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Authors: Georgia Blain

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BOOK: Too Close to Home
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ANNA RINGS MATT AT work. She wants to have a surprise party for Freya's fortieth birthday, a weekend up at Paolo's place.

He's running late for a site inspection, and because of this he's terse when he tries to explain that this isn't something Freya would enjoy.

‘Why not?'

She doesn't like big gatherings, he says, and when Anna tells him they can keep it small, he starts to feel trapped.

‘The whole weekend – with lots of people. She likes to be able to get away from everyone. You know her, she's always the first to leave.'

But Anna doesn't listen. ‘Leave it to me,' she tells him. ‘I do know her.'

He was young when he was with Anna. It feels so long ago that he rarely recalls their relationship, and when he does, he is unsettled by the fact he had once thought he was in love with her. She was (and is) beautiful, but not in a conventional way. Fine boned, with wide-set green eyes, set off by short black hair, she was like a pixie. Her limbs, hands and feet were too
long, and her mouth too large, but this only added to her charm. Her clothes took her outside fashion but looked right; heavy platform shoes long before they came back into vogue, thigh-high striped socks, short denim skirts and silk blouses, combinations that came together as art.

He saw her often – dancing, drinking, laughing and flirting until the evening had faded into morning – and they would smile at each other, the very fact that she had noticed him and he had noticed her bringing all the rush of life to a standstill. He wasn't surprised when they finally talked, when she came up to him at a party and took his face in her hands, kissing him on the mouth and telling him she had always wanted to do that.

‘Always?'

She had nodded vigorously. ‘Absolutely.' And then she had kissed him again.

Her grip on life and those around her was ferocious. It was thrilling and exciting and then wearing and exhausting. He remembers a morning when he'd watched a dog take a shoe in its mouth and shake it furiously, and he had thought, that is what Anna is like. She has me like that, and I've had enough. He began to extract himself, telling her he needed to study and earn money, and it was all too much. He remembers how bemused she had been by his protest, and then how bored. The practicalities of life should be left to take care of themselves. They were dull. And then when she realised he was serious, it hadn't taken long before she'd left him alone – to his relief.

Which isn't to say he doesn't like her. He does. He still admires her vitality, even if he is also a little wary of
it, keeping enough distance to ensure that any grip she manages to obtain is easily released.

He is out on site when she calls him back.

‘Don't tell her,' she warns him.

‘Tell her what?'

‘About the party.'

He's at a loss in the face of her persistence. He wants to ask her why she called to ask if he felt Freya would like a weekend away, only to ignore him when he told her that no, she wouldn't.

‘I'm busy,' he tells her. ‘Can we talk about this later?'

‘Let's have a drink,' she suggests. ‘Stop by my place. After work.'

He walks down to the edge of a rock platform and looks out across the block of land, the slope steep and dense with silver grey eucalypts. In the distance he can see a sliver of Pittwater, dancing sharp and bright between the crooked branches of tall gums, white scribble against the blue sky.

He sits in the shade of a tree, the breeze bringing slight relief from the heat, and watches a thin black line of ants weave their way through specks of lichen on the rock. As he lies back and shuts his eyes, he tries to envisage the house he would build here if he could do what he wanted. He knows what the client wants, he has been to their home, a stark concrete cube that is striking but austere. This is the kind of building that Simone, his boss, is renowned for; this is why people come to her. And his job is to replicate, despite the fact that she's now sending him out on his own, letting him handle clients and build up his own practice.

But, if he were left to his own devices, it would be quite different. Opening his eyes to the canopy of leaves, he imagines a canvas tent. That would be enough, he thinks. The site is perfect in itself, and he can only view any act of building as desecration. He smiles at how ludicrous his position has become. He is in the wrong profession, and it is not as though the realisation has suddenly dawned. But they have a child and a mortgage and this is the way in which he can make money.

