Authors: Steven Herrick
The weekend off
I've got the weekend off.
No McDonald's,
no schoolwork,
and thankfully no parents âÂ
Mum has a conference interstate,
with Dad going along
âfor the golf'.
It only took three days
of arguing to convince
Mum and Dad that, at seventeen,
I can be trusted on my own,
even though I can't.
And what is trust anyway?
No, I won't burn the house down.
No, I won't drink all the wine.
No, I won't have a huge drug party.
But
yes, I will invite Billy over
and yes, I will enjoy myself
in this house,
this big ugly five-bedroom
million dollar brick box
that we live in.
Hobos like us
Every morning
I wake Old Bill
with a bowl of Weet-Bix
and a cup of coffee from McDonald's,
kept hot in a thermos overnight.
I pour us both a cup
and sit in the sunshine
as Bill groans and complains.
He sits with me and eats
and tells me how he used to be
too busy for breakfast
when he worked,
and he laughs,
a bitter, mocking laugh,
âToo busy for breakfast,
too busy for sitting down
with people I loved.
And now I've got all
the time in the world.'
But at least he eats.
And sometimes he comes with me
to Bendarat River
for a laundry and a bath.
And when he does
and he dives
fully clothed into the river
his laugh becomes real
and it's a good laugh,
a deep belly roar.
I laugh as well,
sure there's hope in the world
even for hobos like us.
The kid
I like the kid.
I like his company.
He's got me waking early
and eating a decent breakfast,
and yes
I drank away most of the cannery money,
but I saved some,
just to show myself I could.
Billy and I go to the river,
we dive and swim
and wash
and for a few hours
I almost feel young again.
Billy deserves more
than an old carriage
and spending his days
trying to keep an
old hobo from too much drink.
I like the kid.
The shadows
I knock gently,
like I always do,
so just Billy would hear,
no-one else.
It's Friday morning
before school.
I want to tell Billy
about my parents' weekend away.
I knock again,
then I hear voices
from the next carriage
and I'm scared.
Maybe he's been discovered?
I creep around the back,
keeping to the shadows,
and I see Billy
in the carriage
with an old man
and Billy's pouring coffee
and giving it to the man
and he's pouring milk into a bowl
and handing this across
and the old man coughs
and groans and swears
and Billy sips his own coffee
and helps the old man
out of the carriage
and into the sunshine
where they sit beside the track
sharing breakfast.
And I stay in the shadows
watching
Billy and the old man
who's finished his breakfast
and Billy washes the bowl
and pours another coffee
for the old man
who is fully awake now
and the old man
looks up at Billy
and says âthanks'
and that's when I turn
and run to school
without ever leaving the shadows.
The afternoon off
I stopped running
when I reached school
and as I entered class
I felt like a real idiot.
I sat through Maths
and Science
and English
trying to understand why I ran
and all I can think
is that seeing Billy
with that old hobo
made me think of Billy
as a hobo
and I was ashamed,
ashamed of myself
for thinking that.
Hadn't I known
that's how Billy lived?
Hadn't I seen him
stealing food,
and hadn't I seen
where he sleeps?
By lunchtime
I decided
I was a complete fool
and maybe I was more spoilt
than I thought,
maybe there was something
of my parents in me,
whether I liked it or not.
And I walked through the school gates,
and I walked slowly and deliberately
back to the railway tracks,
determined not to run away again.
In the sunshine
He was in the sunshine
reading a book.
He saw me coming across the tracks
and waved,
and he stood, closed his book,
and he smiled,
and said welcome,
welcome to my sunshine,
and he jumped into the carriage,
brought out a pillow
for me to sit on.
He offered me coffee
from the same thermos
I'd seen this morning
with the old hobo.
He kept talking
about the book,
his favourite,
The Grapes of
Wrath
,
and the honour of poverty,
that's what he said,
âthe honour of poverty',
and each word he said
made me more ashamed,
and more determined
to sit with him
here
in the bright sunshine.
A man
I know it was shame
that did it,
that made me do it,
but I asked Billy
and his friend, Old Bill,
to dinner at my place tonight.
I only wanted Billy
but the thought of me
running to school
shamed me into asking.
Billy seemed pleased
and he told me about Old Bill,
the saddest man in the world âÂ
that's what he called him â
and as he talked
I understood
what I'd seen
this morning
and I realised
that Billy was sixteen years old
and already a man
and I was seventeen,
nearly eighteen,
and still a schoolgirl.