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Authors: Jean Bedford

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BOOK: Now You See Me
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They all came out of the chapel in twos and threes and stood awkwardly apart, not yet forming groups, shielding their eyes against the sudden sunlight. Hardly anyone wore black — not even Rosa, who had on a light blue cotton jacket over a darker dress.

Mick saw Carly walking rapidly towards the car park, not joining the others or waiting to be part of the hugs and tearful greetings that were now breaking up the tableau on the lawn. He reached her as she was getting into her car. He put his hand on her arm. ‘Rosa says to invite you back for drinks, if you’d like.’

She squinted at him, surprised. ‘That’s ... forgiving of her. No, I don’t think so, Mick. I’d be in the way, and with the kids there, too. But thank her, will you. Tell her I appreciate it.’ She wiped her eyes with a wadded-up tissue and they hugged each other. ‘Take care,’ she said. He stood and watched her drive away, then went back to where the others were also making for their cars.

‘For once I feel sorry for Carly,’ Mick said to Sharon as she drove them to Rosa’s place. ‘She’s got the same grief as Rosa — there’s no doubt how much she loved Tom. But she can’t claim any of the privileges of widowhood. Rosa’s getting all the sympathy.’

‘Well, she deserves it,’ Sharon said coolly. ‘I think Carly behaved like a total bitch all through this.’ But she privately acknowledged Carly’s charm, and wondered whether Mick was moved at all by his old feelings for her.

‘Yeah, perhaps.’ Mick fell silent, gazing morosely out of the window at the sundrenched streets, the bright suburban gardens. ‘Why are funerals always on such glorious days?’ he said finally.

‘I don’t know,’ she said. ‘I haven’t been to all that many of them. Your speech was great, Mick. I cried and cried. Especially when it looked as if you were going to break down and bawl, too.’

‘I nearly did. I hated having to say that about Tom wanting to live as a woman, and dying as one instead, but Rosa insisted.’

‘It helped her,’ Sharon said. ‘She felt as if she was acknowledging something she’d denied him when he was alive.’

‘Wise little thing, aren’t you? Still, at least she didn’t want the kids there to hear it.’

‘They’ll find out. It was in the papers
.
Dra
g
suicid
e
o
f
philosophe
r
i
n
King
s
Cros
s
mote
l
o
f
sleaz
e
, and all that. She can’t keep it from them forever — once school goes back they’ll cop heaps from their friends, for a start.’

‘I don’t think she wants to keep it from them,’ he said. ‘She told me she’s going to try to explain it to them as soon as she’s a bit more together. That’s if she ever gets it straight herself. Perhaps she can explain it to me, too.’

‘It doesn’t seem all that big a deal to me,’ Sharon said. ‘So what if he liked dressing up as a woman sometimes? What difference does it make to anything that matters? Haul out some money for the bridge, will you.’

He rummaged in his pocket and handed her a coin. ‘You don’t think it’s weird?’

‘I suppose it’s a bit weird, but no more so than lots of other things. I had a mate at the Police Academy who was like that,’ she said, braking and handing the money to the toll-collector. She peered at the signs as she drove on, and swerved in front of a truck to catch the right exit.

‘Jesus, watch it,’ Mick said. ‘So — tell me about him, your friend.’

‘Nothing much to tell. I used to go shopping with him sometimes, for frocks, give him advice about what colours went with what, make-up, that sort of thing. It was fun.’ She laughed, remembering. ‘He’d come to my room and dress up some evenings and we’d be like two ladies having a tea party.’

‘Christ, I bet that went down well with the other cops,’ Mick said.

‘Well, he didn’t do it on parade. But most of the guys knew about it — he was pretty upfront about the whole thing. He’d tart up for parties quite often. The other blokes laughed, but they didn’t get heavy about it — I used to think some of them envied him. Mind you, it probably helped that he was the star of the police rugby team. He’s a detective now. Dunno if he’s still into drag, but he’s married with a couple of kids.’

‘Must be a generational thing,’ Mick said, shaking his head.

‘What? Not to think it’s a huge nasty secret that cows like Carly can trade on? That it’s worth wrecking your life over

endin
g
your life over? Perhaps. Still, your generation’s heroes did it in the open a fair bit, too. Look at Mick Jagger. And what about Barry Humphries?’

‘Yeah, but that’s theatre,’ Mick said. ‘Real life’s different.’

‘And men are men and women are women, and one wears pants and the other wears skirts, and never the twain shall meet,’ she said in a mocking chant. ‘No wonder you lot are all so fucked up.’ She was driving into Leichhardt now, concentrating in the heavy traffic on Parramatta Road. ‘That was Fran with Rosa down the front, wasn’t it?’ she asked suddenly.

