Flying Hero Class (16 page)

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Authors: Thomas; Keneally

BOOK: Flying Hero Class
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Whitey was still staring at McCloud, as if to say “You're the manager. This is your problem.” They were very severe, the Barramatjara, in their demarcations of duty. It was no use arguing with them about it.

McCloud suggested therefore that they all get on with the rehearsal. He would, he announced, take Bluey out for some coffee and a talk. He was grateful when the others failed to point out, though he knew they understood it, that the rehearsal did not make a lot of sense without Bluey Kannata, that his lack of a technical briefing might invalidate their own movements about the stage.

Outside, in the great piazza between theaters, the air was brisk and fountains splashed with a steely glimmer they caught from the seasonal sky and its honed clouds. It was a subtle, treacherously cold day such as the Barramatjara, in all their millennia in the western desert, had never before seen.

Shuddering in a paramilitary jacket, Bluey groaned, “Let's go to The Ginger Man, McCloud.”

For a man who believed in curses, he had a good working knowledge of where the bars were. That was his tragedy and his success.

“Neither of us can be trusted there, Bluey. I want to talk to you clearly.”

At this refusal, the shuddering increased again—it was as acute as it had been under the cutting table inside. “My uncle's died of that curse, Frank,” he called out. “Don't you ask me his name!”

“Of course I won't,” said McCloud. He understood that command; that you could not utter the names of the dead. To do so was to invite them to remain in the place they had died in, or else to infest the place where their death was known—to everyone's hellish confusion.

Poor Bluey was malleable, anyhow. He let McCloud push him across the street, in through the doors of O'Neal's, away from the bar, and to a corner booth. The shuddering continued. His face was entirely slick—there was sweat on the brow, and tears irrigated the rest.

McCloud ordered them coffee, during which Bluey studied the menu through the distorting lens of his fear.

“Listen, McCloud,” said Bluey when the urbane young waiter was gone. “Don't nag me about the stuff I smoke.”

Some years past, Bluey had been sent down from Baruda to learn the electrical trade at a technical college. He was on his way back, to attend to his mysteries and to service the Baruda diesel generators, when one of the rising young Australian film directors had noticed him in an airline queue and asked him had he ever acted. He read for the part, sang a song or two, charmed everyone in the production office. Within two weeks the young director was introducing him to film writers and other journalists at a press conference. Everyone was captivated.

On the set of the film, some white actor had passed Bluey a brotherly joint. Hash which languidly strums the brain! The wholesome and innocent model of booze! The Navajo had their peyote buttons, and the Barramatjara movie star should have a similar catalyst of visions. Such was the fashion of thought in those days. The gesture was a gesture of friendship by a member of Actors' Equity who had read Carlos Castaneda and his tales of narcotic illumination. No one considered the influence the joint might have on Bluey's particular Barramatjara catalog of dreams.

The film became a critical success and a winner of festival awards, among them the Gold Palm at Cannes. The world asked, “Where did he learn to act?” Bluey achieved a white kind of fame. He smiled his broad and crooked smile in rooms blue with cannabis smoke. He saw the topless, decadent girls of La Croisette prancing beneath the billboards of the Cannes Film Festival. Far beyond the usual reach of marsupial rat and the Two Brothers, he made contacts.

But he did not look like a man with a wide circle of friends today, not in O'Neal's, under pressure from a different dream from Whitey's. You could tell when the memory of the dream of his uncle's death recurred to him, for he would begin weeping again in the middle of mouthfuls of coffee, spilling tears and coffee wildly down his chin and even onto his shirt.

“You listen to me, Frank,” he pleaded. “I can tell a booze dream from a grass dream, and a grass dream from a fair dinkum dream. What I saw then, on the stage … it was a fair dinkum dream.”

“We'll see,” McCloud promised. “We'll get through on the radio telephone and we'll see exactly what it was.”

“I don't need any radio telephone to know,” said Bluey, crumpling his hands in front of his eyes. “I saw it all happen.”

In the end, just as a mercy, McCloud ordered him some cognac, which arrived in a large brandy balloon with a lit candle so that Bluey could enhance the texture over the flame. If he had chosen to.

