The
Idea of Perfection: Extract
Chapter
One
IN
HIS EX-WIFE'S clever
decorating magazines Douglas Cheeseman had seen mattress ticking being amusing.
Marjorie had explained that it was amusing to use mattress ticking
for curtains the same way it was amusing to use an old treadle
Singer as a table for your maidenhair ferns. But he did not think the amusing
aspect of mattress ticking being used as a curtain had made it as far as
the Royal Hotel in Yuribee, NSW, pop 1374. He could feel the cold dust in
the fabric as he held it back to look out the window.
Over the top of the corrugated iron roof
next door, he could see nearly all of Karakarook. It looked as if it had
just slid down into the bottom of the valley, either side of the river,
and stayed there. Where the houses finished straggling up the sides of the
hills there were bald curves of paddocks and further up, the hilltops were
dark with bush. Above that was the huge pale sky, bleached with the midday
heat.
From the window he could see part of
Parnassus Road, as wide and empty as an airport runway, lying as if
stunned under the sun. Along the strip of shops a few cars had parked
diagonally into the gutters like tadpoles nosing up to a rock. A dog lay
stretched out lifeless across the doorway of a closed-up shop. The awnings
over the shops made jagged blocks of black shadow and the great radiance
of the sun pressed down out of the sky.
A ute so dusty he could not tell what
colour it was drove slowly in and angled into the gutter. Out of it got a
man with a big round belly straining at a blue shirt, who disappeared
under the awning of the shops opposite the Caledonian. Douglas could hear
the squeak as a door was pushed open, and the thump as it closed again.
After a long period of stillness an old
brown car appeared small at the end of the street, came slowly along and
pointed itself tentatively in beside the ute. A woman got out and stood
looking up and down the street with her hands on her hips. She did not
seem to be worried by doing nothing more than standing and looking. She
seemed pleased, in a stern way, and interested, as if Parnassus Road,
Karakarook, was a diorama in a museum provided especially for her
pleasure.
She was a big rawboned
plain person, tall and unlikely, with a ragged haircut and a white
teeshirt coming unstitched along the shoulder. It was a long time since
she been young and it was unlikely that she had ever been lovely. She
stood like a man, square-on. Her breasts pushed out the old teeshirt, but
it was clear from the way she stood that she'd forgotten about breasts
being sexy. Her breasts made bulges in her jumper the same way her knees
made bulges in her black track pants, that was all.
She was not accessorised. Her
teeshirt hung off her shoulders and came straight up to her neck. There
was no collar, no scarf, no beads, no earrings. Her head just came up
sternly out of the teeshirt saying, here I am, and who do you think you
are?
Douglas stood with the curtain in his hand,
watching her across the road as she looked at Parnassus Road exposed under
the sky. A salt of the earth type.
Salt of the earth: that was one of
Marjorie's expressions. What she meant by that was, badly dressed.
The way the woman stood with her hands on
her hips, looking down the street as if she owned it, he could imagine her
life, a proper life anchored solid to the ground. There would be a big
cheerful husband, uncomplicated children, fat red-cheeked grandchildren
calling her Nanna. He could imagine the kitchen out on the farm,
with the radio going on top of the fridge, the big bowl of eggs with the
chook-poop still on them, the fridge door covered with magnets that said
things like Bless this Mess.
A dog came along from somewhere and barked
at her, making pigeons puff up in a scatter from the awning. She glanced
at it, and he saw a frown darken her face.
He let the curtain fall and stepped back
from the window. Then he stood in the dim room wondering why he had done
that.
He looked at his watch but it did not tell
him anything useful. He sat down on the bed, pulled off his boots.
Considered, pulled them on again. He wanted to have another look out the
window, but he did not want to be caught looking. It was only a kind of
hunger, but it could be misunderstood.
Harley had seen him looking, the man
holding back the curtain, with the D of the word CALEDONIAN hanging
upside-down from a screw above his head. She had seen him drop the curtain
and move back from the window, but she knew he was still there, perhaps
still watching her, as this dog was, that had appeared from nowhere.
She had forgotten how empty a country town
could be, how closed, how you could feel looked-at and large.
