Authors: Steven Herrick
Early, or late
I woke early,
went to Old Bill's carriage
with coffee and breakfast
and he was already awake,
he was shaving!
We sat in the sunshine
and I told him
about the cops
and asked what I should do?
I knew welfare would ask
about where I lived
and how I lived
and I had to keep them
as far away from here
as I could
and it seemed that
moving out west
was the only answer.
But how could I leave
the only town
I've ever wanted to call home,
and Caitlin â¦
Home
When young Billy
told me about the cops
I knew I had to do something.
I told him not to worry,
that somehow
we'd come up with an idea.
I left Billy to his coffee
and his fears of leaving town.
I wanted a long walk to think.
I avoided the park â
today I didn't need conversation,
I needed time.
I walked the suburbs
looking at the neat lawns,
the pebbled driveways,
the flowers and hedges,
and the paint jobs of
a thousand everyday dreams.
And I thought of Billy
leaning against the carriage
reading a book
waiting,
as I kept walking
the familiar streets
of Bendarat.
So obvious
I walk for hours
to end up here
in Wellington Road
opposite
my house,
Jessie's house.
I sit on a bus seat
looking across,
picturing Jessie
at the window
in the backyard
on the veranda.
I could use a drink
to help me decide
but
I know Billy has only got
until this afternoon
and I know
that what I must do is
so obvious
and simple
and so unbearably painful
my whole body shakes
with the thought.
To help people
Sitting here
I thought of Jessie
and the injured bird.
Jessie was eight years old,
she found a parrot
unable to move.
We placed it in a shoebox
wrapped in a handtowel
to keep warm,
hoping the shock would subside.
Jessie stroked its head,
she prayed,
she fed it sugar syrup
with an eye dropper
and we stayed up late,
waiting.
It took two days
of Jessie praying
and stroking
and feeding,
and the bird got stronger.
Jessie and I stood on the veranda,
Jessie holding the bird gently.
She opened her hands
and it sat on her palms
looking at her
then it turned and flew
high into the wattle
where it perched.
Jessie waved
and the bird flew away.
I thought of Jessie
helping that bird
and how, after it left,
Jessie turned to me
and said that
when she grew up
she wanted to be a vet,
she wanted to heal animals
and to help people.
Peace
I unlatch the gate to my house
and walk around the backyard,
the wattle is in bloom,
and a pair of swallows
have made a nest
of clay and straw
under the veranda ceiling.
It's so quiet,
the grass is knee-high
and I think of the lawnmower
in the shed.
I'm sure I can find some two-stroke
and with a bit of coaxing
get the thing started,
but for now
I sit on the veranda
and admire the peace
that I'd never noticed here,
with the morning sun
filtering through the trees,
and I understand
why it's so quiet,
so unworldly.
The swallows swoop along
the grass and weeds
and arc into the nest
above my head.
I hear the chirp of
young birds after a feed
and I stand, walk to the shed,
unlock the door,
push the cobwebs away,
and I roll out the old mower
and go rummaging
for some two-stroke,
ready to work.
The neighbours
The house next door
has new owners
and when they saw me
mowing
they ca
me to the fence
to ask questions,
so many ques
tions.
I told them
I owned this house
but
lived elsewhere
and I'd just rented i
t out
to a young lad,
a friend of the family,
and he was moving in soon
and he
'd keep this grass mown
and look after the place
for me,
an old man
with a house
too big for him.
That seemed to pleas
e them,
they stopped asking questions
and talked about
th
e weather instead.
I went back to mowing.
I wasn't any good with neighbours
and I wondered if
I e
ver will be.
War
Today in History
in Room 652
I looked out the window
and saw Billy
sitting across the road
with his head in his hands.
I wanted to rush out
cross the road
and hug him
right there in the park
opposite my school
and we could walk
to his carriage
and make love
while Petra and Kate
and the rest of this class
learn about the Vietnam War.
Billy and I could make love
not war
and Billy looked so sad.
I wanted so much
to flee History
and the murderous armies
and Mr Hawkins
handing out
homework sheets
that gave me more work
to keep me away from
Billy and freedom
and I felt like
a prisoner of war
here in Room 652
while Billy
sat in the park
with his head in his hands.
Not moving
All morning
I sat outside Bendarat Grammar
hoping to see Caitlin,
wishing she'd walk through
those big iron gates
and we could run away
from Bendarat
and cops
and nosy welfare officers
who call you by your first name
after every sentence,
âSo where are you living, Billy?'
âDo you have enough food, Billy?'
âDo you want to go back to school, Billy?'
âI'm only here to help, Billy.'
All morning
I sat in the dull sunshine
waiting for something to happen.
I thought about Old Bill
and what he said.
I guessed he was going to
give me the last of his money
from the cannery work,
and a map of Australia,
and tell me which train
to jump on to get out of town
before four this afternoon
like I'm some dangerous cowboy
being run out of town by the sheriff.
All morning
I thought of Caitlin
and I thought of leaving
and
all morning
I sat opposite the school
not moving,
not moving a muscle.