Thursday 27 November 2008

Episode 5 of PATERNITY - an Australian Mystery Novel

This is the fifth episode of my novel Paternity the story of a young Australian journalist chasing down the story of her mother's closest secret. So far Pip has visited a country town to discover that her mother Selene had been pack raped there about the time Pip was born ...

LINKS TO OTHER EPISODES ARE ON THE SIDE BAR

And please leave feedback in a comment at the end of this instalment.



The publican was sloshing behind the bar with a mop when they walked up the two steps into the stale tobacco air of the deserted hotel. It was still only 10.30am.


Very much at home, Frank pulled two beers and they sat in the milky sunlight finding its way through the window above the front street. He sat on a stool and reached for his makings.

‘Your mum eh? You told me she died. But does your dad know about this? I mean … can you discuss it with him?’

‘I’ve never known who my dad was. It’s always been a family secret.’ Pip half emptied her beer, despite the hour. ‘Now I’m beginning to realise why.’


Outside, at the bidding of an abrupt flurry of wind, dust rose from the unmade shoulders of the road and placed a film of haze across the town.

‘I reckon … I am the bastard child of a rapist.’


Frank took a long drag on his cigarette and expelled the smoke. Pip’s gaze followed its upward path towards the stained ceiling.


‘I had a gut feeling this town was the key to Mum’s past. Looks as though I was right.’


‘But didn’t your mum marry? Her name’s O’Rourke in the paper, and yours is Holmes.’

‘O’Rourke was Selene’s maiden name, and from when I was a kid she always used the name Holmes. I don’t know where it came from. Assumed there was a link with my father.’

‘Could be, kiddo.’


‘Mmmm. I doubt it … Holmes is the name on my birth certificate, and the bit about parentage was filled in “father unknown”. I reckon she wanted to cut ties with the past.’


‘All of this must have been some shock …’


‘You could say that. Although I knew inside me that it was a secret. Had done for years. You know when not to ask questions. But it was torrid finally seeing it there in official black and white.’
Pip was doing her best to keep emotion out of the conversation.

‘I saw Selene’s certificate for the first time during the preparations for her funeral. There was an addendum stating she changed the name from O’Rourke to Holmes by deed poll in early 1976.’

‘And you were born … when?’

‘March 27 1976.’

For some reason Frank looked puzzled.

One of the town drunks stole into the bar, eager for his first fix of the day. The publican had taken up his post behind the row of beer taps. Frank began to roll another fag.


‘She probably hoped people would assume she was married. They were pretty rough times for unattached women with babies.’


‘Selene made the name change only days before my birth, eight months or so after the attack.’


A dog fight began in front of the grocer’s shop two doors down.


‘Can I have another beer Frank?’


‘Sure …’



A warm sun was throwing stumpy shadows towards the east by the time Pip had again settled into the Guardian office chair. She was scouring more old papers and jumped as Frank burst from the inner room with another yellow-brown file.


‘I can’t find a story on the committal hearing, but will the trial do?’ With a grin.


‘Do? You beauty!’


‘It must have become big news around here. To send a reporter over to the District …’


Friday, March 5, 1976. Pregnant Woman Faces Alleged Rapists.
Pip felt her stomach knot.

‘The Western District Court public benches were crowded this week as a pregnant woman faced three men she accuses of gang rape. The woman, Selene O’Rourke 22, of Sydney, alleges the men forced her into a car and drove to an isolated clearing in bush land before viciously assaulting and raping her.’


Pip looked up through a mist of tears.

‘Imagine how she must have felt,’ she whispered.


Frank laid a bony hand on her shoulder, then craned forward to read further: ‘The charged men are all local residents. They are …’

There followed the names of three men.


The old journo began using a match to compact the tobacco in his latest home made cigarette. He seemed very deep in thought.


‘See Editorial page 4.’


Pip turned the pages: ‘The matter of blame in a rape case is never black and white. Questions should always be asked about the degree of provocation. Why was a woman walking alone at night on a dark and lonely street?’ The editorial writer boomed.

‘The Press Council would really like to see that one. Political incorrectness! These people give me the shits. It’s always the woman’s fault isn’t it.’


Pip was abruptly aware of increased tension in the air. She stared across at her former boss.

He was looking at his nicotine stained fingers.


‘You know them, don’t you!’


Frank wouldn’t look at her: ‘Yeah. Two of them. I’ll look into the third bloke for you. Later.’


In the pub an hour afterwards, Frank shook his head as a young barmaid offered a tray of snacks, but Pip reached for a couple of small sausages. She dipped one into a pool of red tomato sauce, placed it whole between her teeth, and began chewing absentmindedly.

‘Nothin’ like “little boys”.’

The old journalist’s smile was forced.


Pip wasn’t listening: simply gaining comfort from eating something; anything. The three names in the newspaper story swayed in her mind’s eye. Those men were scum. They had dishonoured her mother and they should pay.


Pip ground the second sausage to a pulp and turned to her companion.
‘Who are those bastards Frank?’

‘Well, you’ve already met one of them … Dwight Garry Bullfinck, 23 at the time of the rape. His mother must have got the name from a Yankee television soap. He’s a prick.’


In one gulp Frank downed the rum chaser he’d lined up, and dealt with a straying drop of the brown liquid with the back of his hand.

‘All brawn: a violent bugger. Got a wife and four kids he bashes regularly. Seems two bob short of a quid most of the time, but I reckon he’s got plenty of hidden monkey cunning.’


He began on a second beer.

‘The town tolerates him because they’re always short of forwards in the League team. He still plays now and then, even though he’s a bit long in the tooth. And he’s the only mechanic for miles. Yep. He’d be the biggest ugliest prick around.’


‘You don’t mean?’
‘Spot on. Gazza.’ Gazza. She shouldn’t be surprised. That oversized slob looked as though he was created to rape.

She glanced towards the stool, now empty, that the giant called his own. Dust motes swirled in sunlight playing on the torn brown vinyl. It was too early for him to be at the pub.


Pip’s thoughts were still spinning. Gazza had known Selene. He’d ravaged her. He’d tortured her and used her. And here he was walking in the open world, taking part in life. And Selene was dead.

Her eyes locked onto the red and gold carpet.

There was another part to this equation. Could Gazza … ? No. Could he? Her desperation must have shown …


‘No way he’s related to you Pippin … “ There was a softness in Frank’s voice.


Pip brushed his arm in gratitude.


