I arrived back in Sydney late at night and woke up, jetlagged, at six the next morning. When I walked down to the beach it was still dark except for the fishermen's lights scattered at intervals along the beach. I waded into the water, hoping the winter cold would wake me up. I was not paying attention but after a minute or two I looked at the shore and realised that it was moving away from me faster than it should have been. I was half asleep, it was dark, and I was caught in a rip. It shocked me, how quickly it happened, and for a moment I felt a surge of panic.
I knew what I had to do, Tony had lectured me endlessly on the subject. âIf you are ever caught in a rip, don't swim against the currentâyou will just exhaust yourself. Swim to the side of it, at a 45-degree angle. The rip won't be wide, they never are. And never overestimate your strength. Conserve it.' I was tempted, for a minute or so, to float out gently, to go with it, but Tony's words came to me and I began to swim at an angle to the shore.
When I got home I knocked on his bedroom door, not sure if he'd be there, but he was.
âYou've woken me up. Go away.'
âIt's seven o'clock already. You always get up around now, and besides, you haven't seen me for weeks. I need to thank you for the fact that you just saved my life, not fifteen minutes ago. I almost drowned.'
âMy pleasure,' he said, as he rolled out of bed, looking bemused.
âSo?' Tony asked, after I had told him about my road trip, âNow you are both in town at the same time do you plan to see him?'
âI can't promise I won't. I've broken too many promises over the years. It seems safer not to make them.'
Tony nodded and sighed. âI might have saved you this morning, Cath, in a virtual fashion. But I can't keep doing it. You're going to have to learn to save yourself. You do know that?'
âI know it,' I said. âI just don't seem to be very good at it.'
Michael called. âI came for a sabbatical. Can we have dinner? Please?' he asked. âI need to talk to you.' So I betrayed myself, and my friends, and time, by letting all I had learnt slip away from me yet again. By walking down the same old street and leaping in that hole.
âWhy did you fly out of Los Angeles the day I arrived?'
âDid I? I never knew when you planned on being in town.'
âI emailed,' I said. âI left messages on your answering machine.'
âI never got the messages.'
âRight.'
âBelieve what you want. Why would I lie about a thing like that?'
We met that evening at the Icebergs. Michael went to hug me but I pushed him away. While we sat and had a beer he stroked my arm, touched my face. If you'd been watching us from a distance you'd have thought we were happily reunited lovers. Once we'd finished a drink, before we'd ordered our second, he said this to me: âI'm seeing someone else. I wanted to tell you in person. It isn't because she means more to me than you; it is because she's closer. It's the distance. It was impossible for us to keep going.' He talked to me slowly, with catch-up pauses, as if we were speaking on an international phone line.
âIt was not impossible,' I said, after too long. âIt was only impossible because you made it so.'
All the while Michael kept telling me I looked beautiful. Kept touching me on the back of my hand, my cheek. Put his arm around me as we walked down the street to a restaurant. I didn't stop him, and I was frightened by my own passivity. After we ateâme all smiles and conversationâhe walked me home and kissed me goodnight on the mouth in a way that suggested that nothing was over at all, not if I wanted to keep pushing, not if I was prepared to accept his terms. But instead I said goodnight and went up to the flat, alone.
When I got in the door I began to weep. I got into the bath still sobbing. My toes and fingers went white and wrinkly and I rocked back and forth in the water, moaning loudly. I didn't sound human. I was trying to melt away into the water, down the plughole, to disappear.
Through the haze, I became afraid of what I might do to myself. Tony was out. I was running out of people who could be bothered with this
thing
. Finally, I rang Marion in Melbourne, but I couldn't speak properly, made no sense.
âWhat is it, darling?' she asked, kept asking, but I just held onto the phone, not speaking.
âI am nothing,' I managed to say. âI am falling in on myself.'
Tony came home. He knocked on the bathroom door but I was unable to answer, just kept on crying. He came in and stood by the bathtub, stared at me rocking.
âGet out, baby.'
âI thought you were staying out tonight,' I sobbed.
âI was. Marion rang me. She was worried about what you might do to yourself. This has to stop. Catherine, how do we make you stop?'
âI'm sorry,' I sobbed. âI'm sorry.'
âStop apologising.' He leant over me and pulled me up by the armpits as if I was a child. âPut this towel around you.' He tucked me into bed and then made me a cup of tea. âThere is lots of sugar in this,' he said. Then, âCan I snuggle in with you?'
I hesitated. âFor old time's sake,' he said after a few moments of silence.
âYes, please.' He pulled off his trousers, crawled in and put his arms around me.
âHe is finally treating me like a girlfriend now it's over,' I told him. âIt makes no sense.'
âIt makes sense,' Tony said. âSex and emotional connection together overwhelm him. He can only do one at a time. But frankly I don't care if it makes sense or not. I just want him to stop contacting you. Or you to get the strength to stop seeing him. You have to learn to care enough about yourself. And your friends.'
Tony held me for a while.
âI've broken my own rule,' I said finally.
âWhat rule is that?'
âThe five-year rule. If you are obsessing about a situation after five years it's crossed the line.'
âA five-month rule would be better,' said Tony.
Still I kept seeing him, convincing myself that not sleeping with him counted as looking after myself. If my friends expressed concern, I simply lied to them about what I was up to.
I believed I was keeping it together. My life might sometimes look like it was unravelling but I was managing, I thought, to hold on to most of the threads. One night I drove us to dinner in Darlinghurst and turned the wrong way down a one-way street, then almost crashed the car when I parked it.
