Monday, 30 January 2017

Short Story - Cotton Sally


Cotton Sally

or Stegosaurus Pie

The ancient earth divulges a well-kept secret as a work gang of unfortunates tackle a sea of weeds.

Loose parcels of the furry white horehound blighted riven sweeps beyond the blue and steady outlines of the King William Ranges. It was the one thing that stock wouldn’t eat. There were documented cases of sheep gnawing off their own legs rather than eat the furry white horehound. The bitter herb pocked the land, and where it didn’t there were swathes of rancid blackberry, ferocious in the gullies. This is where the rabbits romped too, and the foxes who grew plump upon them, and here and there were spectacular outbreaks of that florid floosey Salvation Jane. The noxious capeweed, looking as innocent as a daisy, was introduced in 1924, a bumper year for transplanted pests. It rolled across the plains and valleys in a festival of bleached yellow with its black eye gazing upwards at the sky in maniacal wonder. The worst offender, however, and yet the most majestic, was the fiercely prickled milk thistle, tall, purple, good-looking, aristocratic, but replete with sour juices. Locals sometimes called her Cotton Sally, for the in late summers when even blowflies lobbied against the heat she went all wooly and the flat, dreary acres fluffed up with hordes of drifting fairies. Only camels and mad bulls would even attempt a nibble. Territorial, jealous of inches, she denounced her rivals in perforating incisions. She seemed good enough to smell, but any creature who did received a spiky fist of ill-will in the face. She came all the way from Scotland where she was only slightly better behaved.

It became a matter of lop-sided contingency, therefore, for the Lands Department, beholden to blessed pioneers, to thus induct expensive schemes, and the Country Party campaigned on a platform of earnest control. It wasn’t until the minority Argyle government, elected on the promise of ‘Jobs For White Joe’, that there were gangs assembled, an army of trudgers, conscripted into the broad-pastured endlessness. The Minister held up Cotton Sally in Question Time and assessed the opposition as tardy. “As we speak, Mr Speaker,” he spoke, “teams of intrepid gentlemen venture forth!” The region beyond the riverflats, as crisp as brittle, pokey hills with granite understorey mixed, regrettably, with grimey grey clay, was among the various selected. Summer that year was ugly. Summer that year had a beaky nose and squinty eyes and a tight, sullen mouth with sun-chapped lips covered in herpes. Vast plumes of thistle cotton roared over the huge dry paddocks in shifting drifts of outright abandon. Every fluffball carried the seeds of lament. It gave pastoralists the cheesy night horrors. Grown men succumbed to a dread of lint. It was decided to station the “unit”, as it was called, at the Lands Department testing ground outside of Restless Pleasure. From there the “unit” could wander on, brave men blazing away both barrels with 24D.

This particular unit, stationed at the testing ground, consisted of the usual dozen and were equipped with a truck and sprayers and a meanly stretched outfit of old canvas tents. Quite apart from what the minister might have spoken, these “intrepid gentlemen” were, bar two of them, unlucky rustlers on a make-work undertaking. The two exceptions were the Man-in-Charge, a departmental lacky, and his invariably pissy offsider. There was Ralph Bowie, M.I.C., twenty years a departmental lacky, and proud of it. There was also his offsider Jock Gotham, pretty pissy, aspiring. He was an expert at being reckless with dangerous chemicals. Under this purview, therefore, were an assortment of social drivel. There was Teddy Mayfair, unemployed. Monk ‘Monkey’ Gilson, very out of work. Craig of the Monobrow, between jobs at that precise time. Then there was Billy Such, a former sailor who had once strangled a Belgian to death. Augustine Farley, one of the twenty-six Farley sons famous in Banning Flats, was among them just because there was no room left in the bedroom and he needed somewhere to sleep. Gustav Rockingwell, an unhealthy specimen, didn’t have his papers. Alf Apple who, ironically, had been an orange grower in the lilting irrigations south of Elegant Ridge, had gone bankrupt up to his noodle and this was his reward. There was, furthermore, a cook, an Aboriginal chap named Channing G. Sportsworth III, and a dwarfish man named Aberfoyle Everest, also ironic - everyone called him ‘Mount’ - inducted just for being short. Thus the spray gang. The unions complained. Why couldn’t an Irishman do the cooking? Since when are dwarves able bodied men? Gustav Rockingwell sounds almost like a German!

