Wild Bill woke to the smell of toast. Now
that he and Neil were back to the bachelor life (Bill’s wife and son were still
in Port Headland), they had returned to the domestic routine established by years
on the track. Neil, who never missed a sunrise, always prepared the breakfast -
four slices of toast with plum jam and a cup of tea. At first Wild Bill had
objected to this arrangement because of the element of servitude but gave up on
it when he realized Neil wouldn’t be happy any other way.
He gave up on trying
to change the menu for the same reason.
The kitchenette was empty of course. Wild
Bill new that Neil would be outside somewhere building or rebuilding a net as a
kind of morning meditation. Wild Bill didn’t know much about meditation but he
sure could’ve used some right now. A gnawing discomfort agitated in his stomach
and he knew exactly what it was. Tonight he was going to be tested.
He knew the eyes of all the skippers and
crews would be on him when he led the fleet for the first time. The eighty odd
boats of the company fleet and sixty odd independents were waiting to see if
this big-time blow-in on his fancy mother-ship could walk the walk.
He was wondering about that himself. The Gulf of Carpentaria is
a hundred and sixteen thousand square miles of water. Somehow he had to find
prawns, and he hadn’t so much as wet a net yet.
This was tiger-prawn season and the
fishing’s done at night. He had given the skippers the drill about how to
proceed once prawns were found. They all had their positions port, starboard
and astern - all very practical but for Wild Bill – all very theoretical. The
skippers who’d been kissing up to him for good positions had given him good
information about the most likely areas for prawns but after that he was on his
own.
He finished his breakfast without remembering
a single bite and went to find his brother.
Outside the last stragglers on the dawn
shuffle were making their way back to their own beds. Neil had never seen so
many early-risers. The position of the accommodation meant they
were smack bang in the middle of the four centres of infidelity – the single-women’s
quarters, the single men’s-quarters, the wharf and the caravan park. His
cheerful nature required him to wave when he recognized a face and he was
perplexed that everyone seemed to be busy examining the ground.
Minge Kerrigan
hurrying from the wharf towards the single women’s quarters, anxious to avoid Neil's wave, bumped into Esky
Ellis who was stumbling from the caravan park to the wharf. Toothpaste Lucy was on her way
back to the caravan park from the single-men’s quarters. To avoid eye-contact with Minge and Esky she had to loiter by Wild
Bill’s gate.
“Good morning,” said Wild Bill.
1969 was the year that the Canadian
sociologist Erving Goffman (1922 – 1982) published Strategic interaction, not so much a definition of a natural law as an analysis of the way we act with each
other. He came up with the term “impression management” and the notion that
having a conversation with someone is actually a theatrical performance where
you play both actor and audience.
A Goffman conversation is a situation where
each tries to give a good impression of herself to the other as an actor and to
assess the other’s acting performance as an audience.
Toothpaste Lucy’s problem was that she
couldn’t think of a credible storyline for being there at that time – aside
from the truth – I’ve just been over the single-men’s quarters fucking the new
electrician.
Not that anyone had asked.
The problem was compounded by Neil’s
insistence on winning the attention of Minge and Esky.
“Hello, hello,” he said.
Now that these two were drafted into the play
the complexities were exponential. An ensemble cast of five, on a limited
stage, with no props was being challenged to improvise some socially acceptable
script.
1969 was not a great year for the
performing arts - the academy awards nominations for best picture: Oliver (Mark Lester), Funny Girl (Barbara
Streisand), The Lion in Winter (Peter O’Toole), Rachel Rachel (Joanne Woodward)
and Romeo and Juliet (Leonard Whiting, Olivia Hussey).
Minge Kerrigan was no Olivia Hussey. She was in a panic. She’d just
come from the Costa Rica and a night
of passion with Toothpaste Lucy’s boyfriend, Back-ache Barry. He'd told Lucy he had to stay on board to lag a pipe.
Minge was grateful when Esky offered up an opening line.
Minge was grateful when Esky offered up an opening line.
“Beautiful day,” he said.
“Oh yes,” said Minge. “I love it first
thing in the morning.”
“You fucking bitch,” said Toothpaste Lucy
and they began to fight.
Wild Bill and Neil decided to head for the
relative sanity of the boat.
LOL. Fantastic! And I hope the plum jam was out of a can....? x
ReplyDeleteThanks Chris. It was the Letona Brand 26 oz can which Neil discovered when they were fruit-piccking in NSW in 1954. In Esperance, he was inconsolable and had to make do with IXL brand until Henry Jenkins could source the real thing. RIP Letona Canning Coy, Leeton NSW (1935-1994)
ReplyDeleteIXL ! That's the one.
ReplyDelete