Page 21 of The Tyrant's Novel


  Who was that fellow who brought you? I saw you start out looking for me.

  A driver, I said. I don't know him. Why didn't you come out and tell me not to waste my time deck jumping?

  Hell. I knew you'd get me into trouble. And you're still trying to.

  The driver hasn't even seen you. He's off somewhere.

  Oh yes?

  Yes. I want you to put me in one of your barrels and ship me out.

  Prime crude, he laughed. Don't be an idiot. You'd smother.

  Punch a hole in the top for air, I urged him.

  What makes you think I do this sort of thing? I don't do this sort of thing. And never have. So what gives you the damned right to say otherwise?

  Nothing, I hurried to say. I'm pleading with you to consider the idea, that's all. If you can transport oil in a can, it struck me you could ship someone human. Me. I'm not saying you do these things. I'm saying you could! That's all! I spread my hands, pleading.

  Can't be done, McCauley calmly declared. Sorry. It's not my business.

  I'm pleading, I told him. I'll pay whatever's in my means.

  McCauley promised, halfway like a confession, If you're a grass or a troublemaker, I'll finish you myself. He certainly had the meaty, hairy hands for it.

  We know all the Overalls, he further told me. We've got them right here, in our pockets. They'll believe me, not you.

  That's not the question. I'm asking you to do this one thing, once.

  What's your name again?

  I told him. He wrote it down.

  Stay here in the teahouse. Don't make a single call, or the owner will spot it and you'll be gone. I'll be back in an hour. Read a book or something. Write one for all I damn well care.

  He went to leave, but stepped back again into the pungency from the doorway of the washhouse. He was full of a wild irritation. Look, if I normally did this stuff, ask yourself whether I'd still be skippering a barge. No! I'd be driving round like some fucking prince.

  He shook his head and withdrew again, and gestured from the door. Go on, go back and drink tea. I hope your damn bladder bursts.

  I sat in the shop, dejectedly drinking tea and reading a newspaper. The hour, even though it proved in the end to be only forty-five minutes, was interminable, of course, but I was full of a kind of patience, since that was one of the few virtues left to me to practice. I kept looking out at the pier to see if my driver had returned.

  At last, McCauley came down the stairwell behind the zinc counter and, glancing all around, crossed the room to sit with me.

  So, he told me, my Overall friends say your girlfriend was stabbed.

  She wasn't my girlfriend. And they have the killer.

  But you're scared they might let the killer go and turn to you, aren't you, old mate?

  His eyes glittered and I could tell he was relieved that I had a normal, predictable criminal motive, not a volatile, political one. He even put a fraternal hand on my shoulder. Look, he said, I had a lot of trouble—this twenty-two-year-old . . . He exhaled, a near whistle, to show how close-run a thing that had been for all participants.

  Did you kill her? he asked.

  No, I was walking with her.

  But did you pay the person who did do her?

  No. I swear.

  But then it struck me he would respect me more if there were a lingering doubt about that.

  They're all mad, you know, he told me. Women. They're all mad.

  I shrugged. It would not hurt me to convey the idea that I was an ordinary fellow beset by woman troubles.

  I just about came to the conclusion, he told me. Live with one woman and live in one lunatic asylum. Mess around with three and live in three asylums.

  I understand, I assured him, trampling on Sarah's sage residual presence.

  Suddenly he was right up to my face, and full of spit. If you're playing a game with us, he told me, you'll be laughing where your throat is, my son.

  I nodded.

  All right. It'll cost you five thousand U.S.

  Where in the hell do I get that?

  You've got a U.S. dollar account, don't you? I thought you were a swank.

  Yes, but the authorities would be notified if I took out that amount.

  Say you went to a certain branch. What if you had the name of a sensible fellow at that branch?

  It might be a help. I don't want to get arrested at a bank.

  I'm not involved, declared McCauley. I'll be protected by the local Overalls, so you needn't even expect to be believed if you say my name.

  I understand.

  He began writing out the details in block letters on a card, and passed it to me.

  Say you want the money for a car. So the rest of today and most of tomorrow, you'd better go looking at cars for sale. You'll all but close a deal, too. The next morning, day after tomorrow, go to the Bay View Café at Beaumont, near the Eastside markets. Do you know those markets?

  Very well, I assured him.

  Be using the toilet at nine-thirty. This won't be easy for you, you know? Not that I know anything anyhow.

  That's okay. I can get to that bank branch, no problem.

  Holy God, I mean after that! That's when it won't be easy. You'd better be able to handle claustrophobia.

  Okay. I'd rather not suffocate, though.

  No guarantees. But someone will do his best to prevent that.

  Drop me to any ship, and as soon as I'm out of that barrel, I'll claim asylum.

  Yeah, yeah. What would I know? Why do you think you'll be on my barge?

  Please, make it yours.

  For familiarity would be a comfort and a kind of guarantee.