Further down the street past the Caledonian
she could see the old picture theatre. You could tell what it had been
from its shape, tall at the front and falling away steeply at the back.
The brackets were still screwed on down the front of the building where
the sign must have been, Odeon or Starlight. Now the whole
lot was painted utility grey.
There was a piece of masonite screwed up on
the wall, with a sign, hand-lettered, hard to read. She squinted towards
it. COBWEBBE CRAFT SHOPPE, she read. OPEN WED & THUR, and beside it
another one left over from the previous month, with a corner broken off,
MERRY XMAS PEACE ON EAR.
She laughed without meaning to and the dog
barked. Then it stopped as if to let her have a turn.
Get lost, she said.
Its tail began to swing from side to side.
Opening its mouth it panted with its tongue hanging out, pulsing. It went
on watching her closely, as if she was about to perform a magic trick.
It showed no sign of being about to get
lost.
The Cobwebbe Crafte Shoppe still had the
old ticket window from the picture theatre, and in the window she could
see two quilts competing like plants for the light.
Harley glanced back at her car. It was not
too late to get back in and drive away. No one would know, except this
dog, and someone behind the curtain. As she stood hesitating, a rooster
crowed lingeringly from somewhere, and a distant car horn went dah
diddidy dah-dah. Then the silence pressed back in over the sounds.
She straightened her shoulders and cleared
her throat.
Get lost, she told the dog again.
It sounded very loud in so much quiet.
The dog watched her as she looked right,
looked left, looked right again. Nothing at all was moving, anywhere along
Parnassus Road. It was just her and her shadow, and the dog and the shadow
of the dog, as they crossed the road together. Under the awning of the
Caledonian their shadows were swallowed in the larger shadow.
Looking along at the Cobwebbe Crafte
Shoppe, not at where she was going, she walked straight into a man coming
out of the doorway of the Caledonian. When they collided, he staggered
backwards and nearly fell. She grabbed at a handful of his forearm,
clutching at the fabric and the arm beneath, and he flailed out to steady
himself, hitting her on the shoulder. Then they were both standing in the
beer-smelling current of cool air from the doorway, apologising.
The man had a look of hysteria around the
corners of his mouth. He wanted to blame himself.
My fault, he kept saying. Completely my
fault. Stupid.
She had a feeling it was the man who had
watched her from the window, but with his hat on it was hard to be sure.
Totally stupid. Not thinking at all.
So clumsy, Harley said. Me, I mean.
She did not look at him, but at the ground,
where their shoes were arranged on the footpath like ballroom- dancing
instructions. His were elastic-sided bushman's boots that looked brand~new.
Did I hurt you? Hitting you?
She looked at him, surprised.
Hurt me?
He pointed but did not touch.
I hit you, he said, humbly. There.
No, no, she said, although now he had
mentioned it, she could feel the place hurting.
She looked at her own hand, large and
plain, that had clutched at him, and wondered if she should ask whether
she had hurt him.
Well, he said, and laughed a meaningless
laugh.
A moment extended itself into awkwardness.
Well, he said again, and she said it too at
the same moment.
Their voices sounded loud together under
the awning. Harley felt as if the whole of Karakarook, behind its windows,
must be watching this event that had burst into their silent afternoon:
two bodies hitting together, two people standing apologising.
Chapter
Two
THERE
HAD BEGUN to be a
little atmosphere in the butcher's shop. It had got so that
Felicity tended to put off going to his shop. The problem was, the butcher
was in love with her.
She hesitated outside the dusty window of
the closed Karakarook Bakery. She wished there was something to look at,
something to make hesitating look natural, but it seemed to have been a
long time since the Karakarook Bakery had been open for business, and
there was nothing in the window but a few shelves with a lot of dead flies
on them.
The trouble with a little place like this
was, a person could not dawdle too long on Parnassus Road without becoming
conspicuous. You could not window- shop convincingly in Karakarook,
unless you were in the marekt for dead flies. And there was no way you
could sit somewhere and be watching the world go by. The world
simply did not go by in Parnassus Road, Karakarook.
She brushed away a fly that was circling
her face, and shook her arm when it landed there. Then she bent down and
brushed her leg, although it had not landed there yet.