‘Keep away from him kiddo. Do your investigatin’ from a distance.’


Her index finger toyed with a pool of spilt beer on the tabletop. She nodded. Pip knew it was good advice, but she was damned if she’d allow that monster to dictate what she did.


‘The other bloke I know is George Wimpole. I know George.’


‘And?’ Pip scanned his face for reactions. Clues …
‘A nerd. Seems a nice enough cove. I wouldn’t have said raping was his thing. Far from it, in fact.’

‘Go to hell Frank!’ There was bile in her throat. How could a rapist seem ‘a nice cove’? What was he on about?


‘Slow down mate. I’m just givin’ you my impressions. And we don’t know if he was found guilty. Just charged. We haven’t read the evidence yet remember … Cool it eh? Stop jumping to conclusions.’


Frank struggled off his stool with several empty glasses.
Pip used the chilled edge of her schooner to wipe away some beads of sweat on her top lip.

Perhaps she shouldn’t be so hasty, but a rape is rape. And her mother would not have made allegations without good cause.
Frank was back with two ten ounce glasses this time.

'Wimpole works in a one-teacher school in a little place a few miles from here. Keeps himself to himself outside school hours. Not married and a sister in London. She’s his only family.’


A chipped and dirty mirror on the opposite wall threw an image back at Pip. An image she couldn’t readily identify as hers …


‘We could go and visit. I could introduce you to him … I’ll have a go at arranging it.’


Pip tripped over the doorstep as she left the bar.




The café cum milk bar was one of those Greek affairs that used to be part of so many Australian outback towns.
As was usual, this one stretched long and thin away from the road, its walls lined with rows of tables and benches in alcoves, often empty.

Pip’s walk down the road was prompted by an aversion to the style of food meted out at the pub. The moistness of the Greek souvlaki passed her by although by this time there were two empty skewers on her side plate, and she was working towards a third.
As always food was some sort of comfort to Pip, and tonight an unconscious accessory to thought.

How could she ever come to terms with any connection between Gazza and her mother?

She’d met men of his type during a stint as court and crime reporter and placed them in a file labelled
Unreal. She had never imagined that such rabble could enter her own life.

And what about this Wimpole? And the third rapist, named ‘Raven’ in the newspaper story? Frank hadn’t known anything about him.


Pip picked up her fork and toyed with a piece of lamb then thrust the plate aside. It was good to be alone though. And she needed a break from alcohol.


Frank was a great friend and she was pleased he was here to help out. However, it was a worry that Flo wasn't around at the moment because she had always had seemed a steadying influence on him.


Frank had been so vital when they'd worked in the city together. Now the edge had come off his good looks and air of self assurance and the ready access to grog wasn't doing him any good at all.


Pip came back to the present and look around the Greek restaurant ...
Half a dozen tables separated her and the only other customers, a family group of four she’d passed in the upstairs hallway of the pub an hour before. The farming parents and the young boy and girl were murmuring their way through mixed grills, and posed no threat to her solitariness.

One other person was seated at a table in the far corner at the rear of the room.
He was a plump old Greek stamped with a drooping moustache and as she watched, his son the waiter placed a large plate of olives and cubes of feta cheese before him. Their shared appearance and the young man’s respectful concern removed any doubt about the relationship between the father and son.

Pip began thinking of home. Would it ever be the same again? Without Selene, and knowing what she did now?


A moment later the bulbous waiter was at her side. He cleared the table and wiped down the plastic top with a dubious looking cloth.

‘Can I help yous to anything else?’
Pip came back to the present. ‘A short black coffee thanks. Strong.’

When it arrived, the dark brown liquid had muscles.

‘Thanks I need that,’ she smiled, and leaned forward.
‘You might be able to help me. I’m from a Sydney newspaper doing a story about the football tragedy … with that young boy?’

‘Yeah …’ ‘I think I might be able to help the town. You know … get a bit of media attention and maybe an increase in the local health budget. I saw on the pub notice board there was a meeting of the football club, but it didn’t say where.’

‘Yeah. Tonight, down at the hall.’ The fellow’s previously languid moustache twitched. ‘Get some money for the hospital ya reckon?’


‘Well. I hope so.’
The waiter glanced around the café, then wedged himself onto the bench at the opposite side of the table. ‘

‘Look. You know the young guy that was killed? At the football?’
‘Mmmm …’ ‘Well, that’s his mum and dad. His family.’ Conspiratorial, the waiter nodded towards the family of mixed grills.

This was a breakthrough.

‘Great. Do you think they’ll talk to me?’


‘I dunno. People don’t like the media ‘round here. We like to keep ourselves to ourselves.’ He pulled his moustache to its full length, then allowed the hair to spring back to its normal shape.' S’pose you could try.’


Pip took another look at the family. They’d finished their food and had been tucking into cups of tea, with milk shakes for the kids. The father, as broad as he was tall, had a great thick chest and short arms. His wife was broomstick thin and wore a squashed felt hat from a scarecrow’s wardrobe. The kids were all freckles and scabbed knees.


She took a deep breath and slid out of the alcove. Pip hoped her smile was wide and friendly.


‘Hi. I’m a journalist from a Sydney newspaper. Do you mind if we have a chat?’


The adult faces closed down on her, and became as impenetrable as bank vaults. Then the father stirred. ‘Go to hell lady. We don’t need any of your bloody publicity.’


‘I want to help,’ she gagged. ‘We might be able to get some money for the hospital.’


Pip felt a fraud. She wanted to use these people for her own purposes and until five minutes ago hadn’t given a thought to helping at all.

‘Shove orf!’ the man yelled, then muttered, ‘C’mon, let’s get out of here.’ And directed his flock of dumb struck chickens into the street.


Pip stood in the middle of the café, abandoned.

Instinctively she dropped back into her alcove and, when she caught the eye of the intensely curious waiter, ordered another coffee.


‘I warned ya.’ The waiter’s expression was almost imperious. ‘We don’t like outsiders much around here.’


‘Well, I have to keep trying. I’ve a job to do. What time’s the footy meeting?’


To even consider attending the football meeting cold turkey, without preparation or introductions, was probably quite mad under the circumstances. She’d approached this assignment arse-up, giving her personal problems priority. Now she was stuck with the consequences.

The meeting was tonight and she had no time to lose.


A single street light illuminated the cenotaph with its statue of a World War I soldier, obligatory in so many Australian towns, and extended its feeble gleam to the rusting iron walls of the nearby Memorial Hall.


