LITERATURE BY
Thor May
© Thor May 2005

On
Her Majesty's Australian Service
The Australian Government gave him a gun. It was 1964, before
the system got really professional. They said, Put it in your
pocket. Neat little Browning .32 automatic, but even that was
bulky. The Lad's strides weren't made for carrying a pistol. It
felt like an erection that had got out of control. Surely everyone
would notice him walking like a crab, with this hard, bumpy thing
on his thigh.
Mr. White wore a sympathetic face. He had opened the top left
hand draw of his large Public Service issue desk and dug under
some papers. Special job for you William. Anise will do the files
you're working on. I want you to go with Doug Ellis here. Doug
has to take some payrolls around the city. There's a lot of cash
in his briefcase
.
The Lad looked at Doug Ellis and didn't see him. He was one of
those blokes who fill up the space around you without actually
being there. Cities are full of them, harmless blobs on the radar
as you barge through train station crowds. If one turns out to
be a bank robber, you have no hope of giving a sensible description
to the police. Well officer, was blurry around the edges. No,
he didn't have a scar above the left eye... He might have been
Anglo or maybe he had a Syrian grandfather.. no no, not a typical
Syrian. Smelled of soap, I think. No, didn't really get that close.
Um, thank you sir. What was he wearing? Well, you know, just the
usual things. A pair of brown trousers from Gowings, or maybe
they were grey. Yes, he had a shirt on. Would have noticed if
he hadn't.
As it happened, Doug was an inoffensive, nice sort of man, as
most anonymous blobs are. But the Lad was eighteen and wondering
whether Superman was inside the brown trousers somewhere. It didn't
look likely. Doug had a briefcase, also brown, the stitching coming
undone down one side. DTE was in gold letters on the lower right
hand corner. The Lad wondered, but didn't ask, if the older man
got a mileage allowance for carrying around payrolls in the thing.
This was an age before couriers in zoot suits wore fibreglass
Luton luggage chained to their left wrists.
How do you, um, use this thing.., the Lad asked coyly. If he was
going to kill someone, the someone was bound to take a dim view
of the situation. Mr. White sniffed and showed him the trigger,
and a sliding safety catch that locked the mechanism. Then with
a flourish the office manager pushed something and a brace of
bullets dropped out of the handle. Ugly looking things. A reminder
of final ends. The Lad pulled a face. He had a bad habit of being
facetious, maybe not quite adult, they would say in the office.
And where are the bullets supposed to go when they, uh, get to
fall out the end of the barrel? Mr. White looked at him with a
twinge of apprehension. Smart brat. Callow, twitchy, big ears,
skinny as a rat. Why had the Bureau sent him this one? You have
to guard the payroll, he explained again patiently. Yeah, but
am I actually supposed to shoot anyone? Should I shoot 'em in
the head or between the toes? The polished granite fronts of downtown
would make a lovely shooting gallery. Ping, ping, little bits
of hot lead bouncing off the stones. Was Mr. White going to write
a sorry letter if one parted the hair of an eminent personage?
Mr. White's twinge gave way to a glare of stark misgiving. He
started to hunt around the room, and finally, from a lower drawer
that was obviously an outer resting place for excluded memories,
came up with a small booklet. The cover was red, but revolution
was not its theme; rather, something along the lines of "Use
Of Firearms By Government Employees". Take it away for a
read.
Even the Lad expected to meet a committee mind waffling in such
pamphlets. You had to do a translation job to get at the sticks
and stones of meaning. Don't take your new toy home for the weekend.
Don't wave it around under the tea lady's nose. Clean the cake
crumbs out of the barrel from time to time. Then it got mean.
If you happen to blow anyone away, well the Department has never
heard of you. You are a drop in from outer space, and had better
find a Martian lawyer to get you off the rap. Not only have you
nicked our gun, but you have used it to commit murder.
The Lad knocked on Mr. White's door again. The office manager
put his head down, struggled to keep any intrusion off his radar.
The Lad's juvenile sarcasm had drained away. He was cool and polite.
I'm not going to shoot anyone with the Browning, sir. The manager
dialled an urgent escape number. I'm not going to shoot anyone
Mr. White. Damn it. No one is asking you to shoot someone William.
You mustn't come to this office to say things like that. Now Doug
will call for you in a few minutes when he is finished with the
requisitions.
Anise was working on the Lad's invoices. She had rich wavy black
hair and amazingly white skin. Not that furry sort of skin with
blotches on it that unlucky girls dust off with powder, but a
sort of lucid, soft shimmer of life-force. He wished the old spider
of time could hold its web of wrinkles in check from such a virgin
field. She smiled; her serious dark eyes decoded his dismay. Back
already. How was the action? Weak grin. Going in a little while.
