NONE MAY HEED
The cold wind
blasted grit against her legs as she stood in Glebe Point Road, stunned by the
tedium of the launch she had just fled. She prayed for a taxi before they all
came clamouring out, denying her the graceful exit which was now all she wanted
from this evening.
No taxi
appeared on the stretch of road; she was beginning to loath it.
She knew she
did not have long if she was to avoid being caught up in the post event
indecision and desperation Tina was prone to. She set off for Parramatta Road
and whatever obscurity buses could offer.
Tina caught up
with her. ‘What are you doing? We’re here. Gus is giving us a lift. We’ve been
invited back for the dinner. Come on!’
‘Oh no, thanks
Tina, it was great – very interesting. I’ve got a bit of a headache – why do
they always serve such lousy wine?’
‘You can drink
orange juice, or mineral water - come on. It’s in his warehouse. Gus is giving
us a lift. I think he likes me.’ Tina grabbed her arm.
She allowed
herself to be dragged back down that unpromising road.
The crowd
milling outside the launch had the abstracted gaze of predation she had so
wanted not to be part of. Restaurant? Does it have vegan? Fabulous Thai place.
I’m so over Thai. Why can’t we go somewhere like that new Italian near St Johns
Road? Does it have BYO? There’s this great pub in King Street, it sells
fabulous steaks and grilled fish and things like fresh salads, you feel so
clean. Let’s go to Oxford Street, you and Tim and Harry can go in one cab and
Lottie, Missie and I can go in another with Tranh. We’ll meet in Lansake for a
martini.
What taxi?
Tina
interrupted her own strained encomium of the author to demand, ‘Couldn’t you
get a closer park?’
‘No,’ Gus said.
‘Isn’t he …
Wasn’t that thing he said about East Timor and the oil deal with Australia
amazing? Did you know that? I didn’t. Isn’t he so like … right?’ Tina leant
over and lowered her voice, ‘Didn’t he look cute in that jacket? It was so
cool.’
‘They’re
everywhere in New York,’ Gus said.
Tina whispered
in her ear, ’Isn’t he a hunk? I think he likes me.’
‘He’s with
Gabriella,’ Gus said.
‘Do you mind if
I smoke in the car?’ Tina said after she had lit the cigarette.
‘Yes,’ Gus
said.
‘I’ll blow the
smoke out the window.’
She decided she
would ask Gus to let her off where she could get a taxi – maybe he could let
her off at a station, she could at least salvage some of the expense of the
night. She must not go out with Tina when she was wearing the boots. As soon as
she saw them she should flee. Anyhow. No excuses, out of there.
Tina was
fishing in her bag, brought out a little tube and sprayed her mouth.
‘Where is it
again?’ Gus demanded.
‘Gus – ’
‘It’s around
here somewhere. I thought you knew.’
‘You’re the one
going Tina, all I do is drop you off.’
‘Aren’t you
going?’
‘He wasn’t
invited,’ Tina said, ‘he’s just giving us a lift.’
‘Gus, would you
mind dropping me off somewhere?’
‘You’ve got to
come! Don’t be silly. You can’t run away like that. All the time.’
‘Tina, I wasn’t
invited.’
‘You were! His
girlfriend said to bring you.’
‘Tina, I’ve got
a headache. I’ve had a very stressful week. Thank you for inviting me to the
book launch, it was great but I really must go home now. Gus, will you – ’
‘If you don’t
go, I can’t. I won’t know anyone there. It’s my only chance to get to know him.
I think Abbie Abramovic is going too. Did you see him at the launch? I thought
you liked his stuff. You bought one of their C D’s. It’ll be so cool. This is a
really big chance for me.’
‘Go for it,’
Gus said.
They drove up
and down some deserted and ill-lit industrial cul de sacs.
‘There’s Abbie.
With some chick. Stop.’
She turned to
watch Gus’ tail lights diminish. Then turn into the night.
