Holier than thou, p.1

Holier Than Thou, page 1

 

Holier Than Thou
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Holier Than Thou


  Also by Laura Buzo

  Good Oil

  Author’s note:

  This novel is set in Sydney. The suburb of

  Elizabethtown and its surrounds are fictional.

  First published in 2012

  Copyright © Laura Buzo

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. The Australian Copyright Act 1968 (the Act) allows a maximum of one chapter or ten per cent of this book, whichever is the greater, to be photocopied by any educational institution for its educational purposes provided that the educational institution (or body that administers it) has given a remuneration notice to Copyright Agency Limited (CAL) under the Act.

  Allen & Unwin

  83 Alexander Street

  Crows Nest NSW 2065

  Australia

  Phone: (61 2) 8425 0100

  Fax: (61 2) 9906 2218

  Email: info@allenandunwin.com

  Web: www.allenandunwin.com

  Lines on page vi from A Better Woman by Susan Johnson, Random House

  Australia, 1999. Reproduced by kind permission of the author.

  A Cataloguing-in-Publication entry is available from the National Library of Australia www.trove.nla.gov.au

  ISBN 978 1 74175 998 3

  Cover and text design by Design by Committee

  Cover photo by Betsie Van Der Meer/Getty Images

  Printed in Australia by McPherson’s Printing Group

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  To Dad

  Just you wait until your own nightmare

  wakes, loud and roaring, just wait until it

  comes alive to scream in your face.

  Susan Johnson, A Better Woman

  Contents

  1

  2: One year earlier

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25

  Acknowledgements

  About the author

  1

  There’s a point on Jindarra Street where you crest the hill and suddenly the city skyline appears on the horizon. Even on hazy days you can see the figures of the buildings, straight and tall, taking more than is their due. Far from the quiet desperation of Elizabethtown. Not so quiet at times.

  When I crest that hill I always think of Lara and Daniel, high up in Governor Phillip Tower, seated in the offices of their respective firms. Then I draw a line south across the city, passing Tim’s office near Central Station, down to Abigail at St George Hospital. I extend the line west, pausing briefly to glance down toward Canberra where I think Liam and his girlfriend are still living, and then link them all back to me in Elizabethtown – Befftown – where Nick and I are hurtling along Jindarra Street in the work car.

  Today we occupy the car in pained silence until Nick, who is driving, rubs his hand on his thigh and asks, ‘A penny for your thoughts, Woman-of-steel?’

  The moniker that even he has adopted for me brings tears to my eyes. I know that my steel, once shiny and impenetrable, is now rusty and corroded. Almost all the way through.

  I shake my head, looking out my window. A Silverchair song comes on the radio and Nick turns it up. He always drives the car with one hand on the gearstick, even though it’s an automatic. Old habits. Death is always hard.

  We pull up outside Gerard’s fibro shack and Nick switches off the engine. Seatbelts still on, we brace ourselves for the stench that will hit us inside the house, not to mention the thirty-five-degree heat that penetrates the car the second the aircon is off.

  Nick reaches for the medication box on the back seat and lifts it onto his lap.

  ‘In and out, right?’ I say. ‘No chatting. It’ll take everything I’ve got not to heave my guts up in there.’ I am a little hung-over.

  Nick flips open the top of the box and fishes out an ampule, a syringe and a needle. The car rapidly heats up even though we have parked in the shade of a lonely eucalypt. Our faces are moist and I can feel a drop of sweat rolling down my décolletage. I wind down my window pointlessly. The cicadas have set up a robust, unflinching song.

  ‘I am so not supposed to do this,’ Nick says. ‘And please don’t dob me in to the naughty-nurses board, but I’m going to draw up in here so I can walk straight in and give it to him.’

  I watch him rip the packaging off the syringe.

  ‘I hope I didn’t upset you last night.’ He taps the bubbles out of the ampoule with his fingernail.

  ‘Oh . . . no no,’ I say, ‘not your fault.’

  ‘Some of it’s my fault.’

  I shake my head again, tears brimming, and this time he sees them.

