Tuesday, 25 November 2014

End of Days


It was quite a mystery really: all the Poisoners disappeared overnight. Or so it seemed to us, in our little corner of the world. One minute they were everywhere, crashing pots and crockery around, big feet thumping through the place – then there was nothing, just the musical hum of all those little appliances that you could only hear when They weren’t around. I must admit we were a bit puzzled – pleased, of course, but puzzled. Only Great Great Grandad could remember a silence like that. He even remembered the Awful Silence, a time when the Poisoners of the day had departed, leaving a deadly bomb that filled the whole Domain with toxic smoke. Only the toughest had prevailed. Then another generation of Poisoners had come and life continued as it always had – a deadly struggle to survive in the cracks and crevices of Their civilization.

“It will pass,” Great Great Grandad said in that inscrutable way he had. “They disappear, but new ones always arrive to take their place. Seize the moment!” That pronouncement really took it out of the poor old fellow and he had to lie down for a bit, waving all his legs in the air. But seize the moment we did, stockpiling food scraps, building new nests and reproducing like there was no tomorrow. I had more mates than you could shake a toothpick at and I couldn’t even begin to count the babies. Life was wonderful back then: freed from the omnipresent threat of a poison gas attack or a brutal crushing, we could go where we pleased and do what we wanted – and we just wanted what we always wanted, food and sex, sex and food. They were nowhere to be seen and all the Poisons stayed put, rusting away in the High Cupboard. No sound but the scuffling of our myriad feet and the gentle, rhythmic hum of the power grid. Aahh, good times!

Well, we started to get reports in from other rooms in the Domain, and even a few snippets of news from Out There. It seemed the same thing was happening all over: Poisoners just up and disappearing. One crazy female from Out There even claimed she had seen the bodies of Poisoners dead in the streets. She said the Brothers were feasting on them, that their numbers were beyond counting. Many of the young and gullible amongst us believed her and she gained quite a following for a while. A small group of believers even let themselves be led Out There, on the promise of boundless rotten meat for all to share. I’ve always been a bit of a sceptic myself. Anyway, we never saw any of them again. Perhaps they found the Land of Plenty, perhaps not.

But good times don’t last forever. After a while some of us started to worry about the future. Yes, there was plenty of food now, but it was not a renewable resource: without the Poisoners, who had (unwillingly, it’s true) shared all their produce with us, we had no way of replenishing our supplies, and even I had to acknowledge that population growth was out of control. I hadn’t given it a moment’s thought while I was mating with everything in sight and having all those thousands of  babies, but it turns out the Poisoners had actually been doing us a favour with their cans of Mortein and their great stomping feet. Keeping the numbers in balance, like. Experts calculated that soon even the cardboard cartons would all be consumed and, without new food sources, our days as a species were numbered.

 

For once, Great Great Grandad was wrong. New Poisoners never did arrive. Explanations abounded, including a rather neat theory that, in their quest for ever more deadly chemicals They had actually ended up poisoning themselves! Hah, imagine, the irony of it! Well we tried everything, but we had no traditions of production, except for babies. I am ashamed to say that, in our desperation we did resort to cannibalism, but even that could not be sustained. The few of us who survived decided that we had to act; we had to venture Out There: it represented our last hope. I have to admit that, although I was not optimistic, nor was I prepared for the devastation that confronted us when, after a long and hungry journey, we finally gazed Out.

Nothing, as far as we could see, nothing but grey dust and swirling clouds of burning chemical grit. Behind us in the Domain, the strains of the last faint electrical circuits fizzled and died. We were the last of our race, it sang, the last of the last.

Friday, 19 September 2014

Pen Name


I was at the flea market in the filthy old port town of Piraeus, near Athens, a while back. I love a good market, especially in a place with a few layers of history, a few dirty secrets. The life of such a town is in its markets: the tools and utensils that have changed little in centuries; the gorgeous clothing woven, dyed, knitted or embroidered by hand; the antique stalls where grandmother’s china kittens jostle with her priceless amber worry beads – so different from the soulless, standardised supermarkets with their plastic Chinese goods and their plastic food. Anyway, in this particular market I was drawn to an unruly display of items under the care of a surly, gap-toothed teenager. He smirked as I examined a heap of brass goat-bells – what would an ignorant turista know about livestock? His smirk grew more pronounced as I worked my way through his collection of antique icons – foreigners! They wouldn’t know Saint Giorgios from Saint Nikolaus!

Then I saw it. A fine, silver fountain pen in elaborate filigree, nice and thick, with the old-fashioned straight nib that I favour. It had a name engraved in Greek letters along the side and it was in splendid condition. I hefted it and appreciated the weight and balance of a fine instrument. Just as I was composing my face into a look of nonchalance to make my opening bid, the youth’s eyes met mine. His glance slid down to the object in my hand, and his superior expression was instantly replaced by one of unmistakable horror.

