Albert must have decided to give the tourists a demonstration.â
Albert?
A didgeridoo was an Aboriginal instrument. Did one of the tribes still live here?
Miranda sped after Nathan, eager to experience more of what she was hearing. And suddenly it came into viewâ¦the end of the gorgeâ¦a fantastic open cavern, the side walls towering up in incredibly sheer sheets of rock, the back one curved inward, sheltering a pool of mysterious black water surrounded by sand.
Behind the pool a group of six people sat on a jumble of flat rocks, watching an Aboriginal man blowing into a long hollow pole, the end of it resting on the ground as his hands moved over the holes in the wood, controlling the emissions of sound.
The eerie notes boomed up with all the power of a pipe organ in a cathedral, filling the cavern, echoing out like some primitive call that had passed through aeons of time, as though summoning the heartbeat of the earth itself so that those who heard it would feel its underlying rhythm and be in harmony with it.
It couldnât be called a song. There was no melody. Yet the interplay of sounds touched some deep soul chord that suddenly reminded Miranda of what Nathan had said earlier about his life being bound up in this landâancient landâwhere survival reduced everything to basic needs.
She hadnât comprehended the full context of what he was saying but she had a glimmering of it nowâ¦the stark simplicity of choices laid out by nature, a cycle to be followedâ¦birth, growth, mating, reproducing, deathâ¦an endless replenishment as long as the earth kept feeding it.
No romantic gloss.
Just life as it really was, underneath all the trimmings that civilisation had manufactured to sweeten it.
The playing ended on a long, deep, mournful note, which seemed to reverberate through Miranda, making her tingle in a shivery way. The Aboriginal man shouldered his didgeridoo. The group of six applauded, their enthusiastic clapping sounding totally wrong to Miranda, somehow trivialising an experience that should have been savoured in silence.
She was frowning over it when Nathan turned to look at her, his eyes hard and cynical. âThe performance not worth your applause?â
She stared at him, feeling his contempt for the lack of understanding that connected what theyâd just heard to a performance to be clapped. âNot everyone has your background, Nathan,â she excused.
He raised an eyebrow. âYouâre not going to show some mark of appreciation?â
She struggled to express what sheâd felt. âTo me it was a communication, not a concert.â
âOh? And what did it communicate to you?â
His eyes were a pitiless blue, scorning any sensitivity from her. His challenge was a deliberate ploy to confirm the place heâd put her inâa woman without soul, a woman who cared only for herself, disregarding the hurt she might give to others.
Mirandaâs gaze bored straight back at him, resentment goading her into flouting his superficial and insulting reading of her character. âIt gave me an insight into your life. And the life of those who have inhabited this land. How it must have always demanded they be attuned to its heartbeat.â
Her reply visibly jolted him. His chin butted up as though hit by a punch of disbelief. His eyes flared as though sheâd done serious violence to his feelings. For a few nerve-shaking moments, she felt caught in a fiercely questing force that tore at everything she was. Then just as suddenly it was withdrawn, Nathan turning away and walking on.
Denial? Frustration?
Feeling as though sheâd been pulped and tossed aside, Miranda had to recollect herself again before following. The deep drifts of sand made walking heavy going, but clearly the cavern was their destination so there wasnât far to go now, and at least she wouldnât be alone with Nathan here.
Having consoled herself with this
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