He’s waiting at the bottom of the ramp, just inside the steel fence that cordons off the entry to the station. He said to give him a ring from her mobile when the train passed Gosford. She quickens her pace, adjusts the overnight bag on her shoulder. She is close enough to see the soft fold of his greying hair, the clear smooth glow of his skin. In his white socks and slip-on loafers he looks very English.

It wasn’t easy to get herself on a train and up to the Central Coast. It took a lot of encouragement on his part and a steely determination on her side of things to get out of Sydney. But now she’s glad already that he kept pressing. “It will do you good,” he said on the phone, “to get out of the city for a couple of days. It will give you a new perspective on things.”

He knows about her tendency to brood and her struggle to manage the drowsiness that follows. They talk about these things on the telephone. He also struggles to get through the days, suffers with the same lethargy. He says he prefers to tell people he has “chronic fatigue”. People understand the term “chronic fatigue”.

He sees the deepening of laugh lines around her mouth and eyes, her face browned by the sun, her hair spiked and in shock. He tells her that she looks the same as he remembers. She assures him he looks very well and living away from the city obviously agrees with him.

Would she like a coffee? Or would she prefer to have a shower first? Some people needed to have a shower before they could do anything.

For goodness sake. It was only a couple of hours on the train. She would like to wash her hands though. They smelt of the tuna sandwich she’d eaten on the train.

Sure, sure. He’s been waiting all day for a coffee. They’ll go somewhere close by.

She’d agreed on the phone that there’d be no post mortem. “Don’t worry,” she said. “I’m happy to be in the present. I don’t need any analysis. You’re the one who goes on and on … on the telephone.”

How well she remembers that first time she had seen him. He was at one of the Saturday night dances that she used to frequent. He was standing at the side of the hall, his thick blonde hair brushed back off his forehead. He’d asked her to dance, said she danced well. Then they’d met up regularly and got to know each other. He wanted them to hire a hall and practice their dance routines. “But we mustn’t get involved, you and me,” he warned. “Too dangerous.” They were sitting in his car at the time, so close in the front seat that she could smell the Palmolive soap on his skin. She watched his hands as he put the car into gear and reversed up the driveway.

Now, he opens the back door of his car and motions for her to get in.

“Sorry about the mess,” he says. “It’s easier if you sit in the back. Easier than moving all that stuff on the front seat.”

It’s the same car as last time, an orangey-red Mitsubishi with scratches down the side, the same cracked glass of the headlights. She slides across the vinyl of the back seat, her eyes dazzled by a blaze of early summer sunlight passing through the spotted salt stains on the windscreen.

He puts her bag in the boot and she pushes the tapes and DVDs and beach towels a little more to the other side. She snaps on the seatbelt, looks through the window at an older man in loose baggy clothes slumped on a wooden bench staring at the concrete of the pavement between his knees. She imagines she can hear his sighs.

Michael opens the window across from the driver’s side as he drives, then rests his arm along the empty front passenger seat and turns to speak to her. “Is it too windy for you?”

She reminds him his fast driving makes her nervous.

“I didn’t know that. I’ll slow down, now that you’ve told me. I’d better anyway because I’ve lost my licence.”

“Again? Every time I see you it’s the same story.”

“That’s a bit harsh. It’s a lesson I still need to learn.”

It’s like being in a taxi in a way, sitting in the back like this, not too close to the driver. A memory flashes into her mind of when she was a child and had seen a taxi parked by the side of the road. She’d looked in as she walked past. The driver had his hand between a woman’s legs and the woman, an older woman, not a young woman, maybe the same age as she is now, had a funny glazed look on her face that she, Madelaine, had never seen before. She remembers it vividly. The man, the odd position of the two of them in the front seat, the look on the woman’s face.

“How come you’ve lost your license again?” she asks.

“The twelve points were up,” he says. “You lose three points for an infringement.”

“Parking infringement?”

“No. If you get an infringement in the holiday period they double the points, so it doesn’t take much from there to get to the twelve points.”

“Speeding?”

“You’ve got to be very careful where the schools are, which are forty. Six double demerit points.”

With one arm resting on the ledge of the open window he runs his fingers through his hair. He’d been ringing every few weeks since they reconnected. Sometimes she tries to ring him, to save him the expense of the long telephone calls, but he’s impossible to contact. It was only recently that he gave her his address. No answer machine, no mobile, no internet, and he doesn’t answer the telephone. In fact he said he pulls the phone out of its socket.

He belongs to some strange group that he won’t give a name. Calls it a meditation group, but she knows it’s something else. At first she thought it must be AA but now she thinks it might be some kind of a secret sect.

