Georgie started, then sighted Jack approaching with a plump blonde woman and two skinny-necked boys. She patted Katieâs shoulder, then told a partial lie. âI told Jenny Iâd plaster a bit of makeup on her face. Iâd better go.â Sheâd plastered on the makeup an hour ago. âGood to see you,â she said, and merged into the crowd.
Most of her merged. Her hair wasnât easy to hide. Sheâd stopped growing at five foot ten but usually added three or four inches to her height with heels. She was wearing sandals with three-inch heels tonight, the lesser inch a concession to the time sheâd be standing in them.
Walked around the corner, where she stopped to light a cigarette before continuing down to the side door to wait for its bolts to be drawn. Theyâd bring the kids out that way to escape the crowd, and when they did, sheâd sneak in.
Heard the last of the tinkling kidsâ voices singing âTrain Whistle Blowingâ. Every item tonight, plus the costumes, had been chosen to fit into the theme of the old days.
Jenny was wearing Juliana Contiâs gold crepe frock theyâd dug out from the bottom of Grannyâs cedar trunk, an authentic 1920s frock. Sheâd restrung Grannyâs amber necklace and bought fake amber earrings, almost a match.
I should be thinking about tomorrow, not yesterday, Georgie thought. Maybe she would if she ever worked out what she wanted to do with her tomorrows.
Cara would be seeing in the new year in London â in twelve hours or so. Sheâd be home in April.
Sell the shop and move down to the city, share a flat with her. Sheâd be easier to live with than Margot.
Or fly somewhere, see a bit of the world. Or drive somewhere.
Margot.
She was the brake on Georgieâs life, like the barricades the council blokes had used to block off both ends of South Street, big sign on them: No Through Traffic.
And the door was opening and kids streaming out.
Jenny opened the adultâs concert with âYesterdayâ.
T HE F UGITIVE
C ara had survived the week between Christmas and New Year, locked inside her dogbox; maybe the longest, loneliest, saddest week of her life. On New Yearâs Eve, stir crazy, 1970 still an hour away, she opened a bottle of wine, and lifted a glass to Morrie, knowing that he was doing the same on the far side of the ocean â or would be.
Sheâd met him at a New Yearâs Eve dance in Ballarat, in 1964. Five years ago. Sheâd been in love with him for most of those five years. Why hadnât he told her heâd been born in Australia? Why hadnât she asked where heâd been born?
Why hadnât he told her his mother was Australian? Heâd rarely mentioned his mother â other than her illness. Iâve served my time here , heâd once said, and that was all heâd said.
Heâd known Melbourne roads. She should have wondered how heâd known them so well. When sheâd told him sheâd won Armadale Primary in the Education Departmentâs lottery, heâd repeated the name, but hadnât told her heâd started his schooling there. Why hadnât he said something then?
Because Morrie Langdon hadnât attended that school. The schoolâs old records only mentioned James Morrison King; and Morrie had been hiding who he was from himself, not from her.
The wine was good. Bubbly wine always went directly to her head. And maybe to her stomach.
Whatever was in there was having its own New Yearâs party. Maybe it was two. And why not? People needed people. Tonight, she needed people.
Outside her window, Melbourne was partying. In Woody Creek, Georgie would be partying. She lifted her glass to Georgie and to Woody Creekâs centenary, to its new paint, its flowerbeds and its white ants.
To date, her belly bulge hadnât moved much; and when it had, it had felt like wind rolling in her intestines. She knew they
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