The Ballad of Siddy Church
Lin Van Hek writes about the poetry of aunties in a novel that is at once thrilling and filled with the memories of wilful women. When Eadie Wilt disappears during the flood, everyone thinks she has drowned. But Siddy Church’s granddaughter has more life to live in a household filled with stories and larger-than-life characters.
1030724317
The Ballad of Siddy Church
Lin Van Hek writes about the poetry of aunties in a novel that is at once thrilling and filled with the memories of wilful women. When Eadie Wilt disappears during the flood, everyone thinks she has drowned. But Siddy Church’s granddaughter has more life to live in a household filled with stories and larger-than-life characters.
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The Ballad of Siddy Church

The Ballad of Siddy Church

by Lin van Hek
The Ballad of Siddy Church

The Ballad of Siddy Church

by Lin van Hek

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Overview

Lin Van Hek writes about the poetry of aunties in a novel that is at once thrilling and filled with the memories of wilful women. When Eadie Wilt disappears during the flood, everyone thinks she has drowned. But Siddy Church’s granddaughter has more life to live in a household filled with stories and larger-than-life characters.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781742193991
Publisher: Spinifex Press
Publication date: 03/28/1997
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 261
File size: 249 KB

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The Ballad of Siddy Church


By Lin Van Hek, Jo Turner, Janet Mackenzie

Spinifex Press

Copyright © 1997 Lin van Hek
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-74219-399-1



CHAPTER 1

The Poetry of Aunties


My grandmother was a difficult woman, you could not get around it. She was born on three different occasions in three different locations and she said her name was Siddy Church. Late at night, she would sit like a giant curious toad, her heavy-lidded eyes turning with her head, her pupils like magic bullets about to gun down any real conspiracies in the room. Her past was too big and diverse for her to govern; people talked about her shady past. She had relinquished her right to her own story.

Countless individuals in the small town where we lived knew the story of Siddy Church and Joe Flood. I remember my grandfather, Joe: he played the mandolin. He sat out on the great sweeping verandah on the first floor of our hotel at the top of the big hill. This verandah ran around three sides of the building and you could see out over everything in the town. The river at the back beyond the chook pen where the lake Aboriginals camped. The ice factory at the side and the bridge with its suspension curves and creaking timbers. The wide deserted street that came from nowhere. This was where I first knew miracles. The beginning of time.

The town had a story with Siddy Church as its primary object of worship. It involved the long love affair and marriage of Siddy Church and Joe Flood. For those who studied the situation closely, a host of other unknown possibilities could pump up their big alien brains. For no sideshow trickery was ever used to conceal the fact that, at thirty-nine years of age, Siddy Church had fallen in love with a woman old enough to be her mother. If Siddy Church had a husband, she was most certainly a husband to my Auntie Mantel Bonlevi who always called her Sid.

