‘A bright future.
I promise.’
Eddie
The coalmine is surrounded
by a high wire fence.
In the far corner I scrape the loose dirt
from under the boundary
until there’s enough space to lie on my back
and pull myself under the wire.
Through the gritty window of the rusted tin shed
I can see the picks, shovels and lanterns
stored neatly on wooden shelves.
Dad hates me talking about the mine
and he made me repeat this year in school,
just to stop me working underground.
I’m stronger and taller than him.
I weigh close on twelve stone
and most of it’s muscle.
I can move rocks
bigger than a yard square
and I can swing an axe to split firewood
quicker than Larry.
You can load my arms with ironbark
and I’ll carry it all inside,
no problem.
This mine is where I want to be,
with the returned soldiers
and my mates from school,
who earn a decent wage doing a real job.
I dodge between the outbuildings
to watch the men in their dirt-coloured overalls
and thick brown boots
prepare for the night shift,
laughing and singing
like they’re going out to the pub.
They strap their helmets on,
test the light, twice, for safety,
and clip the strap tight under their chin.
I want to sneak in behind them
and take the trolley ride
down into the soul of the world
and see what it’s like,
deep in the pit
where muscle and rock
fight their daily battle.
Albert Holding
You can smell the coal smoke
long before the train rounds the bend
and drops down into the narrow valley.
Some days in winter the plume settles so low
you could stand on Jaspers Hill
and not know there’s a town below.
Let me tell you, I was grateful
that scabby bastard Wilson evicted us.
The land we bought is next to useless
but at least it’s out of town.
The wind blows the smoke east
back up through Dulwich Gap.
At least a man can breathe in his own backyard.
Not like the miners
who walk through town to work at the pit.
My mates, every one of them.
I remember marching in our khaki uniforms,
wheeling down Main Street in perfect file
while the town,
the whole district,
cheered us on and waved little flags.
The chinstrap on the slouch hat
kept our eyes straight
should we be tempted to gaze at all the young sheilas
smiling and waving our way.
That was at the start of the war.
The high and mighty ladies at Paley’s
go on about us living out here like gypsies.
We’re only one rung above Barney Haggerty,
who sleeps in a cave halfway up the gap,
drunk most of the time.
They don’t know what he went through
during the war.
They certainly know sod-all about me.
And I want to keep it that way.
Eddie
Dad says, it’s not right,
working on Laycock’s farm.
He didn’t fight a war
to muck out after ignorant animals.
Hay bailing,
picking eggs,
slopping out pig-swill.
That’s work for a boy, he says.
But Mr Laycock’s got no kids
and no one wants the job,
not when there’s men’s work to be done.
When I bring up the mine again
Dad slams his fists on the table
and shouts,
‘I ain’t going underground.
And neither are you, boy.
Not while you live in my house.’
I want to tell him it’s our house.
We helped build it.
But most of all,
I want to ask him
why he’s always so angry.
Ever since he got home,
he’s been blaming me and Larry for everything
when we done nothing wrong.
‘The mine needs workers, Dad.
I’m not doing much at school
except wasting time.’
He shakes his head
before walking outside,
muttering,
‘I’m better off with the pigs.’
Larry Holding
My big brother’s not too smart.
He thinks living out here,
miles from anyone,
is an adventure.
I heard him say that.
‘An adventure.’
Shooting rabbits for dinner
with our rusty-barrelled .22,
picking blackberries for supper,
fishing in the river
with a string line tied to bamboo,
hoping for a silver eel
so Mum can make an evil-smelling stew.
This is my brother and his life.
This is why I want to shoot through.
But you don’t leave Burruga,
not without an education,
even I know that.
So I don’t want to miss school.
In the baking-hot classroom of Burruga Central,
I listen to Mr Butcher
with his maths and stupid algebra
and his splitting infinitives in English,
whatever they’re meant to be.
I keep a clean book
with lines straight
and practise handwriting that slopes
‘like a long-haired girl dancing’
Butcher says, in his nancy-voice.
But here’s my deal,
the pact I made with myself–
I’ll give it a burl
and do every inch of Butcher’s homework
if only I can leave town when I’m fifteen,
in six months time,
after the exams,
after I get the certificate.
I’m going to wave it in their faces and say,
‘See ya.
See ya for ever.’
Mayor Paley
I tell them exactly what they want to hear
and I’ll try to make it happen, truly.
Everyone in town should have a job.
We’re sitting on a pile of coal here.
So I promise what I can
and now it just depends on money
and the State Government.
Most of these people don’t realise
it isn’t the town that’s building the things I promise.
It’s the State.
I’ll do my best to swing it, I will.
A man of my stature has influence.
And friends.
Trust me.
It’ll take a few trips to the city, mind you,
and I’ll have to spend some town money
entertaining those business folk
so they’re sure we’re worth helping,
way out here.
But I know a few people;
associates of my father.
Good citizens.
Rich people in the city.
I will never cease working for my town.
‘Will and purpose.’
Mr Wright spoke the truth.
Albert Holding
Fatty Paley was a sneaky kid in baggy trousers,
with a limp,
and a father who owned the general store.