He honks his horn at the woman in front as they wait at a roundabout. “This wouldn’t happen in the UK,” he says. “They don’t know how to use roundabouts here.”

It was always his dream to work hard and then retire young and live somewhere by the sea. He finds a place to park in the shade on the top floor of a shopping centre, so they can walk straight in. He takes her hand when they get out of the car.

“We’re holding hands are we?” she says. She lets him do it, passively leaves her hand in his. “Don’t forget they smell fishy.”

He shrugs.

They find a seat near the back. She had been looking forward to sitting by the water somewhere and breathing in the salt air, rather than sitting in a shopping centre, but doesn’t express her disappointment.

On the phone he’d said something about telling people in the cafe that she’s his wife. That they could read their newspapers while drinking coffee each day. She said they’d look like an old married couple if they drank coffee hidden behind their separate papers. That’s when he said he’d tell everyone they were married.

“They only give you one shot of coffee at this place,” he says. “Other cafes give you two.”

Shots? The word reminds her of the days when his drinking was out of control. Not that she knew him then.

Now that they are seated together he says, “I knew it would be like this. That we’d pick up from where we left off. No different from last time.”

How dull all sounds are by the water, she thinks. Dull but sharp, like the cheepings in the branches of the trees in front of the motel. It must be the serenity of so much water. She decided to take the motel option even though he said she could stay in the guest room at his house. His front door was broken and you had to climb in through the back, the water taps were temperamental, the sliding glass door on the shower needed to be handled just so, the carpet in front of the television only to be walked on with bare feet.

“Why don’t you get the lock fixed?” she asked when they walked back out to his car.

“Not before I go away,” he said. “When I go to Europe to visit my mother I’ll get the door fixed.”

His mother again. He’s been saying for the last two years that he’s going back to the UK to visit his mother.

Madelaine chose to stay at the first place he showed her, a motel across the road from the beach. It was just a couple of minutes drive from his house, so they could still meet up each day. It’s an upstairs room, with two beds and a view of the road and the palm trees in front.

She lay on top of the covers on the spare bed of the motel room, reading. He said if it was him, he’d sleep on that bed. You’d get more of a through breeze.

He’s been to the beach for a swim. He arrived unannounced at the sliding screen door, knocked and walked in. Now he is looking at himself in the mirror in front of the bed. He turns from side to side inspecting his body, admiring his reflection, bare chest above the white shorts, says something about her being a good five years older than him.

“I’m not older than you,” she scowls. “You say that every time. We’re the same age.”

He rubs her foot a little. It doesn’t really matter so much, does it? We’re friends, aren’t we? He is getting ready to say that they’ve known each other for a long time, when she turns on him and says, If you say we’ve known each other a long time again and it doesn’t matter, I’ll scream.

The family who own the motel are very friendly. The old grandfather sweeps the leaves on the driveway each morning and the grandchildren go off to school with a bang of their screen door. The children’s father hands the local newspaper up to her through the railing when he sees her sitting outside her room eating breakfast. They probably watch when Michael picks her up in his car and she climbs into the back seat.

Now that she’s here on his home territory he won’t go on any walks with her, won’t show her where the tracks lead. Says it’s best if she finds out for herself.

She says in the city she wouldn’t head out on an unknown bush track on her own.

“The city,” he sighs from the front seat where she can’t see his face. “Ah … I keep thinking they’ll design a new Almanac Cognac.”

“Cognac?”

He laughs.

It’s a shame he didn’t take her with him when he went for a swim, she would like to know the best place to go for a dip. She’s enjoying being a passenger though, being chauffeured around.

“I tried to ring you at Christmas to see how you were going,” she says. “I know it’s a difficult time for you, with no family here. I tried at least six times—in the mornings and in the night times.”

“There’s no point in ringing in the mornings,” he says. “The phone doesn’t go back on till after coffee.”

“What do you mean?”

“I take it off the hook when I go to sleep, I don’t want people ringing from the other side of the world. They forget it’s an eleven-hour time difference. So I don’t put it back on the hook until I come back from having a coffee. I don’t want the phone breaking up my morning routine. And at night time I don’t come back in from the garden until after eight.”

Probably avoiding his mother. “I’ve rung after eight,” she says. “You’re so hard to contact. It’s a wonder you’ve got any friends at all. I sent you a Christmas card by the way. Did you get it?”

He shakes his head.

“That’s a shame. I sent the card to your post office box, like you said.”