“No! No for sale!” he exclaimed, attempting to snatch the pen from my hand. But I was not to be put off by some smug kid who thought his precious merchandise too good for an ignorant turista. I held tight to my prize and waved a fifty euro note at him with my free hand – more money, I’m sure, than his stall would make in a month. He let go of the pen to grab the fifty, of course, but the stricken expression never left his dark eyes as I turned and fled, triumphant.

That evening I polished my pen to a fine sheen and filled it with the best quality indigo ink. What a pleasure to sign my name with an instrument of such craftsmanship! But what happened next, I can hardly bring myself to tell. I am in the habit of keeping a journal of my travels – observations on the landscapes, customs and architecture, amusing incidents, characters, memorable meals and the like. The silver pen glided over the page with a silky smoothness, transforming my scrawl into calligraphy of deepest, most lustrous blue. I read over my account of the day, and had to take several deep breaths and clean my glasses. What I read in place of my plain, methodical prose was a narrative of such horror and violence that I thought I must be caught in a nightmare!

The narrator of the tale was a man unhappy in a brokered marriage, who plotted the death of his wife. But the descriptions, the lurid imaginings of his disturbed mind, the detail of his methods and her suffering, the clever disguising of his crime – where had this come from? It took a few more trials, but it soon became obvious that every time I took up the pen, no matter what my own intention, the result would be a story of violence and vice that sickened me to my soul. I should have stopped, of course, and disposed of my beloved pen, but I’m afraid the writing became a kind of compulsion. And besides, though I wouldn’t dream of publishing them under my own name, the horror fiction of Ariadne Thanatos – quite literally my pen-name – turns quite a nice little profit.

 

Friday, 11 July 2014

Nine Thousand Boys


Madison had been on the bus for seven minutes now and it was getting boring. Next to her, Gemma was lost in the music of her i-pod and wouldn’t respond even to sharp elbows to the ribs. Madison pulled out her phone and texted her second-best friend Tiffany.

Hey Tiff wasup? So BORED rite now.

Seconds later, Tiffany responded:

Hey Mad. BORED 2 death in Coms lecture atm. Where U at?

Madison replied instantly:

On the bus. Gem out of it as usual. Bus full of smelly old people, old dude opposite dribbling and talking to himself. Shd be put down.

Lol. Probly gunna hit on U.

Eeewww think hes checkin my boobs.

Haha old perv. Mad’s got a boyfrend!

EEEWWW old ppl R so gross.

 

Duncan realised that he was mumbling and checked himself. It was a habit he’d got into when his mind wandered, which it did more and more these days. He enjoyed riding on the bus, especially now that it was free for senior citizens. He had never imagined that he would make it to ‘senior citizen’ age. So many didn’t. His dad was only twenty-seven, killed in that murderous landing at Suvla Bay. As a boy, Duncan had worn his dad’s medals proudly, head full of glory, never understanding what a landing under fire was really like, and never having known his father. And Gwen wasn’t even fifty; everything they had been through together, then when it was time for a bit of a rest, a bit of joy, she’d been taken with the cancer.

And, of course, the boys at Normandy, who would always remain boys in Duncan’s mind. Nine thousand boys lying dead on the beaches. His brother Harry. His best mate Lew. As always, Duncan was back there in an instant. He would never be free of the screeching shells, the brutal body-blows of explosions, bloody human parts and bits of kit all mashed together, the grey sea washing up pink along the shore for miles. Hand to hand fighting, taking that beach foot by bloody foot. Nine thousand boys. Sergeant Giles, a funny bugger and tough as nails, saved more than a few of them before he copped a bullet to the neck. Henderson, the smart one, always inventing stuff and wondering about life. He could have been someone, that Henderson. Barnes, just a kid, calling out for his mum in those last minutes as Duncan had held him.

Duncan breathed deeply and shut his eyes as he gradually got the shaking under control. With a great effort of will, he sat straight and smiled. It had been worth it. Their sacrifice had been worth every life cut short that day. They had stopped the Nazis right there, turned the tide of the war. Those nine thousand boys dead on the beaches of Normandy had ensured that all western nations would enjoy freedom for generations to come. The lovely young girls sitting opposite, for example, could take their freedom totally for granted, and Duncan was glad about that.

Thursday, 3 July 2014

Small Change


Hannah and Tim were enjoying a last cold beer before heading to the airport. It was late afternoon and the sunlight filtering through the dust turned the streets of Dar-es-Salaam to red gold. They left a decent tip for the barman, but Hannah still had a pocket full of small coins. “What’ll I do with all this?” she asked, “It’s worth nothing.” They were about to leave the change on a nearby table when Tim noticed an old woman sitting beside the gutter with a few bunches of herbs beside her. Hannah funnelled the stream of coins into a plastic cup beside the woman, and Tim waved away the bunch of herbs she proffered. The woman put a hand to her heart as the two shouldered their backpacks and trooped off down the street.

