Authors: Judy Nunn
âToo busy, Mavis.' His reply was always the same too.
âYes, I know, such a pity, but you won't stop me from trying, you know â we need men like you on the committee.' She changed subjects without drawing a breath; it was a talent of Mavis's. âI saw Vi on Saturday. Well, of course I see her all the time, I'm in Hallidays nearly every day of the week. She's turned into such a pretty girl, hasn't she?' The question was rhetorical and she sailed on, âBut when I saw her on Saturday night, all dressed up, I must say I was most impressed. She and her young man make a lovely couple.'
Young man? What young man? Cam thought, but he said nothing. Mavis was a garrulous fool of a woman, but she was also a gossip-monger who liked to cause trouble. He waited for her to go on.
âI've seen them quite often around town, they've been going out together for some time now, I take it?' This time the question was not rhetorical, and Mavis looked at him with feigned innocence, awaiting his answer. She was dying to find out if Cam knew about his daughter and the Italian. But Cam's face was unreadable.
âYes, I believe they have,' he replied. He was damned if he'd give the interfering cow the satisfaction of knowing that she'd dropped a bombshell. âVi's eighteen now, Mavis. I trust her, and I don't meddle in her life.'
âOf course, and so you shouldn't.' He knew, and he approved, Mavis thought. Well, fancy that. But then Cam Campbell had accepted the foreigners right from the start. She decided that flattery was the best tactic. âI must say, Cam, I admire your open-mindedness. Of course I've always believed, like you, that we should welcome the migrants into the area,' she added, although she didn't believe anything of the sort, âbut to welcome them into one's family, so to speak ⦠well, you're certainly living up to your principles â¦'
Mavis knew she'd gone too far. Her flattery had backfired on her, the man looked angry. She'd offended him. âI'm not being critical, I know you believe that all men are equals, and I'm sure you're right. It's just that I can't help feeling ⦠and perhaps it's wrong of me, that â¦'
âYes, Mavis. It's wrong of you.'
He walked off and Mavis was left feeling most put out. She'd been trying to be helpful. If he hadn't known about his daughter, then it was high time someone told him, she'd thought. And if he had known, as it appeared he did, then she'd been prepared to be malleable. If he'd been upset, she'd have commiserated with him; as he wasn't, she'd flattered him. And it hadn't worked. She couldn't win.
Cam dumped his shirts into the back of his Holden ute and strode off towards Hallidays. His daughter going out with a bloody foreigner? Over my dead body, he thought.
âG'day, Cam, haven't seen you for a while.'
Frank Halliday was seated beside the windows. It was Monday and Frank was taking an inventory following the busy weekend.
âG'day, Frank.' Cam propped himself casually in the open doorway; he could see his daughter further down the counter, stacking tins on the shelves. âHow's business?' He had no intention of creating a scene in front of the shopkeeper, or anyone else for that matter.
âCan't complain. You after Vi?'
âYes, if you could spare her for a sec.'
âTake your time, we're not busy. Hey Vi,' Frank called, âyour dad's here.'
Violet's face lit up in a smile as she turned. âDad!' She dumped her armload of tinned tomatoes, circled the counter and ran to him. âI didn't know you were in town,' she said, throwing her arms around his neck and hugging him.
âI was going to call around the house later and surprise you and your auntie.' Cam returned the embrace, briefly and uncomfortably. She was too old to hug him like that, particularly in public.
Violet, aware of his self-consciousness, broke away. In the instinctive pleasure of seeing her father, she'd forgotten for a moment that things had changed. She wished they hadn't. She wished her father would still hug her the way he used to.
âThat'd be beaut,' she said brightly. âCan you stay for tea? Auntie Maureen'll be home by four, she was on the early shift today.'
âWe'll see. Do you want to pop out for a cuppa?'
Violet looked at Frank Halliday.
âGo on with your dad, Vi,' Frank nodded, and she quickly ducked back behind the counter to collect her handbag â Violet never went anywhere without her lipstick and comb.
âLike I said, Cam, take your time,' the shopkeeper added. âWe're never busy on Mondays.'
