Read Another Night in Mullet Town Online
Authors: Steven Herrick
The sun comes out
All day at school
the boys crowd around Patrick,
like seagulls arguing over an oily chip.
At one point,
Angelo puts his arm around Patrick's shoulder
as though they're back in kindergarten.
He leads Patrick away from the canteen,
down to the back fence,
near the janitor's shed.
I watch from a distance.
Angelo keeps looking around
as if checking for teachers.
They disappear behind the shed
and, a few minutes later,
a faint wisp of smoke
marks the spot.
I can't see them
but I bet they're talking
about Friday night
and what Patrick saw
while he hid in the dark.
A few minutes later they return.
On the stairs,
Angelo bustles past me
his eyes bloodshot,
his voice slurred.
He calls me âLoser'
before following Patrick to English.
I look down at Patrick's shoes â
black and shiny
expensive leather â
while the rest of us wear canvas.
I turn away from the classrooms
and walk deliberately
down to the janitor's shed.
The bell sounds
for the start of class
as the sun finally comes out.
Sweet and simple
Behind the shed
are scuff marks in the dirt,
except for one small section
near the fence,
which is smoothed over.
Too easy.
I dig down and
find a metal case with a green lid
and inside a stash of pot and papers.
Suddenly, a crow calls from the gum tree.
I look up quickly,
but there's no-one around.
I jump over the fence
and make my way down to the bay
past the old man
wheeling a shopping trolley,
the shop assistants
drinking coffee under the cafe umbrellas
and a young mother holding the hand of her child
who sees a dog and points,
squealing with laughter.
All the while,
I keep my hand in my pocket
touching the case,
its smooth metal surface cool.
I cross at the lights
and walk along the foreshore,
until there's only sand, pelicans and me.
A lone sailing boat rocks on the tide,
the halyard banging against the mast
as a seagull lands on the boom.
I take off my shoes and socks,
roll up my pants
and walk into the shallows.
The water laps against my knees
as I take the case out of my pocket
and hold it flat in my palm.
I so much want to throw it
as far as my anger travels
to make Patrick pay.
But then a thought arrives
so sweet and simple,
I can't help but smile.
The gull wheels in flight
and hovers overhead
expecting food.
My plan
In the afternoon,
I take my bike from the shed
and pedal faster than usual
through the swamp track
and around to Tipping Point.
The sun reddens the cliffs
as a southerly arrives on cue.
At Tipping Point,
I cruise down Patrick's street
and pray that the BMW
isn't parked in the carport.
I'm in luck.
I rest the bike
against the newly painted picket fence
and tentatively walk up the front stairs
whispering to myself,
âPlease don't be home,
please don't be home,
please don't be home.'
My knock is loud and assertive,
the opposite of how I feel.
The sound echoes down the street.
Next door a dog barks.
I knock again
and the dog threatens to wake the dead.
I walk downstairs,
open the double gate to their driveway
and wheel my bike down the concrete path
just enough so I can still see the length of the street.
I wait, my fingers drumming on the bike seat.
The dog next door
gets bored with my presence.
I wait ten minutes.
I wait twenty minutes.
I wait thirty minutes.
I look at my watch
as often as I look down the street,
until I hear the BMW turn the corner.
I take a deep breath
and ride
nonchalantly out of the driveway.
Patrick and his mum
look surprised
to catch someone leaving
as they're arriving.
Patrick's mouth hangs open
like a laughing clown at the sideshow.
His mum winds down the window,
and I say loudly,
âSorry, wrong house.'
It's easy to look guilty;
there's no need for acting,
just a hurried pedal,
back to where I belong â
the poor side of the lake.
All the way home,
I tell myself
my plan to save Manx
will work.
The rich don't always win.
Shimmer
I text Ella and arrange to meet her
at the end of the pier.
She sits down beside me
on the hardwood landing.
Our legs dangle over the edge
as we watch the shimmer of bait fish below us.
Ella reaches for my hand
and I look at the ring on her finger:
a single stone of jade on a silver band.
I touch its smooth surface.
âMy grandmother's,' Ella says.
Clouds scud across the horizon
and a jet takes off from Balarang Bay
wheeling north towards Sydney.
âI've never been on a plane,' I say.
Ella smiles and kisses my cheek.
âIt's like the world is in freeze-frame,' she says,
âand you're above it all, watching.'
The wheels of the plane
contract into the fuselage
and a single light blinks on the wing.
Mr Huth strolls along the sand,
carrying a rod and an esky.
He puffs on a pipe
and the acrid smoke
drifts towards us.
âMy parents won't be home for hours,' Ella says.
She stands and pulls me to my feet.
We walk off the pier.
âI like your parents,
even though I've never met them,' I say.
âYou almost met Dad.' Ella grins.
I remember stumbling around her bedroom
trying to get dressed,
my stomach churning,
my knees shaking.
âAre you
sure
your parents won't be home for hours?'
Ella laughs.
âPositive!'
A clattering sound
In the cool of the evening,
I arrive home to find Dad
loading garbage bags into the truck.
He walks into the bedroom
and returns with a suitcase
attempting a smile
that he can't quite manage.
âI'm going to camp at the workshop,' Dad says,
ânow Suzy is home.'
He pushes the screen door open
with his boot
and struggles through with the suitcase.
The door bangs shut
with a clattering sound.
