Kathleen stands up, dusting her knees; as she helps Rose to her feet, she asks after the reverend. Janet waves her hand as if she is dismissing the question and says that Thomas is always fine. Then she adds that he is relentless like a machine. Neither Kathleen nor Rose know what she might mean by this and their faces betray their confusion.
Janet smiles to herself.
Rose steals a look at Kathleen as Janet tries to explain. âIt's as if he turns it on at the start of the day and then turns it off at the end of the day. Like a machine.'
âOh, I understand. Turns what on?' Rose asks.
âHis faith.'
âAh,' Kathleen and Rose say at the same time. Janet turns away from the two women for a moment to look down the street. They wander away from the foxgloves to the apricot tree. Janet mentions that she saw Johnny riding out of the street this morning, looking as if he was going on a long trip.
âYes. I was just about to talk to Kathleen about it,' says Rose. âHe has gone on behalf of Alfred to find his wagons and see if they need any help.'
Janet looks at her. âAlfred is still sick?'
âYes. I think he's worried that Elizabeth is not back by now. Not that he says anything. And you know how men get. Like a machine.' The other two laugh.
If ever there was a time for Rose to openly talk about her marriage, this would be that time. But she is not going to. She doesn't even consider it, although she has spoken of it in her head plenty of times.
At first, Alfred never worried about anything. He was so happy and content and always had fresh ideas in his head. Then about ten years ago he started to brood and mope around the house. He wouldn't say what was wrong and he hasn't offered any explanation since. Some men are good at hiding what they are thinking about. Some, like Alfred, aren't.
And marriages don't need physical distance to separate. The house and the necessities that come with it may be shared but interests can go in opposite directions. More often than not these separations aren't sudden; they grow and grow over the years as more things fall into the tiny cracks of a marriage and open them further.
Rose looks over at the rose bush she and Alfred planted when they first moved here. Its flowers are still as beautiful as when it first
bloomed but it is now untended and its thorns turn inwards and scratch its own strangled branches. She comments, as if to herself, âI have been meaning to prune that rose for two years. Now I will have to wait till August.'
The wind has turned around; it is now coming in from the north and carries with it strange scents. Janet looks at the line of currawalli trees in the distance.
Rose stands up straight and stretches her back. She invites both women to dine with her tonight. Alfred is going down to the pub, Johnny has gone into the bush. Janet will be alone because Thomas is attending a dinner at the bishop's house. On the strength of their new communion and because they accept that Rose is more at home in a landscape like this than either of them are and because they have their own dread for the night's isolation, both the younger women accept the invitation. All three are mildly surprised by what they just agreed to.
âAre you not invited to the bishop's house?' Rose asks.
âOf course. I am always invited. But I choose not to go.' Janet shakes her head slightly as she speaks. âDo you know the bishop? No, of course not. How could you? He is a strange little man. Quite horrible.'
She turns again to watch a willy-willy dance down the street. This bishop, whom Thomas has to rely on for so much, makes depraved suggestions to her without using any words, his leering eyes, his overly wet mouth, his lifted eyebrows proposing retreats into the shadows. Holding a spoon to her mouth or wiping her lips with a napkin seems to give him some kind of perverted pleasure that he barely conceals.
She turns back to the others and they see that her cheeks have reddened. She shakes herself and tries to smile. Kathleen and Rose don't
smile back.
âThe bishop has made inappropriate suggestions to me,' she finally says.
âDoes your brother know about this?' Rose asks.
Janet begins pulling at the foxglove she has picked. The petals float down to the ground. âOh yes. He knows very well. I keep nothing from him. I imagine that my non-attendances at those dinner parties will eventually work the bishop into a frustrated fury. And then he will send Thomas somewhere far away as punishment. The bishop will blame me for the way he feels.'
Kathleen thinks, how much further could far away be?
Rose thinks of her vision, and of the grass next to the church.
Looking out the window of number twelve, Nancy sees Rose chatting to Kathleen and the reverend's sister and decides to join them. She walks across the street to Rose's front fence, leans over and smiles at the three women. Each is happy to see her, in varying degrees.
For Kathleen it is only a little, for although Nancy brings with her a sense of Britain that Kathleen has not otherwise been able to find this far away from London, she talks too much and too loudly about things that aren't really important.
