Authors: Stephen Daisley
The dingo studied the dead kangaroo and the surrounds for a while longer.
Her eyes drooped and she licked at her shoulder, a healing wound the black dingo
had made with his slashing teeth as he mated with her. The black dog was strong,
crossed with one of the big run-off cattle-station dogs.
They had become welded when he covered her and finished, knotted with his swollen
glands locked inside. She had yelped, turned and bitten at him, opening his ear.
His dominance reasserted itself and he stood snarling over her with strong, straight
legs. She obeyed with look-away eyes and became still for him as they waited. And
then he slipped out, and was gone. Head down running west and never looking back
at her. Ten minutes later her nose was following where his feet and saliva had touched
the rocks and sand. The rapture of what would become a pack, twelve or so dingos,
running in and beside her.
She felt a twist of hunger for six and stood. Approached the yonga carcass from a
side angle, bent her head under where
the tail had been taken and began tearing at
the flesh. Soon she had exposed the intestines. Swallowed a mouthful of gut fat.
The doe's soft liver, pulpy in her mouth. The dingo bitch gulped the liver and choked.
Vomited up the black mess and began to eat it again.
It was mid-morning when they turned off the Great Eastern Highway, rattled across
the rails of a cattleguard and onto the red mile that led to Drysdale Downs homestead.
They passed a five-wire fence. Iron star pickets and two top barbed, wool stuck in
the barbs. The dried bodies of several wild dogs had been wired with ancient spines
and leg shapes outstretched on the fence. Paddocks of dried mitchell and failed flinders
grasses, yellow grass and smoke bush out to a series of hollows and rises away to
the horizon. Beyond there the wheat fields.
Three pink and grey galahs flew off the fence at their approach.
âDrysdale Downs,' Lew said. His voice croaking from the dry silence. âHow many they
got?'
âNot as many as they used to,' Painter said. âAbout twelve hundred I believe. Three
maybe four days for us.' He coughed. âUsed to run over ten thousand head but they
gone mostly to wheat now anyway. Should be the other way around. Dunno if
they got
shed hands coming even, it's all a bit of a doubt mate.'
âNo blackfellas you say?
None?'
âNot now, not ever. I told you. They will never lay a foot here. None bloody left.'
A Comet windmill in the near paddock. Tall and rusted tubes welded into a thin quadruped
structure with a working platform bolted below the circle of blades. Long curved
metal flukes. A bent pipe running from the top of the bore to the holding tank. Two
stone drinking troughs north south.
âSomething else I should tell you,' Painter said. âPull up here for a bit.'
Lew stopped the truck at the side of the track. Stones crunched beneath the tyres.
He looked over at Painter.
âThe boss, John Drysdale, lost his wife a few years ago. Had their share of troubles
on the place, her was just the latest.'
Lew with both wrists on the steering wheel, leaned forward, watching. âLost?'
âCancer. Yep. Jack the dancer, y'know.' Painter stared out the side window. âTook
it hard I heard. Like a dry stick in the wind these days.'
âBy himself now?'
âNo, a daughter, she was at boarding school in Perth. She come home I believe. Clara,
her name. Thought I would let you know to tread a little careful, y'know, ducks on
the pond. Less said the better.'
Lew nodded. âI'll keep it in mind.' He eased the clutch pedal out.
âHave you seen that?' Painter nodded out the window as they drove. An ancient red
harrow rusting at the edge of the
paddock. Its metal seat, buttock-shaped and perforated,
high above the metal spines. Rusted trace chains. Large spoke wheels. Abandoned but
kept, grown around like a wound. Long wheat grass through it.
âYeah mate. An old harrow.'
They drove up to a shearing shed raised up on wandoo stumps. Pulled the truck to
a stop and waited for the dust to settle. They got out of the truck, closed the doors
and stretched. Hands braced above kidneys.
