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When we first met
a December windstorm pelted granite across the gravel and grazed the string from heat-stinking gums. Mute black and white cattle sheltered under the ribs of creaking pylons, their tails crusted and sour, and in Darwin there was a cyclone. I moved into the house in Holbeche Road where Maltese farmers grew pig-eyed potatoes, and where a high tattered fence surrounded a secret treeless place where guard dogs were bred to have no bark. The paddocks were tortured with thistles, the empty tin sheds bent under prickly pear: the dirt poked full of dry dead things like an insect Calvary. The hollowed horses, Regal and King, collapsed in the dust, playing dead, and exploded up to the fence like the dark spit-flecked male things in dreams. When the waters broke, I was wearing rubber thongs. It was hot, and they stuck to the scarred soles of my feet. I remember watching for the postman. She stopped in a brown mini at ten, slewing off the road up to the gate. I would hear the crunch over the voice of Caroline Jones, would watch through dust-sweet nylon curtains while the baby tipped rank from my hip, and I gagged on cold toast. On Tuesdays, I pummelled nappies by hand, filling stone laundry tubs that smelt of hot-but-winsome days and a grandmother. Cleansed in scalding water and sunlight soap, while the baby drowsed in the square shade of the house, the thick cool of that concrete was the only lust left. When she was old enough for sandals we straggled to the letterbox waiting at every dry pothole while she threw in a handful of knuckle-like pebbles, imagining a splash. One nostril-drying day, we went looking for cambungi behind the brick school at the end of the road and I saw a man loitering in white grass. He had salt-pan eyes and leeched-out cheekbones, and velvet teeth, like the bottom of a long-drained bore. He turned and watched me scuff past shoving at the old Steelcraft pram and after that, I was frightened: wondering if he lived nearby- if he would one day trick and brutalize and leave in a dry gully some happy child skipping along the footpath after school, a silver coin so moist in her hand, on her way to that shop, lush and dark, to buy damp yeasty bread for her mother and maybe a yellow fizzy drink for herself that tasted of unexpected seasons in another sweeter place. I couldn't sleep worrying about the ugly man and the murdered child until the day I realized that the ugly man was my life, and the child was me.
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