‘Yeah. Apparently Rosa was seeing her for a while, professionally, and now they’re mates. Fran’s moved to Leichhardt, too. I don’t think they ever knew each other in the old days — Tom was already living with Carly when I met Fran, and our marriage only lasted a couple of minutes.’

She parked outside Rosa’s house and shot him a quick glance. ‘Did you speak to her?’

‘Yeah,’ he said, getting out of the car. ‘It’s been ten years,’ he said, surprise in his voice. ‘She’s changed — she’s much thinner and she doesn’t seem as brittle and nervy as she used to be.’ In fact, he’d thought she looked ill.

‘Perhaps it was living with you,’ she said, giving him a light punch in the ribs. They walked up the path arm in arm to where the door was open, loud music spilling out and muffling the subdued laughter, the conversation and the other noises of a party.

*

Rosa and Fran were on the back verandah. The children were watching television and the two women had cleaned up after the wake. Now they sat with a glass of champagne each.

‘I still don’t believe it,’ Rosa said with a heavy sigh.

‘It takes a while. A year, they say, to properly grieve. Those old rituals of mourning were based on reality.’ Fran spoke absently, thinking this was the last champagne she’d have for a while. Once they started the radiotherapy she wouldn’t be able to drink at all.

‘No, I don’t mean it that way. I mean I don’t believe the actual scenario. I believe Tom’s dead, all right. I just can’t accept that he’d kill himself.’ She took a sip of her drink and put out a hand to touch Fran’s arm. ‘I’m sorry, you don’t want to hear all this. Not with tomorrow looming up.’

Rosa was going with Fran to the hospital and bringing her home for a night or two. She was the only person Fran had told. She’d explained to her patients that she was winding down the practice because of illness, though she hadn’t been specific. But strangely, she thought now, she’d had an almost overwhelming impulse to tell Mick when he’d hugged her after the funeral.

‘Sharon seems a nice young woman,’ she said.

‘Who? Oh, yes. She’s OK, I guess. Mick seems to think so, anyway.’ Rosa stared into space, twiddling her champagne flute.

‘Fran,’ she said suddenly. ‘Are you frightened? Do you want to talk about it?’

‘Reversal of roles,’ Fran said with a faint grin. ‘No, I’m more angry than scared. Just when I thought I had my life together finally, the new house, contentment. It seems like a gratuitous act of cruelty from the gods, this.’ But she was lying, she thought. She was terrified of dying; terrified of the long months of treatment and pain that might precede death
.
I’
m
alway
s
lyin
g
, she told herself
.
Pretendin
g
I’
m
i
n
contro
l
an
d
thing
s
ar
e
fin
e.
That’
s
probabl
y
wha
t
gav
e
m
e
cance
r
.

‘Rosa,’ she said, unable to overcome her long habit of counselling, ‘you have to let go all this business with Tom. That you don’t believe he’d do it. Stop agonising over it, and get on with a bit of plain honest grief that he’s dead. What you’re doing now is common. You’re looking for a different scenario, one that excuses Tom, excuses you, from any blame. Don’t. Face your guilt. Face Tom’s despair. Then put it behind you.’

‘I suppose you’re right,’ Rosa said. ‘I don’t feel actual grief at the moment, though — I feel almost euphoric, speedy. As if I’m high on something.
I
enjoye
d
the wake. It felt like a great party. I wished people didn’t leave so early — I could have gone on all night.’

‘Endorphins,’ Fran said. ‘They’ll wear off after a few weeks, when your brain thinks you can deal with it. It’s a wonderful thing, the human body. When it works.’

She stood up. ‘I’d better go. I’ve got things to organise before tomorrow. Do you want something to help you sleep tonight?’

Rosa shook her head and began to rise.

‘No stay there. I’ll let myself out.’ She bent swiftly and kissed Rosa’s cheek. ‘I’m glad we’re friends,’ she said, surprising both of them.

Rosa sat on outside for a while, sipping the flat champagne, trying to find the sadness that must be inside her
.
I
t
wil
l
com
e
, she told herself, knowing it and half welcoming it. But meanwhile there was a faint relief that she was ashamed of. That she didn’t have to be jealous, any more, of Carly or anyone else. That she would not, in the end, have to deal with Tom’s problems, have to try to live a life that would be a radical denial of her own instincts.

She heaved herself out of the garden chair finally, tired of self-analysis, and went inside to make a scrappy meal for herself and the children.

