Authors: Peter McAra
âMmm.' Erin must tread carefully. âI remember the cliff-top walks we used to do. Grandma always carried a plastic sack and secateurs. When we came to a weed, she'd snip it and throw it into the sack. When I grew big enough, she promoted me to chief sack carrier. That sack got pretty heavy by the time we made it back to the cottage.' She sneaked another look at him, saw his eyes caressing her as she talked. She needed a breather. âTell me how a nice boy like you got mixed up with Grandma.'
âI grew up not ten kilometres from here.' He waved towards the range. âMy people raised beef cattle. Which is why I wanted to get into law school.'
âYou didn't like beef cattle?'
âI didn't like what happens to your favourite cow when she reaches a certain weight. In other words, I was a misfit around these parts.'
âI must confess to enjoying a steak now and again,' Erin admitted, remembering Hamish had ordered vegetarian. âBut do go on.'
âIt all began ten years ago,' he began. âWhen Edna first heard about Landcare. She couldn't wait to set up a local branch. Tore round town like a wild animal, sinking her fangs into anybody who wasn't quick enough to run. I was one of her first victims. I spent summer holidays on the farm with my folks while I studied, and in my early years in the profession, with one of those big international law partnerships.
âThose huge firms with fancy names and hundreds of lawyers on their staff?' Erin asked. âI thought they hired only the crème de la crème of law school graduates. And paid them squillions.'
âWellâ¦I did do pretty well at my studies,' he said. âI was the nerd from Central Casting.' Erin mentally smacked herself for her gaffe. âThey grabbed me, sent me to New York for a year. Told me I'd make it to partner â and zillions of dollars â in a few years. If I behaved myself.'
âSo you misbehaved?'
He took a bite from the tangle of noodles on his chopsticks. âWhen Edna showed me what was really going on around The Bay, I saw a huge disaster looming. I saw that if no one took a stand, the place where I was born would be a weedy jungle in a few years. Or a great big quarry. Or else, another slab of suburbia. The habitat for our beautiful Aussie wildlife would be gone forever.
âThat would be terrible. Butâ¦'
âSo I quit my city job and came home.'
âBut â'
âI know, I know.' He spread his hands. âIf I'd stayed, I'd be a millionaire by now. Probably living in one of those glitzy high-rise apartment blocks on the harbour. Know the price of everything and the value of nothing, as the old saying goes.' Erin cringed as she remembered her last dinner with Todd.
âSoon Edna told me I was the only one in The Bay who could take on the heavyweights â get a grip on the legal fine print of what they were doing. Then organise protests to stop those wicked developers raping the place. Write applications for government grants â all that stuff.'
He paused. She sensed his guilt over letting his hobby horse gallop away with him, his awareness that he should get back to being civilised dinner company. He twirled another bundle of noodles onto his chopsticks.
âThen one summer Edna just happened to leak a bit of local gossip to me. Old Tom Parker, The Bay's one and only lawyer, was selling up and moving to an old folks' home. It seemed Tom liked me so much, he sold me his practice for a song. I reckon Edna had something to do with that. So here I am.' He stopped to draw breath as he captured the last few noodles on his plate.
âDon't you, well, miss some of those fancy creature comforts that go with city living?' Erin asked, struggling with the revelation. The man had turned his back on a millionaire lifestyle most people would kill for.
âI'd rather work on saving habitat for an endangered frog than help some greedy multinational corporation gobble up another innocent local company,' he said. âAnd now I'm getting more and more of the work I like, from bigger and bigger outfits. So it's not such lean pickings these days. All round the world, people are realising that we've only got one planet, so we'd better look after it.' He took a breath. âAnyway, now it's your turn,' he flicked a hand towards Erin. âWhat are you going to do with that beautiful property of yours?'
Hamish had bared his soul to her. She'd better reciprocate.
âI
will
have to sell it. Sooner rather than later.'
âAs you told me this afternoon,' he said. âI couldn't believe you. Not that beautiful place. It's unique, spiritual.'
