So many familiar faces. So many names from the past, changed bodies, changed people. So many I had never met, still wouldn’t. Such a breadth of influence.
There aren’t too many people who get Tim Costello outlining their biography at their funeral and performing the committal, have condolences from Senator Kate Lundy, and the ACT health minister and various other politicians, whose name will be entered into Hansard, and who also have punks and goths dancing in the aisle as the coffin is lowered into the fires. And yes, dancing. With tears in their eyes. Aveline would have appreciated it.
The speeches were great – covering her time in Sydney, Canberra, Melbourne. I’d helped write one but stepped back in the end to smooth over difficult relationships, and I’m so glad I did. Halo’s introduction and contributions made it perfect and her delivery was exactly what the thing needed. Grant and Renée, who were very close to her, spoke last, touchingly, saying goodbye yet again in a week full of so many goodbyes. I wished her mother and brother long life, part of a Jewish tradition I think Aveline would have appreciated.
All day, I kept wanting to tell Aveline about it all and she wasn’t there to tell.
A few of us went back to my place before the wake, vodka martinis and shots of chartreuse. Changed clothes.
The wake was everything it was supposed to be. I wasn’t much in the mood for dancing when I got there, so I sat downstairs and downed cocktails, talking with Jack and various people. Then once, heading upstairs for some reason, I heard Liz and crew playing guitars and singing on the landing. I joined them and we sang for ages, songs of protest, songs of farewell, songs of power and love and sadness. Liz got Kate and Morgan to sit down and listen to the song she’d written for them, and in it I heard all my love for Doug, who has left already and who I miss so badly: “It’s cold where you are… stand tall, stand strong, together” (I may be misquoting, but those are the lyrics I remember). It’s been in my head for days now.
Upstairs, I finally felt like dancing. It being a Mistress’s wake, there were naturally floggings going on in one corner. Topless punk dykes dancing in the same place as ethereal hippies. Yes, Aveline, you did cross borders and barriers, didn’t you? Towards the end of the night, Jaffa collapsing in my arms and Carla coming to help me support her, sobs and pain. So many people realising the fragility of humanity and the shortness of time, me apologising to Mark, Ruth approaching me, Nigel and I having a heart-to-heart at 2 in the morning on the landing.
We stumbled out into the night when the club closed and off to Chinatown for noodle soup, me and Chaedy, Ben, Nigel and Kate. Home at 4 and I’m drunkenly on the phone to Doug in the US.
Where to now? asks the night. Where to next? whisper the shades of decisions past. Sleep claims me. It is Lughnasadh, the festival of harvest, the time of reaping, the funeral games for Tailitu. Life goes on.