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Authors: Laura Buzo

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BOOK: Holier Than Thou
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he

‘It is not. It’s beautiful. And that plain old no-frills Marrickville sign like a gateway . . . It’s home.’

‘If you say so.’

‘I say so.’

‘And now we have to walk all the way up to the Royal.’

‘Correct.’

He squeezed my shoulders.

‘Anything for you.’

Good old Nicholarse. In addition to being unnervingly attractive hanging upside down from a piece of silk, he was, it turned out, also somewhat direct in matters of the heart. Or groin. I still wasn’t sure which one was going on here. Groin, I preferred to tell myself.

As we sat in our usual corner, sipping beer and talking quietly about Johanna’s latest and most work-soul-crushing memo, he was busy shredding cardboard coasters on the table as was his habit. Or nervous compulsion, depending on which diagnostic lens one chose to peer at him through. At some point he stopped shredding and fiddling and arranging the pieces, folded his arms and leaned back in his chair. His face was like a nimbus cloud.

I

H Y

Huh. Of course he did. The content didn’t surprise me. The frankness did. Why on earth had I never thought of doing that to Liam, during one of our myriad drinking sessions? Just shred a coaster and put it out there. Easy. The issue had to be addressed then. By hook or by crook.

And yet at our table there was complete silence, save the faint sound of swallowing.

Complete silence.

Utter, pin-drop-hearing, muscle-clenched silence.

‘Wow. I really killed the conversation, didn’t I?’ said Nick.

‘No, no. Er. Well. We should talk about this. Um. Yeah.’

‘Not here.’

‘Where?’

‘My place.’

‘Okay.’

Terry was out. It was just Nick and me, crossing the threshold into the apartment.

‘If, by some miracle, I ever make it into the landed gentry,’ I said, ‘I will not let my tenants suffer with carpet like this. Whenever I hear any propertied type talking about tenants it’s always, “Oh they
wreck
the place, it’s not worth making it nice for them . . . ”’

Nick went into his dark room and switched on a soft, orangey lamp somewhere I couldn’t see. I eyed the bong on t theighhe coffee table.

‘You know, it’s only a stone’s throw from, “It’s so hard to find good help these days”. Or, “Drink is the curse of the working classes”,’ I called out after him. ‘Or, “
Insert minority
are their own worst enemies”. Makes me sick. Hey, what are you doing in there Nicholarse?’

He appeared in his bedroom door frame, backlit, and appeared to be unbuttoning his shirt. He made no reply but just moved back into the bedroom.

‘Where are you going?’

He reappeared, shrugging his shirt down over his shoulders.

‘Bed,’ he said simply. ‘Are you coming?’

‘Am I
what
?!’

‘Are you coming?’

I stared at him.

‘We’re supposed to be talking!’

‘Actually, I don’t think that will, you know, achieve anything, Hollier-than-thou. So . . . come or don’t come. Okay?’ He disappeared again.

‘Would you like a drink?’ he called.

A drink?

‘Or a cone?’

A cone?

‘So, what, we are just going to drink and drug and screw around?’ I shouted with crescendoing shrillness. ‘What is this, a Christos Tsiolkas novel?’

‘Who?’

Omigod, omigod, this was not supposed to . .. This is not why I came here!

Is this why I came here?

I am not that person.

I am within spitting distance of becoming that person.

I have issues. I have issues with blood flow ... and swelling ... and rapid heartbeat .. .and a fiery pit of hell opening up at my feet.

Yes, this would have been quite a stunt to pull with Liam ... if only I’d thought of it.

24

I stared at Tim’s and my wardrobe. At our lack of one. At our clothes hanging side by side on the hastily assembled IKEA rack. My clothes and his clothes. It still shocked me, when I borrowed something to wear of Mum’s, to see her clothes hanging in the wardrobe without my father’s next to them.

I was sitting on our bed doing the staring. The bed that smelled of both our bodies. In the home we had made together. I was late for work. Dressed and everything, just couldn’t bring myself to leave. Tim had left over half an hour before. I’d said I was hung over. Which was true.

