âAre you the one doing the anaesthesia book?' I asked.
âSo it seems.' Oddly formal. âI've got an outline here.'
âGood. I'll be editing it. We're always on the look-out for doctors who can write in English.'
He nodded.
âAs opposed to Latin and jargon,' I explained, although he seemed not to get the joke, or not to find it funny.
He picked the asthma book up. âCan I borrow?'
âTake it home and have a look. How's the writing going?'
âGood, I think, though it's hard to know how much to put in, how much information to give.'
âI told you, didn't I, that my husband was once awake during an operation?' said Em, who had just pushed open the door, balancing three coffees and a couple of muffins. âHe couldn't move or feel anything, but he heard everything. It was like he was stuck.'
Michael held the door for her and took a cup, which he handed to me.
âNo thanks, I've got a toothache.'
âHe could hear the surgeon,' said Em, âor whoever it was, talking about the cricket score. Andrew was really annoyed. He's a Pom and Australia was winning.'
âYes, that happens sometimes,' said Michael. âHearing's the last sense to go.' He turned to me. âHave you got a good dentist?'
I said I had an appointment for that afternoon, and he nodded and moved to follow Em into her office. Just as he entered he turned back to me. âHere,' he said, and fumbled with his black leather satchel before passing me a sleeve of white tablets, âtake two of these.'
After he went, I looked up the
Oxford English Dictionary
.
Anaesthetise
, it said,
render insensible
.
Among the books on the shelf above my desk at work were the Macquarie Dictionary (of Australian English), the Oxford English,
Roget's Thesaurus of Synonyms and Antonyms
, Strunk and White, and Fowler's
Modern English Usage
. Just looking at their solid spines above me made me feel calm. âIf the answer's not there,' I used to tell writers, gesturing at the bookshelf, âI give up or make it up.' But they always were there. They always are. Mixed metaphors, split infinitives. Dangling participles (Fowler prefers to call them unattached), in which the two parts of the sentence don't match. âSurprised and pleased, her tooth seemed to ache less immediately.' The surprised tooth. Confusion about the subject.
A week later he walked past me as I was waiting for my bus. He was on the way to his car. It was a casual exchange of pleasantries that created its own force field, neither of us implicated by more than circumstance, and kept us talking there, first standing, then leaning together against the bus shelter, for the ten minutes it took for the bus to come. He asked me about my work, not out of politeness, it seemed, but interestânot in the material published, but in the process of editing.
âHow do you decide what to take out and what to leave in?'
âWellâ' slow at first, trying to gauge his level of interest, how much he really wanted to know. âYou take out anything that is not necessary.' I paused, and glanced at him quickly, aware that I had put more thought than must seem necessary into a statement so obvious. I waited for him to laugh or turn away. But he asked again, focused, insistent, âBut how do you know what is necessary? How do you make that decision? How do you decide what it is that matters?'
âIt matters if it is interesting,' I said at last. âThat is the first thing. It matters that the information is of value.'
I stopped again, wondering when he would be sick of this, but he was nodding his head, small precise punctuations.
âIt matters that it is clear, that it is intelligible. It matters that it is to the point.' I paused. âThough that can be open to negotiation. Sometimes something may not seem immediately relevant, but you feel that it's important, so you try to work out where it fits and why.'
And now he smiled just slightly. âSo there is some room for negotiation?' And I smiled slightly back, and said, âA little. Not too much.' From the corner of my eye I could see my bus further down the street and I knew that this was the natural place to end the conversation, the hint of gentle sparring, a small realignment, but I said quickly, because it was what had occurred to me and because the information seemed to me interesting, of value, âWhat is harder than knowing what to take out, is knowing what is missing. That is the hardest part.'