Tina was intent
on watching Abbie and his friend. They were looking around uncertainly.
‘Hi!’ she
called out, ‘we’re lost too.’
Tina clutched
her arm, ‘Shut up! What are you doing?’
She shrugged
Tina off and walked up to Abbie Abramovic and whoever.
‘Are you going
to Mac Baker’s?’
‘I hope so,’
Abbie said. ‘Where is it?’
‘No idea,’ she
said, ‘my girlfriend Tina … this is Tina, I’m Catherine, I know you’re Abbie
Abramovic, I bought one of your C D’s … ‘
‘Fine,’ Abbie
said. And looked away.
‘I’m
Catherine,’ she said to Abbie’s companion.
‘My name’s
Lorelei.’
Abbie returned
his emptied gaze to their presence. ‘Lorelei’s a performance artist.’
‘Oh,’ she said,
‘what do you perform? Where?’
Just as Lorelei
said, ‘I’ve almost got a major in dance from Western Sydney,’ another car
rolled down the noir cul de sac.
She wouldn’t
have been surprised if some bros had got out and pushed them up against a wall.
She was ready for a fight.
A solid blond
woman bustled out of the driver’s seat. A small bull of a man hauled himself
out of the passenger door and a very thin woman got out of the back door. A man
wearing an overcoat held it open for her.
Abbie started
over to them.
They all
followed.
‘She’s an
agent,’ Lorelei whispered of the solid blond woman.
‘Oh, what will
we do?’ After a few more clattered paces she added, ‘Like in The Matrix?’
Tina caught up.
The two parties
stood off a little then Abbie said, ‘I heard it’s a fabulous loft.’
The agent
turned and headed towards a building.
As they all
started after her the bull said, ‘You’ll have to get a bigger car, Pinkie.’
‘How come?’ the
agent turned around to say.
‘My publicist
wouldn’t approve of me driving around in a car which drags its bum every time a
few people get in the back.’
‘And we don’t
even weigh that much, do we Cassie? Not that I’m not intensely grateful for the
lift Pinkie … I hope. Where are we – if that isn’t too existential a question?’
The man in the coat addressed Tina.
Tina ignored
him.
Delighted by a
sally, Catherine said, ‘I think we must be careful, there are agents about.’
The fact that
he smiled ameliorated the agent’s turning and glaring at her. Catherine smiled
back at the man. He was quite old.
The agent
pushed a buzzer and said, ‘It’s us and some other people, we’re all lost for
Christ’s sake you’d better have some whicky whacky waiting. It’s colder than a
witch’s tit out here.’
‘Push the
door.’ The voice was singularly flat.
It took three
of them to get it wide enough for them to squeeze through one at a time.
She looked to
Tina in appeal as they mounted the slippery steel stairs. Tina’s profile told
her she no longer knew her.
The loft was a
vast space, appallingly cold though a single bar radiator glowed in the
distance. It illuminated some outlines of people. The effect was rather Munch.
Pinkie led them
on, clattering over the polished concrete floor.
Their approach
was regarded in silence by the four silhouettes. One of them was Mac Baker. She
could tell by the coat.
A huge
refectory table stretched near a wall; assorted chairs broke its interminable
line. On the other side of the radiator was a screen but you could see a bed
behind it and a crowded clothes rack under which assorted shoes had dropped
dead. There was a glow in another further darkness. It was an oven. Thank god:
food.
Three of the
four turned out to be minor celebrities like Mac.
‘Where’s my
whicky whacky?’
‘Didn’t you
bring some?’ Mac made it a rebuke.
‘No-o. You know
I only drink whisky.’
‘There’s wine,’
the statuesque woman who didn’t seem to be a celebrity said and moved towards
the oven glow.
‘Jesus,’ Pinkie
said, ‘I can’t stay.’
‘Tra-laaa!’ The
man in the coat pulled a half bottle of whisky from one of its pockets.
