The conversation was lagging, again. She smiled awkwardly at her husband across the picnic table.
'Would you like to go for a walk?'
He shrugged indifferently and made a witty comment about the barramundi they were feasting on. The others laughed. Kara hesitated, then climbed over the bench and started strolling away. It felt good to have air on the backs of her legs, which were sticky with sweat. Soon the voices faded, left behind in the shadows of the glade. The corroboree was very interesting. Touristy, of course, but it was another aspect of Australian and Aboriginal culture she hadn't known about. So much newness, and the feel of Darwin excited the senses - steamy, tropical, more Asian than she'd expected.
She mused over the strange Aboriginal words as she strolled. They rolled on the tongue, another thing to process in this new country, along with their meanings. Γorroboree: a ritualised performance. Barramundi: a large and tasty fish.
She walked out onto a headland, looking out over the glistening water they had covered just a few hours before in a wide open boat they'd come over on.
The water was so blue, so inviting. It seemed impossible that a dangerous jellyfish made the ocean here unswimmable, right in the middle of summer. Thank goodness Sydney was not so hot, and you could swim there all year round.
The house they had just bought in Balmain flashed before her. It could all be so wonderful: the house, the dance group she had just joined, the lushness of Sydney's plants. If only, the bitter thought intruded, if only your marriage wasn't breaking up. Just a few hours before, her husband had made excuses to leave and make a not very secret call to his lover in Sydney. Professors screwing their students was nothing new, and in the wild days of the 1970s open marriage was almost de rigeur in their social set. And he hadn't taken it very well when she had initiated an affair of her own.
Forget it, let the sun in. She was perched on a rock contemplating how wild and dangerous it would be to strip off and dive into the sea. No one would be able to account for it. Would jelly fish with deadly tentacles get her? Or maybe sharks? The shiver of fear made her smile. The surface of the water, very quiet, glowed like machined steel.
But these dark thoughts couldn't hold her for long. At last, Kara rose, a twang of guilt calling her back to the rest of the group. It would be interesting to explore further, but she didn't know her way around this island, and weren't there wild boars in this part of the country that attacked people? Perhaps she'd better go back, and laugh politely at her clever husband's jokes.
Then, the corner of her eye caught movement, a tall man. Yes, it was that Norse god who'd been standing at the helm of the PT boat that had transported them here. What an extraordinary sight he had been. There was no inkling then of how powerful that first image would become, growing to become an icon, worshipped in her memory. At that moment, the power of his presence had fallen like a net, soundlessly around her.
He was at least six feet, blond hair streaming over a very red but handsome face, a leather vest tied with thongs, revealing well-muscled arms and a bare torso. One silly tattoo. And leather trousers - how warm they must have been.
Now he was wearing Stubbie shorts and ankle boots, just as she was. He still had no t-shirt on. He was definitely coming in her direction. She turned towards the sea again, ignoring the momentary increase in heart rate. She must have known it was caused by the subsconscious surge of panic and thrill.
'Good day' he said as he neared.
Turning, Kara registered that his voice was as Scandinavian as his appearance. She noted that he held a beer can in a Styrofoam holder.
'Hello' she replied, attempting to sound both polite and disinterested.
'Do you enjoy the corroboree?"
'Yes, I've never been to one before.'
'You come with the tourists?'
'What? Oh yes, we're traveling around in a bus.' His accent was so heavy, it was hard to follow him. 'You are from Sweden?'
'Nah", he answered disgustedly, 'I am from Denmark, that is the best country. And where do you come from?'