The bus was nearly here, he had heard it too, and we straightened together. I pulled my bag higher on my shoulder, the slight awkwardness of finishing. âI'd like to talk more about this,' he said. I nodded vigorously, too vigorously probably, I thought later, but he did not seem uncomfortable, at least no more so than I, and he waited while the bus door shut and I found a seatâat least he was still there when I turned to look through the windowâand raised his arm briefly before turning and walking off.
The next day at work I asked Em about his manuscript, casually, and when it might be ready for me to look at.
âYou can have a look at a draft now if you like,' she said, passing it over. âHe says he'll get the final version to me in a fortnight or soâ we've got another meetingâand after that he's all yours.'
I wonder now how Emma is managing, if she has someone doing my job. She came to see me at the nursing home once after I woke up. She wore her red lipstick and her shiny black boots with zips up the sides. She brought magazines.
Vogue, Newsweek, Vanity Fair, Who
. We were downstairs in the sitting room and her voice was too loud. Old people, even deaf people, turned to look at her. I could not hold a thought. I could not follow the trail of her thoughts. They flapped around like streamers, red and yellow and blue, and became tangled, until I stopped listening.
âLook,' I said, and I pointed out the window. âThere are my birds.' It was the first time I had seen them from any window but mine, and I thought how much I appreciated their greyness, grey shapes in a white sky, and how, up close, there would be mauve and soft brown and sedate creamy tips on some of the feathers. This is why I am here, I thought. I felt a wave of such tiredness that after another minute I excused myself. I did not ask her up to my room, and though we hugged at the door I knew that I had not given her what she wanted. Nor she me. I left the magazines downstairs on the table and did not look at them again. After that I told Viv I did not want visitors, except Hil. Emma rang a couple of times (I found the messages on my bed) but she did not try to visit, and I knew that she had got the message and that she would get on, for now, without me.
I took his manuscript home and read it in the bath, careful not to splash stray drops of water that might mark the paper or cause the print to run. âOne hundred and fifty-four years after a Boston dentist called Thomas Morton gave the first successful public demonstration of what is now known as surgical anaesthesia,' he wrote, âwe still don't know exactly how anaesthetics work. We know that a general anaesthetic acts on the central nervous systemâ reacting with the membranes of the nerve cells in the brain to shut down responses such as sight, touch and awarenessâbut the precise mechanisms and effects remain uncertain.'
Dr Michael Small, whose sentences had a steady forward momentum, and whose participles did not dangle.
It was two weeks or more before I saw him againâhe was walking into Emma's office as I was walking out of mineâby which time I was sick of thinking about him. In the days after the bus stop talk, I had run the conversation in a loop through my head. Replayed over and again the feeling of his earnest engagement; the smile when he had said, âSo there is some room for negotiation?'; the image of him standing at the bus stop, hand raised in farewell. I knew it was not wise, I knew it was bad luck, but I'd allowed myself even to imagine, just briefly, what it would be like to kiss him, the soft pads of our lips, the subtle, moist negotiations. I'd replayed the images and imaginings until I had sapped the juice from them, until they were husks, and the thought of them produced only dissatisfaction, a slight nausea. So the first feeling I had, alongside the thud of excitement at finding myself standing in front of him in the office, was irritation, a sense that he had somehow let me down. And it was this feeling, or the fear that he would recognise this feeling, that kept me walking past him, barely pausing to snap him a sharp quick smile, eyebrows raised, before heading for the kitchen, where I closed my eyes and leaned my face against the side of the fridge in disgust.
I waited for a few minutes, dawdling over the tea, hoping that he might on a sudden impulse come in and find me there. But he didn't and I spent the next hour at my desk fighting off sad, heavy feelings and toying distractedly with a manuscript that had arrived that day about Aboriginal health, or the lack of it.
