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    Cold Skin

    Page 4
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      ‘Sorry, fellas.’

      Jamming the head of my next bottle

      under the brass plate,

      I twist and the cap snaps off,

      rolling along the concrete like a stray dice.

      There’s nothing to do now

      except wander down Princess Street

      towards the river.

      Trying my best to follow the white line,

      not having much luck though.

      The bastard who painted this

      must have been drunk.

      A dog starts barking

      and jumping against his lead.

      I’m tempted to chuck the bottle at it

      except there’s still some left

      and I’m not wasting it on no stupid animal.

      At the end of the street

      I climb the fence and cut myself on the barbed-wire.

      What idiot fences off the river

      for God’s sake?

      I hurl the bottle across the water,

      smashing it on the rocks.

      ‘Better not swim there, children.’

      At least it’s quiet down here,

      away from all the old men wandering home,

      singing tunes from the war

      and vomiting in the gutters.

      My head is spinning.

      Must be Mum’s awful cooking.

      Mr Butcher

      On Friday evenings

      I take my supper

      at the Sunset Café.

      A mixed grill

      with Mr Kain’s special–

      grilled mince rolled into a long thin sausage

      cooked with tomatoes and mushrooms.

      He makes it for me alone

      because no one else in this town

      cares much about food on Friday night.

      I ignore the noise from the pub.

      A mob of uncouth drunks falling about,

      spilling drinks and cursing.

      Mrs Kain pours me another cup

      of her strong black tea.

      ‘Off to visit your mother again, Mr Butcher?’

      Forcing a smile, I answer,

      ‘Dear Mrs Kain.

      My poor mother insists she can cope alone.

      But–’

      Mrs Kain interrupts,

      ‘You’re a good man, Mr Butcher.

      A good man.’

      In a few hours

      I’ll be on the train

      heading into the city,

      away from this backwater,

      to spend two days

      and my wage

      on pleasures you can’t enjoy in this town.

      Delights that I deserve

      after another week

      teaching the unteachable.

      Things that a single man needs

      when he lives in a town of married old matrons

      and young schoolgirls.

      Things that Mrs Kain and my mother,

      dead for ten long years,

      wouldn’t understand.

      Things that make me forget

      Monday morning.

      Eddie

      I dangle my legs over a fork in the branch

      of the old fig tree,

      waiting for the night train to the city.

      A lady beetle lands on my arm

      and tickles along my skin.

      Mr Butcher takes a long time to light his pipe.

      He stands at the far end of the platform,

      away from the lights,

      thinking no one sees him.

      I do.

      Maybe he has a wife and kids in the city,

      where he goes every weekend,

      but I don’t believe it.

      He’s not the type.

      The train whistle echoes through Dulwich Gap.

      Mr Butcher empties his pipe onto the tracks

      and tucks it into his overcoat.

      He glances up and down the platform,

      picks up his Gladstone bag,

      and pulls his hat low over his eyes.

      I see you, Mr Butcher.

      I see you.

      Mr Carter

      Here comes Larry Holding

      staggering towards my office,

      doing his best to stay upright,

      talking to some imaginary friend

      who dances around him.

      A slow waltz, by the look of things.

      When the paper is put to bed,

      I relax with a cup of tea

      on the old lounge chair

      in the front room,

      with all the lights out.

      It’s then I watch my town lurch by,

      getting itself into such a tangle.

      Larry wants to fight the lamppost.

      He’s so drunk

      he starts swearing at it.

      I expect he’ll throw the first punch.

      My money’s on the lamppost.

      He sits in the gutter for a while,

      scratching his head,

      shaking his fist at the post

      and muttering to himself.

      Maybe his imaginary friend

      became bored and moved on?

      Larry gradually stands and sways

      before wandering off

      slowly down the street.

      There’s no pedigree in that family.

      A dad with a chip on his shoulder,

      brooding on Laycock’s farm.

      A mum, quiet as a dormouse,

      sending the boys out to find food at the river

      or shoot rabbits on Jaspers Hill.

      And big Eddie,

      stuck at school

      when he really wants to work those muscles

      where they might be of some use.

      Larry

      They shouldn’t stick lampposts

      right on the footpath

      where you can walk into them.

      If only I had an axe.

      Hang on,

      Colleen’s house isn’t far from here.

      A walk will clear my head,

      but it won’t do much for my stomach.

      Bloody heck, the footpath is really uneven.

