The barman’s finger
traced invisible circles around Thursday’s date printed on the front of today’s
paper. He stared at the back of the tourist studying the notice board. A man of
average height, in his mid to late sixties, he walked with limp and a ragged
scar ran down his cheek. Sam had seen many tourists in his bar, but this one
had an air of mystery about him and it gave Sam the shivers.
‘What’s
with the ear?’ the drawl sounded American but Sam couldn’t be sure.
‘It’s from
one of Joe Gillespie’s heifers, somebody shot and clay-panned it out near
Pauper’s Corner about six months ago.’
‘Where?’
the stranger asked, tapping the section map.
Sam
left the bar and stood in front of the yellowing chart, he swept his hand along
the Hammond road. ‘This is all Joe’s country here.’ He studied the roads for a
while and jabbed his finger at the intersection of two tracks. ‘And this is
Pauper’s Corner.’
‘Clay-panned
eh?’ The tourist said taking a long look at the map. He drained his glass, and
paid Sam for cigarettes. He turned on his heel, led his shadow into the street,
and disappeared into the early afternoon.
Sam, on his own again
leaned on his elbow and flipped the paper over to the sports pages, but his
mind was elsewhere. He gazed at the pocketknife pinning the cow’s ear to the
frame of the notice board and his mind drifted to the night months ago when Joe
stabbed it there.
It was
about six o’clock on a Friday, he remembered because it was happy hour and all
of the regulars had made it in for their free drinks. The place was full, old
Wally’s shearing team had been in since three and were becoming rowdy.
He’d
just put a schooner in front of Spider when he heard a bull bar crash into the
high kerb in front of the Hotel. Through the open door, he saw the driver’s
door flick open. Joe Gillespie he was out of his seat before the Toyota stopped
shuddering. His face glowed red with anger, the eyes wide and piercing. It only
took Joe two steps to lunge from the four-wheel drive and breast the bar.
Holding
the heifer’s lifeless head by the ear, he slapped it onto the bar in front of
Sam. Gunk splattered those closest and the bar hushed with amazement, Joe had
their attention.
‘This
is the third cow I’ve lost in twelve months and someone in here probably knows
the thieving pricks who’ve been taking them. Well get the message out people, I
have had a gut full and if anybody takes another one it will be their head I
put on the bar.’
He drew
a pocketknife from the pouch on his belt and sliced off the ear. The identity
tag stayed with it. Showing the room, he said. ‘This is a reminder to your
mates to leave my stock alone.’
He held
the ear against the white frame and slammed the blade through the ear splitting
soft timber. Joe studied the crowd, holding eye contact with everyone in the
room when a lone voice broke the silence.
‘Ease
up Grandad. It’s just a bloody cow for Christ sakes.’ The ginger headed young
roustabout giggled. A gutful booze to fuelled his courage.
Joe’s
grabbed him by the throat, his right hand lifting the smartarse from his stool.
Joe dropped him backside first on top of the wet bar. The crowd had stepped further
away when Joe pressed his nose on that of the offender and whispered. ‘But you
see fella, this was no ordinary cow...It was my cow.’
Sam smiled at the theatre
of his memory and returned to the paper.
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