Authors: Lloyd Jones
At the end of the day with nowhere else to go but home, Dean passed under the bronze
rifles and donkey of the Anzacs instead and entered the Garden of Memories where he
sat on a bench by the rose garden. For a long time he was the only one in the gardens.
So it felt like an intrusion when he looked up and saw a woman circling near the
fountain. He wondered how long she had been there, and if she'd seen him bend to
tie up his laces and come up with a profanity for the world.
She had taken some care with her appearance. Dean was not to know that this was a
hallmark of Diane who is Dougie Munroe's wife. Diane wouldn't be seen dead in a dressing
gown. Anyway, let's continue with the scene from Dean's perspective. The woman looked
over his way and started towards him. She was pointing at her wrist and asking for
the time. So he told her, âFive forty-five.'
The woman looked down at her own wristwatch and she made a complaining noise. âThat's
what I've got too.' She looked up and shook her brown bob of hair, shook loose some
pleasing fragrance. She stared at the gates Dean had just come
through. Now she turned
and looked for the other entrance at the far end of the gardens. Then she wanted
to know something else.
âYour watch is absolutely correct and not fast?'
âIt's good,' he told her, and she said, âWell, that's that, so why should I be surprised?'
She looked fed up, and after thanking him she marched off under the gate entrance
with the Anzacs.
The man she was supposed to meet turned up fifteen minutes later on the grass beneath
a
maple.
Dean guessed he was the person the woman had been waiting forâthe closeness
in
age,
a matching preparedness, the man's shiny black shoes. He cupped his hands
to
light
a cigarette but abandoned it when he saw Dean. He started over.
âYou missed her,' Dean said.
âWoman with brown hair? Probably in a red top?'
âThis one was wearing blue.'
âA blue top.' The man looked surprised.
Dean said, âYou were supposed to be here at five thirty.'
âNo. I said six o'clock. I definitely said six o'clockâ¦wait. She told you five thirtyâ¦?'
âShe said you were supposed to be here.'
âWell that's bullshit for starters. Five thirty.' He threw away his unlit cigarette
in disgust. Dean considered going after it but the man was sculpting a figure in the
air. âBrown hair⦠and kind ofâ¦you knowâ¦'
âYeah. That's her,' said Dean. âShe said her watches always run fast.'
âAh ha ha ha. Yes. We are talking about the same person. No doubt about that. That
was Diane you just met. That's her without a doubt. Did she say if she was coming
back?'
âShe didn't sayâ¦'
âWhat else did she say?'
Dean thought for a moment.
âNothing. That's about it.'
The man closed his eyes and gently shook his head. âOh Diane, Dianeâ¦' He took a deep
breath and opened his eyes and pointed to the space beside Dean on the bench.
âMay I?'
The man sat down and crossed his legs.
âSo she didn't leave a message?'
âNo.'
âThank you, Diane. Why am I not surprised? After all, why would you do something
so reasonable as leave a message?'
Dean stared at the ground. It seemed like this would be a better conversation if
he wasn't there and the woman Diane was sitting here instead.
âA blue top. I find that interesting. Very interesting.' He sat up and crossed his
arms and nodded back at the rose bed. Now he uncrossed his legs. âSo what else? Did
she look happy or sad? For example, did she look disappointed at having missed me?'
None of the questions and their guesses quite hit the mark. âAnnoyed' might be the
word but the man hadn't put that one forward.
âShe was angry with her watch,' Dean said.
âInteresting. Interesting. That in itself tells a story. People always look to lay
blame when they've lost something. Diane is my wife. Possibly former wife. I had
better get used to that idea.'
He stopped himself and took a good look at Dean.
âI don't think I've seen your face. I'm Doug, by the way.'
âDean,' said Dean.
He felt the man look him up and down.
âSo Dean, what are you like with a paint brush?'
