Read Another Night in Mullet Town Online
Authors: Steven Herrick
The sailor's museum
I sit against the smooth stone wall of the museum,
closed ten years ago.
I try hard to think of something â
anything â
other than Mum leaving home.
From here I can see all of Turon
scattered around the west side of the lake.
To the north is a row of lakeside mansions
at Tipping Point where Patrick lives
bordering the National Park
separated from the rest of us
by a swampy creek
and a million dollars.
Patrick's dad has planted a
FOR SALE
sign near the driveway
that lists ocean views,
a landmark setting
and a price tag
that makes my eyes water.
Manx's dad lobbied
the council
to reopen the museum,
but all they wanted was a quick sale
and money in the bank.
Mr Lloyd-Davis
gets a bonus if he sells it
within the next six months.
As if he needs the extra money.
Three words
A slow line of coal ships head north.
On the rocks at low tide,
a lone figure casts into the ocean.
Mr Huth fishes, rain or shine.
He lives in a shabby van
the shape of a teardrop.
If it wasn't for fishing, he'd starve,
although rumour says
he keeps his money hidden in the van.
I walk to the leeward side
of the museum
where the cemetery stumbles downhill.
I pick my way through the headstones
until I find Grandpa's grave.
Charles Douglas
IN LOVING MEMORY
Three words to decorate seventy-two years.
Dad visited for the first month,
but too many long hauls
left the fireweed covering Grandpa.
I think of the empty house
waiting for me
and, without knowing why,
I grab a weed and pull hard.
It comes up easily.
I toss it behind the headstone
and keep working,
one fireweed at a time.
I don't stop until Grandpa
has a clear view all the way
down the hill to his old town.
Fine specks of dust
Opposite the cemetery,
the town church
is next on Mr Lloyd-Davis's list
of places to sell.
It's been given a lick of paint,
a few garden beds, freshly planted,
and a hardwood fence
that preaches home, not God.
Mr Lloyd-Davis bought it cheap,
paid for the renovation
and is now looking to double his money.
I leap the fence
to admire the stained glass window
of Jesus among a flock of sheep,
the distant hills of waving grain.
I wonder how long before
the new owners â
spooked by Jesus looking down on them
as they drink wine,
eat lamb and have sex â
replace the window
with double glazing and curtains.
What do you do
with a second-hand pulpit
and long wooden pews
that haven't been used in years?
On a woodpile under the church
is an uprooted sign
that lists Sunday services
and Easter celebrations,
the paint flaking,
the words hollow.
I've been to this church once â
for Grandpa's funeral
when I was nine years old.
His coffin was draped in a fisherman's net
and carried inside by my dad
and his rarely seen uncles.
The light through the Jesus window
shone on the pulpit;
fine specks of dust
flickered in its beam.
The priest offered blessings
for the dead.
And ill-conceived promises
for the rest of us.
Grandpa's wake
While Mr Crewe helped Mum
clear the discarded glasses and plates
of Grandpa's wake,
Dad got two fishing rods
from the shed
and placed one in my hands.
He carried the bait box,
while I walked alongside,
all the way to the lake pier
as the evening light faded.
Dad baited the hook
and watched my nervous hands cast.
The lure landed barely metres away.
He smiled
and deliberately cast close to mine â
two bobbing floaters
in the shallows.
We sat like that for hours
listening to the slap of water
against the pier.
By the light of a half-moon,
I watched my dad's face
unpack the meaning
of being a son
without a father.
That was enough
I remember my head tilted forward,
and I would have fallen into the water
except for Dad's firm hand on my shoulder.
I woke and saw the fishing rod beside me,
the dark lake and my father's smile.
I asked him if we'd caught anything,
and he said,
âA large mullet.'
I looked around for the fish,
but on the boards of the pier
there was nothing but an empty beer bottle.
Dad said,
âYour grandpa taught me,
no matter how desperate I was,
no matter how hungry,
the first-caught fish
should
always
be returned.'
It didn't make sense
and I said so.
Dad replied,
âThat fish took a risk â
bit something it wasn't sure of â
and deserves a second chance.
Like we all do.'
âBut didn't the next fish
also take a risk
and the one after that?'
I asked.
Dad laughed.
âA father's rules
aren't always wise,
but it's how we remember
and judge a man.'
He reeled in his line
and helped me to my feet.
We hadn't caught a fish,
but I'd spent a few hours
with my father,
and that was enough.
Grandpa's town
When we returned from the lake,
my father hugged his uncles
and walked them to their cars.
But, instead of waving goodbye,
they sat on the fence
and told stories
into the night.
Grandpa and the outboard motor.
Grandpa and the volunteer fire brigade.
Grandpa and the scar he wore like a badge
above his right eye.
He told everyone it was from a pub fight,
but it was really a plate thrown by Grandma.
She was smart enough to die
before Grandpa did,
just to prove how much he'd miss her,
lost in the big house
they rented for cheap â
spooking the verandahs,
wandering the gardens,
baffled in the kitchen â¦
without her.
Grandpa spent his last years
wishing he was dodging flying crockery
rather than waiting for the inevitable.
I sat listening to these stories
from my bedroom window
and saw the lines of memory
creasing my father's brow,
while he talked his uncles
into being sober enough
to drive away from Grandpa's town.
The colour of rich
Manx is sitting on his front steps,
a fishing rod at his feet
as he works on threading a line
through a hook.
âYou'll go cross-eyed doing that,' I warn.
He tosses me the rod,
runs into the house
and comes back carrying an esky.
âFull of ice and beer,' he says.
âYou're hoping,' I answer.
âI caught six yesterday
and sold four to Mrs King,' he says,
spitting between the gap in his teeth.
