'A blog about living close to the earth as experienced by one girl.'='viewport'/> Francesca Whyte - mothersisterloverme -: September 2012

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

South West Corner

English Mick drove us across the desert in his van. He stopped at the Great Australian Bight, and we ran over the khaki scrub to the edge of the Bunda Cliffs, the wind from Antarctica beating us in the face. We were so small there, at the bottom of Australia, the great red land above us, hanging like a stretched out sail, the canvas pulled tight right down to the cliffs, where we stood with our toes hanging over the edge, and the waves like seals, darting and diving, spinning with the gummy sharks.  We stood and our eyes were blown dry, our lungs breathed it in, the sea, the sky, the desert, blew our physical away, blew us into souls, until just the shells were left, and we were whole again. Jacob told me, ‘I’ll never get tired of looking at you’ and I wondered what else he saw, as though there was nothing else to see, but I wanted him to see it. Time took us back into the metal van, where it was still, and the dust was waiting, and where we shook off the outside, turned the key and it all magically worked, and took us forward. It wasn’t hard to convince the motel in Eucla to hear him sing and we were spoiled with beds and beer while Mick slept in his van.Jacob’s energy drove us across the desert and we did it in two days, hitting Norseman on the third day. His narrow face behind the wheel of the Englishman’s van, the sky a dark grey towering over us as he steered us through the storms, dodging squalls like a sloop at sea, darting over the flat black road, the white line luminous, glowing in the electric light of the desert.  The red dust blew through the town and the front yards were laden with ochre coloured dirt. Jacob played the oldest hotel in town and a trucky offered him jaundiced coloured speed, but we slept early in a corner room, windows open to the sweeping verandah, a dark, old wardrobe against the walls. As the road turned to the south we said goodbye to Mick and the intensity of the desert’s burning orange turned to the green and blue of the south west corner of our map.