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    Cold Skin

    Page 6
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      The lady twirls and walks towards me

      and I keep my eyes down.

      She walks up to me

      and says something I don’t hear properly.

      So I say, ‘Pardon?’

      She squeezes my arm and says

      ‘Aren’t you a polite one.

      How about it, sonny?’

      How about what?

      Then I smell her perfume

      and notice the cut of her dress

      and I try not to look at her breasts

      in case she thinks I’m rude

      but it’s kind of hard not to look.

      ‘How about it?’

      She’s offering something

      ladies don’t really offer,

      well, not in Burruga.

      I don’t know what to say

      and I see Mr Butcher

      a long way up the road

      about to turn the corner,

      so I quickly shake my head

      and I rush after him

      with a thousand thoughts

      churning through my brain.

      Eddie

      Now Mr Butcher is talking to someone

      who looks as young as me,

      with long shiny blonde hair,

      and she’s wearing a tight dress

      and high heels,

      ready for a date.

      She walks beside Mr Butcher

      and lights a cigarette.

      She leads him into a block of flats on the corner.

      The door slams behind them.

      I creep around the side

      and climb the paling fence,

      jump down behind some bushes

      and feel my way to the back,

      afraid there might be a dog.

      There’s a light on in the back room

      so I sneak towards the shed.

      I hear their voices

      as she moves to the window,

      pulls back the curtain

      and flicks her cigarette into the yard.

      She’s naked!

      I can see her breasts

      and forget all about Mr Butcher

      until his shadow moves behind

      and pulls her towards him.

      She quickly moves away,

      walks to the door

      and switches off the light.

      I could go closer now,

      if I wanted,

      but I’m still trying to take it all in.

      He’s in there with a girl half his age

      and I’m wandering around the backyard

      with no idea what to do.

      Mr Butcher

      Blonde hair framing her face

      my fingers all over her body

      her enticing aroma

      her languid eyes

      her arm flung back

      blonde hair

      her fingers in small fists

      my weight pressing

      her body like soft talc

      blonde hair

      I can’t get enough blonde hair.

      Eddie

      Mr Butcher and the girl

      are inside for twenty minutes

      and the sounds I hear tell me

      they’re not just talking.

      She’s can’t be his girlfriend.

      She’s not much older than Sally.

      So why is she doing it?

      The light flicks on in the room

      and in my brain.

      For money!

      I laugh at how dim I am.

      Why would anyone do that with hopeless Butcher

      if not for money.

      The first question that springs to mind is,

      how much?

      It would need to be a bloody lot of moolah.

      The door slams

      and I see the girl at the window

      still naked,

      smoking a cigarette,

      looking out at the yard.

      I’m sure Butcher has left

      but I can’t follow him.

      The girl is watching.

      I remain still and hidden.

      I don’t care where Butcher goes now.

      Sergeant Grainger

      The phone rings

      and I expect it’s Johnno, the publican

      calling me about this week’s fight

      between two drunk miners

      and a disagreement over

      whose bloody shout it is.

      They’re wasting good drinking time

      if you ask me.

      But it’s Mrs O’Connor

      wondering where her daughter is.

      Frank will be back from the pub soon

      and angry as hell if Colleen’s not home.

      I know Colleen.

      Smart and pretty

      and not the type to get up to mischief.

      So I promise Mrs O’Connor

      I’ll check out the netball courts

      and Main Street,

      and I wonder aloud

      if she isn’t visiting a girlfriend

      to celebrate their win.

      That seems to settle her nerves.

      She gives me the names

      of the other players on the team

      and I tell her I’ll door-knock

      for the next hour

      and drop by soon with Colleen.

      I pull on my overcoat,

      my sergeant’s hat

      and head to the car.

      Well, at least it’s not an all-in-brawl.

      Sergeant Grainger

      The first families I visit

      are sitting down to late supper.

      One by one, husbands come to the door,

      all of them swaying slightly,

      holding a bottle and inviting me in.

      Everyone’s a friend when you’re sloshed.

      Most are too drunk to understand my questions.

      They slap me on the back

      and say obvious things like,

      ‘Yeah. Colleen. I know her.

      She’s Frank and Betty’s daughter.’

      And they fumble through their pockets

      looking for smokes or a pipe.

      Wendy Sutton says they had a milkshake together

      and came straight home,

      leaving Colleen outside the café.

      As I close the front gate

      I realise that doesn’t make sense.

      If they were going home

      they’d walk up Main Street together,

      before separating.

