Authors: Joy Dettman
Sunday 24 August
There was a determined knock on Ben's front door the following Sunday morning, and in the kitchen, lounge and dining room, heads lifted, ears listened. Friends and egg buyers always came to the back door. Only salesmen, the police and Jehovah's Witnesses knocked on the old front door, but salesmen didn't come on Sundays, the
police had stopped calling, Ellie's church didn't approve of Jehovah's Witnesses, and she was running late.
âGet rid of them for me, will you, Benjie love? Give them some eggs,' she called from the bathroom.
Ben left off printing out his shop accounts and walked to the front door where he found Kerrie Fogarty, studying the mud brick wall.
âG'day,' he said. âWhat can I do for you?'
âWhat are
you offering?' She grinned her cheeky boyish grin, and Ben returned the grin as he swung the door wide. He liked Kerrie. He cut her hair every six weeks and he wished it grew faster.
Scared silly that first day, embarrassed to be so close to a female head, he'd held back. âShorter,' she'd said. âShort back and sides, Ben. Like you do the guys. More,' she'd kept saying. âRun your clippers up my
neck. I haven't got time for combs.'
She had no time for lipstick either, or dresses. She lived in jeans and boots, or baggy shorts and leather sandals. She was wearing her shorts today. The sun was out and warm, and her legs were long.
âActually, I was hoping to speak to your big brother. Is he
around?'
âYeah. He's reading. Come through. Watch that bottom step,' he warned, leading her down
to a dark and narrow passage, past the steep staircase that led up to Ellie's room in the roof.
âWhat a funny little house you've got,' she said. âWhen I first came here I used to call it the gingerbread house. Didn't know who owned it then, and every time I passed by I expected a cackling witch to beckon me in with her crooked finger. It's got real character, Ben. What's something like this
doing in Mallawindy?'
He liked his house too. Always had. He'd known it well until he was five years old, until his grandfather had died and the house was sold. Then, around nine years ago, Mr Mack, the buyer, had died amid the chaos of his back bedroom, and no one had missed him for a week. The house and land had gone to auction and Ben had bought it for a song, hoping Ellie would move back.
She'd helped him clean it up and put it back the way it had been in her father's time, but refused to move in with him. It had taken Jack's disappearance and Johnny's return to move her from over the river.
âMum's grandfather came out here from Germany when he was fourteen, back in the late eighteen hundreds. He built it. Started off with a couple of rooms and just kept adding bits, then because
he'd built the roof so steep, he decided to put a room upstairs. Only trouble is, he hadn't left anywhere to put the stairs. Watch your head, there.'
âThe little house that grew up.'
âYeah. He made the bricks himself out of the riverbank. Clay and straw, plus a bit of cow manure. So my grandfather always told us.'
âI can't smell it.'
âOnly on wet days.' They were still grinning when Ben ushered
her into the dining room, where Ellie stood ready to make her escape.
âOh, it's only you, Kerrie.'
âG'day, Mrs Burton. Just telling Ben I like his house.'
The newspaper opened to the crossword, Ellie closed it, self-conscious about her spelling, always a little threatened, a mite apprehensive, when around educated people. âSit down, Kerrie. Ben will make you a cup of tea.'
âNot today, thanks.
I'm here to see John, actually.'
Ben walked to the double doors separating lounge from dining room. He swung one wide. Johnny, still seated, looked past his brother to the infant mistress.
âG'day, John,' she said. âHow's the foot?'
âMiss Fogarty.' He nodded, annoyed by the interruption. âIt's improving daily.'
âI like your shoe.'
An oversized sneaker, cut to fit, now covered his foot. He
forced a brief smile as his eyes urged her to come to the point of her visit.
The three Burtons coexisted within these dark little rooms, but when together in any one of them, the room appeared crowded. Kerrie stepped down to the lounge room to perch on the arm of a well-stuffed couch, and Ben backed off, backed off to the kitchen to his accounts, but he listened in to the conversation.
âI've
just heard that Norman O'Rouke is in hospital. His mother called, said he won't be coming back, and I can't let Fletch into the classroom again tomorrow or I won't have a school. Uncle Joe said that you had done some teaching, John. I was wondering â '
âMy goodness.' Ellie was at the front door waiting for Bessy. She walked back to the lounge and stood at the double doors. âWhat's happened now?'
âFletch? He um . . . sort of did his block with young Robert West.'
âI meant to Mr O'Rouke.'
