Authors: Sarak Kanake
Samson took a deep breath, his lungs filled with air, the static on the edges of his brain calmed and he felt his insides expand, everything started to catch up, move past his extra chromosome and bring him together. With every following breath Samson Fox became more aware. He hadn't changed in the way he wanted, because the Snake had only changed the outside of him. His hands, his eyes, his skin. But while everyone would be able to see he was different, Samson had never really minded his outsides. It was his insides he wanted changed. He wanted to think faster and know more and be something.
The toad heard him, and Samson felt it move through the Rainbow Snake, and the Snake moved too. Slowly, it let go of them both, leaving Samson the same, but with enough rainbow left to decide how he felt inside.
This was his extra chromosome now. It was every colour and as thin as mist.
Samson moved his hands again, and the wind and leaves and light and dusk circled around his arms and tangled him up. They brought their bodies close and their language close, and it didn't matter what they said, because Samson and the mountain were saying it together.
Clancy stood in the doorway of his grandsons' bedroom. The curtains were open, and the room was dark. Nothing looked touched, or lived in. Boxes were still packed in the corner, as though Samson and Jonah were still waiting to live somewhere else. Samson's bed was empty. He hadn't come home.
âMaybe he's sleeping rough,' Clancy said, because he was so used to Queenie being there. His silent listener. Maybe the twins were together, hiding out from the olds, making a campy and having a yarn over the flames. âNah,' he said to Queenie's empty shadow. Samson was different to other boys.
Clancy had no idea what his grandson could manage outside the house. Samson seemed capable enough, but maybe there were hidden parts to Down's. Maybe he'd fit, or go crazy. Clancy still wasn't sure what the bloody hell Down's actually was, beyond how they all looked alike and had trouble speaking. He didn't know what to give his grandson, or show him, and he certainly didn't know where the Down's might take Samson. Did Down's kids panic easily? Samson might not know what to do if he got bitten by a snake, rushed down the creek or lost in the darkness.
Any sign of worry or weakness, and the mountain would have him. Snap, down he'd go. Clancy knew that better than most, and Samson had been distressed for days, even Clancy could see that.
He sat on the edge of the bed and thought of the first night River had missed sleeping in her room down the hall. She was only young, seven or eight maybe. Clancy hadn't known that she was missing until she came in for breakfast and told them she'd slept under the stars.
After that she would often sneak out, especially on school days. Sometimes for two nights in a row. Clancy and Essie never panicked, because River always walked back into the house as if nothing happened, although she was dirty and wild-eyed.
âWhere were you?' Clancy would ask.
River would shrug or look away. âHunting,' she'd often say.
âHunting what?'
Sometimes she wouldn't answer him, but mostly she'd say, âTigers.' Sometimes there was blood on her clothes.
Now, Samson's bed was empty, and Clancy wished he'd followed his daughter or tied her up. He wished he'd found a way to stop her from disappearing. He slumped into the doorframe and tried to breathe. He was tired. The kind of tired that seeps into your bones and tangles through your organs. âWeary', his ma used to call it.
âYou lost another one?' asked George. He was standing in the doorway wearing a dress shirt, rolled up at the sleeves, and his suit pants.
âGreat timing, mate,' said Clancy. He wished, for once, that George would either sit down next to him and tell him everything would come good, or fuck off.
âOh well,' said George. âThat one was bound to go missing.'
Clancy's leg ached, and his head felt sluggish. He knew he should try to find Samson, but he didn't have it in him to start all over again. Something inside him had ripped, torn in half. The log that took his leg had finally taken the rest of him. Like the crocodile, Tick-Tock, chewing on Hook in
Peter Pan
, or Moby Dick biting Ahab. He'd read those stories with David and River, sitting at the end of their beds as if nothing would ever change. A time before he could recognise himself in those stories.
He wished every day that he was still living in that time, but the mountain wouldn't let him go back, and he couldn't take back what the mountain had stolen. It was old, older than any person or building, older even than the country that sent them all to Tassie to wait for their deaths. The mountain had felt the feet of the white men, his ma and his da, the Tiger Men and hunters, the dairy farmer and the scientific bloke, David and River, even Essie. It knew that all it had to do was wait. The mountain got everyone eventually.