âGood park,' Michael laughed. âYou seem a bit wired tonight.' Then, when we were sitting in the restaurant, âYou look incredible.'
I was wearing a tight shirt that showed lots of cleavage. I had hoped that might make me feel powerful, but it didn't, it filled me with contempt. For both of us. I look back on things and I realise that I spent years not wanting to admit how shallow men can be. That people can declare true love, that churches can be formed, that fathers can leave their flesh and blood, for nothing more than thisâa good pair of tits.
âAre you trying to make things hard for me?' Michael asked, âBy dressing like that?'
I look at him and imagine smashing my glass of wine in his face, cutting him up, blinding him, making him bleed. I imagine slashing myself. I look at my arms and imagine the glass going in.
âI miss you,' Michael is saying. âI always miss you, that's what I can't bear about this.'
I am trapped in a bad play, the lines not convincing even to me, who wants desperately to be convinced. I drop Michael off where he is staying and he gets out of the car. He hesitates, stands by the car, drums his fingers on the roof, then leans back in and kisses me all over my face, on the mouth. I think he will leave it at that but he doesn't, begins to bite my lips hard, my neck.
He drops to his knees on the pavement beside the car. He put his head in my lap. He is shaking.
âYou have to let go of me,' he says.
âYou say, on your knees, kneeling before me.'
He doesn't answer, but puts his hands on my breasts, buries his face into my lap, breathes me in.
âI love your smell,' he says, as he has said many times over the years. âWe are right for each other.'
I get out of the car and push him against it, keep kissing him while he puts one hand under my shirt, undoes my jeans with the other. He turns us around so now I'm against the car, he puts two fingers in my cunt, one in my arse, my hand reaches back for his cock. He bites me so hard he draws blood. We strain and push against each other, like we are wrestling.
He pulls back, âIt is important to me that you understand,' he says, âwhy we can't see each other any more.' I don't understand, refuse to even now and we end up clawing at each other, half-hitting, half-embracing.
I want you to kill me, I think. I want to die.
As if he hears me, Michael reaches out and puts both hands around my throat so tight it hurts. He shakes me slowly. He shakes me with force.
âWe. Must. Stop. This.' He lets go of my throat, pushes me hard away from him. âWe are driving each other crazy.'
He walks off, breathing sharply, retching air. I'm left alone in the driveway, and even though there is no one to see me now I slide down the side of the car to the ground. That is the role I have chosen. I am the victim. I will always be hurt and left. I don't know any other way. I pull myself onto all fours and bang my forehead over and over onto the asphalt until finally, to my relief, I gash myself. I sit quietly there on the concrete and bleed tears down my face.
I look back at this and I can see it is not that exciting. A long night in the bath and waterlogged skin. Bored friends. A fantasy of drowning, of crashing my car, ripping my own flesh open with metal, slicing up Michael's flesh with glass. I'd like to make it seem like there was more drama. But the point of my story is how quietly you can lose years. How gently they can slip away from you. You can spend so much time waiting for something to happen, and thenâ¦well, it simply doesn't.
When I was reading all those classics at university, about heroines like Jane Eyre and Anna Karenina, I'd rail against the times that reduced women to such dependence, though for all my travelling, my working, my friendships, I too had spent years hanging around waiting for someone, some
man
, to fix everything up. From the outside it didn't look like that, not that you'd know it from the story I'm telling. From the outside I had a good job, I was a success, I looked sexy. I was smart and funny. Etcetera. All the positive things we tell ourselves and each other to make it all seem okay. I call myself a feminist. But this is my secret, many women's secret: there is a darkness in me that isn't about how kinky I can get in bed, or the rage I often feel. In fact âdarkness' is the wrong word. âBeige' is more the word to describe the passivity that eats away at me, away at us, but seems like nothing at all.
The books I read were full of warnings it took me too long to heed. I read them for romance but now I see they were written to save women like me from ourselves. Don't wait, that is what I say to people now. Never wait. I am a born-again on this subject. What do the Nike ads say? Just Do It. I offer up my childlessness as my scar.
We stand on the Indira Gandhi Bridge, which is some two kilometres long and connects Rameshwaram to India's mainland. We are both subdued. I'm exhausted by the intensity of our recent discussions. Ever since our argument after the temple I've remembered more of what happened to me with Laura's dad and more of the shit I took from Michael. More of the terrible distress I felt when my first father, then my dad, left me. The low-level grief I've felt for years has been washed away by the rage that is swamping me. I'm feeling things the way everyone has always said I should, and I do not like it. I don't like it at all.
I wonder if it would be best if Ruby and I part. I don't want to fight with her, and I don't want to dump this on her either. But I'm shying away from the thought of not being with her. I am starting to understand what this might mean and am becoming frightened.
Ruby is pointing at Adam's Bridge, the scattering of tiny islands and boulders that stretch from here to Sri Lanka, twenty-two kilometres away. It is very beautiful where blue sea meets a blue sky striped with streaky white clouds, the sand and green of Rameshwaram directly below.
âThe Tamil Tigers want to build a real bridge across Adam's Bridge between Jaffna and here,' I say. âThere are lots of Tamil refugees living on this island and back on the mainlandâthey want to hook up.'
âIt shouldn't be called Adam's Bridge,' Ruby says. âThat's Christian colonisation talking. It's Hanuman's Bridge if it's anyone's. In the
Ramayana
Hanuman, Rama's faithful helper, ran over these stones searching for Rama's wife, Sita. She had been kidnapped by Ravana, demon-king of Ceylon. It was a battle of two of life's great forces: Ravana is a devotee of Siva the Destroyer and Rama is an incarnation of Vishnu, the Preserver.