Twenty-seven
This time we made a proper weekend of it, perhaps the last one for the year when it would be warm enough to swim in the sea.
Kat jumped on the bunk beds. Peter pretended he was six again and joined her.
I half wished I'd signed up for a diving courseâthat way I would have had the whole weekend to chat to the instructorsâbut when I saw how much fun the kids were having, I was glad I'd brought them.
Peter's cheeks were red with jumping. I hadn't told him why I wanted to go to Merimbula, simply saying that a cheque had been more generous than we'd expected, their soccer teams both had byes, and we all deserved a weekend away. Peter was so used to living from cheque to cheque that he accepted my lie without a murmur. I hoped I'd be able to get away on my own without arousing his suspicion.
As for Ivan, he was still, after twenty years in Australia, so unaccustomed to the Pacific Ocean, so wary of it even in its mildest presentations, that he couldn't comprehend how any sane person would want to swim there, let alone explore its depths. When I put forward the idea of enrolling in a dive course he reacted with horror, sure that I would drown. When I pointed out that there'd be instructors whose job it was to prevent this happening, and that one or more of them might have known Laila, my argument hardly made a dent. It wasn't hard to settle for a compromise. There was the money to consider too. The price of a weekend course was beyond our means, which made me wonder how Laila had been able to afford it.
I smiled at my monkey of a daughter jumping from the top bunk to the floor. Laila had been impatient, I guessed, unwilling to wait, determined to get what she wanted. Practically all of my impressions of her had been filtered through the emotions and attitudes of men who'd been blinded by their own attraction, seeing only a reflection of this, rather than the person underneath. Jeremy Pascal was an exception. IÂ was suddenly sure Cameron Fletcher had been an exception too.
I would never take my first breath, in memory of Laila, underwater. I would never learn to scuba dive. Since I hadn't grasped the opportunity this weekend offered, I would never grasp it. Small matter. IÂ would never learn to ski either, or dance on my toes. I smiled again, this time privately, turning away from the antics of my children, released after three hours cooped up in a car. I asked myself if the picture of me, their mother, in a wetsuit with oxygen strapped to her back, was as ludicrous as a tutu, say, or a pair of skis. I loved swimming. I
could
have learnt to dive.
Sadness overtook me unexpectedly, for a young woman whose strength and abilities, whose youth and beauty, had been powerless to save her.
âMaybe it's too cold for sharks,' Ivan was saying glumly.
âMum,
you're
coming in, aren't you?' Katya cried.
âIn a little while. There's something I have to do first.'
Careful not to catch Peter's eye, I left them running down a sandy path to the water, taking a moment to stand and admire the lovely curved lines of the bay, national park on one side, houses stopping short of the headland on the other.
I'd noticed the dive lodge as we'd driven in. It was part of a converted house.
The young woman who answered my knock smiled a greeting as she led me down a corridor to a room furnished with two tables pushed together, surrounded by half a dozen chairs. The walls were lined with photographs. A white board stood in one corner, and a TV and DVD player in another.
On the phone, I'd spoken briefly of my interest in Laila, but had not gone into details. The young woman, who'd introduced herself as Angie, had sounded willing to help, but unsure how she might do this.
âI checked back through our records after you called,' she said after inviting me to take a seat. âLaila enrolled for a weekend course in October last year.' Angie's voice was mild and uninflected. It was impossible to tell what she felt about Laila, or her death.
We spoke in generalities for a few minutes, about the courses, the shipwreck dives which were very popular, then moved on to the instructors.
âBen was a lovely guy,' Angie said, colouring deeply and not looking at me. âA good teacher. We miss him.'
I waited, then when Angie didn't volunteer anything more, I asked gently if she knew whether Laila and Ben might have met before that weekend.
Angie bit her lip, then raised her head with what seemed an unusual effort. Her grey-green eyes held an expression that was hard to read.
âAfter you rang, I tried to think back. It could be important, couldn't it? A policeman came down here and took statements from all of us, but he didn't ask me that.'