How would he explain all this to David, if he could be found? Two boys lost, or maybe three, including Clancy's greedy son. David's words swarmed up around Clancy again like a chattering crowd of stinging wasps.
The Fox broke free on a chilly night, She prayed for heat, and prayed for light, with muddy hands, and wild eyes.
Clancy shook his head and scattered the wasps in his son's words. He wished he could change everything. Maybe even go back to that day in Hobart when he first saw Essie, her red hair like a burning question he had yet to ask.
His leg clenched. He tried to rub the pain out, but his skin stung against the fleece of his trackies. He pulled up the cuff. The angry purple veins were like a Rorschach he couldn't get wrong. There were no more climbs up that mountain left in him.
From where he was sitting on the edge of the bed, Clancy heard the back door open and close. âSamson?' He hoisted himself up. âJonah?' He shuffled to the door in time to meet Samson between the kitchen and the living room. âWhere have you been?' he yelled, almost in his grandson's face.
Samson stared at him, unblinking. âLooking for Jonah.'
âWhat did we say about the bloody fence? You can't just wander off like that.'
âI didn't wander,' said Samson calmly.
Clancy shook his head. No point arguing about it. They were both knackered and raw as road kill. âLet's get you into bed,' he said.
Samson nodded. He looked like a tree about to topple. Clancy followed him to his room, where he got into bed without changing his clothes.
âWill you tell me a story?' he asked.
âI don't know any,' said Clancy, but he thought of Tick-Tock and Ahab again. âI'd need a book to tell a story.'
âFind one,' said Samson.
âI don't have any kids' books anymore,' said Clancy. âJust your brother's
Jungle Book
.'
Samson yawned. âI know that one.'
âWhy don't you tell me a story?' Clancy asked.
âAnything?'
âAnything.' Clancy shoved his grandson's foot to make room. He sat down on the end of the bed, the way he used to with River and David when they were small.
âThe Other Samson didn't choose. Did you know that?'
âOther Samson?'
âFrom the Bible.'
Clancy nodded. âOh, right. Of course.'
âHe was born the way he was,' said Samson. âThere was no choice for him either.'
âStrong, right?' Clancy tried to remember something from Sunday school, but all he could remember was skylarking with George at the back of the hall.
âGod tells him where to go. He goes. And what to do. He does it all. He doesn't know his wife when they get married.'
Clancy wondered if he'd known Essie on the day they tied themselves together for life. He wondered if he knew her even after she was in the ground.
âOn the way to his wedding, the Other Samson sees the dead body of the lion again â'
âAgain?' asked Clancy.
âYeah,' said Samson without missing a beat. âHe kills it earlier in the story. Breaks its mouth wide open.' The boy mimed prying the lion's mouth open. âThis time when he sees it, the bees have made a nest inside it. The lion is full of honey.'
That reminded Clancy of something. Samson kept talking, but his voice sounded far away, carried down a rain-filled river. It reminded Clancy of death. Essie's hair discarded in the bin as though the maggots were already stripping her bare. He tried not to imagine the worms and flies inside the Other Samson's lion, but he couldn't, and the honey turned to worms and the bees turned to flies.
âAre you listening, Granddad? The lion is full of honey, and the Other Samson takes some with him. Then he turns it into a riddle, and the riddle proves that he is intelligent as well as strong.'
Clancy shook his head. âSorry, mate. You've lost me. I reckon it's time to turn in.' He stood up and reached for the light switch.
âGranddad, do you miss your wife?' asked Samson quietly.
Clancy didn't answer. He was like the mountain. Filled with tunnels and darkness. Pockmarked with caves. He didn't know where the sadness ended, or where it began. It seemed to sweep in every direction, an endless sea. Clancy thought of Essie, and River, and his mother. His grandson's question punched a hole.
âYou alright?' asked Samson. His voice was warm and sweet, and reminded Clancy of feeding molasses to his da's old nag on a hot morning.
âGoodnight,' he said.
âGranddad?'
âYes, Samson?'
âJonah won't come back unless he wants to.'