Kerrie turned to her. âYou knew they found that dead woman near Albury? The police came for Norman and took him down there to identify her. He didn't come back.'
âI saw it on the news. About finding the woman. Was it his wife?'
âI think it must have been. His mother didn't say one way or the other.
All she was interested in was her Norman and his breakdown. They've got him in a nuthouse . . . psychiatric hospital. Anyway, I was wondering, John â '
âYou've got time for a cup of tea, Kerrie.'
âNo. Not now, thanks, Mrs Burton. Another day, though. I'll come back and have a proper look at your house.' Again she turned to John. âI was wondering if you're qualified to teach, John?'
âNot as
qualified as Mr Fletcher, and with less patience these days,' he said, ending the conversation.
âI doubt that . . . greatly. Very greatly. We could have been in serious trouble on Friday. I could have been in serious trouble. He threw the whiteboard cleaner, could have knocked young Robert's eye out.'
âFletch always had a thing with the Wests,' Ben said, joining Ellie at the double doors.
âJeff knows about his thermos too. I had to do some fast talking. Anyway, the department will get me a replacement but I can't contact them until tomorrow and the kids have had a bad year. Norman's had too much time off, and the temps we've had have been in and out . . . like â '
âBulls through the milking shed,' Ben said.
Kerrie nodded, grinned. âAnd about as much use. It'll take them a day
or two to get someone else up here, and I just thought you might be interested, John. Just for tomorrow, or a few days max. I want to keep the kids in school if I can. We've got six who are supposed to be going to high school next year. We've let them down badly.'
Johnny wasn't adding to the conversation. His book was closed but a thumb kept his place, and his expression suggested he was eager
to return to it.
âYou'd be qualified, wouldn't you, Johnny? You said you used to teach at some boys' college in Brisbane,' Ben said.
John looked at his brother, cursing him silently but not denying his words.
Ben moved into the room. Kerrie, when standing, looked him in the eye, but she was seated now; he could look down at her head, and he knew it intimately, knew her small neat ears, and
the two gold studs she always wore, the long slim neck. She'd be coming in soon for another haircut. This pleased him, and he smiled as he looked beyond her head to John and his book.
His brother rarely left the property; he refused to take any money for his labour, wearing the working clothes Ellie bought for him, or his father's discarded trousers, the hems let down by Ellie, who was no seamstress.
Since his accident he read day and night, replying only briefly when spoken to.
âWould you be interested in helping me out tomorrow, John? That's why I'm here. I'd be eternally grateful. I can't ask Fletch again. I dare not. Robert West ended up with two stitches in his head.'
John frowned at the ones determined to break into the space he'd managed to build around himself. The atmosphere in
the house had lightened since the Daree body had altered its status from Jack Burton to John Doe. Ellie was happy, Ben was relieved she'd stopped howling, but for John, for him, it meant that Jack Burton was alive again, living in comfort at Narrawee. It meant that he now had to begin mentally murdering him again â and waiting, waiting for him to show his face in Mallawindy.
âIt would be good
for you, love,' Ellie said. âIt might take you out of yourself, being with the children, teaching again. You could wear the suit you wore to Bronwyn's wedding.'
The book closed with a snap. John considered a fast reply to the negative, a faster escape to the old place, but his reply became lost on the way out. He placed his book on the couch as he glanced at Kerrie.
She was watching him, her
head to one side, her teeth chewing on a hangnail. He knew she was in her mid-thirties, but today she
looked like a lanky kid who'd landed in a hole but wasn't complaining about it. An organiser, that one. Her eyes were a deep grey, flecked with blue â too hard to hold, so he looked back to the cover of his book.
Les Miserables
. Fit company for him these days. He'd picked it up from the old bookcase
yesterday. Hadn't read it in years, and he wanted to read it now. The distant past had been trapped between its worn covers and he preferred the past. He'd been planning to spend the afternoon wallowing in the ancient sewers of Paris. Not to be. They wouldn't let it be.
âI can't handle the boys, John. Some of them are as big as me. They need discipline. And they need a male teacher with a bit
of self-discipline â and one big enough to look as if he means business. You sort of fit the bill.' Still John made no reply, but Kerrie wasn't ready to give up. âSomeone smashed two windows in the senior room last night. It was probably the Wests, giving me a warning. If I get Fletch back, they'll burn the school down tomorrow. I wouldn't ask you to do it if I wasn't desperate â if the kids who
want to learn weren't desperate for help â but I am, and they are, John. And you're the only one in town I can ask. Beg. Kiss your smelly shoe.' She grinned, and for a moment his mouth attempted to return the grin. He controlled it, rubbed his eyes instead, rubbed his brow as he looked at his misshapen shoe.