Did Anise know more about this business than he did? Time would
tell. He retreated to familiar territory. Having fun with the
paperwork?... Well, you know how it is. Roll of the eyes. They
both knew how it was. Some earnest dope had done a study on The
Form, the one the Lad did a small sum on day after day. Ninety-two
operations, a solid accumulation of man hours, marching from varnished
desk to varnished desk, each annotation from a hand slightly pinker,
more wrinkled and veined, until the last claw in a partitioned
plywood office at the end of the big room signed away another
ten pound invoice. You had to admit that the Public Service was
accountable. Every cardigan was accountable to the cardigan sitting
in front of it, and each June a report would definitely be written.
Mr. Freighton has shown a solid performance in the last twelve
months. If he could just get over the unfortunate habit of scraping
his chair, I would recommend him for promotion at an appropriate
juncture.
Anise had lunch in a place on the corner of Queen Street. The
Lad had seen her there two days ago. Wanted to go in, then flushed
at the idea. After all, what did he really know about her? Maybe
she was waiting for some fellow wearing a cardigan. Even a Suit.
She was pretty enough to go for a Suit. At fourteen pounds a week
he could hardly afford a pair of trousers from Gowings... A pile
of forms slid off his desk; he straightened up. The lump suddenly
stopped balancing on his thigh and pulled his pocket with a soft
thump onto the chair. He leaned back for a moment, stretching...
Just imagine the sandwich bar in Queen Street. She would be sitting
there, on a stool by the counter bar they had against a street
window. He would come in casually, scrape up a stool. How's it
going? ...Well, you know how it is, she'd say, and roll her dark
eyes. And before she could look around for the Suit who had promised
to come without fail at ten past twelve, he'd put the little Browning
automatic on the table between them. Had a job to do, he'd say,
like another coffee?
Doug was standing two paces behind him. Just standing there like
a blob. How are you supposed to know when a blob is waiting for
you? Well, are you right lad? We'd better get a move on.
Doug ambled out to the lift. It had a folding black metal grill
that you had to slide back, and a sort of double acting stainless
steel door that had to be held back too. No doubt the designer
had done a fine job of discouraging the punters from exiting between
floors, but it was a two handed job getting into the thing before
everything slammed shut. The Lad did the honours, keeping an eye
out for foreign agents while Doug breasted into the contraption.
As the morning wore on, the Lad came to realize his true agenda
in this routine, as lift door holder opener.
The Departments, it emerged, lived in various infestations around
the inner city. There would be the brown marble facade of a bank,
or insurance company, a man with thin hair in a blue shirt just
inside the front door, a lift cage. On the third floor, when they
emerged, the light would be subdued in a hall with green linoleum
that was disinfected once a week. The second varnished door on
the left would say ACCOUNTS in gold lettering, and just behind
it a chest high counter would separate its anointed servants from
the brute public. There was always a faint smell of dry paper
about these places.
The Lad never got past the counters. He would stand there, feeling
the lump on his thigh and trying to look like anything but Dick
Tracey. Various bloodless bodies in the outer office would understand
this modesty perfectly. Eye contact was avoided at all times.
Here were people who were seriously devoted to remaining inconspicuous.
Their letters of reply would be written from thick books of boilerplated
paragraphs, signed by the Commissioner's rubber stamp. Dear Sir,
In regard to your enquiry of the fifth inst. Their lives were
planned to deliver 2.4 children in the suburbs. They sat like
dough balls, waiting to be flavoured with the Commissioner's cautious
directives.
So he stood and fidgeted. In the meantime Doug would wheeze through
to a partitioned office, glassed above waist height. Paper would
change hands, an initial on each side, maybe a comment about the
football if the other man was close enough in rank and generation.
It was probably Doug's big day out in the week, he thought with
a reluctant twinge of sympathy.
They were on the home stretch when it fell apart. Their little
choreograph at lift doors and the two step routines in pastel
coloured hallways were always harder to keep up in the anarchy
of city streets. Sunlight itself seemed an offence to their complexions.
The scrums at street crossings, the hurried zigzag of that footballer
bearing down on the right ... Who was the Lad supposed to be ready
to shoot at anyway? And on the home stretch what was there to
take?
Suddenly Anise was there. In the street, leaning lightly against
a yellow light post. To this day, he doesn't know how she came
to be there, but it was like a thing fated. Or was it planned?
Anise was striking in the streetscape, you couldn't fail to notice
her. The insouciance was practiced, relaxed, almost professional.
A lock of hair hung over one eye, her hands were slightly clasped,
she balanced on one leg with the other sandal crossing an ankle
below her long, sheer dress. She could have stopped any other
man on the footpath dead in his tracks, but her eyes were only
for him. How's it going little brother? How many notches on the
pistol butt?
The Lad put his hand in his pocket, briefly taking the wretched
implement's weight off his belt. Nothing to it really. Spending
my life going in and out of lifts. Anything has got to be better
than working on The Form though. He shifted his feet a little
uncomfortably. Anyway, what are you ... There was a shout, a sort
of hoarse, strangulated sound that wasn't like Doug at all. His
question was destined to remain one of the great unspoken mysteries
of history. Doug was gone, and so was the brown briefcase with
DTE in the corner.