      Wendy mentioned Ruth Weaver.

      The Weavers live two blocks away

      and I walk with a creeping sense

      that someone is telling tales.

      Mrs Weaver answers the door.

      George is asleep, she says.

      He’s had so much to drink

      nothing is waking him until morning.

      She lets me speak to Ruth in the sitting room.

      The young lady fidgets with her necklace

      and keeps glancing towards the kitchen,

      hoping her mum can’t hear.

      ‘The three of us went to the pub.

      We just stood outside,

      talking, that’s all.

      Someone gave Colleen a shandy

      and we all took a sip. Just one sip.’

      Ruth leans forward and whispers,

      ‘Colleen left before us.

      Wendy and me wanted to stay

      We weren’t drunk.

      Not like Larry Holding.

      He was so wonky he almost knocked Wendy over.’

      Mrs Weaver comes into the room

      with her arms folded tightly across her chest.

      She’s heard every word.

      I say, ‘Thank you, Ruth.

      For your honesty.’

      It won’t help her

      when George wakes, hungover,

      and gets an earful over breakfast from the wife

      about his daughter, drinking,

      and taking after him.

      Sergeant Grainger

      Albert Holding closes the door

      and steps ou
    t into the yard.

      He walks a distance from the house

      before speaking,

      ‘So why are you asking me?

      There’s lots of houses

      between here and the pub.

      Have you knocked on them all?’

      He stands with his hands on his hips,

      in challenge.

      ‘A friend of Colleen said your Larry–’

      ‘My Larry what?’

      ‘Larry was drinking.

      And he offered them some.’

      Albert Holding turns away and swears.

      He walks a few steps towards the house,

      then says,

      ‘Listen. I saw them girls outside the pub.

      Okay?

      Drinking with some young blokes.

      My Larry wasn’t one of them.’

      He shakes his head in anger.

      ‘If you want to find out what happened,

      piss off back to town

      and ask some people who do know.

      Leave my boy alone.

      He’ll be in enough trouble

      when he wakes up tomorrow.’

      Albert’s as mad as a cut snake

      but right now, I couldn’t care less.

      ‘Mr Holding.

      A girl is missing.

      If that means asking you about your son,

      then so be it.’

      Albert looks like he wants to punch someone.

      ‘Do your bloody job, Grainger.

      Find the girl.’

      He walks back inside

      slamming the door so hard

      the windows rattle fit to break.

      As I return to the car,

      I’m shaking with anger.

      Where is Colleen?

      And who is she with?

      Larry

      I’m glad Eddie isn’t home.

      I couldn’t stand him looking at me,

      asking where I’ve been

      and how much I’ve drunk.

      I just want to sleep

      and be left alone to forget.

      I kick the blanket off

      and feel the beer rumbling deep in my stomach.

      That bloody Ruth Weaver is a stuck-up bitch,

      looking down her nose at me.

      Just cause I stumbled.

      Those girls spent the night

      flirting with the blokes from the mine.

      I saw them, from behind the water tank.

      It made my blood boil

      when Les Johnston offered a shandy to Colleen

      and she drank it down, giggling.

      Take a drink with him,

      but not from me.

      All those mornings in the library wasted.

      I rush to the door

      and make the backyard

      before I throw up.

      The cool breeze dries the sweat on my forehead

      as I squat in the yard

      and heave my guts up.

      Eddie

      I step out into the light,

      ready for her scream,

      ready to run.

      She just lights another cigarette

      and looks at me,

      daring me to do something.

      I step closer

      so I can see her eyes

      and she can see mine.

      ‘That bloke,

      he’s my teacher.’

      As if she cares.

      She keeps looking at me

      with her sharp green eyes

      and I try to hold their stare

      or else I’ll look where I shouldn’t

      and she’ll see me looking.

      She makes a scoffing sound

      and casually flicks the cigarette into the yard.

      ‘Well, for a teacher,

      he doesn’t know much.’

      Then she smiles at her own little joke.

      I smile too,

      glad Butcher is miles away

      while I’m standing here in someone’s yard

      looking at a naked girl

      who’s looking back at me

      and asking,

      with a faint smirk

      as she beckons me with her fingers,

      ‘What’s your name?’

      Eddie

      She says,

      ‘Well, Eddie.

      I’ve got all night.

      If you can afford it.’

      I gulp,

      even though it’s the funniest thing

      I’ve ever heard.

      I reach deep into my pocket,

      take out the coins,

      and hold them up into the light.