Pip had only walked two hundred metres from the café but paused to take a deep breath before entering the hall lobby.


There was an empty ticket office on the right and through the internal doorway she could see a collection of plastic chairs at the other end of the large main room. The walls were unlined, skeletal support timbers naked to the eye, and a dozen or so sticky old fly papers complete with old dead flies dangled from the ceiling.


Some local families were sprinkled in small knots around the lightly polished wooden floor.
She stood at the edge of the bright light, hesitant and looking for a familiar face. The mixed grills were in the larger group to the left. The cluster on the right had to be the best bet.

Mercifully a beaming smile extracted itself from the group and moved in her direction. It belonged to a small pumpkin on chunky legs - a man who was obviously determined to please.

‘Hello. What can we do for you?’ The man’s eyes swept Pip for clues, then held out a pudgy hand.

‘Harold Staunch, club president.’


Pip breathed easier. She’d found her key contact.


‘Mr. Staunch. Pip Holmes from The Daily,’ she injected friendship into her eyes and pumped the proffered hand.


‘I’m here to write a feature story on your town’s health problems … made so obvious last week with the death of young Jim Rouse. The paper believes some publicity could help prevent similar tragedies in the future.’


‘Excellent Miss Holmes. Excellent.’ The man was positively beaming. ‘I’m also the retired doctor, so I know about the shortcomings around here. Delivered most of the babies in town for the past forty years.’


Pip settled herself to listen …


‘My practice disappeared when the department closed down the hospital. It meant people didn’t come here for treatment and my retirement left the district without any doctor at all.
Now they’ve also shut down the bank, so we’re in one big hole. I’ll help you in any way I can.’


‘Great. You’d be a first class interview for me then. Can we talk later?’

Staunch nodded agreeably.


‘I’m afraid I didn’t make a good start with the Rouse family. We met down at the café, and he didn’t want anything to do with me.’


‘It doesn’t take much to get Jesse Rouse offside, especially at the moment. We’ll see what we can do with him. I’ll introduce you to the team coach too. And before I forget, here’s my card. Ring and we can meet somewhere.’


It looked as though she could be off and running. Pip followed the round man as he rolled towards the front of the room.

By this time the crowd had grown and people began drifting to the seating. Two men were in position on the stage.
Staunch walked to greet them and motioned Pip to follow.

‘Ms Holmes let me introduce our secretary Jerry Humber and the club coach Jack Tripp. Jerry, Jack, Pip Holmes is a journalist from the city. Wants to do a story on the football accident and our need for additional health services.’


Pip had a feeling of deja vu.

The eye lids of both men became shutters, just as the Rouses’ had done. The bank vault treatment all over again.


Pip’s hand had been in the air, ready to greet the men. Now she let it drop, and surreptitiously rubbed her jeans to rid herself of the sweat from her palms.

Humber turned his back and, looking embarrassed, Staunch pointed to a seat in the front row.
Pip hoped it would swallow her up.

The meeting was short — apologies and correspondence through to general business —the usual. There was talk of the need to meet a shortage in club funding, and official condolences were extended to the bereaved family.


Afterwards there were tea and home made cakes, with Pip feeling decidedly ignored. Staunch stood by her until called away, and then she became the proverbial shag on a rock.

What was this town on about? So much for country hospitality …


Pip sought solace in the jam and cream sponge, then helped herself to a mug of scalding tea.

She had a quiet corner in her sights when a steam roller hit her without warning.

The hot liquid flew from the mug and she felt the sting of it through the sleeve of her shirt.

The burning intensified as the cloth stuck to her arm, and she grabbed the sleeve to prevent it sticking even more.

Only when the pain subsided a little did she look for the cause of her woes.
Garry Bullfinck was standing less than a metre away, a leer on his face, and beside him, a man she hadn’t seen before.

He was a short tomato stake with a long nose, so uninspiring he begged to go unnoticed. Except that he made Pip’s flesh creep. And he limped severely as he turned and made his way to the other side of the room.


Gazza laughed almost silently. ‘It can be dangerous around ere love. And don’t cha forget it.’

Then he slid away into the crowd.
Pip felt an involuntary chill. Of course Gazza was at the footy meeting. How could she have forgotten to look for him?


The foregoing is excerpted from Paternity by June Saville. All rights reserved. No part of this novel may be used or reproduced without written permission from the author.

GO TO EPISODE SIX

I think Pip's work as a journalist to find a story for her paper illustrates the hit-and-miss nature of journalism. There are so many worthwhile stories happening in the world but so often it's a matter of chance whether they gain appropriate attention.

What do you think about journalists? Do you believe everything you read in the newspapers?
Please tell me in a comment.

Saturday 22 November 2008

PATERNITY Episode 4 - an Aussie Mystery Novel

Here is Episode 4 of my ongoing mystery novel Paternity the story of a determined young Sydney journalist's quest to discover who her father was. The search takes her to an outback Australian town where she renews the friendship of a former workmate and daily editor, now reduced by the demon drink to a position as hack on the local newspaper.

LINKS TO OTHER EPISODES ARE ON THE SIDE BAR



Pip didn’t go back to the Guardian office that afternoon: she couldn’t face any questions. Instead she bought a hamburger from the take away counter at the pub and ate it in her bedroom. She drank water from the crockery jug. Pip wanted to think.

So. Selene was raped as a virgin, according to the paper, at the age of 22. June 24 1975. Almost nine months before Pip’s own birth.

It looked as though her father was a rapist.

The thought scorched her.

How can I reconcile
These men —

Animals of the night —

With the human being                                                                                                                              Who is my Dad?

Was he gang leader

Or gutless follower,

Too weak
To say no?

Did he even look at her?

Note terror in her eyes?
Feel the rush of her breath

as he crushed her?

Or was she just

A space

To fill?


Did he hear screams

As he pierced her softness,

Invaded secret places

Where none had been before?


He must have felt involved

In some way
To leave …
His seed.

I hate him With a fervour
Whoever he was.

There in the town where it all began, a single tear trickled down Pip’s face, followed by a flood.

The pub pillow
Soft and white,

Cradles my head.

But Selene’s secret

Sucks my soul

Into a vortex

Of regrets.


Other kids
Had fathers.
Not me.
I used to think ...
What’s it like

To have

A football hero Dad?

Or one who turns his hand

At making a swing



To rock me                                                                                                                                                 With love?

If things were different

Would my Dad

Have played ball
And taught me to swim?