Janet is a little more pleased to see her, because Nancy evokes a kind of earthy sensuality that isn't common with the other women of the street. Except Maria. But if Janet is ever going to confess her adventures to anyone it will probably be Nancy, for she feels that Nancy will understand without needing an explanation whereas Maria will need
one. And she sometimes thinks that Nancy already knows, which is a sort of comfort.
Rose is the happiest at Nancy's presence, because the Scottish woman knows how to allow life to throw itself at her and never loses her resolve in the face of it. It is good to have someone like that close by.
âWill you come over for dinner tonight?' Rose asks her.
Nancy doesn't have to consider for long. Eric is going down to Station Pier tonight to have dinner with an old friend of his whose ship is in port for only one day. He will spend the night on board. She accepts.
âGood. These two are coming also.'
Nancy promises to bring over a bottle of Eric's apple brandy, as long as the other women agree to drink too much of it. After all, this will be their first dinner together. She claps the top rail of the fence with both hands and heads home with a sense of purpose. The things that she was going to do tonight will need to be done now instead.
Janet takes her leave soon after. Kathleen walks around the garden with Rose for a while longer, without speaking. Both women are happy in the silence. When Kathleen turns out the front gate, Rose goes inside.
That evening, after Thomas has ridden off down the street to have dinner with the bishop and his minions, armed with a plausible excuse for his sister's absence, Janet closes the front door of the manse behind her and walks down to number nine. Kathleen is already sitting at the table, laughing at something Rose has said. By the time Nancy arrives with the brandy, Janet is laughing too. And that is the way most of the night goes.
There is a freedom in the atmosphere, not because of the liberal
drinking of the apple brandy but because there is no man there to pour it. Standing in the hallway beside the front door at the end of the night, they all agree men are to be banned from the following dinners. As they say goodnight, they all sense a change in the air. A man might dismiss it as a sudden sea breeze sprung up, but to these women it is something else. A twisting, of sorts. Alfred returns through the front gate but goes straight out to the stable and listens to the women's receding footsteps.
T
he next morning, Alfred walks slowly down Currawalli Street and along the little road to the store opposite the railway station and buys a copy of the daily newspaper. He is planning to scour it in case there is any news of his wagons but he doesn't get past the front page before forgetting about them. Rather than returning straight home, he walks across the road, greets the stationmaster, sits down in the station waiting room and reads through the whole paper.
He reads every article concerning the front-page story.
War Ahead. Conflict Coming, says Prime Minister
 . . .Â
Europe has gone quiet as if preparing herself
 . . . He is alarmed by what he reads. Previous news of the potential crisis in Europe has always stressed just that: its potential. This is the first time he has seen it presented as an inevitable event. And not just as a small âcolonial' type war but something bigger; something that might drag in the whole world. Even though Alfred is a mapmaker, the concept of the whole world is still unimaginable to him.
And no politician in Europe seems to be talking anymore about a
way to stop it from happening; they are now asking how its effects can be minimised. That is unnerving because it means an acceptance has already been reached that many people are going to die. Things like war seem such an easy thing for certain people to accept. Alfred turns the pages and reads more.
Relationships between many countries in Europe are in tatters, the damage is irreparable and so a war beyond anything ever seen is going to occur. England is beating its chest loudly, confident that young men from all over the Empire will answer her call to arms. And that means Australia. That means Melbourne. That means Currawalli Street.
Alfred folds the paper closed and puts it down on the seat next to him. He is old enough not to go but of course he will. Men of his experience in making maps will be needed. Rose won't try to stop him.
He leaves the paper on the seat at the railway station and walks home. His feet are suddenly heavy. He doesn't know why. He wishes his wagons were home. Turning into Currawalli Street he can see the church at the opposite end. In front of the church is a manicured garden and beside it is a square of lawn. In the centre of the lawn is Rose, standing still and looking down the street towards him. He looks at her and, for a moment, remembers how far they have come together. She has said he's become distant in recent years but that is the exact word he would use to describe her. He laughs to himself then walks along the street towards her. He calls out a greeting but still she doesn't respond. It is only when he is a few steps away that she seems to emerge from her oblivious state and see him. She smiles.