 

 

Marseilles

..
.
I’
m
ver
y
comfortabl
e
her
e.I
hav
e
a
jo
b
a
t
a
Catholi
c
hospita
l,
wher
e
the
y
ar
e
delighte
d
t
o
hav
e
someon
e
o
f
m
y
experienc
e
wit
h
les pauvres enfants
,
an
d
I’v
e
take
n
a
n
apartmen
t
hig
h
u
p
i
n
th
e
ol
d
tow
n,
wher
e
I
ca
n
se
e
th
e
for
t
an
d
th
e
harbou
r
fro
m
almos
t
ever
y
windo
w.
M
y
rust
y
schoolgir
l
Frenc
h
i
s
comin
g
bac
k
t
o
m
e
rapidl
y
no
w
tha
t
I
hav
e
t
o
communicat
e
i
n
th
e
languag
e
ever
y
da
y
.

I
hav
e
change
d
m
y
nam
e
agai
n,
o
f
cours
e.
N
o
mor
e
Dian
a;
n
o
mor
e
Carl
y/
Kal
i(
yo
u
woul
d
hav
e
recognise
d
tha
t
pu
n
immediatel
y;
yo
u
wer
e
intereste
d
i
n
th
e
significanc
e
o
f
homophone
s
)
,
thoug
h
I
stil
l
hun
t
an
d
destro
y.I
mus
t.
Becaus
e
th
e
demon
s
kno
w
n
o
frontier
s;
th
e
ocean
s
ar
e
n
o
barrie
r
t
o
the
m
.

The
y
cam
e
agai
n,
las
t
nigh
t.
Fortunatel
y,I
hav
e
alread
y
marke
d
th
e
possibl
e
sacrifice
s—
evi
l,
to
o,
know
s
n
o
boundarie
s;
an
d
ther
e
ar
e
thos
e
her
e—
everywher
e—
wh
o
mus
t
b
e
save
d.
An
d
thos
e
wh
o
mus
t
h
e
punishe
d
.

  *

I
g
o
fo
r
lon
g
walk
s,
i
n
m
y
tim
e
of
f,
u
p
th
e
grea
t
hil
l
throug
h
th
e
dan
k,
overhun
g
par
k
t
o
wher
e
th
e
giganti
c
gol
d
Madonn
a
garishl
y
crown
s
th
e
cathedra
l
o
n
th
e
mountai
n.I
clim
b
th
e
hundred
s
o
f
step
s
an
d
I
stan
d
o
n
th
e
basilic
a
esplanad
e
lookin
g
dow
n
ove
r
th
e
island
s
an
d
th
e
sweepin
g
blu
e
o
f
th
e
se
a
o
r
bac
k
acros
s
th
e
par
k
t
o
th
e
cit
y
an
d
th
e
hill
s
i
n
th
e
distanc
e.
Sometime
s
I
g
o
insid
e
th
e
churc
h
t
o
stan
d
a
lon
g
whil
e
contemplatin
g
th
e
crud
e
littl
e
mosai
c
Annunciation
;
th
e
stupi
d,
blissfu
l
loo
k
o
n
th
e
virgin’
s
fac
e
a
s
sh
e
listen
s
t
o
th
e
ange
l
.

Ther
e
ar
e
place
s
i
n
th
e
par
k
wher
e
a
smal
l
bod
y
migh
t
li
e
fo
r
day
s
undiscovere
d.
Ther
e
ar
e
swing
s
an
d
slide
s
wher
e
childre
n
migh
t
b
e
le
d
al
l
unsuspectin
g,
b
y
someon
e
the
y
trus
t.
Ther
e
ar
e
narro
w
windin
g
path
s
an
d
secre
t
shadow
y
space
s
beneat
h
strang
e
enormou
s
Europea
n
tree
s
.

An
d
i
n
th
e
ol
d
cit
y,
particularl
y
th
e
Ara
b
quarte
r,
ther
e
ar
e
rubbis
h-
strew
n
alley
s
an
d
abandone
d
building
s
enoug
h.A
ne
w
corps
e
ther
e
woul
d
hardl
y
surpris
e
anyon
e
.

Firs
t
I
wa
s
Danut
a,
the
n
Dian
a,
tha
t
ol
d
familia
r
secre
t
sel
f
wh
o
firs
t
appeare
d
t
o
kee
p
m
e
fro
m
terro
r
throug
h
th
e
lon
g
night
s
i
n
th
e
dar
k
cupboar
d.
Whe
n
I
escape
d
t
o
m
y
ne
w
lif
e
I
becam
e
Carl
y.
Yo
u
woul
d
hav
e
see
n
th
e
furthe
r
implication
s
ther
e
.

BOOK: Now You See Me
5.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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