      Maybe it’s something to do with the mine?

      All that digging underground.

      The old man reckons the whole town will collapse

      and disappear into a giant pit.

      I wish he’d disappear into a giant pit!

      Here’s Colleen’s place.

      Up and tumble over the fence

      into the bushes beside her room.

      How did my clothes get so dirty?

      I’m just sitting here,

      innocent, I swear,

      giving my eyes time to focus . . .

      through her window.

      And there she is,

      getting out of bed,

      wearing just a nightie,

      a very short nightie,

      as she heads out to the dunny

      in the backyard.

      My eyes follow her,

      but I don’t move.

      I can’t move.

      When she walks back up the path

      I see her ankles,

      fine slim ankles,

      and I gulp so hard

      I’m sure she can hear me.

      But she doesn’t look around.

      She hurries inside

      and I watch as she snuggles down into bed.

      Then I stagger away from the bushes,

      thinking a thousand things at once,

      feeling mad sober

      and wild drunk

      all at the same time.

      Albert Holding

      My wife and I don’t talk much.

      Not since I got home from up north

      and she asked me questions,

      too many questions,

      about what I’d done,

      what I’d seen,

      what I planned to do

      now that the family was back together.

      It only took a few hours

      for her to mention the mine

      and the jobs begging to be filled


      and how some boys

      were leaving school

      to work down the pits

      because the money’s so good,

      and everyone in town

      is buying one of them new fridges,

      and how the Bennetts have moved

      into a bigger house

      now there’s two breadwinners.

      That’s when I slammed the chair back

      and leant over the table,

      pointing towards town.

      ‘I’m never going down that bloody mine again!

      And neither are the boys.

      They either leave town,

      if they got half-a-brain,

      or they find whatever work they can

      above ground, in the sunshine.’

      She doesn’t understand.

      No one can,

      unless they’ve been down the pits

      where men get buried

      and all the management does

      is put a cairn at the entrance

      to remind us of their sacrifice.

      Each miner touches the inscription

      ‘for luck’

      before disappearing.

      Not me.

      Not my boys.

      My wife and I,

      we don’t talk much.

      Mr Butcher

      In the city, the streets reek

      of perfume, beer and smoke.

      It’s easy to find what I want,

      no matter how late it is.

      She has hazel eyes

      and glistening black hair.

      We go to the Royal Hotel,

      offering rooms by the hour,

      and climb the creaking stairs

      with stained carpet.

      The odour of fried food

      blows through an open window.

      She switches on a lamp,

      which throws a pale light

      over the unmade bed.

      When she asks my name

      I answer, ‘Eddie. Eddie Holding.’

      That insolent kid wouldn’t know what to do.

      Her perfume is so strong my eyes water.

      I tell her what I want.

      My hand reaches for her hair,

      a slick of fine weave,

      her thick lipstick on my cheek

      and the touch of her cool skin . . .

      and suddenly I think of the classroom,

      my weekday world,

      so I lean heavily on her soft body.

      I’m so thrilled and so ashamed

      all at the same time.

      I push harder

      trying to forget everything,

      but I see the blankness in her eyes

      and that’s when I ram

      as rough as I dare.

      I want to drive that emptiness away

      until it’s replaced by fear.

      With one last lunge

      I groan like an animal,

      roll off and keep my eyes closed

      for as long as possible,

      even when I hear her dressing.

      ‘Time’s up, Eddie.’

      She’s standing there

      looking older than she did an hour ago,

      with her hair a charcoal mess

      and clothes slouched on.

      She stuffs the money in her handbag,

      says goodbye and walks out,

      leaving the door open

      to remind me this room

      is rented by the hour,

      not the night.

      Eddie

      Larry stinks of beer

      and mumbles to himself

      as he climbs into bed

      on the other side of our small room.

      He’s gonna snore all night

      and in the morning

      roll over with a headache and a temper.

      He’ll stumble outside

      and throw up under the lemon tree.

      I’ve got no chores tomorrow

      so I jump out of bed,

      climb over my rank brother

      and step out the open window.

      I wrap the blanket tight around me

      and follow the track up into the hills.

      The path is overgrown

      with swaying grass stalks and banksia.

      I lie in the cool grass under the rosewood tree

      and look up at the looming cliff.

      It has the face of an old man

      with one eye closed

      and a scar on his chin,

      a coal-seam scar

      too high to mine.

