A bitter space

Page 1

A BITTER SPACE

Whenever the trainee opera singer next door let rip fragments of an aria, she trilled her top notes so defiantly, a crazed Callas about to be tossed into a vat of boiling oil, that Phil’s windows shuddered, his dog bristled and growled basso profondo, even the chandelier rankled. Segues into the recitative: ‘Mum,’ said the would-be diva, ‘I told you not to drink in front of Amy.’ ‘I don’t,’ protested the thick burr or drunken slur of a Scottish accent over the falsetto of baby wails. ‘Don’t lie to me, Mum! Even now you’re tiddly.’ Sounderama wall to wall, for their echo chamber of a devil’s kitchen hung over Phil’s bedroom. Brow-deep in Tolstoy, all of a sudden he’d be laid low by the high dudgeon of family cross-wires or gunshots sprayed from a cackling tele. Burrowing under the blankets, he’d beat his fists against the mattress, crying over and over, ‘Shut your bloody noise!’ Till he trembled into tears. Abruptly one Saturday, they decamped, sotto voce. Peace breaks out at last in the City of Harmony! sighed Phil and subsided into the suppleness of his bones. Until the following Saturday, when his nostrils twitched. Smoke? Thickening wisps of the stuff, eddying from next-door’s lawn . . . and . . . what’s that racketing? ‘. . . a mild autumn afternoon here at the Optus Oval. A perfect day for the footy. And you join Crackers and yours truly just as . . .’ flames whooshed up from wrenched-down branches, a slew of junk mail and broken-backed packing cases. ‘Ciao, mate. Rino Piccolini!’ boomed a three packs-a-day voice from beneath a Richmond beanie. A ripe tomato of a face was sucking on a ciggie as the grins slid home. But when in stasis, his dial was the dead ringer for Robert de Niro in Taxi Driver – eyes hard as ball bullets with a trace of fire. ‘Hello, I’m er Phil,’ he gasped, for the streams of smoke had looped back to choke his overtures. ‘Did you er know you can’t light fires here? Council regulations.’ ‘No worries, mate. We nearly finished.’ But the terminator, Rino was not; in fact, proved to be a serial constructor of protean shadows that had taken possession of his clouded mind, shaped to the sounds of concussion, for he tirelessly beat base metals and woods into the gold stamp of personal approval. At all hours he’d be hammering, drilling, tamping; or revving the lawnmower, edge-trimmer and buzz saw; or bawling, ‘’Ere, Violanda, the fg lawn’s gone ‘n’ died on us!’ ‘Nuh, it just needs a drop more water, that’s all.’ ‘’Ere, Viol. Vi!’ ‘What?’ ‘Where’s my fg fags?’ ‘How should I know? Don’t blame me! Look on yer fg bench!’ One weekend, Phil detected from his kitchen window, a verandah went up quicksmart out the back of the laundry door. Next weekend a carport was hammered and


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A bitter space by Michael Small - Issuu