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Authors: Tim Winton

BOOK: Blueback
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After a few years Abel's mother could no longer walk along the beach she loved. She was too frail to dive any more and too stiff to pick fruit or dig vegetables. In the end she lay in her bed and listened to the sea. On fine days Abel carried her to the verandah so she could watch the tide and see the life of the ocean. Her hair was white as the sand on the shore and little Dora liked to feel it silky between her fingers. Old Dora Jackson slept a lot but when she woke she told stories.

‘When Abel was born,' she said, ‘his father thought we should let him meet the sea straight away so he wouldn't get homesick. After all, he'd been swimming inside me all that time. He was always a swimmer. So we took him down while the water was warm. We knelt in the shallows and lowered him gently into the sea. For a moment he went stiff as coral and then he kicked like a fish about to be set free. He wanted to swim off right there and then. He cried when I took him back to the house. He was always like that. Just like his father. Couldn't get him out of the water.'

The day before Dora Jackson died, Abel carried her gingerly down from the verandah and took her to the shore. Her nightie flapped and her hair became a tumbleweed in the breeze. He walked out a little way as whiting darted past his feet. He cradled her in his arms, laid her back and let her float against him in the clear, still water.

‘We come from water,' she whispered. ‘We belong to it, Abel.'

She lay back smiling, her arms and legs bobbing lightly. She weighed nothing at all. A long, blue shadow swerved into the shallows and swam around them once, stirring up the sand like confetti against them.

The next afternoon she died in her sleep and Abel made a new cross for the little graveyard behind the orchard.

Abel Jackson never regretted staying on at Longboat Bay. He lived the life of his boyhood every day and he was happy. The bay grew rich with life as fish came into it for sanctuary. They seemed to know that, just past Robbers Head, hooks and nets awaited them. They bred in their haven and swelled the stocks of the coast beyond. Seagrass, coral and sponges thrived. Abalone grew like snails in a garden. Dolphins and sharks came in. Sea lions returned to Robbers Head after being gone a hundred years. People dived into this teeming world and saw how the ocean could be itself.

Abel and Stella went back to being scientists. People came to visit them from all over the world and they continued to watch and listen and read. But they never discovered the secret of the sea. Abel figured his mother knew all the secrets by now and his father before her. He guessed that Mad Macka might have a few ideas too and that his own time would come eventually. In the meantime he let the sea be itself.

On little Dora Jackson's third birthday, three divers drifted in clear water off Robbers Head. The smallest diver hung like a sail between the grownups as they flew down to the rubbly bottom.

Out of the shadows, from a crack in the reef, a huge blue creature came swirling at them. The little girl's eyes grew big in her mask and she chirped in her snorkel.

The fish's head was enormous. She felt that it was about to swallow her and she pressed against her parents in panic. But Blueback slipped in close to them, fins rippling. His scales shone. His tail fanned. He was the colour of all their dreams and he rested against the child, quivering with life.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Tim Winton has published twenty-one books for adults and children, and his work has been translated into twenty-five languages. Since his first novel,
An Open Swimmer
, won the
Australian
/Vogel Award in 1981, he has won the Miles Franklin Award four times (for
Shallows
,
Cloudstreet
,
Dirt
Music
and
Breath
) and twice been shortlisted for the Booker Prize (for
The
Riders
and
Dirt
Music
). He lives in Western Australia.

PENGUIN BOOKS

Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Group (Australia)

707 Collins Street, Melbourne, Victoria 3008, Australia

(a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd)

Penguin Group (NZ)

67 Apollo Drive, Rosedale, North Shore 0632, New Zealand

(a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd)

Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London, WC2R 0RL, England

First published by Pan Macmillan, 1997

This digital edition published by Penguin Group (Australia), 2012

Copyright © Tim Winton, 1997

Illustrations © Andrew Davidson, 1997

The moral right of the authorhas been asserted

All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

Cover design by John Canty © Penguin Group (Australia)

Cover image © Paul Vismara/Getty Images

Extract from ‘Portrait of Luke' from
A Counterfeit Silence
by Randolph Stow, published by Angus & Robertson Publishers, Australia, copyright © Randolph Stow 1969, is reproduced by permission of Sheil Land Associates Ltd.

‘Carmel Point', copyright 1954 by Robinson Jeffers, from
Selected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers
by Robinson Jeffers. Used by permission of Random House, Inc.

eISBN: 9781742537399

penguin.com.au

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