  ‘You’re a good person, Holly.’ Dear Nick. He wants to comfort me.

  ‘You don’t know anything,’ I mutter. I want him to comfort me. But I am speechless with anger at myself, and I won’t look at him.

  ‘I just wanted to put it on the table.’

  ‘Well. You certainly did that, Nicholarse.’

  ‘Anyways,’ he says, drawing the viscous liquid from the ampule into the syringe, ‘let’s get Gerard done, and then it will be time for lunch.’ He touches my right cheekbone. ‘You need it.’

  He throws the needle he used to draw up into the sharps disposal and fits a 21-gauge needle in its place.

  We both glove up – I only glove up at Gerard’s house – and get out of the car, faltering briefly in the heat.

  ‘Hotter than hell,’ says one of us.

  I look across the road and see a woman come out of her home. It is another fibro shack and someone has punched two great big holes in the front wall next to the door. She wears black from ankle to wrist and a black hejab. I wonder how she doesn’t collapse from heatstroke.

  It’s strange how you can’t see death from outside a house, but you can feel it as soon as you are inside. I used to stand on the footpath after Liam’s mum dropped me home from rehearsals, looking at my family’s house. It looked, for all the world, like the other houses on our street. But as soon as I was inside the door, death filled the space. Waiting.

  I raise my fist to knock on Gerard’s door and notice a dirty scrap of paper stuck to it with sticky tape. I lean in closer to decipher the scrawl.

  I cant take the side affect ‘Hmmm,’ I say. ‘Good times.’

  ‘Bloody hell,’ Nick says, looking around at the filthy porch, the hideously overgrown grass in the yard, the letterbox overflowing, the generations of rain-sodden, sun-dried advertising catalogues littered every which way, the garbage bin on its side in the gutter with stinking detritus spilling out.

  ‘This guy needs a hospital of the old school,’ he continues helplessly, ‘not us and a fortnightly fight about a needle.’

  I tear the note down and knock on the door. The dog in the next yard starts barking furiously.

  No answer.

  Nick does his ‘policeman’s knock’ with one of his strong carnie arms. I can see the peppering of new and old burn scars on his hand. Playing with fire is stupid, I tell myself.

  No answer.

  ‘Odd,’ he says. Usually Gerard is quick to answer the door and start arguing with us.

  I try the doorknob and it turns. The door swings open to reveal nothing but the empty hallway, but we must know on some level because we instinctively reach for each other’s hand.

  ‘Gerard?’ I call. ‘It’s Holly and Nick.’

  No answer.

  ‘Gerard!’ Nick joins my call. ‘Still asleep, mate? Rise and shine!’

  Adrenaline begins to pump through our bodies as we cross the threshold together and walk slowly down the hall.

  In the kitchen we see him.

  The needle and syringe drop from Nick’s hands onto the ancient lino. His hands connect with my body and he is shoving me out of the room.

  ‘Get out! Get out, Holly!’ His shouting is hot in my ear.

  ‘Oh shit! Oh no.’ I think that’s my voice.

  Nick is still shoving me, all the way down the hall and back onto the porch. The dog next door’s barking is aggressive, deafening.

  I yank my work phone off my belt. Nick runs back inside, and, as I dial the three zeros and press the green button, I can hear him frantically ransacking the kitchen for a knife.

  ‘Police!’ I tell the operator out of habit. ‘No, ambulance! No, both!’

  I can hear Nick swearing.

  ‘Yes, I’m in, um, Guthrie Hill. There’s a man hanging. Uh, 26 Koorana Street. ‘K-o-o-r-a-n-a. Guthrie Hill. Nearest cross is Jindarra Street. It’s a fibro house. White. White-ish. Um, I don’t think so . . . I don’t know. Nick! Is he alive? Nick? I don’t know. I’m from the, uh, mental health service. Elizabethtown.Yeah. Gerard Stanek. S-t-an-e-k. Okay.’

  I hang up, and Nick appears by my side. He pulls off his gloves.

  ‘He’s dead.’

  I hook my phone back onto my belt and take off my gloves too.

  ‘Is he down?’