âThanks, Frank, most appreciated.' Cam smiled, and he and Violet stepped out into the street. But the moment they were outside, his smile disappeared, and he took his daughter by the arm and started walking her briskly in the direction of the Holden.
âWhat's the matter, Dad?' she asked, but she'd already guessed. Her father had heard about Pietro.
Cam said nothing until they arrived at the ute. He opened the passenger door. âGet in,' he said.
âI thought we were going for a cuppa.'
âI want to talk to you, Vi.'
âWe can talk over a cup of â¦'
âPrivately. Get in.'
Violet did as she was told, and her father slammed the ute door a little harder than was necessary. He was furious, she thought. But she wasn't going to let him frighten her, she decided. She'd done nothing wrong.
Cam drove across the creek and out of town, away from the eyes of passers-by, and stopped the ute by the side of the road and turned to her.
âRight. Now tell me about this bloke you're going out with.'
She looked him square in the eyes. âHis name is Pietro,' she said. âPietro Toscanini.'
A Dago, he thought. My daughter's going out with a bloody Dago. But he controlled himself, as any good, responsible father would. âHow long have you been seeing him?'
âFive months.'
A whole five months! Jesus Christ, he'd kill the Wop bastard. âAnd why wasn't I told?'
âI haven't seen you since the Show, you haven't been into town â¦'
âThere's such a thing as the telephone, Violet, you could have rung your mother and me.'
She turned away and gazed rebelliously out the window. Although she liked others to call her Violet, she hated it when her father did so â it meant she was about to get a lecture. Well at least he was only mad because she hadn't told him she had a boyfriend, she thought, he didn't seem to mind that Pietro was Italian. She'd worried that, for all his talk, he might not be as broadminded as he professed when it came to his own daughter.
Cam was infuriated by her silence. How dare she ignore him and stare out the window. âLook at me, girl.'
She did. And her look was cold. âGirl' was far worse than âViolet'. She hated him calling her âgirl' more than anything.
âWhat have you got to say for yourself?'
âNothing. What is there to say?'
Cam was uneasy; she wasn't behaving like his little girl. Vi would normally protest, âDon't be mad at me, Dad, I haven't done anything wrong.' Her self-composure worried him, she seemed too grown up. Did it mean she was sleeping with the boy? His baby girl and a Dago Wog bastard, he was sickened by the thought.
âHow far's it gone?' His tone was gruff, and the question sounded blunt, tasteless, but he didn't know how else to ask it.
âI'm not sleeping with him, if that's what you mean.' Violet could see the relief in her father's eyes and she would have liked to have added, âbut I want to.' Just to shock him. But she didn't.
âOf course you're not, I didn't think for a minute you were,' he said. âI trust you, Vi.' He started the ute. End of conversation. âBut you're not to see him any more, you hear me?'
âWhy?' Perhaps she'd been right after all, Violet thought. âBecause he's Italian?'
âOf course not. You're too young, that's all.' Cam checked the rear vision mirror and did a u-turn.
âWe love each other, Dad. He wants to marry me.'
There, she'd said it. And she'd well and truly got his attention now, she thought as the ute slowed to a halt.
Cam turned off the engine. Then he sat and waited, his face giving away nothing.
âPietro's been wanting to ask your permission for ages, but Auntie Maureen thought it was best to wait until we were sure.'
âOh yes?' Maureen, he thought. Bloody Maureen. He should have known better than to leave his baby girl in the care of bloody Maureen. She'd messed up her own life and now she was going to mess up his daughter's. Well, bugger that. âAnd you're sure now, are you?' he asked, studying her carefully. Something wasn't quite right, he thought, there was too much bravado about her, as if she were trying to shock him, and convince herself at the same time.
Violet's answer was strangely indirect. âPietro came to see Auntie Maureen yesterday,' she said. âI wasn't there, but they talked, and Auntie Maureen promised that she'd go out home and see you.'
âDid she?' Bloody Maureen and the Dago prick appeared to have it all figured out, he thought. God alone knew why. âAnd you
wanted
her to come out home and see me, did you?' Cam kept his voice steady, though he'd have liked to strangle his sister: why hadn't Maureen just told the Dago to piss off? âYou want to marry this bloke, is that it?'