âIt is important,' I said. âPlease try and remember.'
âWe all ate dinner together on the Saturday night,' Angie said. âBen wasâI guess you could call it
paying attention
to Laila over dinner. Later on, when I went into the kitchen, they were stacking the dishwasher and talking.'
Angie blushed again. I guessed she was the kind of person who often blushed when she was nervous. Laila and Ben's conversation had been about shipwrecks. Laila had been telling Ben how she'd become interested in diving. Ben had been on wreck dives all over the world.
âThere was nothing she could tell him that he didn't already know.'
They hadn't been acting as though they were friends from Canberra, and Laila hadn't spoken about any wreck dives in particular, or not in Angie's hearing. She sounded wistful as she recalled the domestic scene, the obvious pleasure the two had taken in each other's company.
âBen told her about the Yongala. It went down in a cyclone off Townsville, and lay undiscovered for over fifty years. It's right inside the Barrier Reef Marine Park, you know. It was Ben's favourite dive.'
I nodded, waiting, guessing that Angie was working her way up to telling me something that puzzled, or perhaps annoyed her.
âI do remember one thing about that weekend. A friend of Ben's dropped in to see him. I didn't think anything of it at the time.'
Angie hadn't been introduced to Ben's friend, and didn't know his name. People had been coming and going all weekend and the house had been full. A group, including Laila, had sat around the lounge on Saturday evening. They'd talked about going to Queensland to dive the Yongala, what a cool thing it would be to do.
âBen was telling them about it, I mean about what happened. The bodies and the cargo were never found, or just one body, actuallyâa racehorse. It was washed to shore.' Laila had seemed keen to go.
âBut she couldn't have done it. The sea floor's thirty metres. It would have been too hard for her.'
âBen's friend was a diver too?'
âOh yes. He used to take groups out to the homestead at Lake Jindabyne. I mean, before the water got too low.'
âHow did he get on with Laila?'
Angie blushed again and looked as though she wasn't going to answer. Finally she said, âLaila was beautiful, wasn't she? She had men wrapped around her little finger. It was child's play to her.'
Ben had driven the Canberra group down in the dive shop's Toyota. Angie looked up the records for me, but no names apart from Laila's were familiar. When I asked about sleeping arrangements, she explained that there was a girls' dorm and a boys'. She added that the instructors were in a separate, three bedroomed cottage behind the main building. She'd gone to bed before Ben on that Saturday night and had not heard him come in.
âBut something woke you up,' I said, acting on a hunch.
âI heard voices, Ben's and another man's.'
âBen's guest?'
Angie said it could have been; she wasn't sure. She hadn't liked to eavesdrop. She'd lain awake for a while and then gone back to sleep. Next morning, everything was normal. Ben was bleary-eyed, and the cook was late. They'd gone off on their wreck dive.
âHow did Laila seem that morning?'
Angie raised her head. She'd been staring at her hands while she spoke about Ben's late-night visitor.
âThere was a bit of an incident, as a matter of fact. Laila went inside the hull after she'd been warned not to.'
Angie described the buddy system and the safety rules, including stopping at a bar ten metres from the surface, even though the
Tasman Hauler
wasn't so deep as to make this obligatory. The dive master, that morning Angie, had waited at the bar while her group explored the huge propeller and looked at the fish who'd made the wreck their home.
âI sometimes stay on the boat, but at that time of year I like listening to the whales.'
Angie digressed for a moment to describe the joy of hanging off the bar and listening to the Humpbacks singing as they swam along the coast. I'd almost forgotten that Merimbula was famous for whale-watching expeditions, as it had been famous in the nineteenth century for hunting whales and killing them.
âIt's just as well I did, because Laila's buddy swam up in a flap. It saved both of us those few extra metres.'
Angie explained how much air they carried, how long it was safe to stay under, and how easy to was to become disoriented in a confined space, where kicking up silt could reduce visibility to zero.
