The True Colour of the Sea Read online




  About the Book

  An artist marooned on a remote island in the Arafura Sea contemplates his survival chances. He understands his desperate plight and the ocean’s unrelenting power. But what is its true colour?

  A beguiling young woman nurses a baby by a lake while hiding brutal scars. Uneasy descendants of a cannibal victim visit the Pacific island of their ancestor’s murder.

  A Caribbean cruise of elderly tourists faces life with wicked optimism.

  Witty, clever, ever touching, and always inventive, the eleven stories in The True Colour of the Sea take us to many varied coasts: whether a tense Christmas holiday apartment overlooking the Indian Ocean or the shabby glamour of a Cuban resort hotel.

  Relationships might be frayed, savaged, regretted or celebrated, but here there is always the life-force of the ocean – seductive, threatening, inspiring.

  In The True Colour of the Sea, Robert Drewe, Australia’s master of the short story form, makes a gift of stories that tackle the big themes of existence: love, loss, desire, family, ageing, humanity and the life of art.

  Dr Pacific

  Another Word for Cannibals

  Black Lake and Sugarcane Road

  Paleface and the Panther

  Varadero

  Lavender Bay Noir

  A View of Mt Warning

  The SeaDream Emails

  Spotting Killer Whales

  Imaginary Islands

  The True Colour of the Sea

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  Also by the Author

  ‘To undiscovered waters, undreamed shores.’

  William Shakespeare

  ‘Time is short and the water is rising.’

  Raymond Carver

  For Tray

  Don dropped dead on the sand and that was that. We’d just finished our lighthouse walk and he bent down to remove his shoes for our swim and keeled over. He was in his blue board shorts with the red palm trees. One shoe on and one shoe off when the ambulance took him – his new Rockport walkers. Only seventy-eight. Three years ago now and as I said, that was that.

  Since that moment the days often look blurry around the edges, like I’m wearing his glasses by mistake. People loom around corners when I don’t expect them and next minute they’re on the doorstep. Jehovahs. Seventh-dayers. Charity collectors.

  A Green type of woman in drifty clothes came by wanting to save baby fruit bats. She said the cold snap was making them lose their grip and fall out of the trees and they needed to be wrapped up in bandanas and fed mango smoothies. She was collecting money to provide the bandanas and smoothies and she showed me a photo of a baby bat in a red bandana to clinch the deal.

  ‘Look how cute it is, peeping out snug and warm,’ she said.

  ‘Cuteness is a survival characteristic of baby animals,’ I said. ‘If you ask me, this one looks a bit confused being right side up instead of hanging upside down.’

  ‘But very cute, you must admit,’ she said, shaking her Save the Grey-Headed Flying Fox collection tin. It hardly rattled. She was one of those North Coast women who look better from a distance.

  The reason I was unsympathetic was that we’ve got hundreds of flying foxes living in a colony in our street, raiding our fruit trees and screeching all night and doing their business all over our decks, especially the Hassetts’ and the Rasmussens’, and the council playground so kids can’t play outdoors, and probably spreading the Hendra virus or Ebola or something.

  Even worse than their noise and mess and being kept awake all night, the most irritating thing about them is they take only one bite out of each piece of fruit. They like to sample one bite out of every papaya and mango and mandarin on the coast – and they ruin the lot. And of course they’re protected under the Wildlife Act.

  Mind you, there’s even people around here who are fond of brown snakes, the ones that kill you quickest. Those people need a slap, honestly. And down at Broken Head there used to be signs saying Do Not Molest the Sharks. The tourists pinched all the signs for souvenirs.

  I said to her, ‘Let nature take its course, miss. If I was a fruit bat and the weather got too nippy, I wouldn’t wait for a bandanna. I’d up stakes and fly to North Queensland.’

  Another day a young woman with a bossy accent called in to convince the ‘household’ to switch to a different electricity provider. Sun-Co or North-Sun or something. There were lots of benefits for the ‘household’ in switching to Sun-Co, she said.

  I told her it wasn’t much of a household any more. ‘Just this gnarly old bird.’