For as long as I can remember
Dad has been away for days at a time
on some forgotten highway,
but it still felt like he was around.
I go to the kitchen,
open the fridge
and take two beers from the shelf.
I carry them out to the front step
and sit down,
twisting the tops off the bottles.
When Dad returns from the truck,
I offer him one.
He watches as I take a deliberate swig
and sits down beside me.
âYou're too young to drink,' he says.
I take another swig
and reach across with my bottle
to clink it against his.
We drink until it gets dark
and the streetlights flicker on.
The bicker of blackbirds in the casuarina
mark the hours.
When Dad gets up to leave
I tell him I know where the workshop key is hidden
and I promise him he won't be alone,
that I'll visit most days.
He kneels down and cups his big hands
around my cheeks.
He nods his head
and I know,
just like me,
he's too afraid to say anything more.
Coming ashore
In the early morning light,
I take the kayak from Manx's front yard
and silently carry it to the lake
casting it and myself adrift.
Against the breeze
I slowly paddle
towards Tipping Point.
I've chosen the kayak
instead of my bike
because Manx owns it
and I'm doing this for him
and for me.
Last night, Rachel gave me Patrick's number
and I've texted him
to meet me on the beach,
or else.
I smile to myself
at the implied threat
knowing I have nothing to lose;
despite Patrick's two word response,
I'm sure he'll be there.
The sun shines on the row of houses
along the point,
each one a mansion of pastel colours,
well-tended gardens
and insufferable neatness.
I think of my dad
setting himself up in the workshop:
a large room with one crusty window,
Peachy whining at the door,
the smell of oil and grease in the air.
I think of my mum
working overtime
to pay off repairs
to a second-hand car.
The kayak glides easily onto the sand.
I step lightly
along the bow
before dragging the kayak ashore.
Stand up
âWhat do you want, loser?'
Patrick's voice
comes from the shadow of a tree.
My spine tenses.
âI've got your dope, Patrick.'
He steps forward and grins.
âSo?'
He shrugs.
âI can get more where that came from.'
I turn and stare across to Manx's house,
my silence
inviting Patrick to think
all the wrong things.
He steps in front of me.
âSo?' he repeats.
I look him in the eye.
âI'm not going to smoke it.'
My voice is measured and relaxed,
even though it's not how I feel.
âI've hidden it,'
I glance towards his house,
hoping he'll take the bait,
âsomewhere that will prove
embarrassing for you
if it was found.'
He steps forward and grabs my shirt,
his face a few inches from mine
and spits out,
âI'll beat the shit out ofâ'
âNo you won't,' I interrupt,
âbecause if you do,
the cops will be the first to know
where the dope is.'
He loosens his grip
and steps away.
A vein pumps in my temple,
but I keep my voice quiet, calm.
âI've added more dope,
enough for the cops
to lay charges.'
He raises a fist,
but I don't flinch.
âThink about it, Patrick.'
He spits at my feet,
his face flushed with anger.
âHere's what you can do.
Convince your parents
to drop the charges against Manx.
Tell them it was too dark,
tell them you were mistaken
and you're not sure it was him anymore,
tell them anything you want,
and I promise you, the dope
will stay hidden forever.'
I take a deep breath
and step forward.
âOr you can
spend today
trying to find it.
But if Manx is charged,
I'll ring the cops
and you'll be in deep shit.
Your choice, Patrick.'
His shoulders slump.
He looks back towards his house.
I remember Mr Lloyd-Davis
outside Batley's Cafe
and the way he spoke to his son.
I almost feel sorry for Patrick.
Almost.
âYou have to stand up to him sometime,' I say.
I walk slowly to the kayak,
step aboard
and use the paddle
to push myself away from the sand.
Floating gently in the shallow water,
I glance towards Patrick's house:
the green lawn,
the wide double-glazed windows,
the diving board and swimming pool.
Then I turn and paddle back to Turon,
the sunlight bright on Manx's shack.
A pact
The Holden isn't in Manx's yard
so I take a smooth round stone
and toss it onto the roof.
A second later he swears
and comes barrelling through the door,
almost tripping on the front step.
I can't help but laugh.
He runs towards me
and grabs me in a headlock,
pretending to punch me again and again.
I squeeze free â
neither of us can stop laughing.
âYou're always fighting someone,' I say.
âOnly those who deserve it,' he answers.
We walk across to the lake and sit on a log.
Manx slaps a mosquito on his arm.
âIt's the swamp and those mozzies
stopping you from having
rich neighbours building next door,' I say.
âNah,' he says.
âPeople like you and me, Jonah,
we drag down the price of everything we touch.'
I think of Ella and me,
the simple pleasure of holding hands
and the honour of Manx
not letting Rachel get caught.
I shake my head.
âYou're wrong, Manx.'
I look towards Tipping Point.
âLet's make a pact,' I say.
âIn five years' time,
you and I will be sitting here,'
I look meaningfully at Manx,
âdrinking the beer
you
bought,
and we'll count off the residents
at Tipping Point.
I bet none of them will be the same ones as today.
They'll all move out
bored with the lake,
the sunsets,
and the salt of the ocean.
They'll return to Sydney
or build an even bigger house
further up the coast.
We're as permanent as gold.
They're as temporary as â¦'
I try to think of the word.
â⦠as paint?' Manx grins.