I could just pack a bag, pack some things, leave a note, leave Tim and go to Mum’s tonight. I could do that.

Looking at the clothes, though, I knew I wouldn’t. Tim was a gift from the gods, and I didn’t want to anger the gods. Did I?

Johanna glared at me as I slunk in late to handover. I no longer cared. I took my seat, sweaty from the unseasonable heat, and didn’t look at Nick. It was the first time he had ever been in there before me. While Tessa talked her way down the whiteboard of clients, I wrote on a piece of letterhead paper I had strapped to a clipboard.

Ms Johanna Dukes, Service Manager Elizabethtown Integrated Mental Health Service
Dear Johanna,
I hereby tender my resignation from my position as social worker at Elizabethtown Mental Health Service, effective four weeks from today.
Yours sincerely,
Holly Yarkov

‘Johanna.’ I knocked gently on her door.

She sat with her back to the door and always jumped in fright whenever anyone knocked, which, her being the manager, is frequently.

‘Oh!’

‘Sorry.’

‘That’s alright.’

‘Can I talk to you for a moment?’

‘Yes, but it’s fine, Holly, I know you are not habitually late and you must have had a reason.’

‘It’s not that.’

‘Oh?’

I gave her the paper and stood looking at the ground while she read it.

‘Oh, Holly,’ she said, and her eyes got wet.

Nick appeared in the doorway and knocked. Johanna jumped.

‘Sorry to interrupt,’ he said. ‘Holly, just wondering, are we leaving to visit Gerard as planned?’

He jangled the medication box.

‘Yep.Yes. I’m coming now.’

Out to Jindarra Street, to our ’hood, to the view that heaves into s he;

I’ll tell Nick after we finish at Gerard’s, I resolve.

Johanna ended up giving both of us a couple of hours off, after we had returned to the centre, hollow-eyed, and finished the preliminary paperwork and reports for Gerard’s suicide. His file was bundled off to Clinical Governance before you could say ‘high lethality’.

Tessa hugged me in her office.

‘I’m resigning,’ I said.

‘Sweet pea. These things happen; it’s a tragedy but it’s not your fault and you’ll move past it in no time.’

‘No—’

‘He was a very sick man.’

‘It’s not about Gerard. I gave Johanna my letter before I even knew about him.’

‘You did?’

‘Yes.’

‘Why?’

I didn’t answer.

‘Is it because of Nick?’

I wanted to visit my mum. My actual mum. I hadn’t visited her in ages. So I ran out of the health centre and up to the train station without saying goodbye to Nick and hoping he wouldn’t follow me. I sprinted through the barriers and down the stairs, praying to make the train I could see down on the platform. The whistle blew before I made it to the bottom stair, but like Indiana Jones I didn’t falter in my speed or belief, and I slipped through the hissing doors with a millimetre to spare.

I stared out at the water tower at the top of Guthrie Hill, the one we always drove past when visiting Gerard. It shimmered in the heat. The train pulled into Petersham Station, and as I climbed the stairs I half-expected Liam to fall into step beside me. But he didn’t. I just missed him keeping step beside me. I missed my friend. There was no script to follow for a friend who had gone MIA. If you get dumped by a lover there is a script. You grieve intensely, you cry, you don’t eat for a few weeks, you take a deep breath and you move on. But the hole left by an absent friend never really closes over. You never stop missing them or wondering what the fuck happened.

I wanted answers; I wanted . . . I pulled out my phone and dialled the old numbers, hovering at the top of the stairs near the turnstile.

The answering machine kicked in. ‘You have reached Ingrid Keller. I’m unable to take your call at the moment but if you leave a—’

‘Hello?’

A real voice.

A male voice.

Liam’s voice.

‘Uh, Liam?’

‘Yes.’

‘Liam! It’s Holly.’

Pause.

‘Hi there.’

There was a superficiality in his tone that broke my heart. No, chilled it actually. Dulled it.

‘What are you doing home?’

‘I’m . . .We’re . . . in town this week. I have a work thing, and my mum wanted me to install her new computer, so . . . that’s what I’m doing.’