  ‘You should go solar and save yourself many dollars,’ she insisted, in a South African sort of voice. ‘The sun is so harsh here you might as well benefit financially from it.’

  The way she said ‘harsh’ it sounded like ‘horsh’. Then she looked me up and down in a superior way. ‘Your skin looks like you enjoy plenty of sun.’

  I let that go. ‘I certainly do,’ I said, and gave her a big sunny grin. ‘I swim every day, rain or shine. I’ve earned every one of these wrinkles.’

  At eighty you can choose which insults you respond to. I said the stove was gas and I just used electricity to run the TV and boil the kettle. I told her I only ate cheese sandwiches and the pensioners’ ten-dollar three-course special at the bowling club. A glass of brown rum of an evening. No point cooking for one.

  I said, ‘Miss, when it’s dark and cold I just creep into bed like the decrepit old widow I am.’

  She raised her drawn-on eyebrows and cut short her electricity spiel then, like I was one of those eccentric old witches with bird’s nest hair and forty-three cats. Maybe I’d laid the elderly stuff on too thick. But she was a hard-faced girl.

  *

  Ever notice that after people pass away the world seems to have more sunsets than dawns? I try to avoid sunsets. They stand for things being over. With sunsets I think of Don in his palm-tree board shorts swimming over the trees and hills into those pink and gold clouds – that exaggerated heaven you see in the pamphlets the Jehovahs’ hand out. And our darling boy Nathan and his friend Carlos in ’87. My own mum and dad. Oh, sunsets draw the sadness out.

  When that sunset feeling seeps in, watch out. Don’t think about everyone gone, and no grandchildren. Sorrow shows in your face. Stay upbeat and busy is my motto. Don’t worry yourself about last words, either. (Don’s final word he bubbled out on the sand sounded like ‘Thursday’ or ‘birthday’ – I’ve stopped wondering what it meant.) And I don’t blame Carlos any more for making Nathan sick. I try to face east and the dawn and the beginning of things.

  Just after sun-up every morning, all seasons, I do my lighthouse walk. It’s always interesting – big blue jellyfish the size of bin lids lying there; sometimes an octopus or little stingray beached in a rock pool. One morning the shore was strewn with hundreds of green capsicums, as if a capsicum freighter had jettisoned them. All green, no red ones, just floating there like blow-up bath toys.

  What I enjoy these days is stopping to pick up shells and stones and interesting bits of driftwood to take home. I look for those rare stones shaped like hearts.

  Don called this stuff ‘flotsam’. He hated beach decor. ‘Listen, Bet. Are we doing our exercise or picking up flotsam?’ he’d say. ‘Who wants to live in a beachcomber’s shack?’ He preferred the surfaces kept clear for his barometer collection and shiny brass telescope and sudoku books and his memoirs of cricketers and politicians. Books with deadly-dull titles. Afternoon Light and Cabinet Diary and A Good Innings. God save us!

  After my walk I leave the morning’s beach souvenirs on my towel and then I’m in the sea, swimming the kilometre from The Pass to Main Beach like Don and I used to.
r />   One thing’s for sure – it’s my love of the ocean that keeps me going. You know what I call the ocean? Dr Pacific. All I need to keep me fit and healthy is my daily consultation with Dr Pacific.

  ‘Morning!’ I yell out to the surfers waxing their boards on the sand, zipping up their steamers. ‘I’m off to see the Doctor!’

  Some of the boys give me a friendly wave. They treat me like I’m their crazy brown granny. ‘Morning, Bet! Looking good!’ They can’t wait to hit the surf and ride those barrels. ‘They’re pumping today!’ they yell.

  You see things out there – fish galore, and there’s a pod of dolphins that lives off the Cape, plus many turtles. And shapes and shadows. Sometimes there’s a splash nearby, but I just keep going. I imagine the shadow and splash is Don still swimming alongside me.

  *

  We’re on the trailing edge of tropical cyclones here on the country’s most easterly point. One moment it’s a hot summer’s day and then Cyclone Norman or Cyclone Sharon spins south with its high winds, choppy surf and water spouts, little tornadoes twirling across the ocean. The humidity drives us locals out onto our decks. Everyone sits there with their beers and hibachis and watches the weather over the sea like it’s the Discovery Channel.

