You could never tell with Bruno. Jonathan and he had been friends for ten years at least, but the slightest criticism could set him off, hurling hybrid insults as if their friendship had simply vanished. Another time, he might go all quiet and hurt; he could sulk, smoulder for days. And just as easily, he could be as open and generous as the hungry earth: 'Sure baby, is no problem! I do it again. It will be beautiful!' It was a lottery. Jonathan had not tried to keep the satisfaction from his voice when he informed Christine that the new mix, minus the celestial orchestra, would be ready by Monday night. Beautiful.
Walking down Palmer Street in the evening angles of shade and light, Jonathan neared a small park shadowed by the overpass of the Eastern Suburbs Line. Even in good weather old men sheltered here, and drank from paper bags. One man sat with his back to the wall, his head between his knees. He grasped his bottle in both hands as he rocked back. The liquid fell into him, thick and sweet as blood. He placed the bottle on the grass, slowly, deliberately, carefully.
Jonathan walked past, seeing the man smack and savour his wine-stained lips. Turning aside, the bitumen beneath his feet was replaced by an area of brick paving closed to traffic.
Diana had looked good this morning. The little illness must have gone that seemed to be troubling her that night at the Cross.
Kids swerved close to him, riding skateboards, bicycles, roller-blades. A woman was calling for a child to come home, while in another house a television boomed the football replay.
'Perhaps all you need is the right kind of inspiration'. Jonathan thought about it over and over, as his steps led down the shallow slope, towards the water. Christine was the real force behind the songs they had written. Sometimes he thought she had broken up with Carrie merely to provide him with material. When he tried to write about his own life, all the supposedly important stuff, the hurt and desire, seemed to float away as if gravity were thrown into reverse. Those songs of his were smart and empty, and sometimes not even smart. But Christine goaded him. She loved her life, loved digging around in it, and was only too happy for Jonathan to join in. The melodies she came up with seemed to carry the words with them. Still - he missed that childish feeling: 'all by myself'.
Diana liked him, he was sure. It was she who had suggested they have lunch together, while Christine was fetching her shout at The Rose. She seemed to think he could write, although how she figured this out he didn't know. He turned over some ideas in his mind, but they were dead ones. The melodies he hummed broke and dissolved, and came to nothing.
The trees high on the north side of the harbour caught the failing sun. Even in the lingering daylight, the moon had a sharp radiance, full and white. 'It's all down hill from now on,' Jonathan laughed to himself; not like the new moon that had hung around Diana's neck at lunch: a tiny sliver growing into form.
Jonathan came to the Harbour's edge, down by Woolloomooloo Bay. He leant over the iron rail and looked down amongst the city refuse. The water was high against the containing wall and the pillars of the finger-wharf. A brown froth rose and fell at the agitated join of water and stone, as if the harbour were fraying, like rope.
Jonathan could see a metre or two into the green water. A trail of bubbles rose from the invisible depths, spiralling to the surface. The rotting on the harbour bed is continuous. Here lived bacteria that thrived on minimum light and air. But at each digestive moment, a tiny bubble formed, scarcely to be seen. And another.
The light had now left the hill-top on the north shore. The water and all the land were in shadow. Behind Mosman, where the rich maintained their Harbour Views, the sky was deep and blue, the moon clear, big, and alone; Jonathan admired its steely brightness. Not dressed for night-time, he began to feel cold, and he considered returning home before full dark fell.
A power-boat disturbed the evening quiet, breaking the rhythm of the harbour swell. Quick ripples became noisy and insistent, and Jonathan watched as the froth was beaten and grew.
In piercingly cold European lakes, thousand-year-old trees are said to lie slowly rotting in the sediment. Within their spongy flesh form pockets of vapour. These remnants of extinct forests, at times when temperatures change, at dawn or sunset or when the air pressure falls, when the moon is full and the tide is strong, they rise, they breach the surface like sea-beasts, exhaling their stinking gas. Then they will sink again, heavy and deep and invisible.