‘Right. Um, it’s been a while, hey? I miss you—’

‘Yeah, it’s been a while. Busy with work and stuff.’

‘I left you some messages . . . ’

‘Oh, I got a new mobile.’

‘And some emails . . . ’ I petered out.

I wanted to go to him and blurt out the whole mess I was in with Tim and Nick and work and everything. I didn’t like being a grown-up. I wanted to go back to uni and sit around with Liam all day and all night, drinking beer and watching Star Trek, walking the streets at night thick as thieves and singing the same songs.

‘Hey, I’m actually at Petersham Station. Um, I could drop around, you know, for a cup of tea or whatever . . . play me some Tori . . . ’

‘Yeah, I really can’t today.’

‘I’m five minutes away!’

‘Yeah, it’s just . . . I have to do some things. Uh, but I’ll give you a ring some time. We’ll catch up.’

‘Oh. Okay.’

‘Bye.’

‘Bye.’

I should have listened to Lara and Abigail. He really was gone.

I walked, stinging, alone to Mum’s.

It was the darndest thing. I turned up the driveway of my ancestral home, and stopped short. Had I walked up the wrong driveway? It . . . it was painted a lovely shade of grey, with a dark burgundy trim. The tiles were swept clean, a new gate had been fitted, the letterbox was freshly painted and empty. I peered at the number on the door: 38. It was the right house. And the same old door, just nicely painted, with the brass door knocker actually brassy and polished. My mother’s silver Ford Focus was parked, gleaminarkht houseg, in the garage. I knocked on the door and waited. She didn’t come. I knocked again. Some kind of music was playing inside, she must be home. Maybe she was out the back. I pulled my key ring out of my bag and put my old house key in the door.

‘Mum?’ I called, sticking my head inside. ‘Mum?’

I put my bag down on the floor and was taking off my sunglasses when I recognised the music. All in a flash. A horrible, sick-making flash. It was that beautiful old jazz piano CD, the one I had come home to find Mum and Dad listening to, in those final months. My mother’s pulsing-with-anticipatory-grief hand clutching my father’s prematurely wizened one.

And without warning, everything that I had successfully pushed down, down into my sternum the night I stepped out onto that stage, came rushing out in a wail crossed with an asthma attack.

‘MUM,’ I wheezed. ‘
MUM!
’ Louder. And that was how she found me, frozen to the spot inside the doorway, as she came tearing in from the back yard in her gardening hat and gloves.

‘What is it! What!?’

I made strangled sobbing noises, punctuated by laboured inward breaths, and tried to point at the stereo.

‘Is it Paddy?’ She held my shoulders. ‘What?’

I shook my head.

‘Music,’ I sputtered. ‘Turn off the music.’

She went into the living room and a moment later the house was blessedly silent, except for me.

‘Holly. Holly,’ she kept saying. ‘You’re hyperventilating. Try to slow down your breathing. You’ll be alright.’ Stuff like that.

She steered me into the kitchen and pushed me onto a chair.

‘That’s right. Nice and slow. Nice and slow.’ She rubbed my back.

Eventually I calmed down and just started to cry normally. Then stopped even that, and the kitchen was silent except for the buzzing of the fridge.

‘Doesn’t that music make you sad?’ I asked.

‘No. It makes me happy.’

‘Doesn’t it make you remember him?’

‘Well, yes . . . happy memories.’

What?

I stared at her. It was all coming together. How debilitating and raw her grief had been for the years after his death, how she had ‘given in’ to it, as I had not with what I had thought was stoicism. And here she was nine years later, having her house painted, sweeping the tiles, gardening, listening to their music with
happy memories
. Whereas ‘Every year that passes,’ I said slowly, ‘I get angrier and angrier about it; I accept it less and less. I find the memories of that time
more
vivid. Not less.’

She nodded.

‘I do not accept it Mum! Orright?’

My mother sighed.

‘You can’t outrun it, Hol,’ she said quietly.