Malia counted the coins again in disbelief. It was more than she normally made in a week. Despite appearances, she was not old – just thirty-five years – but they had been hard years of planting cassava in the fierce sun, cooking and housework, walking miles for water and firewood, childbearing, then the terrible loss of her husband to the evil disease that was sweeping the country. And after that the heartbreak as the fever took her son Christian, and then her daughter Grace, burning and shaking their poor tiny bodies as she watched and prayed. Now little Glory was all she had left, and this pile of coins would buy a net to protect the child from mosquitoes that, Malia now knew, carried the fever. She packed up her unsold produce, slipped the money into her pocket and strode with purpose towards the market.  A net, and perhaps even a scrap of meat to add to their rice this evening.

*            *          *          *          *          *          *          *          *          *

Glory sighed and allowed herself just a little smile of satisfaction. She had worked so hard, and now it was over. The late nights of studying by the light of a kerosene lamp, scrimping to buy old text books, long shifts at the cafĂ© – but of course that had helped her to learn English as well as being a source of good tips sometimes. And here she was at the end of her final Accounting exam. It had been easy and she was confident she had passed well. Now there was the interview at the bank next week to think about – she had saved for a smart new blouse to wear, and there was just enough over to get that beautiful scarf for her mother. Glory smiled more broadly as she imagined Malia trying on the silky turquoise and gold headscarf, and how proudly she would wear it on graduation day.

            *          *          *          *          *          *          *          *          *          *

Sara gradually relaxed. She sipped the spicy ginger tea and quietly, with downcast eyes, shared her story with the smart young woman across the desk. Like so many older women, Sara had the care of her two grandchildren, their parents dead years ago of the evil disease. She had supported the little family by taking in sewing. Now Sara had had an idea. The grandchildren were of an age to work, and Sara also had a sister and a niece. Together they wanted to start a sewing business – not just the mending, which brought in very little, but making clothing as well. Sara’s niece was very good at designing and cutting patterns – here was a photograph of a dress she had designed for the wedding of Ruth and Njomo. So, Sara was here at the bank to borrow money for a second-hand sewing machine and some bolts of good fabric to get them started. She looked up at the young woman – very young and very pretty, Sara thought, to be a real bank manager. Sara’s heart leapt when the woman nodded and smiled at her. “I’m sure we can help you, let’s work through these forms together.”

            *          *          *          *          *          *          *          *          *          *

Glory had had an exhausting first day as manager of her own branch, but it had gone well. She was especially happy about the two small business loans that she had arranged: good people who would work hard and spread their prosperity to others in the village. This was exactly what she had wanted to do when she had learnt about business back at school – help her people to help themselves. And there was her mother waiting for her at the corner as always, ever since she had been a little girl running home from school.
Malia thought her heart would burst with pride and happiness as Glory told her all about her day – her little girl was finally the boss, helping to make the lives of people so much better. As she dropped off to sleep later that night, Malia dreamed of a hazy, red-golden evening on the streets of the old city, and a handful of small change.

Sunday, 22 June 2014

The Greatest Gladiator


A hush descended on the festive crowd. The cries of the hawkers, the gossip of the matrons, the raucous laughter from the cheap seats all ceased as Emperor Titus ascended to his purple-dyed canopy. As he raised his right arm, they shouted with one mighty voice, fifty thousand strong, “Ave Caesar! Ave Caesar! Ave Caesar!”

In the gloom beneath the stadium, Burun registered both the silence and the tumult and he knew his moment had come. Burun was a giant, even amongst his own Lycian stock, whose men had the shoulders of bullocks. Their Roman neighbours often added, unkindly, that their women had the bullocks’ faces. Burun flexed his arms and stretched as the slave slathered him with olive oil and scraped his massive body clean. Unlike the swordsmen who would feature later, Burun was naked except for an ox-hide loincloth and thick bands protecting his forearms. He carried a heavy chain wrapped about his left hand and a massive studded club in his right. At the last minute Burun threw a lion-skin cloak across his shoulders: this was his trademark and symbol and he wore it with the teeth framing his forehead, just as Hercules had worn the impenetrable skin of the Nemean Lion.

What would he face this time, he wondered. The leopards and lions had given him little trouble in the past. They were predictable: he stopped their ripping claws with the chain wound around his leather-clad forearm, then, keeping his throat well protected he finished them with a blow from his club, usually to the face or the back of the head. Sometimes he played them for a while to give the crowd a bit more for their money. They loved a bit of blood. And they loved him, Burun “The Earthquake” they called him. That was the name he had earned early in his career, when he defeated a pack of wolves by staring them down and thumping his club on the ground as he advanced towards them. “Keep the pack together, humiliate the leader, never let them get behind you,” he whispered the mantra to himself and smirked. That worked with men too. Knowledge like this was what had made him the highest paid gladiator of all time, his four year career unheard of in this perilous profession. And he was a professional, a free man fighting for wealth and glory, not some miserable slave or prisoner.