Jonathan saw that the street lights had come on automatically in the increasing dark. They cast white pools onto black water. A red Alfa, shiny and new, took a corner hard, its tyres shifting just enough not to screech. Headlights sliced through a stream of mist that rose from a storm-water pipe. Like a visual echo, this recalled to him the sunlight on the smoke blown from Diana's lips across the white-washed brick of the cafe: white on white. He walked on, humming an uncertain tune.
Monday 29 July 1991Waning gibbous
12a "This was the way Bruno always ordered food."
They ditched the joint at the doorway of Alfresco's. Bruno claimed their seating for six as if it were reconquered territory.
"Couple of bread for everybody, ah, a couple of beer, couple of cheese. Entree. Everyone want entree." This was the way Bruno always ordered food. "Feed us with some pasta and salad and bread. Some wine. And a couple of bowl of chilli." The waitress looked to the rest of the table for help, but they were celebrating, busy talking: Murdoch, Annie and Jonathan; Diana and Christine.
"Is that your order?" the waitress asked, getting desperate. Christine looked up. "Is that your order?" she repeated hopefully, now that someone besides Bruno was acknowledging her.
Christine raised her voice above the general din: "Okay if we start with salad and bread and plonk?" The others nodded. Bruno dragged at his Camel, sucking hard through his teeth. Christine beckoned to the waitress whose eyes had lost that panicky quickness, "We'd like three of the garlic bread, and two plain..." Bruno stabbed his cigarette into the ash tray as he leant over to Annie, taking her attention: "Restaurant you should be able to say 'feed us' and they feed you, and you pay!" Annie agreed, trying not to stare at the lumpy brown cigarette stains between his teeth. Christine continued: "A carafe of red, and a white. Just give us a few minutes to decide on the rest." Bruno breathed into Annie's face: "They don't know shit about service in this country." She agreed with this, too.
The wine was already running low as the baskets of bread arrived. Annie, her hair cropped short and bleached almost invisible, turned to Murdoch. He was wearing black leather trousers and a white T-shirt, ridged by a singlet underneath - exactly what he wore on stage, minus the singlet. He was trying to attract Diana's attention, but she was deep in talk with Christine.
"Red or White?" Annie enquired to the back of Murdoch's neck.
"What?" He replied, not turning around.
"Wine. Red or white?" Annie repeated to the back of his head.
"White."
Annie ordered red.
Diana was wearing an all-purpose little black number, showing off her neck and shoulders for the first time that Christine could recall. A medallion of a crescent moon rested on her skin above the black fabric. A perfect throat to go with her perfect back, Christine observed. Her waist tapered until it was obscured by the edge of the table. And Christine asked: "How's the knee?"
"It is very fine. And, you see, no make-up on the forehead." Diana rubbed her finger lightly across the place where the bruise had been. "Where did you learn to do these things?"
Jonathan leant across the table. "Her mother was your all-round psychic and white witch, purveyor of medicines and potions."
Christine shut him up with a look. She did not like it when someone answered a question directed at her. "My mother was a professional fortune teller."
Murdoch chimed in: "Crystal ball?"
"Yes. Crystal ball, tarot cards, palm reading, all that stuff. But they were only the props. That's just the sort of thing the punters expect." Fixing Murdoch with her eyes: "Rather like leather trousers, don't you think?"
Annie laughed. Murdoch did not. He turned to Diana, smiling at her with his crooked canines, asking if she had seen his band, and did she know there was an album in the pipe-line, and a tour of the USA, and, who knows, after that....
Diana turned away from Murdoch as if he were not there: "You said your mother was: is she dead?"
"Yes."
"And your father?"
"He lives out on the Hawkesbury River. Gone Fishin'."
Annie's carafe of red arrived. She looked into it, troubled for a moment. The mouth-red, the gum-red. That is the problem with dinners, so many mouths to feed. Her last lover, her man of three years, when they split he kissed her hard, stabbing, goodbye, because they hadn't kissed in almost two. She poured a glass for herself, the red liquid folding, collapsing into itself, settling flat. She reached over, thumped the carafe on the table beside Murdoch. He took the wine without looking at it and leant toward Diana, trying to connect with her eyes.
"White wine?" he said, proffering the carafe.
