The Light Between Oceans (9 page)

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Authors: M. L. Stedman

BOOK: The Light Between Oceans
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Janus Rock
,

15th March 1921

Dear Isabel
,

I hope this letter finds you well. I am very well. I like it out here.
That
probably sounds strange, but I do. The quiet suits me. There’s something magical about Janus. It’s like nowhere I’ve ever been
.

I wish you could see the sunrise and sunset here. And the stars: the sky gets crowded at night, and it is a bit like watching a clock, seeing the constellations slide across the sky. It’s comforting to know that they’ll show up, however bad the day has been, however crook things get. That used to help in France. It put things into perspective – the stars had been around since before there were people. They just kept shining, no matter what was going on. I think of the light here like that, like a splinter of a star that’s fallen to earth: it just shines, no matter what is happening. Summer, winter, storm, fine weather. People can rely on it
.

Better stop rabbiting on. The point is, I am sending with this letter a little box I have carved for you. I hope it’s useful. You might put jewellery in it, or hairclips and whatnot
.

By now you have probably changed your mind about things, and I just wanted to say that that is all right. You are a wonderful girl, and I enjoyed the time we spent together
.

The boat comes tomorrow, so I will give this to Ralph then
.

Tom

Janus Rock
,

15th June 1921

Dear Isabel
,

I am writing this quickly, as the boys are getting ready to leave. Ralph delivered your letter. It was good to hear from you. I am glad you liked the box
.

Thank you for the photograph. You look beautiful, but not as
cheeky
as you are in real life. I know just where I will put it in the lantern room, so that you can see out through the window
.

No, it doesn’t really feel all that strange, your question. If I think about it, in the war I knew plenty of fellows who got spliced on three-day furlough back in England, then came straight back to carry on the show. Most of them thought they might not be around much longer, and probably so did their girls. With a bit of luck I will be a longer-term proposition, so think carefully. I am prepared to risk it if you are. I can apply for exceptional shore leave at the end of December, so you have got time to think it over. If you change your mind, I will understand. And if you don’t, I promise I will take care of you always, and do my very best to be a good husband
.

Yours
,

Tom

The next six months passed slowly. There had been nothing to wait for before – Tom had grown so used to greeting the days as ends in themselves. Now, there was a wedding date. There were arrangements to be made, permissions to be sought. In any spare minute, he would go around the cottage and find something else to put right: the window in the kitchen that didn’t quite shut; the tap that needed a man’s force to turn it. What would Isabel need, out here? With the last boat back, he sent an order for paint to freshen up the rooms; a mirror for the dressing table; new towels and tablecloths; sheet music for the decrepit piano – he had never touched it, but he knew Isabel loved to play. He hesitated before adding to the list new sheets, two new pillows and an eiderdown.

When, finally, the boat arrived to take Tom back for the big day, Neville Whittnish strode onto the jetty, ready to fill in during his absence.

‘Everything in order?’

‘Hope so,’ said Tom.

After a brief inspection, Whittnish said, ‘You know how to treat a light. I’ll give you that much.’

‘Thanks,’ said Tom, genuinely touched by the compliment.

‘Ready, boy?’ asked Ralph as they were about to cast off.

‘God only knows,’ said Tom.

‘Never a truer word spoken.’ Ralph turned his eyes to the horizon. ‘Off we go, my beauty, got to get Captain Sherbourne, MC and Bar to his damsel.’

Ralph spoke to the boat in the same way Whittnish referred to the light – living creatures, close to their hearts. The things a man could love, Tom thought. He fixed his eyes on the tower. Life would have changed utterly when he saw it again. He had a sudden pang: would Isabel love Janus as much as he did? Would she understand his world?

CHAPTER 7

‘YOU SEE? BECAUSE
it’s this high above sea level, the light reaches over the curve of the earth – beyond the horizon. Not the beam itself, but the
loom –
the glow of it.’ Tom was standing behind Isabel on the lighthouse gallery, arms around her, chin reaching down to rest on her shoulder. The January sun scattered flecks of gold in her dark hair. It was 1922, and their second day alone on Janus. Back from a few days’ honeymoon in Perth and straight out to the island.

‘It’s like seeing into the future,’ said Isabel. ‘You can reach ahead in time to save the ship before it knows it needs help.’