‘I just thought I could . . . I thought I had to be strong, and I could decide that I would just not, you know, let it . . . ’

‘You were scared of strong emotions.’

I suspect she comprehends me completely, my mum, for all the lack of bonding.

‘I was
scared
of my mother not showering for days on end! I was scared that my mother would not survive, that I wouldn’t have a mother anymore either. I was scared of not having a place in the family without . . . without Dad.’

‘What do you
mean
, not have a place in the family?’ It was Mum’s turn to crank up the shrill.

‘I mean . . . Dad was always in my corner and you were in Paddy’s—’

‘I am in your corner! I have always been in your corner, Holly, even if it hasn’t felt like it, even if we got off to a rocky start . . . ’ She was tearing up.
Shit
.

We sat there, together at the kitchen table, wiping tears and blowing noses, which was how Paddy found us.

‘What’s going on here?’ he asked warily.

‘Nothing, nothing . . . ’ said Mum, ‘just talking about some things.’

He came and hugged her around the shoulders as he always does, then me, which he rarely does.

‘Where’s Lucy?’ I asked, trying to sound conversational. Lucy was the latest girlfriend.

‘Lucy is a psycho,’ said Paddy succinctly. ‘I dropped her.’

‘Oh.’

He went over to the couch and turned on his laptop. I desperately wanted to tell Mum about the Nick stuff, and how my nightmares were all seeming to wake simultaneously, but the moment had passed. Plus, I knew she really loved Tim. As did I.

What were my nightmares?

That I would lose my battle against that raging tide of grief. That I would no longer be, for the most part, coolly functional.
Such a strength to hestr. My mother no longer needed me to be strong for her, so where did that leave me?

That we would never find a way to rebalance the family without Dad, the gaping hole, the yawning absence . . . We would continue our polite pretence of being a family, forever.

That I would no longer be a good person, loyal,
holier-than-them
– just a garden variety muck-raker, down in the mud with everyone else, a disappointment to my – it must be said,
dead
– father.

That my carefully ticked-off boxes would become un-ticked – gorgeous, reliable Tim, our flat, our jobs, our future.

That me, Dan, Abs and Lara would not make it through to the next round together. Like me and Liam hadn’t.

That only the unpredictable grace of God separates me from the girl on top of the roof.
I’ll be challenged when the sun goes down!

I had been calm, strong and compassionate for all the fractured souls and grieving families that were my daily bread at Elizabethtown. I could feel my compassion seeping out, my cynicism and hopelessness hardening, baking themselves onto the pan.

When I leave my mother’s house, I will return to Tim’s and my place for good.

I think.

25

Unfortunately there are never-ending levels, like a video game you progress through infinitely.You master one level, and before you really have time to enjoy it or congratulate yourself, you’re through to the next one and defending yourself against an even bigger dragon. You finish your HSC and then you are doing university exams. You finish university exams and go to job interviews.You go to work and meet deadlines.

You break up with someone you kissed and it’s hard. You break up with someone you slept with and it’s even harder.You break up with someone you shared years with, that you shared a home with, that you married, that you procreated with.

The stakes are always on the rise. There is no way to make them stop, no insurance you can take. Except on your car. Which is some comfort, I suppose.

Apparently, some tough choices may come your way; you will make them and hope for the best. But at any point you may have to deal with the worst. Where does strength come from? I thought of my mother caring for my father so steadily, the years of grief that followed, and for the first time saw her bravery, and the ultimate dividends, in letting herself dwell in that dusk.

I thought of my father defending his positions so bravely and never faltering in his beliefs, the way he held the audiences fast when he lectured. I hoped my strength would come from my tribe, dead and alive.

I went home from my mother’s place, and lay down on the jointly-purchased couch with Tim. I reached under his shirt and listened feverishly to the beating of his heay mrt in his chest.The smell of his skin was like an opiate addiction. I told him I had resigned from my job, that I felt burnt out and would look for something new. He looked at me tenderly with his clear blue eyes.
Perhaps
, he suggested,
we could both start looking at jobs in the UK
.

I had four weeks to say goodbye to my clients and my friends. Nick. It would be Christmas when I left.