It was his next job. Not a big one. A few days' work at the Albion Hotel. Doug showed
Dean upstairs and led him past suites named the Quagga Suite, the Giant Sloth Suite,
the Jamaican Tree Suite. âAll this shit has to be painted over.' He pushed on one
door which opened on to walls covered in forest and savanna. It wasn't one landscape
or another. Patches of tropical jungle fought with Arctic waste for wall space. Snakes
writhed around tree trunks, mammoths stood ornamentally in the background. A Tasmanian
tiger peered back between branches. Birds with pink feathers turned on a sharp wing
over ice floes. One large awkward bird caught his attention. Dean knew what it was.
He pointed at it, waiting for the name to come to him. âThat's a dodo isn't it?'
And he began to recite some of the stuff Guy Stuart had told him until Doug interrupted
him.
âAnyway' he said. âI'll be downstairs if you need anything.'
Dean had just stumbled
on to one of my outstanding failures as mayor. After the wind-down of NE Paints the
enterprise committee had come up with an idea to turn ourselves into a theme park
called Gondwanaland. We worked ourselves into a fever over it. It seemed such a fine
idea, so original. Our theme park would bring the extinct species of the world back
to life. I managed to get a special local body business grant. We used the money
to draw up plans. We called a public meeting and filled the old NE Paints community
hall where I bounced up on stage and introduced the idea. A steering
committee had
prepared a number of charts. A large illustrated flap chart invited my willing audience
inside to a reception centre, shops and cafeterias, and an auditorium. The artwork
showed a lot of smiling faces, and in the uniformed park employees they saw their
future selves on the Gondwanaland payroll, as car park attendants, guides, projectionists,
restaurant hands, vendors, manufacturers of Gondwanaland maps and stuffed toysâthe
stuffed quagga, woolly mammoths made with the finest New Zealand wool, Eskimo curlewsâand
this was the moment when Frances had nudged my side with her idea for jigsaws. The
park would need financing. We spurned big-moneyed partners; not after what NE Paints
had done to us. In our small-town wisdom we decided on a private subscription. Five
hundred dollars bought a unit share. That was quite a large amount and there had
been some nervous shuffling in the hall. But could we afford not to be involved?
On the coast there are moments when a storm signals its end. The clouds part; the
sky has never before looked so blue. The world appears radiant again. Gondwanaland
was that shaft of sunlight. What a change it made to see people with some purpose
in their stride! Suddenly everyone was an expert on theme parks. Discussion on the
giant elk or Eskimo curlew flushed out the pedant. âYour giant elk, Harry. It takes
its name from the old Norse
elgr
and Old High German
elaho
.'
For all that, the buoyant mood made for a nice change. It was like we'd discovered
oil.
There was much discussion on where to site the park and this led to some speculative
buying of property. Merchandising ideas steamed ahead. Cupcakes in the shape of dodos,
T-shirts with G logos, a map showing our town's approximate location
back when these
islands were part of a supercontinent. There was Frances's Gondwanaland jigsaw. The
Gondwanaland burger which Heath pestered me to death over. We saw it would be crazy
to hang on to the street names of the pastâGreen Way could become Moa Lane. Pacific
Blue would turn into Curlew Square. We liked those new names. For one thing they
finally shook off the yoke of NE Paints. They said something more about our place
in the world.
It was a good idea, if a little wacky. This made it even more appealing. It made
people smile. Everyone's enthusiasm was up. We bubbled along, encouraged one another.
So when Doug took me aside to ask me if I thought it was a good idea, a sound idea,
whether he should go ahead and launch himself at refurbishing the hotel and pick
up the Gondwanaland themes embraced by the rest of the town, I said, âHell, Dougie,
you'd be mad not to.'
We spent a lot of the money raised by public subscription on nailing down trademarks.
Now we could see that we'd struggle to finance it on subscription alone. We would
need institutional support, maybe government support, a benign loan, perhaps from
one of the commercial banks. Our figures stacked up. We had growth charts. All in
all, we had an impressive story to go to the bank with.