They set out into the bleak tusks of February. There was no defined traffic onwards from the Restless Pleasure testing ground, so they managed tough terrain. The M.I.C. and his deputy had a schedule, but the other men couldn’t give a frankfurt’s knob. In the main, they were determined to be idle. The truck, rusty and uncertain, rattled up the corrugated roadways, and when they came to an infestation they stirred the canisters and primed the blasting guns and cut down the purple heads just as they went all cottony in the wind. Young Farley snipped the fence wires. Alf Apple backed the truck up to the furrow. Gustav and Craig took orders to man the sprayers. The paddocks were massive. The thistle had claimed entire landscapes of it and bristled in pointy defiance. Small portions at a time, the spray gang cut Cotton Sally down, knocking out her stiff artichoke legs right from under her. It seemed a pointless extrapolation. The horizon was a hundred miles away in the Kingdom of Weeds. Farmers grappled with the barren dust. Landholders were able to put in requests. Ralph and Jock had maps and plans of tracks and a long list of grieving lambers who had watched their paddocks swallowed up by the blue-tongued wanton and were advocates of subsidies and socialism for the rural man. The Lands Department had a charter to serve their needs.
After a full day of spraying, the party would often settle at designated sites accompanied by heaps of roadbase and three million stars. Teddy Mayfair had the knack of raging fires. They threw on a kettle and boiled a fierce tisane and Monkey Gilson added some gum leaves for flavour. The kerosene lantern had a pump action. Spraying weeds gave a man the hunger fits, and Gustav Rockingwell grew wretched. He complained of being ragged in the belly. He had a cough and liver spots and a wheezing stomach. The cook was undettered. He’d been called a boong before. Ralph, the Lacky, reminded the Germanic all about a cook’s revenge.
“That’s true,” affirmed Billy Such, drawing on experience. “On a ship,” he said, “if you gnargle the cook you’ll be spewey all the way from Port Jackson to Batavia.”

The Germanic looked over at Channing G. Sportsworth III who was just then slicing rabbit chops.

Jock Gotham, being pissy, toked with scintillation on his roll-your-own and said he sincerely feared and respected cooking men. He didn’t care if it was a boong, a gyp, a coolie or a leperous Chinese fishwife; they held the strings to a spray man’s innards. The spray fumes often made him nauseous, but a good meal at the rear of the session in the vast airs of the southern eve settled his apprehension. He’d been with the Lands Department for a floss of tidy years and might have made a Man-in-Charge but for being pissy and his tendency for night sweats.

The cook, for his part, had a repertoire of three dishes: Rabbit Stew, Rabbit Casserole and Rabbit Medley. They all looked and tasted exactly the same but he would announce them every starry evening with aplomb.

“I’ve got a big treat for you whitefellas tonight,” he’d call out during a lull, waving his chopping knife around. “Rabbit casserole!”

All the whitefellas would cheer as if it was a break from the usual.

Mount Everest was on the aborigine’s side.

“I don’t get it, chef,” said the dwarf. “Why are they cheering? It’s the same dish!”

“I don’t know,” admitted the cook, quietly, “But I’m not going to tell them.”

Who can understand the ways of white men anywaze? he did wonder. Inspired, he was thinking of adding Rabbit Goulash to the menu as a special surprise.

In any event, the next morning it was back to killing thistles and soaking the good earth in 24D.

* * * 

It occurred, in this context, that the spray gang one morn surpassed a drastic hillock among the rocky features of the King William Ranges. The Ranges, of course, run north to south and obscure the coming sun. In a bleak land-shadow, desperately dry, a fool from the city had purchased a slather of ruined acres from a toothy land-shark in Adelaide on the promise he could grow potatoes. The soil was like cement. In the first year he managed to grow three potatoes - three - in all his many allotments. Then came Cotton Sally. She rampaged across the paddocks ablaze with grey-green needles. He was on Ralph Bowie’s list. The property was remote and lunar, chunky with rock-work and, in the fallow patches, outbreaks of prickly pear. This was no direct concern of the spray gang, though, whose only grievance was with the pearly milk thistle, ostenatious and offensive. It was a noble gait. She stood upright. But she was as vicious as a disappointed lassie from Glasgow. She was all over this property like a dose of the dribbling groin rash. It was a hazard. These were intrepid gentlemen who rarely washed. They camped out in bursts of three weeks, then drove back to the Restless Pleasure testing ground to drink all their earnings in cycle.

Craig of the Monobrow was driving for a change. The men bartered cigarettes and exchanged cool sardonic banter. Billy Such said that he once strangled a Belgian to death, and he was just reminding every one of this fact to underline his aversion to gentle teasing. The Farley boy from Banning Flats made observations on the weather. “There’s a bit of cloud,” he noticed. But it was far away and thin and streaky. In a quiet corner the cook and the dwarf whispered other observations.

“The weather? Hot!” said the dwarf, sarcastic. As if February would agree to be anything else. They were among the dim.

The Aborigine nodded indeed.

