The Tall Girl from Somerset 18 Harvey
Harvey
Perth, Michelangelo and pool.
Harvey started the next stage of his life
with his usual enthusiasm, and Perth responded.
Perth! What a place to be at any
moment, but to be young in Perth in the mid-1970s was heaven. Perth
was light. It was sun. Jake and Harvey saw
the city through eyes that were still gritty with the dust of Afghan
roads. Perth was a paradise to the travellers who had just come from
the chaotic alleys of Benares and the masses milling in the streets of
Madras. The well-kept gardens and smart houses of Perth were a world
away from the narrow streets of Calcutta where everything needed a coat of
paint. In Calcutta even new buildings
managed to look old before they were finished. Perth welcomed the
two travellers. Everything was clean. Harvey was struck by the
cartons of milk in the shops. Something ordinary, yes, but the rows of neat,
white cartons full of fresh, white milk in the fridge in the corner shop seemed
to symbolize all that was good in the new life. Life had
possibilities. Here was a future, and it was all the better because for Harvey
it was so unexpected. He had only thought of Australia as another
stage on the journey. It would be more hard work at the business of
existence like in Afghanistan or India. He had not expected paradise.
We always find nirvana when we are not looking for it. He had arrived with
about 20 American dollars, and ever afterwards remembered his first efforts at
getting a job. Things were positive. Australia was going
somewhere. Everyone was helpful.
“Sorry mate, we’ve nothing here, but if you just
walk down the road to the packing factory, they might have
something. I heard they were taking men on. Or failing
that, try the building site round the corner there. They often need
people.”
It seemed to him that the pioneering spirit of
the old settlers hadn’t quite died out. Perhaps the passengers
singing the songs on “The Eastern Queen” had had the right idea after all.
Australia was worth living in. There was a freshness and a newness
here. The air of Perth was a clear air. Harvey soon had
somewhere to live and found a job in the potato department of the fruit and
vegetable market.
Jake had come across a boarding house run by a
Mrs Hartington who was a gruff, kind-hearted widow in her seventies who felt
she had to be doing something. She loved starting businesses, and
then selling them, and in this she was usually successful. Her
last venture had been travelling through the outback in a van, selling dresses
to the wives of farmers and shopkeepers in the little communities dotted across
the huge expanse of Western Australia. She had given up these
marathon journeys a couple of years before, but her van was still parked on the
driveway, with some dresses hanging in the back. It was facing the
gate to the road, and the road led to the vast expanse of the
northwest. The little van seemed ready to set out again over the
miles of dry roads, and every time its owner passed it she had to struggle
against the temptation to throw some more stock in the back and head off out of
the city to sell dresses once more. For the time being, however, she
was running a boarding house in the western suburbs of Perth. Apart
from the newly arrived like Jake and Harvey, she had long-term lodgers who were
mainly failures in the hard business of life. They were men (she
only let rooms to men) who after years of work had still not managed to buy a
house of their own. They were the drifters.
William was a good example of the
type. He was a thin man in his late thirties who wore old-fashioned
clothes and a conventional length of hair. He also sported a
moustache and looked as if he had stepped out of the 1940s. He spent
his mornings writing letters applying for jobs and his afternoons watching old
films on TV. One afternoon, in the middle of a black and white
western from the 50s, he received a phone call. The phone was out in the hall
and as no one else moved, Harvey got up and answered it.
“William, it’s for you.”
William looked up bewildered. No one
ever phoned him. He didn't move.
“It’s for you!”
William finally got up, shuffled over to
the hall and took the call. A few minutes later he put down the phone, came
back to the lounge and announced, “You are now looking at the Assistant
Director of the Edgarley Hotel.”
It turned out that this
hotel was in some small town about 600 miles up the coast, and the manager must
have been rash or desperate enough to recruit William at a distance, on the
basis of his letter of application. William’s new job, announced in
this portentous way, was doomed to failure. He knew almost nothing
about managing hotels, and he was not the type to learn. He walked
about the house for the rest of the day in a slow and dignified way as befitted
the dignity of his new position. The next day he packed and
left. How long would he last in the Edgarley Hotel? How
long would it be before he was back in the boarding house, scanning the papers
for vacancies, making more applications, and watching black and white films on
TV through the afternoons?
Harvey enjoyed his working day. The
hours were from 5.30 in the morning to 1.00 pm, and despite the early start it
was not a bad timetable for a young man with no obligations. He strolled down
to the market in the summer morning and did his undemanding work with little
exertion. He emptied bags of potatoes on to a conveyor belt for bagging
up by the team of five women who chatted happily through the morning. He
finished at one o’clock, had a cool, thick milk shake outside the market, and
then strolled home. In the afternoon he lay on his bed and read from
the books on the boarding house shelves. In the lounge there were about three
feet of hardbacks from some long-defunct book club. They all had the same
binding, a glossy green with the titles picked out in gold. He
chose one which was the story of Michelangelo. It was worth the
read, and it was strange to be there in the new world, reading about the
old. He was starting a new life, involved every morning with
potatoes, but reading about renaissance Italy in the afternoon. Hadn’t he left
Europe behind, along with the renaissance and along with the past, both his own
and Europe’s?
In the evening he went with Jake into the centre
of Perth to a bar where there was a pool table. A couple of hours
later he walked back, dropped into bed and knew nothing till his alarm woke him
at 5.00. It wasn’t a bad life. Harvey was always
disposed to be happy, and if a total lack of responsibility is happiness (and
it can be for a short time), then probably his stay in Perth was one of his
happiest times of all.
This was helped by the fact that in his first
week in Perth, in the bar where he went with Jake to play pool, Harvey met
Lorna.
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