Read Australian Love Stories Online
Authors: Cate Kennedy
Sometimes he kisses me goodbye on the cheek.
In the meantime a policeman called Jason invites me to a fancy restaurant.
âWas that dinner or was that, you know,
dinner
?' I ask him.
If I lived in America, I wouldn't have to ask. The American woman who lent me the professor's book told me that. Australian men can drive you crazy with guessing. Jason at least is straightforward.
âIt was a date,' says Jason. âA date with dinner.'
But I don't sleep with him even though I want to. Because I know I'll get bored, the way I did with my husband. Then he'll hate me and lie on the couch for a year smoking dope and tell all his friends that his life is ruined, and it's all my fault.
My born again friend sets me up with a Christian musician called Glen who lives in his brother's corrugated iron shed on twenty acres of farmland. Glen cooks me vegan meals and teaches me guitar. After dark we go for walks in the bush where we pray to Jesus and say things like, âLord, I just want to thank you for this time of fellowship.'
âOne day I'll meet the right woman,' he says as he juliennes the carrots and zucchini. âAnd the Lord will give me a sign.'
âAll these dinners,' I say, leaning against his double bed with its black and white Collingwood doona cover.
The next time I meet the professor at his house instead of a café. It's brick veneer like mine, and not as pretty as I'd hoped. The rooms are strewn with papers and books. His towels are charcoal and brown. His bed sheets and curtains are maroon. Man colours, I think. The kind of colours a man chooses when he's living alone. When I stand up to leave, he doesn't give me a kiss on the cheek. Instead, he puts his arms around me and we just stand there like that, holding each other close, for the longest time.
âWas that coffee or
coffee
?' I ask him when we talk later that evening on the phone.
It's Sunday night. Tomorrow my daughter will come home from her father's house. I'm in the kitchen steaming carrots for her lunches. I'm mashing broccoli with cheese.
âIt was coffee,' he says. âThe kind of coffee you have when you're falling in love with someone and you want them to stay the night.'
I open a bottle of wine and phone all my friends. I drink the whole damn bottle.
âIt's past midnight,' they say.
But I don't let them hang up. I just keep right on talking.
Where the Honey Meets the Air
CARMEL BIRD
I call her Honey-Hannah and she calls me Sugar-Sam. It's pretty sweet at our place.
And you know how it is with honey.
I hope you do.
Otherwise we're not going to be on the same page for a while here.
Followâ¦
ME
.
You see it there in the bowl, pot, with the honeybee embossedâis that the wordâon the side that curves and fits in the palm of your handâand you take the silver spoon they gave you when you were bornâthat was a while ago now wasn't itâ maybe your were actually born with it in your mouth (joke)â and you dig into the viscousâI think that's what it is, viscous, sounds goodâviscous semi-liquidâit doesn't resistâdown goes the soft sharp side of the silver spoon (Shakespeareâjoke) and you hold it just above your toast, all buttery and gleaming in the light of the conservatory, and you let that honey run drip dribble flow manifest down onto the butter, the toastâand it glides and pools and glows, positively literally
glows
as if lit from withinâand you think of a word and in the beginning it was, and the word was âmeniscus' and you wonder, there at the late morning breakfast table, if honey can be said to do meniscus, so you whip out the iPad (to tell the truth is was already there, whipped, all along) and off you go to Wikipedia and you're a little bit the wiser because now you kind of know that the
âmeniscus', plural menisci, from the Greek âcrescent', is the curve in the upper surface of a liquid close to the surface of the container, caused by the surface tension and depending on the liquid and the surfaceâoh blah blah there's lots more but that's enough of that kind of talk really, for nowâand I conclude that meniscus wasn't what I was looking for was itâI'm just thinking of the
skin
of the honey aren't Iâthe part where the honey meets the air and where it kind of resists somethingâpressure? moisture? distant laughter?âin the air, so that faint striations (
OMG
the old vocabulary is choofing along this morning) of heavenly pale butter beginning ever so delicately to marble (too heavy, this marble word) the envelope of the honey, and it is nearly time (tick tock/ayers rock/silver slippers/brighton rockâ Shakespeare again) to put the spoon somewhereâwhereânot back in the honey, surelyâoh bugger it, put it back in the honey and hang it all if some butter or a crumb of toast or the vestige of the dry wing of a dead moth happens to land in thereâor an ant, what about an ant? have signals gone out to the bloody ants letting them know that the honey potâpot or bowl? jar?âoh English it so devilish isn't itânow if this were French the honey would be, I imagine, simply in a
compotier de miel
or some such and be done with it, unless some froggy whiz had siphoned it onto a
soucoupe
(yes I tried to look it up but if I faff around in the French/English, English/French for much longer we'll be here all day and never get to put the toast and honey into anybody's mouth, let alone mine)âbut the funny thing was that not far from
miel
there lay a squashed and desiccated
ant
caught in the pages of the big Larousse, and highlighting the word
mignarder
which apparently is Frog for to pat, to caress, to fondleâI liked the sound of thatâand it goes on to explain that if you do this