Would I be so fond of reading

And writing

As now I am?

Or would rock music be

My passion?


Or climbing mountains?


Part Six

Frank took his feet off the solid old desk and walked out of the office to meet Pip at the Guardian premises. She’d seen him through the dusty window and it looked as though he had been slumped on his chair, deep in thought.

‘Pippin … the page with the photograph that you left on the desk last night ... when you went out in a rush. Was that what you were looking for?’

Pip wanted to roll into a ball. Instead, she nodded and lowered her body into the chair she’d been using the day before.

Frank picked up the file and stared at the faded old picture. He too was dredging it for information, and seemed loathe to speak.

The ticking of the big old clock in the corner filled the room, and the second hand moved a full sweep of the Roman numerals on its dial.

‘Is this the personal bit you wanted help with, or part of your commission?’

‘The personal bit Frank.’

‘Yeah? You know this woman?’

Once again Pip felt her body curl inwards on itself. Her eyes were damp when she looked up.

‘She was my Mum,’ Pip choked.

Ever the comforting bear, Frank engulfed her in his arms.

‘My god,’ he murmured.

‘Come on, we both need a drink.’



The foregoing is excerpted from Paternity by June Saville. All rights reserved. No part of this novel may be used or reproduced without written permission from the author.

GO TO EPISODE FIVE

Put yourself in Pip's shoes - how would you feel about all of this? Would you want to know? Or do you agree with me that we all have different reactions to situations and that one person's needs may be another's nightmare?

Please tell me in a comment. Next episode coming up.

Friday 21 November 2008

PATERNITY Episode 3 - Pip searches newspaper files for the answer


This is Episode 3 of my ongoing mystery novel Paternity, set in an outback Australian town and sometimes in Sydney. It's the story of Pip, a feisty young journalist out to discover the deepest secret of her dead mother.
Episodes 1 and 2 are in previous posts. Please leave a comment ...




She turned from the barstool and into the embrace of a friendly bear. Frank Rolls had been the chief of staff when Pip served her cadetship. He was a damn good journo, even though too fond of the turps. What was he doing here?

Rolls guided Pip to a table on the other side of the room and a moment later placed a fresh beer in front of her. She nodded thanks.

‘Frank, what are you doing here?’

‘I could say the same for you.’

‘Commission.’

‘Not a bleeding hearts on the downfall of country towns I hope.’

‘I’ll fill you in. I didn’t make a good start did I?’ Nodding towards Gazza.

Frank shrugged. ‘You couldn’t know that you were sitting on a stool that one of the town’s loopy types calls his own.’

‘So that was it …’

‘Yeah. Gazza has been sitting in that corner every night for fifteen years. It’s the main deal in his life. He gets to the pub at exactly six o’clock, has a rum and beer chaser at the bar and won’t say a word until he’s ensconced on that stool along with a second schooner. Interrupt the routine at your peril. He’s a psychologist’s nightmare.’

‘I wondered what hit me.’

‘I dunno. I think you were doin pretty well. Gazza might have met his match with you.’

Pip grinned: ‘The sizes were a bit uneven don’t you think?’

‘Well … you have put on weight since I saw you last.’

‘Thanks heaps.’

It was comfortable sitting there with Frank. It was a good job he’d shown up. No-one else in the place seemed inclined to help.

‘Anyway, come on. What about you?’

He looked dreadful. The sallow complexion of the confirmed alcoholic, with a beer gut to match, and his chest was as hollow as it could be. Pants baggy around the bum. Frank gave orders for others to get physical. The black head she’d known was now grey around the edges.

He drew himself tall in mockery: ‘I … I am the editor of the local rag.”

He had come a cropper.

‘It’s not such a tragedy. They gave me the heave ho in Sydney … too many long lunches.’

Pip nodded.

‘Now I can have as many lunches as I like so long as I get one twelve page rag out each week. And I can write some fiction in my spare time. No sweat.’

‘And Flo?’ Flo had been a barmaid in the press bar opposite the daily where they’d worked together. She and Frank had a stormy off-again-on-again relationship for years. You always knew that it was off again when Frank moved into a bedroom at the rear of the bar, and that it was on again when he moved back to their flat.

Frank wagged his head towards a woman walking past, tray of glasses in hand.

‘Well, you old bugger. You won.’ Flo was there all right. Just an older version.

‘Oh I dunno about winning. I’m in one of the rooms upstairs at the moment.’

Sometimes nothing much changes.



The wide staircase leading to the pub bedrooms was elegantly carved, but the carpet was frayed at the edges. Pip shivered as a wayward draught of air whistled down the long narrow hall.

She found Room 22, tossed her bag onto the faded pink chenille spread, and laid her laptop more gently on a starched doily on the oak dressing table. The bed had no backbone, and a matching crockery jug and water basin with a pattern of large red roses stood on a side table.

Half a dozen wire hangers clinked together in the wardrobe. Tobacco smoke wafted from the downstairs bar and insinuated its way along the corridor to impregnate everything in her room.

Reconciled to the lack of home comforts, Pip sauntered down the hall to the communal bathroom, clad in a towelling robe. The shower rose was broken in the first cubicle, and in the second, the plastic curtain clung disrespectfully around her legs. But the water was good and hot and plentiful.



The sun was almost overhead next day when Pip strolled down the street, the strip of tar empty still, and the only sound the cawing of a crow perched on the rusted corrugated iron roof of the grocery shop.

She could feel her jeans too tight around her waist and blamed the pub food and sitting down too long in the car.

There was the newspaper office. Guardian Printers. Pretentious. It all looked too tired to guard anything.

Its shop front windows were stuffed with hundreds of newspaper files, old and brown and curling, tumbling one upon the other. Dust danced in a shaft of light that had followed her in. Here, a large room with a heavy wooden counter and two desks. Chairs with thick legs and padded leather seats. To the right a smaller space with glass in the wall. The sound of machinery behind another door in the back of the office.

This place was a museum … clutter upon clutter. Heavy black phones, typewriters, copy paper stabbed on lethal spikes. Account books, encyclopedia c1958, dictionary. Pots of paste, scissors and steel em rulers. Rubber stamps and slugs of lead. Not a computer in sight.

A bulky woman with a hair bun and a pencil behind her ear was pouring over a pile of long galley proofs at the corner desk. Pip had only seen proofs like this in old photographs.

Frank noticed her from the inner office and yelled.

‘Come in kiddo!’ He nodded towards a substantial looking chair.

