plainly sorting things out, roping wrecks as if theyâre ornery bulls and dragging them off into the distance, all the time roaring with laughter at their private jokes.
When they show up, Bonanza comes to Footscray. Rob thinks about being a towie one day but never says anything because Emmett has other plans for the boy. Heâs already decided what each of them will do for a living. Rob is to be a scientist and Louisa, a doctor. The rest he isnât concerned with as long as they bring him credit. Privately he thinks; a man just canât stay innarested in all these bloody kids.
Whether or not heâd make it to being a scientist, Rob fancies himself an inky illustrated towie. He loves the way they are, every single thing about them: their lack of fear, their maleness, their answers to problems, their handlebar moustaches and especially their clothes, the rusty-looking jeans and thick belts with buckles the size of ashtrays. Dressed like that, he thinks, youâd have to be safe.
Fifty-five Wolf Street is on a blind corner with Murphy Street and small prangs are a constant. The accidents come at the cusp of the day when the traffic hots up. Following the screech of tyres and the smash comes the astonished stillness as drivers register the accident. The silence settles briefly and spreads out in circles until gradually, shocked or furious voices emerge from that muffled hollow.
Inside the house at the first sound of the screech, someone will yell, âQuick! Ring the towies!â And kids pounce on the phone as if itâs taking off. The number is dialled and the name Brown is delivered to the operator with a kind of formal solemnity and then the comfortable thought spreads through them like warm pee in a cold swimming pool: they might get the spotterâs fee! But being resolute realists they know the fee still might go to one of the rotten neighbours.
Still, they live in hope and after a decent interval, they amble outside to inspect the damage, looking real casual and sporadically concerned, though never greatly so because thereâs seldom blood.
***
Outside, the last rags of the day are pulling away from the clenched little pub. And inside the air is layered with shelves of smoke. Rafts of it surround the men like low cloud but they donât even notice. Itâs not far off six now and the swill is in full swing.
Emmett is drinking in a school of five and each of the five has five glasses lined up before them on the sawdust floor. Their legs make pillars of support for the beer and though they spit and joke and laugh, they donât spill a drop. Itâs just another afternoon at the Station Hotel in Paisley Street.
And then a little salesman named Jimmy Collins comes in flogging encyclopaedias and gets the royal treatment from the blokes. âLook at the little runt poofta,â someone says casually and Emmett turns a lazy eye toward the newcomer.
Jimmy pushes his little wire glasses up his nose and tries out a smile. Heâs wearing a thin, knitted tie and a tweed jacket, aimed at making him look intelligent. Heâs a law student working part-time at selling. He carries a leather satchel and a red sample book. Emmett notices the book straight away even though heâs well into a diatribe against governments, all of them. âOnly people you can ever trust,â he declares, âare union boys like us.â And he raises his glass, smiling, remembering something fine about unity.
Smoke trails from his fag. His audience agrees with every word heâs saying and thatâs as it should be but still, thereâs something about the salesman bloke with the books. Something niggles.
Jimmy, hunched at the bar, is thinking about pushing off, pubs are never very productive anyway and this one looks hopeless, but what do you expect in Footscray? he asks himself. Plus he can hardly breathe with all the smoke in here and he hawks unproductively a couple of times,