Burun breathed deeply into his barrel chest, and exhaling, chanted a prayer to Hercules to grant his muscles strength and his mind, clarity. And again the god granted them – Burun could feel the power pulsing through him as he strode to the gates, which swung open before him. And there it was, the glorious Flavian Amphitheatre, the largest in the world. Emperor Vespasian had built it on the ashes left by the madman Nero, a palace of pleasure for the Roman people. Burun bowed deeply before the young Caesar, who nodded at him in approval. Then Burun slowly raised his club and roared, the sound echoing back to him from the stands as the crowd took up the cry, ”Earthquake! Earthquake! Earthquake!” stamping their feet in unison.

Just as the chanting reached its greatest pitch and volume, the gates at the opposite end of the arena burst open, and the six handlers threw off the ropes restraining his adversary…

For just a moment Burun’s proud heart failed him, and his stride faltered. The hysterical crowd sensed his fear and there was a collective gasp – had The Earthquake met his match at last?

The bear raised herself on her hind legs and sniffed the air. The human smell, the smell of her captors and enemies, was overwhelming and it maddened her. She lumbered into the vast open space of the arena: there must be a way out, a way back to her forested gully and her cubs.

Burun had mastered himself; he must not let the bear smell his fear. He had nothing but respect for these huge dark beasts who fought as he did, with great strength and greater guile. The bear had sensed him and she was on the alert, circling him slowly, back on all fours. Burun knew that he had only one chance, to swing his heavy club with all his strength, right on the nose and forehead, the bear’s only vulnerable point. Knocking her senseless was his only hope against so formidable an adversary.

The crowd screamed as the bear reared up and staggered towards their hero. She swatted at him with a huge paw and those scimitar claws. Burun fended the blow with the chain on this arm, but the force of her casual blow had knocked him to the ground and shredded his cloak. There was a little blood, nothing to worry him. Recovering his feet, Burun swung a mighty blow, catching the bear behind her left ear. She shook her head, stunned, but she did not fall. The crowd went mad with excitement and terror. Burun brandished his great club a second time, but the bear batted it from his grasp and he felt the sting of claws across his chest. And then, what he had feared most, the fatal rush of air from his lungs as the bear gripped him in her powerful arms. Burun felt the rising panic as he fought in vain for air, but the bear’s strength made him weak as a child in her arms. One by one he felt his ribs crack, the blood burst from his eyes and mouth. He would never again see the rugged green hills of his homeland or feel the embrace of his dear fat wife with her dark, gentle cow’s eyes. This would be his last embrace.

Death was painful and all men fear the darkness. But beyond the pain now, Burun smiled. His would be a grand funeral, attended by every dignitary, including Titus Caesar himself. And then he, the humble farmer from the end of the Empire, would lie in a marble tomb engraved with the Twelve Labours of Hercules as befitted the greatest gladiator of the age.

 

Thursday, 5 June 2014

The Discovery of Food


My mother was easily the worst cook in our neighbourhood. Back in the early sixties, she was a liberated career woman – the only mother I knew who worked outside the home – and she expressed herself through her cooking. That is to say, her approach to preparing meals clearly expressed her fury and frustration with all aspects of domestic life. She would crash pots around, carelessly slap meat on the grill and leave it to smoke and curl, and boil vegetables until they lost their colour and structure and it was impossible to identify potato, cabbage or pumpkin. Sweets was icecream or fruit. Get it yourself.

Your own family is ‘normal’ until you’re old enough to have a few broader life experiences, so I grew up not caring much about food. It was fuel. I had a range of preferences just slightly narrower than my mother’s narrow repertoire. Then I spent a day at the house of my Italian friend, Vicki de Luca. What a revelation: it changed everything! First there was the garden. Her grandfather (whom she called “Nonno Giuseppe” and who hugged and fussed over her in a way I could never imagine my dour Scots grandfather doing) had an entire backyard devoted to fruit and vegetables. The only thing I had to compare it to was the illustration of the Garden of Eden in my Children’s Illustrated Bible. Lush green and purple grapes hung from the vines overhead; tomatoes and eggplants (what were they?) burst from great green bushes taller than me. Lemons, oranges, olives. Nonno Giuseppe pulled a couple of carrots from the rich earth, dusted them off and offered them to us. I followed Vicki’s lead and bit into the most intense, carroty carrot I had ever tasted.

Together we collected tomatoes, lettuces, onions, more carrots and a lot of unfamiliar leaves and herbs to take inside. On the way back to the house we passed the outside laundry where something involving steam, feathers and women talking loudly in Italian was taking place. Vicki gently steered me away – “You don’t want to see in there,” she said.

Inside the house another team of women was engaged in rolling dough, chopping vegetables, frying something delicious that made my mouth water (onion and garlic), endlessly checking the huge wood stove, chattering and laughing. Vicki and I were given jobs to do, and I found myself enveloped in a wonderful ritual where food was grown and prepared with love, companionship and the skills of a long tradition.