      ‘That’s all I’ve got.

      Enough for a pie

      and the train home.

      But thanks for asking.’

      I’m not trying to be rude or anything.

      She stares over my head for a long time

      until I feel nervous standing here alone,

      not saying a word,

      not knowing where to look.

      Then she glances down at me

      and says,

      ‘I was as polite and nice as you.

      Until I came here.

      Maybe I’ve got time for charity,

      if you’re interested.’

      My hands start shaking.

      Larry and all the blokes in town

      would jump at the chance to do it with a city girl.

      ‘I . . . I . . . have a girlfriend.

      At home.’

      A dog barks from next door

      as she leans forward and says,

      ‘Don’t end up like your teacher, kid.

      He’s a loser.’

      She draws the curtains

      and is gone.

      Sergeant Grainger

      Mrs O’Connor stands on the top step.

      Her husband waits at the front gate.

      ‘She’s not home, Pete.

      If I catch the bloke she’s with, let me tell you,

      he’ll be getting more than a clip around the ear.

      And I don’t expect trouble from you over it.’

      Frank did it tough in the war.

      It’s more than my job’s worth to argue the toss.

      Mr O’Connor removes his hat

      and wipes his forehead with the back of his hand.

      ‘The wife is beside herself, Pete.

      I’ll stay with her for a while.

      Find the pair of them

      and bring Colleen home, quick smart, will you?’

      I nod in answer,

      relieved he hasn’t asked to come with me.

      People in town don’t say no to Frank.

      ‘I’ll be back within the hour.’

      Sergeant Grainger

      If Colleen is with somebody

      they’ll be at Taylors Bend.

      There’s a standing joke

      that half the kids in school

      were conceived down there.

      The soft sand and grassy bank

      make a perfect lovers’ lane.

      If I catch the ratbags at it

      I’ll give them both a tongue lashing

      for keeping me out all night

      and putting up with the likes of Holding.

      I whistle as I walk down the track

      and flash the torch beam well ahead.

      Give them time to get decent.

      The light passes over a shape

      on the sand by the water’s edge.

      Bloody hell.

      It’s Colleen!

      One arm dangling in the stream

      one arm on her chest.

      There’s blood on her face.

      Jesus! No!

      I rush to her side

      and touch her cold skin,

      hoping against hope for a pulse.

      The girl is dead.

      I reel into the bushes to vomit

      until nothing comes but bile and tears.

      I sink to my hands and knees

      to catch my breath,

      my eyes tightly shut,

      and a pain throbbing against my temple.


      Behind me lies a girl

      admired by everybody in town.

      Frank and Betty’s daughter.

      Sweat prickles on my forehead

      and I shiver with the breeze across the water,

      across Colleen.

      I return to her body

      and start searching for evidence, anything,

      before I tell the town what’s happened.

      Once I do that

      this place will be a swarm of anger,

      kicking up sand,

      masking clues that must still be here.

      Every second I look

      Colleen’s body lies there

      and pleads for covering.

      Her body begs to be taken away

      and put into a warm bed

      with the sheets pulled high,

      even though nothing can help now.

      I can’t stay here much longer.

      Colleen deserves better than this.

      Her skirt is torn and twisted around her hips

      a smear of dark sand on the fabric.

      Scuffed footprints, shattered glass

      and a cigarette butt

      that could have been here for days

      or minutes . . .

      Who in my town could do this?

      FOUR

      Cold skin

      Eddie

      I wander back to Central Station

      and bunk down in the huge waiting room.

      Moths fly around the light

      as I roll my jumper into a pillow

      and lie down,

      hoping no one will disturb me

      before the train home tomorrow.

      A kerosene heater burns in the corner

      and I hope it lasts all night.

      Now I know why Mr Butcher

      comes here every weekend.

      But I can’t tell anyone.

      No one would believe me.

      Butcher can’t get a wife

      so he pays for it.

      He’s not the first to do that.

      So why am I following him,

      like some peeping Tom?

      Maybe I’ll let Mr Butcher know what I’ve seen.

      What then?

      Better marks in exams?

      The bastard would deny it

      and make up some story.

      If Dad found out,

      I’d be in deep trouble.

      As I drift between sleep and the city

      I picture Sally and Colleen,

      and how Mr Butcher always smiles at them.

      I thought it was because they got good grades.

      He likes young girls.

      The creep likes young girls.

      Sergeant Grainger

      As I drive back to town,

      I can’t bear the thought of leaving her there.

      Someone else finding her.

     


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