He sighed aloud as he climbed over the fence and started collecting some of the dried, scattered wood. The sun cast long shadows now and the decision to camp seemed a good one. He turned, looked at his footprints. Aloud he said, ‘I wonder how many white people have walked this way before. It seems so far from anywhere.’
A lizard, soaking up the last fragments of daily warmth, scampered under a tuft of grass, which had left circular ridges around it in the red sand as the wind blew its elongate leaves around the central root. It looked a bit like the concentric circles so common in Aboriginal art. Alec looked back at the parked Kombi. Katherine was sitting on the floor in the space of the open side doors, her feet on the ground. She held Carolyn close to her chest, obviously feeding. Her head was bowed, watching the life force flow from her to her suckling daughter.
‘What a beautiful sight.’ Alec felt the deep warmth of love and pride as he looked back at his wife and child. ‘I love them both so very much.’
It wasn’t Carolyn crying that woke them, but the sun creeping through the thin curtains surrounding the dusty windows of the Kombi. Alec was first to wake. He stretched and crept out from under the double sleeping bag on the extended back seat. He tried not to wake Katherine but the central side doors made such a noise that she immediately stirred. After the baby’s birth her sleeping pattern changed and it took very little to rouse her. Alec sauntered over to relieve himself a short distance from the vehicle and rubbed his stubbly whiskers. They had grown exceptionally fast over the past two weeks. It no longer looked as if he had merely forgotten to shave but more like a deliberate attempt to grow a scruffy beard. He faced the rising sun and stretched upwards as if welcoming its arrival before climbing over the fence to collect wood for the breakfast fire.
By the time the blackened, battered billy was boiling and a frying pan with the last of the bacon and eggs was crackling over the glowing wood coals, Katherine was up and dressed. Even in this isolated area and the presence of only her husband, her modesty prevented her from being too exposed and she wore a floral blouse partly open to nurse Carolyn, all clean and washed. The couple sat down in silence on canvas folding chairs and gazed into the smoke and fire. The chirruping, trilling calls of birds broke the quiet of the morning. A pipit flitted from branch to branch, aggressively defining its own small territory in the vast remoteness of the outback with pretty birdsong. It was otherwise still: not a leaf moved in the surrounding scrub. Both Alec and Katherine were silent, lost in their own thoughts as they breakfasted, the last of the trip. Tonight they would be back in Adelaide, their little adventure over.
‘Right then,’ said Alec decisively, suddenly standing and going across to the plastic bowl of water, ‘let’s get these things washed up and packed then hit the road.’
He started briskly washing and packing, while Katherine slowly folded up their sleeping things. They worked well together, each taking on a task without the need to communicate. Once everything was in place Alec climbed into the driver’s seat, Katherine beside him and Carolyn gurgling in the bassinette, once more secured in the back.
‘Right-O! Let’s roll,’ said Alec as he turned the ignition key and pressed the starter. The starter motor gave a weak grunt and then lapsed into silence.
‘That’s odd …’ A slight frown crossed his brow. He tried again. And again. This time there was not even a grunt. Not a hint of noise from the engine itself. Alec undid his safety belt, got out and went to the back of the Kombi to open the engine hatch. He peered inside but in reality he had no idea why the motor was not responding. Perhaps it was the battery connections or possibly the starter motor. He regretted his lack of any mechanical ability and a slight worry started nagging in his brain.
‘What if we can’t get the damn thing going? Ma is just going to love this. She said we were silly to come out here in this old Kombi. Probably just a loose wire to the starter motor.’
He double checked the battery connections and wiggled the spark plugs. As far as he could tell everything seemed in place and firmly connected. Alec clambered back into the driver’s seat and again tried to start the Kombi. His efforts were once more rewarded with total silence. Now he was really worried but he didn’t want to make Katherine anxious. In spite of all the distance driving he hadn’t once thought of the possibility of a flat battery and didn’t have a spare. After all this battery was almost new. It shouldn’t be flat. And the Kombi had been thoroughly serviced before leaving.
After several more tries at starting and more fiddling in the engine compartment, Alec gave up. He stood beside the open passenger door and angrily said to Katherine, ‘The damn engine won’t start no matter what I do. I think it’s probably a flat battery. I don’t know how that’s happened; it was new a month ago.’
‘Why don’t you leave it a while and then try again?’
‘Okay. I’ll do that. But my intuition tells me it won’t change anything. In the meantime, we may as well make ourselves comfortable and organise some shade for Carolyn. If I can’t start it we may be stuck out here for quite a while.’
‘Good idea. It gets hot so quickly,’ Katherine said as she climbed out of her seat.
‘Can you check our supplies, especially water? How much have we got?’ he asked, trying to sound more confident than he felt.
‘I think we have about twenty litres.’
‘That’ll last a while if we go carefully, but I’ll see if I can organise a way of collecting water for a safety margin.’
Katherine taped newspaper against the windows to reduce the amount of sun getting into the Kombi, which was already beginning to feel hot. A short distance away, on the other side of the fence, Alec started digging a pit in the red sand. Once it was completed he broke off some branches and put them in the hole, with a small bucket in the centre. He covered the pit with the sheet of plastic that served as a waterproof for Carolyn’s bedding and held it in place with heaped sand. Once in place he weighed down the middle of the plastic sheet with a small piece of granite from his collection.
Katherine, finished in the Kombi, curiously watched his activity. ‘What’s all that for?’
‘It’s a way to ge
t extra water. Dehydration is going to be our biggest danger if we’re here for a while.’
‘How will that get us water?’
‘The branches in the pit transpire in the sun. Hopefully, the moisture will form drops on the plastic and they’ll collect in the bucket. That way we can get clean water. In the meanwhile, we’re going to have to be very frugal in terms of what we use. Early in the morning we can replace the branches.’
‘Clever!’
Alec pointed to some large, heavy-duty plastic bags he used for wrapping rocks and holding soil samples.
‘We’ll tie those sample bags around some of the leaves of the bushes and they’ll collect moisture as well.’
He left Katherine tying bags on the bushes while he put a few branches on the roof of the Kombi, to help keep it cool through the day. Alec tried to sound confident as he spoke while working, ‘I’m sure there’ll be a vehicle along before too long. There must be a ranger or someone who monitors the fence and the reserve. Even if we have to wait all day someone is likely to be along here tomorrow.’
* * *
The sun rose higher and the temperature crept up as morning progressed. Alec and Katherine played cards, liar dice, read their books and talked. Carolyn woke, was fed and wiped clean, and nursed.