For a long time now I have been trying to write a gay romance. Several years ago I stayed with my son in a hotel in West Wyalong a country town in outback New South Wales Australia
There was a stand alone bathroom with a lockable door, big green bath and a 1930s style pedestal wash basin. I had an overwhelm
ing feeling that two men had experienced a powerful love for each other in that place
I did some on-line research and came up with two characters Richard a former RAAF pilot and Tom a trainee doctor at the local hospital. Here is how I have imagined their story, drawing freely on my own family history of being publicans and my childhood years in country towns in the late 50s and 60s . feedback welcome
THE BALCONY ROOMS
There was a stand alone bathroom with a lockable door, big green bath and a 1930s style pedestal wash basin. I had an overwhelm
Image credit State library of Victoria |
I did some on-line research and came up with two characters Richard a former RAAF pilot and Tom a trainee doctor at the local hospital. Here is how I have imagined their story, drawing freely on my own family history of being publicans and my childhood years in country towns in the late 50s and 60s . feedback welcome
THE BALCONY ROOMS
The
Balcony Rooms
Tom had the sort of looks that men and women took to without
being threatened by. He was a redhead and redheads have their own type of beauty.
Although he was only 5’7” he was well-built with strong calves
and powerful hamstrings, the product of success in schoolboy tennis. Tom was a
scholarship boy at Xavier who had gone on to do medicine. He had come to the
town as a locum doctor and been made so welcome by the townspeople that when a
medical officer position came up at the Base Hospital he had applied for it.
Richard was blessed with the trifecta- 6’2”, dark Irish
looks with a high forehead from a hairline that was gently receding as he aged,
celtic steel blue eyes with the added
feature of lips that were a deep red . Everyone noticed when he entered a room. Tom envied
Richard his height –one aspect of good looks age could not so easily diminish.
Richard was a pilot
who had survived the RAF. After
Australia had been invaded by the Japanese in the last war the government had
decided that every square mile of Australia would be mapped from the air. This
hot but friendly town was in the middle of his patch, an area the size of Great
Britain and Germany combined.
The Hotel had been renovated between the Wars in Arte Moderne
style –in the streamlining of the facade only the corner suite had been left
with a balcony. As it was at the edge of
the commercial district there were no other two story buildings to obscure its
view of the river or threaten its privacy.
Bert the publican of the Royal Mail Hotel and his wife Mae
had that morning left the small suite of rooms on the corner of the Hotel to
take a house in River St. After years of
hard work the business was thriving and they no longer needed to live on site. There
was a large bedroom with a wash basin, a sitting room and the balcony, facing
the morning sun and providing a cool breeze off the river in the evening.
Tom asked Richard casually – do you want to get that corner
suite together? Richard felt a wave of excitement and anxiety at the prospect
rise up from his balls and put colour on his cheeks. He agreed- saying it
shouldn’t cost any more than the sum of their individual rooms put together
and would give them a table for their frequent card games.
They had met one unexpectedly warm day last October
Richard was forced to
make an emergency landing in the only straight and even place available – the
main street of a small town some 160 Miles out. He pushed the plane to the
side of the one horse and cart fire station, hitched back to town and waited at
the hotel while the Department sent a mechanic and parts to fix his plane.
One week later he was making the rounds of people in the bar
seeing if anyone was heading out in his direction. Tom had just booked into the
pub-he had purchased a V8 Customliner on the strength of his new job at the
hospital and was keen to give it a stretch.
Bert packed them a couple of beers they wrapped in wet
newspaper and Mae made them sandwiches. They
left around noon and soon found themselves warming up in the heat. About half
way there they passed a deep bend in the river that Tom remembered from his
locum.
Richard took off his war issue leather jacket and pants to
reveal a long pale body tanned only from the neck up. Tom dropped his khaki
shorts and ran quickly to the river – he duck dived deeply–looking down he
could see patterns made by the sun on the stony bottom of the riverbank,
looking up he could see Richard floating
head down arms out taking in the coolness of the river. He noticed Richard’s manhood was undiminished despite the cold water. Afterwards
they lay sunbathing behind some large rocks, the beer the sunshine the cool
water and the complicity of their nakedness slowly loosening their tongues.
When they arrived to pick up the plane the publican had
opened up the front parlour and prepared them a large dinner of lamb and roast
veggies. He had rented out a room to the Department mechanic and the paper from
the nearest regional centre had even sent a reporter out to cover the story
–all in all a better week than he had in a while. It was really getting warm by
this stage -they went upstairs to the balcony drinking a Rutherglen red that
the publican had kept from before the war and looking out over the wheat fields
and the silos. When Richard had wiped the claret from his mouth with the heavy
napkin Tom was reminded of the priests he had seen cleaning themselves up from
the altar wine, before facing the people for the farewell blessings.
In the heat of that summer they stayed in Coogee on the
beachfront in a hotel frequented by local service men. Tom had been surprised
to find Richard had booked them into a double not a twin room – it was the only
one available he had said..
Richard’s company gave Tom
a deep sense of hope, of feeling special that he was no longer alone His
dark good looks promised oceans of reassurance – he knew Richard enjoyed his
company as much as he enjoyed Richard’s.