Sometimes, a person could actually be
pleased at the diversion a fly could provide.
Partly, it was that the butcher was
Chinese. She was no racist, and wanted him to know that she did not count
it against him, him being Chinese. The trouble was, not wanting to be
thought racist always seemed to make her too friendly. She could hear that
her voice was a little too loud and a little too sprightly in the quiet
shop. She smiled too much, and did not know how to stop.
She was no racist, but noticed, every time
he spoke, how he spoke exactly the way everyone else did. She was no
racist, but listened for something Chinese in the way he talked, the
little foreign something. The funny thing was, it was never there. She had
tried closing her eyes when he talked, and you would never have guessed.
If you happened to find yourself with him in the dark for any reason, you
would never know he was Chinese.
In the dark, he would sound just like any
other man.
The woman from the craft shop had told her
one day that Changs had been here, meaning in Karakarook, since the
year dot. They had come for the gold in the first place, she said, but
had the sense to see there was more money in food. She had caught
herself thinking but it's not the same. Her own family had only
been Australian for two generations, but somehow it was different.
She was no racist. She was sure of that.
But she never thought of Alfred Chang as Australian, in the way she
herself was Australian. He was Chinese, no matter how long
Changs had been Karakarook.
The street remained obstinately empty. She
looked to the right, looked to the left, looked to the right again. There
was no moving vehicle, anywhere, in any direction.
She checked her reflection sideways in the
window of the bakery. She had always had a good bust, and the little top
set it off well. In the reflection you would never imagine she had just
turned forty-one. She had only just turned forty-one. A month hardly
counted. Really, she was still only forty.
She swapped the basket from hand to hand,
pushed her hair back behind her ear, and crossed the road. At the
screen-door of Chang's Superior Meats she waved at the cloud of flies
gathered there and went in onto the sawdust. Behind her the door slapped
back into place and a triumphant fly shot out ahead of her and up towards
the ceiling.
Inside the shop it seemed dark after the
sunlight and the air was heavy with the thick smell of meat. She glanced
up to where the wall of fly-wire that ran from floor to ceiling met the
white tongue-and-groove plank ceiling far above. A fan rotated slowly next
to a blue insect-light. She could not see the fly that had come in with
her, but it would not last long.
On the other side of the fly wire there was
something human in size and shape. In the dim light it could have been
either the butcher or a carcass on a hook. She peered, and the shape moved
towards her.
Mrs Porcelline!
He always seemed to enjoy saying her name.
Somehow, he made the s sound especially noticeable.
She could see him now, granular behind the
fly wire, turning away from the chopping block, slipping a knife into the
holster on his hip, wiping his hands on his blue and white apron. She
could see his big bland face, but could not see its expression behind the
mesh.
She thought it might be like this, visiting
someone in jail. The question was, who was the prisoner? Alfred Chang was
at ease in his cage, with a peaceful purple- stamped carcass hanging
beside him. It was she herself who felt like the trapped one.
Mrs Porcelline, he said again.
The way he said it, it was a name full of
hisses. He stood smiling. She did not know how to break their gaze.
Would he think she was a racist if she
looked away?
Morning, Mr Chang, she said. I'll have six
short- loin chops, please.
There was something about the word loin she
did not like. Something slightly suggestive. Especially here with Alfred
Chang looking at her that way.
She would have very much preferred Woollies
in Livingstone, the meat all tidy in little polystyrene trays. So much
more hygienic. Coming to Yuribee had been like stepping back thirty years:
cutting the meat up separately for each customer, the sawdust on the
floor, actual carcases hanging up for anyone to see.
It made it all rather personal. There was a
kind of intimacy about the butcher knowing exactly what you were having
for dinner.
Now he went out through the white-painted
wooden door at the back and closed it behind him. The first time she had
come here, she had given her order and watched him go out through the
little door and had stood, shifting from foot to foot, for so long she
wondered if he had forgotten her. She had imagined him going out into the
backyard and sitting on a tree stump having a smoke.
Now, twelve months and many short-loins
later, she knew that the door took him into the coolroom, and that it was
best to sit in one of the chairs thoughtfully provided. But sometimes he
was gone so long she wondered if he had died in there, or coagulated.