Finally it was time to eat. I was pretty much full after soup with a couple of chunks of warm, crusty bread from the oven, but there was much more to come: pasta with steaming fresh tomato sauce; roast chickens with Nonno’s vegetables, a huge layered chocolate cake, cheeses, grapes and figs. We kids were given sweet wine with water to drink. I had never tasted alcohol before, but Vicki’s Uncle Cesare insisted we all had to try his home vintage. I felt my face glowing. Some of the foods were just too alien and intense for my WASP palate, but most of the dishes were glorious, and the family were clearly delighted that I thought so. The meal just went on and on, the three generations of Vicki’s family relaxed and talked in their musical language, occasionally inviting me to eat some more, and telling Vicki her friend was “bellisima”, which, as a scrawny freckle-faced kid I certainly was not.

As Vicki walked me to the front gate and I thanked her for a great day, she grasped my arm and said anxiously, “You won’t tell anyone, will you?” Somehow I knew exactly what she meant. There was still a lot of prejudice about “New Australians” and their foreign ways. I shook my head, smiled and waved goodbye.

Mum greeted me at the door and kissed me on the forehead. “Pooh, you smell of garlic!” she said, laughing. “Ready for dinner?”

“No thanks mum,” I said with complete honesty. “I’m not hungry.”

Sunday, 25 May 2014

The Language of the Sea


 

The language of the sea is difficult to learn

for those whose lives have not been spent upon

its storms and calms, face tilted to the wind,

the shifts of tide and time beneath their feet.

I come late to this arcane discipline

that sailors feel with bones and blood. The sea

taunts me like the brown boys taunt the tourists

on market day; cajoles me like a lover

in some foreign voice that hints of starlight

on oily water, currents deep and cold

and sailors’ dreams of voyages unfinished,

their narratives still waiting to be told.