‘The higher the light, and the bigger the order of lens, the further its beam shines. This one goes just about as far as any light can.’

‘I’ve never been this high up in all my life! It’s like flying!’ she said, and broke away to circle the tower once more. ‘And what do you call the flash again – there’s that word …’

‘The
character
. Every coastal light has a different character. This one flashes four times on each twenty-second rotation. So every ship knows from the five-second flash that this is Janus, not Leeuwin or Breaksea or anywhere else.’

‘How do they know?’

‘Ships keep a list of the lights they’ll pass on their course. Time’s money if you’re a skipper. They’re always tempted to cut the corner of the Cape – want to be first to offload their cargo and pick up a new one. Fewer days at sea saves on crew’s wages, too. The light’s here to ward them off, get them to pull their head in.’

Through the glass Isabel could see the heavy black blinds of the lantern room. ‘What are they for?’ she asked.

‘Protection! The lens doesn’t care which light it magnifies. If it can turn the little flame into a million candlepower, imagine what it can do to sunlight when the lens stands still all day. It’s all very well if you’re ten miles away. Not so good to be ten inches away. So you have to protect it. And protect yourself – I’d fry if I went inside it during the day without the curtains. Come inside and I’ll show you how it works.’

The iron door clanged behind them as they went into the lantern room, and through the opening into the light itself.

‘This is a first order lens – about as bright as they come.’

Isabel watched the rainbows thrown about by the prisms. ‘It’s so
pretty
.’

‘The thick central bit of glass is the bull’s eye. This one has four, but you can have different numbers depending on the character. The light source has to line up exactly with the height of that so it gets concentrated by the lens.’

‘And all the circles of glass around the bull’s eyes?’ Separate arcs of triangular glass were arranged around the centre of the lens like the rings of a dartboard.

‘The first eight
refract
the light: they bend it so that instead of heading up to the moon or down to the ocean floor where it’s no good to anybody, it goes straight out to sea: they make it sort of turn a corner. The rings above and below the metal bar – see? Fourteen of them – they get thicker the further away from the centre they are: they
reflect
the light back down, so all the light is being concentrated into one beam, not just going off in all directions.’

‘So none of the light gets away without earning its keep,’ said Isabel.

‘You could say that. And here’s the light itself,’ he said, gesturing to the small apparatus on the metal stand in the very centre of the space, covered in a mesh casing.

‘It doesn’t look much.’

‘It isn’t, now. But that mesh cover is an incandescent mantle, and it makes the vaporised oil burn bright as a star, once it’s magnified. I’ll show you tonight.’

‘Our own star! Like the world’s been made just for us! With the sunshine and the ocean. We have each other all to ourselves.’

‘I reckon the Lights think
they’ve
got me all to themselves,’ said Tom.

‘No nosy neighbours or boring relatives.’ She nibbled at his ear. ‘Just you and me …’

‘And the animals. There’s no snakes on Janus, luckily. Some islands down this way are nothing but. There’s one or two spiders’ll give you a nip though, so keep your eyes peeled. There are …’ Tom was having difficulty finishing his point about the local fauna, as Isabel kept kissing him, nipping his ears, reaching her hands back into his pockets in a way that made it an effort to think, let alone speak coherently. ‘It’s a serious …’ he struggled on, ‘point I’m trying to make here, Izz. You need to watch out for—’ and he let out a moan as her fingers found their target.

‘Me …’ she giggled. ‘I’m the deadliest thing on this island!’

‘Not here, Izz. Not in the middle of the lantern. Let’s …’ he took a deep breath, ‘let’s go downstairs.’

Isabel laughed. ‘Yes, here!’

‘It’s government property.’

‘What – are you going to have to record it in the logbook?’

Tom gave an awkward cough. ‘Technically … These things are pretty delicate, and they cost more money than you or I’ll ever see in a lifetime. I don’t want to be the one who has to make up an
excuse
about how anything got broken. Come on, let’s go downstairs.’

‘And what if I won’t?’ she teased.

‘Well, I suppose I’ll just have to—’ he hoisted her onto one hip, ‘make you, sweetheart,’ he said, and carried her down the hundreds of narrow stairs.

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