âWe go through it all with them beforehand of course, and it's nearly always fine, but now and then you get the odd one who thinks she knows better.'
âSo you saved Laila's life,' I said, guessing what came next.
âPart of our training is to do the dive blindfold. I know every centimetre of that boat. If you don't, you can miss a ladder that's less than a metre away.'
When I asked how Laila had reacted to being rescued, Angie gave me a half smile, head on one side. âShe wasn't exactly grateful. I gave her a good talking-to. Her buddy was furious. He said she indicated to him that she was going inside, and then just gave a kick and went. He had two choicesâgo after her, or return to the surface and get me.'
âI bet he's glad he chose the latter.'
âYes, well, like I said, every now and then you get one. I told Laila she wouldn't be diving with us again. I might have been softer on her if she hadn'tâ'
âBeen so arrogant about it?'
Angie nodded. Or so attractive to Ben, I added silently.
When I asked if Ben had changed over the summer, Angie said, âHe
was
different.' She threw me a glance that indicated she'd been thinking about this, but might not have raised it if I hadn't.
âHe became more and more irritable, which was really unlike him. I asked if he was worried about something, but he wouldn't tell me.' Angie bit her lip and blinked. âThere was one other time I remember when Ben had a visitor, but he didn't come into the main house and I never met him. I only heard his voice. The group we had that weekend weren't exactly into cleaning up after themselves. I'd stacked the dishwasher by myself, and tidied up the kitchen and the living room, wondering why Ben didn't come and help me. He was usually good about stuff like that. I got things ready for the morning, then went up to the cottage. That's when I heard their voices.'
Angie paused. I waited, telling myself to let her take her own time.
âThey were having some sort of disagreement. Not a full-on argument, but the other guyâhe was doing most of the talkingâwas trying to persuade Ben to do something, I think. And Ben didn't want to.'
When I asked if Angie had recognised the other man's voice, she shook her head. She hadn't been able to hear what they were saying.
âWhat did you do?'
âIâI went out the front.'
âTo see if you could find a car?'
Angie swallowed as though the movement was painful and admitted that this had been her reason.
âThere weren't any extra vehicles, just the van, my car, and a station wagon some people from Sydney had driven down in. I walked a little way along the road and then Iâwell, I started to feel embarrassed, I guess. It wasn't any of my business who Ben's visitor was. I went to bed.'
There'd been no more voices coming from Ben's room, nor had Angie heard the sound of a car starting up. The next morning, Ben had got up late. âAnd
really
bad tempered.' Angie hadn't asked him what the matter was. âHe was a bit better after he'd had some food and about four cups of coffee.'
âWhen you walked along the road, how far did you go?'
âJust to the corner of Market Street and back.'
I thanked Angie for taking the trouble to answer my questions. IÂ sensed that she'd kept her feelings for Ben and her jealousy of Laila bottled up, perhaps out of guilt. She'd let me see them because I was a stranger, someone who didn't count. I would disappear and she need never bother about me again.
On my way out, I asked if she'd mind showing me the storeroom.
Sturdy shelves covered an entire wall. There were piles of sheets and towels. Four weight belts sat on a bottom shelf. I only needed to glance at them to see that they were an older type. In any case, Angie confirmed that none had gone missing. I picked one up and felt the tug at my shoulder, the pull in my wrist and forearm. Unless I was used to handling one, I doubted very much if I could have use it as a weapon. I asked Angie what kind of weight belt Ben had used.
âOne like that,' she said.
. . .
By now, Ivan would have forced Pete and Katya to come out of the water. The three of them would be building a sand castle. Tempers would be fraying, and hunger would be beginning to make itself felt.
After lunch and a dipâPete came in with me a little way but Katya pronounced the sea âbitey' and stayed with her father, who said, âMy sentiments exactly'âwe drove along the coast to Eden.
The wind picked up as we approached the headland overlooking Twofold Bay, and the sea turned grey and choppy. We pulled up at an old whaling tower, which Peter pronounced âcool'.