Standing slowly, he stretches his arms overhead, and then turns to the northern boundary of the site. There is a small creek that runs along here; dry now, it is nothing but twigs and stones clogging a trough in the dirt. Reaching down, he pushes a finger into the soil, checking for any moisture. It is sandy. Down to the east of the block, there are ant hills, red mounds with open mouths, and he avoids walking across them. The incline to the west is the steepest, and he looks up, shading his eyes against the afternoon sun. His hangover is not as bad as he'd expected but it's there nonetheless. It's the cigarettes he regrets: there's a thickness at the back of his nasal passages, a polluted lump in his throat, and a heaviness to his headache.

He had told Freya that the surprise of the evening had lifted his spirits, and it had. He'd felt alive this morning, as though he had shaken off the constrictions of his life and was once again young and without plans.

When he'd met Shane, he'd been completely broke. He had hitched his way north, surfing and picking fruit on the way, finally stopping in Brisbane where he'd registered for the dole. It was warm, still hot days and afternoon storms, the clouds swelling, hanging low and
heavy with no breath of air, until finally the rain came as the day eased into night, steam rising from the pavements. He'd thought about going home for Christmas. In fact, he'd even written to Freya, a card scrawled in the post office, telling her that he missed her (which he had) and that he was thinking of coming back.

He'd slept out for the first couple of nights, waiting until he could pick up his first dole payment. He smiles when he remembers dressing up as an angel, putting plastic holly around his hair and wearing a pair of wings he'd found outside a department store. His plan had been an idiotic one, but he was young and even less adept at being entrepreneurial then than he was now. He thought that playing a tin whistle in the pubs might earn him a bit of money from the drunks.

Shane had been playing pool that night. The pub was at the end of the street where he lived. He'd told Matt that times must be as tough for angels as they were for blacks if they were sending blokes like him out to earn a buck, and he'd bought him a beer and a meal.

They'd ended up at his house at two in the morning, pissed and talking politics, lying on saggy couches, broken louvres wide open to let in what little air there was, mozzies whining all through the night. He had gone to sleep in the living room, waking to the stillness of another hot Brisbane morning and the heavy clunk of the plumbing as water groaned out of the taps in the bathroom.

In the kitchen he met Lisa. Wrapped in a sarong, wet hair in a towel; she looked at him, dishevelled and hungover.

‘Who are you?' she asked.

The directness of her question was at odds with the shyness in her eyes. She was slight, with honey brown skin, white blonde hair and pale lashes, her gaze slipping away from him whenever possible, although she smiled when he explained how Shane had rescued him from continuing to make a complete fool of himself in the pub.

He asked if he could have a shower. It had been a few days, he added, apologising if he smelt. She sniffed at the air, wrinkling her nose, her blue eyes quickly returning to the plate in front of her, burnt white toast spread thickly with Vegemite.

She was gone when he came back into the kitchen. He made himself a cup of tea, and put some bread under the griller. Cockroaches scuttled across the blackened stove. The pile of dishes next to the sink threatened to topple over as he extracted a knife and rinsed it under the tap.

He ate and then did the washing up, piling relatively clean crockery and pots across the kitchen table, leaving a note balanced on the top. He was going to pick up his dole cheque and then he would be back to collect his stuff. Thanks, he added at the bottom. The couch and a shower were a welcome change from the park bench he'd slept on for the last couple of nights.

As he remembers, he stands at the highest point of the site, looking out across the block. He had forgotten so much from that time, and last night he and Shane had leant in close to the fire and talked, bringing up places and people that had slid into a part of himself that had been closed off. Names had returned slowly and he'd asked after each person as he recalled them; Shane had mentioned others who had been there and he could
visualise some faces, not all. He shakes his head. Strange, he thinks, how Lisa had popped into his thoughts just then, yet neither of them had mentioned her last night. He wonders what became of her and where she is, smiling as he does so. They had only had a month or so together, but there'd been an ease between them that had made it seem much longer.

He takes one last look out across the bush and then jumps off the boulder, feet landing in a carpet of dry eucalypt leaves, the sharp smell astringent in the breeze.

