Read Blood Is a Stranger Online
Authors: Roland Perry
âHow did your husband die?'
âThe pressures crushed him,' Tien said. âThe government put him under stress. His heart gave way . . .'
âHow was he put under stress? How was he pressured?'
âUtun threatened to nationalise our businesses.'
There was no turning back. Tien seemed about to end the conversation.
âIs that why your daughter returned to Indonesia?' Rhonda asked.
âI have no more time,' Tien said, standing.
âDid she come back to Bandung to help you?' Rhonda said, without budging from the sofa, âor was she forced?'
Tien clapped her hands. Servants appeared.
âHas Utun ordered her back . . .' Rhonda began.
Tien gave orders to a servant, and a guard was summoned.
âIs your daughter working on a laser project for Utun?'
âYou'll have to leave,' Tien said as she opened the door.
A servant led Rhonda down stairs to the lift, and Tien
disappeared. As she went down, Rhonda could see the commando waiting for her.
He was looking down at the faceless body in a shallow grave. It was squatting and blood was dripping on the earth from his thighs. The head looked up and spoke to him. âIt's not me,' it repeated in his son's voice. Cardinal was bedevilled. Was he speaking with Harry or Burra's son?
Cardinal awoke and it took him many minutes to accept that he had been asleep, so vivid were the images that tormented him. He had been sweating. He rolled over and switched on a light. It was five. He tried to sleep again. When this was impossible, he wandered down to the hotel pool for a twenty-minute swim, which included an exhausting burst of butterfly. He returned to his room just in time to catch the phone. It was Topfist.
âBurra wants you to meet someone who may help you,' he said. Cardinal was surprised. He thought the heated discussion a few hours earlier had thwarted his chances of getting help from the Bididgee leader. âHe wants to drive you to Cahill's Crossing.'
âWhen?'
âHe'll pick you up in fifteen minutes.'
Thirty-six truck and juggernaut engines coughed to a start as O'Laughlin finished addressing the convoy over a loud-hailer. In the half light, Cardinal and Burra could see the drilling rig, parts of which towered higher than a house.
Burra had taken him on a short detour to check on the departure of the convoy for the Aboriginal reserve. They parked in an all-night roadhouse and petrol station about a kilometre along the Stuart Highway heading east out of Darwin. The truck headlights went on and the convoy began to roll.
âTwenty-five cops counting the chief,' Burra said. âIt'll take them seven hours. We can do it in six. It'll be slower than normal. I'm taking a caravan to attach to our home at the reserve.'
Cardinal thought he should clear the air one way or another before their journey began.
âYou asked me what I thought last night,' he said. âI'm sorry if it upset you. But I had to be honest.'
âRhonda Mills made a good documentary on me,' Burra said coolly. âI owe her a favour. That's why I'll help.'
âDid she tell you why I have come here?'
âNo,' Burra said. âShe just said you were interested in knowing about the Indonesian visit.'
He paused and added, âShe tells me you're an art dealer. I want to introduce you to a prospective client. You help him sell his paintings, he'll help you.'
Burra turned his vehicle around and sped back to his apartment in an ugly block on the outskirts of Darwin. He attached his caravan to his ute and lay on his back to secure the pinion linking the two vehicles. Then he prepared the canvas flaps in the back of the ute. Later they would provide shade. As dawn settled over the north, the sun promised a boiling day.
Cardinal was put in the back with Burra's mother-in-law, Judy. She was skeletal and wrinkled, and her hair was lank and grey. Judy's eyes shone with intensity from a worn face. In the front seat next to Burra was his shy wife, Elaine, and their two children, three-year old Gabby and baby Nia, fourteen months. The boy, all eyes and teeth, was intrigued with Cardinal and insisted he sit in the back with him. Gabby pushed and prodded the stranger for several minutes, much to everyone's amusement. Burra told Cardinal it was typical of Aboriginal children.
âThey are more alert and tactile than white kids,' he said. âThey learn everything about their environment far
quicker. He could survive alone in the bush.'
Cardinal had doubts about this but could see the sharpness in the child's eyes.
âThey also have better memories,' Burra said. âForty thousand years have taught us very young to remember landmarks in the bush, smells and certain signs to guide us. It has been necessary for survival.'
Cardinal gazed at the plains of dark green and yellow, a patchwork broken by clumps of paperbarks and pandanas. They had come sixty kilometres by seven-thirty in the morning; the heat was fierce. Flies were becoming an irritation, and Cardinal was becoming proficient at the Australian salute. He longed for the corked hat that Burra was wearing.
The flaps at the back of the ute were released; cool drinks from an ice box handed around.
âSee buffalo?' Judy said to Cardinal with a nod towards the bush. It was the first time she had spoken in an hour. Cardinal squinted but couldn't see any animals.
âKeep your eyes on the horizon,' Burra said. Minutes later Cardinal could make out a grazing herd close to the road. Judy spoke again, this time in her own language.