thing called
mignarder son style
(yes I too thought we had wandered into porno there, patting the stylus, but no) you are being
finical
âI could leave you to look up finical in your Shorter Oxford (get real, misterâlook it up on google) but to save time I will tell you it means to be affectedly fastidious or precise in one's use of language, and to engage in mincing metaphors (
OMG
!!â âmincing metaphors'!!!! exclamation markâthink of the dead antâa metaphor, but is it mincing?) and I feel a figure of speech coming on in any case because the wing of the moth (imaginary) set me thinking that the honey is quite similar to amber, isn't it, and what do you knowâwe called our baby daughter Amber, yes indeed we didâto Hannah and Sam, a baby girlâher eyes are as brown (simile alert) asâas whatâoh you fill in the blanksâand her lips are as red asâoh no!âbloodâsome old fairy tale, I imagine it's Snow White, is crossing wires with me and a witch or wicked queen or step-mother is planning to hook our baby (she's now nearly two years old
BTW
and is partial to a spot of toast and honey herself, pat, pat, caress, caress) up with a prince from some minor kingdom by the sea in the distant or not so distant future of the planet, supposing the poor old planet has a future which maybe it does and maybe it doesn't, all things considered, what with the morphing climate and the disappearing bees (bee motif) and the way the sea is rising up like King Neptune reclaiming his rights whatever they were, and the way the sun is a dying star (have I got that rightâoh sometimes I don't seem to know what I am talking about)âand anyhow we were living together for a yonk, me and Honey-Hannah, and happy as two little bees in lavender (that didn't really work, did itânever mind) when one day
HH
who had not sighted blood as red as blood for a while came out of the ensuite with a funny
look on her face and a funny thing in her hand and said she thought she might be pregnant and she was of course and so we thought we'd zip off to the registry office and tie the knotâ something that went out of fashion for a few years, but has come back with a vengeance in the form of the Wedding Industry of which more a bit laterâwhen Her Family swept in and tied us up in knots, ribbons, bows and a certain amount of barbed wire, and whirled us up the aisle of St Francis in the Jolly Old Fields with a
huge
reception at Quoile, the (her) family home in the rolling hills (have I got that right, Family?) behind Kyneton in Central Victoria, Quoile being named after an old, old castle in County Down where the Family had its Elizabethan roots (joke)âwe are the Gunns of Quoile Castleâyes she is Hannah-Margot Gunn of Gunn's Constructions (not to mention Gunns Wedding Bells, Gunns Hardware and Gunns Honey, and not to forget Wishart, Perpendicular and Gunn, Barristers and Solicitors)âI should have warned you about how this narrative will tie itself up in the knots of several metaphors and coincidences and thingsâbut Honey-Hannah is unlike most members of the Familyâunlike particularly in the matter of issueâher mad sister has no children (not a hope in hell)âher brother's mad wife will have no children (although the brother, Fabian, has probably fathered a bastard or two but they would not count as your proper Gunns or Quoiles) and so when
HH
put forward the idea of the coming of Baby Amber there was much joyful todo among the constructors and wedding-meisters and hardware handlers and apiarists (at last a real word) and barristers and solicitors, and we were propelled together into the floral archways of matrimony until death did us part (relax, we are still buzzing along nicely in the real world) unlikeâoh-oh, here it comes, the
fly in the ointment, the snake in the grass, the ant in the honey, the startled grasshopper in the amberâwho's divorced, who's
dead
around here? who got together and then got parted by something other than death?âwell, in fact it was deathâthis is why I'm actually at home in the conservatory thinking about honey on toast instead of going to the office I occupy in Gunns Constructions where I hold a very responsible position and where I spend a hell of a lot of my time writing playsâwhaat?âyes, that's what I do as I sit at my vast mahogany desk-arama, I tap away at my plays, some of which (hem-hem) have had readings at places such as the Court House and fortyfivedownstairs, while Sheba my personal secretary takes calls and takes care of all stuff such as email andâwellâ businessâSheba's the real thing, I just draw the salary and look goodâI should explain that I am generally considered to be very presentable, a fucking asset to the whole shebang (ha haâlook at that will youâSheba runs the whole ShebangâI just thought of thatâI had occasion to text her just now to tell her I'll be late and she texts back sayingâyou'll like this I thinkâsaying Take Your Time Solomon, Sheba Runs the Show) you will have seen pics of
HH
and me around the placeâat the opera, at the races, at the charity fashion thingie, at the opening of the super awful reception for minor lovely royalty etc, etcâwe get aroundâand the great thing is we get around
together
as a genuine social item, an item in every wayâ
HH
and
SS
and their adorable Baby Amberâunlike, as I have intimated just now, unlike Patrick my best friend from school so long ago, unlike Patrick who hasânot to put too fine a point on itâwho hasâumâquite recently murdered his wife Cressidaâwh-at? oh yes, he did it allrightâ and if you don't know the story I should briefly fill you inâI