Today he returned quite quickly with a lump
of meat and put it on the block, worn into a curve like a wave.
He stood side-on to her and reached into
the big tube full of knives that hung from his belt. He brought out one,
unhooked the sharpening steel from his belt, and started to strop with
lingering movements. She could see the muscles of his shoulders moving
under his shirt as he stroked away deliberately at the blade. She could
see the muscles moving under his shirt.
He said something, but his voice was
swaddled by flywire, the space of air above him, the dim coolness of the
shop, the stirred air from the fan.
It was an awkward place to have a
conversation. You could talk through the flyscreen, but you had to talk to
a face that was grey and fuzzy, like a film out of focus. Or you could
both twist down sideways to talk through the small flap at counter-level,
where you handed the money in and he handed you the wrapped-up meat.
I beg your pardon?
He put the knife down deliberately on the
block, hooked the steel back on his belt as if sheathing a sword, came
over to the gauze.
Ever tried the mutton?
He was close enough for her to see his
eyes, dark in his smooth face, but she could not tell what sort of
expression he had. She realised you could call this being inscrutable.
Oh, no, she said, No, I never have.
Somehow, she'd got the tone wrong. There
was more regret in her voice than was warranted by not ever having
tried the mutton.
She went on quickly to cover the sound of
it.
Bit tough, isn't it?
Too late, she heard how tactless that could
sound.
She could feel a blush start in the small
of her back.
Alfred Chang smoothed a large hand over his
laminex counter and smiled down at it.
Up to the butcher, he said. Butcher it
right, mutton's sweet as a nut.
Now he was staring at her through the
gauze.
Oh! she said. Yes! I suppose so!
She hated the way she kept on exclaiming
and smiling, but did not know what she might do if she stopped. You could
hide behind a smile and no one could blame you, or guess what you were
thinking. She crinkled up her eyes to show what a lark it all was, but
then she remembered that crinkling up your eyes gave you wrinkles.
No one, not even a Chinese butcher, would
want her if she had wrinkles.
He had finished wrapping the chops now. She
flinched as the hatch flipped up with a bang.
Here you are, Mrs Porcelline.
His eyes dwelt on her, and his voice did a
sort of yearning thing. The fly-wire made it hard to be sure, but she
thought it was possible that he winked.
The very best there is, Mrs Porcelline. For
you.
He hung onto the parcel when she reached
into the hatch for it, and for a moment they were joined by the little
squashy packet of meat.
It was like holding hands, in a way.
They have a fascination for white women,
she thought, and suppressed the thought.
Finally he let go of the packet and bent to
get something from under the counter.
Was hoping you'd come in, Mrs Porcelline,
he said in his languorous voice.
Been keeping this for you.
It was like a dirty secret when his big
hand came out holding a brown paper bag towards her.
Oh! Really! What is it?
She heard her exclamations travel through
the meaty air, filling the shop. She had a feeling she was shouting.
When she opened the bag, something cool
rolled out against her hand and she gave a little cry of fright, snatching
her hand back. The thing was cool and damp and bright red. She thought in
shock that it was a tiny heart. They eat dog, she thought
confusedly. Dog's hearts.
She heard herself go Urgggh! It was
the sort of noise her mother had made when taken by surprise. She had made
it herself in the long-ago stale dusty playgrounds of childhood. Common.
It was a noise she thought she had long since trained herself out of.
And she could see now that the thing was
not dog's heart at all. It was only a strawberry.
From my garden, the butcher said.
She hated the way she could not see him
properly.
Picked them myself. Six o'clock this
morning.
She smiled at the mesh, where he was a
vague square dark shape.
Thank you so very much, she heard herself
gush. They're perfectly marvellous.
They were horrible. They were too big, too
solid, too meaty looking. Fleshy, solid, like a heart. Revolting.
Ox-heart, the butcher said, and she was
startled.
Pardon? I beg your pardon?
She wondered in panic if she had spoken
aloud.
What they're called, that kind, he said.
Ox-heart.
She felt paralysed. He brought his head
down to the flap, opened it, and inserted his big face sideways into it to
look up at her, his eyes skewing sideways.
