âShe's not a child. She's seventeen, old enough to face me. Old enough to write and tell me what her mother's been up to.'
âYou're being unfair. You cannot expect a child to take responsibility for a mother's behaviour. As for her not being there tonight, well, I can understand that. She probably thought it best not to be there to witness your reaction to your wife's swollen belly. Can you really believe she didn't want to see you? If I know Miss Charlotte â and I believe I do â she's probably worrying herself sick right now.'
Edward refilled his glass and took a long swallow. He wanted to believe Chen Mu, believe Charlotte was as angry with her mother as he was.
âI have to deliver these,' Chen Mu said as he collected a stack of telegrams â yellow messages now no longer feared but seen as harbingers of good news. âI'll be back in an hour or so. We'll talk then.'
âChen Mu?'
âYes?'
âDid
you
know?'
Chen Mu hesitated. He'd heard the gossip, of course. In a town as small as Macoomba, nothing was secret. But he hadn't
seen
Julia Billings these past months. He didn't
know
, as such.
âNo, Master Edward. I didn't know.'
Edward paced Chen Mu's living room, picking up objects, putting them back without even noticing them. He was so angry he wanted to smash something.
While he'd rotted in China, lain in hospital for months on end, she'd been entertaining her Yank, right in his mother's house â no,
his
house now. His bed.
You should have been home more
, she'd yelled at him. Stupid woman. He could see the scene now: he'd barely recovered when they promoted him to Major and attached him to Allied High Command for the rest of the war â
Go where? Sorry Sir, can't do that. Have to go home to the wife and kid
⦠If they hadn't just dropped the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, if he hadn't just come home, when would he have found out about Julia's âcondition'? Would she have written to him before or after going to America? Or would she have waited until the child had been born? He imagined himself in the depths of somewhere like Burma at mail call.
Dear Edward, Just writing to let you know I've decided to leave you. America is wonderful this time of year. PS: Congratulate me; I'm about to become a mother again! The
woman was ridiculous.
He went to pour himself another drink. Hesitated, and picked up the bottle instead. He needed air.
The night soothed him. It was cold and, though still relatively early, it seemed as if the whole township slept. Somewhere an owl hooted. He drank the brandy straight from the bottle while in the sky millions of stars shone. Out here, sitting on the steps of Chen Mu's front porch, he could think more clearly. He would let Julia go without an argument, give her her divorce. But she wasn't getting Walpinya Station, nor the house in Sydney. He'd pay her off. In cash. She'd always preferred hard cash to property; he'd borrow from the bank if he had to. Now that the war was over and he'd been guaranteed a promotion at the Technological Museum â recently renamed the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences â he'd have no problem getting a loan. Yes, that's what he'd do. Pay the whore off.
He raised the bottle to his lips and was surprised to find it empty. Had he finished it already? He thought of Charlotte. Did she want to go to America? In his anger he'd forgotten to ask if she too was leaving. No, he didn't think she would. She loved Walpinya Station, and she had friends there and in Sydney. She wouldn't want to leave. Chen Mu was right â she wasn't that grown up, poor kid. She was probably worried sick. He imagined she'd spent the night at her best friend's house. Maybe he should go and talk to her. Yes, he should go and find her. Now. His little sweet girl.
He went back into the house.
His car keys were nowhere to be found. He checked the mantelpiece, the armchairs, the coffee table. On a table below the window was a pile of posters â another of Chen Mu's jobs. They were meant to have been plastered on walls around town, but now were no longer necessary. Edward flicked through them.
The enemy listens â your words are his weapons
. Another asked people to salvage scrap metal, whilst a third â
She may look clean BUT ⦠pick-ups, âgood time' girls and prostitutes spread syphilis and gonorrhoea. You can't beat the Axis if you get VD â
made him laugh; it reminded him of the madam and her chickens in Burma.
Keys forgotten, Edward flipped through to the last poster. He pulled it out from the pile. His hands shook.
Australia screams
, it was titled. In the background was a map of New Guinea on which stood a wounded Digger, bayonet fixed.
What's that scream? Something's up
, he asked, looking towards a map of Australia in the foreground, pierced by the Stars and Stripes. A smirking American officer straddled the continent, with a young Australian woman struggling in his arms.
Shhh ⦠quiet, girly
, the Yank whispered.
Calm yourself. He'll be on the next casualty list, no worry
.
Edward stared at the poster. The room around him faded. His hands shook more and more. Slowly, he tore the poster in two. Then in four. Then in half again. He tore faster and faster, ripping the paper into smaller and smaller pieces until it became too thick to tear. With a howl he threw the paper into the air. Overturned the table on which the posters rested. The crash only fuelled his anger. He wanted to hit someone. Punch and punch until they bled. Julia's Yank. No, not the Yank. Julia. He wanted to hit her and go on hitting and hitting and hitting until her beautiful face was pulp and her belly no longer swelled under her dress. He punched the wall instead and his knuckles cracked.
He held up his hand and looked at it, surprised to see it there, a part of his body. It throbbed and swelled as he watched, the skin turning an ugly purple. Over two knuckles the skin had burst and trickles of blood ran down to his wrist and still he watched, mesmerised by the changes taking place. In some part of his brain he knew he should feel pain but he felt nothing. Not pain, not anger. Just a fascination with his hand, watching it swell more and more and turn purple. Watching the blood run down his wrist and soak into the cuff of his shirt.