We walk along the curve of sand
to our favourite spot under the swamp oak.
Manx casts a line into the lake,
the twirling reel imitating the wind.
The yellow floater bobs on the
ti-tree burnished surface.
âI've been thinking, Jonah,' he says.
âDoes it hurt?'
âYou wanna hear my idea or not?'
âAlways, Manx.'
He stares across the lake
to the row of double-storey houses
at Tipping Point.
Counting them off, he says,
âRich, rich, for sale, Patrick's palace, rich,
old man Beattie, rich, rich.'
He frowns. âSome of those places
are only used on school holidays.'
Manx narrows his eyes and grins.
âThey're vacant,'
he waits a few seconds before adding, ânow.'
Then he points to the weatherboard mansion
at the end of Tipping Point and asks,
âWhat colour is that, Jonah?'
âSalmon pink,' I say,
âor delicate rose with an autumn-mist trim.'
âI'd call it erect nipple with a baby-poo highlight.'
âI'm not sure I could front a hardware
and ask for ten litres of erect nipple.'
Manx licks his lips and repeats,
âThey're vacant ⦠now.'
Fish guts
All of a sudden,
Manx's reel squeals
and the floater ducks under the water.
The rod bends wildly in his hands.
Manx widens his stance,
grits his teeth and says,
âFish fillets here we come.'
âBiggest pile of seaweed you've ever caught, Manx.'
âIt's a mullet,' Manx yells
as he reels slowly, the line tensing.
âSeaweed's fine, Manx. The Japanese eat it.'
Manx is about to respond
when the fish breaks the surface,
twisting and squirming on the line.
âSeaweed, my arse,' yells Manx
as he flicks the rod.
The mullet sails overhead
landing in the kidney weed on the bank.
Manx grips the fish tightly in one big hand
and carries it to a boulder.
Then he smacks its head hard on the rock.
âHere, mullet king,' I say,
tossing a knife
onto the sand near the boulder.
Manx scrapes the scales from head to tail,
wipes the blade on his shorts
then inserts it into the vent
and cuts along the belly of the fish,
all the way to the lower jaw
before reaching in and removing the guts.
He turns to me, holding them in his hand.
âDon't you dare!' I yell,
leaping to my feet.
âJonah, trust me,' says Manx.
He flings the guts into the lake.
A flock of gulls descend,
flapping and squawking,
arguing over the feast.
Manx washes the fish in the cool lake water.
âWe've got the mullet.'
He looks across the lake to Tipping Point.
âNow all we need is a barbecue.'
Stepping into a catalogue
Our kayak glides onto the sand
at the far reach of Tipping Point.
Manx bows elaborately.
âYou may step ashore, King Jonah.'
The bottles of beer clink in the esky
as we drag the kayak up onto the sand.
I look across the lake to Manx's house
and I notice the surface of the water
creasing in the wind.
âIf the southerly builds,
we'll be walking the long way home,' I say.
Manx pats me on the back.
âAfter a feed of fish and a few beers,
you'll be able to paddle into a cyclone, Jonah.'
He lugs the esky along the beach.
I follow, watching for movement
in any of the houses.
The sand is blinding white
all the way to the point
where the cliff of sand-blasted rock
shines rust red in the afternoon light.
A sea eagle floats on the breeze.
Twenty metres from the pink house,
Manx stops to survey the scene.
A grassy lawn leads up from the sand
to palm trees lining the east fence.
A newly built wooden pagoda
with a hammock strung between two palms
entices us forward.
Hardwood stairs lead up to a deck covered by
a shade cloth, like a gull's wing
shielding a shiny silver barbecue
and a teak dining table with eight chairs.
Leading from the deck
are glass double doors, heavy pink curtains
with blue seashell patterns
and, when my shoe touches the bottom step,
it's like walking into a rich man's catalogue.
A meal, well earned
Manx strolls across the deck
and puts his arm around my shoulder.
âDoes the banker wanker
ever sit here and enjoy the view?' he asks.
âNah, he's too busy making deals,' I say.
âHere's a deal.
This place for my crappy bedroom.'
Manx slaps the mullet on the grill
and opens a beer, offering it to me,
before taking his bottle to a chair
under the shade cloth.
He flops down, puts his feet up on the table
and snaps a selfie.
âMaybe I'll post it on Instagram.'
âExhibit one in a court case for trespassing,' I reply.
âWe could invite Rachel around,' suggests Manx.
âTell her not to knock at the front door,' I say.
âIt's a deck party, Jonah.
All the rage among the rich.'
I take a swig of beer
and look out to the lake.
âShit, Manx! Patrick's dad
is on the beach,
and he's heading this way.'
Manx quickly flips the fish onto a sheet of foil,
and turns off the gas.
I grab the esky
and we clamber over the railing down to the garden
and scamper into a vacant block next door.
Manx stops near a fallen log.
I keep looking behind for Mr Lloyd-Davis,
but Manx sits down, carefully unwraps the fish
and offers me a fillet.
âWhat are you doing?' I ask, breathing heavily.
âEnjoying the fish before it gets cold, Jonah.'
âWhat if he sees us?' I ask.
âWe're having a picnic.'
âHe'll smell the fish,' I say.
Manx shrugs, takes another bite
and wipes the juice from his lips.
âSo?'
Mr Lloyd-Davis stands
looking out across the lake,
more interested in his mobile phone
than a feast of mullet.
The pink house blushes,
the sea eagle tilts away from the lake
and Patrick's dad turns and walks back
towards his mansion.
Manx rolls his eyes
before returning to the deck
to enjoy the sunset of
a meal, well earned.