Auntie Maureen had asked her the very same question, Violet thought. She hadn't really been sure of the answer then, and she wasn't sure now, but her reply was the same.
âYes,' she said.
Cam continued to study his daughter. She looked vulnerable. Lost and uncertain. She wasn't sure of herself at all, he thought, and he breathed a sigh of relief. He'd been worrying about nothing. It was a bloody joke, the whole thing. Romantic bullshit. The girl went to the pictures too much, that was the problem.
âDon't you worry, baby girl.' He put his arm fondly around her, uninhibited this time, and for a moment he held her close. âDon't you worry about a thing, we'll sort this out.' Then he started up the ute.
He hadn't called her âbaby girl' for a very long time, and he hadn't cuddled her like that either. Comforting as she'd found it, and relieved as she was to have avoided his anger, Violet sensed that things hadn't gone quite according to plan. Her father was treating her like a child, he wasn't taking her seriously.
âI love Pietro, Dad,' she said. She'd said the same thing to Auntie Maureen when Auntie Maureen had told her she had only two options.
âMarry him, or stop seeing him, Violet, it's that simple.' Her aunt had spelled it out bluntly. âMake up your mind.'
âI love him,' she'd said. And, without insisting on any further discussion, Auntie Maureen had nodded knowingly. Something had passed between them, Violet had thought, and she'd been grateful for her aunt's understanding.
Cam glanced affectionately at his daughter. She was just a kid, he thought. âOf course you do, baby girl, but don't you worry, I'll have a chat to your boyfriend and Auntie Maureen, we'll sort things out.'
They'd sort things out all right, he thought. He wanted to kill his bloody sister, and he wanted to kill the fucking Dago too. They'd given him one hell of a scare there for a minute.
He dropped Violet back at the store. âSee you later, love,' he said as she climbed out of the ute. He'd go to the Billiards Club, he decided, and while away the time with some of the blokes until Maureen got home from the hospital. Four o'clock, Violet had said.
She was about to ask him if he was going to come home for tea, but the ute pulled out from the kerb. âBye, Dad,' she called instead, and he waved at her through the open window.
Violet stood in the street and watched as the Holden drove off. She expected to see it turn left into Vale Street, on its way to the hospital only a couple of minutes' drive up the hill. But it turned right instead. There was time for her to warn Auntie Maureen. She ferreted about in her purse for some coins and walked to the public phone box just down the street. Mr Halliday didn't mind his staff using the store's telephone so long as they were brief, but Violet didn't want anyone overhearing.
âDad's in town,' she said when Maureen's voice came on the line, âand he knows about Pietro.'
There was a moment's pause. âAh well,' Maureen said in her practical fashion, âit'll save me a trip out there. What did you tell him?'
âThat Pietro wants to marry me.'
âAnd what was his reaction?'
âHe didn't get mad. But he didn't seem to take me seriously, Auntie Maureen. He said he'd sort things out with you, so I thought I'd ring before he turned up at the hospital.'
âThanks, Violet, I'm glad you did. Just as well to be prepared. I'll see you at home.'
âBut Auntie Maureen â¦'
âI have to go now, dear. Don't you worry. Everything'll be fine. Bye.'
Violet returned to work, confused. Her future was at stake and everyone was telling her not to worry, that everything'd be fine.
Â
Maureen was thoughtful as she replaced the receiver. Cam wouldn't come to the hospital, she knew that much. If he was going to confront her, as she was sure he would, he wouldn't risk causing a scene in front of others, he wouldn't want to be caught out. But it was odd that he'd appeared not to take the situation seriously. Cam Campbell would be livid at the mere thought of his daughter going out with an Italian.
Maureen knew that, for all his pretence of egalitarianism, her brother had a different set of values when it came to his family. In fact, when it came to his family, Cam was a man of strict convention. He saw himself as the patriarch. It was Cam who made the rules in the Campbell family, and woe betide anyone who bucked them. Maureen had bucked all the rules when she'd left the land for a career in the city â it had been against the Campbell tradition. Campbell women worked like men until they were of a marriageable age, then they wed local farmers or graziers and bore them children to take over the property. But Maureen had married a businessman at the age of twenty-three, and she'd paid the price when she'd come home two decades later.