âYou were shaking like a bloody leaf,' says Allan. âShrieking like a girl.
There's a snake in the cockpit; there's a snake in the cockpit!
'
All the faces around the table, Tony and the four Crabtrees, turn expectantly toward Julie, for whose benefit these stories are being told.
âOh, wow,' she says. âA
snake
?'
Tony looks gratified. âI was flying in some green tree pythons for Baiyer River â'
âThat's a wildlife sanctuary,' says Ryan Crabtree, startling Julie with the first words he's spoken all evening. He is Allan and Barbara Crabtree's son, a year older than Julie, back from boarding school for Christmas. He shoots her a glance from under his long, slightly greasy hair. Julie had dismissed him earlier as sullen and miserable, but perhaps he is just shy. She supposes it isn't his fault that his dark, heavy eyebrows give him a perpetual scowl.
Barbara says, âTony, maybe you could take Julie out to Baiyer River while she's here.'
Nadine, the Crabtrees' thirteen-year-old daughter, chimes in quickly. â
I
want to go to Baiyer River. I've
always
wanted to go to Baiyer River. I want to see the baby deer â'
âShut up, Nads,' mutters Ryan.
âNadine,' says Barbara, âUncle Tony's trying to tell a story.' She pushes back her chair and lights up a cigarette; she had waved away a bowl of fruit and ice cream when the housekeeper brought around dessert. She lowers her eyelids, heavy with eye shadow. Barbara has a dark bob, stiff as Cleopatra's wig. She looks bored, as if she's heard all these stories a hundred times, but she commands, âGo on, Mac.'
âWell,' says Tony. âOne of the buggers got loose in the cabin. I managed to pin it down with a box before we landed, but its tail was thrashing around like a bloody whip. But Curry was screaming and yelling blue murder, how he didn't give a fâ didn't give a fig about any effing snake â Pardon my French, kids. Sorry, Barb
. . . You've got a responsibility to the flaming aircraft, get back in there and shut her down properly!
'
âI made him do it, too,' says Allan with satisfaction. âSnake or no bloody snake.'
âDamn thing tangled itself up behind the instrument panel. Took us hours to pull the bugger out.'
Allan takes a swig from his stubby of South Pacific lager. âRemember the day Peter Manser clipped a tree, going from Goroka to Lae? He landed at Lae and the old balus was knocked about a bit, leaves hanging out of the flaps and what-have-you. Someone said, what happened? Peter says, “Oh, I hit a bird.” They said, “It must have been a bloody big bird.” “Yes
. . .
” says Peter.'
â
It was sitting in a tree!
' chorus Ryan and Nadine.
Julie laughs. Barbara blows out a stream of smoke and smiles a faint, tight smile.
âPeter used to scare the â' Tony coughs, glancing at Julie and Nadine, ââ scare the suitcase out of his passengers. He'd pretend to read a novel while he was flying along, turn the pages, cool as a cucumber. Scared 'em witless! All play-acting, of course.'
âUsed to take out his false teeth and leave them lying around,' muses Allan. âI found them, once, sitting on top of a bar in Madang.'
âYou can laugh,' says Barbara sharply. âBut it's that kind of stupid behaviour that gets people killed.'
âWhat, leaving your teeth out?' growls Allan.
âShowing off,' says Barbara coldly.
âJust a bit of fun, Barb,' says Tony. âNo harm in it.'
Barbara flicks her cigarette over a yellow glass ashtray. âThe younger pilots see this kind of adolescent nonsense from men old enough to know better, and they think they have to compete, to show how macho they are. Look at Andy Spargo today, racing the weather. Look at Kevin Griffen.'
Tony and Allan fall silent. The only sound is the faint clatter of dishes from the kitchen, where the housekeeper has started washing up.
Nadine asks in a small voice, âWhat did happen to Kevin Griffen?'
âHe was killed,' says Allan shortly.
âNineteenth of July,' murmurs Tony.
âI knew Kevin Griffen,' says Nadine, in the same thin, small voice. âHe was that tall guy, wasn't he? With the big mouth, like Mick Jagger?'
Ryan stirs. âWe all know who he was, Nads.'
âBut what
happened
?'