Sunday, 18 May 2014

Where the Wild Things Really Are: encounters with Australian wildlife


 
My son is a chef, a member of an international fraternity that respects skill and stamina alone. Race, gender, religion and national identity confer no status but are fair game for the comradely vilification that seems to be the soundtrack for most restaurant kitchens.  As an Australian, his usual tag is a benign one – ‘Skip’, from Skippy the bush kangaroo who was the hero of a daggy children’s TV show back in the last century.
Generally, people are well-disposed towards Australians. We are a small, civilised Western nation inhabiting a large, wild continent. We don’t threaten anyone, but we have a reputation for being game and gutsy.  We keep public order, but have scant regard for status and authority. We’re tolerant of most faiths, but don’t take any of that stuff seriously.  We amuse people with our funny accents, ironic humour and our famous wildlife which is divided evenly between the endearing and the appalling. Some species, like the endangered Tasmanian Devil, manage both at the same time.
“Ay Skip,” his fellow kitchen slaves ask my son, “is it true about all the killer snakes in Australia? And the spiders? And what about the sharks? And those jellyfish things…?” Martin nods his head and intones mordantly, “Everything in Australia is trying to kill you.” He pauses for effect. “Even the cute things. They’re all trying to kill you. Don’t go there.”
Now that we’re travelling in the US, we cop the same wildlife questions every time someone recognises our accent. Until recently I was in the habit of laughing it off, alerting Americans to our penchant for tall tales, exaggeration and bravado. We all become bullshit artists abroad. I reassured would-be Antipodean travellers that they had nothing to fear swimming, surfing and diving in our clear cold waters. Shark attacks were very rare: you had more to fear from your rental car or your super-sized burger.
Then to make a liar of me, there followed in rapid succession five fatal shark attacks within 150 miles of my home town. One victim was a young American who had been taken by a Great White while scuba diving off Rottnest Island, so the US news networks were full of the story. Western Australia had become Shark Attack Central. A popular tourism website rated its capital city, Perth, alongside Haiti and Cairo as a safe travel destination.
Apparently the population of Great White Sharks has increased dramatically in recent years. Two factors are operating here: they are now protected rather than hunted as trophies, and their preferred prey, the massive humpback whales that make their southern migration down this coast, have proliferated since the demise of the whaling industry. Yes, the odds are incredibly slim that you will meet your maker via the jaws of an ocean predator, but our fears are always qualitative rather than quantitative; our anxieties are primal, a reminder that human dominion over all living things is a profoundly conditional thing.
Perhaps I was wrong to dismiss foreigners’ fears of Australia’s fauna. After all, these creatures had spent millions of years evolving their weaponry and deserved a little more respect. I began to reflect on my ordinary suburban Australian childhood and the extent to which this narrative was enlivened by encounters with wild things.
The first of these I can’t remember personally, but the family photo album clearly shows a young incarnation of my father holding a dead snake aloft by its tail. His arm is stretched well above his head and the snake’s snout brushes the ground. That makes it about seven feet long – a fully grown dugite (pronounced jew-gite), its fangs full of venom. Like many returned World War II veterans, my dad bought a block of land newly opened up under the War Service Loans scheme. Our block, in the beachside suburb of Doubleview, was covered in scrubby bush and Dad had started clearing it himself with an axe and a shovel. So he was, fortunately, well-armed when he encountered the resident dugite. Dad was a conservationist at heart, but this bit of bush was home to his wife and baby daughter; this was his hard-earned bit of Australia and snakes were not welcome.
Humans didn’t always beat the snakes, however. When I was a teenager I cycled around the aforementioned Rottnest Island (‘Rotto’ to the locals) with a group of mates. One had the misfortune to run his bike over a dugite and it whipped up and entwined itself in the spokes, then sunk its fangs into his bum (that’s Australian for ‘butt’).  We managed to get him back to the nursing station so he didn’t die but he was in bad shape, shaking and vomiting.  Standard procedure at the time, since discredited, was to ‘suck out the poison’, but none of us was that good a mate.
The first wild encounter that I can actually recall personally was with a bat. It was in a chicken-wire cage at the local Nature Society Show, and it was fascinating. Its tiny claws gripped the wire and I could see the tracery of veins in its translucent wings. Its eyes were like bright black beads. I was five years old, the bat was irresistibly cute and I wanted to feel its soft fur. I cooed gently, “Hello little batty,” and stuck my finger through the wire where I promptly felt its cute little fangs. A tetanus shot and a good talking to failed to teach me anything: I was bitten by a bobtail lizard at the same show the following year. Bobtails (‘bobbies’) are chunky lizards that grow to about a foot long. They are generally pretty harmless, but they have a wide threatening gape, and once they bite, they don’t let go. I have no idea how the bobtail managed to grab the soft underneath of my upper arm, but I do know that it resisted all efforts to loosen its jaws until someone lit a match under it. I came out of the ordeal with a bruise the colour of prune juice and a lifetime ban by the Nature Society.
Back to the bum thing. There are many cautionary tales about the deadly red-back spider and its tendency to nest under toilet seats. There is even a song about such an encounter by country singer Slim Dusty, one of our national treasures. Well my Aunty Joan was actually bitten on the bum by a red-back in the toilet. Her entire left buttock turned black and pustular and she spent days in hospital. The event turned our whole family into a kind of corporate spider Nemesis. Every time I enter a shed, garage or outside toilet (‘dunny’) that image of Aunty Joan’s bum won’t leave my consciousness until I’ve done a thorough reconnoitre of the likely hidey holes and destroyed any spiders bearing the tell-tale red hourglass. (What a marvellously appropriate symbol – ‘your days are numbered’!)
Snakes and spiders are an obvious threat, rather banal, to be honest, in the scary species stakes. You need to get wet to feel the full measure of danger on our continent – just watch where you put your feet. Don’t put them anywhere near a live cone shell, for example. That’s right, even the sea-shells you collect as you stroll along a dazzling white, deserted beach are trying to kill you. The marine snail that occupies these attractive mottled shells has a tiny high-speed dart at one end, which it uses to pierce, inject and paralyse prey and predators alike.
It’s also wise to avoid poking around in holes in the reef, or picking up any bottles or cans that you might encounter in the water. On one snorkelling excursion, I noticed something shiny on the sandy bottom, and dived down to retrieve a set of barbecue tongs. I flung them casually onto the deck of our boat, then kicked off to continue exploring the reef. I returned to the boat to find its occupants in a state of panic, squealing and fighting for elevated spaces, as an octopus the size of a quarter squished its way around the deck. The Blue-ringed Octopus injects a powerful neurotoxin through its bite, and victims have reported horrifying experiences of being both fully conscious and completely paralysed – so they can actually see and hear their rescuers deciding to abandon resuscitation efforts, or themselves pronounced dead. This little blue-ring had been rudely uprooted from his silvery home on the sea floor, and he was not happy. Iridescent blue rings were flashing all over his body signalling high displeasure. Fortunately the tongs doubled as a handy octopus removal tool and he was gently plopped back over the side.
In Australia’s tropical waters, tourists are often disappointed to see ‘NO SWIMMING’ signs fronting the glorious beaches at certain times of the year. The culprit is the box jellyfish or sea-wasp, another creature that defends itself with a deadly paralytic venom. The transparent box jelly drifts apparently aimlessly, polluting the warm waters of the north and providing more grim stories of sudden death. If that isn’t bad enough, researchers have only recently discovered the irukandji jelly – smaller and deadlier, named for the Aboriginal tribe who were the original victims of the syndrome whose cause was a medical mystery for years. Crocodiles, stonefish, cobbler, lionfish, scorpion fish, even a sea urchin than can stop you breathing. Never a dull moment in the oceans of Australia.
But surely these fearsome killers are balanced out by the cuteness of our mammals, the furry pouched marsupials and bizarre monotremes that are almost unique to the continent? Tell it to people who have been eviscerated by the hind claws of the male red kangaroo, who props himself up on his powerful tail and lashes out at rivals or enemies with his massive, muscular hind legs (ay Skip?) Or those (admittedly few – the animal is rare and reclusive) who know first-hand that the platypus is equipped with a toxic spur on its back legs. Or those who, like my husband, have spent a night in the ER after a bloody encounter with a possum.  
We lay claim to eight of the world’s top ten venomous snakes (with the dreaded taipan heading the list); the world’s most dangerous bird, the aggressive cassowary whose forbidding appearance confirms the links between birds and dinosaurs; and the smallest multi-cellular animal capable of killing a human, that nasty little irukandji jelly.
So why are we Australians so inordinately proud of our strange and frightening wildlife? Perhaps it makes us vicariously interesting, helping us to maintain the delusion that we are somehow edgy and special because we occupy the same land mass as the rest of the world’s nightmares.  The danger seems to confer status: we imagine ourselves rugged frontierspeople when in reality we are a mob of flabby suburbanites like every other western nation. When you watch Crocodile Dundee or reruns of Steve Irwin’s TV show (did I mention stingrays?) it pays to remember that they are projections of the way we want to see ourselves and be seen by the rest of the world. The scary critters are definitely out there for the intrepid few who want to venture forth, but most of us prefer to experience them on the screen where they belong.
My last Australian wild encounter was many years ago now. I had been diving at Bunkers Bay, a fairly remote location in the far south-west of the country. Having drifted some distance from the beach where we entered the water, I decided to head back on foot, rather than swimming against the current. Rock-hopping between large flat granite boulders would not normally have been all that challenging, but a full scuba kit changed all that. The extra weight made every forward move a big effort. I was making pretty good progress when something stopped me on the brink of one rock. Tanks and weight belt followed the laws of motion and wanted to keep their forward momentum. I teetered on the edge, and saw with horror the fat coiled form of a snake on the rock below my foot. A tiger snake, red-brown, the colour of the warm rock, with dark tiger stripes and an indented diamond-shaped head. One of the top ten, aggressive and deadly. Somehow I managed to shift my trajectory sideways, smashing my left hand, dropping the fins I was carrying and clanging the empty tank on my back against the rocks. The snake roused itself, reared up to check me out, opened its jaws to expose two warning fangs and took off. I sat there for a while, bleeding a bit and trying to breathe. A close one. Even closer by the time I limped back to the others, pumped up and ready to share my story.
Thirty years on that tiger snake has a permanent place amongst the varied cast of my personal narrative. I drag them out from time to time to remind people that I wasn’t always a dreary, sagging retiree. I used to be tough as a big red kangaroo, tenacious as a bobtail lizard and dangerous as an angry tiger snake. I was a real Australian too.