  We'll see, said McCauley. By the way, nothing to do with me. But if you want to take out more than five thousand, you can. But put the excess in your sock, so they don't take that too.

  They?

  The people you'll be dealing with. Nothing to do with me.

  All this was, of course, very much in the tradition of some of the films I would have liked one day to have the chance to subtitle. But the glamour only attends a film. There's no glamour in anticipatory fear and plans in which any minute shift is lethal and in which the escapee doubts the capacity of his own mind not to go crazy during the process. The most piteous creature on earth is the one contemplating unlikely flight, and without documents.

  I went out again and found my driver had returned to the pier but seemed to be asleep in his car. Thus began a day and a half of tedious and earnest car hunting. I took my driver's sagacious advice and went and saw a friend of his who owned a large yard of vehicles behind a two-storey house in Beaumont. He was selling cars somewhat cheaply, particularly the older models. In some cases inflation had reduced their value to a couple of hundred U.S. dollars. I particularly liked a white Toyota, like Captain Chaddock's. One could make a journey up north in such a sturdy vehicle, I told my driver and his friend. I saw the anticipation of kickback in my driver's eyes.

  And no shortage of petrol, said my driver's friend.

  But I made the driver take me to other dealers too. I ran hot and cold over this model and that, still conveying to him that the white Toyota probably had my vote.

  On the morning itself, I invited my driver upstairs for coffee, on the supposition that yesterday's car hunting had made us compadres. He seemed so flattered by the gesture that I indulged the hope someone more senior than he would be blamed if I vanished.

  As we sipped away, I was aware of carrying ten thousand dollars on my person, divided into wads of five thousand each, one in my breast pocket for handing over, the other, according to the absurdity of this drama, in my right sock. The only thing I carried which resembled a document was a folded-up dust jacket from the American edition of my book.

  There's a great place I used to go when I was younger, I told the driver. The Bay View. By the Eastside markets. Do you know that place?

  My driver said he did.

  And so he took me, and so it befell me.
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  At nine-thirty, breakfasted lightly and having drunk as much fluid as I could, I went to the men's toilet. As I urinated and waited very calmly for any changes to be rung, a young man stood at a urinal near me. When I had finished, he zipped his own fly and turned to me.

  Finished? he asked.

  Yes, I said.

  Do you have the money?

  Are you the man?

  Of course. Hurry!

  I pulled out the five thousand and he leafed through it.

  Very well, he said. The lid's on fairly tight, but when it's time to get out, our man will release you. Okay? You run up onto the deck of the tanker yelling, I seek asylum, I seek asylum! The captains are bound by international law to take notice.

  I understand, I said.

  As I was still nodding, he punched me vigorously on the side of the jaw. What a big wrist you have, I thought for a second. But this was no bar-brawl punch, which merely confused the sight with sudden lights. I had no time for further thought. I must have simply dropped where I stood.

  Unconscious of its beginning, I made the journey in a barrel. In that I woke in fear and pain and confusion, jammed upright in an agonizing position, light entering through five minuscule holes in the lid. We were static. I could feel no rocking of water so I must have stood on the dockside. Though there was some form of padding in the barrel, it gave little comfort. Immediately ill, I found by chance with my hand a liter bottle of water which had been mercifully included.

  Since they had left me my watch, I knew it to be eleven o'clock, and clearly daytime, but staring at it, I felt my head expand and shrink with pain. I had been uncomfortably located, my knees and back holding me upright, but however I moved, I could not get a painless position nor achieve a full kneeling one. McCauley had promised it would not be easy.

  Heat grew within the barrel. Little by little, I was able to shed my jacket and had an urge to douse myself with the remaining water, but did not know whether I would be suspended in pain and thirst like this for another day. I went into a stupor and woke to the outer world as my barrel was toppled sideways. I could feel but not see the abrasions this movement brought. I was rolled and rolled over planks, keeping my elbows in, crazed with giddiness, sometimes my conveyance falling from one surface an inch or two, or in the worst case, five or six inches, to another. When it stopped, I was sick again and became insufferable to myself. And then, upright, I heard McCauley's voice but could detect mere threads of light. I had found my bark of exile, humble though it might be. I could feel the tug and the suck of the river on which Joanna, or whatever barge it was, rode. But another barrel was placed atop mine, and I felt a panic of claustrophobia. The people involved had my money, it occurred to me. There was no reason they would regret it if I perished on a tanker's deck or in a hold, buried amongst the piled-up barrels of crude.

  I suffered unutterably and banged the sides of the barrel, but I knew justice had been done—I was buried with my few possessions. I slept miserably, and I woke to darkness, and the fluorescent dots on my watch said nine o'clock. I rationed the water, and lost all sense of my own putridness. I propped myself to my knees again and urinated in the bottom of the barrel. I banged its sides, but the padding numbed the sound. I beat against the lid, and it resonated dully, as if it lay in the bottom row of a pyramid of barrels.