Normally I wouldn't have bothered. It was not a book we would ever publish. There was a story at the start about a woman returning to the top-end community she had been taken from when she was nine. I read it more through inertia than anything else. It was a familiar enough tale: the government people arriving, the kids being rounded up and put on the truck, everybody crying. Em had left her door a little open and now and then I could catch a voice (his) or laughter (hers) from inside her office. One young mother had tried to make a bolt for it, but on being cornered had run back to the truck and thrust her baby into the arms of the nine-year-old, made her promise to look after it. No surprise to read that soon after they got to the children's home near Darwin, a white couple came and took the baby away. Eventually I let myself realise that I was hungry and that the reason I was not eating was that I didn't want to miss him leaving. And after that it was not so difficult to rise, take my jacket from the back of my door and head out of the office without lingering. As I paused at the bottom of the wooden steps to check in my bag for my wallet, Michael opened the door behind me and came down the steps.
âHello. Are you having lunch? Do you want to get something to eat?'
I said sure, which seemed easy, and we walked in a serviceable silence together down the street.
The cafe did not feel so easy. He had clearly defined, cherubic lips, and I could not remember where on a face to look to be natural. We sat at the only free table, too close to the door, so that people passing in and out brushed past us with their jackets and bags and a couple of times we both reached protectively for the bottle of water. The second time, Michael picked it up and moved it to the other side of the table and I thought, that is what I should have done. Now he will think I lack initiative.
A woman entered, dragging a small blond boy by the wrist. She leaned over the counter next to us and shouted queries at the man who was frothing milk for coffees in a jug.
âI need a table for four. When will there be a table?' The coffee man kept frothing the milk but pulled an enquiring look over the jug.
âHang on,' he mouthed. The woman kept shouting.
âHow long will we have to wait for a table? When will it be quieter in here?'
I winced, slightly, comically, in her direction, but Michael, next to her, seemed not to notice.
He had soft, dark curls and deep set eyes which darted quickly around the room before stopping very still. I had the sense that he was waiting for something. I wondered if he was going to ask me about my work; if he had thought about me since the bus stop talk. We looked at the menu and made small talk while we waited to order. I said the toasted sandwiches were good. Michael said he knew, he had come here once with Emma, though not at lunchtime and now he knew why. I asked if he lived around there, and he said no, he lived in Bondi. âMe too,' I said. Trying not to sound too pleased. Instead I started to tell him about the kitchen at Hil's house; the bird table I had helped her build outside the window, and the rosellas that were now tame enough to eat from your hand. Some days, I said, I came home and the garden was full of kids and birds. I added that it was a small garden, mostly taken up by a fig tree, and that it only took a few kids to fill it. But that these kids had never known much tenderness, yet they sat so still there with Hil, husky voices lowered, arms outstretched, waiting.
I spoke without looking at him, and although everything I said was true I was aware that I was telling the story for my own purposes and that those purposes were obscure even to me. I spoke partly, I knew, in order not to look at him. In order not to have to keep wondering if I mattered to him. I told him a story about myself in order to hide from his scrutiny. But I chose to use that word tendernessâand the image of the waiting children. Then I stopped and there was nothing more to say and still I could not look at him, so I ran my gaze around the cafe's blue and white interior and saw that the woman with the blond child had found a table and was sitting there with a blond man and the child and another, older, child, a girl.
I wondered if they were a family.
âWhat do you do Jess,' says Anna, âwhen you want something?' After a while he asked how long I had been a copy editor. I said three or four years I supposed; it had sort of crept up on me. âIt suits you,' he said. âYou look like a copy editor.'
I said it must be the glasses, which were round and dark. He said, yes, and the hairâwhich back then was short and white.
âYou look like a doctor,' I said, âbut I won't hold it against you.'
I told him then about the manuscript I had been reading, and about how thirty years later she had gone back, the nine-year-old who had been taken away, to try and find her family. How she had arrived in the middle of the day and walked along the dirt road towards a group of Aboriginal people sitting in the shade of a tin-roofed shed; how suddenly a figure had detached itself from the group and started running towards her. It was an old woman and her arms were stretched out in front of her and when she reached the woman who had returned, she said, âYou got my baby? Where my baby?'