‘Thank Christ,’
said Pinkie. ‘Bring glasses!’ She bellowed at the dim form near the glow of the
oven, ‘And ice! I’d better go and see what she’s up to.’
In the silence
– was it despondent, hostile, coolness? - they listened to Pinkie interrogating
the statuesque woman about glasses and ice and the statuesque woman refusing to
be organised.
‘Pinkie must
have her whicky whacky,’ the man in the overcoat risked, ‘we all have our
needs.’ Then, ‘How about some music? With all these musicians present.’
Mac moved off
and bent down near a wall. Little red and green lights blinked and music leapt
into the air. Techno jazz, she thought but hoped there wasn’t a quiz.
They all had a
drink in their hands. Abbie was standing near the little steady red lights and
the oscillating green ones but he seemed to be grooving to a different beat.
She glanced at Tina. Tina was offering to help the statue who was Gabriella.
Pinkie was kneeling at the radiator, her whisky glowed wonderfully when she
raised it.
‘Give us your
car keys Pink,’ the small bull said.
‘Get me some
cigarettes, will you?’ Cassie said. Her face had been everywhere for years.
‘Oh have one of
mine, they’re in my bag,’ Tina called from what had lighted up to reveal itself
as a kitchen nook. Everything was stainless steel.
Cassie did so
at once.
‘And what would
you like – chewing gum? chips? I’d send out for a new life but the delivery people
have obviously always stolen them by the time they arrive. Some things you’ve
just got to get yourself.’
‘I’d kill for a
vodka and tonic with a not too thin slice of lime,’ she replied. ‘I’ll come
with you.’
‘Oh stay here,
I know I’m senile – oh we don’t say that any more do we? – demented – it sounds
wrong but it’s probably right, I’d be the last to know – I can remember that:
vodka, tonic, lime and a Crunchie – how was that?’
‘Pretty good.
Let me come with you!’ she whispered intensely and clasped his forearm. His
sleeve felt like cashmere.
‘This is Mel,’
he said of the small bull who was swearing at the car as he drove, ‘and I’m
forgotten – no, my name’s Sanders.’
‘But call him
Chicken, everyone else does,’ the bull said.
‘And call him
Meltdown, everyone else does.’
So the bull was
who she thought he was. ‘Call me Catherine, everyone else does,’ she said but
was interrupted by Mel.
‘Where the fuck
are we? Why do they live in these industrial estates, there won’t even be a
Twenty-four Seven or whatever they’re called …’
There was. And
it even had a little basket of limes.
Chicken
presented her with a Crunchie. The woman in the burkha smiled at her but did
not know where a bottle shop was.
They found one.
She bought the most expensive bottle of vodka they had and a bottle of lime
water in case she really wanted that instead of a slice of lime.
‘Do you think
we’d better buy takeway?’ Meltdown said back in the car.
‘Yes,’ Chicken
said, ‘because we’ll never find our way back.’
She helped them
to.
Tina hissed,
‘Where did you get to?’
‘Oh I don’t
know, Tina,’ she proclaimed so that her voice echoed through the gelid air,
‘Chicken and Meltie and I were just cruising about, you know what I’m like.’
Tina had cut
free of the group at the refectory table to come over and address her thus. The
other party was still huddled about the reassuring useless glow of the
radiator.
‘Not before
dinner, honey,’ Gabriella said in her American accent, ‘please.’
Tina drifted
back to the table.
She followed to
see if they were grazing on food.
Mac was
razoring some cocaine on a black glass tray. He neatly curtailed a line, rolled
up a hundred dollar note and handed it to Abbie who snorted. Mac watched him
for approval. After a minute or so Abbie nodded at Mac and went back to
grooving at the light show. Mac handed the note to the other man and arranged
the thin beautiful disintegrating line of white on the black glass. It
disappeared. ‘Some people think it makes the food taste better,’ he turned to
say to Gabriella before continuing with his hostly duties. The men were served
first, Meltie and Chicken declined. Pinkie told him to go fuck himself. ‘I
might do that later,’ Mac said and laughed. Tina did too before bending to
snort up her assistance. Catherine waved her vodka at him when it was her turn.