A blue heeler cattle dog ran from the yards and began barking. John Drysdale walked
from the woolshed, holding up one hand to block the sun and looking at them. A tall,
lean man, dressed in a faded green shirt and trousers, his head at an awkward angle
to his shoulders, almost as if avoiding recognition. One side of his face had healed
so that it looked like the bark of the bloodwood marri. The lids of his left eye
were coral pink and wept and drooped and often it felt as if that side of his face
was still on fire. It was the memory of the spinifex and blue-bush fire he and his
father had been caught in while mustering out near Daybreak Springs. A brown Akubra
hat on his head. He called to the blue dog. âThat'll do Jock, sit down there.'
Jock sat, mouth open and long pink tongue hanging out, closed his mouth and began
to scratch at something behind his ear. Groaned as he scratched.
âHello Painter Hayes. Had any rain?' John Drysdale held out his right hand.
âBoss,' Painter said. âNo rain.' He took John's hand and they shook hands.
âThe bloke upstairs has been trying us,' John Drysdale did not smile.
âKeep calling him, boss,' Painter nodded. âIt'll come.'
âBetter be, let's hope so.'
Painter turned his head, coughed and spoke as John looked to Lew.
âThis is Lewis McCleod, Mr Drysdale. You may have known his father Mac?'
âCan't say I remember him. How are you Lewis?'
âGood good Mr Drysdale.' Lew said and held out his hand. They too shook hands.
The land was silent, the truck's motor ticking from the heat of the motor. A pair
of crows called to each other and after a minute, the metal creaking sound of the
Comet windmill began. They watched the D-pattern tail swing away from the wind coming
out of the desert.
âHis father shore here,' Painter said, âin the late thirties once or twice I believe.'
âHe did?' Drysdale looked closer at Lew.
âFirst I knew of it Mr Drysdale.'
The circle of blades whirred, moving in the air. The wind lifted and the flukes began
turning faster, and the familiar sound of the air and moving metal of the windmill.
âAnyway good to see you both,' Drysdale said. âMustered yesterday. Shed and yards
full. Just the hoggets. Tally I have is just under twelve hundred head. More or less.'
Lew and Painter both nodded. âGood good.'
âThree days I would say. Four the outside. Perhaps a week or so if it rains.'
The sky was blue for as far as they could see. No clouds, not one, just the wind
coming out of the eastern desert. The windmill's pump piston began moving up and
down, dry-hissing in the sleeve of its cylinder. A small dust cloud swirled away
behind the woolshed.
âThat is a hopeful condition Mr Drysdale,' Painter said.
âNever know,' Drysdale replied. He turned, as they heard horses coming at a steady
run.
Clara Ruth Drysdale rode towards them. Nineteen and sitting a white gelding as if
she had grown out of it, holding a big-bellied grey mare on a long rope behind her.
The horses slowed, baulked a little to the walk and stopped in front of the men as
red dust caught up and blew around her and over them. A team of lean mustering dogs
loping behind her. They circled Painter and Lew. The head dog lifted his leg against
the wheel of the truck, squirted a line of urine and ran over to Jock to stand and
bristle in defiance. Jock's top lip lifted and he began to open and close his mouth.
The edges of his tongue curling as he too snarled. A low growl coming from his throat.
She had dark brown eyes, freckles and black hair cut unfashionably short. Cheeks
flushed brown red with blood and sun. Her father's old, worn Akubra hat, hole in
the peak. It had come off her head and hung down her back by a cord. Waved a hand
in front of her face at the flies. Smiling yet as the gelding walked back three more
steps and began turning away from them. Touched his nose onto the upper jaw of the
mare on the lead. Nibbled at the halter brow strap.
âWe just having a bit of a wongi,' her father said. âBit of a chat here with the
boys.' He turned to the shearers. âYou remember
my daughter Clara, Mr Hayes? The
image of her mother.'
âI saw your truck coming Mr Hayes.' She was almost shouting in her easy breathlessness.
âGood to see you again.' Pulled the white horse's head to the off side as she spoke
to him.
âMiss Drysdale,' Painter said and smiled up at her. âMy you have grown. Good to see
you. What are the horses you have there?' He recalled her love of the animals.
Clara waved again at the flies in front of her face. Glanced at Lew once, twice.
He could not take his eyes off her. Three times now she had looked at him.