“I’m going to get rid of my post box at the house. Every time the postman rides his bike up he ruins the grass.” He sniffs deeply, with a heaving of his chest. “When I go to the shopping centre there’s nowhere to park in the holiday period and people park on the lawns. I guess it’s like that in the city?”

“Probably. I try and walk everywhere. I’m trying to lose weight.”

“That’s good. Cutting back on the pasta?”

Her eyes narrow at the back of his head. “I don’t eat pasta.”

He twists around and smirks. “That’s right. You’re into healthy foods.”

Back at his place he’d tried to play with her bare feet when he sat next to her on the couch. She’d pulled them away. On the bed in the motel room he’d hugged her and wanted to lie back on the bed.

When he turns off the motor she opens the door slowly and lets the strong salty wind flood into the car in one cool, cleansing breath.

His words are carried off into the breeze.

They’ve had an altercation, in a café down near the beach. The diamond in the nostril of the girl behind the coffee machine had flared beneath the fluorescent light. The girl was silently mouthing the words to a song playing in the background when Madelaine got up and walked out.

“You should speak up sooner,” he called after her. “You should speak up before it gets to this point.”

She has heard this before, or something like it. She turned around briefly but did not stop.

“You send knives into the heart when you speak like that,” he called. “Madelaine?”

She kept walking until she got to the bush track by the sea. She heard the echo of her own footsteps on the earth. He made her so angry. She wanted to be free of him. He made it so impossible.

“You need to be careful,” he’d said. “Or you’ll go under. All the way under.”

An insistent fly buzzed near her face.

She walks.

The track keeps weaving away from the sea and makes it difficult to keep close to the water. She has no idea where she is headed or how far she needs to go to escape her anger. Tree roots stumble away from her sandshoes. Flies buzz too close to her ears. She brings to mind a bird that she saw recently with friends. She can’t recall exactly who she was with and where she was, just that someone said, “Look at that bird. It’s so big.” A black and white bird with a large wing span flying through a gorge. Maybe that’s where she was? Cataract Gorge, in Launceston. Walking along that track alone, but with all those other people going in the same direction. The best part was approaching the gorge and being so surprised to see such natural beauty in the middle of a city.

She walks. After all, she’s free as a bird. Her children are grown up and lead their own lives. He always said he prefers a woman who’s had children. There’s something about women who’ve had children that he finds very appealing. The sound of the wind in the trees; the setting sun over her shoulder casts shadows on the dirt track. The sweet smell of earth. So why did she come then? She wanted to get out of Sydney, that’s all. A change of scene. She needed a holiday and she didn’t want to be alone.

As she moves deeper into the bush of the landscape—the ebb and the flow of the waves to her left—she begins to forget his limitations … and her own.

Loneliness. That’s all.

In the mid-afternoon haze, she just feels the need to keep going, to keep moving on. When she’s ready she will go back and apologise for her behaviour. After all, they’ve known each other a long time.

She lets him diminish from her thoughts, and moves deeper into the tender late afternoon light. The sea, always in motion, not too far away. She walks, and the great swelling of sound begins to recede behind her. Her feet at last on the ground. “Put your feet on the ground, sit up with a straight back,” the counsellor had said in an attempt to get her to pull herself together. Perhaps the counsellor was uncomfortable with all the tears. But who knows? The last counsellor had let her cry, but not too much. Do they let you cry for a set period of time at those places?

They’d slept together only once. It took him five years to speak to her again. Five years. Later, he said something about her breasts reminding him of his mother’s.

The bird sounds have softened, got gentler, more mellow. As the sun makes its slow arch, she observes the changes in the bush, what is revealed, and what is hidden. It’s so peaceful she’s almost afraid to breathe.

There is no specific place she is heading towards. She could stop at any time, turn around, go back. The stillness of it all. An insect flitters between the twigs.

The landscape of shrubs and trees she has been moving through is now more like a rainforest. She watches the filtered light between the long thin strands of fern. All around is a canopy of leaves—fern leaves, frond leaves, mossy leaves—bright green leaves skating on the breeze. And tree trunks: hollowed out, split in two, grooved and gnarled.

She looks up. What direction are the clouds travelling? She’s lost her bearings. She forgot to look for the position of the setting sun before she entered the forest. It is so hot. She is sweating.

But, as she walks on she is happy in her own self. In a new self, not the old one that she’s left behind.

She looks back the way she’s come.

Is she lost?

She reminds herself not to panic and, standing there absorbing the landscape, breathes in deeply to the count of four, and then out again … four, three, two, one.

She sees another insect on a rollercoaster with the air. The web of a spider made visible in the glow.

In the humidity and sleepy afternoon light, she could keep going forever, all the way back to Sydney.

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