Ox-heart, he said clearly. Heart of ox.
His head stayed there, sideways in the
hatch, watching. The hatch was just the size of his big cheese-coloured
face. She put her own head sideways too. It seemed only polite. She felt
her smile hang down on one side. She felt like a huge sparrow, head cocked
on one side.
They're so big! she exclaimed. They're
enormous! What enormous things!
She felt as if she had got the hang of the
conversation now. They were strawberries. They were not dog's hearts, but
they were called ox-hearts. But her brain was going very slowly. She could
not think of anything to say apart from talking about how big they were.
She held up one of the strawberries and
turning it around and around. It was not really all that interesting.
How do you get them so big? I've never seen
them so big! They're incredible! So huge! Marvellous!
Suddenly she thought it sounded as if she
was actually exclaiming over and over again at the huge and marvellous
size of his - well - organ.
She felt herself starting to sweat.
She was certainly not thinking about his -
well - organ.
And I'm sure they will taste just
delicious!
She blushed more and longed for rescue.
She flung her husband into the breach.
Hugh will love them, she said. and so will
William. They love strawberries.
The butcher's large bland face did not move
in the flap but his eyes blinked.
Oh, he said. But I picked them for you.
He was watching her, and she thought he was
smiling, but with his face sideways it was hard to be sure. She wished the
face would go away, the eyes stop looking at her. Smiling away hard, she
thought of how she could jam her shopping bag up against the hatch. It
would be right up against his face. It would be just the right size to
block the face out completely.
Oh, but I'm allergic, you see, she said
wildly. To strawberries.
She felt herself flood with heat. He was
still just watching. It was as if he had unscrewed his head and wedged it
in the hatch. The silence, with him watching, was unbearable.
Only strawberries, she shouted. Lucky
really, nothing else. Just strawberries.
She went on piling words in front of his
face. They bring me out in a rash. Well, a terrible rash, really. More
like a ... disease.
The word came out in a hiss.
She was thinking, Leprosy.
His face recoiled and disappeared from the
hatch. She had not meant, of course, that Chinese people gave you leprosy.
Sort of a rough rash, she amended. Like
pustules.
She had heard the word, but perhaps it was
not quite what she meant. She had not exactly meant pus.
And itchy, she hurried on. Terribly itchy.
Oh, you wouldn't believe.
Behind the wire she could not see if he
believed or not. The flap slapped down and she saw his large hands on the
counter smoothing the white paper there, pressing down a dogeared corner.
Well, he said. I wouldn't want to bring you
out in a rash.
She could not see if he was smiling.
She heard herself giggle explosively.
No, she said, and could not think of what
to say next.
Certainly not.
I hope Mr Poreelline doesn't come out in a
rash too, he said. Or William.
Do they, Mrs Poreelline?
She rushed in.
Oh no! Mr Porcelline just loves
strawberries! and so does William!
She hated the way he went on just standing,
watching as she laboured to find more words.
She was still smiling hard when she left
the shop, and she went on smiling until she was out of sight of his
window. She could feel the cool damp weight of the strawberries through
the paper of the bag. She went briskly along Parnassus Way holding them
casually, smiling at old Mr Anderson standing in the doorway of the
General Store across the road, calling hello, how ARE you, very
warmly, to the mother from the school whose name she could never remember.
She smiled and waved, and held the bag of strawberries as if they were the
least significant thing in the world.
The thing was, Hugh would want to know
where she had got them. It would seem a little odd, to tell him the
butcher had given them to her. Why should the butcher give her
strawberries? Why strawberries? Why her?
All things considered, it might be a bit awkward
if he knew.
Taken all round, it might be better for the
strawberries simply to disappear.
The best thing would be to burn the whole
lot in the incinerator at home. They would make a bad smell, burning, but
if she went home and did it quickly now, the smell would be gone by the
time Hugh came home. She had got the knack of the incinerator now. You
could be surprised, how often there was something that needed burning,
what with one thing and another.
Hugh might smell the smoke in his office at
the bank, but he would never guess that it was coming from his own
backyard.
Burning was always the best idea. It tidied
everything away marvellously. And ash could never create any kind of awkwardness.
(end of
extract)