part. I swoon just thinking about it.
London was a bitter place in October 1985. I don’t just mean the cold. Unemployment queues, a miners’ strike—there was no Empire any longer if you took notice of the news. Me, I had a job. I had initiative. I had thirty pounds a week, with a room and food included. If the English didn’t want to work I would do it. I would clean a youth hostel, and that is exactly what I did. I wasn’t so proud I couldn’t sweep corridors. Cow and horse stink prepared me well for toilets.
I was promoted to cutting the lunch ham. You had to hold it very softly to the mechanical slicer. If you squeezed it would slime away, you could lose a finger in the blade.
I had no idea Tilda existed. She was in New York, going to galleries like churches. She had pipedreams of her own, of being a Pollock or Rothko. The other matter, RADA—even now I squirm to think of it. I jump on one leg and hit ‘Get out!’ to my temples to be rid of those four letters trapped
like swim-water in my head.
At the time I convinced myself my failure was a blessing. It was bitter fate doing me a favour: I should be happy it happened, the shorting-foot-nerve problem. Such a violent attack I almost fainted. It rattled my leg bones and sent my nerves into such a spasm all my words got tangled: I recited, ‘Put rats in thy purse.’ It was humiliating.
Even if I had been accepted I would have turned them down. Or so I said at the time to my vanity. What kind of building was called Royal Academy and yet was shabby as an old town hall, flaked plaster and peeling paint? Where was the spruced, grand glamour?
And as for the two who sat and judged my shake-tangle show. I had dressed in good shoes and white shirt. I wore a duffle coat for the outside chill, but only for the outside. I carried it serviette-style like a gentleman when in. They wore jeans rubbed out at the knees. Jumpers moth-holed and letting through elbows.
I had combed my hair down, parted it at the side for a dash of drawing room elegance. They had matted mops, and beards with patches of baldness showing, the way beards are when you’re young. They must have been under thirty and yet were magistrates of me. And no proper speaking either. They had cockney vowels. I was expecting Sir-someones with impeccable language. I was taller than they were but they looked down at me and smirked. I was thankful that at least they didn’t laugh in my face.
I could not get out of the place quick enough. My legs were awobble with nerve-water but I swayed down the hall and barged through the front doors onto the street before my legs gave way and I slipped on fish batter and rain spit.
It occurred to me to do myself in. Just a thought-sip of suicide, nothing more.
Chapter 4
My room was tiny; I nicknamed it The Box. Four strides by three with a camp bed in the corner. I had to sleep with one shoulder hanging over to fit the rest of me. The hostel clientele were Italians, Germans, Australians. A hundred of them a night stacked in rickety bunks. Girls in the north wing; boys the south. My shift began at 6.30 each morning, serving breakfast with Polish Lily and Dirk from Rotterdam. At 10 we did the cleaning. The main rule was, if we slept with guests they still had to pay the bunk fee.
The Amateur Science of Love Page 1