He looked around in panic. Not a sign, not a hint. Gone in the
crowd. Bodies moist with summer heat brushed by. A small girl
dropped her iceblock on his shoe and started to wail. The mother,
florid with domestic cares, glared at him. He swung back to the
yellow post. Anise too was gone. He began to get the dizzy sensation
of being in a universe where the rules didn't work anymore. For
a wild moment he felt a desperate need to pull out the Browning
and shoot up some headlights. Damn it, whose conspiracy was this
anyway? Then a mood, a wave rippled across the street, like an
idea tinged with blue, shading the midday light, washing past,
dimming the passers-by, receding with them until he stood in crowded,
clammy isolation.
The Lad's shirt clung, wet under the armpits, his hands flapped
uselessly. For a few days, a week or two, he had been on the cusp
of some great enterprise, hidden just beyond view but boundless
in its promise. A brief orientation period in Brisbane, they had
said, before assignment to the national capital. The entrance
tests had gone well, an aptitude they said, for anything he chose
to do, almost. The Service was vast, had a niche for every ability.
Now it was all a matter of attitude, and waiting, and the recommendation
from one of those pink veined bodies wrapped behind a plywood
partition somewhere.
Doug was at his desk, adding handwritten numbers on The Form,
double checking steadily without passion, like a weary old nag
that knows the way home. His glance barely flickered. Mr. White
wants to see you. The voice rustled, an ancient paragraph of boilerplated
words. Doug no longer knew him. Maybe he never had.
Well, we have your assignment. Its very abrupt I'm afraid. They've
booked you for tomorrow morning, on the 11am flight. Is that possible?
Look, you had better go home now. You are sure to have a lot of
packing to do. Yes, I'll take that weapon. Thank you. We haven't
had much chance to get acquainted. Was there the hint of a sad
smile there?. Don't worry about the Forms. Anise will finish them
off when she gets back. Anyway, best of luck. He was holding out
his hand. A dry, veined hand, not hot, not cold. Later, on the
aeroplane, the Lad thought, I don't want to live long enough to
have a hand like that.
The new Department digested economic information. Each day there
were stacks of large index cards to write numbers on. They had
holes around the edges. You clipped some of the holes and shook
them out into little piles with knitting needles. At 5pm, you
went three miles across the national capital's carefully planned
boulevards to a fibro hostel built for junior employees. In two
years you could move up to a slightly better hostel, with two
kinds of desert.
After thirteen months and twenty five-thousand index cards the
Lad stood up one day in the office. Outside it was Autumn, gusts
of wind swept at the fallen leaves. In the office only an endless,
lifeless shuffle of bleached paper on paper disturbed the hiss
of the air conditioner. Fuck you! he shouted; damn your stupid
forms, choke on your index cards. I came dux of my school, I can
think, I can fight, I have the world at my fingertips. And you've
fucking buried me alive. Is this what my country has to offer?
The line of cardigans swayed like an ancient reed bed in a backwater,
grey, stems weak, threatened with a sudden storm. Then they sighed
and turned back to the Form. An answer was not in the regulations.
There was nobody at his side.
---end---
Postscript
The essential features of this story are biographical. In 1964
the author was inducted into the Australian Commonwealth Public
Service at a base level. The initial engagement was in Brisbane,
where he was kept for a short time pending assessment and placement
into a branch of the federal bureaucracy in the national capital,
Canberra. Shortly after beginning clerical work in Brisbane, the
office manager did take a Browning 0.32 calibre pistol from his
desk, and ask the author to use this for security guard purposes
while accompanying an older man around the city on foot. The older
man was carrying payrolls, or so the new employee was told. No
weapons training of any kind was offered. The young employee did
insist on some kind of guidance, and was eventually given a public
service booklet (which had little of value to say). Even at 18,
the author was unimpressed by this cavalier official approach
to distributing weapons, and bluntly told the office manager that
he wouldn't use the gun under any circumstances. His attitude
wasn't warmly received. He was told "don't say that".
Although he did the 'guard duty', an assessment was evidently
made that he wasn't the kind of compliant employee they needed
for, uh, adventurous situations. He was quickly buried in a dead-end
clerical job in Canberra, but revolted after 13 months ...

Thor May
© Thor May 2005
Thor
May is one of almost a million Australians who are no longer attached
to Australian real estate, but keep more or less Australian software
in their heads. The glittering prizes in his first cultural cage
rarely seemed within reach, so in early adulthood he picked the
locks, and has spent most of his adulthood in the shadowlands
where ideas overlap. To pay for dinner, he has been teaching English
to non-native speakers, and lecturing linguistics, since 1976.
This work has taken him to seven countries in Oceania and East
Asia, mostly with tertiary students, but with a couple of detours
to teach secondary students and young children. He has trained
teachers in Australia, Fiji and South Korea. At the moment he
is teaching in Chungju National University, South Korea. Many
of his papers, essays and stories may be seen on his website at
http://thormay.net


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