  Thus hours of panic passed. I could have brought a pocketknife, a plain utensil to end all the fear and wasting ahead of me, but I hadn't thought I would need it. I began to rave, and the dots on my watch meant nothing more than the random cells of some insect. My barrel swayed and I began to hear the gluey crude moving all round me, and I began to sing a song about it, some oceanic plaint that made sense to me at the time. I finished the water, tried to piss in the bottle, and waited for my air to run out. Why the oil? as the medic had asked in “The Women of Summer Island.” What was the oil doing, this Satanic honey, out at sea and separating me from the sweet air of earth?

  At some stage beyond all time there was new movement and jolting all around me, and sharp noises around the lid of my barrel. In glittering early air, McCauley looked down at me, Bernie peering over his shoulder, curious to see what had befallen me.

  God, you stink, said McCauley.

  Oh yes, I admitted.

  The two of them dragged me out. I wavered on the deck, and sat as Bernie hosed me totally with seawater.

  Barrels rose on pallets from the deck of Joanna up the side of a red and white tanker. McCauley pointed to the stairs which led up the side of the ship.

  There it is. Look lively.

  I caressed him as if he were my lost father.

  Get away, you mad bastard, he said. Go on! Up the steps, yelling asylum all the way.

  I swayed up the tanker's ladder, howling the word. They called the captain, who accepted me with a shrug. I spent three months in a psychiatric ward in Greece. Everyone shook their head at me, even the nurses, and said, Without documents, and stateless.

  After-tale

  And you see, said Alan Sheriff, isn't that the saddest and silliest story you ever heard?

  He was finishing the tale for which he had made such claims under eucalypts in the detention center. It had occupied us some weeks, but Alan Sheriff had been determined to tell it.

  How did you get to this country? I asked. Without documents?

  I bought fake ones in Greece.

  And the book?

  It was published under Great Uncle's name and did medium well, but no one believed he'd written it. So I read in Time magazine. The thing is, your friend—Alice. She thinks I can be innocently attracted by her breasts? I have two ghosts to stay my hand. Does she think that if I get a temporary protection visa, I'll ask her for a date?

  We're naïve, I said.

  I looked at the other folk in the yard—matriarchs in the encompassing Middle Eastern or Afghan robes in which they had made their long escapes; a few solemn Sudanese gentlemen, philosophy aching in their eyes; young Palestinians in jeans who could have passed for Italian waiters except for a darkness in their faces.

  I wonder, I said, shaking my head as if to rid it of the extraordinary impact of Alan's story. I wonder if all these people have saddest and silliest stories to rival yours?

  Oh no, he said. He grinned at me. Some of them have been involved in genuine tragedy.

  Acknowledgments

  The concept of this novel arose as a result of reading “Tales of the Tyrant” by Mark Bowden (Atlantic Monthly, May 2002).

  A Note About the Author

  THOMAS KENEALLY is the acclaimed author of more than two dozen books, including Schindler's List, which won the Booker Prize and inspired the film; The Great Shame: The Triumph of the Irish in the English-Speaking World; American Scoundrel, a biography of Civil War general Dan Sickles; and most recently, Office of Innocence, a compassionate novel about a young priest during World War II. He lives in Sydney, Australia.

  Also by Thomas Keneally

  Fiction

  The Place at Whitton

  The Fear

  Bring Larks and Heroes

  Three Cheers for the Paraclete

  The Survivor

  A Dutiful Daughter

  The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith

  Blood Red, Sister Rose

  Gossip from the Forest

  Season in Purgatory

  A Victim of the Aurora

  Passenger

  Confederates

  The Cut-Rate Kingdom

  Schindler's List

  A Family Madness

  The Playmaker

  To Asmara

  Flying Hero Class

  Woman of the Inner Sea

  A River Town

  Office of Innocence

  Nonfiction

  American Scoundrel: The Life

  of the Notorious Civil War General Dan Sickles

  The Great Shame and the Triumph

  of the Irish in the English-Speaking World

  Outback

  Now
and in Time to Come

  The Place Where Souls Are Born:

  A Journey to the Southwest

  PUBLISHED BY NAN A. TALESE

  AN IMPRINT OF DOUBLEDAY

  a division of Random House, Inc.

  DOUBLEDAY is a trademark of Random House, Inc.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Keneally, Thomas.

  The tyrant's novel / Thomas Keneally.—1st ed. in the U.S.A.

  p. cm.

  1. Fiction—Authorship—Fiction. 2. Detention of persons—Fiction.

  3. Political prisoners—Fiction. 4. Novelists—Fiction.

  5. Despotism—Fiction. I. Title.

  PR9619.3.K46T97 2004

  823'.914—dc22 2003059670

  Copyright © 2004 The Serpentine Publishing Co., Pty. Ltd.

  All Rights Reserved

  First published in Australia by Random House Australia

  eISBN: 978-0-385-51344-9

  v3.0

 


 

  Thomas Keneally, The Tyrant's Novel

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