The Pakistani lady was pregnant again. The blonde woman in the unit, haunted by her lover’s exit, drank mugs of tea on her balcony with a straight back, then moved out herself. The skinny blonde agent who had let our unit appeared in that unit, airing it out and opening it for inspection.

On my last day at Elizabethtown I drove the ancient Mazda to work so I could load it up with my belongings at the end of the day. Tim zipped off to work on his motor scooter. He promised to be home by 6:30 to take me out to our favourite restaurant that night to mark the end of the chapter.

Nick had left a post-it on my desk, but instead of saying
welcome to work
it said
I cannot express how profoundly I will miss you. With barely restrained tears, Nick xxx.
I peeled it slowly off the desk, folded it, and put it in my wallet.

The team took me out to lunch. Tessa made a lovely speech and Johanna told me not to forget to give her my ID badge and swipe card at the end of the day. Nick and I made cups of coffee at 3 p.m., and descended the stairs to our alcove and crates for the last time.

‘We’ll still catch up,’ I said lamely.

‘We sure will,’ he chirped back.‘It will be just the same, except we won’t see each other every day anymore. But we’ll catch up.’

‘Yeah! We’ll have drinks and . . . ’ I trailed off.

We blew on our coffees in silence.

‘I’ll dance at your wedding Hollier-than-thou.’

‘My
wedding
? When am I having a wedding?’

‘You know what I mean.’

My head drooped.

‘Even though you heart me?’ I said quietly.


Because
I heart you.’

‘Well . . . I’ll dance at yours too.’

‘Tops. We’re sorted then.’

‘Dance-a-rama.’

‘Hells yeah.’

At 3:30 I realised I had nothing more to do except carry my stuff out to the car. I would take an early mark, in lieu of the hours and hours I had stayed back to do my stats. I hugged Tessa, Kristo, Gareth, Hannah and Kristy. To my srisar.urprise, Johanna hugged me too. Nick carried my stuff outside and loaded it into the boot.

‘Goodbye, Mister Sister,’ I said.

He hugged me rib-crushingly tight.

‘See you soon,’ he managed in a strangled whisper.

And he walked back to the Community Health Centre, turning once to wave and smile his best default smile. I sat in the car for a good few minutes before putting the key into the ignition. As I drove past the health centre, I caught a glimpse of Nick sitting in our alcove, smoking a cigarette. It was a split second, but I saw Niah from Drug Health sitting next to him. On my crate.

I parked the Mazda right outside our block. Bliss, parking near your block in Dulwich Hill when everyone is at work and the kerbs are empty. It had been garbage morning so I grabbed our bin off the pavement and wheeled it around the back of the building. My tree’s silver skin gleamed in the afternoon sunlight and her leaves gently shook in the breeze. I always did say she would share her strength with me.

When I turned around to make my way up the driveway, I saw with surprise that Tim’s scooter was parked in it’s usual spot next to our neighbour’s black Polo. He hadn’t said anything about coming home early. Maybe it was some surprise for me. Cooking dinner, or cleaning or . . . chilling champagne and laying rose petals everywhere. Maybe?

I turned for one last deep breath in my tree’s direction and held the air in my lungs for as long as I could.

Then I walked up the driveway and set my foot firmly on the stairs.

Acknowledgements

Thanks first and foremost to my mother, Merelyn Buzo, for taking care of my daughter while I wrote.

Thanks also to my sister Genevieve, for the valuable editorial assistance, to Margaret Connolly and Jamie Grant, for their encouragement and belief in my writing, and to Erica Wagner and Susannah Chambers from Allen Unwin, for their patience, good humour and professionalism.

And lastly, thanks to Penelope, for giving me a reason to try, in this and all things.

About the author

Laura Buzo was born and grew up in Sydney, the middle of three daughters. Her debut novel,
Good Oil,
was shortlisted for the 2010 Prime Minister’s Literary Award, received a notable listing from the Children’s Book Council of Australia and was published in the USA and Germany. She lives in Sydney with her daughter.

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