Pip whispered: ‘What a scene for a crime novel.’

‘Mmmm … Don’t steal my thunder. Now. What’s with you in this place young Pippin?’

‘I’m on a job. Yeah. But mainly it’s personal. I need your help.’

Part Five

The ageing newspaper file threatened to crumble as Pip placed it on the desk in a quiet corner of the office. With reverence she smoothed the old yellow-brown paper, and it seemed to respond to the delicacy of her touch.

There was sweat on her palms and she wiped them with a handkerchief. Could these flimsy newspapers hold her mother’s secret?

The Guardian, Friday June 11, 1975. League Hero in Doubt with Groin Injury. Police Blitz Speeding. Bus Trip for Country Women's Association.

Her sister had said that Selene made the trip west soon after her birthday. It would have been later in the month …

She could hear the rhythmic thump of the ancient flat bed press in the back room. Someone answered a phone with muffled voice. A fly buzzed around her abandoned mug of tea. Pip moved through time.

New Portable Classroom for Primary School. Preparations for District Show. Farmer Killed when Tractor Overturns.

She scoured the stories for a clue to her mother’s visit all those years ago. Why was she there? What had happened to change her life?

Friday, June 25. Picnic Races Planned for September. Pioneer Dies Age 100. School Principal Retires after Thirty Years. Three Men Detained in Rape Case.

Rape Case. The story was set in a small panel on page three. There were no names, just a bald police statement. A Sydney woman abducted and pack raped. Three local men being questioned. Police confident charges would be laid.

Pip’s knuckles whitened as she gripped the edge of the desk. She turned more pages. The paper was a weekly …

Next issue a page one spread. The 200pt Bodoni Bold screamed at her — Rape Case: Three Charged.

And there was a faded out-of-focus photograph. A very young version of her mother, cowering on a bench in front of the police station. As though she herself accused.
Pip’s eyes bored into the page, seeking more.

She read the story again and again. Selene O’Rourke 22, a virgin, had been attacked in the main street of the town and dragged off into the bush. The charged rapists were still not named. Talk about lopsided reporting! And no reporter today would dare to be so personal.

Could this be it? Her mind whirled. That would mean … this must be it!

Selene’s secret.

Pip left the newspapers where they lay and walked, stunned, into the silent street. Her mother … raped. Pack raped. Taken into bush land, alone and vulnerable.

Tears were coursing down Pip’s face. She wiped them away with her fists, smudging her cheeks with dust from the old pages.

She drifted down a side street and into a small park. Here she threw herself onto the thin grass beneath a spindly grey gum, and wept.

Eventually the tears gave way to a coldness; a numbness. Pip sat there, still, and for a very long time, cross-legged upon the hard earth. The day was fading and she could see a creamy moon beginning to make its way across the pink and blue sky.

The veil lifted
On a tragic life …
Transparent now,
A secret revealed.

Silences explained
Sadness understood
Anger spelled out
Shortcomings vindicated
And blame absolved.

Even so …
New questions raised.


The foregoing is excerpted from Paternity by June Saville. All rights reserved. No part of this novel may be used or reproduced without written permission from the author.

GO TO EPISODE FOUR

What questions does Pip need to answer now? What would you do next? Please let me know what you think in a comment.
More of the story in my next post ...

Monday 17 November 2008

PATERNITY - An Original Australian Novel - Episode Two




Welcome to Episode Two of my Australian mystery quest novel Paternity. If you missed the beginning catch up on Episode One in my last post. You may recognise Pip's Poem from the 'taste' I posted earlier. It needs to be included here however.
Enjoy - and please leave a comment about what you thought, at the end. Otherwise it's free!

LINKS TO OTHER EPISODES ARE ON THE SIDE BAR


PATERNITY
©June Saville 2008
Episode Two

The ride into the bush was an atrocity of bodies and intrusions. They forced a filthy rag smelling of petrol into her mouth, and rasping cords bound her hands and feet. She was a helpless plucked chicken.

Now they all waited in the clearing … for what?

A car door slammed once.

The pack was half men, half beasts, and their strangely long teeth snapped and gnawed at her in the moon’s light. She lay on the hard stony ground, splayed, naked and open, and they lined up, one after the other to devour her, and to leave their residue.

The pain … no matter to them. No matter her degradation and her fear. They sucked at her pride and took away her spirit’s breath. They picked her up and spat and growled and shook her; worried at her, and scratched at her with their claws.

She was their meat, and their grotesque masks of hair and flesh flashed and burned into her soul. And picked at her bones.

It was always the same dream. The same nightmare.

Part Two
Pip's Poem

My mother died last night,
Secrets in the palm
of her hand.

She’s gone.
And with her the blue eyes
Which could be icy
Or take on the hue of a summer sky
Or cloud over
Milky weak with memories,
and mystery.
As a child
I’d read her eyes
And know when to steal
To her lap for comfort
Or leave her alone
to her sadness …

She’s gone.

And without living full.

Oh yes, when she was young
I’m told
She lived it full.
Then.
But something happened.
Her secret.
Her secret happened
And she died within.

My mother Selene
Of the beautiful long limbs
And the wheat field hair
Wound round her head.

Of the stutter,
The frightened look
And the deep voice
Sunk to a whisper.

She’s gone.

And with her the recipes,
The way to make apple pie.
Where to buy
Our favourite tea …
Little things that mean too much.

It seemed that
Without being truly loved …
She’s gone.

She didn’t tell me
who my father was …
I asked often enough
But her lips seemed sealed,
The knowledge lying there
A lump in her throat,
Threatening her breath
Should she let it loose.

Selene wasn’t spiteful
Although she must have known
What her secret meant to me ...
I just wanted to know.
That’s all.
So simple.

The secret strangled her spirit,
Sabotaged her life
And cut it short.

Why?

Do I look like him?
In my mirror …
Are those eyes his eyes?
With their curling lashes
And button shape
Are they his legacy?
The nose I’ve always hated
With its aquiline hook
That some call noble
And which I abhor.
Is it his?

I need to know!

I’m a runt …
Can’t reach the hanging straps in buses.
My toothpaste splatters
The mirror
I leave hairs in the basin and
squeezing pimples is my thing.
I shave my legs
But not
My underarms.

I don’t do drugs.
I do pump iron.
And grow vegetables
For their juice.
Each night I run miles
And top off my dinner with
Sticky date pudding
And runny cream.

I’m a woman and proud.
I am a writer —
Freelance.

