Authors: Steven Herrick
Tonight, and the
night after
The walk stretches my cold body
and gets me breathing again.
As I near town there's more cars
and school buses, yellow,
full of kids shouting insults
at me, the bum,
walking down the road.
I don't care,
better a bum than a schoolkid.
It's an old town
with stone buildings
and wide streets
and cast-iron street lamps
like crazy ghosts lurking
on the footpaths.
And every shop has a SALE sign
like the whole town's
desperate for money.
As I walk down Main Street
thinking of the $50 in my pocket
and how it's got to last me
a lifetime
I realise Bendarat
is not the only desperate one.
But, today
I don't care.
The sun is shining now
as I reach the library
and sit down on the front steps,
one hour until opening.
My day today is reading,
reading about people who don't need money
and people
who have somewhere to sleep
tonight,
and the night after.
Lord of the lounge
It's a good library.
Lots of books, sure,
and lounges soft and comfortable
for real reading,
and I choose one
in the corner
and I settle down
with a book about these kids
stranded on a deserted island
and some try to live right
but the others go feral
and it's a good book
and I'm there, on the island,
gorging on tropical fruit,
trying to decide
whose side I'm on.
And then it hits me.
I'm on neither.
I'd go off alone,
because you can't trust
those who want to break the rules
and you certainly can't trust
those who make the rules,
so you do the only thing possible,
you avoid the rules.
That's me,
on the deserted island
of a soft lounge
in Bendarat Library.
The librarian
âYou can borrow that if you
like.'
Her badge says
Irene Thompson â Chi
ef Librarian
.
Trouble I'm sure.
âIt's a good book.
It
was my favourite when I was young.'
âNo thanks.
I'm happy to read it here.'
Please just
leave me alone.
âThat's fine.
But we c
lose for lunch in ten minutes.
I'm sorry. But you can come
back at two.'
âThanks Mrs Thompson. I will.
It'
s too good a book not to finish.'
She's OK.
Not like
the librarian at home.
She hated kids touching books.
She ran
the perfect library
because no-one ever went in there
to disturb the books.
âCall me Irene.
I'm old, but not t
hat old.
See you after lunch.'
Lunch
I'm poor, homeless,
but I'm not stupid.
For lunch I go to Coles.
I buy a packet of bread rolls,
some cheese and a tomato.
Enough for three meals.
I sit on the bench
at Bendarat Gardens
with my Swiss Army knife
cutting thin slices of tomato
with chunks of cheese
and I eat two rolls
watching the pigeons
watching me.
I toss them some crumbs.
Lunchtime entertainment,
free of charge,
is a couple kissing on a blanket.
For twenty minutes
they lay together
kissing
hugging.
They hardly touched their sandwiches.
I can't blame them.
As they got up to leave
I felt like applauding,
but as I said
I'm poor, homeless,
but I'm not stupid.
The Motel Bendarat
I finished the book,
nodded goodbye to Irene
and walked out
into the late afternoon cloud
and a slight drizzle.
No sleeping in the park tonight.
Two options:
a church
or a railway station.
Churches are too spooky and cold.
I walk to the station.
Men in suits, like tired penguins,
wait for the bus
and throw furtive glances
at the woman on the seat
reading a magazine.
She ignores them.
The train station is sandstone
with a long veranda platform,
hard wooden seats and a Coke machine.
I walk across the tracks
past the freight yard
to some old carriages,
disused, waiting to be sold
and turned into
fancy bed and breakfast accommodation
or maybe used as someone's chook shed.
I try each door until one opens.
I climb in.
There's a long bench seat
fit to hold eight people
and certainly long enough
for me to sleep on.
It's comfortable too,
being old and well made.
I close the door
and make a home
in Carriage 1864,
painted red and yellow,
my Motel Bendarat.
Night
I had two rolls for dinner,
washed down with
the last of Dad's beer.
The carriage was surprisingly warm
and quiet, so quiet.
I used my bag as a pillow,
wrapped my jacket over me,
lay back and slept
the sleep of the dreamless.
Occasionally I woke
to a train whistle
or the clank of metal on metal
as the night shift worked,
shunting the freight carriages.
I thought of Bunkbrain, my dog,
probably asleep on the veranda
and I wished I had brought him
for the company
on nights like this
in a new town
and in a new home.
Eating out
I finished the rolls
and cheese for lunch today,
so tonight I'm eating out.
McDonald's.
I order a small lemonade,
no ice,
no fries,
no burger,
and no smile from the lady
behind the counter.
She's the manager I'm sure.
Everyone else working here is my age
except this lady
who looks at me as if I'm diseased
for ordering only a drink.
I go upstairs
where it's quiet and warm.
I read the free newspaper
and wait.
Sure enough
the couple in the corner
can't eat all the fries,
and the woman leaves half a burger.
They get up to leave
and before they've reached the stairs
I'm over at the table,
grabbing the burger
and the fries
to go with my lemonade,
the lemonade I bought.
This is the only way to eat at McDonald's.
I sit back
read the newspaper
and wait for the family of five to leave.
I can see dessert
waiting for me.