Sunday, November 04, 2012

#7: Together Seven Years Apart


Memoir - Week 7

Although Harry and I had become separated, we kept meeting up before separating again like little blobs of oil gradually adjusting to the water’s surface. When we did meet up we’d consolidate, updating each other with anecdotes about the night’s proceedings.

After a couple of hours, Erin announced she and some of the girls were heading over to a club across the road. Erin did ask me and Harry if we’d like to join them, but I said no – weirdly – normally it would have been the logical thing to do, no question. But this night reality was a little unusual and I remember thinking if this was meant to be, it will be, leave it alone. So, like hacking their way through dense scrub, Erin and two or three other girls inched their way through the King ‘O’s crowd, and into the hands of fate I fell. Yet somehow I felt reassured I would see Erin before the night packed its bags.

My instincts proved to be correct and I sighed a silent relief. Erin returned with a couple of the girls an hour or so later – her face displaying happiness that I had not left the pub. We started chatting again. Before long, Harry and I were once more standing shoulder to shoulder, almost at the exact same spot when Erin and Carol had first entered. Only this time, a jumbled group consisting of Erin and most of the university girls, with a couple of drunken strangers thrown in, had formed in front of us. By now my lips had been intermittently pulling on a lit cigar, and my mouth gulping down a frothy beer.

Then it happened in a brief moment. The words suddenly danced their way off my tongue into Erin’s ears. I turned to Erin. 

Sunday, October 28, 2012

#6: Together Seven Years Apart


Memoir - Week 6 

By now King O’s had swelled to a throng. Nothing like a healthy throng to whip up some buzz in the atmosphere. It also meant Erin and I had to stand increasingly closer to each other, as if the excitement was fusing us together under the spell of inevitability.

“So, are all of you girls studying the same thing?”

“No, it’s a mix. I’m doing a semester here for my Bachelor of Arts in Integrative Studies” answered Erin with a smile.

“Oh, yeah - what’s integrative studies?”

Her big blue eyes moved sideways in a cute way, her head obliquely tilted with the quick rising of her shoulders, and a little grin formed on her juicy lips. She had answered this question many times before, and it took some explaining I could see.

“Well, basically, it’s taking…integrating…different ideas and perspectives and using that in what you’re studying. My focus is on health education and I’m really interested in HIV AIDS prevention. So, you’re looking at that with the biological, economic or social aspects – things like that, you know, it’s not one thing  -

“Oh yeah. I see”

“ - yeah. Not just one aspect – dya you see what I’m saying?”

“Yeah, that’s interesting”

“Did you study?” she asked.

“Yeah, I finished in 1999 – I did languages and applied linguistics. In Brisbane.”

“Oh, wow. So, you’re a cunning linguist!” She shot this back. Her eyes delivered it.

‘Yes. I am” My eyes also did the talking. We were in the bedroom now.
 

Sunday, October 21, 2012

#5: Together Seven Years Apart


Memoir - Week 5
  
Introductions out of the way, it turned out I had stumbled across a bunch of girls – mostly study-abroad students doing a stint at the University of Canberra. There were around eight of them who had entered the infamous King O’s, including two Canadians, a Norwegian and…Erin Ogilvie from Roanoke. Virginia. The United States of America.  There was also Carol, an Australian student Erin had become friends with through the university’s orientation day.

“No, but I’ll buy you a beer” Erin said.

This was the first time for me any girl had replied with this cheeky response, and I admired Erin for her independence and confidence. It struck me as a good start and only bolstered my feeling that this was something, that she was someone quite different. She hadn’t said no to me. She wasn’t being negative. She had gently taken control of opening the gate and allowed me to prospect on her land, you might say.

Contrary to the predictable convention, I followed the ‘girl’ as we side-stepped, bumped and brushed our way past the seemingly invisible others to the bar.  On-tap Carlton draught we drank, the conversation did flow. Erin’s large blue eyes were pretty and mesmerising, and I remember beholding them on a woman as I never have before. 
 

Sunday, October 14, 2012

#4: Together Seven Years Apart


Memoir - Week 4

Casual glances and shy smiles at each other gave me confidence to push through the universal boy-meets-girl awkwardness.

I have to talk to her. I’m going to talk to her. 

“Hi, how’s your night been?”

“It’s been good, thanks”, she said with an American accent.

An American accent! – even better; a different species in this little pond here tonight.