Thursday, 15 May 2014

The Ballad of Padraig Mallon



Here’s a true tale of an Irish lad named Pat
Dreamed of crossing the ocean on a big white yacht.
Saw an ad on the internet, ‘Crew for crossing the Atlantic’

And thought to himself, that sounds fine and romantic!
“That’s the craic for me!” he said with a grin.

Claire gritted her teeth and said, “Here we go again!”
Next thing Pat’s packed his boots, trunks, pyjamas,

A photo of his wife, and he’s flown to the Bahamas.
Arrived in Spanish Wells on the big blue ferry

To meet a pair of Aussies named Carol and Terry.
They’d set out on a cruise, a journey immense

On a Catalina sailboat known as ‘Common Sense’.
Purchased in Annapolis from skipper Dave,

She looked quite comfortable, sturdy and brave.
The Aussies welcomed Padraig aboard with a cheer

And said, “We’re glad you’re with us – have some cake and a beer!
A few days enjoying the calm blue sea,

Padraig thought to himself, it’s the life for me!
Set off for the Abacos, the weather brisk and breezy

Pat took the helm and said, “This’ll be easy!”
A week in Marsh Harbour buying in supplies,

Meeting other cruisers, watching sea and skies;
Swimming in warm water with the sharks and barracuda

Till at last it was time to set sail for Bermuda –
Seven hundred miles out in the Atlantic Sea.

Pat looked at the charts and said, “How hard can it be?”
Exit from the slip, all was going fine,

Through Man o’ War Cut, Pat threw out a line –
Hooked a big Mahi Mahi, shiny and sleek

Gaffed it and cleaned it, kept them fed for a week!
Sailing, fishing, eating and sun

Pat said, “This cruising life sure is a heap of fun!”
But the Sea Gods thought more respect was due,

They’d show this Irishman a thing or two…
And besides, the crew forgot that their course’s angle

Would take them right through the Bermuda Triangle!
A few days of calm, just to let them settle in

Then the wind started howling with a terrible din;
The seas were rising, the sails were lashed,

Around the cabin everything crashed!
Fifty-five knots of wind and a terrible heel,

Terry and Padraig clinging to the wheel;
A demented demon, the wind raged and screamed

While into the cockpit the driving rain teemed.
Common Sense was knocked over, but she came back around –

It’s true you can’t keep a good girl down!
Finally the wind and the rains became quieter,

In the east, the sky gradually grew lighter.
After a passage grueling and tense

Into St Georges Harbour sailed poor Common Sense
With her deck awash and her headsail torn

And her crew of three looking shagged out and worn.
In beautiful Bermuda, rum, food and hot showers

Restored their energy and their sailing powers.

