William searched town for two hours, blinded to everyone and everything passing by, trying to work out where Bluma might go to get away from him. Not that she'd ever done anything like this before. Except for the time, just after their engagement, when Bluma's mother wouldn't let him past their front door for a week. In the end it turned out to be something she'd heard via a friend via a friend. Something about his father, and the coming of the Lord. Completely untrue, or so William explained to Bluma, standing beneath her window one dark night when her parents were asleep.
But this was different. Bluma was his wife now. Valley wives, Lutheran wives, didn't do this sort of thing. This smacked of a romance novel. The American way. The had-it-too-good-for-too-long way. Soft. Not the Bluma he knew.
And he knew her well. Like the seasons, or the taste of a ripe grape. He knew every thought she had before she had it (or so he believed). Which made his search even more frustrating. Where was she? A bench, the grandstand, on a train to town? He knocked on Seymour's door (claiming she'd said she was off visiting somewhere) but couldn't bring himself to check Joshua's or Arthur's place. He could just imagine her in Arthur's living-room, sipping on watery coffee, portraying him as some sort of ogre.
Oh well, what's it matter, he thought, in the end. If that's the way she wants it. Returning home he was expecting to see her there in their living-room. But their house was dark and cold and empty.
The next morning when William went to buy milk and bread (the first time he'd had the shop stuff in years) Seymour stopped him outside the Lutheran school and asked, âYou didn't need any help?'
âDoing what?' William replied.
âPainting.'
William was careful with his words. âWho told you this?'
âPaint triggers Bluma's asthma?'
âYes . . . yes.'
âHow long will she be at the hotel?'
Ten minutes later William was at the front desk, and a few seconds after that, up the stairs and outside Bluma's first floor room. âBluma,' he called, knocking loudly.
Sitting in bed eating her breakfast, listening to the radio, Bluma took a moment to think. Whether to answer him or pretend to be out. Whether she should call down to have him removed, or open the door and have it out in the hallway.
âBluma,' she heard him call, âdon't be so melodramatic.'
She sat, tight-lipped, pulling the sheet up over her legs, wondering if this man was really her husband.
âBluma, open the door and we'll talk.'
She didn't answer him.
âBluma!'
He continued knocking and pleading for another ten minutes before he gave up. Bluma sat silently in bed for another half hour before she dared pick up the phone and ask the front desk if he'd gone. âYes he's gone, but he wasn't happy,' a voice explained. Then she got up and showered and sat in a chair overlooking Murray Street, unsure of what to do. She saw William emerging from a shop and looking up at her room. She shot back, falling to the ground and crawling to a distant corner. She sat there for another hour, scared, cold, shivering, before a pass key opened the door and a maid entered.
âJust leaving,' Bluma said, standing, turning away from the maid as she pretended to fix her hair.
âShall I fix your bed?'
âYes, that would be fine.'
She passed quickly out into the hallway and William was waiting there, standing with his arms crossed, leaning against a wall of crimson-red wallpaper. âCan I buy you a coffee?' he asked.
She was nowhere near as confident, standing slumped, red-faced and fighting for breath. After a few moments she said, âI suppose so.'
Over the next hour, drinking coffee and eating stale torte at the Zinfandel tea rooms, William did what he did best: talk her around to seeing things his way. The old William Miller, the crackpot, the zealot, was gone, he promised. From now on their life would be like it used to be: everyone happy and sociable. His dates would be
his
dates, he promised. Kept as secret as their bank balance.
Bluma knew she should have stayed angry, but she couldn't. In the end it was much easier to believe what he said, like Joshua and Seymour had. William was good on the attack, but weak on the retreat. He could convince some people of anything, she guessed.
He'd even made an artform of avoiding saying he was wrong, or sorry. And still people believed him. Or at least humoured him.
Bluma sat staring into her coffee, retreating into a silence of words thought but not said. Although she'd think, later, that this episode was the closest she'd come to saying, William, you're a drongo. I really don't know how I ended up . . .
But then censoring even her thoughts.
From now on, she thought, as they walked home together, as William barked incessantly in her ear, she'd leave her disagreements to lino and mud on boots and a million inconsequential things she knew he'd give in to.
