Read Another Night in Mullet Town Online
Authors: Steven Herrick
Tattoos and hairnets
âI've got no idea how you're getting to work
if the car'sâ'
Dad stops yelling
as I walk into the kitchen.
They both look at me.
Dad leans against the sink
wearing shorts, a t-shirt and
his trucker's cap, worn and sweat-stained.
On his forearm is the faded tattoo of a woman
wearing a red-and-white polka-dot bikini;
a dare when he was seventeen.
He reckons it's Mum when she was young.
Mum doesn't wear bikinis anymore.
She sits at the kitchen table,
still dressed in her blue uniform
after an eight-hour shift on the filleting line
at the SeaPak factory in Balarang Bay.
She looks tired,
her hair pulled back in a tight ponytail,
her hands cracked and worn from
wearing mesh gloves all day.
Mr Crewe told me
that every man in town sighed
and hit the pub
the day Mum married Dad.
She was the prettiest girl around.
My dad promised to give up
the interstate trucking runs for good
if only she'd say, âYes'.
Eighteen years is a long time
not to keep a promise.
The sigh of a sea breeze
I wake in the night
to the sound of the television
and snoring.
I walk to the lounge room
and find the lonely flicker
of an advertisement
for WonderVac:
âFive payments of $15.95 per month!'
Dad's asleep on the lounge,
one hand flung across his eyes.
When I was young
Dad told me
that if the day ever arrived
where he spent more time
with the television
than with his family
he'd fetch his surfboard
from the shed,
paddle into the ocean
and not stop
until he reached Chile.
I asked him how far that was.
He looked at me
with something resembling a smile
and said,
âIt's further than heartbreak
and somewhere past caring.'
On the side table is an empty beer bottle
and the Balarang newspaper
open at the employment section.
Nothing there but jobs
for kids leaving school
to become kitchenhands in cafes
or shelf stackers at the supermarket.
Dad has one boot on;
the other has been kicked across the room.
I don't know how he sleeps
with his feet above his head,
the blood running the wrong way;
as if blood ever gets a choice.
I gently remove his boot,
pick up the other and
put them both behind the lounge
where he won't trip over them
should he wake
and stumble to the bathroom.
I find the remote under the coffee table
and switch off the television.
The room darkens.
The only sound is Dad's heavy breathing,
the call of a curlew
and the sigh of a sea breeze.
This embarrassment
In the morning,
I walk to the bathroom
and stare into the mirror.
My reflection
is all long nose and full lips
and, when I smile at myself,
my teeth are too big for my mouth.
I've seen photos of Dad
at my age
and I can't tell us apart.
I cup my hands in the water,
splash it through my hair,
grab a towel from the shelf
and scrub my head dry.
My hair spirals at awkward angles.
In primary school, my friend Rachel
would gently pull each curl
and giggle when they popped back into place.
âLike a spring,' she'd say.
Outside the bathroom window
a cat creeps along the fence
stalking a wren
nesting in the black wattle.
I open the window.
The cat leaps to the ground
and scurries away
as the wren adds another twig to its nest.
Dad snores from the lounge.
I take my embarrassment of hair
to the kitchen for breakfast.
Breakfast
I lift a bowl from the dishwashing rack
and wipe it on my shirt
ready for Weet-Bix.
Dad walks in, grunts hello
and sits down to tie his steel-capped boots.
âThe Magna's blown a head gasket,' he says.
He looks out the back window
to where the car should be.
âHow will Mum get to work?' I ask.
The door to their bedroom is closed.
Mum's still asleep â
or tired of arguing.
âWe're working that out,' he says.
âWhere you going today?' I ask.
âAdelaide,' he answers.
I offer him the Weet-Bix
as if it's enough to get him
across the Hay Plain.
He shakes his head.
âSteel girders, west,
bottles of wine, east,' he says.
âAnd a chance to get drunk
in the middle of nowhere,' I joke.
Dad smiles, reaching for the pan.
âScrambled eggs, buttered toast
and the risk of a heart attack,' he says.
âWhat do you think about out there?' I ask.
I imagine Dad driving the rig across the plain,
a storm cloud on the horizon,
flocks of cockatoos in the fields,
music on the stereo.
âWhether the bloke driving towards me
is about to fall asleep,' Dad replies.
He stirs the egg mixture with a fork
and pours it into the frypan.
âAnd how many miles
before I pay off the truck,' he adds.
âI could get a job over the holidays,' I say.
Dad slides the spatula under the mixture,
flipping it before lifting the pan away
from the heat.
He tips the eggs on toast
and pulls back the chair before sitting.
I pass him the salt
and he smiles.
âWork is forever,' he says.
âEnjoy school while it lasts.'
The endless highway
I promise Dad I'll do the dishes
before Mum wakes.
He returns the egg carton to the fridge,
then leans down
and kisses me on the cheek.
His stubble grazes my skin.
I try to remember
how long it's been
since he's done that.
âGo easy on your mum today,' he says.
He doesn't meet my eyes
before walking from the kitchen,
a duffel bag
slung over his shoulder.
I jump up from the table
and, at the window,
watch him wheel his pushbike
out of the shed
into the weak sunlight.