There is a painful silence. At last Tony says, âHe was flying into Telefomin. He just disappeared. You know how rough the country is up there â never found any trace of him. Weather was shocking. He should have turned back, but he must have decided to go for it.'
âThe clouds up here have rocks inside,' says Tony to the tabletop. âThat's what they say.'
Ryan meets Julie's eyes. âThey call them chocolate-box clouds, up here,' he says. âYou never know which ones have got hard centres.'
Julie looks away.
âEx-MOA,' growls Allan. âAlways knew it was a mistake to hire him.'
âMission of the Air,' murmurs Tony, seeing Julie's puzzled face.
âThose MOA bastards think they can get away with anything! Always flying into gaps that aren't there, because God Almighty's watching over them! Stupid pricks.'
âThey do a lot of good work,' says Barbara. âYou've got some missionaries living next door, Julie. Graeme and Robyn Johansson. Remind me to give you a bundle of clothes to pass on to them, before you go.'
Ryan says, âWhich plane was it?'
âHotel Alpha Kilo,' says Tony. âOne of the Barons.'
âThe Barons can be twitchy little buggers,' says Julie.
Everyone looks at her, startled, and there is a gust of laughter.
âYou want to keep an eye on this one, Mac,' says Allan. âJeez, she's quick! She'll be after your job before you know it.'
Julie can feel Ryan staring at her from under his heavy dark brows, but when she looks back at him, he drops his eyes.
The housekeeper, an elderly local woman with hair as grey as steel wool, emerges from the kitchen and pads around the table, collecting the empty ice cream bowls. The soles of her bare feet look as tough and pliable as rubber thongs. Julie gives her an embarrassed smile and hands up her bowl. The woman flashes a brief smile back. No one else around the table speaks to her or pays her any attention; she might be invisible. Julie has never been waited on by a servant before; she doesn't know the rules. Does the housekeeper live here? Does she have her own little house somewhere? Or does she live in one of those grass huts?
The others are discussing someone who has moved back to Australia.
Barbara says, âYou can't blame him; he's got no future here.' She gives a bitter laugh. âLet's face it, none of us do.'
Julie leans forward. âWhat do you mean?'
âShe's talking about Independence coming next year,' says Ryan, slouching in his chair. âYou must have heard about it, it's been all over the papers for months.'
âNew flag, new money,' says Tony. âThat's all it is.'
âMore than that,' says Allan. âGoodbye Aussie. They'll be running their own show.'
âThey're running it now,' says Tony. âThey started self-government last year.'
âStill had the Europeans to hold their hands, though.'
âEuropeans?' says Julie. âIsn't it mostly Australians?'
Tony flaps a hand. âAll the expats get called Europeans. Doesn't mean they're from Europe. Though we have got Germans, Canadians, Dutch, all sorts
. . .
'
âIt means white people,' Nadine explains, in a loud clear voice. A ripple of embarrassment runs around the table.
Barbara frowns. âNadine â'
âWhat?
What?
It
does
!'
Ryan says, âSo are we going to become PNG citizens?'
âMay as well,' says Allan, and âCertainly not!' says Barbara emphatically. They glare at each other.
âHaven't even set foot in Oz for fifteen years,' growls Allan. âWhat's the point of hanging onto bloody citizenship? Our whole life's here. May as well sign up for it properly.'
âYou
haven't been down south for fifteen years,' says Barbara. âI have. And what about the kids? They'll be at uni soon, getting jobs. Their future's in Australia, not here. If the New Guineans don't want us, we should just get out and leave them to it. See how they manage without us.'
Allan scowls. âYou've got to face facts, Barb. This place is our bread and butter. When Independence comes, they want us to make a choice, that's fair enough.'
Barbara ashes her cigarette. âAny fool can see they're not ready to govern themselves. There hasn't been time to train the nationals up properly. Maybe in another twenty years
. . .
Why the rush, all of a sudden?'
âBloody Gough bloody Whitlam,' says Allan. âDon't get me started.'
Julie sits bolt upright. Her mother voted for Whitlam. They had a party at their house the night Labor won the election, beating the Liberals for the first time in twenty-three years. She says, âIndependence is a good thing, though. Isn't it? Nations should be run by their own people. You can't have empires any more.'