A single track took them across the girth of the land, deep into the grey clay. They pulled up and dismounted and prepared to continue the war. It was a point where the thistles were thick and bitter. There were patches of the inedible horehound on the edges. It was the only companion the thistle would permit. The Man-in-Charge ordered Gustav and Craig to man the sprayers and Alf Apple leant a hand. Suction was powered by a deisel engine on the back. The M.I.C. himself took care of that.

“You blokes get onto this corner,” he directed, “I want to get this done by lunch time.”

Monkey Gilson snorted loud and said, “Pig’s arse!”

A million thistles laid down their challenge.

“You shouldn’t speak to your M.I.C. like that,” said pissy Gotham.

No one cared.

“We’ll get it done when we get it done,” said Alf Apple sagacious. It was his philosophical position.

As this went on, however, the cook and the dwarf sought refuge from the wasteland. There were boulders avast, heavy munga of the earth, and a slight pinnacle of high ground and nooks of shade. Rabbits abound. The cook could catch them with his bare hands. The two veered upwards. The deisel started chugging and the first mists of spray wafted from the guns. The plan, as usual, was to dowse one section then drive along. It was going to take them forever.

Mount Everest led the way. Channing G. Sportsworth III surveyed the primordial topography as the sun started eeking over the hilltops.

Their conversation was a continuation of other days.

Mount Everest had plans to one day go to Sydney. He spoke of ways to become a millionaire. The cook was softly spoken and contemplative and considered it a rare disposition for a dwarf in a spray gang killing Cotton Sally. He himself had plans to go to Rockhampton where his brother lived.

“You’d like Sydney,” said the dwarf. “It’s got a big bridge and you could get a job as a cook.”
“I can only cook three things,” the cook admitted though.

They climbed some further boulders. There was a sharp cut of shadow ready for when the sunbeams hit and noon came searing.

The drawf thought it over. “Yeah,” he agreed, “And they’re all the same. Pity.”

He saw the limitations.

It was then, amidst the cut, sheltered by great rock, that the two of them, opening forth, suddenly saw the cave. It had been covered by sandy rubble but the recent wind storms had loosened the obscurity. The indigenous chap scooped down and pushed the few stray thistles aside. There was a cave front, it was true. From the angle you could see down deep inside. It seemed to descend.

The two glanced aloft.

“Will we have a look?” wondered the Mountain.

“Why not?” wondered the Aborigine.

The dwarf was small enough. He climbed down within.

The thistles, meanwhile, had drawn first blood. Ralph the Lacky tripped on a malee root and fell face first into a nasty bed. Apart from pissy Gotham, the spray gang laughed until they all needed to urinate on the side of the truck, further irony. Ralph’s thistle stings were bleeding. Vengeful, he ordered the Germanic and the Monobrow to not hold back but to train their nozzles upon Cotton Sally that she might know to never mess with the Victorian Department of Lands ever again. The gang resumed. They cranked up the deisel to the highest gear. Alf took the wheel. Cotton Sally swayed in the blistering breeze.

Among the rocks, the dwarf disappeared. Channing G. Sportsworth III looked on.

“Can you see down there?” he called.

“Sure can!” the dwarf responded. Then, going hence, there was a long silence until he expressed his massive fascination. Tremendous adherence! Awesome encounter! Great quadrupeds of the palaeocene!

“Blood hell!” cursed the Mountain. “You really ought to come down and see this chef!” His voice was muffled in the cavenous wonder.

“What is it?” the cook wanted to know.

The dwarf had to coax him through the narrow entry hole. Once under, all was revealed.
“So what is it?” the cook asked again, this time before the skeletal ruins of a considerable beast. The hole was dark - as holes are dark - but a bright shaft adjusted their eyes and they could easily see the shapes and the frame.

“I’II tell you what it is!” said the dwarf. “It’s a bloody stegosaurus, that’s what it is!”

He knew his dinosaurs.

The sandy twists had uncovered its final rest. Three hundred acres of vicious thistles had kept the cave occluded. It was in some disarray but its huge hips and whacking jawline were plain to understand. Some manner of dinosaur any how, was intruder from a former age.

“We’re rich!” Mount Everest announced.

“How do you figure?” asked the cook.

The dwarf was instantly excited.

“We’ve just discovered an archaeological treasure, my friend. It must be worth a fortune!”
Not only did he know his dinosaurs, he knew his market forces.

Channing G. Sportsworth III gave it some serious thinking. His round mellow face remained unchanged.

“I don’t see any reason,” he began, “to tell the Man-in-Charge about it, though. Do you?”

Mount Everest entirely agreed.

“I don’t see any reason to tell anybody about it,” he said, vowing certitude.

