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Gavin peered at the screen; the thick foliage made him shiver. There was something obscene about the abundance of spiraling vegetation tumbling and curling over itself in an attempt to secure more light. It was familiar, but it was not the landscape he’d been plunged into.

“How would the forest sound if I was standing in it?” he asked, praying he didn’t sound too crazy.

“You wouldn’t be. There weren’t any humans, at least not as we know them, at this time. Just shrewlike mammals that were probably tree dwellers.”

“What about the theropods?” he persisted. A slow blush crept up from his collar as he remembered the footprints, their steamy outline evaporating slowly in his mind’s eye. His fingers closed on a fossil that sat on the desk. Saturday firmly took the rock away from him. The property developer was looking increasingly distraught; one knee jerked involuntarily and there was a stretched look to his face that Saturday had initially thought was stress but now recognized as fear. Interesting, she thought, making a mental note, hallucinations involve misplaced delusions of grandeur.

“Nasty flesh-eating buggers that scampered across the forest floor,” she said aloud. “You wouldn’t want to meet one on a dark windy night. As for the sound, who knows? Looking at that canopy, you’re not going to get a great deal of rustling, certainly not a roar, unless you’re perched right at the top or hovering above. If anything there would probably have been an eerie silence below.”

“Then that’s not it!” Gavin, exasperated, stood up and began striding around the room, running his fingers through his hair over and over as he fought the sense of vertigo that failure brought.

“It looks wrong. There are elements, but it’s not right, I know it!”

“But it’s a beginning, Gav.” Watching his fallen face and the way one of his eyebrows was twitching from nerves, she couldn’t help but take pity. “Don’t be so male about this. This isn’t one of those linear problems you can solve just like that; you have to take a holistic approach. It’s like a prism, something to be understood from many angles simultaneously. We know one thing: it’s a forest, a landscape, that is haunting you, right?”

Gavin nodded like a little boy, his hair standing up in tufts. Finding it difficult to breathe he loosened his tie and undid his top button. He hadn’t been so disheveled in years.

“Now we just have to locate where it is and when,” Saturday continued, wondering whether she shouldn’t be recording the conversation.

“You believe me, don’t you?” Gavin whispered, crumpling into a beanbag in the corner.

“Put it this way, Gav—I believe in Gaia, in Goddess Earth as a living organism, and frankly if she were going to pick on anyone, it would be you.”

Stepping off the back porch, the property developer followed Saturday through the plethora of ferns, feral gardenia bushes, flowering gums, and fountains of reeds, his eyes drawn to her great arse wobbling in front of him. The air was thick with jasmine and the fruity smell of freshly turned earth. The paleobotanist reached a small clearing, a band of luminous green in the overgrowth. She bent and tore a flowering branch off a low bush.

“Here, take this—sage. Smoke your apartment, smoke your office, smoke your fucking Merc—it might help ward off any more visitations, you never know.”

Dubiously Gavin took the offered herbs. He held them at a distance, acutely allergic to flowering plants. “Thank you,” he said, his voice already turning nasal before he sneezed violently.

As they picked their way back around the side of the house a craggy stone head suddenly loomed up at him. It was the face of a man, entirely covered by the leaves of a tree that seemed to be growing out of the center of his face, branching out just above the bridge of his nose. Startled, Gavin leaped back.

Saturday grinned, taking a secret delight in the property developer’s terror. Now he knows how it is to be bullied, she thought.

“Isn’t he magnificent? The original stands in Bamberg Cathedral. Thirteenth century, you know, a hangover from the pagan worship of the Green Man.”

“The Green Man?”

“The Celtic god of Nature.”

Gavin stared at the face. The darkened eyes, fringed by the curved edges of the leaves like winged eyebrows, glared out in accusation and terrified him. And the more Gavin stared, the less he was able to shake the sensation that somehow he knew the man.

“Is that what you think, that I’m being persecuted for my sins?” he asked, the formal wording of his question strangely appropriate for the Gothic atmosphere that pervaded the house and its surrounds.

“Hey, I’m an agnostic, a floating voter. But one thing I do know is that an observed particle will behave in a certain way because it is being observed. In other words, if you believe in something it exists—and fear can only empower it,” she finished, embellishing her words with an ominous tone. As if affirming her statement, a pear suddenly dropped from the tree to the ground.

His wife stood at the living room window. She was wearing a dress he recognized from the summer holiday they’d taken a year ago. He remembered the crisp smell of starch rising up from the linen mixed in with the scent of her suntan oil. Gavin had wanted her then. But, smiling softly, she had removed his hands from her body, a gesture that had sliced through his heart. However, he’d shrugged it off blithely, bellowing for his children to join him for a swim.

There they were now: Aden had grown since the last time he’d seen him; the shadow of manhood pushing out his wrists and making jerky his loping strides. His daughter, Irene, sat on the kitchen counter swinging her legs. My baby, Gavin thought, remembering the moment the obstetrician had handed him the crumpled girl-child, her alien sex twinkling up at him as he gazed at her in stilled amazement.

He rested his head against the steering wheel. He was parked across the road, the car thinly concealed by the row of trees in the front garden. His daughter looked so determined, sitting there. That one’s got my drive, he thought, every muscle contracting with longing. Just then the four-year-old was lifted into view as his brother swung him up playfully. Would they ever forgive him? Did they even really know him? he speculated, remembering all the times he’d worked late, all the times he’d been absent even in their presence, the flurry of mobile calls, the constant distraction of ambition burning up his attention. What had all that useless activity led to—this moment of complete solitude? Burying his head farther into his folded arms he wondered whether the holidays they’d spent together, the gifts of guilt he’d lavished upon them, had secured their love. Doubts sprang u

p and twisted into themselves. What was he becoming? Something he’d always feared: his father, his broken father.

He started up the car and accelerated away from the curb. Inside the house Cathy caught a streak of ruby as the Merc passed. Pursing her lips she pulled the blinds shut.

Was he rewriting history already, Gavin wondered as he sped through the streets of Fortitude Valley. Was that what loss was—a remapping of memory? An attempt to imbue the banal with meaning? Would he ever rid himself of the insidious sensation that he was constantly living in the past tense? Would he ever return to living in the moment instead of mourning what was gone and, more importantly, had perhaps never been?

Furious with the deluge of self-indulgence he moved into fifth gear and watched the speedometer notch up to a hundred and ten. If he drove fast enough could he burn out this haunting, revert to the secure successful man he was before?


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