He smiles back and says, âYou look good standing there. Very pretty. Standing still like a statue.' He knows how to lift Rose out of these black
holes she falls into.
âThere will be a statue here. It will be put here soon.'
âAnd who will it be of? The mayor? The bishop? The prime minister? Me?' He stops laughing when he sees the effect his words have on her. She has stopped smiling. âWhat's the matter?'
âI hope it's not of you.'
âWhy not?'
âI just don't know. That's the thing, Fred. I just don't know.'
âLet's go home and have a cup of tea. I should have made you one before I went out. I don't do that for you these days. I don't know why. I'm sorry. I only wanted to get the paper. I forgot to bring it home, after all that.'
âA cup of tea would be good. Let's go home. I wish Elizabeth was back,' says Rose, already tired.
âSo do I. So do I.'
Eric Dunold walks jauntily home from the railway station. He always feels good after sleeping onboard a ship. The rhythm of a ship tied to a wharf sends him into different type of sleep, different from on land and different from at sea. It has been good to see Jacob. Last time they ran into each other, they were both rushing to leave Hong Kong harbour and neither could spare any time for real conversation. So last night they talked into the small hours and then started again when they awoke. The train left from a platform opposite the wharf and the smoke from the steam engine mixed with the smoke from Jacob's ship as it manoeuvred away from the wharf to begin its journey back to Portsmouth. Eric hadn't bothered
waving from the window at first; he assumed that Jacob would be concentrating on the logistics of leaving the harbour and wouldn't be looking at a train steaming off into the distance. But then he saw a capped figure emerge from the door on the side of the bridge and raise his hand, and he leaned out the carriage window and did the same thing in return.
And as he walks into Currawalli Street, he sees Alfred and Rose Covey standing together in front of the church. As they begin to walk away from the church towards him, he raises his arm again in a half-wave. Alfred waves back.
Eric doesn't know Alfred that well yet; shore life is not like being on a ship where friendships are forged very quickly. On land it is different; everything gets soaked up by the earth or blown away by the bushfire wind and friendships are slow to grow. But Eric has seen Alfred's maps and they are clearly made by a man who knows the mechanics of travel, even though land maps to Eric have always seemed crowded, overblown, and overly detailed. However, one of the reliable ways to judge a man, besides whether he can pack a bag and sit still on a journey, is whether he knows the workings of a map.
Nancy opens the door when she hears his footsteps on the front porch. She embraces him long and hard as if he has returned from sea. He comments aloud on this and she pulls back and looks at him.
âYou silly man. It is because you are
not
coming home from sea that I hug you so. It makes sense, doesn't it?'
âYes, it does. Perfect sense. What shall we do today, my sweet? Anything you desire.'
Nancy thinks for a moment. âWell. I do believe I would like to spend the rest of the morning lying in your arms in our bed, and then I would
like to go into the city and have lunch at the Savoy Hotel.'
âI can do all of that.'
That is how they spend the morning. Eric thinks that there are two kinds of light that a woman's body looks best in: candlelight and morning light. Through the open window, they can smell distant smoke. A bushfire somewhere miles away.
Johnny Oatley watches his horse sniff the air. He knows what it means. He looks for a gap in the trees by the side of the road, and when he finds one he steers the horse off, lets her wander away through the bracken. Then he looks ahead to the horizon and sees a line of smoke. Bushfire.
It is his second day on this track and he is well into the rhythm of travel. His mind works better in a setting like this. He watches the smoke for five minutes to see how quickly it is being lifted away from the flames and whether there is any irregular movement. He decides to continue, knowing that he will have to be alert from now on. Many times he has seen a bushfire at this distance; the first time was when he and his father sat on the big hill above their home and watched a line of fire eat its way through the scrub; he stood with local Aboriginals and watched another, knowing he wouldn't have to retreat until they did. He and bushfires aren't strangers. The fire is about twenty miles away but the tiniest change in the wind direction or speed can amplify a fire's passage and alter its path in seconds. Fire has a mind of its own: that's what his father told him on that hilltop. People of that generation knew it was best to stay away from these fires. They could never be tethered or fenced in or cut down or controlled.