âMaster Edward, what happened? Your hand!' Chen Mu tried to grab Edward's wrist but Edward pulled back, raising the injured fist as if to strike. Chen Mu stood his ground and his gaze met Edward's as he slowly reached up for the arm. This time Edward allowed him to examine the fist. âYou've broken it, I'm sure of it. Come, sit yourself down. Let me look at it properly.'
Edward stared at Chen Mu, confused to find him there. He looked around the room, then back to his hand. He allowed Chen Mu to lead him to an armchair.
âI'll get some water â some ice. You must soak it. Then we'll see.' Chen Mu took in the overturned table, the torn poster, the empty brandy bottle. He'd been expecting something like this.
âHere,' he said, pulling a small table up to Edward and putting the bowl of water and ice cubes on it, âput your hand in this. I'll ring the doctor.'
When he came back into the room Edward was hunched over in the chair, cradling his hand, but from the water on the floor and on his clothes it was obvious he'd at least attempted to soak it.
âThe doctor'll be a while. His wife said he'd gone to attend a birth.'
Edward didn't answer.
âYou know, Master Edward, you're not the first. This war â the women. They didn't have it easy either â¦'
âAnd that makes it all right?'
âNo, no, of course not. All I'm saying is thatâ'
âI know what you're saying and I don't buy it.
She
was the one who said no more sex. Separate bedrooms. Not me. No more children, she said. And I didn't force her. I stood by her. I could have divorced her there and then. But no, I stood by her. For her sake as well as Charlotte's. A whole lot of good that did me. If I'd known what she'd been up to I would have stayed in China. Stayed near LiLi. Instead Iâ'
âLiLi?'
Edward closed his eyes and leaned back into the chair. He hadn't meant to mention Ming Li; he'd never told Chen Mu about her. But what did it matter now? Why shouldn't he talk about her? His wife had certainly shown no such discretion.
Chen Mu sat still. He'd suspected such a liaison for some time now â if not in China, then in Sydney. He watched the expressions flitting across Edward's face. He looked a different person from the cocky young man who'd bragged about his adventures so many years ago. He was gaunt and his skin had a sickly yellow tint, but the change had nothing to do with his physical deterioration. There was something haunting about Edward Billings â an intensity that suggested a troubled mind.
âTell me about this LiLi.'
Edward didn't move, didn't open his eyes. But after a while he began to talk, as if to himself. Slowly, softy, he spoke of the young woman he had met so long ago in the Cercle Sportif Français. He spoke of his yearning for her, of her courage and her beauty and her pain, of the constant urgency he felt to look for her even though he feared she might already be dead. And Chen Mu listened without interrupting, remembering a small boy from a lifetime ago.
19
âQuickly! Quickly!' Ming Li told MeiMei as they hurried towards their house.
âWhy? It'll still be there â¦'
âYou don't know that. And even if it is, who knows what state it'll be in.'
She heaved her bundle containing their few belongings further up her chest and crossed the road, barely looking at oncoming traffic. The Japanese may well have withdrawn from China at the end of the war, but with it the uneasy truce that had existed between the Kuomintang and the Communists collapsed, and the country was now embroiled in civil war. But unlike the rest of China, Shanghai was beginning to prosper once more as Westerners optimistically ignored news of the Communists pressing southwards. For most Chinese, however, starvation continued and thousands more flocked to the city hoping to find work. If their house was still standing, Ming Li wanted to reclaim it before someone else appropriated it.
âSee? It's still there, Mother. You worried for nothing.'
Ming Li pushed open the gate of the tall granite wall surrounding their house, entered the outer courtyard and stepped behind the privacy wall. Under the veranda of the main house, a woman was breastfeeding an infant, whilst in the courtyard another was washing her hair in the stagnant water of a large carved stone basin that had once held goldfish during the summer months. Both glanced at Ming Li and MeiMei, but Ming Li ignored them and went into the house.
In the inner hall a group of men, all dressed in rags, squatted around a small fire they'd built in the middle of the floor. A piece of wood cracked, drawing Ming Li's attention to the flames, and she recognised the intricate carvings of their ancestral altar. On seeing this, all the resentment of the past few years, which she'd kept hidden under a façade of submissiveness, suddenly exploded. Armed with a piece of wood she found lying beside her, she screamed at them and beat them out of her house and out of the front courtyard into the street.
Back inside, she entered what had been her bedroom and found a couple having sex in her bed, while curled beside them an old woman slept, and on the floor by the bed a toddler played with a skinny, naked, gurgling baby. Only for the sake of the children did she rein in her temper. She picked up the baby and handed him to MeiMei, and signalled to the toddler to follow her daughter out. By that time the man was trying to climb back into his trousers whilst yelling at her for taking the children, and his partner was shaking the old woman awake.
With the house and courtyard empty of squatters, Ming Li gave her daughter the last of the money she'd received for selling her gold pendant and chain.
âFood. We need food. Get whatever you can. And something to clean this house â soap, brushes, whatever you can find. The whole place stinks of Japanese and beggars.'