 

Anna is on the phone when he stops by her house on the way home. She holds the receiver away from her ear as she opens the door, signalling that the person to whom she is talking holds absolutely no interest for her, and then she laughs loudly at something the caller has said.

She is doing an interview. She has a film coming out in a month and is on the publicity rounds, she explains, hanging up.

‘There's another call booked in half an hour,' she apologises as she opens a bottle of wine and pours him a glass. She sits opposite him, and then nods in the direction of the courtyard. ‘Shall we go outside?'

‘What makes it hard is that it's such an unbelievably bad film,' she continues as they take a seat next to the stone water feature. It trickles into two long pools that border the courtyard, each filled with waterlilies. ‘The director was an inexperienced idiot and I have to praise him. The script was awful and I'm expected to describe it as brilliant.' She slumps slightly and he can tell that her dislike for this aspect of her job is genuine. ‘It will
probably last two weeks on the screen. Thank Christ.' She pauses for a moment and takes a look at him.

‘You're a bit worse for wear.'

‘I drank too much last night.' He glances at the glass in his hand with some wariness.

‘Hair of the dog.'

‘Never got that expression.' He takes a sip, and it is, of course, excellent wine.

‘Paolo keeps us stocked,' she tells him, and at that moment, Paolo comes out into the courtyard, still dressed in a suit, immaculate as always.

Anna reaches out one long pale arm to him and draws him close, kissing him on the lips as she does so. ‘You're home early,' she says, and he tells her he's going to get himself a glass.

Matt has never really known what Paolo does. None of them do. He raises capital. He has a lot of money. Beyond that, the details are too uninteresting to pursue.

Anna has been with him for about three years now. They met at a charity benefit; one of the events she is often asked to attend because she gives the evening glamour. She chooses carefully, knowing that an occasional appearance in the right social pages benefits her as well. In the days before Paolo, she used to sometimes ask Freya to go with her. Freya would come home pissed on expensive champagne. If he were asleep, she would wake him up, wanting to talk (alcohol often makes her chatty), to tell him about the rich and famous, the gossip she had heard in the loos, the food they had served; finally curling up next to him, saying that she was glad she was who she was.

Anna had changed with Paolo.

Wrinkling her nose, Freya would try to describe it. ‘She's safer. In what she wears, in what she says, in how she behaves.'

Money had killed her imagination.

‘That's what it does,' Freya would say.

And he had to agree with her, although he doesn't quite know why it so often has that effect. Perhaps it's simply having more to lose. He looks at Anna now and remembers driving drunk through the back streets of Sydney, her dressed in an eccentric mishmash of clothes, the windows down, music blaring, as they sought out drugs, both of them trying every connection they could think of, neither of them having any success, until finally they gave up. Sitting in the car in a suburb they didn't know, they rolled joints, passing them back and forth, giggling inanely, while night-time turned to day.

‘So,' Anna asks, ‘what do you think of the landscaping?' She winks as she speaks, mocking her own question and the place where she lives.

He realises the courtyard and water feature are new, and he had failed to comment.

‘Very European,' he grins. ‘Roman, in fact.'

Paulo perches on the edge of a ludicrously expensive and frail-looking iron parterre chair, holding his glass up to the light.

‘What is Roman?' he asks. ‘Apart from myself, of course.'

As Matt waves his hand to indicate the courtyard, the phone rings and Anna picks it up. It's her second interview. She takes it inside, leaving Matt to discuss builders and landscape architects with Paolo.

‘So, have you seen the film?' Matt asks, wanting to change the topic from one that is too much like work.

Paolo shakes his head. He is disparaging about most of the projects in which Anna is involved. ‘Australian cinema,' he says. ‘It is so tedious. Infantile, underdeveloped.' To be fair, he usually does praise Anna's work, or the little he sees of it.

‘I am worried about her.' Paolo leans forward.

‘Why?' Matt asks. He and Paolo never talk about anything other than what lies on the surface.

BOOK: Too Close to Home
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