A few days later the weather broke. William told Bluma it was time to face the sly looks and bemused grins he knew awaited them. And so, on March 26, with his clothes freshly pressed, his head held high and a smile stretching from one ear to the other, he took his string bag, put his arm in Bluma's and closed the door behind them. He covered the length of Langmeil Road and Elizabeth Streets, greeting old neighbours (who no longer bothered rushing inside to avoid him) and stopping at the Eclipse deli to arrange for his newspaper and milk deliveries.
âFor how long?' the shop-keeper asked, smiling.
âI'll give you notice,' William replied, refusing to be baited. No handbills or rallies this time, as promised. No rush to convert or save souls; in fact, no use trying to persuade anyone.
The sun was receding from the earth, allowing the grapes to finish to perfection. There were bottles to wash and then the harvest, again, reminding them that the cycle came full circle, compensating simple mortals for the bruising and losses of another year. A breeze from the south-west rattled carob leaves in a painfully familiar synthesis of smell and sound, of things seen, remembered, forgotten, someone's uncle dead in the ground five years now, no, it couldn't be that long, or could it . . .
William and Bluma sat on the bench in front of the Tanunda Club and watched the world pass by. William looked in his jacket pocket for a musk but found a bunch of stapled papers. Opening them out he smiled and showed Bluma his name-change application. âLook, I never got around to posting it.'
She shook her head. âYou were never serious, Wilhelm.'
âI was.'
She looked into his eyes and smiled. It was his way of buying lino. She ripped the application into tiny pieces and let them blow away in the breeze.
âI was serious,' he repeated, stretching out his legs and putting his hands behind his head. âLike other things, people make it too difficult. You give in, you compromise.'
Bluma looked up to see Ellen Tabrar standing before them, hands on hips, her face as cold as the granite soldier they all avoided on Anzac Day. âBob Hope double-bill, next week,' she began. âYou like Bob Hope, William?'
âCan't say I do.'
Ellen stared at him. âAnd Amgoorie tea. They're just about giving it away at Mackenzie's. You shop at Mackenzie's, William?'
âNo.'
âMackenzie's is best. Cheap.'
Why won't she look at me? Bluma thought. âWhere you off to?' she asked.
âHome,' Ellen replied, glancing at Bluma but then returning her stare to William. âJoe wrote. He said it would be a great disappointment. That's what he called it: the Great Disappointment. Wasn't much great about it.'
âIn what sense?' William asked.
âIn any sense.'
âIt was a big disappointment. But I've moved on. I've worked out where I went wrong.'
She smiled. âWhere's that?'
He explained his refiguring, and how it meant they should have been waiting for March next year, but how there'd be no point trying to convince people now. Except for the few. âLike your dad. You gotta tell him I want to talk to him.'
But Ellen just looked at Bluma and said, âThey've got chenille dressing gowns, blue and pink.'
Bluma smiled and bowed her head as, without revealing any of her own plans, Ellen smiled a sort of goodbye and walked off.
Bluma looked at William and said, âShe's got Joseph on her mind,' but he didn't reply.
They stood up and kept walking. Passing the Apex, Ron Rohwer emerged with an armful of pasties, realising too late but deciding to make the most of it. âWilliam, Bluma . . . must be time to crush again, William. You need a hand, you call out, eh?'
William made an effort, if only for Bluma's sake. âThanks, but I've got Seymour gonna help me.'
âExpecting a good harvest?'
âNever know till it's done.'
âOf course. Still, you need a hand, you call.'
And then Bluma saved the day. âI'll see you on Sunday, Ron.'
âGood.' Ron looked at William. âThat'd be fine, eh? I'll tell Pastor Henry.'
William didn't want to tell him about his new dates, shaking his hand, upsetting his pasties and passing on. âTwo-faced bastard,' he said, as they walked.
âAs hard for him as it is for you,' Bluma replied.
âGarbage. As long as I go back to church. See the error of my ways.'
Compromise, more and more, dragging him down into the gutter. Maybe he'd have to become a recluse after all, avoiding the misunderstanding which loomed above his head. And then he saw Joshua Heinz, a hundred yards away, heading towards him. He stopped, thought, grabbed Bluma's arm and said, âI'll see you back there.'