âMy movements are somewhat restricted, Miss Fogarty.'
âI'll pick you up at your door.
I'll drop you home.'
âHe can drive Jack's car. He only needs one foot for it. It's an automatic,' Ellie said.
âThree against one. It appears that I am outnumbered. I'll give it some thought, Miss Fogarty. Can we leave it at that for the moment?' That answer might buy him time.
âKerrie. Call me Kerrie. Everyone does. Miss Fogarty always makes me look over my shoulder for my maiden aunt, and
she was an old tartar if ever I met one â although the older I get the more like her I become . . . never know when I'm not wanted, and refuse
to take no for an answer.' She grinned at Ben, then she stood. âCan you let me know by six tonight, John? I'll have to contact the parents, get them to keep the kids home if you can't make it. Or . . . or get Jeff Rowan in to give them a tour of his jail.'
âWe'll get back to you by six,' Ben said.
âThanks.'
âOh, there's Bessy. I'm off, loves. Take some eggs with you, Kerrie. You do eat eggs?' Ellie said
âThanks. Yeah, but another time. Thanks in advance, John, in hope. If you can just give me a couple of days until the department gets its head together and gets me another temp. Three days, tops. I'll call them first thing in the morning.'
John
nodded. He stood. Taller than his father, slimmer than his father, his grey slacks loose and worn, their half-centimetre hand-stitched hems barely brushing his odd shoes. Not as well pressed as his father.
âI'll call you by six,' he said as the infant mistress disappeared into the passage, then he took up his crutch and left the house by the back door.
Malcolm had served his time in the army. He'd fought the Hun â with a pen and ink, which had not been his choice of arms. Back then he'd wanted to get out there, shoot the swine and save the world for old England, but always a little chubby and never the sporting type, he had only seen the ravages of war, the totals of war, and the lands after the
bombs had done their work.
He'd had friends in his childhood, his boyhood, but so many of his generation had been lost to war. Fresh-faced boys, with mischief and laughter in their eyes, had left old England's shores to return to it with the eyes of old men.
Saved from the worst of it, Malcolm had stayed on in the army when the fighting ended, travelling with his pen and ink. He'd bought a German
rifle in France, and a handgun in Germany. Back in England, he'd got onto two grenades, building up quite an arsenal which he'd had to leave behind when he'd packed up for Australia. But the handgun had travelled the oceans, packed beneath hand-embroidered tablecloths in Jillian's hope chest.
He unwrapped the gun now. First the red cloth, then the oilcloth, then the brittle old oiled paper. Each
item he placed separately on the table until the gun was in his hand.
And he loved it, loved it as he had the day he'd purchased it. A treasured toy, owned from near boyhood, he loved the smell of it, the weight of it in his hand. He opened an ancient matchbox that had lived for fifty years beside the gun, and he poured two bullets
into his palm. They weighed heavily. Gently he tossed them, listening
to the click-click-click for seconds before rolling them onto the table like dice.
Hard to believe that death lived within each of those bullets. Tiny things, with eternity waiting patiently inside. His handkerchief out, he polished the bullets first and then his gun, as he had done a thousand times, as a young man, as a husband, as a father and as a fat old fool in his dotage.
His feet were
swollen this morning. He'd barely managed to force them into worn slippers. His fingers were stiff with fluid, and every bone he possessed ached.
One should use these bullets, he thought. One into the temple. End it fast, Malcolm. Better to be in control of the moment than to die alone here, rot for a week in your own bed.
But he had two bullets. One would be wasted. Perhaps one should be used
to blow a hole through Jack Burton. The bastard was playing dead and Malcolm knew it.
âOne for his heart, and one for my head.' He inserted the bullets and aimed the gun at a shadow on the wall.
Perhaps it was a game the boy in the fat old man played. Just another scenario, replacement for the tales he could no longer complete, but he sat now, writing this one mentally in minute detail. And
it had a satisfying resolution. His publisher liked satisfying resolutions.
âDon't move, Mr Burton. I have a gun on you. This is for the children you wasted, and for my son, and for me. This is my war and I shall win it.'