  It’s all to do with La Niña or El Niño or something. Firstly, clouds bank up over the fishing boats and container ships on the horizon, then the sky turns thundery and purple, the sea looks sulky and there’s distant sheet lightning over the Gold Coast. You can smell the storm racing south. The air smells of meat.

  The wind’s blowing barbecue smoke into your face. Pressure builds up in your ears. Then a yellowish mist drops over the ocean and hailstones begin pelting down. By now the fruit bats have got night and day mixed up and they start shrieking in this strange muddy daylight as if the sky’s falling.

  Just as quickly the hail stops, like a tap’s been turned off, the sky’s clear and the wind moves offshore. The waves spray backwards against the tide in lines of spindrift. The air’s so sharp you can see the humpbacks breaching on their way back to the Antarctic.

  Funny how the cyclone weather gets all the bachelor whales over-stimulated. The sea’s getting strangely warm for them here and they start displaying for the girl whales. Slapping their tails on the water, showing off like teenage boys. Slap, slap, over and over.

  *

  During Cyclone Sharon we were all out on our decks every day for a week. Even the main bat victims, the Rasmussens and Hassetts. Curiosity and anxiety plus a faint shred of hope brought everyone out. It was bedlam with the noise of the coastguard helicopters and the spotter planes and the lifesavers in their rubber duckies and jetskis and the water-police launches. Up and down the shoreline and river mouths they were searching for poor Gavin Monaghetti.

  What happened was Gavin’s prawn trawler, the Tropic Lass, overturned at night in the cyclone seas off Cape Byron. Gavin and his two young deckhands were believed lost. But next afternoon, the youngest boy, Lachie Pascall, crawled up on Belongil Beach.

  Lachie had been guided by the lighthouse and swum fourteen kilometres to shore. He was exhausted, flat as a tack, but he told the rescue services approximately where the boat had sunk.

  He said he’d left the others clinging to floating stuff when he set off to swim to land. So they concentrated the hunt and, you wouldn’t believe it, six hours later they found Brendan Hess, the second boy. Brendan was just alive. He was badly sun-blistered and dehydrated and hugging an icebox. They had to prise his fingers off it.

  For a day or so that gave everyone hope. Brendan said the last he’d seen of Gavin he was clutching a marker buoy. But now there was no sign of him, and after another five days the search for him was called off.

  Very sad. I knew poor Gavin. His boat operated out of the Brunswick Heads fishermen’s marina and when he wasn’t at sea he was a regular drinker down at the bowling club on Friday and Saturday nights. He was quite a big wheel – on the club committee and everything.

  ‘How’s my surfer chick?’ he’d call out. He liked to flirt with me in a teasing way. ‘Still fighting the surfers off, Betty?’ he’d say. ‘If only I stood a chance!’

  ‘Too young for me,’ I’d shoot back. ‘I’m no cougar.’ Gavin was late sixties, I’m guessing. A good-looking silvery fellow. Lovely smile. The dashing, cheeky sort I used to go for before Don came along. Solid, responsible Don. Good business brain. ‘You can’t go wrong there,’ my old dad said, more than once. I guess I didn’t.

  Gavin knew I liked a rum or two of an evening. During the bingo he’d sneak a mojito onto the table for me when I wasn’t looking. Once he pinched a hibiscus flower off the bush by the club’s entrance and left it alongside the drink.

  *

  That strange time of Cyclone Sharon I’d be walking home from my meal at the bowling club about nine – it’s only a couple of blocks – and I’d look up and the sky would be thronging with dopey fruit bats caught in the lighthouse beam. Flapping wilder than usual, squealing, and crashing into trees and electricity wires. Bats were even on the sand and struggling in the shallows. Where’s your famous radar now? I wondered.

  The colony had started raiding the local coffee plantations. They’d chewed up thousands of dollars’ worth of ripe beans and the local growers were in a panic. As usual, Parks and Wildlife was no help.

  ‘The grey-headed flying fox is a protected coastal species,’ they said. Blah, blah. ‘Try scare guns or netting the plantations.’ But the nets were too expensive and the fake guns only made the bats shriek and act crazier, especially now they were addicted to coffee.