 
Padraig was up for the challenge, he felt his spirits soar –

“Bring on the Atlantic – set sail for the Azores!”

Tuesday, 13 May 2014

Atlantic Voices



In July 2012, I crossed the Atlantic Ocean in a 42 ft sailboat, a Catalina 42 Mark II called, ironically enough, Common Sense. I can’t take a lot of credit for the technicalities of sailing – that was mostly my husband Terry and our Irish crewman Padraig, but I navigated, stood my watches day and night, through turbulent seas and calm. And I did a lot of cooking under somewhat challenging circumstances.
Imagine preparing your dinner braced against the wall with the kitchen heeling to starboard at 40 degrees. Every few minutes a violent shock sends your ingredients and utensils flying to the other side of the room. To even reach this stage, you have played an extended game of Jenga with the contents of your fridge and dry store: on a boat you always need to move at least four things to find the one thing you are looking for. During a bad squall eight hundred miles from anywhere, I remember huddling on the floor in a corner while the entire contents of the cabin crashed around me. It really did feel like being under fire!
The hardest part of the voyage was near the start; the passage from Marsh Harbour to Bermuda was a six-day trip that took us nine. Squalls kept pushing us into the ‘Triangle’, and I have to say, my scepticism about its reputation was severely tested.
Firstly, the weather was terrible, much worse than the meteorological reports we studied so carefully. There were flat calms and sudden intense squalls, one of which gusted to 55 knots and knocked us down so the shrouds were in the water.  Then there was the effect on our instruments. There is always some variation between ‘magnetic’ and ‘true’ bearings on a compass, but in these parts there were dramatic and changing variations – not the classic spinning compass dial you see in the movies, but enough to be very cautious with our navigation.
And that was not the worst of it. I hesitate to write this, being the rational, level-headed individual I hope I am, but I swear I heard voices. The first episode happened while I was trying to catch a bit of sleep between watches, as Common Sense pitched and rolled on her sluggish way to Bermuda. There was a lot of noise, I admit - waves slapping, lines creaking, the straining of the sails – but I know I heard sobbing and then a woman’s voice saying the Lord’s Prayer in a clear English accent. I was very unsettled by this, but put it down to sleep deprivation and the noises of the boat.
The next time was harder to dismiss. I was wide awake at the wheel on night watch at about 10 pm. It was a rare beautiful night, with the stars reflecting on the water and the boat zipping along at five knots. I heard a man’s deep voice giving the command to fire, then a cacophony of dreadful screams and calls for help. Then silence and the swishing of our wake. There was absolutely nothing in sight.
The last time it happened I was lying in my bunk reading when I heard an Irish voice singing a song that I recognised, ‘The Black Velvet Band’. Naturally I thought it was Padraig awake and starting his chores, but when I went to ask if he wanted a coffee, I saw he was still fast asleep in his cabin. Terry was at the wheel and I said to him, “I like the Irish folk CD!’ He looked at me sideways and said, ‘CD? What are you on about?’ I started to answer but noticed that the singing had stopped. I didn’t pursue the conversation.
I have never had a so-called paranormal experience before or since, but I do wonder about those voices. I researched wrecks in the area, but there have been so many and few have a precise location. I wonder, was I hearing the voices of long-dead travellers on this strange and treacherous body of water? Perhaps even the last words of those who had met their fate here, and whose bones now lie many fathoms deep, at the bottom of the cold grey Atlantic.


 

Storm Symphony



Like tightened nooses all the halyards creak
and moan obscenities;  the mocking dull
wind’s muttering crescendos to a shriek;
Black waters churn and slap our eggshell hull.
Beneath it all the ocean’s bass profound
obliterates the known world and creates
a universe of water, wave and sound,
oblivious to petty human fates.

Within the rage, hope’s faint and precious hum:
that nature will find balance, calm will come.

Chemical Romance*


I didn’t expect the norepinephrine to outlast time;
A dopamine high is six months tops, not forever;
I know better than to bank on phenyl ethylamine.
I’m not some foolish kid, however
I had hoped we’d produced enough serotonin
To reach a comfortable, stable state
Where pleasant waves of oxytocin
Help one to appreciate one’s mate.
But no, you claim suppressed vasopressin
Elevated your levels of testosterone,
And forced you into sexual transgression
When assailed by female pheromones.

So, though it was volatile while it lasted,
I’m off to get my endorphins elsewhere, you bastard.




* Thanks to Wikipedia for information on the biochemistry of love