I was a child with many aunties. The hotel was teeming with them. A hotel run by aunties. The cooks, the yardwomen, the cleaning women. I grew up with the poetry of aunties. On summer mornings, they would turn on the hoses and water down the tiles on the hotel's facade. All those women laughing and getting their feet wet. I gasp at the memory of the steam rising from the footpath. The sudden silence as they turn off the water and polish with collected fury the brassware on the entrance doors. Joe Flood played his ukulele on the floor above them. You could hear him tapping his feet on the floorboards. I cannot remember my birth or initiation into the demon knowledge that women could love women. The double marriages of Siddy were two separate and different events. The aunties were content. They stood on the sidewalk, hands on hips, sniffing the air. "Heave ho," they said as they hoisted Joe Flood from his bed and washed his backside. "What's wrong with Grandpa Joe?" I would ask. "Nothing that he can remember," laughed the aunties as they buttoned his crisp shirt. "You really are a ravishing man," said Siddy as she shaved his transparent cheeks. "We love you, Joe Flood," said the aunties a hundred times a day in the middle of everything. He had the place of honour in the kitchen. "He used to be a commie bastard," said Grandma Siddy, watching him play his slippery melodies. The afternoon stretched, the wonders gushing forth. What did Siddy carry in her big black handbag? Rolls of money tied up with handkerchiefs. Definitely! Everyone had seen those. Many had been given one, in troubled times. There was a tiny gun in there, too. She showed it to me, held it up to the light and I stretched my plump fingers up towards it. "She was once a religious woman," the aunties told me, "before those boys died." I already knew from my mother that her brothers had died and these events had changed everything. "I had a crisis with the church," Siddy told me, "but I still like the Marys." When the priest came into the bar, she quoted the scriptures while pouring his beer. He had known her for a long time. "I went to him after my boys died and he told me, 'It's God's Will.' This church of yours suffers from mystic laziness," she told him. He was in favour of cooperation with her, since she was the owner of the only hotel in three hundred miles. This renegade to the faith could diminish his voice considerably. Siddy was continually threatened by law and church for her friendships with the lake people, especially for allowing them into the bar. She would quote for the priest's benefit, "I act with Jesus to give greater privileges to the Gentiles, allowing them into full membership with the receiving of communion." Which everyone knew meant a free drink. When my beautiful mysterious mother, Paddy, came charging at me with her fists, Siddy or the aunties would lift me away, wrap me in their folds. "She has the grand fury in her, your Mum." They would nod their Celtic heads together and put their hands deeper into their trouser pockets. If I had escaped, I would be laughing with them, but sometimes Mum hurt me and it was a deep feeling in my belly that words could never tell about. "I want another Mother," I would cry. Then Grandma Siddy would put some salt in my soup and say something Big: "If you don't get what you want, think of all the things that you don't get, that you don't want!" To Auntie Mantel Bonlevi on her birthday card every year she wrote, "I seek Thee and sure as dawn Thou appearest as perfect light to me." She wanted to change the name of our pub to The Wilderness or The Mountain of Transfiguration. I agreed that these names sounded better than The Club Hotel which had nothing to do with the poetry of aunties.

CHAPTER 2

The Last Days of Rufus


On a hot January day in 1950, I was up on the verandah with Joe Flood high above the hotel. He was perched neatly on an old hallstand. His still black hair slicked back from the bony alabaster forehead made him look brainy. He was wheezing and took little breaths between trills on his mandolin. There had been an episode that week involving my grandmother's cat Rufus. This particularly exquisite creature was dying, dishevelled and huffing in his elegant dialect. The house was suffering. It was known to the whole drinking public that we were waiting for the cat, whom Siddy thought of as an incarnation of an angel, to die. We were told that cats prefer to die in seclusion. Rufus determined to conceive the project as a public spectacle. His behaviour, vanities, ties of the heart, despaired of losing their way. When Mantel put a hot water bottle in her bed, he settled on the mound. His heat-seeking became obsessive. He staggered along kitchen sideboards and stretched out on cakes taken from the oven. During Queen Elizabeth's South Gippsland tour, one such cake was prepared. It was to be served after the flag-raising on the lawn outside our pub. This very splendid cake was cooling in the manner prescribed. Rufus could not discuss the crisis which was racking him. Siddy could not, in her distracted preparation for the Royal visit, satisfy his hunger for a kindred spirit. He fell into an exhausted sleep and the phantom of death could not have frightened him more than Siddy's shriek when she found him, with no malicious intent, on top of her cake. He groped to find his way off; the soft squishes of sponge stuck to his paws.

He found his way blindly to the bar and sat on the mahogany counter; the customers fondled him. He moaned his sleepy death-rattle. Everyone said "Poor Siddy's cat, Rufus." Finally, the man from the ice factory suggested to Siddy that he take Rufus to a kindly vet in the next town. He sent animals off with miraculous consoling potions that drugged away plague and catastrophe. In the supple rush of death, a pleasurable floating euphoria carried them gently away. Siddy was heartbroken. Finally, she said goodbye to Rufus who drove off with the man from the ice factory.

After the Queen's visit and time and counselling had shadowed her longing, Siddy began to make overtures to other cats. She still inserted whole sentences about Rufus into whatever else she was talking about. When the man from the ice factory came in for his mid-morning, her seraph eyes rested on him. She pulled his beer and held his eye; slanted, slate-coloured eyes. They shared yet another adaptation of the Rufus fable, then went about their separate tasks. She pulling beers, he drinking them. On a hot holiday morning in a small town, when the bar is crowded and the humour is high, if you take a listening breath you will hear whispered on the air all the secrets of the town.

