Read Last Day in the Dynamite Factory Online
Authors: Annah Faulkner
He can still see the telegram.
COMING LONDON FOR HOLIDAY STOP NEED ACCOMMODATION STOP ANY ROOM
?
He did have room. After Judge moved back to Australia Chris had entertained a string of Aussie guests, but he wasn't keeping the flat on for much longer. In two months he'd be leaving for Germany to spend the summer honing his cabinet-making skills.
FINE TILL END MAY
he wired back.
Diane arrived a week later with a large suitcase and a matching smile.
She'd changed in the two years since Chris had last seen her; she looked more mature, more ⦠worldly, a far cry from the clingy kid of their school days in Port Moresby. Though both their families had relocated back in Brisbane, they'd lived in different suburbs and gone to different schools and didn't see much of each other until they went to university. Diane was studying English Lit and they kept bumping into each other at parties, reviews and student meetings. They didn't date per se â Chris already had a girlfriend â but he and Diane both loved theatre and movies and sometimes they went out together.
The evening after she arrived in London, Chris came home from work to find the table set, wine poured and dinner being prepared.
âWhat's the occasion?'
âCelebrating our re-connection,' she said, handing him a glass of wine.
Chris tugged his ear. He hadn't ever considered them âconnected' in the first place, simply good friends. âWell, thanks, Diane, but you didn't need go to all this trouble. You're here to see England, not me.'
âYou, too.'
During the day, she took herself off sightseeing around London but every night Chris came home to a hefty glass of scotch and an excellent meal. His weekends had hitherto been spent prowling galleries and flea markets or visiting friends, but now Chris felt courtesy demanded he show Diane something beyond the city limits. So he borrowed the company's shooting brake and took her on trips into the countryside. It was no hardship; she was good company; intelligent and stimulating and amenable to whatever he suggested.
But her determination to return his hospitality was so overwhelming â with theatre tickets, concert tickets, exotic food, expensive wine and immaculate housekeeping â that Chris began to feel uncomfortable. He'd refused her offer of rent, imagining she'd stay only a week or two but now wondered if he should have made a more formal arrangement. He asked about her holiday plans.
âNothing definite,' she said. âI thought I'd do England first, then see what appeals.'
To encourage her holiday spirit he brought home travel brochures which she courteously acknowledged and put aside. One evening he arrived home to find his laundry â which he'd stuffed into the bottom of his wardrobe â fastidiously washed, ironed and laid out, folded, on his bed. As he contemplated the neat stacks he began to suspect he'd been misreading her signals.
âThank you,' he said warily as he stowed his underwear.
âYou're very welcome.' She sat on the bed and curled her finger towards him. âAnd look.' She drew back the quilt. âLovely fresh sheets.'
âYes ⦠thanks.'
She took his hand. âWould you like to try them out?'
That night Chris discovered a Diane he had never imagined. She gave him her body and knew what to do with it. His, too. But when he woke during the night he found himself alone.
The next morning she was pleasant but remote and Chris wondered if she regretted what had happened. Yet night-time found her once again in his bed but gone the following morning.
âDid I dream the last two nights?' he asked at breakfast.
âNo.' She smiled.
âThat's a relief.' He bent to kiss her but she ducked.
âSo, what's wrong?'
âNothing.' She put the kettle on the cooker and a match to the gas. âNothing to do with you, Chris. It's me. I'm ⦠I'm a night-time person.'
âWhat â not even a kiss between dawn and dusk?'
âOh ⦠yes, but â¦' She fussed over a bowl of cereal. âBut not ⦠you know.'
He didn't know and wasn't inclined to enquire too deeply. Diane's sleeping dogs, whatever their names, were not his business.
Thus it continued. For three weeks Chris veered between delight and confusion, submission and domination, surrendering to her hands and mouth and plundering her lovely flesh. But flesh was all he found. Try as he might, he could neither evoke nor inspire any sense of transcendence in their nocturnal couplings. For Diane, the act was resolutely physical; her spirit maddeningly, tantalisingly out of reach. Years later, tantalising would become frustrating, then isolating. But back then, she was a feast â for his eyes, his hands and his cock â a feast that never ended, yet never quite satisfied.
âWill I see you when you get back to Brisbane?' she asked, as he began to pack up his gear.
âSure. Why not?'
âI mean, as ⦠this?'
He hesitated. âI ⦠I really like you a lot, Diane, and maybe ⦠but you're ⦠you're not very â¦'
âI know. Demonstrative. And I'm sorry; it's not that I don't care, it's just the way I was brought up. Maybe ⦠in time, I'll â¦'
She'd decided to go to Paris. Two days before he left for Germany Chris drove her to the airport. On the way they stopped at a building site where Chris was overseeing the partial demolition of an old house. On the second level the chippy had tacked up a temporary balustrade. Diane went up to investigate, leaned on the balustrade and it gave way, dropping her fourteen feet to the ground. She broke her leg and three ribs. During her six weeks in hospital, an additional complication was revealed through routine checks.