warn youâit's uglyâand it's probably just as well you've got me with my finical phrasingâI will caress you as we goâpat pat, mincing metaphor notwithstandingâI will tell you the tale of Patrick and Cressida, one of whom lies at the bottom of the pool with her dead lover, and one of whom lies very much alive, telling himself long lies, just along the hallway, in my bedroom, watching who knows what on
TV
and drinking scotch and waiting for me to bring him toast and honey and good news as he waits for Deke Perpendicular to arrive with advice and the good oil and the loophole in the noose (I think my mincing metaphor has sidled off somewhereâand anyway we don't do the noose or any other form of capital punishment in our light and enlightened social system)âlook his name isn't really Perpendicular but it's something weirdly Greek and I can't think it or spell it and so I am writing Perpendicular, emphasis on the âdic' because in fact he is one in many ways, but in the matter of getting people out of situations as sticky as that in which Patrick finds himself, he's almost magicâso, for want of anything better to do, and as a displacement activity, and because this is how I think in a crisisâ
OMG
but is this a crisis!!âI'm watching honey running slowly off the spoon while Patrick is in my bedroom, as I said, and I don't know what he's thinking, but I'm actually trying to distract myself from thinking about how Cressida was having this hot affair with Damien Bliss (I know, I know, but that was the name) who was the hot topic that looked after their indoor pool (heated) and everybody knew except Patrick, and guess what, there comes a time when Patrick arrives home in the middle of the day because he suffers from asthma (mild) and he was suffering from it, andâlook I apologize for the banality of all thisâbut this is why Patrick is lying in the comfort of my bedroom waiting for
his toast and honey and short blackâso he was feeling pretty seedy and he goes in the front door and what does he see but the naked Cressida and the naked Damien hotly engaged in a
soixante-neuf
on the dark and wonderful Turkish rug
just inside the front door
âthat was apparently, according to Patrick, what got to himâand the shock did wonders for the asthmaâit was the location you see that got to him, and so to cut a long story short, he loses it and he grabs Cress by her long chestnut locks with such sudden force that he breaks her neck, and then he king hits dazed Damien who cracks his stupid head on something or other (Patrick isn't yet clear on this) and he doesn't get up eitherâand so what does Patrick do thenâyou'd wonder, wouldn't youâwell he drags them one by one across the floor leaving trails of blood and stuffâand chucks them in the poolâ incredible, mad, but you never know how these things will take youâI said they were on the bottom but I don't really know do Iâmaybe they're floating around like blow-up toysâI don't know how long the various processes take, what with the body and the water and the air and Archimedes' Principal and so onâwhat Patrick did was pretty amazing when you think about itâjust goes to show what rage can doâthen he rings meâof course he doesâand I ring Perpendicular, and Patrick makes what is probably a mistakeâeven I can see thatâhe gets back in his car and comes around here where I'm getting ready to go to the office for a late morning meeting, and where I put him to bed and give him the scotch and start making toastâand so far nobody has called the police, but anyhow Perpendicular can work all that out and what I'm really waiting for is for Patrick to have his toast and get the hell out of here and then I'm going to message Sheba again and tell her I'm
really
going to be late-late,
like not coming in until tomorrow week, and I'm going to go and get
HH
from her mad sister's where she's making quince and elderberry something or other (a quaint lot, the Quoile Gunns) and I'm going to collect Amber from Brighton Bambini and we'll drive out to Quoile and stay for a few days because in spite of anything I might have said, if there is one place I can feel safe and sound and silver-plated it's behind the great iron gates and up the winding tree lined drive of the Family Home where Hannah's mama and also old nanny will enfold us in an incredibly stilling and sticky form of loveâyes loveâand nothing can ever disturb the knot of usâwhere no Mr Bliss can ever come, whereâwait for itâhere comes a rushing wave of somewhat mincing metaphorsâwe will be enfolded in the sweetieness of our own slow flowing honey, and we will live happily, ever after, in love and eternal easeâ
OMG
what dismal, dismal bullshit all this isâbecause I know, and Patrick knows, and Perpendicular knows, and the police are
going
to know, and even you knowâwhat has happened to Patrick (has it happened to Patrick, is that it? or has Patrick
done
itâthis remains to be sorted out by lawyer and police and jury and judge etc., not to mention the merry media, social and anti-social) could conceivably happen to anybody, and when you say anybody you could mean meâit could happen to meâI could come home one day and find
HH
in the arms (so to speakâI can't go further than that) of, say, Deke Perpendicular (laughter) and I could lose it and I could, say, shoot them with some handy gun or other and there I would be, rushing off to somebody's conservatory for scotch and toast and honeyâoh yes, honeyâand I could dip the spoon into the honey and I could lift up the spoon (silver, remember) and I could watch as the honey slowly falls and makes its way down