âShe says there will be a storm tonight,' Burra said, and then had to swerve the ute and caravan to avoid two buffalo, which had strayed onto the road.
âUseless bastards!' Burra called after them as they hardly moved their massive frames.
A mob of kangaroos dared to pace the ute for a hundred metres or so, and then veered off into the bush. Cardinal had never seen one before, and he was fascinated. Burra slowed the ute, and this encouraged two of them to come closer to the vehicle. They bounded along beside them for about a kilometre.
âThey're Big Reds,' Burra told him.
âThey have to be more than six feet tall!' Cardinal said, holding back a flap to get a better view. Their hop developed into a rhythm as strong back legs thrust them forward
and their big tails acted as a counterweight to their bodies.
There're a lot of them,' Cardinal said.
âThere are about forty-five million. That's about three for every human,' Burra said, âwhich the government says is a plague.'
âDo you hunt them?'
âOnly for food. Never for sport.'
âDo you use a rifle?'
âI have tried to get my people to avoid using bullets and use the traditional ways with spears and boomerang. But they can all afford rifles.' Burra paused to glance at Cardinal. âDo you shoot?'
âNot animals. Clay-pigeon.'
âYou good?'
âI keep my eye in.'
The next landmark was the Arnhem Highway where they encountered dead kangaroo and buffalo, which had collided with roadtrains. Their rotting carcasses gave off a stench like open sewage, which lingered a kilometre past them. Burra spent some time speaking to Judy and Elaine.
âJudy says you are searching for someone,' Burra said, taking his eyes off the road for a few seconds. âShe reckons you're a hunter.'
Cardinal was surprised. If his manner registered this, it was running ahead of his conscious feelings. He was determined to do all he could to understand why his son had died.
Judy's comments returned his thoughts to his mission. His eyes fixed on the horizon. It danced in the heat. Kangaroos and vehicles ahead seemed to vapourise in it. Cardinal's mind filled with the images of the nightmare and the faceless corpse.
Cardinal was distracted by Gabby who wanted to go to the toilet, and baby Nia's crying. Burra decided to stop at the next pub where they could buy drinks for the rest of the journey.
Just over the Adelaide River, they pulled into a pub named after it, where a sign said, âLast quality watering hole between here and the Alice.'
Although it was not yet ten, there were trucks and roadtrains parked outside. Burra told his family to use the toilets at the back.
âYou stay here,' he told Cardinal.
âCan't I help?' he said pulling out his wallet.
He thrust forty dollars into Burra's hand.
âPrefer you to stay here,' Burra said âto look after the family.'
Cardinal frowned.
âWhy?' he asked.
âThis is redneck country,' Burra said. He turned and disappeared into the main bar.
Cardinal stretched his legs. He decided to visit the toilet before the family returned. On the way back, he glanced into the bar. Burra was arguing with a barman. Several heavyweight drivers perched on stools were throwing abuse at the black. Cardinal hurried around to the pub's front entrance. The drone of talk fell away as Cardinal entered, and the hum of three old-fashioned ceiling fans could be more easily heard. There was a smell of sweat from a dozen uncovered torsos. He moved close to Burra.
âEverything okay?' he asked.
âBastards won't serve me,' Burra said.
âWe need drinks,' Cardinal said. âThere's still a way to go.'
Burra took him by the arm.
âC'mon, mate,' he said. âThis is trouble.'
Cardinal went up to the bar and asked for cans of Swan beer and Solo. The barman's eyes met his, but he went on serving others.
âTinnies,' Burra whispered. âYou ask for tinnies.'
âSorry, barman,' Cardinal said, âI should have asked for tinnies.' The barman still didn't react. âWhy is it that
everyone truncates everything in this country?' Cardinal asked. âChocolates are choccies, Carnations are carnies, tins of beer are tinnies . . .'
âIt's our way,' the barman snapped.
âWhen in Rome, eh?' Cardinal said with a grin.
âIf you don't like it, mate,' the barman said, âyou can leave with the boong.'
âIt's not that I don't like it,' Cardinal said with equanimity, âbut somehow “tinnies” doesn't sound too macho. It sounds more effete. You know, the way faggots speak.'
âFaggots?' the barman said, wiping the bar vigorously, âyou mean pooftas?'
âYup,' Cardinal said, looking around the bar, âlike I said, faggots.'
âI wouldn't go saying that in here, mate,' the barman said.
âI didn't say anyone in here was a faggot,' Cardinal said. âIf you or anyone else in here is a faggot, then I apologise.'
The barman's jaw twitched. He eyed Cardinal's attire of denim shirt, jeans, sneakers and that stylish white hat. It was not Territory rig. Most of the men wore brown or khaki shorts and thick socks inside lace-up boots. Filthy sleeveless vests predominated.
âI think you'd better leave,' the barman said, his face going crimson. Cardinal repeated his order.
âYou a septic tank?' one of the drinkers said. His behind swallowed the bar stool. He had short-cropped red hair and was the biggest man in the room. Other drinkers sniggered at his remark. Cardinal took it in good humour.