Then he saw Jack Burton's old car come to a halt out front. Quickly Malcolm wrapped his gun. No time to take the bullets out, he pushed it into his cutlery drawer. He snatched
up the old matchbox. It went into his pocket as he walked to his front door, his heartbeat rapid.
âBurton?'
âMight I have a few minutes of your time, Mr Fletcher?'
âYou may. Come. Come.' John followed his old teacher through the hall and into the kitchen. It was the first time he'd been inside the house, and once there he appeared ill at ease.
âSit,' Malcolm said. âA cup of tea perhaps?'
âThank you.' Leaning crutches against his chair, John sat.
A houseproud spinster would have felt righteous in Malcolm's kitchen. He liked a place for everything and everything in its place. Busy now at neat cupboards, he allowed time for his visitor to state his business. As he took spoons from his drawer, the red-wrapped parcel got in his way. It was definitely not in its correct place. He fumbled
beneath it, found a spoon, then quickly tried to close the drawer. It jammed on the gun. He repositioned it, slid the draw in gently.
âYou've been spending some time back at the school, Mr Fletcher?'
âIndeed I have. The faces of Mallawindy youths have undergone little alteration; I can still pick a West from a Dooley, but the vocabularies have taken a turn for the worse, I fear. It has been
an eye opener to me, Burton. And you? What are your plans â apart from farm labourer, fencing contractor.'
John looked at his shoe. âI find physical labour cleansing. I miss it.'
âCleansing? Digging in Mallawindy dirt?'
âThere are worse occupations.'
âIndeed. Indeed. However, I admit to seeing your crowbar work as a criminal waste of a brilliant mind, and of your years of study.'
âNo study
is ever wasted. Isn't that what you used to say? No book ever written should be scorned.'
âI used to say a lot of things, Burton, however, I have had time recently to reconsider that one. Still, one man's poison is another man's meat. Do you have any plans to return to your former calling?'
âSome of us are called. Others enter the church seeking sanctuary.' John shrugged, glanced at Malcolm,
then away, and he looked more like Ann than his father. So young still. A life ahead of him. Malcolm envied him his youth.
âYou'd be in your early forties?'
âNot so early.' John looked at his hands, at his nails. They had grown long in his two weeks of inactivity. He had not inherited his father's hands, or his well-shaped nails. He had Ellie's hands, if somewhat magnified. Broad palms, flat
nails. He linked his fingers, then looked up to his former teacher. âAs a thinking, reasoning adult, I know I can't continue digging post holes for the next twenty years, but I don't often think as an adult these days, Mr Fletcher. I don't often think. Or I try not to.' John sat forward on his chair.
Malcolm waited for more as he set out cups. Old cups, Jillian's cups. She had loved this set.
One by one he'd broken them until only two of the original eight remained.
âThe years have kept passing while I've been waiting, hoping that some new beginning might present itself.' John drew a breath, held it, and the older man stood, teaspoon in hand. âI used to teach, Mr Fletcher. In Brisbane, then on the island for many years. I enjoyed teaching. I felt . . . felt more worthy in the classroom.'
âI must admit, I have never been able to think of you as one of God's black-suited messengers, preaching damnation to the masses.'
John Burton held the older man's eyes now. âNo. Nor I. That's one of the reasons I ended up on the island.' He drew breath, held it. âA proposition was put to me this morning by Miss Fogarty.'
Malcolm nodded. He smiled his tight little smile that barely made an impression
on the mass of his face. âAh hah. I see now what has brought on this visit. You, no doubt, thought you might be stepping on my toes by accepting her proposition?' John shrugged, nodded and Malcolm patted his broad expanse of stomach. âDifficult to tread on my toes these days, Burton.' He looked down. âDifficult to see them too, but no doubt they are still there as they continue to find the
toes of others. Do feel free to accept our Miss Fogarty's proposition. You may save me from a mild case of murder.'
Murder. Ten minutes ago he had been planning a serious case of
murder. He thought of the loaded gun in his drawer, and a shudder shook his profusion of flesh. Must remember it is in there, he thought. A blind grope for a knife might find a trigger and waste a bullet. I must remember
to remove it. When he leaves.
He stood eyeing the drawer, his mind wandering. Was he capable of taking a life? One could not, in all conscience, fire a bullet into the most deserving of flesh â unless the life-taker was prepared to donate his own life to the cause.