She was pregnant.
Diane was shocked, but happily so.
Chris was thunderstruck. He'd taken precautions and been honest about his feelings. Unwilling to abandon Diane in hospital, he'd already surrendered his prized summer job. Now this. In two months his world had upended.
Yet, as the shock wore off, Chris came to accept his new situation. He rather liked the idea of becoming a father and concluded there were worse things than marriage and family. Diane was a good friend, a capable and pleasant companion, and while he'd have preferred a more affectionate mate, it was not beyond imagining that in time, respect and liking might turn to love.
There was no-one else. The door on that had closed six months ago; now he was merely locking it. In architecture, form followed function. A house was designed for a family. A family was designed for its members. A mother, a father and a baby. The question was obvious and he asked it.
Chris drops onto the sofa and rattles the newspaper but memories of those pre-marriage days continue to creep between the lines. Pregnancy dulled Diane's sexual intensity â naturally enough â but it never returned. Not that it bothered him nearly as much as her ongoing emotional detachment. He can drench himself in Diane but his soul remains dry.
He abandons the newspaper and puts the kettle on for tea. When it boils he fills the mug, squeezes the tea bag with his fingers, then blows on them to cool. Diane bought him a tea bag squeezer which he never uses. She has long since given up asking why. He can't tell her; he doesn't know. He takes the tea to the balcony but it's so windy he brings it back to the sofa.
Seeing her again?
He slurps his tea.
Are you?
Go away.
He stretches out on the sofa. Its square arms crick his neck. He stuffs a cushion under his head which pushes the flesh of his cheek into his eye. He worms further down until his head is flat but now he's too long for the sofa; one leg dangles over the end, the other over the side. Somehow, he manages to fall asleep.
He wakes with a stiff neck, eases himself up and goes to the kitchen. Lunchtime, but he's not hungry. Outside, the scabby wind makes mean little waves. Not inviting. Perhaps a drive.
He guides the Rover north, avoiding beaches and opting instead for Noosaville by the river. With a flabby white-bread sandwich â all that's left at the deli in the wake of the lunchtime crowd â Chris sits under a cotton tree to eat, listening to the plop and slap of water and gazing across at the grey-green bush of the north shore. Ben is there, in his head.
Their phone conversation has provided a sad kind of logic behind Jo's silence. But her fear of the family cracking has been realised anyway, and if it is not to shatter beyond all repair, Chris is the one who must fix it.
Bertie has accommodated unimaginable difficulties in her life, losing her husband and her daughter, yet still remaining soft and sane. She's even looked beyond death to form a new kind of relationship with Stephanie.
If he wants a relationship of any consequence with Ben he must do likewise, and build something new. The kind of reconciliation urged by Diane â caulk the cracks, tape the mouths, guard the silence â is not possible. Truth is out and everything has changed. He must change with it.
He gets up and dusts off his trousers. A walk. Food. Not a crappy sandwich but proper food, for dinner.
A couple of hundred metres down the road he finds a bustling fish shop with gum-booted staff sliding shiny seafood onto icy trays. Oysters, prawns.
Dinner.
Invite Bertie.
Yes, why not? They are, after all, old friends. Even before ⦠even after. If she and her Stuart bloke can't come he'll eat the food himself.
Two dozen Sydney rock oysters, a bag of king green prawns, beef rib and salad stuff from the supermarket.
Twenty minutes later he's knocking at her door. Nobody's at home except for a smoochy, flaxen-haired cat with a broken tail. Chris bends down to stroke it, instantly evoking a loud, rattly purr. He leaves a note under a stone on the doormat and returns to his unit.
When the buzzer sounds, he jumps.
âIt's me.' Bertie's voice is tinny through the intercom.
Chris waits by the lift. She steps out, alone.
âStuart not with you?'
âNo, he's busy this evening.' She hands him a bottle of wine and surveys the tired white walls of the unit, the beige sofa and maroon Indian cushions. âGee, the decor really has that wow factor. Oh, look! A knapsack, a real one with buckles and all.'
âI've had that since I was a kid.' Chris pulls the cork from the wine and uncaps a beer. âI ran away with it when I was eight.'
âReally â where to?'
âCoomera. I was headed for Coolum but there was no train to Coolum and the ticket seller assumed I meant Coomera.'
âWhy did you run away?'
âLong story.'
âI like long stories.'
Chris takes the oysters from the fridge. âLet's sit outside.'
Bertie hooks her stick over the back of a chair. Chris brings out the drinks and oysters, takes one from the plate, tilts his head back and drops the creamy softness into his mouth. âFood of the gods. My favourite. What's yours?'
Bertie smiles.
âOh, no,' Chris says. âDon't tell me it'sâ'