Authors: Steven Herrick
A project
When Jessie was nine
she did a school project
on the Great Barrier Reef.
Together we hunted for books
on fish and sea life and the rainforests
and Jessie loved cutting the pictures
from magazines and pasting them
onto a huge cardboard sheet.
She wanted to learn to dive
among the fish in the warm
tropical waters thousands of miles away.
We kept cutting and pasting
and I promised her we'd go
and I promised her we'd swim together
and wave at the fish!
The Great Barrier Reef.
Queensland,
where they have work
for fruit pickers,
watermelons,
pineapples,
bananas.
I could do that.
I could hop the freights
all the way north
where it's warm.
I could stay for winter
and I could be sure
that Billy was looking after
everything I own,
for when I get back
from taking Jessie's
trip to the ocean.
Measure
Caitlin and I walked
through the house,
brushing the spiderwebs
from the doorways,
treading carefully,
quiet, like in a museum.
The furniture was old
but solid.
There was a television,
and a stereo
with lots of country records
stacked neatly beside.
The curtains
were beautiful,
white cotton with seashell patterns
in vivid blue,
and in the bedroom
the wardrobes were solid old timber,
empty,
the double bed was neatly made,
and the dresser was clear
of photos, or books, or anything personal.
The kitchen was huge
with a big fridge,
a double sink,
lots of bench space,
a place where someone
had en
joyed cooking.
Caitlin and I walked around
touching everything gent
ly
as though each object
was worth a fortune.
At the entrance
to the sma
ller bedroom
we found some pencil marks
on the wall,
we
leaned in to read them,
they were height markings
â Jessie 1.2.91
â Dad 1.2.91
â M
um 14.6.92
â Jessie 14.6.92
â Dad 1.2.93
â Jessie 1.2.93.
Under the last entry
for Je
ssie
in a child's printing
were the wo
rds
âI've grown thirteen centimetres in two years,
lots
more than Dad!'
The swallows still
sang on the ve
randa,
as Caitlin and I
stood there
measuring a life.
Cleaning
I told Mum and Dad
the truth.
Well, some of it was true.
I told them
I'm helping a friend
clean their house
and that's why
I've got the mop,
yes, the hated mop,
and a bucket,
and lots of rags.
And I tell them
I'll be away all day
and I leave quickly
before they can ask me
what friend, and where?
I arrive at Billy's
and he's in the kitchen
scrubbing the floor.
He's already done the bathroom.
I vacuum the lounge
and the main bedroom â
it's only dust
that's gathered lonely in the corners
and on the curtains.
Billy and I work all morning.
We eat lunch under the fir trees
and look at the house.
We don't say much.
We lie on the blanket
and hold each other.
Billy has his arms around me
and his eyes turned
towards the white timber house.
Saturday dinner
I rang Mum on the mobile
and I told her I'd be late home.
I was having dinner at my friend's.
She started to ask who
and I switched the mobile off,
deliberately.
I'm having dinner at Billy's,
a dinner we will cook together,
and afterwards
we'll make love on the bed,
Billy's bed.
Then we'll get dressed
and Billy will walk home with me,
and I'll walk into Mum and Dad's questions,
and I'll answer them
truthfully.
It's time.
I love Billy, and I'm sure of him.
I want my parents to know.
In two weeks I'll be eighteen
and I want my parents to know
what I do,
what I plan to do.
I put the mobile down
on the kitchen bench
and I help Billy prepare
the Saturday dinner.
The best meal
It was the best meal
I've ever eaten.
Chicken curry,
with rice and cashew nuts
and pappadums.
It took Caitlin and me
all afternoon to prepare.
We kept stopping to put on
another of Old Bill's records.
We slow-danced around the lounge
to wailing country music,
laughing at our foolish steps
and holding each other
to stop from falling,
and Caitlin tries to lead
and I try to lead
and we both give up
and go back to the curry.
We each poured a beer
and sat at the dinner table
with a white tablecloth
and napkins
and proper cutlery and plates.
I raised my glass,
Caitlin did the same
and we both said,
âTo Old Bill',
and we drank
and we each ate two helpings
of curry and rice.
It was the best meal
I've ever eaten.
Value
Caitlin and I lay
in the huge bed
with the moon
a perfect light
and the trees
long fingers scratching
at the window.
I reached under the bed
and found what I'd hidden
earlier in the night.
I lifted the small case
and I opened the lid
to show Caitlin the
beautiful green emerald ring
I'd bought months earlier
because of the colour of her eyes
because I'd worked all week
in the cannery with my hands stained red
and because
I couldn't spend all that money
on food,
or beer,
or myself.
Midnight
Last night,
unable to sleep
in this quiet house
without the freight train whistles
and the diesel shunting back and forth,
I got dressed, closed the door gently,
and walked the streets,
and as the Town Hall clock
tolled midnight
I stood on the railway platform
looking across at the carriages,
my home for these past months.
I knew Old Bill was asleep
like most of Bendarat.
I made a silent vow
to visit my carriage,
once a week,
to sit and read, alone, on the leather seat,
with the sounds and smells
of the hobo life close by,
to never forget this home
by the railroad tracks.