"No thank you," she replied, taking it, "I prefer red." Murdoch looked down at the carafe in her hands, opened his mouth, but said only: "Um". When Diana had finished pouring, Annie leant in front of him to take her wine back. On Murdoch's left, Diana had resumed her conversation with Christine; on his right, Annie was inviting Jonathan to drop in during their recording session. Murdoch poured himself a glass of water. Swallowed it.
Bruno was talking to the waitress, who smiled fixedly. He was ordering more wine and finding out what brand of Cognac they stocked. This is a very important occasion, he told her: Jonathan and Christine were going to be famous. Their song is going to be on a CD. "I am a little pissed, and I want to have a good time, okay?" The waitress said that was fine by her, and walked quickly for the kitchen door.
Murdoch eyed the last piece of garlic bread lying in its cane basket, lined with a red paper napkin. Diana's fingers reached down to encircle it, drawing the bread towards her mouth. Placing it between her teeth she squeezed it slightly, cracking the crust. A little of the yellow juice ran down between her fingers, and she slowly licked them clean. Christine noticed this, and Jonathan. Annie looked away. Murdoch readjusted in his seat.
They ate and drank, and Bruno always wanted something from the far side of the table. He asked the waitress for a bigger glass. Murdoch invited Diana to tonight's gig at Blue City, telling her that he would put her name on the door.
"Some women..." he said to Diana, "some women think blokes in my business have this gigantic sex drive, you know, that we're always rootin', but I reckon I only get it about four or five times a week, tops."
She replied: "Do you want to have sex with me?"
"You bet I do."
And she said: "That is a pity."
"Hey baby!" Bruno offered, "you want some more sauce?"
A new bunch of customers came through the door, and something flew in with them. It landed on the table in front of Christine and started its run for the shadow underneath a basket of crumbs. Jonathan was quick on the draw. With the cloth napkin in his hand he made the table rattle and spilt some of Bruno's wine. A small, barbed leg stuck out quivering from beneath the white linen. Christine rolled her eyes. Murdoch said 'yuck'.
"You see, Diana, Jonathan has these bad habits." Christine reached over the table, resting her hand near Diana's. "I, however, manage to combine a wild unpredictability with a mild humour and extreme tolerance of divergent opinions." She pulled back and jabbed Jonathan with her finger: "Don't I!"
"Christine," he said, rubbing his wounded shoulder, "you're the light of my life."
"Yes," she retorted, "and you're the light relief of mine."
Jonathan laughed, turning to Diana, "She's a ball-breaking bitch, you know."
"That's right, Diana," said Christine, "I am." Then she cast Jonathan a dead-pan stare: "Too bad it's wasted on you though."
"Well you can go and get fucked!" Jonathan was a little surprised that there was actually some hurt in his voice, that he had taken some genuine offence, and he snatched up the napkin, depositing it into the potted plant behind him, while he recovered his humour.
After watching him, with a smile wiped on her face, Christine once more leant towards Diana to whisper: "And he's foul mouthed too."
Jonathan turned to Annie, feeling that, for the moment at least, Christine had won their tug of war for Diana's attention. Annie covered her mouth as she spoke to him, so her words were hard to make out, and Jonathan did not pay close attention.
"I think I told you," Christine continued, "I need someone to move in to my place. Do you know anybody?"
Diana shook her head: "I know very few people in this city."
"Then what about you? You're not thinking of an escape from the wilds of Kings Cross yourself are you?" Diana smiled, her hand wandering to the amulet on her neck. "What do you think?" Christine continued. "The peaceful suburban life-style of Darlinghurst might be just what you need. A new scene. Recharge the batteries."
"You think we would be compatible?"
"Oh yes! I think we could be very pattable."
"It is true, Christine, that I am thinking of moving, but I am too used to living alone. I have lived that way ... a long time. I will probably find a place to myself." Her hand left the piece of jewellery, rested lightly on the table. "I am like Jonathan you see, I have some very bad habits."
"Oh well," said Christine after polishing off another glass, "if you change your mind you know where I am."
"Yes," replied Diana, "I do."
When it was time for coffee, Bruno ordered Cognac, and complained that the nip was too small. The waitress explained that it only looked small because the glass was so big.