She caught the feisty glow in his eye before he turned away. Erin had hit the nerve she'd sensed lay just under the man's genial skin. Now the truth was out, she'd continue. âMy motherâ¦my parents split when I was eightâ¦she has a heart condition. It will soon become life-threatening, her specialist says. Years of struggle as a single mother, a mortgage that's a dead weight round her neck.' She paused. âAnd there's my job.'
âWhat's that?'
âI write children's books. Write and illustrate. It's mostly drawing, actually.'
âCan't wait to see your work,' he said. âBut couldn't you draw pictures here in Luna Bay? Maybe better pictures than you do now? Isn't it just possible the view from your workbench might inspire you?'
âWell, I have to spend a lot of time with my publisher, so it's â' As his words hit her, she realised he had a point. She mustn't give in.
âLuna Bay's only a few hours' drive from your publisher's office.' Hamish chased an imaginary noodle around his empty bowl. âAnd there's technology, remember. Lots of Bay locals work from home these days. Anna Kershaw, my neighbour. A financial journalist for AMC Press. She finds a Sydney visit about once every second Pancake Day is enough.'
For no reason, Erin grimaced. She'd seen the slick journalist's photo heading her column. Dressed to kill, the often-quoted Anna Kershaw was Hamish's neighbour. Why had she taken an instant dislike to a woman she'd never met, Erin asked herself. She didn't get a straight answer.
âIt's my mother,' she continued. âShe really needs to feel I'm there for her. Know that I'll call around every few days.' She'd always loved her mother, the woman who'd overcome so much to raise her. âShe could end up in care at any time. Orâ¦worse.' Erin stopped short. Every time she remembered her mother could die suddenly of a heart attack, she reeled from a vicious stab to her stomach. âHer doctor's warned her often enough, and told me she really needs expensive surgery. I have to be there for her.'
âBring her down here for a few months. Until you get the house into shape, ready to sell.' Hamish wasn't a quitter. âThere's a big hospital half an hour's drive from here. Your cottage is big enough for two. And a sight healthier than the smog-choked city.' Whatever that annoying man said, it made sense. It was putting her off her dinner.
âAll her friends live in her neighbourhood,' Erin countered half-heartedly. âAnd she, well, she says she'd die without her friends.'
âWhich is more important, her friends or her sweet, caring daughter?' Hamish fired back. He'd morphed into a lawyer putting a case to court. âAnd I assure you, the Luna Bay ladies will take her under their warm feathery wings the minute she shows up here. You don't understand the horsepower that team can churn out when they decide to help someone.'
Erin accepted that it was time to give up. Sure, she loved the idea of spending an occasional week in Luna Bay's rustic peace and quiet. But the city, with its 24/7 pulsing life, its shops, cafés, theatres, and people, its chemistry, had shaped her life since birth. At heart, she was, would always be, a Sydney girl. Hamish Bourke would never understand that. Erin liked Luna Bay, but she loved Sydney. She couldn't live two lives â city and country. She'd change the subject.
âOkay,' she said. âSounds like you're the perfect guy to advise me about my property. How to tidy it up.'
âI did suggest that you spend some time on the place â real time, not the quick sprint along the cliff-top path. Listen to what the land has to tell you.'
âYou mean listen to the trees? So trees really can talk?'
âSure they can. The ancient Druids said they could, and anybody with half an ear open can hear them.'
Was this smart lawyer telling the truth as he saw it? She'd assume he was just dangling a cute metaphor to draw her in â better that she play along with it.
âFine. So I can hear what the trees are trying to tell me if I go for a walk through the property? Maybe hug one or two as I go?'
âThat might help,' he said. âBut I hear them loud and clear every time I take a walk there, and I haven't taken to hugging one yet. It's all about being open to listening.'
âAnd how do I get to be open to listening? Remember, I'm pretty new to tree talk.'
âWellâ¦' He hesitated. âI suppose it's alright to tell you this. Since you own the place now.'
Erin looked hard into his face. What was he holding back?
âDid your grandmother ever tell you about the Sea Eagle's Nest?' he asked eventually.
âNo.'