They decided Richard would speak to Bert about the balcony room.
Bert had been in the navy in the First World War and the home guard in the Second.
Richard was a man’s man and Bert was
fond of him. He caught Bert in the mid
afternoon –always the best time. Bert started
drinking about 2 – reached his peak for the time between 4 and 6 when half the
town drank at his pub –and spent the evening drinking with the boarders –
school teachers, bank clerks and other men like Richard and Tom with no family
in town and no wife to care for them.
Bert I was wondering about the balcony rooms now you and Mae have moved
out – do you have any plans for them?
Clean them up a bit and rent them out.
Tom and I were thinking we could share some digs for a while.
He looked up at Richard with a slightly puzzled look and
then said with half a smile on his moustache clad lip.
There is a double bed
in there now Mae and I brought a new one. I will replace it with 2 single
In matter of fact tone Richard said
Don t bother Bert, it
will be fine as it is. We’ve been mates
for awhile
Bert knew from his time in the Navy there were many ways men
could be together-having someone special that’s what counted.
OK that’s settled you can move in Saturday. Go
and get Tom and we’ll have a beer on it before the crowd shows up
That Sunday morning was spent reading papers on the balcony
while the church bells from each denomination pealed in the background.
Every morning Tom had the ineffable joy of lying in bed seeing
his Richard washing himself awake at the washbasin, his lean body now
developing a deep all-over tan.
The Measure of a Man
Being able to judge distances mattered a great deal to
Richard. He lived (or died) by this ability and others too depended on his
skills – each moment he was awake he was constantly estimating distances.
Richard now liked to keep his distance from other men;
preferring solitude to company that would get too close and then be lost to to
him
Richard had been sent home to Sydney from the RAF base in
England. He was living in Randwick Barracks while he worked out if he would stay
in the RAAF or find some other way to keep flying.
It was a brooding close-in Sydney morning with a low sky. He
needed some exercise to keep to his flying weight. The only thing he had to do all day was turn
up at the officers’ mess at 1800 hours
Passing Randwick race course he could see the ocean a couple
of miles away
As he walked he remembered the
names of all those Boys he had lost. 19 boys from his home town had
perished flying, boys he had swum with in the River in summer or played footie
with in the winter. There were many others he had been close, to including the
6 members of his crew who had perished when someone else took his place in the
final stages of the war
One friend Jack, a handsome
lad with shining eyes and black curly hair that escaped his helmet had shown
him the letter they all had to write to their next of kin. He remembered one line Jack had written to his
mother “There is nothing like the element of danger to seal a friendship”.
How hard it was to forget
friends he had wanted to keep for his lifetime!
He remembered packing up Jack’s things when he had not come
back from a mission over Holland, especially the rosary beads that had failed
to protect him. There would be someone else in this bed tomorrow night.
Survival was a mixture of luck and skill – a lot would be
killed in their first five missions before they knew how to defend
themselves but even experienced officers
with medals to prove it were shot down.. They would all be in the mess together
before takeoff, 8 hours later there were 35 missing
During the war Richard had learned to just keep going
whatever happened to those around him. He had been postponing his grief until
he had the solitude to deal with it. Now he began to allow himself to remember
- one name every 100 steps was his rosary of grief
He was not done when
he arrived in Coogee. Passing the convent school on his left and the faded
apartments on his right he walked out onto the Coogee concourse
The concourse was a grand sweep of beach. On the left was
the walk to Clovelly along the cliff tops, he walked right to the Sea Baths.
Paying Tuppence to enter plus threepence for a towel and
cossie he pushed through the rusted turnstile. There was a European looking man
sitting naked in the change room catching whatever sun he could find. Richard
changed awkwardly under the stranger's gaze bending lower then he needed to
when changing into his cossie and turning his back while he carefully folded
his uniform
When he emerged from his dive he felt warm soft rain falling
on his head and shoulders as the rest of his body enjoyed the cool foamy water
The day became fiercely hot and by lunch time he took
sanctuary in the pre war hotel whose main bar faced the surf. As the cold beer
hit his stomach he slowed right down and turned in on himself He noticed the
tiles on the outside of the pub were red and black bordered on a mottled background,
inside they were a cool sea green.
At 6 O’clock he was on the street. As he looked back he saw in
the first floor window a man in a dirty white singlet with a roll your own
hanging out of his mouth, gazing out to sea.
On the cliff-top he suddenly wanted to be one of the Boys again,
to lie in a cool green silence where there was no more struggle.
With a practised eye he estimated to the nearest foot the
height of the cliff and then calculated the impact of his body on the rocks –
and pulled back from the edge. He knew there was a chance he would survive and
become a burden.
A summer storm lit up the sky and he saw that he must leave
the war behind him - He took out his pipe and the small fire in his palm
comforted him. As the smoke filled his lungs it was both a benediction to those
he had lost and a reminder he was still breathing when so many others were not and
he had better make the most of it.
In trouble for arriving back late and worse for wear, the charges
he was threatened with only helped him make up his mind to leave the Air Force
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