She looked back and pointed to the pregnant mare on the lead rope. âThat is our shy
Pearl, she is in foal, well you can tell that by her look, and this is Tom, her half-brother
who we had to geld as a yearling. Uncontrollable otherwise.' She leaned forward in
the saddle and patted Tom's dappled white neck. âRemember that Dad?'
The men all smiled up at her like they had heard something they didn't need to and
were silent.
Painter spoke to her and pointed to Lew with an open hand. âMiss Drysdale this is
Lewis McCleod.
âMiss Drysdale,' Lew said. âHow do you do?'
Her face lit and she blushed and looked to herself; at how her loose work shirt was
hanging off her. The jodhpurs tight on her thighs and a hole in the knee. The bloody
flies all over her. A million of them. âHello there,' she said with the sudden confidence
of boarding school. âGood thank you.' Tom once again moving beneath her. âAnd yourself?'
âI am fine thank you,' Lew said.
Painter watched them.
Drysdale was leaning back. Raised a hand and spoke. âClara, I was about to tell them
that we will be doing the roustabout and pressing work in the shed. There are no
shed hands coming.'
She shook her head. âAs well as mustering and penning? It won't work Dad. You should
have got a shed hand or two. Goodness sake.'
âWe have been having troubles. But they are sent to try us are they not?'
Clara looked at him as if he was losing his mind. âI would rather shed hands were
sent to help than troubles to try us. Or what about those awful bank managers. What
did you call them, Dad? The assassins of hope? Like a weather forecast, you said
they were. And we need to carry more sheep, Dad; have you seen the price of wool?
White gold.'
Drysdale gave an uncomfortable laugh. Shot a quick look towards the shearers. âWell,'
he said, âI don't know about that, girl.'
Painter coughed. âWe better get settled in then Mr Drysdale,' he said. âWe'll get
over to the quarters?'
Drysdale, nodding, was about to say something when Clara spoke up. âThere must be
wild dogs, dingo about, I saw crows before, flying up and jumping like they do.'
âDog crows?'
âBeyond the highway,' she said. âLike they were following you almost.'
They looked to where she pointed. âGone now by the look.' Tom walking backwards beneath
her.
The land fell away to the red mile track and fence line. The Comet windmill and water
tanks. A flock of white cockatoos
walking in a wide paddock behind the woolshed.
The earth, yellow and red brown and in places shimmering white to clear. A line of
trees marked the Great Eastern Highway about half a mile away. They watched as a
large articulated truck and trailer appeared in the distance and the sound of a powerful
American motor washed in to where they were and then it was past them and disappearing
away to the east.
âGoing to Kalgoorlie I expect,' Drysdale said. âThe gold mines there.'
After she had eaten, the dingo rested a short distance from the highway. She had
followed the road until she found an overhanging rock outcrop fringed by wax bush,
smoke bush and gimlet saplings. She was almost invisible.
Her belly made liquid digestive sounds and the two rows of her teats had begun to
itch. Her eyes drooped and she put her chin on her paws and slept. Flies touched
her nose and mouth. Once she snapped at them. Waited, made a small groaning noise
and relaxed, lay on her side. Lifted one paw to rub it over an ear; allowed the paw
to slip and rest at the end of her nose. Sand moving in front of her nostrils as
her breathing deepened. A small pup-yip and she slept.
She opened her eyes when the ground began vibrating. Raised her head, ears turned
to the sound. All other noise was sucked away as the approaching presence came through
the red earth towards her. Terrified, she crouched, ears laid flat to flee, and as
the sound roared by she snarled and flattened herself into
the ground, tail between
her legs. Roadside bushes swayed in the air wash of its approach and passing. The
heavily laden truck and semitrailer roared past on the highway. She began to tremble
and then made herself as invisible as possible in the earth and waited.
The noise faded away. She stood and came out of the hiding place. Sidled to a clearing
and sat in the shade of a karrik bush. Crows were stalking about, as if following
her. She ran at them growling and jumped up as they flew off to land a few feet away
and caw and waahdong their displeasure. She raised her nose. Tested the air.
Clara was speaking to them. âThe windscreen on your truck is broken Mr Hayes.' She
squinted to look more closely at their vehicle. âAnd it is dented on the front mudguard.
Headlight gone too?'