The conversation turned to the night ahead. Annie invited them all to the Blue City, the band's last gig before studio rehearsals began. Jonathan, his attention caught by a faint crackling, a kind of scratching sound, looked around the table for its source. Bruno was keen to go: yeah, yeah, baby, The Hub, (which played after Wet Money) did this hot Ray Charles set. "Drink up, baby, and we go." He took a gulp of his Cognac. The others sipped their drinks, except Diana, who merely rested her finger-tips on the rim of her glass. The wine reflected red upon her skin. Maybe it's the creaking of the table joints, thought Jonathan, or the floor-boards. Diana's left hand slid from her glass to the linen serviette in her lap. She dabbed her lips with the cloth as Bruno knocked back the last of his brandy.
Bruno felt the brandy's warmth deep in his stomach, but his smile did not last: a stab of pain in his guts stopped him short. His fingers went numb and cold. He tried to hide behind the long breath that he drew. As he looked up he saw that Diana was watching. Annie glanced at him a moment but, seeing his lips turn white, turned away. Bruno looked for Jonathan, but Jonathan was paying him no attention. Christine too had her mind elsewhere, her eyes upon Diana. Diana's white serviette lay lightly crumpled inside her left hand. Bruno saw her smile. Diana turned away, and said to Christine: "I think that your friend has become unwell."
In the dim light, Christine could not see Bruno's aura, but she did not need to. His face was suddenly lined and old, stony-pale. "Let's pay the bill mate," she said to Bruno from across the table. Jonathan could not get the sound out of his mind, the crackling, the scratching, a kind of dragging sound. Now it seemed that it was coming from behind him. "We'll share a cab, eh?"
"No," Bruno said, "I'll go by myself. You can stay."
"Don't be a dill, we'll come with you. Jonathan, you right?"
Bruno looked from Christine to Jonathan, who now had his back turned. In the confusion, Diana's face had retained its smile. "No," he said, as the pain came again, and he failed to keep the shock of it from his voice. "By myself."
Christine stood. "Hey Jonathan! Bruno isn't feeling too good," and she poked him where she was sure it would hurt, "let's split." Jonathan looked up this time, but Christine could see that he did not know what had been going on, and that the sharp little pain she inflicted had just added to his confusion. Another groan forced its way through Bruno's throat. She turned to him: "Gimme thirty bucks." Bruno stared back at her. "We're gonna pay. Come on. I'm not a charity. Thirty bucks!" Christine peeled off thirty of her own, slapping it onto the table in front of Jonathan. "See you later," she said. "You've been an inspiration." As Jonathan turned to watch them leave, he saw through the corner of his eye a white blur, down to his right. In with the potted plant was the white napkin he had used to crush the cockroach, the linen stained with the brownish juice of the insect's insides. One leg was moving back and forth, back and forth, its barbs catching again and again on the tight weave.
"You can see the moon rise. The sound of the waves is like voices." Annie and Murdoch had split for their gig on Oxford Street, leaving Diana and Jonathan to finish the last of the wine. She confided her plan to move away from Victoria Street. A place was virtually secured, she told him over a full glass, in a new high-rise overlooking the cliffs of South Head. "It will be perfect for me. That is, if the lease comes through."
"Where is it exactly?"
"It is right on the edge. Macquarie Villa. It was once a lighthouse."
"I know it, down by The Gap - luxury apartments on a site like that - it's a disgrace."
"It looks out to the sea."
"And now it's up I suppose it might as well get lived in. Have you got enough money for a place like that?"
"My solicitor says I do. My uncle had more assets than the family knew."
"And you've got it right away?"
"No. I have borrowed on my expectations."
"Is it safe to do that?"
Diana smiled indulgently, looking down into her wine, her white fingers rosy with reflected light. "It may not be safe, of course. Things can go wrong. But I am confident that my solicitor's advice is good."
"So... Spectacular ocean views! Do I get to see?"
"Of course. Next week, I hope. I would like you and Christine to come for a house-warming dinner. Can you come?"
They drank to it, and Diana accepted Jonathan's offer to walk her home.