My mother … tall and golden …
Angular.
Me … small, pale
And round.

The phone:
‘Pip
I’m so sorry
to hear the news.
So sorry …’

‘Aunty!
I’ve wanted to talk …
To ask …
Now she’s gone it seems
So important
Somehow …
I want to know
About my Dad!’

A gasp
And
Silence
At the end of the line.
‘Oh my sweet
I don’t know myself …
It was her secret.’

‘Please Aunty
Please!’

‘Oh dear …
I always felt …
The answer …
Lay in that wretched town.
I’d help if I could.’

Selene had
A strange fascination
For outback towns.
And loved driving.
But there was one place
Where she refused to go.
Is that the key?


Part Three
The street outside Pip’s study was as quiet as feather pillows before the pizza boy came. Feathers flew when the heap of old metal roared up the hill, stereo thumping. Brakes screeched, a door banged, and the guy’s boots thumped down the driveway opposite.

He was a large youth. So large that nothing fitted. The Tasty Pizza T-shirt and the jeans threatened to explode against his frame, and the inadequate baseball cap looked ridiculous …

A quiet moment and then the murmur of voices. Coins jingling. The throb of music again, fading around the corner, and the feathers settled …

What was the pizza boy thinking … did he hate his job? What was his secret? Thoughts were so unreachable.

Pip often found herself wishing to scrape away at peoples’ skulls, to peel back the layers and reveal the thoughts beneath. Perhaps that was why she enjoyed journalism. And hated unsolved mysteries.



Joe Black, news editor and a mate of Pip’s was always good for a commission when she really needed it.

‘But we’ve done economic rationalist stories on little outback towns! You’ll have to find a new angle.’

‘Joe baby, have faith. I thought a human-interest interview with that family whose son died. You know — the kid injured at football. The hospital closed down. No doctor. What’s better for the paper’s circulation than a kid dying an unnecessary death?’

‘Orright. Christ I’m soft. But you’ll have to get it into context. Talk to others to get their slant on it.’

Joe’s deep blue eyes softened: ‘How are you doin mate? I’ve missed you … give me a ring some time?’

Pip placed her hand on his arm, there among the rows of deadline driven sub editors. ‘Thanks Joe, maybe I will call ... some time.’

Pip Holmes grinned all the way to the newsroom lift … that took care of her expenses.



At home she flipped the top from a stubby of beer and flopped onto her favourite easy chair. Joe was right of course. It was a pretty weak excuse for a story, and he was really doing her a good turn entertaining the idea at all. She felt lousy using Joe. She couldn’t help thinking he was still vulnerable, even though they’d called it a day with their relationship all of six months before. Anyway, they were still friends, and what were friends for?

What was she thinking of anyway, heading off on a wild goose chase. Was she letting her feelings about her mother’s death screw her into an irrational heap?

Pip groaned out of the chair and tossed the empty bottle into the kitchen recycling bin. Selene’s face was staring at her from a photograph on the bench top. It was her mother’s melancholy, dreamy expression – the one that hinted of her secret. Pip moved closer to the frame and traced the beloved image with a gentle touch.

Not long afterwards she hit the light switch and grabbed her suitcase from the back of the wardrobe. Mad hunch or not, she needed to do this.


Part Four
The town is as sad as a dog without a tail to wag. Potholes pit the strip of tar that does for the main street and peeling paint is everywhere. Door and windows are boarded up on the only bank, and spiders’ webs are a shroud for many of the other buildings.

Involuntarily, Pip fears this place.

The pub is doing all right though … Friday night and there is a gaggle of utes outside and the din of raucous laughter within. The building needs a paint job too and several tiles are missing from a mural advertising KB Lager near the front door, but it’s not in bad nick otherwise.

A blue cattle dog snarls at Pip as she walks too close to one of the trucks. She skips sideways and up the single step into the bar.

‘Fosters light please. Got a room for the night?’

‘Yeah’ the barman wheezes, ‘I’ll fix yous up as soon as the rush dies down a bit.’

The large room is crowded with country men and women pleased to see the back of another working week. Some stare at Pip above the rims of their schooners, and others watch an intense darts match going on in the far corner.

Pip downs her first beer quickly. It had been a long and dusty trip … She orders another, and grabs a handful of free peanuts from the dish on the bar. Then she saunters over to an empty stool near the dart board. There’s room for her glass on the adjacent sticky tabletop.

Pretty typical Australian country pub. Garish red and gold carpet, tall chairs with black iron legs that get in the way, bar towels stinking of stale beer, tin trays on the floor overflowing deceased cigarette butts. The air almost solid with swirling smoke.

The match is in full swing, but without warning the man with the darts freezes in mid throw. Patrons around him stand suddenly rigid, drinks halfway to their mouths, looking in her direction. Pip knows there is someone behind her.

‘Get off that seat ya fuckin’ cunt.’

The giant of a man is standing immediately behind, well within her personal space. Pip senses the warmth of his body, sees the coarse hairs clustered just inside his bulging nose, feels the stare of his small eyes. His bad breath is suffocating.

Pip’s face is bright red.

‘What did you say?’

‘You heard. Get off me seat.’

‘Your seat! This is a public bar. What right have you …’

The man’s big meaty hand is around her arm, squeezing. Time has slowed remarkably and Pip is thinking clearly despite the pain. She notices the faded tattoo of a crescent moon nested in the tangle of hair above his wrist. She looks up and sees that his eyes are connected by a bushy brow line that stretches, uninterrupted, across most of the upper half of his face.

Then Pip feels rising panic. Who is this monster? What has she done to deserve this?

With an effort she stills the tide inside her and when Pip speaks again her words come slowly: relentless.

‘Remove your hand.’

‘You uppity bitch.’

‘Move it!’ Only the flow of red coursing her face gives away Pip’s anger.

Another voice, one of authority, brings the giant to book: ‘Crawl back into your hole Gazza. That’s no way to treat a lady.’

The voice is measured and strangely familiar. The odious one takes a step backwards, releasing Pip’s arm, and twists to face the newcomer, jaw gaping.

‘Crissakes! It’s Pippin!’ the new voice hoots.

Only one man had ever called her that …

‘Come on mate, give this slug the heave ho and come and have a drink with me.’

Gazza the giant sinks onto the now empty seat and reaches for his schooner ...


Log in soon for the next episode in which Pip embarks on a quest to find her mother's secret. Is Pip a character whose story you want to follow? Are you on the edge of your chair? Or do you feel sleepy right now, and disinterested? Is the town familiar? Please tell me in a comment.



