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The Dressmaker Part 8

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'So you're a trained dressmaker?'

'Yes,' said Tilly.

'Where did you train?'

'Overseas.'

'Here he comes towards us now,' said Sergeant Farrat.



Gertrude moved quickly to intercept her boyfriend, grabbing hold of the tall young man to drag him away.

'You look extremely fetching, Tilly,' said Sergeant Farrat, beaming, but Tilly was watching Gertrude's young man and he was watching her.

'I remember him,' said Tilly.

'He used to wet his pants at school,' said Teddy.

William thought the tall girl with the unusual face and strong shoulders was striking. A McSwiney stood either side of her, like sentries at a luminous statue.

Gertrude tugged at William's arm. 'Is that ...?' he asked.

'Myrtle Dunnage and the McSwineys. They deserve each other.'

'I heard she was back,' said William, staring. 'She's quite beautiful.' Gertrude pulled his arm again. He looked down at his round, brown-eyed girlfriend, her eyes and nose red from crying, the sun in her face.

That night Gertrude lay on the back seat of the car with her knees flopped open. William was elbow deep in her petticoats, his mouth jammed over hers panting through his nose when she wrenched her face away and said, 'It's time to go in.'

'Yes!' said William and reached for his fly.

'NO!' said Gertrude and pushed at his shoulders. She struggled, feeling about in the dark with William still oozing all over her, sucking at her neck. She crawled out from under him and was gone. William was left engorged, panting and alone in his mother's car. He scratched his head, straightened his tie and sighed. He drove to the Station Hotel but there was no sign of life. The soft yellow light at the top of The Hill burned, so he drove towards it, stopping at the base to smoke a cigarette. Mona said the Dunnage girl had apparently travelled and was driving Miss Dimm spare, always at the library ordering in strange books. Ruth Dimm said she even received a French newspaper in the mail every month.

He drove home. His mother was waiting. 'Why?' she cried.

'Why not?'

'You can't marry her, she's a heifer!'

'I can if I like,' said William and raised his chin.

Elsbeth stood looking at her only son and shrieked, 'You've been had and it doesn't take too much imagination to work out how.'

William's voice rose to the Beaumont shrill. 'I want a future, a life '

'You've got a life.'

'It's not mine!' William stomped off towards his room.

'NO!' his mother wailed.

He turned. 'It's either her or Tilly Dunnage.'

Elsbeth collapsed into a chair. On his way past Mona's room, William called, 'And you should find someone too, sister.'

Mona's wet rubbing halted under her blankets and she bit the sheet.

William went to see Alvin Pratt the next day and by evening all had been arranged for William to marry down, thus reinstating his mother to her rightful place.

12.

Marigold Pettyman, Lois Pickett, Beula Harridene and Faith O'Brien were standing at Pratts' vacant window. Alvin had removed the specials advertis.e.m.e.nts from the gla.s.s two days ago. Purl, Nancy and Ruth joined the gathering crowd. Finally Alvin, dusty and scone-coloured, leaned into his window, scooped away a few dead blowies, and rested a catalogue open on a page featuring five richly ill.u.s.trated wedding cakes. Beside it he placed a two-tiered, elaborately decorated and perfect wedding cake on a silver tray. He smiled lovingly at his beautiful creation before carefully closing the lace curtains hanging behind.

Inside, Muriel, Gertrude and Tilly leaned together over the haberdashery counter flicking through a magazine. Molly sat beside them in her wheelchair, watching out the door.

'Lois Pickett always looks like a tea-stained hanky,' she said.

Tilly gave her a black look.

'And we all know how unbalanced Marigold Pettyman is, these days.'

The wedding gown they were looking at was strapless with an overly clinched waist held by a bunchy satin sash which gave way to an overskirt of unspectacular beaded net. At the bodice top there was another bunch of satin, a bow, fit to camouflage any cleavage.

Gertrude pointed to a picture and said, 'That one, I like that one.'

'It's beautiful, Gert,' said Muriel and stepped back to picture her daughter wearing the white wedding gown.

'It'll hide those thighs of yours,' said Molly. Tilly pushed her mother over to hardware and parked her in front of a shelf full of boxes of nails. Molly was right about the thighs but Gertrude had a waist Tilly could emphasise, which would also help with her hips. Then there was the square bottom and shapeless down-pipe legs and matching arms, and under that cardigan Gertrude was hirsute, so bare skin was out of the question. She also had a pigeon chest. Tilly looked again at the gown. 'Oh no,' she said, 'we can do much better than that,' and Gertrude caught her breath.

Teddy was leaning on the bar and Purl was telling him all about the wedding, '... so of course Elsbeth's furious, Ruth said she hasn't posted the invitations yet but Myrtle Dunnage phoned Winyerp and ordered six yards of cloth and five yards of lace. It should arrive Friday.'