William walked home as quickly as his legs could carry him, locking himself in his study, taking his pen and writing, again and again, in his grandfather's Bible, The Great Disappointment, The Great Disappointment.
Ellen helped Vicky load the last of their four suitcases into Seymour's hearse. They piled in and Mary turned the key in the ignition, sparking a clang of metal, a car full of laughter and the grin of Michael Haddad, their Lebanese postie. Mary fought with the column-shift, looked at Ellen, crossed her fingers and tried again. The hearse chugged to life and everyone smiled, except Vicky, who flung open the back door and ran towards the house. âHold on.'
âHurry up,' Ellen called, trying to wind down the window, eventually giving up and pushing it down with her hands. Vicky jumped down the steps and flew along the garden path, smiling and hugging her
Hollywood Annual
, Stewart Grainger grinning on the cover as he made up for another scene.
They drove past the Bowls Club, refugee Anglicans in white standing in full sun, adjusting the tops of wool-blend socks which wouldn't stay up, retreating to the shade of the Fargus Barker Memorial Lean-to, unscrewing thermoses full of hot tea and pouring it into chipped mugs. In the back-blocks, beyond the club, Moy's chaff-mill worked at full steam, loading wheat bags into carts pulled by teams of four horses, drivers sitting twelve feet high on top of the loads, holding reins so long they had to be made especially. Past the Anglican church and Wohler's, the Apex and Tanunda Motors, Doph Gordon standing beside a Humber with a look of satisfaction. Nothing I'll miss, Ellen guessed. Just things I'm familiar with. Like where they kept the Rice Bubbles at Mackenzie's, or which doctors you could trust to keep quiet.
Both of the boys were full of excitement and anticipation, ready to reclaim their father and hold him to his promises of endless cinemas with endless choices, Francis the mule stretching into a future of popcorn and choc-tops, marking the years with stories infinitely more enjoyable and believable than Mr Miller's. Flying carpets and bearded women and milkshakes the flavour of chewing gum, classrooms minus crucifixes on every wall, homes minus rising damp and bakeries minus endless slabs of custard cake. Butchers stocked with fritz and lamb roasts and newsagents risking the wrath of God to stock
Superman
.
Vicky had mixed feelings, unhappy to be leaving so many friends behind. âWe'll come for visits all the time,' Ellen had consoled, but that wasn't the same. She'd even miss Mr Rechner, who'd always had plenty of time for her, considering her connection with William and her father's move to Adelaide. But in the end Ellen had convinced her, brought her to the understanding that family was more important than anything, which is why Joseph had had to do what he'd done. To keep them together for an eternity of small things.
As they pulled into the station carpark the train was already waiting. Mary dented Seymour's bumper-bar on a date palm, wrestled the shift to select âpark' and killed the motor. She watched as her daughter and grandchildren each carried their own suitcase, full of only a fraction of what they owned. The rest would follow in a month or so, after Joseph finally got the keys to the house he'd selected.
Mary was dreading the arrival of the moving van; not only because of its finality, but because of the emptiness it would leave behind, the dilemma of what to fill the spaces with once she'd cleaned up the dust and mopped away the sauce stains. As she wandered like a ghost, Seymour telling her to get a hold of herself.
Mary watched through the window as Ellen settled her children in economy class and returned to the platform. As the whistle blew, Ellen took her mother's hand and said, âWe won't be far.'
Mary smiled. Although it should have been a special moment, it just seemed bleak, full of unreconciled endings and worse, William's voice in her ear, reading from the Bible on the night of the not-so-great disappointment. Mary kissed her daughter on the cheek and hugged her, holding her tight and waving to the children with her one spare hand, then turning and walking down the ramp, already planning her first visit.
The highlight of the journey down was curried-egg sandwiches and a lay-over in Gawler to take on water. Close to the city the train stopped a hundred yards south of North Adelaide station, heat radiating up through the floorboards from gravel warmed by an April sun that couldn't shake summer. They waited for almost half an hour, as voices shouted to each other from the front of the train, as cylinders cooled and coal lost its glow in the boilers.