She had decided she wanted vodka and lime.
Now she decided
she wanted a slice of lime as well.
Gabriella
glared at her as she entered the kitchen. She was preparing a salad in a huge
greasily transparent scratched plastic bowl. It looked as if it were all leaves
and very, very wrong. Some of the limes lay around butchered.
‘May I use
this?’ she picked up a knife.
‘Suit
yourself,’ Gabriella said.
She sliced a
lime and plopped the slice into her glass.
There was a
terrible smell seeping through the kitchen.
Gabriella
suddenly stopped, turned away and came back carrying a card. ‘Fill this in,’
she said, ‘for yourself.’
She looked at
it. It was blank. ‘Fill it in with what?’ she asked.
‘Your name,
what else? It’s a place card. Put it where you want to sit.’
That note of
exasperation could not be all her fault.
She moved along
the table. Every now and again there was a white card held up by a little
wrought wire claw. She saw Chicken/Sanders’ name and suddenly realised she’d
done him at uni. She wondered if she would get the chance to tell him. Meltie
was who she had guessed. The other names were known except for Tina’s and
Lorelei’s. Lorelie’s family name was Monroe – had her mother been inspired by Gentlemen Prefer Blonds? She decided not
to ask.
Abbie looked as
though he was now actually dancing. She recognised the music, it was his own.
Lorelei slid up next to him and began to move to the music too. Abbie stopped
and moved away from her, into the gloom. Catherine saw Lorelei slump from
beauty. Mac was standing as if a lighthouse but it was Tina who was beaming, up
at him. Every now and again he lowered his eye balls to make sure he was still
being lapped up. Cassie was staring intensely at the man whose name was that of
another writer, lesser known but of high repute. He appeared to be explaining
something; she appeared grateful. The remaining woman was a painter. She was
staring around as if for something. As far as you could see no art hung on the
walls, nor stood.
‘This place is
fabulous, who was the architect?’ Tina exclaimed to the beamless lighthouse.
Gabriella came
into the room bearing another huge plastic bowl in which something strange sat.
The putrid odour of the kitchen intensified about them.
‘It’s
minimalist,’ Mac explained to the room, ‘Gabi did it.’
‘Yeah,’ Gabi
said. ‘it’s an N Y style. Would you like to take your place now?’
Catherine was
pleased to be at the distant end of the table because that indignity had also
been accorded Chicken.
‘Take your coat
off, Chicken,’ Mac ordered from the head of the table.
‘I have nothing
on underneath,’ Chicken said.
‘This is
durian, it’s a traditional Indonesian fruit, they call it the shit of the
gods,’ Gabriella announced. ‘You pass them around,’ she ordered Tina who had
managed to seat herself next to Pinkie who was on Mac’s right. Tina scowled,
pushed some bowls on.
Pinkie rose. ‘I
would like to propose a toast - to
Mac.
All
upstanding!’ When they had, she said tenderly, ‘ I hope your book is a great
success dear in a difficult market, of course there will be t v spots.’
‘T V spots,’
Chicken murmured.
They tried to
eat.
‘Has everyone
got wine?’ Gabriella waved a huge bottle.
She must be
very strong, Catherine noted, Tina had better watch out.
‘What can she
follow durian with?’ Chicken said to her. Everyone else was engaged in ignoring
them.
‘Some sort of –
Lomatil is the only possibility.’
Unfortunately
at that moment the table had fallen silent to listen.
‘I guess you
don’t use place names much in Australia,’ Gabriella said down the refectory
runway.
‘Well dear,’
Pinkie said, ‘we don’t find them necessary. The theory down here at the arse
end of the world is that the hostess considers who to sit next to whom – very
carefully -and leads them to their place. Or indicates it. Personally.’
‘Yeah well we
think that’s rather ordinary, you know?’