âAustralia's hardly got an empire,' says Tony with a smile. âIt's just one country to look after!'
âA good parent takes care of the children until they're capable of looking after themselves,' says Barbara. âDon't you think? That's just common sense.'
âI haven't seen my father since I was three, and my mother's sent me to New Guinea by myself,' says Julie. âMaybe I'm not the best person to ask.'
Ryan gives a snort of suppressed laughter. It seems to explode into the uncomfortable silence which follows.
âSorry, Tony,' says Julie. âI didn't mean â I was just making a point.'
Tony gives an awkward smile and shrugs one shoulder. âGuess I earned that one.'
âServes us right for talking politics,' says Barbara abruptly. âCheese?'
She pushes the platter down the long table. Julie keeps her head lowered as she busies herself cutting a wedge of cheddar.
Tony clears his throat. âI've got another story for you,' he says. âOnce upon a time, so they say, Curry here went off to visit the Controller of Civil Aviation. He didn't have an appointment, so they wouldn't let him in. Well, he marches up and down the office, effing and blinding â you know the way he does â and he insists that he has to see the Controller urgently, immediately! Secretaries start to cry, they threaten to call the police, but he won't go away; he won't give up. At last they let him in. And Curry throws a map down on the Controller's desk and stabs his finger down on it, and he yells,
this mountain is in the wrong bloody place! What are you clowns going to do about it?
'
Julie feels herself beginning to smile. âWhat did the Controller do?'
Tony smiles back, enjoying himself. âThe poor bastard didn't even think about changing the map. Oh, no. He picked up the phone and ordered some bulldozers.
Come on, boys, we've got to shift that mountain!
'
Julie laughs, as Ryan groans and Nadine says, âI've heard that story a million times.'
âHaven't we all?' Barbara scrapes back her chair and gestures to the lounge area at the other end of the long room. âShall we?'
The Crabtrees' house is large and white and built of brick, with an expansive, parquet-floored living and dining room opening out onto a big verandah and the valley beyond. It's a house built for parties. âThe most expensive house in Hagen,' Allan had told Julie with gruff pride before dinner. âEvery bloody brick flown in. Cost a fortune.'
Tony and Allan settle themselves in deep armchairs with tumblers of whisky and begin to talk shop â flight routes and business prospects, which plane is due for a service, which pilot has leave coming up. Barbara drops onto the couch, her eyes hooded as she lights up a fresh cigarette and leafs through a magazine. Julie hesitates for a second, not sure if she wants to sit next to Barbara, then sits down on the rug. Nadine plumps down beside her. Ryan slouches over to squat next to the stereo.
Without looking up, Barbara says, âPut on something decent, for God's sake, not that horrible wailing you insist on subjecting us to.'
Ryan scowls, but he says nothing as he flicks through the LPs. Perhaps he hasn't heard.
âHas your housekeeper worked for you for a long time?' Julie asks Nadine.
âYou mean Koki? Oh, yeah, she's been with us forever. She came when Ryan was a baby. She looked after both of us. She's kind of like another mother.' Nadine giggles. âShe's probably taken care of us more than Mum has.'
âI hardly think that's true,' says Barbara sharply.
Nadine pulls a face at Julie. âIt is, though,' she whispers cheerfully.
âWhat does she do when you and Ryan are at boarding school?'
âWho, Mum? I dunno!'
âI meant Koki
. . .
'
âOh, she cleans and cooks and everything,' says Nadine vaguely. âThat's what
meris
do. Everyone here has a
meri
or a
haus boi . . .
And she looks after the animals, of course. There's Roxy the dog, and the birds, and George my cuscus
. . .
He's sort of like a possum. He got his foot caught in a trap but I rescued him. Do you want to see him?'
âOkay,' says Julie, but she doesn't get up. She looks around the living room. âDon't you have a TV either?'
Nadine laughs. âThere is no TV up here.'
âNo television at all?' Julie stares at her.
âWe make our own fun,' says Barbara briskly. âCanasta nights, parties, the Drama Club. We have a terrific time, don't we, Ryan?'
âYeah,' says Ryan. He lowers the needle onto a record and suddenly a Neil Diamond song blares into the room.