He is glad now that Kathleen hasn't accompanied him. He doesn't want her to see him frightened. Of all the things in the bush, it is bushfire that scares him the most. You can sense what a wild horse or an angry snake will do. You can estimate how much water is around when you're going to need a drink under a relentless sun. You can see where the high spots are when a flood is coming. But the only thing you can know for certain about a bushfire is that it will burn. You can't tell where, or for how long, or at what speed. But you can be sure that it will be absolute and without mercy.
Suddenly he sees a carriage travelling quickly along the track towards him. It is pulled by two horses and another two riders are behind it. Johnny doesn't like this. Even from a distance, he can see that they are fleeing something. He decides to go no further and wait to hear their story.
The retreating group is upon him in a few minutes. He lifts his hat to them. The carriage, loaded with furniture, is being driven by a woman in her forties with a child on either side. The pair on horseback, an older man in his fifties and a youth, ride over to the gap in the trees at the side of the road to look back at the smoke before turning their attention to Johnny.
âThe fire's coming,' the older man says. He waves the carriage and the boy on and they continue up the track.
âIt doesn't look too fast.'
âWe have been travelling for two days now. This is the furthest it has been behind us. It burned through our land and has been chasing us ever since.'
âMaybe it will burn itself out soon,' says Johnny.
âYou would think so. There's a railway line up the track, is there
not?'
âIt's at least a day away, probably two with a carriage.'
âI know. It can't be helped. We can't go in any other direction. We're going to leave the carriage behind and catch a train to the city. I'm not confident that this fire
will
burn itself out.'
The man looks exhausted and frightened. He knows and Johnny knows that there is nothing that any human can do to help. A bushfire answers to no one's logic. It burns down cathedrals and orphanages as readily as brothels and sly grog shanties.
It is not the first time that Johnny has heard of a bushfire chasing a person or a group of people. It is a tale of horror that he remembers being told around the kitchen table at the farm. Then, when Johnny was a boy, his father took him in the middle of the night to a lonely crossroads in the deep blue-gum forest. They travelled for two hours to get there and stopped in the undergrowth back from the road. Johnny smelled smoke. It was summer. The horses were uneasy. Suddenly there was the sound of hooves on the road coming quickly towards them. A rider tucked into his mount galloped past. Johnny glimpsed the look of terror on the rider and horse. The sweat from the horse glistened in the moonlight. Johnny and his father waited until the sound of the hooves had disappeared, then they wheeled about and galloped in a diagonal direction back towards home. Johnny saw out of the corner of his eye the red glow that they were riding across the face of.
They had ridden out of the path of the fire and slowed down. Still they did no talking until they had unhitched the gate to the house paddock.
Johnny asked his father, âSo who was that? He looked scared.'
âThat man was chosen by the fire. It is the worst thing that can happen to a human being. He has been riding for over a week. The fire is catching him. It will consume him.'
âCould we not have helped him?'
âNo. There is nothing anybody can do. The fire has selected him and nothing is able to stand in its way. We could do nothing.'
âWhy did the fire pick him?' asked Johnny.
âNo one knows why. Every man hopes it is never him. That man we saw tonight is a dead man.'
âThat's why we went to see him?'
Johnny's father looked down at his boots before he spoke. It was something Johnny had never seen him do before. When he lifted his head, he looked fully into Johnny's eyes. âWe went because it is something, I hope, you will never forget all your life. You will remember the look on his face, the sound of the hooves, the smell of the smoke, the strange light. If you do forget, then I'm afraid your life is not worth living. Not that you will know.'
For a few years, Johnny didn't understand what his father meant by this. But when he did understand, it made the sort of sense that he had come to expect from a man who had seen the powerful drama of midnight thunderstorms brewing, the beauty of soft running rivers, the sudden excitement of hundreds of kangaroos hopping over the crest of a hill, the views of miles and miles of gum trees, as an unremarkable matter of course.
His father added, âOf course, the horse will throw him soon. Its own survival instincts will take over from any control that man may have over it. The fire won't come after it.'
âWill it be alright?'
âYes, we'll go and find it in a few days. It will be somewhere close, probably down in the gully near where we were.'
âHow did you know that he would be riding along that road? How did you know that the fire would be chasing him?' Johnny persisted.
âI just knew. I don't know how. You live in this land long enough, strange things start to come into your head. You'll find that out,' his father said quietly.