But he supposed that he could find a buyer in Sydney. The bleak land is bereft of treasures. Here and there are opal mines and a zinc pit or two, the endeavour of completely foolhardy men. The water that’s dredged up from the bores is red and brown and smells of the far-reaching devil. They call intrepid gentlemen on spray gangs “thistle rich”, meaning dirt poor, and this be where the expression comes from even though those who use it no longer remember anymore. ‘He’s thistle rich’ means poor enough to be conscripted to the rural scheme, camping out beneath the circling sky in gangs of twelve or more. How bright the starry rafters! The dwarf and the cook realised it was their lucky day. What about the fool whose land it happened to be on? He needn’t know about it either. The ancient beast held all its secrets. Its head was intact. The texture of bone was showing. They would cover up the caveway and come back in the relative calm of autumn. No one need know till then.

“There are museums,” said the dwarf, “that specialise in this sort of thing.”

Some men find mere artifacts. Some find song-lines across the unshod desert. Some find nuggets of gold. Some men, even short men, black men, find stegosauruses hiding in the rocks midst oceans of unfriendly weeds.

* * * 

The night came slowly. Evening lingers in the plains at the back of the King William Ranges. The M.I.C. started yelling and so did pissy Gotham. Billy Such threatened to strangle them both. The team poured a belly-load of 24D over the purple menace, and she stung, and she imbibed the heady toxin. They were behind schedule by a King William mile. The dimensions of the land just laughed at their puny application. They sprayed all day but only trimmed around the edges. There were banks of blackberries in the gullies, the harbour of new vermin.

Upon dark the gang lit a hardwood fire and slipped on a billytin of eucalyptus tea again. They sat on logs and rolled slim cigarettes. Channing G. Sportsworth III started slicing up the rabbit chops.

The men were discussing who were the bigger bastards, the Scots or the Poms? Alf Apple had been born in Cornwall and was mightily offended. Gustav had a continental point of view. Teddy Mayfair thought that Scotsmen, not unlike New Zealanders, whom they resembled, he said, couldn’t be trusted near sheep and he offered his own views on the real purpose of the kilt. After a while, the department lacky broke the spell of the fireside by listing the sites that were scheduled on the dusty morrow. It was a rough test of reality. They go until the tank is empty. Then they go back, siphon it all, and drive onwards to another landholder’s purple nightmare. They were paid enough for tobacco and a hold-over stipend collected at the end of active duty.

“I’ve got a big surprise for you hardworking whitefellas tonight,” yelled the cook during a star-studded lull. The fire crackled. “Stegosaurus pie!”


The men looked up, paused, then cheered and stomped. Anything but rabbit.

- O. Spaniel Murray


News from Wallaby Ridge

There have been jubilant scenes at the Wallaby Ridge council chambers over the past few days.  In a series of meetings, the Shire Administrators have clinched a deal with the Chairman of U-Win Gaming P/L, Mr Lou “Lucky” Grasp.   Under the terms of the agreement, gaming machines are to be installed in the newly named Eunice Cakebread Memorial Hall and at other selected locations.  The Shire is about to launch a competition at the local school to come up with a suitable name for the new casino at Cakebread Hall.   Announcing the agreement yesterday, the CEO, Basil Scrivener said that “this will move Wallaby Ridge into the 21st Century and greatly bolster the local economy”.

There has been limited opposition to the new deal.  A spokesperson for the Wallaby Ridge Senior Citizens, former occupants of the Cakebread Hall, said that some members were finding it difficult to travel out to their new meeting venue at the East Bagshot Mechanics Institute. The future of the latter building is also under review by the recently constituted Public Amenities Rationalisation Committee and there are rumours that the Hall may be sold off.  Some of the Wallaby Ridge Churches have also voiced concerns. Father Daniel O’Herlihy, PP of St. Agnes’, said that he had been resisting pressure from “progressive elements” to install gaming machines in the narthex of the church .  The local branch of the Salvation Army has also shown little enthusiasm re the “new economic miracle”.  A spokesperson for the S.A. has told the Wallaby Creek Office of the Clarion that demand for emergency supplies, particularly 20 cent coins, has been overwhelming.  In a conciliatory gesture, U-Win Gaming P/L has offered to place machines in the Salvation Army Hall at a much reduced fee.


Fears of widespread social problems and poverty attending the introduction of these machines seem to be largely unfounded.  A recent cost-benefit analysis of the local gaming industry by academic and noted economist, Dr. Angus Forehead, B.Ag.Sc., PhD., indicates that the net economic gain from the Casino will be considerable.  Using the Reinhart-Fourier sociological model, Dr. Forehead has predicted that the new industry will vastly enhance social cohesion and stability as well as assisting the economy in a tangible way.