âI know,' said Clancy. He flicked the switch.
Outside, the air and sky were dark, and the stars were glinting like a necklace Samson's mum sometimes wore to parties. She was gone. So were his dad and Jonah, even Mattie. He remembered driving slowly up the mountain with his dad and Jonah. He looked over the side of his bed and down into the gorge that surrounded the mountain. His head swirled inside, and he pulled himself back from the edge. His brother might be down there. He might have fallen off the side.
Samson made the sign for
fall
in the darkness, and the sign for
fall
was one flat hand above like the sky and one flat hand way below like the ground. The hand on top came towards the ground, but only halfway because it should never hit the ground. Only, Samson couldn't see his hands, and his sky hand went too far and slapped into his ground, so he tucked his hands under his bum to keep them quiet.
He heard the kookaburras start laughing and wondered if it was dawn. The air outside was still black and thick, but the stars were dim and reminded him of bitumen roads back home in Queensland. Then another kookaburra started, and another, and pretty soon everything was filled up with laughing, and Samson untucked his hands and put them over his ears. He cried, because even though he missed Jonah, he didn't miss being laughed at.
Clancy washed his face and undressed. His voice was hoarse, and he was tired and wanted to sleep. He turned on the wireless.
ââ this year marks a historical and sad time in Australia's history â'
âCourse it does,' said Clancy. âWhen doesn't it?'
His pyjamas were at the end of his bed. They wouldn't be warm enough.
The radio crackled. ââ and looks as if the announcement will be made that the â'
Clancy pulled a jumper from the top shelf of his wardrobe. Another toppled with it. He left it on the ground.
ââ officially extinct.'
Clancy stopped.
ââ this year has marked half a century without a single substantiated sighting of the animal â'
The radio crackled again. Clancy ran his finger over the tuning wheel. The woman's voice tipped in and out of static. âOn 7 September 1936, the last Tasmanian tiger died at the Hobart Zoo, with no confirmed reports of wild tigers in many years â'
âCome on, come on,' said Clancy.
He found the right spot, and the static melted back into nothing. ââ the day-shift keeper didn't lock the thylacine in its hut, and it died of exposure in the night.'
Clancy sat on his bed.
He'd seen this âlast tiger', and he had only been a boy at the time. He hadn't known how Benjamin died until now. In fact, he'd tried not to think about Benjamin. Now he imagined the frightened tiger balled up in the dark corner of the pen, cowering from the icy wind that blew in from the mountains. The tiger hadn't been frightened the day they met, although maybe Clancy had got that wrong too.
He was at the Hobart Zoo with his Aunty Sheila. It was a hot day, and she bought them each a flavoured ice. She chose red, and Clancy's was green. âLet's go,' he said impatiently, before Sheila had finished hers. âI want to see the tiger.'
âHold your horses.' Sheila fingered the last of the ice from her cup and slipped it between her lips. âNever be wasteful,' she said, and threw their cups over the side of the fence to the road. âReady?' The inside of her mouth was brownish purple.
The zoo cages were all made from chicken wire, pulled over small wooden frames and standing on cold slabs of cement. Clancy needed to piss out the water from his green ice, but he didn't want to wait to see the tiger, so he didn't tell Aunty Sheila.
The first cage had two angry-looking Tasmanian devils. Everyone crowded around, pointing at the black furry bundles. âWhat beauties,' said Sheila. They growled again, and the pressure expanded in Clancy's bladder.
Each cage was occupied by an exhausted-looking animal. Kangaroos and wallabies and a colony of skinny possums.
Then, there he was. Benjamin.
He was on his side, his back legs pointing towards them and his front legs curled inward like those of a dog. Feathers were piled in the corner of his cage, and Clancy could see the orange twig of a chicken leg sticking out from the middle of the mess. The tiger's large face twisted towards them.
âHe looks like a dog,' said Aunty Sheila, but Clancy thought there was something pretty un-doglike about the way Benjamin kept his mouth clamped shut, even in the heat. âReckon we can get him to stand on his back legs?' Sheila asked, but Clancy ignored her. Benjamin seemed to look right at him.