Siddy Church listened and heard the secret ... Rufus had been thrown into the furnace of the ice factory, alive. Though nervous of the act immediately afterward, time and a few beers loosened the story, "He had driven straight across the lane after he left the pub with Rufus." He reasoned that a quick death in the flames would be just as good as messing around with the bludger vet. He strode with the cat to the iron-gated furnace doors, hooked them open and plunged the cat in. He made casual mottled reference to Rufus's heat-seeking habits. The story became a laconic anecdote told in the colonial way, festooned with squinting eye movements. His mind wanders. Sound-bites reach poisoned ears, fastballs of slow dying words. She waits for more chatter in her listening. He squats there; neurons flare through her skull. He does not notice that people have begun to move away.

I was there. What I saw was that my grandmother was wreaking havoc. Something piteous and imbecilic was contained in the grief that flew about the room. Signals were cycled in such a way as to control the minds of the people. The rage careering through time caused a new communication, a mind-dread. The vibratory hostility could have been used to drive an engine. Timeworn notions of reliable decency surfaced on behalf of Rufus the cat.

It was 1950, before our world was addicted to petroleum, pesticides and pharmacueticals. 1950, in its frozen state, takes the form of that day for me when a man was killed running backwards from our citadel, the awesome shadowy forces of public opinion pyramided against him ... hit by a two-toned Holden on the Princes Highway.

CHAPTER 3

Joe Flood's Sleep


Everyone agreed that Siddy Church had done nothing to cause the death of the man from the ice factory. When the police came, they wanted to speak to the man of the house. The dribble was wiped off Joe Flood's chin and he was propped in a corner and spoken to "man to man". Never once did he come out of the sweetplace that he had migrated to, years before. His own personal hearing-loss eliminated any displays of concern or knowledge of the event. The police, typically, acknowledging his complete indifference to the proceedings, thought him a serious man, with no real input into the affair. The aunties said nothing; the house sync, all the way around was "Shshh ..."

The inhabitants of the house napped. Grandma and Mantel Bonlevi hibernated in their shaded room all week. Out on the veranda, I bounced on the old bedstead springs to the mandolin tunes. The afternoon prepared itself for the lethargic attendance of long hot sunshine which bought many thirsty drinkers into the bar downstairs. I was working on a somersault on my springs and Joe Flood was finger-picking primly on the hallstand.

The evening comes down and Joe Flood cracks his knuckles. We go to bed at the same time. Out of the window, as I fall asleep, I see my name written in clouds of sky-writing. The sun drops in the exhausted hot sky, my lids are pulled shut. I touch the larger life of dream where the wind blows the pages of the day across the great lawn out into the falling darkness. I sleep for a long time, then some deep sad thing wakes me.

I can hear voices. Every light is lit. Caves of shadow. Light globes tremble. Eerie breezes shudder through open windows. My mother is not in bed beside me. Our door is open. I trail my too-long nightgown out into the light. Overhead lights sway. Everything is creaking and knocking and the wallpaper dances and melts into that yellow that my mother calls ochre. It is a word I have newly learned and I see it everywhere. I am not sure if this is real time or dreaming. I cross the river of corridor into the room that is usually locked. Gran and Joe's room is where the money from the bar is kept. It is wide open ... this fascinating place. The wallpaper has birds and flowers, the ceiling is high and gold with branches of fruit growing over my head. Sometimes on hot afternoons, my Gran comes and lies on the bed and talks to Joe and undoes his braces and I lie between them. No one cleans this room. It is left as it is. The small tables are piled with clutter: papers and saucers of silver coins and hairbrushes full of my grandmother's thick white hair. The mantelpiece spills over with silver-framed photographs of all of us. Handsome Joe Flood, the agitator, in Union flare-ups. Joe Flood in Russia. Holding hands with my mother, Paddy and her long-dead brothers in the old house garden. My favourite picture is of Mantel and Gran and Joe Flood, hand-coloured and radiant in Sydney after the war. My gran has her big black handbag but she has a flowery dress and looks young and beautiful. I have never seen my Gran without her black apron. The first drawing I ever did, told this story, "My gran has a body like an apron." Her hair is pure white, but in this photograph it is black. A copy of this photograph is in Mantel's room down the hall. That room is clean and polished but not as fascinating as this messy place. Here there is a chamber pot under the bed and it is usually brimming with piss, and musical instruments are standing all around.

