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Denise Goodfellow (Lawungkurr Maralngurra) It was a beautiful spot, hidden deep below the ancient sandstones and conglomerates of the Arnhemland escarpment. Here dark-leaved trees towered over pure white sands that had never known the imprint of shod feet unlike nearby Kakadu National Park with its thousands of visitors. From a multitude of countries they crowded the famous rockart sites and waited in cacophonous snake queues to board boats that would take them through wetlands, country that for thousands of years had known little noise but the cries of waterfowl and the thunder of storms in the wet season. But in the secret spot all was silent. And it was here that Mary met the woman from the past. She had sat on a bank near a pool for almost the whole morning, lulled by tinkling waters flowing in silver braids between the grey boulders. Nervously at first she dipped her toes in the water. But then gentle nibbles started her giggling and she looked down to find rainbowfish, red, blue and yellow iridescences schooling around her feet, their filmy tails waving in the gentle current. Delighted she watched a turtle poke its long neck up to glance at her quizzically, and she pulled a face in return. And rapturous was the best way to describe the overwhelming emotion she felt when a tiny azure kingfisher with a rust-coloured breast perched on a twig just above her head. How different from corporate life! She had left
that and Washington behind a week ago, when plane, and then helicopter
travel brought her here to this haven where for the first time
in her adult life she didn't need defenses erected against It would have been perfect, except for him; that guide everyone said she 'had to have'. Mary had to
admit she thought him attractive, at first. But within the Furthermore
he went on and on about Aboriginal people, calling them But that was hours ago and he still hadn't returned and Mary was dying for a cup of coffee. Rising she stretched, and brushing sand and twigs from her legs, whe turned towards the nearby camp. And then she stopped dead in her tracks. A young woman stood there beside the campfire, but blending so well with the dappled shade that bits of her seemed incomplete. Mary could not believe her eyes. She had come, at great expense, to the wilderness, a refugee from the metropolis, seeking to be alone and, first she had to have a guide, and now this intruder. Worse, this woman was probably his tart. He had done nothing but ridicule Aboriginal people and yet he had a black bit on the side. Bitter disappointment swamped Mary and she glowered at the girl who now sat in the sand before her with eyes downcast. Shoving past with an audible sigh of resentment Mary searched through the provisions only to find there was no coffee or milk. She took the boiling kettle off the fire and with steaming mug in hand plumped herself heavily onto a blue and white-striped canvas chair, thinking grim thoughts about the guide. Well, they were probably both being used, she thought. The little
flow of sisterhood caught her off-guard and before she knew Above, the afternoon sun streamed down in rays through the faint blue haze that arose from the gum trees carpeting the escarpment. Smells of the bush made more potent by the sun's heady warmth intertwined with steam and woodsmoke and were wafted on a whisper of a cool southeast breeze that shivered the leaves and ruffled Mary's hair. She settled herself deeply into the chair lullabied by far-away birdsong and the soft crooning of the woman sitting in the sand. She didn't
know what woke her. With eyes still sleep-heavy she gazed around
her forgetting for a moment where she was. And then she saw the
woman. She was doing something that Mary couldn't quite see,
fiddling with the wrapping of white bark,.Mary assumed it was,
around her waist. Laying them carefully in the sand the girl tenderly brushed them clean of clinging bark and taking her time arranged them, anatomically in perfect order, shifting one long bone a little to the side and adjusting the pelvis and then the skull until she was satisfied that it was just right. Then her fingers lovingly stroked the tiny head as mothers have stroked their babies since time began. Mary almost jumped up and down in her excitement. What a tale to take home! This would have her colleagues green with envy - talk about one-upmanship in holidays. Who else? It was then
that other emotions thundered into her braiin, clouded her Mary felt a
lump in her throat and tried to fight it, desperately searching
the corners of her mind for a smart comment. But even a Suddenly the male faces of the boardroom swam before Mary's eyes. They were featureless but mocking in the presence, and she suddenly found herself embarrassed beyond belief at her tears. Pulling her hand away she averted her face, "I think we need another cup of tea", she said and the girl began to pack the bones away, brushing the sand away carefully and rolling them gently in the soft paper bark. Mary poured
the fresh tea into the two mugs and turned back, arm But no one
was there. Only the imprint of a tiny skeleton remained in
This short story is the intellectual property of Denise Goodfellow and is protected under international copyright law. Email: Denise Goodfellow |