Timothy Cairncross had left the station and was making his way along a tree-lined street. The late afternoon traffic was murmuring like a muted diapason, the sky darkening to ruby in the west. A slight wind stirred dead leaves in the gutter. And then a sharp turn in the road revealed a block of flats half-hidden in Virginia-creeper.
As he made his way up the pathway he saw his sister Rachele standing in the entrance-way. Rachele was flustered as usual, saying as she led him into a room pleasantly furnished with rattan and chintz, which served as her living-room/studio. 'I wasn't expecting you, Timothy. You should have rung. You'll never guess who's here - I've got Cyrene Shelton here - she's sitting out on the patio.'
'That's all right,' he replied. 'I've got to face her sometime. My mobile ran out of credit.'
'Just put your things on the sofa there.'
Of medium height, habitually hopeful, his sister was a ruddy-faced young woman with honey-coloured hair. She wore a wide multi-coloured skirt and low-cut gipsy-style blouse. Rachele was a landscape painter and was beginning to make a few sales. A large outback scene stood on an easel before the open window. It featured an active volcano visible above a low range of hills.
'I was hoping you would have come up to Ballarat by now,' Timothy said after a pause. He stood looking towards the doorway leading out onto the patio. 'I'm heading home for Ballarat first thing in the morning,' he went on to say. 'I've booked into a hotel for tonight. I told Claire before I left that I would call in on you.'
'I haven't been able to get away at the moment,' Rachele said almost breathless. I'm expecting Montgomery Finch any moment. Monty runs a curio shop and gallery in Essendon and says he might be able to place a painting or two. I was looking out for him when you suddenly appeared.'
'I've come at an awkward time,' he said.
'Don't be silly. Cyrene's here. Go on out and talk to her. I'm just making a fresh pot of tea. I'll join you in a moment'
Timothy stepped out onto the patio where Cyrene Shelton was sitting at a white-painted table. In the garden a sinister creeper was nearly - but not quite suffocating its host tree. But the sunset was magnificent and the tiled rooftops of neighbouring houses beyond the screen of trees looked metallic in the glow.
'Hello Tim,' Cyrene said, extending her hand. She smiled and shifted on her chair as Timothy took the seat opposite. Obviously she was far more composed than he. Dark eyed with night-black hair and full pouty lips, this was the woman who had once touched him into love.
He was now very conscious of her legs generously displayed. Sitting almost side-on in the metal chair, Cyrene was a woman who played the leg-crossing game and spent a long moment adjusting her tight-fitting skirt. He searched for some conversational opener, something bright to say, but he could think of nothing. 'Well, what shall I talk about?' she said at last.
'What you always talk about - yourself,' was his quick reply. 'Tell me what you've been doing.'
'No, let's talk about you, Tim. It's good to see you again. I see you're still keeping your hair cropped short like I suggested,' she laughed, her eyes heavy with the old knowledge of woman.
Her mind was doing a backspin to the time when she and Timothy were lovers. But now he was married to Claire Ridgeway and had entered the Anglican Church, as he always said he would. But when they were together he had always been concerned about losing his hair. He was an old-looking youth of twenty-four whose sandy hair was already receding. He'd even grown his remaining hair long enough to comb over his bald spot in an attempt to hide it.
'You should have it cut short,' she had said on more than one occasion. 'Very short. Prussian-style would do it.'
'If I were to do that,' he had argued, 'it'd be only too easy to see how thin it's getting.'
But she had contradicted him, 'The shorter it is, the less attention it will draw to itself.' And so he had his
hair trimmed to please her.
'I want to hear all about your ordination,' she was saying, adding a third teaspoon of sugar to her tea. 'And I want to hear all about your marriage. And how Claire is getting on.'
'Claire has been in hospital with acute appendicitis.'
'And has she fully recovered? She doesn't mind you being away?'
'She's doing pretty well. Yes, Claire's fine now,' he answered, his eyes meeting Cyrene's. 'They removed the appendix just in time. She insisted I go to Hobart for the conference.'
'She's no longer working, I understand?'
'No.'
'So she gives her time to the parish? She gives you every support?'
'Yes.'
Cyrene's questions were polite but formal. How's Claire? Cyrene had asked only because it might have seemed odd if she hadn't. He surmised that nothing would have delighted her more than to hear that his wife was sick, unhappy, dying, no less. For a long moment their eyes again met and dwelled in each other's. 'Do tell me what you've been doing?' he asked finally.
'I'm working as a sort of gad-fly journalist for a not-too savoury magazine 'Melbourne Night Life,' she replied. 'And I'm singing Blues three nights a week at Philistines. That's a jazz-club in Flinders Lane.'
But their conventional talk was concealing their real thoughts. Timothy was reflecting on their stormy love affair two years before and how he had been awakened to the depths of his own nature and had been made to face one of the sharp corners of life. Sex had been the great leveller between them. And she, he thought ruefully, had played the serpent's part.
Cyrene for her part was remembering the feel of his boyish arms around her, the sensation had been sharp, visceral, urgent. Her fingers had caressed tumescent flesh.
But there's no boy left in him now, she knew. Timothy Cairncross was very much a man, all muscle and sinew and that close-cropped haircut! With his sheer physical good looks, he was much too male for a priest, she thought. At Melbourne University he had been the mainstay of the football team, a formidable full-back. Girls had competed for his favour, she was only too aware. She had never believed such a red-blooded man would become a minister.
And now she caught him looking at her legs. He was blushing as he raised his eyes slowly to hers. The fair sex never did play fair, he mused. No doubt she was thinking, I want you to look at my legs, but I don't want to catch you looking at my legs. No doubt it was all a game to her!
'Of course I'm delighted you've come, Timothy.' Rachele was saying as she came out onto the patio. It's just that I've been caught up with Montgomery Finch. He just rang to say he's on his way.' She set a large plate of scones and a fresh pot of tea on the table.