Yet it was rejection after rejection. It was hard to understand why, harder still
to explain to the hopeful constituency. Face to face we'd get respectful and enthusiastic
hearings, then the letter with its bad news would arrive some weeks later. I'd call
up, sure there was a mistake, but I never got through to the person the steering
committee had met with. I began to feel more and more desperate. The business kept
me awake at night.
I didn't know which bank or funding agency to turn to next. I
put all my hopes and those of the town in one last pitch to a rural bank.
I remember it was a fortnight later, getting the news and looking up from the letter
with the bank's regrets and seeing a woman on a stepladder clipping a hedge; and
I had this mad desire to rush out and stick my head between the blades of her hedge-clippers.
The theme park was so stupid, so obviously stupid now that we'd been turned down.
Worse, I'd led the flock down a blind alley and straight over the edge of a fucking
cliff.
Tommy Reece hadn't done this bad. The Tommy of the sombre portraitâthe last one by
the way commissioned by council. Gondwanaland was the kind of disaster that should
end a political career. But when the election came around eighteen months later no
one could bear the embarrassment of remembering. I was voted in unopposed.
Long before then, however, the constituency found other ways to square things up.
They filed in one after another with their worthless possessions and demanded ridiculous
prices and I couldn't refuse any of them. Overnight Pre-Loved filled up with ships
in bottles, plain wooden boxes talked up for their âantique value', miniature cars
that were really cigarette lighters, stuffed animals, stuffed toy animals, so many
koalas I had to burn them, an embarrassing number of stag heads, wooden tennis rackets
of a vintage more likely to turn up as an accessory in a clothing catalogue than
on the tennis court. The slightest bit of hesitation on my part and they reached
for their last card, but what a card. âTo be honest Harry, I did a bit of money on
that Gondwanaland thingâ¦'
A few days after Dean had finished up at the hotel they were on their way back from
the supermarket when the Datsun blew up halfway along Beach Road. They had to abandon
it. They had groceries plus the twins to carry, and a surfboard Dean had tried to
sell me. I should probably have bought it but some mean-spirited bile kept rising
up my throat. I took my time looking over Dean's surfboard, drew out the agony,
pursed my lips and drifted into long silences while he twisted and burned before
me.
That night he and Violet discussed what to do. They needed transport of some kind.
They needed to get to the shops and what if the twins fell sick? Dean got up and
walked away from the conversation. She followed out to the porch where he let her
know he had seen a second-hand bike at the Pre-Loved place. âIf I can get him to
come down on the price the bike will do for now.'
I made him work for the price he wanted. The hassle over the Stuarts' bed was still
fresh in my mind, the way Dean stonewalled and sought to exploit the situation. I
didn't want to be cruel about it. I let him have it in the end but not without a
slow, sweated-out negotiation. I'll give credit where it's due, though. Cunningly
he clinched it with, âIt's not really for me. It's for Violet.'
A steady spell of fine weather towards the end of January saw Dean disappear for days
at a time on his bike. Often he was gone by the time Violet woke to find the two babies
wedged up against her where Dean had put them in the night.
She assumed he was out looking for work so she was surprised when he told her he'd
bought a small house truck which
he planned to do up and sell. She didn't ask what
he'd used for money or where he'd found it. She had a feeling Dean had cycled into
some other life away from the one they shared, and she was afraid to ask. A bit of
paint on his fingers and hands, a green fleck on his eyebrowsâthat was as much of his
world Dean brought back to the cottage on Beach Road.
And since he was never there she asked him for the rent money just in case he wasn't
back in time. Dean who was tying up his laces said he would be back.
âWhen?' she asked.
He went on tying his shoelaces. âI'll know when I know.'
Later in the day when I turned up with Alma she insisted Dean was on his way home.
Alma was more willing to be led along a merry trail than I was.
âWas that your car we saw up the road?'
There was no point denying it and its bad end. All the same, she turned the question
over and considered it from every angle.
âSo Dean is driving what exactly, honey bunch?'
âHe's not driving anything. He's on a bike.'
âYour bike?'
This seemed to confuse her. What did I mean by âher bike'?