Catherine
stopped feeling sorry for Gabriella.
‘I learnt to
make this on an Aegean island one summer when I was on holiday from Vasser,’
Gabriella announced of a casserole dish which didn’t look nearly big enough.
‘It’s very rich so you only have a little bit.’
‘Moussaka,’
Meltie said. ‘It’s actually an Australian Aboriginal dish. The Greek immigrants
took it back when they returned with the wealth they earned from bad backs.
Traditionally it’s kangaroo?’ It was a question.
‘No-o,’
Gabriella said. It was almost a question.
Even the coked
had cleaned their plates in an alarmingly brief time.
Gabriella
returned with the salad.
‘It’s too cold
for salad,’ Mac said, ‘haven’t you got any … potatoes, or something?’
‘There were
potatoes in the moussaka, I couldn’t deal with the aubergine. They’re
traditional.’
‘Did the
Aborigines steal that from the Irish convicts?’ Cassie asked Meltie.
He shrugged.
Whatever
celebratory soufflé had briefly bound the party – raised on coke, hostility,
novelty, alcohol, the bizarre level of discomfort – piffed into resentment and
ill temper.
‘God it’s cold
in here,’ the painter said.
‘Why don’t you
get one of those oil heaters? They don’t work but they’d be better than that,’
Cassie said.
‘They’re not
environmentally friendly,’ Mac said.
‘Bullshit,’
Abbie said.
‘I’m not
allowed to have a dishwasher either,’ Gabriella said. ‘I feel colder here than
I ever did in Brook- New York.’
‘That’s because
you never do any exercise,’ Mac said.
‘Exercise is
very important,’ Tina announced.
‘Anyone want
coffee?’ Gabriella asked after she had stood up.
‘Oh. I brought
some chocolates,’ the painter said, ‘I’d love some.’
‘Have you got
any tea?’ Catherine asked.
‘Of course.
Lemon grass or mint?’
‘I’ll have
coffee,’ Catherine said.
Everyone
laughed.
Gabriella
retreated.
Catherine went
after her. ‘I’m sorry about that, I didn’t mean it that way.’
‘Forget it,’
Gabriella said.
Meltie came in.
‘Here are the chocolates. Will I put them on a plate?’
The coffee and
the chocolates were very successful. Pinkie poured whicky into hers.
‘Let’s dance,’
the painter said. And did.
Lorelei joined
her. She was pretty good.
Cassie dragged
the reputable writer onto his feet and danced in front of him but soon gave up.
Tina loved
dancing; it would be interesting to see what she did. She sat with Mac who was
lecturing Meltie who wasn’t listening.
Gabriella
retreated to a wall, on the way she flicked a switch and more light suffused
the room.
Catherine
looked at Chicken’s sleeve. Red glowed up through the blue. ‘Look at your
coat,’ she said.
‘I know,’ he
said, ‘it’s a revelation. Do you think I can go now?’
‘Can I go with
you?’
Gabriella
escorted them out to wait for the taxi.
Chicken kissed
Gabriella and thanked her.
Catherine
thanked her too and gave her her card. ‘Please ring me, we can go out to the
pictures, or just talk.’
‘That was a
stupid thing to do,’ she said in the cab. ‘Do you think she will? I really
wanted to ring her and thank her – I wasn’t really invited and I don’t have her
number and … well, she had gone to some trouble.’
‘You could say
that. She’s got something, I’ll say that of her, the durian was a sensational
touch. That alone made her too good for Mac, though god knows a tin of pâté
would have done that. Doesn’t the book sound dreary?’
‘Yes,’ she
said. ‘I studied you at uni.’
‘I think you’re
confusing me with Chaucer,’ Chicken said.
‘I remember a
line –
the ash floats
like gentlest snow
before the
fiery blizzard
but none may
heed the warning
…’
She was going
to add, ‘It’s so true’ but got caught up in the thrill of having remembered the
quote.
© Ian MacNeill