âWell then. I suppose I'd better.' He leaned back in his chair. She sensed he was less than sure about sharing this secret with her. âYou know your land falls away pretty steeply towards the sea? Right at the highest point, where the cottage overlooks the ocean.'
âYes. I've never been down there. It's scary. A sheer cliff.'
âYou're right. Which is a good thing. There's a rope ladder tucked away in your shed. If you take that ladder, and your courage, in both hands, and head towards the cliff, you can hook the ladder to a tree, shimmy down, and find yourself at a pretty exciting place â Sea Eagle's Nest, Edna called it. It's a little cave â not much more than a cleft in the rock, actually. Don't know how Edna found it, but she did.' He paused, steepled his hands. Satisfied he'd hooked her, he carried on.
âShe set it up as a little shrine to her dead husband. Furnished it with the basics â bed, table and chair, running water. She showed it to me and said I could stay there any time. And I have, a couple of times. It's a beautiful place. Spiritual, she called it. She'd go there when she wanted to sort out something in her life â something deep. She might spend a few days there. Take a backpack with food, drinking water, a few books, some writing paper. It was like going back into the earth's womb, she said. So â'
âYou're suggesting I go there? To figure out what to do with the property?'
âYes. It was made for thinking through big decisions.'
Erin stared at him. Was he telling the truth? Was heâ¦weird?
âYou asked me for my advice about what to do with your property,' he said. âThat's it.'
âMmm. I don't know that I'm up for something that scary.'
âI could show you. Help you with the ladder and stuff.' He seemed genuine. And she'd pressured him for his advice, professional and otherwise.
âOkay,' she said quickly, before she lost her nerve.
âWhen would you like to do it?' At last, a friendly look flickered across his face.
âI have all the time in the world,' she said. âYour call.'
âTomorrow? Since it's Saturday.'
âFine. Say around ten?'
âIt's a deal,' he said, and parked his chopsticks on the little china rest.
âHow was your dinner?' she said, to change the subject.
âLoved it. You like Chinese too?'
âYes,' she said. âNot that there's much choice in Luna Bay.'
âOh, but there is, well, not exactly within walking distance.' His face brightened. âHalf an hour's drive away, up in the hills, there's the leafy ambience of Highlands Hall, weekend hideaway for the rich and famous.'
âYou're kidding.'
âNo. Best kept secret around these parts. The owners don't want to attract local yokels. They restrict themselves to absolute highest level business clients. Secret government briefings and workshops with foreign delegations. The big international corporations use Highlands Hall too â for confidential dinners and such. Often, the attendees' partners join them for post-workshop weekends. It's a beautiful place to relax. Ornamental gardens, a lake, complete with a bridge straight out of a Monet painting. Fabulous cuisine. A spectacular ballroom even.'
âHow do you know?'
âI often get speaking gigs there. Talking about forest regeneration, usually. My specialty. It seems conservation is showing up on the radar for big business at last.'
âAnd the post-workshop weekends with partner,' Erin asked. âHow have you found those?'
âUmâ¦I haven'tâ¦erâ¦notâ¦erâ¦me.' Hamish actually blushed. Erin winced in sympathy. So Hamish Bourke didn't want to talk about his partner. Totally out of character for a smart lawyer, he'd fallen in an awkward heap when she'd asked him out of the blue.
He pushed his plate aside. âMust go. A grant application to finish. Excuse me.' Erin watched him walk to the counter, pay his bill, and step out into the dark. So Hamish Bourke had a partner. Most people did. But what was he trying to hide?
Hamish cursed with every step as he walked back to his office in the dark. Scowled at the way his stupid, inept, bungled answer had tumbled out. After their hour together, he'd begun to respect Erin Spenser, care about the impression he made on her. Then, when the conversation suddenly switched to partners, he'd fallen in an ugly heap. The way she'd bitten back her smile while he choked said it all. She knew he was holding back on something painful, private, embarrassing.
Why had he fallen apart? It was truth time for Hamish Bourke. The second Erin Spenser had stepped through his office door that afternoon, had he, well â fallen in love? Stupid word that â love. What did it mean? Years before, he'd felt he was in love with Honey Biggs, and what a disaster that overnight infatuation had turned out to be.