'Friday?' repeated Teddy.

'By train.'

Teddy arrived on the veranda at The Hill that evening and talked about the poor mail service around Christmas and how Hamish complained the new diesel trains were always late. Tilly leaned on the doorjamb, crossed her arms and raised one eyebrow.

'... and I understand it's a hasty decision, on William's part,' he said, 'a very hasty decision.'

'So you think Gertrude needs her wedding dress as soon as possible?'

'I don't, but I bet Gertrude thinks that so she can tell him as soon as possible that's it's all st.i.tched up.'

'Perhaps we should leave it to the trains, and fate.'

'No one would ever know how well you can sew,' he put his hands in his pockets and looked at the stars, 'and I happen to be driving to Winyerp tomorrow.' He looked at her. 'Molly might like the drive. Ever been for a ride in a car, Molly?'

'They don't look much chop to me,' she said.

Teddy said he'd be leaving about eight.

When he got to his car the next morning she was already sitting in it, lovely in her deep cloche and dark gla.s.ses. She looked at her watch and waved a fly away. 'h.e.l.lo,' said Teddy. He left her alone, and dropped her off at nine with a plan to meet her at the pub at noon. At lunch he shouted her a plate of vegetables and a stout and took her parcels for her, leaving her free all afternoon. He dropped her home at dusk. When she went inside she found Molly had dismantled her sewing machine entirely. It took her three days to find all the parts and put them back together.

A week before Christmas Tilly sat hunched over her sewing machine at the kitchen table, happy to be creating again. Molly was in her wheelchair beside the stove unravelling the jumper she was wearing, a crinkly nest of wool gathering over her knees. Tilly glanced at the woolly pile. 'Why are you doing that?' she said.

'I'm hot.'

'Move away from the fire.'

'I don't want to.'

'Please yourself.'

She pressed down firmly on the electric treadle. Molly reached for the stove poker and hid it under her knee rug then slowly pushed at her wheels.

Tilly's fingers guided the slippery surface beneath the speeding foot, the needle racing. Molly fumbled about under her knee rug, found the poker, raised it high and let it fall on Tilly's head just as Teddy rapped at the screen door. He heard a yelp, then someone stumbling.

He found Tilly standing in the corner holding the back of her head. Molly sat innocently by the fire unravelling thread from her jumper. On the floor by the table satin and lace lay heaped like cloud cus.h.i.+ons.

'What happened?'

'She hit me,' said Tilly.

'I did not.'

'You did. You hit me with the poker.'

'Liar. You're just trying to have me put away. You're the dangerous one, you killed my possum.' Molly began to weep.

'He moved back to the tree because of the chimney smoke, you can see him any time you like.' She rubbed her head.

'If you weren't always stirring away at your cauldron.'

Teddy looked from one to the other, then went to Molly and rubbed her bony back and handed her his hanky. 'There, there,' he said.

Molly fell against him, howling. He handed her his hipflask. 'I've got just the thing.' She grabbed it and put it to her lips.

Teddy moved to Tilly and reached for her. 'Show me.'

'It's all right.' She pulled further into the corner but he persisted. He pushed his fingers into her glorious hair and felt around her warm scalp. 'You've got an egg on your head.' He turned back to Molly just as she shoved his hip flask down the front of her nightie.

'Give me that.'

'Get it yourself.'

Teddy screwed his face up. Tilly dived down her mother's nightie with two hands, retrieving the flask and handing it to Teddy.

'It's empty,' he said.

Tilly heaped Gertrude's wedding dress back onto the table.

'I came to invite both of you for a Christmas drink tomorrow night, but ...' He looked sideways at Molly and shook his flask one more time.

'I'd love to come,' said Molly then burped.

'I'm not going,' said Tilly.

'That's all right. He'll come and fetch me, won't you sonny?'

He did come to fetch her and he brought roses to Tilly. A huge bunch of velvet-skinned, scarlet-black roses that smelled thickly of sugar, summer and misty creek water. Tilly was amazed.

'I risked my life to get these for you last night.'

'Which garden Beula or Sergeant Farrat?'

Teddy winked. 'Come for a drink?'

'No.'

'Just one.'

'I really appreciate you taking Molly off my hands for an hour or so, I really do.'

'You can still come.'

'It'll be nice to be by myself.'

Molly was at the veranda step. 'Come on then,' she called, 'leave her to sulk.'

From the back step Teddy pleaded one more time. 'Come on please? We're having a high old time down by the Tip, pile of presents from Santa under the tree for the kids, all down there screeching about.'

She smiled, closed the door and said softly, 'That would break my heart.'

13.

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The Dressmaker Part 8 summary

You're reading The Dressmaker. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Rosalie Ham. Already has 576 views.

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