“You know, those geologist blokes have been out west of Baruda. My uncle's country, that one. Mount Gilbert, it's called. It's my uncle's. And they went and did some drilling. You know, they take these core samples. And they drilled, those blokes. And they reckon there's diamonds out there. Out there towards Mount Gilbert. My uncle's country. And they reckon there's diamonds.”

The dancers sometimes told their stories this way, moving in circles, repeating chief ideas, teasing the fabric out. It appeared a Barramatjara tale
rolled
, as well as had straight momentum.

“So these blokes are very keen on that place, of course, on that Mount Gilbert country of my uncle's. And they take their bits of core sample away. And all at once there's one of those classy planes, the ones that carry about a dozen heavies. Executive jet or something like that. It comes into Baruda. One of those classy bloody planes that … it touches down. And blokes wearing those Singapore-style tropical suits and silk ties are on it.

“And they want to go into a conference with my uncle and some of the other old blokes. All these old fellers who have something to do with Mount Gilbert, who have to do its ceremonies. These are the old men the classy blokes want to talk to. And they talk to them, but nothing gets settled. There's a talk session goes on for two days. And no one says yes or no, can or can't. Because it's my uncle's country, but he can't just say yes. He can't say, ‘Keep drilling, blow the shit out of it with gelignite.' He has to check with all his cousins, because it's their country, too. That one called Mount Gilbert. Not just my uncle's, but his cousins' as well.

“These blokes in the suits, they're from the Department of Trade and the Department of Aboriginal Affairs, too, and the department of this and the department of bloody that. They say to my uncle, ‘You don't mind helping Australia out, do you, mate? What with its adverse balance of payments and all that shit? You're a patriot, aren't you, old feller?' And you know what, Frank? They're doing the work for those drillers. And they're saying, ‘There'll be all these mineral royalties, and you can buy schools and trucks. And there could be other things here in the end, on this Barramatjara freehold. There could be foreign governments come in here and pay you a big rent for a little bit of this country. But before that happens, they want to see you Barramatjara blokes are interested in progress!' And they go on talking the poor old feller blind.”

Bluey gave another yelping sob, and McCloud rushed in to prevent it developing.

“Keep going,” he urged Bluey. “Take a sip of that stuff, just a sip.”

“It's terrible for those old blokes,” said the Barramatjara film star, the tribe's only sniffer of white powder. “It's pretty terrible for us fellers who're away all the time. But in a different way, you know. The heat's really on blokes like my uncle. On old fellers like that. ‘Traditional owners.' There was a time traditional owners were traditional owners and took it for granted. But now those words are in the law. ‘Traditional owners.' The blokes in the Singapore suits have to keep chattering away at them. And not only the old blokes. I mean, I got my responsibilities up there in the Baruda country, too. I've got a wife up there, you know.…”

“I know. I met her.”

“She talked to you?”

“No, she didn't talk. Not particularly.”

“She's pretty shy,” said Bluey, conceding a grin toward the memory of her shyness. “Not like that rowdy sheila I'm living with in Sydney, not like that. A bloody old-fashioned girl, that one. My Barramatjara missus. My wife's country's way over near Giles Weather Station. I got ceremonies in the Baruda country I gotta go to, I got ceremonies in Giles, I got ceremonies all over the bloody place. But I'm never there. I'm always making bloody pictures. Or going to the opening of malls. Or poncing round in New York or somewhere.”

And he went into a staring contemplation of his destiny, before lowering his voice.

“Frank, I go back into all that country, anyhow.
Badunjari
. You know
badunjari
? It's that dream journey you can make. It buggers you, mate. There you are in the fucking Carlton-Ritz, shagged-out, rooted, absolutely buggered, trying to sleep. And then your spirit gets up. Your spirit comes up out of you.
You
might have checked into the fucking Carlton-Ritz, Frank. But not all of you. And your spirit, you know … he travels you to Easter Creek or Giles or Mount Dinkat or Gilbert or any of those places. You see those places in daylight. You sing to their stones, Frank. You're half-dead with that
badunjari
. But you can't get out of it. And at eight o'clock in the morning, when they wake you up, there's some press conference you got to go to.