The foregoing is excerpted from Paternity by June Saville. All rights reserved. No part of this novel may be used or reproduced without written permission from the author.

GO TO EPISODE THREE

Sunday 16 November 2008

PATERNITY - An Original Australian Novel Part 1



Last week I posted a taste of my novel Paternity and the bloggy mates wanted more. Today I begin at the beginning with Part One and will continue the story with regular episodes posted here.
Enjoy - and please repay the favour with feedback via a comment. That's the only royalty I require! (Unless you're a publisher and then we can talk.)

LINKS TO OTHER EPISODES ARE ON THE SIDE BAR

PATERNITY – A NOVEL Part One
© June Saville 2008

They waited with some sort of bizarre discipline, although straining at the leash.

The vicious wind set leaves scuttling on the ground, and branches arching against the bright night sky. The full moon saw it all, and intensified the shadows at the bases of the trees. She felt freezing then, and fear took over from the anger. What did they intend with her?

Soon two white lights shattered the gloom, appearing first at the top of the track. They followed its bends and twists until they lit the clearing and then the target directly … blinding her.

The car door slammed once.

*

By age 22 Violet Selene Holmes, yoga fanatic, had saluted the sun in a dozen different countries. She draped her long limbs on the sand at Goa as the saffron sun swelled above the Arabian Sea, and, less comfortably, on mountainsides in the Andes, the Himalayas, and among the Kurdish sheep on the slopes of Mount Ararat.

Her mother named her after a flower, and an old fashioned one, although Violet was anything but a delicate petal. Given the choice between a rough pebble-strewn path and a smooth one, she’d take the pebbles.

Her second name was borrowed from the moon goddess of Greek mythology. This was Selene's favourite, and she used it throughout her life.


Selene paid for her fares from a cache she began collecting at age seven, and she travelled alone. But she knew how to party.


She had been roaming for three years, luxuriating in the sights and sounds and smells of other lands, when her thoughts turned homewards. Selene found herself longing for the toss and tumble of a Sydney surf, the smell of eucalyptus leaves burning in a barbecue fire, for streets clogged with Australians — whatever their hue, whatever their accent.


So the young woman with the wheat field hair booked a flight home and did those things which had set her aching while on foreign shores. She steeped herself in old friends and familiar places, but a year or so later she felt again the old need to move along. This time she would explore the vast spaces of her own land ...

*

The thin strip of gibbers and gravel which had passed for a road for the last two hundred kilometres became wider now and Selene’s hands relaxed on the smooth vinyl of the steering wheel. She could even see signs of desultory attention from a grader. The car picked up speed, rattling by occasional clumps of ancient pine trees, branches gnarled and foliage bedraggled, and spewed dust high into the air. The dust changed colour to red, and eddied and swirled, to settle on the stumps and drunken fence posts on either side.

The town must not be far away.


She took the bend too fast, and had to wrench the wheel to avoid a row of mail boxes on posts set too close to the road. They stood there like abandoned skeletons with no real connection to humanity. Where were the people who got letters in this godforsaken place?

Everything she saw was evidence that people had been there — not that they were there now. A tractor ravaged of moving parts, and rusted. A wattle and daub hut, collapsed upon itself. A lonely sentinel chimney, fireplace attached. Willy nilly tangles of barbed wire, battered baked- bean tins and scattered shards of lager bottles.

The car groaned towards an outcrop of round red rocks lying topsy turvy on a sudden rise. It heaved up the hill, gasped as it came to the top, and died.

In the distance, a small town lay all but concealed on the flat below, as though resisting prying eyes …

Selene stormed out of the driver’s seat and tugged open the bonnet. Her tall frame doubled itself as the fair head bent towards the engine, seeking reasons. There didn’t seem to be any. Finally, she locked the car. Her boots clomped rhythmically, exciting the red dust as she made her way down the slope.

*

The sun’s glare ricocheted from the galvanised iron walls of a shed dimly labelled War Memorial Hall, and bounced off the road to hit the figure of a soldier dressed in World War 1 uniform, ramrod straight as the gun he held aloft. The cenotaph warrior was the token human being in the place, for the single street was hushed, and empty apart from a clutch of cars shimmering in the relentless light at the far end.


This town was the product of a time tunnel. Small windows of a shop front winked at her, sharing Selene’s delight at its wares. Rolls of cloth, scissors, umbrellas, packets of needles, children’s clothing dangling raggle taggle on wire hangers, and shoes. A battered and cracked mannequin stood proud of her daisy-showered cotton dress, and rubber knee boots. There was a sign on the wall: Closed for lunch.

Next door two small wooden houses leaned against each other, also in siesta.

However, the milk bar was open. The long fake marble counter was coloured with rows of sweet jars, bottles of ice cream soda flavours, stacks of plates and containers of cutlery, all reflected in the long mirror engraved with a likeness of the Parthenon, and swirls of leaves and flowers. An endless row of cubicles with laminated tabletops set with salts and peppers, menus and sugar, lined the opposite wall.


A row of slowly moving ceiling fans hummed a greeting.


‘Afternoon,’ she smiled in relief. The chubby man behind the counter was tied at his middle by the strings of an apron, and his hesitant nod came framed by a moustache, curled and drooping on either side of stacked chins.


‘I’d die for one of your milkshakes — caramel malted?’


‘Just arrived in town?’ He craned his short neck towards the street.


‘My car threw it in at the top of the hill … Lucky to get so close.’


She sat in the corner of one of the cubicles fondling the coolness of the glass, which was thick and squat. The tumbler came empty, accompanied by a tall dented aluminium container filled with creamy milk and froth. You poured the drink into the glass yourself, and there was enough for two helpings. There were no straws, and as she drank, the froth tickled her nose.

The smell and sound of crackling bacon sidled its way from the kitchen, soon followed by the proprietor and a hamburger on a plate. A fly buzzed in his wake.

‘With the lot!’ He slid the plate across the slippery table towards her.
‘I’d have thought you’d be busy … it’s lunch time,’ she glanced around the empty cafe.

‘If you must know they generally wet their whistles at the pub first, and maybe eat later. Watcha here fer lady?’


‘Just wandering. Is there a mechanic?’


‘Gazza’ll probably fix you up. Ask at the bar.’


*

The clatter in the pub ceased immediately she walked in from the street. Schooners of beer stood ignored among the slops on the bar, and every eye leered in her direction.