  ‘No. No knife. And . . . he’s dead. We’ll have to wait . . . the ambos’ll have something. To get him dow

n.’

  We sit on the step clutching hands until we hear the sirens, far off, over the screaming of the cicadas.

  2

  One year earlier

  It was the eucalypt that we signed the lease for. The flat itself was much like all the others.

  Uninspiring red brick? Check.

  Original kitchen, read: ancient lino, filthy electric oven, stained sink, hardly any bench space, peeling, cockroach-ridden cupboards? Check.

  Shared laundry? Check. Which we had no quarrel with really. The machines were pretty old and festy, but hopefully they would clean our clothes, which is all we asked.

  Neat bathroom. Read: bathroom installed before Gough was PM but it does the job so just lump it, you know you can’t afford any better? Check.

  Carpeted throughout. Read: carpet so so skanky with years of stains but why would the landlord put in new carpet when he could use the money for his son Toby’s rugby tour to the UK? Check.

  Vertical blinds that perhaps were white or beige at the beginning but are now brown, blotchy and tangled down the bottom? Check.

  Exorbitant rent and ten other harried, worn-down-looking applicants all willing to pay it and not mention the skanky carpet or the shitty fittings? Check. Hello, Sydney.

  But this flat was on the top floor and had a tiny balcony that looked out over tiled roofs of duplexes to the west and identical red-brick apartment blocks to the north. In one of the back yards was an enormous eucalypt, its trunk and branches gleaming white, its delicate foliage a brilliant green in the sunlight, and shaking with the tiniest breeze.

  ‘That tree is beautiful,’ I said to Tim, unable to tear my gaze from it. ‘We can sit out here after work and drink a beer in summer. Bring out a cup of tea to catch some winter sunlight.’

  Tim frowned and wiped his brow with the bottom of his T-shirt.

  ‘Nice abs,’ I said, momentarily distracted.

  ‘This is the hottest flat we have seen by far,’ he said. ‘It’s right up top and all the windows are west-facing. It’ll be so hot in summer. And it’s skanky.’

  ‘We’ll be at work under aircon for most of the days,’ I soothed. ‘In the dusk it will cool down heaps and we can sit out here in shorts and T-shirts . . . ’

  ‘No T-shirt for me.’

  ‘Sweetness!’ I said, slipping my hand onto his belly and sliding my fingers just under the waistband of his shorts.

  ‘I don’t know, Hol.’ His reservations were increasing at the same rate as my enthusiasm.

  ‘It’s close to everything, it will become less skanky the more we get to know it, and add stuff to it. Look at that tree,Timbo. It’ll make us strong.’

  ‘It’s a tree.’

  I was going to have to pull out the big guns.

  ‘Don’t,’ I pulled his pelvis against mine, ‘be a North Shore pussy, sweetheart.’

  He looked into my eyes, smiling without using his lips. He was softening.

  ‘Come on, our own place.’ I cajoled. ‘And we’ll have our Saturdays back. And we can be as loud as we want! Whenever we want. In whichever room. Not a parent for miles.’

  ‘Your mum’s only in Petersham.’

  ‘Who cares about the skank factor; we’ll be high on endorphins.’ I was free-stylin’ now. On a roll. A woman about to get what she wants.

  Another couple came out to inspect the balcony. I looked inside and saw two more couples come in the front door and greet the skinny blonde property agent.

  ‘Now go,’ I squeezed him in a hug, ‘and flirt with the agent.’

  Not many women can resist Tim’s understated charm, and this woman was certainly not one of them. One week later we pushed open the door to Ray Payne Dulwich Hill and sat down to sign the lease and pay the bond, plus the first two week’s rent in advance. On top of that, there was a fifteen-dollar ‘lease preparation fee’. Payable by us. Right up there with ATM fees, random ‘account keeping’ fees and the twenty-dollar ‘administration fee’ you had to pay to get on the waiting list for a staff parking pass at Elizabethtown Hospital. I wanted to present that skinny agent, in turn, with an invoice for a twenty-dollar ‘lease signing fee’ from me and Tim. We were lucky to be offered the place though, I guess, as neither of us had ever rented before and had no rental references. We had both put down our parents as referees, which hurt, but there was nothing else for it as the application form was quite specific about wanting to know where we had both been living.