  As their caffeine habit increased, the bats became even more speedy and twitchy. Their flying was more reckless, their screeching and squabbles were even shriller than usual. And they began to fall off the perch.

  It took a while but the survivors eventually woke up to themselves and threw off their caffeine addiction. Mind you, there wasn’t much left to eat around here by then. One full moon there was a great squawking and flapping, as if they’d come to a decision, and what was left of the colony upped stakes and flew north into the wind.

  Carol Hassett’s house had taken the brunt of their droppings and noise. Carol said she hoped they all had headaches from coffee withdrawal.

  *

  I was on my morning lighthouse walk at low tide. It was three or four weeks after the latest cyclone had rearranged the shoreline and something not regular, a bump on the smoothness, caught my eye on the hard-packed sand. A big shiny white bone had just washed up.

  I stopped and picked it up. It hadn’t been long in the sea. No weed was growing on it, and it wasn’t eroded. It didn’t look like any animal bone I could recall. Thick, quite heavy, it was about as long as – I’m sorry to say – a human thighbone.

  I know I think about things too much these days. If I’m not careful my imagination runs away with me. But as I turned it over in my hand, boy, I had that prickly sensation on the back of my neck. This old duck almost passed out there on the shore.

  I said to myself, ‘Betty, you’re holding a thighbone in your hand!’ The sides were smooth and one end of the bone was cleanly snapped. At its widest end the bone was jagged, with a zigzag edge of sharp points, as if it had been severed by a big pair of pinking shears.

  I held the white bone with the zigzag edge and my neck did that prickly thing. I was thinking of the search for Gavin, and of his friendly ways, and his silvery looks, and of what I now presumed had happened to him. It took all my concentration not to collapse on the sand.

  What should I do with the bone? Take it to the Byron Bay police? The cops would probably laugh it off as bait from a lobster pot or garbage thrown from a ship. (‘This lady thinks she’s found a femur, sergeant!’)

  Lots of thoughts struck me. If it was Gavin’s thighbone, would his next of kin appreciate its discovery? (He was close to his three daughters and he had an ex-wife somewhere.) Wouldn’t the evidence of the bone – that sharp, zigzag pattern – be too brutal
for his girls? Shouldn’t there be a thingamajig, a DNA test? Could you hold a funeral service for a femur?

  Anyway, what amount of remains, what percentage of flesh or bone was necessary for a trace of a person to be counted as a body? Would a leg bone count? Did it have a soul? I’m not a religious woman – I don’t know these things. What would my pesky Jehovahs and Seventh-dayers say? God’s in nature is all I believe.

  Oh, I worried over all this. The white bone in my hand now had huge significance. It carried the weight of many emotions. In the bright beach glare it had what the local hippie chicks would call an aura. A pale but powerful aura. The aura of a handsome kind man who’d suffered a violent death.

  I continued my walk while I thought about what to do. And I decided I wanted to keep the white thighbone. I wanted to treasure the memory of poor Gavin Monaghetti. I wanted to be able to look at the femur and recall his smile and the gift mojitos and the hibiscus on the bingo table.

  I had no pockets and the bone was too cumbersome to carry, so I placed it on a patch of dry sand securely far from the water, and jammed a driftwood branch into the ground to mark the spot. I’d pick it up on my way back.

  Of course, as I trudged along I started feeling guilty about Don. I had no treasured souvenirs of poor Don (I’d given his cricketers’ and politicians’ memoirs to the Rotary market stall). All I had were his clothes hanging in his side of the wardrobe, getting musty and moth-holed, but with his smell still faintly on them. Jackets and sweaters I was too sentimental to give to the op shop. His Rockport walkers growing mould. The palm-tree board-shorts the hospital gave back to me.

  How would Don feel about me having another man’s thighbone on the mantelpiece? Because already that’s where I was imagining putting Gavin’s femur – over the fireplace, mounted on a little stand like the gold brackets that held Don’s brass telescope. (Yes, on that very same telescope-stand.) With its pale aura gleaming out into the room, through the windows and out to sea.