'Ladies’ lounge is out the back,’ the barman whined.


Selene chose not to hear: ‘Is Gazza around? I’m after a mechanic.’


The little knots of drinkers, wearing broad hats to a man, stood mesmerised. Then, as Selene stood firm, the entire bar seemed to shift weight from one foot to another.


‘I’m after a mechanic!’


Finally, a mountain of a man extracted himself from the crowd, lumbered over, and breathed a stink of rotten eggs at her. Selene thrust her hand forward to force a greeting and immediately wished she hadn’t. The fellow had hair growing on his palm!


‘Got car problems eh?’ The drinker’s currant eyes flicked over Selene’s jeans where the denim stretched tightly across her thighs.


‘At the top of the hill. It died at the top of the hill … ’


‘Oright. I’ll see ya after I’ve had me lunch.’

*
Selene drifted into the street just as the last of the sun began to disappear behind a hill. A bed she’d organised at the pub bent in the middle like a hammock, and the shower rose down the hall was broken, but it was all clean enough. Her car was supposed to be on the road next morning.

She thought about the wild ride up the hill in the rusted old ute, engulfed in Gazza’s breath of bad eggs. The mechanic was a soaring suet pudding with cold eyes staring from slanted brows that met at the bridge of his nose. He was impervious to her attempts at conversation. However, once they reached her car he was a changed man: methodical and efficient. To each his own.


That peculiar disinfectant smell of pubs in Australia lingered even on the footpath outside. The barman was hosing down the tiled wall with its mural of brawny footballers advertising KB Lager. He seemed to ignore her, but directed the hose closer as she passed, splashing her shirt. She could feel the damp spreading on her skin.

Where were the women? She hadn’t even caught sight of the ladies’ lounge.


A couple of doors down there was a grocer’s shop with long scrubbed counter and bags of potatoes and onions near the till. Closed. A lone petrol pump outside cast a long weak
shadow …

It was good to be in the open air after the smoke and stench of the pub. A full moon sat majestic in the sky, occasionally blotted out by scudding clouds. Washing on a decrepit clothesline flapped with the strengthening breeze …


This place was so silent. The moon withdrew again, and the shadows disappeared as well, becoming one with the sombre darkness.


Close to the cenotaph at the far end of the street Selene paused before an aged building: Guardian Printers. The town had a newspaper! She pressed her nose to a window, opaque with grime. It was now too dark to see anything.


An engine roared somewhere. The moon came out from behind the clouds. She strolled on towards the hall at the edge of town, and then crossed the road. The engine was still roaring. Some hoon trying out his V8. The engine screamed repeatedly, but the car remained hidden.

An abrupt howl and a shriek of tyres, and Selene, startled, stared down the silver road towards the pub. A red Holden screeched into view and was thundering toward her.

The three faces in the front seat of the car gleamed white with the return of the moon. They sneered at her: evil ghosts.

The car propped.

‘Ya fuckin’ cunt. Git in!’


Selene’s body became a spring. She leapt to the side and was running. Her legs were pistons. On foot now, the men clamoured after her, increasingly near and shouting obscenities. The buildings, monsters on either side of the street, mocked her plight.




What did you think of Part 1? Have you seen a town like this? What will happen next? Have a guess and leave your idea in a comment ...

The foregoing is excerpted from Paternity by June Saville. All rights reserved. No part of this novel may be used or reproduced without written permission from the author.

Go to Episode Two

Friday 7 November 2008

When a Mother Dies Secrets Remain



I have an almost-finished novella lying at the bottom of my desk drawer, and it rarely sees the light of day.
This week I dusted it off and plucked from it one of the occasional poems which lightly pepper the text.
Here Pip, the protagonist or main character, is reflecting on the life of her mother who had died the evening before, leaving a secret.
The poem also serves to sketch a little about Pip herself ...

The musings of Pip
My mother died last night,
Secrets in the palm
of her hand.

She’s gone.
And with her the blue eyes
Which could be icy
Or take on the hue of a summer sky
Or cloud over
Milky weak with memories,
and mystery.
As a child
I’d read her eyes
And know when to steal
To her lap for comfort
Or leave her alone
to her sadness …

She’s gone.

And without living full.

Oh yes, when she was young
I’m told
She lived it full.
Then.
But something happened.
Her secret.
Her secret happened
And she died within.

My mother Selene
Of the beautiful long limbs
And the wheat field hair
Wound round her head.

Of the stutter,
The frightened look
And the deep voice
Sunk to a whisper.

She’s gone.

And with her the recipes,
The way to make apple pie.
Where to buy
Our favourite tea …
Little things that mean too much.

And without being truly loved …
She’s gone.

She didn’t tell me
who my father was …
I asked often enough
But her lips seemed sealed,
The knowledge lying there
A lump in her throat,
Threatening her breath
Should she let it loose.

Selene wasn’t spiteful
Although she must have known
What her secret meant to me ...
I just wanted to know.
That’s all.
So simple.

The secret strangled her spirit,
Sabotaged her life
And cut it short.

Why?

Do I look like him?
In my mirror …
Are those eyes his eyes?
With their curling lashes
And button shape
Are they his legacy?
The nose I’ve always hated
With its aquiline hook
That some call noble
And which I abhor.
Is it his?

I need to know!

I’m a runt …
Can’t reach the hanging straps in buses.
My toothpaste splatters
The mirror
I leave hairs in the basin and
squeezing pimples is my thing.
I shave my legs
But not
My underarms.

I don’t do drugs.
I do pump iron.
And grow vegetables
For their juice.
Each night I run miles
And top off my dinner with
Sticky date pudding
And runny cream.

I’m a woman and proud.
I am a writer —
Freelance.

My mother … tall and golden …
Angular.
Me … small, pale
And round.

The phone:
‘Pip
I’m so sorry
to hear the news.
So sorry …’

‘Aunty!
I’ve wanted to talk …
To ask …
Now she’s gone it seems
So important
Somehow …
I want to know
About my Dad!’

A gasp
And
Silence
At the end of the line.
‘Oh my sweet
I don’t know myself …
It was her secret.’

‘Please Aunty
Please!’

‘Oh dear …
I always felt …
The answer …
Lay in that wretched town.
I’d help if I could.’

Selene had
A strange fascination
For outback towns.
And loved driving.
But there was one place
Where she refused to go.
Is that the key?

©June Saville 2008. Not to be reproduced without express written permission of the author.