      I close my eyes,

      listening to the rustle of the leaves

      and the distant siren from the mine.

      The afternoon shift finishing at midnight.

      I sleep beside the Coal Man

      battered into the cliff,

      miles above my town.

      Mr Butcher

      The valley is covered in mist

      as I return on the mail train.

      Back to my flat

      to boil the kettle

      and sit by the window

      with my feet on the ledge,

      drinking my tea,

      thinking of her shoulders,

      the arch of her back,

      her thick black hair.

      And although I try to stop myself

      I’m already imagining next weekend.

      This time a blonde,

      with a ponytail,

      a long ponytail.

      A young lady.

      Someone who doesn’t put on lipstick

      quite so thick,

      who doesn’t drench herself in cheap perfume

      that rankles through my clothes

      so I’m afraid everyone in town can smell it.

      I leave the clothes to soak

      in the washtub downstairs.

      Next week I want someone fresh,

      with alabaster skin.

      Monday morning,

      I pack my briefcase

      with this week’s homework

      and try to steady my thoughts.

      The students are walking to school.

      In all the time I’ve lived here,

      in this wretched flat,

      not one person has ever looked up

      to wave hello.

      THREE

      Town and city

      Albert Holding

      Every morning before dawn

      I stumble out of bed

      in the chill damp of our house

      to make my lunch for the day ahead.

      Yesterday’s bread wrapped in wax paper

      and a thermos of sweet black tea.

      The boys are still asleep,

      fidgeting in their hand-built beds.

      My wife has a whisper of grey hair on her temple.

      Her dressing gown tossed across the blanket.

      On our bedside table are two photos.

      One of our wedding day.

      All I remember is slicking my hair down

      with Brylcreem

      and the little tail that wouldn’t sit

      at the nape of my neck.

      My hair was laughing at me behind my back.

      I’m in uniform in the other photo,

      the hat tilted just right.

      I’m grinning like someone

      who doesn’t know what’s about to happen.

      The smile of a fool;

      a happy idiot.

      One day I’ll take that photo

      and toss it in the wood stove.

      Replace it with one of the boys.

      As I close the front door,

      the click of the lock

      sounds like loading a gun.

      My heavy boots crack the frost.

      The sky is charcoal grey.

      Nobody wakes to see me off now.

      Pretty girls kissed me on victory day,

      their lips soft red petals brushing my face.

      Now I’m just a married man in farm overalls.

      I remember my arms tight around their waists,

      closing my eyes to their rich inviting smell
    .

      It stayed on my uniform for days,

      until the wife washed and stored it

      in the wardrobe to be eaten by moths.

      Victory lasted precisely one day.

      Now I work like a mule

      alone in a mud-bog paddock

      and the only enemy left is myself.

      Mr Carter

      Pete Grainger is a smart lad

      and I guess there are worse places

      to be stationed than your home town.

      So I wrote it up in the paper

      with a big splash.

      ‘Local policeman returns to help his community.’

      Pete does his best.

      He wants to see the town prosper,

      so he goes easy on Mr Wright

      when he gets drunk.

      Pete escorts him home,

      never to the lock-up,

      because you can’t have the mine manager in jail,

      now can you?

      And Mr Calder never heard about his son

      stealing the milk money after dusk.

      Pete gave the kid a good talking to,

      and a solid kick where the bruise won’t show.

      No one knows,

      no one was told,

      but I’m a newspaperman

      who can smell which way the wind blows.

      I’m not broadcasting the town troubles

      for all the world to read.

      Pete’s job would send me balmy.

      Filling out forms,

      patrolling the town,

      waiting for something to happen.

      And all the time wishing for a little excitement,

      then, when it comes,

      shuddering

      because it means someone is up to no good.

      Pete’s the poor beggar

      who has to deal with it.

      It’s true to say

      that nobody welcomes a copper

      knocking on their door

      in the small hours of the night.

      Sergeant Grainger

      I patrol the evening streets

      in fading light,

      nodding to each of the store owners

      as they shut up shop,

      asking if there’s anything I can do.

      Mrs Kain grabs my hand and pleads,

      ‘Yes Sergeant, more customers, please!’

      She’s joking, but I wish I could help.

      For all that Kenneth Paley says about a new town

      with a better life and brighter future,

      it’s still the same sleepy place it always was.

      Except Fridays

      when there’s always a brawl at the pub,

      with two blokes squaring off outside

      and a crowd gathered,

     


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