at Frankie to straighten up and stop fooling around. Frank barely responded. As the car slid around to the front door, he jumped from the board and ran a few feet to slow himself down. He saw her on the cottage verandah, darkened by the shade of the corrugated iron roof. He waved his freckled hand and she waved back. She liked Frankie. He took off around the side of the house.
The two men climbed out from the front. The other was her own father. He opened the back door and her mother erupted from the dim insides. She wore a hip-length jacket over her dress and the white hat sheâd worn to the wedding. She caught sight of her daughter. The girl waved at her and mouthed a garbled message about being up there in a minute after returning the washing-up dish to the kitchen and putting on her shoes. Her mother put a hand up to her ear. The girl shook her head.
Mae Malone had appeared. She came down the red stone steps, her hands raised as if she were amazed to see the Fergusons pouring out of her husbandâs car, as if she hadnât been baking since the day before.
The young wife opened the screen door. It creaked and as shelet it fall back behind her, it shuddered. She walked dust across the wooden floor. Clear imprints of the pads of her feet followed her to the shaving mirror nailed on the wall. She picked up the damp tea towel and wiped her hot, reddened cheeks and forehead. She dabbed at the sides of her nose, at two clusters of tiny bubbles of sweat.
She was suddenly tired. She didnât want to go up to the big house, to carry around plates of scones and lamingtons, and afterwards collect up the dirty cups and saucers and, with another tea towel in her fist, stand beside her mother-in-law whoâd pass her the steaming hot, too slippery, too precious tea things from her water-boiled hands. And sheâd wonder how Mae could bear that her hands were lobster-red.
She bunched the towel in her fist. The windowsill took her attention. She wrapped a corner of the cloth around her finger and poked at a tiny quarry of ingrained black dirt where a dead fly had ended its days. She swept the fly ungraciously to the floor and continued to scrape conscientiously with her nail. Outside the window, she could see the wooden tower of the water tank. And there was Rusty, the cur who compartmentalised his life between, on the one hand, running like a mad thing at the wheels of the car, joining in the gallop when the men rode out, darting about the legs of the horses, and on the other flopping in the shade, motionless, possibly dead, for hot hour upon hour till his visible ear woke up, twitched once more and he, astonishingly, tore off to some new event of the worldâs making. He lay now at his leisure under the wooden struts. The early afternoon shadows were inexorably on the move. He would feel his dust-laden, tan rump heating up in the awful sun before long.
She heard the footsteps. She recognised them, the two-toned beat, the sturdy heel and wider sole, a blood rhythm. She picked up her husbandâs comb from his shaving-gear shelf, took an appalled look at the scum which had gathered along the base of its teeth, and nevertheless made a few approaches to the front of her hair with it.
The footsteps stopped. Her mother was bent to peer through the wire screen; the bending seemed to assist in the seeing, though it was otherwise pointless. âAnybody home?â she yodelled. And, without a pause, the hinges squealed. There she was, in the open doorway, dark against the almost unbearable light washing over the yard and the tree-less paddocks to the encroaching bush and the dazed horizon.
âWhat are you doing?â her mother said.
The girl scissored her fingers through her hair, busy establishing waves. âHello,â she said.
âWhy arenât you up at the house helping Mae?â Vivienne Ferguson walked into the room. Her face, too, was flushed, cheeks reddened in the heat. âGet me a