He reached for a packet of imported biscuits, studied the pack, which required a knife to slit it open. He looked at the drawer
he did not wish to open, at the bench, seeking a tool. Only his fingers to work on the cellophane, but they broke through and the biscuits were arranged neatly on a plate. All the while his mind was working.
Closer to eighty than seventy. Little to look forward to, apart from a fast heart attack, or slow disintegration. Not a soul would miss him.
Ann. She would mourn his passing. His readers
might, but they would mourn Chef-Marlet, not Malcolm Fletcher. Who was Malcolm Fletcher these days? Just a lonely, fat old fool who spent too much time talking to himself. Why had he moved his family to this lucky country? To see them die? Or had he been sent to this hole in hell for a purpose? Why had he brought the gun with him, wrapped in his wife's prized tablecloth? Why, if not to use it on
the extermination of vermin? He was rubbing his chin, his mind far away, when John spoke again.
âI enjoyed the children, Mr Fletcher, enjoyed watching a child's mind open and grow. I had forgotten how much I enjoyed it until . . . until Miss Fogarty's visit.'
Malcolm's attention returned to his visitor. The jug had boiled. He poured water into the small pot.
âSome are born to the profession,
Burton. At one time I believed I had been born to teach. These days â ' He glanced at his cutlery drawer, coughed. âWhat you achieved with Ann in those early years was quite exceptional.'
John nodded. âShe taught herself, once given the key.'
âBut isn't this what we aim to do, to offer young minds the key to question, then set them loose on the path of life in quest of their own answers?' He
poured the tea, placed the cups on the table, offering milk and sugar, biscuits. His visitor refused the biscuits so Malcolm dispatched one. He sat munching, stirring his tea, creating a whirlpool in the cup.
John added sugar, stirred slowly. âI lost my direction, or took a wrong turn too many years ago and left no footprints behind to lead me back. I was a priest who had no real belief in God.'
âI consider myself a part-time atheist, Burton. Even as a child I was not a true believer in the old man with the white beard; still, the longer I live, the more I am inclined to think that there is something greater than man. Some great universal plan for all. A big computer, perhaps, deleting, adding, moving us around at will. Allowing man to progress to a certain stage then pulling the rug
out from beneath his feet, watching him stumble, pick himself up and start all over again. It's just a game, Burton, a computer game and we the small cartoon characters scuttling madly around obsessed by our own importance.'
âUntil we're bowled over like tenpins.'
âYes. And fight as we may against it, that old computer in the sky finally gets us where it wants us, to do the task it has programmed
into its electronics.'
âYou were sent here to find Annie. To turn her life around.'
âPerhaps. Or perhaps not,' he said thoughtfully, his eye on the cutlery drawer. âI admit, Burton, that I saw more for your sister than motherhood. She has an exceptional mind, which is now buried beneath baby mush and napkins. I saw much more than that for her.'
âHis genes didn't marry well to Mum's. They created
a breed of misfits. We want to own the world, but end up malcontents, milking cows.'
Malcolm lifted his glasses and stared at his visitor. A long silence followed, then he asked, âWhat is it between you two?' John
glanced at him, then away. âAs a child, she was obsessed with finding you. I spent much time with her in the months after she began speaking again. She said one day that she had to
find you because you would remember all the things she had forgotten.'
John made no reply. He sipped his tea, his eyes down, then he placed the cup on the saucer, a fine delicate thing, hand-painted flowers interlinked with gold. âSiblings grow apart,' he said. âWe . . . too much time had passed. We have nothing in common these days.'
âOr too much in common, perhaps.' Again Malcolm stared at
his visitor, his old eyes magnified behind thick lenses. Then it was out. âYour father? Perhaps you are both aware that he is alive, Burton?'
Johnny Burton stood abruptly, forgetting his foot. He stumbled, grasped at his chair, his face grown pale.
Malcolm ate a biscuit, his gaze still on the younger man. Now he knew he had not been mistaken. Now he understood Ann's refusal to discuss her father's
surmised demise. Although he had convinced himself that the man in the car had been Jack Burton, he had not been entirely certain until this very moment.
âI sighted him quite recently, Burton,' he added. His visitor's eyes were down, studying his odd shoe. How transparent, Malcolm thought. He looks like a guilty boy caught stealing his neighbour's apples. Both he and Ann knew that their father
was alive! Ah, but where was the bastard hiding out, and why were they covering up for him? What was his game, their game? And where to go from here? A step back may be in order. A tight smile, a sip of tea. âA biscuit, Burton? One less for me.'