“I’m Julian”

“I’m Air ren and this is my friend, Carol”

Air ren? I honestly couldn’t make out her reply. The combination of my residual nervousness and her accent had scrunched up what she had said. 

“Sorry, how do you spell that?”

“E, r, i, n”, she said.

“Oh, Erin, sorry! Hi, nice to meet you”

You idiot, you just made her spell out her name to you. Okay, salvage mode now. Keep this ball rolling – acknowledge Carol and keep chatting.
 



Sunday, October 07, 2012

#3: Together Seven Years Apart


Memoir - Week 3

A sort of fuzzy greyness filled the pub space and overhead the blonde a perfectly centred spotlight lit her presence. Sounds cut back to a muffled hum as she headed my way.

Before I knew it, the blonde had walked past me and was standing, slightly away, to my right with the other girl on her far side. The blonde’s good looks aside, I sensed something deeper as a wave of familiarity washed over my off-guard self. My brain didn’t realise it at the time, but my heart knew something special had arrived when I hadn’t been seeking it.

Seconds later, I returned a little grin to Harry as I shifted to my left – his eyebrows were raised indicating approval of the girl who had just gained my interest.

Brains and hearts aside, there was another aspect that I couldn’t ignore even if I’d tried really, really hard - she so obviously descended from a fantastic line of buxom predecessors.

Monday, October 01, 2012

#2: Together Seven Years Apart


This week is the first time I've posted on my writing blog ahead of my cartoon blog. Only because I haven't got a damn cartoon ready!

Memoir - Week 2

This night, though, I was not actively spotting. Rather than chatting with Harry and enjoying myself, my mood had somewhat a morose hue to it. I couldn’t weight down rising thoughts that my life in the Bush Capital was turning stale. Plus, I was seeing the same old people and I was standing in the same old pub and it was the same old end of the week night. Same-shit stuff. My life explained almost in a mathematical equation, conveying all the predictability and dullness that math is renowned for and feared.

Julian had always feared predictability and a kind of dullness in his life. He feared being left out and in an empty room with only a keyhole to look through – a single eye with which to observe others interacting and enjoying life. 
 
He remembered thinking as a young boy how the late afternoon calls of Australian birdlife in the garden signified the end of the day – particularly the wistful voicing of the spotted turtle doves. Had he spent enough time outside playing with friends, and making the most of a sunny day? Too late – the birds had sung their song and the keyhole was coming into focus. Another day had become irretrievable, lost with the ominous clouds in his mind he was yet to fathom. 

Still, he took solace that the birds’ regular calling also heralded chance anew in the fresh day to come. Just one more day – he would think – and the sun would rise never again to set.

All of a sudden an interruption snapped my contemplative mood. Two girls – one blonde the other a brunette – had walked in through the front door and were making their way up towards the bar area in slow motion, where Harry and I were staked out on the fly paper floor. Hello, hello! Predictability and dullness might become casualties to the night after all.

Monday, September 24, 2012

#1: Together Seven Years Apart


I do tend to focus more on my cartoon blog. But, finally, here's a posting for this writing blog after neglecting it for a while. I'm starting to post snippets of a memoir I'm working on - Together Seven Years Apart - a story about my wife and me. Hopefully, posting the snippets will force me to find more time to write and so keep posting - and to actually finish the story. That's the plan...You know how it is.

Memoir - Week 1 

Exactly two days after we happily celebrated our first wedding anniversary, I left my wife. June 28, 2010.

Leaving wasn’t easy - but leaving seemed to be the only way forward.

Right after I first ever met her on that cold Canberra night, I had also fallen in love with her. Friday May 16, 2003. Somewhere around 10.30pm.

Me and a friend, let’s call him Harry, were shoulder to shoulder, standing semi-glued to the always made-sticky-by-spilt-drinks floor, warm inside King O’Malley’s – a popular Irish pub downtown Canberra.

For anyone unfamiliar with the capital of Australia, Canberra doesn’t really have a downtown as such. Although locally referred to as the centre or city, it’s actually like another suburb of Canberra – too small to qualify as any downtown proper. Too quiet and leafy to be “downtown”. 

Okay, too boring. I said it.

We hadn’t been there long and I was not in the mood for being out or around people. At approximately 10.30pm, King O’s – as everyone called it – was still filling up. Purposely positioned where we were, Harry could readily admire any entering guys that took his fancy, and I could easily spot approaching, attractive girls.