  But we had evidence of permanent full-time employment, albeit on new-grad salaries, and a one-bedder between the two of us was do-able. We signed here, here, here, here and here on their copy of the lease, and then same again on our copy of the lease. We were gouged another $15 for the keys deposit, then the agent finally gave us our two sets and booted us out onto Marrickville Road, where we stood, slowly becoming giddier and giddier with the freedom that was coursing through our veins. It was 11 a.m.

  We drove Tim’s cretaceous-era Mazda 626 to the Supa Centa to look at fridges.

  For moving day we hired a two-tonne truck and lined up Lara, Abigail and Daniel to sweat and grunt it out with us. My stuff was only coming from the family manor in Petersham so we knocked that over in an hour. Tim’s stuff, however, had to come all the way from the North Side so he and Daniel drove the truck over together, leaving us girls to unpack, assemble the clothes rack and wait for the new fridge to be delivered.

  ‘Omigod, there’s so much stuff we don’t have,’ I worried. ‘Kitchen stuff . . . and we don’t even have a coffee table.’

  ‘Don’t worry,Wozza,’ Abigail comforted me. ‘Tomorrow you can pop in to Kmart and pick up a few things. This crate will do for a coffee table for now.’

  ‘Yeah, it’ll come together, sweetie!’ called Lara from the bedroom.

  It was hot. I went into the bathroom and splashed water from the cold tap onto my face. God knew where the towels were. I lifted my singlet to wipe my face.

  ‘What do you feel like listening to?’ I asked Abigail as I unpacked the speakers.

  ‘Hmm, KOL,’ she replied.

  Once they were playing I opened the balcony door all the way across and listened to the cicadas singing. Tim was right, even with all the blinds shut, the flat was stiflingly hot.

  At 4 p.m. there was still no sign of the boys so we slumped on my old double-futon-turned-couch with cold drinks from the little esky packed by Abigail’s mum.

  ‘I googled Liam last week and found a work email address for him,’ I ventured.

  ‘Who?’ exclaimed Abigail.

  ‘You googled who?’ Lara chimed in, as if they were singing a madrigal.

  ‘Liam-who?’

  ‘Liam-who!’

  I had one on each side of me and they were no longer slumping but sitting dead upright and looking at me in demand of an explanation.

  ‘I’m serious, I emailed him at the new address. Unions are big on transparency, I guess. He was right there on the website.’

  ‘Why did you do that?’ Lara’s question was quiet but confronting.

  ‘Well, obviously because I . . . wanted to hear from him. To talk to him.’

  ‘Holly.’ Lara was incredulous. ‘He doesn’t want to talk to us. He’s either shut down his Hotmail or he’s just not replying. He’s changed his mobile number. He hasn’t given us an address in Canberra.’

  ‘Or a landline, or anything,’ Abigail interjected.

  ‘It’s done; he’s gone. He’s been gone for the better part of a year.’

  ‘It can’t be done,’ I protested. ‘It cannot just be done like that.’

  ‘Hols—’

  ‘Abs!’

  I sat up straight, crossed my legs and decided against telling them that the week before I’d also rung Liam’s mum, their landline number etched into my brain since high school. She was genuinely delighted that I had rung, and I tried to keep the conversation as subtle as possible. I didn’t put her on the spot and ask for his new mobile number, or his address in the Berra. I didn’t say, ‘Your son has surgically removed himself from our friendship . . . why?’ I just said I was sure he’d been busy, and the move had been such a big deal, and I’d had some trouble getting in touch recently. Could she please ask him to call me when she speaks to him next? I gave her my mobile number ‘just in case he’d lost it’, which I’ll admit was pathetic.

  ‘Woz,’ said Lara gently, ‘he has all of our numbers. Mobiles. Landlines. He’s got our email addresses. He knows where we live. Well, where we live.’ She gestured at herself and Abigail. ‘You know he’s more than capable of getting in contact. He’s a smart guy.’

 

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