Joe Flood sits in bed eating his cut apple, and Siddy does the book work under the lamp at the window. After he has fallen asleep, she goes to play cards with my mother and Mantel. I know this from asking questions. An accepted part of my life was that asking questions could cause everything to get bigger, more intriguing but sometimes muddier. I look around the door. Joe Flood is sleeping under the light of the bedside lamp. He is grinning and one arm is hanging down from the bed. I trail down the long passage towards the stairwell. The landing is glowing from the gaping mouth of light coming from downstairs, where some strange business is going on. Ihang over the balustrade and look down on the heads of many women playing cards at the old table. The cards go between them and they hold them a while in tiny fans and throw them down. Their voices, hushed and ghostly, float up to me on airborne parachutes of understanding. They are drinking. The ice in their glasses goes clink clink. The whisky decanter comes and goes between them. I can only see the crowns of their heads but I know them all. Mantel is very old and has almost no hair on her crown. She is the one Grandma loves the best. I was told this: "But it is not something to worry about," my Gran said, "since it is only a bit more love and it has to do with need and time and is more like adore." My mother Paddy is quick and deals in a flash. I can hear her halting laughter. Her hair is thick and gleams under the light. They are speaking of me ... good things but too strange to understand. They are saying good things about Grandpa Joe Flood. I settle in upstairs on the landing, listening to all the good things coming up at me in rays of night sun.

They are making jokes, and peals of rowdy laughter dazzle me on the landing. Mantel's voice is soft and husky. She sings and my grandmother plays the pianola. Sometimes they sing the words on the rolls that go around but other times, they make up their own words. My mum joins in. They return to the card-table, dim the lights and turn a glass upside down. Now they are very quiet. They make no noise and close their eyes and each one puts a finger on the glass in the centre. I am trying not to fall asleep. I stumble back to the bed where Joe Flood is sleeping. I climb into the bed beside him. He is a little man for a grown-up. He doesn't feel much bigger than me and I am not yet seven. I have the feeling that he'll wake up but sleep has me. I am gone with child fatigue.

The morning was old as I came into the kitchen. Women were greasing baking dishes, cutting chicken breasts in half and flouring down oven trays. I had stretched in my bed until cooking fragrances, warm and spicy, seeped through to me. Siddy had her sharp knife and basted a bird. I did not stop to wonder why I had awoken in my own bed. I was never sure of real or dreamtime. My mother was chopping onions, tears rolled down her cheeks. She wiped her eyes on her apron. Sometime in the morning, the aunties tell me that Joe Flood has died in the night but I keep forgetting this. After we had eaten and many people came and went, the day felt particularly different. I went to look for Joe Flood on the hallstand. Siddy was sitting there. She dabs her eyes. I ask her if she adored Grandpa Joe. She said, "No! It was just ordinary long-time knowing," and hastens to add, "this is a different kind of love altogether," and she tells me just because I have learnt a new word, I should not over-use it or wear it out. I ask her, "You mean like ochre?" and she says, "No, I mean like adore," and she starts howling loudly and I am mightily impressed and stroke her face with my grubby fingers. At the funeral, there were many women. Dozens of handsome old ones all singing "The Ballad of Siddy Church and Joe Flood". Some with guileless whirlpool eyes, others with a narrow glint of cunning.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from The Ballad of Siddy Church by Lin Van Hek, Jo Turner, Janet Mackenzie. Copyright © 1997 Lin van Hek. Excerpted by permission of Spinifex Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

The Poetry of Aunties,
The Last Days of Rufus,
Joe Flood's Sleep,
The Great Bloody Flood,
1939 ... Siddy's Yarn,
Cheek-to-Cheek at Mantel's Cafe,
The Boulevard of Broken Dreams,
For Her Least Look,
During That Time,
The Sleepout,
Back Alive,
A Girl as Loud as the Sky,
Our Own Sex,
Secret Hidings and Women's Business,
Being Schooled,
Moving on with the Wordstretcher,
Eadie Wilt Meets Anna Wesoloski,
Truly Speak,
Mr Mott and the Bathing Beauty,
Legs,
He Came through the Door in His Shirt Sleeves ... Quickly,
Slags, Bitches, Sluts and More,
Little Things that Hang Down,
Was It 1956? When Childhood Ended and Eadie Wanted to be Jewish,
Anna's Box,
Cry Yourself Blind,
The Inheritance,
Earthly Cares Spilling,

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