And Fatty grows into,
expands into,
the mayor of this town,
while the rest of us are fighting the war.
Driving trucks
is
fighting a war.
Fatty charms the ladies
with his boarding school education
and his prissy sincere voice.
He greases the palms of certain people
who backed him as mayor
while the rest of us were thousands of miles away.
Fatty gets fatter and richer than his old man
and he has a sign above his store,
his crummy little general store,
that reads ‘Paley’s Emporium’,
because Fatty’s too proud to own just a shop.
And he had the hide to stand on the platform
when our train came in,
holding out his arms,
hugging,
yeah, hugging,
every man who came home from the war.
It made my flesh creep.
Eddie
I’m not much good at maths
and
I’m not much good at grammar
and
I’m not much good at geography
and
I’m not much good at anything,
says Mr Butcher
with his hair slicked-back so tight
it draws the blood from his face.
His thick black-rimmed glasses
sit useless on his nose
as he stands at the chalkboard
tapping his long ruler,
talking to the class,
pointing at a map of the world
and trying to convince us
our country is the biggest island
in the whole world.
I believe him,
it’s just the idea of an island,
you know,
surrounded by water,
when it looks to me that map shows
nearly every country is surrounded by water.
So I put up my hand and say,
‘Africa looks bigger than Australia, Sir.’
Mr Butcher removes his glasses,
rolls his eyes and slowly shakes his head.
‘Yes, Eddie Holding.
But Africa is a
continent,
not a country.
Didn’t I mention that?’
He says it like he
did
mention that,
but I can’t remember,
and judging by the look on everyone else’s face,
they can’t remember either.
Continent.
Country.
So Mr Butcher explains the difference
and I can tell he’s mad at me
because I picked him up on something.
After he’s finished he’s says his usual,
‘There, Eddie.
You’re not much good at geography.
You’re not much good at remembering.’
I see Larry smirking,
and hear the giggles from behind me,
so I stand up,
wave my arm just like Mr Butcher
and say,
‘And you’re not much good at teaching, Sir.’
Then I walk out of the classroom
and head to Jamison River to go swimming.
I’m very good at swimming.
I reckon the river
and the sunny day
are worth the punishment I’m in for
on Monday morning.
Larry
My stupid brother can’t keep his mouth shut.
Yeah, Butcher never told us about continents.
In all the years pointing at that boring map.
I know he never told us because, unlike Eddie,
I remember everything I’m taught
and I studied it in the library,
tracing my finger over the world atlas,
imagining how long it’ll take me
to travel the distance from here to all those places.
Eddie will get six cuts on Monday
and we’ll all be given a lecture
with Butcher’s voice like powerlines in winter,
whining in the wind.
You’re never sure if they’ll snap over your head.
He’ll go on about manners,
proper behaviour,
respect for your elders,
and I’ll be thinking,
just get on with it, Butcher,
and whip my stupid brother a few times
with your nasty little cane.
Let’s start algebra
because I still don’t understand it all
and I’ve only got six months more
and yes, you are a hopeless teacher,
but you’re the only teacher we got,
so get on with it.
Eddie
Sally Holmes runs through the willows
and stands beside me, looking down at the river.
‘As soon as the bell went
I was out of there like a shot.’
She kicks off her shoes
flings her socks after them,
not taking her eyes off the clear water
and the rope dangling from the river gum tree.
‘Do you think I can grab it, first go?’
Sally orders me to look away
and I hear the rustle of her dress
as she pulls it over her shoulders.
She’s wearing dark blue swimmers
and I feel my face go blush red
as I try my best not to look at her.
‘I’ll go first, if you want, Sally.
It’s going to be freezing.’
She has wavy hair like flowing cream
and she’s as tall as me,
with long legs and a narrow waist.
I love Sally,
but I don’t tell anyone that,
especially not Sally.
I’m her friend,
and I listen to her wild laughter
as she runs from the bank
and leaps towards the rope,
both hands grabbing the very end
as she swings far out to midstream and hangs there,
looking back at me,
‘Too late, Eddie!’
She falls with a scream,
hits the water in a curled-up ball,
comes up laughing and hooting,
racing back to shore to do it all again.
She pushes her hair back
and flicks her wet hands,
spraying cold drops all over me.
‘Come on, jump in.
It’s not too chilly.’
I hold the rope for her
because if there’s one thing I like
more than swimming,
it’s watching beautiful Sally Holmes
laughing and rope-swinging.
Just me and her in the afternoon
at Jamison River.
Sally
All the wowsers and bullet-heads
in school say Eddie is slow.
They call him names behind his back.
‘Pudding brain’ and ‘Clod-boy’.
They say it quietly,
because whether he is or not
doesn’t matter so much,
they know that if he ever heard them
there’d be trouble—
trouble in the form of big Eddie
and his oversized fists.
They’re all wrong anyway.
I know Eddie better than they do.
He’d never hurt anyone,
not unless they meant him harm.
We swim down at the waterhole,
even in winter when there’s no one else around.
One day I’m going to dive deep enough
to touch the bottom,
way out in the middle of the river.
Eddie calls this place, Sally’s Spot, in my honour.
He holds the rope for me,