He checks both tyres
before throwing his leg
over the seat
and pedalling down the driveway.
I don't know why,
but I rush through the house
to watch him
turn onto the road
without checking for cars,
knowing that no-one is stupid enough
to be awake this early.
I imagine the smell of the sea
filling his nostrils
before he rides towards the workshop
to exchange a bicycle
for a lonely truck cabin
on the endless highway.
Balarang Bay
Whenever I miss the bus to school â
like today â
I ride my bike along Lake Road,
around Coraki Lake,
past Tipping Point
and into Morawa National Park.
I ignore the sign that reads:
HORSES AND BICYCLES PROHIBITED
and follow the track
watching for snakes
and swooping magpies.
I make it to school before the bell
if I pedal like a crazy
and forget the brakes
on the long downhill into town
past the billboard of bikini models
trumpeting:
WELCOME TO BALARANG BAY
MILES OF SMILES
.
Balarang is Aboriginal for
âplace of the swamp oak'
but the council
didn't want to put âswamp'
on the billboard,
so they chose bikini models instead.
They paid an advertising company
a truckload of cash
to come up with
MILES OF SMILES
.
Manx and I would have
accepted much less
and been closer to the truth with:
ACRES OF FAKERS
and the by-line:
WHERE THE UTE MEETS
THE MOBILITY SCOOTER
.
Manx told me he's planning
on getting a spray can from the local hardware
to do some creative dental work
on the models in the billboard
to show his civic pride.
My school
My school is surrounded
by a wire fence
and a stand of stringybark
that the council
is debating whether to rezone
for a new housing estate.
Each morning the buses bring
the hippie kids from the hinterland
and us southerners from Turon
into the main car park,
already filled with four-wheel drives
dropping off the locals
too lazy to walk.
Mr Drake, our Science teacher,
is on uniform duty
at the front gate
telling boys to tuck in their shirts
and girls to remove their lipstick.
The first rubbish bin
in the schoolyard
is decorated with red-lipped tissues.
I whizz past him on the bike
and he tells me to stop
and strap my helmet on properly.
Rachel walks through the gate
wearing a pair of trousers
instead of the tartan skirt.
When Mr Drake stops her,
she says,
âGirls are the equal of boys
and should wear the same uniform.'
He says, âWell, you won't be allowed to class
wearing trousers.'
Rachel winks at me,
turns to Mr Drake
and, in front of everyone,
drops her trousers
to reveal her skirt underneath.
She hands Mr Drake the trousers
as the bell rings
and we all cheer
as Rachel strolls to class.
The only one that matters
I refuse to tell anyone â
even Manx â
just how much I like Ella Hurst.
Every period in Science
and English
I alternate between analysing the whiteboard
and Ella's long dark hair.
If there were a grade
for knowing the curve of her shoulders
and the grace of her hips
I'd get an A plus.
Sometimes I miss the teacher's question
and I'm sure my furtive glances
betray my thoughts.
Everyone likes Ella,
from the cool girls to the geeks,
yet she spends most of her time alone
reading a book
or watching the lunchtime football.
I'd have as much chance of scoring a goal
on the school oval
as I'd have of working up the courage
to talk to her.
How can it be
that the companion of attraction
is fear?
No matter how many words
there are in the English language for shy,
the only one that matters is
Jonah.
Caveman at the bottle shop
It's Friday afternoon and
Angelo, who's in year ten with us,
collects money from
a bunch of his mates.
Rich-boy Patrick
who lives at Tipping Point
doubles the stash.
Angelo presses the bills
into Manx's oversized hand
and says, âAs much beer as you can buy.'
Manx is kitted out in a day-glo workers vest,
school shorts and his father's spare boots.
I reckon he's even smudged
some dirt on his forearms
just to complete the picture.
He walks like a draught-horse pulling a load,
his head pushed forward, chin up
and muscular arms hanging by his side.
His voice is a few octaves deeper than bass,
hands the size of boxing gloves,
dark hair sprouting from each of his knuckles.
The boys call Manx a caveman,
but never to his face.
Angelo calls out, âThe cheapest, okay,'
as Manx turns and strolls into the bottle shop.
I follow him
and walk to where my favourite beer
sits in artfully arranged slabs.
I tap the carton three times and walk out.
Manx sees my choice â
it's not the cheapest.
Manx takes a cut of two bottles per dozen.
He always shares with me.
The latest model
For a while after we started high school
Angelo and I were friends.
He'd sit beside me and Manx on the bus
and tell us
about the caravan his parents
had set up in his backyard
and how on the weekend
they'd let him sleep out there.
He'd stay up as late as he liked
and watch things he shouldn't
on the laptop,
the caravan door locked tight.
âI told them it was quieter in the van,
so I could do my homework.'
He'd lean over and dig me in the ribs.
âI sure learnt a lot, Jonah.'
He'd invite me to sleep over
and, no matter how many times
I asked Mum, she'd say,
âI don't trust that boy.'
One day Angelo came to school
with a black eye
and, when I asked him
what happened,
he mumbled about the caravan door
opening in the wind.
On the way home
he sat next to someone else on the bus
and told them he had a Nintendo â
the latest model.
He asked them if they wanted to visit
and never invited me over again.