“And those journos and critics, they don't know any of this, and you can't say anything. And they think, What a dumb fucking Abo! They don't know, Frank, I could've been singing those stones half the night. That's why I'm not what you'd call a good bloody traveler. But you know what, Frank? Let me tell you! That Jim Beam stops
badunjari
, and I love it like a brother! And that little white snow you snort up your nose! And screwing yourself stupid with a white girl! That's what works. You get a rest from that
badunjari
, Frank. And Christ, I like a rest.”

“Oh, dear God,” cried McCloud, who had never heard a story of such anguish, such wrenching of the spirit. “What can I say, Bluey? Do you want to go home? To Baruda, I mean?”

Bluey forlornly considered the idea. Then he halfway smiled. “Don't think so, Frank. Too much of a bloody nomad now.”

McCloud looked beyond the glass of the restaurant window, at pale faces which seemed not so much burdened with dream journeys as with their lack.

“So my uncle,” said Bluey, resuming
that
tale at last, “caves in and agrees to letting them have a mining lease. They can drill his country! What else can he do? He's big on the queen, my uncle. Like Paul Mungina the
didj
bloke, you know. You can't say a word against the queen in front of either of them. So the queen wants him to let the diamond drillers cut loose. That's the way he thinks about it, poor old bugger. And he thinks, I'm over sixty, and I can't stand the talk and the pressure, and my cousins will sing me for it, but that's okay. I had my life, he thinks. And so he says okay. He says, ‘You can drill!'”

By “sing me” here, McCloud understood, Bluey did not mean the sort of singing of the stones which occupied him during sleep. He meant a curse.

“Poor old feller knows he can't hang on to his country anyhow,” said Bluey. “Even though they give it to him freehold. They don't mean it. They don't mean, ‘We won't come round and talk about the queen and exports and being a patriot.' Because they will come round. They come round all the time in Singapore suits. They get down out of classy bloody planes and talk bullshit about balance of payments and exports. And my uncle stares at them and tries to sort out how much of what they're saying comes from the queen.”

In the electronics pit on the hijacked aircraft, McCloud would remember with distress that he hadn't even asked Bluey the name of the drilling company, the corporation behind the enterprise. It was likely Bluey didn't know it anyhow, that it was some small drilling company which had since sold the rights to the megalith named in the magazine article. And it would be no use explaining to Taliq that Bluey's tale had sounded generic, to him, that the names almost hadn't mattered, that the story was an encapsulation of the Barramatjara tragedy and all the rest of the earth's tribal tragedies.

Useless to say to Taliq, “I have no interest in mining news.”

Useless to say, “I own no diamond drilling stocks.”

Anyhow, in O'Neal's, McCloud hadn't asked for the company's name.

Hadn't he been a compassionate troupe manager, though? And hadn't he swallowed down his own bewilderment at what the literary agent had by that stage already told him, and given himself over entirely, companionably, to treating Bluey's bewilderment?

But that counted for nothing in Taliq's court. It did convince McCloud himself, as he shivered and exchanged conversation with Stone and the Englishman Cale, that he must always ask for names. That it was a guilty world, and names must be inquired after. That you needed to live in the whole world, the world of the miners as well as the world of the agents. If I get out of here, McCloud promised himself forlornly, I'll make sure I inquire after names and match them against the souvenir programs of dance companies.

In O'Neal's that day, the cognac had leveled out Bluey's woe but somehow given it more authority.

“I was up there on that stage,” reported Bluey, “and my uncle came in front of me, and his face was painted white and he had that confused look, the look of dead people. And I said to him,
Yes, you're dead, old man. You got to go back to your country
. His face had that bloody awful look. He didn't believe me, or he didn't want to go, but he knew I was on to something all right. I knew something he didn't. For the first time in my bloody life, I had one up on him. And he wanted to do me a harm. Because he didn't know where he was. Poor old bugger. He didn't know whether to stay or start out, he didn't know whether to look for his own blood or put a curse on mine.”

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