Authors: Steven Herrick
Caitlin
Now I'm a normal seventeen-year-old girl.
I think about boys.
I sit with my girlfriends, Kate and Petra,
at lunchtime.
Sometimes we talk to boys
when they sit with us.
I watch Petra flirt madly
and I notice her body language
change when boys are near.
She moves her hands more,
her eyes wink and flutter,
she's such a show pony,
but I like her.
And yes I've been out with boys
âon dates'
but mostly with Petra and Kate
and a whole gang together,
not alone.
And I've done some things,
you know,
at parties with boys,
just mild stuff really.
So I'm normal,
a normal seventeen year old.
I think about boys
but only in a general way
like not a boy I know
or anything
but just some good-looking guy
and me
and what we'd do
if we had the chance.
Pure fantasy really.
Nothing wrong with that,
but nothing real about it either.
The hobo hour
It's morning
but still dark
when I hear a bottle crash
outside the carriage.
I go out to check
and find
an old man
with long grey hair
and beard
sitting on the train track
looking at the beer stain
the wooden sleepers.
He can't believe he's dropped
a full bottle.
He sits there, staring,
doesn't notice me
behind him.
I don't know whether
to leave him be
or say sorry
although I didn't do anything.
Then I remember
Dad's carton of cigarettes
in my bag.
I don't smoke.
I just stole them
to annoy Dad.
I rush back into the carriage
and get them.
I sit beside the old hobo
and hand them across.
He looks at them awhile,
then at me,
smiles weakly,
takes them, saying,
âI should give up.
These will kill me.'
He unwraps the carton,
hands shaking,
lights one
and takes a huge drag.
The tip of the cigarette
burns brightly
then
fades to old smoke.
We both sit
staring at the beer
and the sunrise,
sharing the hobo hour.
Old Bill
His name,
would you believe,
was Bill.
So I decided to call him
Old Bill.
He didn't mind.
He said he'd slept
in the carriage next to mine
on and off
for years.
He'd bought himself
a bottle of beer
to celebrate his birthday,
and look at it now.
His grey beard was stained with smoke,
his hair long and swept back,
his face lined but
when you looked closer
he wasn't that old,
forty-five, maybe fifty.
He got up to go to bed
to sleep off his sorrow
or so he said.
As he left he turned
and said,
âWelcome to the Bendarat Hilton,
I've been here since March 2nd, 1994.
May your stay be as long,
if you wish it.'
Then he stumbled off,
an old man
before his time,
sleeping in a carriage,
and I shivered
as the sun came up.
Rich town
In the late afternoon
Old Bill told me
that Bendarat was once
the railway hub of the south-west.
A rich town,
with pubs on every corner
and drunken railway workers
walking the streets looking for action.
Over one hundred men
worked in the freight yard
on eight-hour shifts
around the clock,
loading cross-country trains
with wheat and wool
and fruit from the orchards.
A rich town.
But the highways improved
and semitrailers were faster than trains
and they built a wheat-loading
facility outside of town
so now
there's only a few men left
driving forklifts
loading fruit pallets
and that's all.
Old Bill said
the workers
know he's here
but they don't say anything
to the authorities
because
he keeps the carriage clean
and doesn't make much noise
and, like the few workers left,
he's got nowhere else to go
and nothing else to do,
in Bendarat,
that once
was a rich town.
Before my time
I slept badly.
I dreamt of myself
as an old man
in a pub, at the bar,
watching the races on TV
with my smokes and my plans
for winning $5 on the grey horse
running second last.
All night
I could hear Old Bill
snoring, coughing,
swearing in his sleep.
He made more noise
than the wind
whistling through the freight yard.
I lay in bed
listening
afraid to fall asleep
and dream again
of myself
getting old
long before my time.
Too early
In the morning,
too early,
I got a bowl
and filled it with Weet-Bix and milk
and I took it next door
to Old Bill.
I knocked quietly
and I heard him grunt.
I opened the door
to his carriage,
to the smell of old socks
and alcohol
mixed with the Weet-Bix,
the Weet-Bix I offered
to Old Bill
as I leaned inside.
He lifted his head slightly,
shielding his eyes
from the light,
and he growled,
âPiss off, son.
Piss off. Leave me alone.'
It was too early
for a drunk,
too early for most of us I guess.
I left the bowl and a spoon
and I closed the door
and walked away
into the fragile morning.
Bendarat River
The river is cold, clear,
and deep. Outside of town
there's a weir where the water
falls swiftly over rocks
and forms whirlpools
and bubbles and makes more noise
than the cockatoos in the rivergums.
Further downstream it rounds a slow bend
and here I swim fully clothed
and stand waist-deep in the shallows
with a bar of soap.
I wash my clothes and myself
in one soapy afternoon
swim in the deep,
feel the weight of my clothes
pulling me down
but I'm a strong swimmer.
I reach the bank
and undress to my Speedos
and hang my pants, shirt
and jumper in the trees
to dry.
Every second day
I come here
to the Bendarat Laundry
to wash the world away.