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    A Place Like This

    Page 4
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      among the wealthy.

      Not here,

      jump-starting tractors,

      sleeping in a shed,

      working ten-hour days

      and now, get this,

      going to birth classes

      with Emma and Annabel!

      I’m eighteen years old

      and going to birth classes

      for a girl who’s not my girlfriend,

      for a baby that’s not mine,

      and I’ve got to admit –

      yes,

      when I think about it

      I’ve got to admit –

      I’m looking forward to it!

      Emma deserves help,

      like George needed help with picking.

      And one day,

      maybe one day,

      Annabel and I will want a baby.

      God!

      I’m starting to sound like my dad.

      Birth classes.

      God!

      I hope I don’t have to touch anything.

      Or lay on my back and breathe funny …

      Uncle Craig

      I hope Emma has the baby at home.

      I want to see it,

      you know,

      being born.

      I’ve seen calves and lambs

      and even a piglet being born,

      but never a real baby.

      I reckon it’ll be unreal.

      Emma says after I was born

      I cried for days.

      She said I never shut up,

      which is funny really

      because Dad says I never shut up now,

      so maybe that’s what happens –

      you get born and act the same

      your whole life.

      Anyway, I’m being real nice to Emma now,

      so she’ll let me watch,

      and you know

      it means I’ll be an uncle

      at my age.

      It’ll be unreal.

      Different

      You two are different.

      Different from my school friends.

      They want to know about the baby, sure,

      but only because they’re not pregnant

      and only because they’ve got nothing else to say,

      not since Jenny’s party anyway.

      They don’t want to know about me

      and how it feels

      to be carrying this great weight,

      to be a mother without a boyfriend,

      to be missing school and parties

      and all of my friends.

      I’m glad you’re here.

      I’m glad you’re coming with me to my classes.

      I couldn’t go alone

      and I need to know stuff

      about the birth.

      Truth is, I’m scared.

      I’m sure Dad’s truck won’t start.

      Or the ambulance won’t come.

      Or the midwife.

      Or I’ll be home alone

      with everyone in the orchard.

      And the pain,

      and how long it’ll take.

      It’s kind of funny really.

      Jenny, Peter, Rick Harvey,

      even Adam bloody Barlow,

      are hard at it studying

      for their exams,

      and I’m here

      about to study

      for something much bigger.

      I hope I pass …

      Saturday night

      The drunk night.

      George in town.

      The farmhouse asleep.

      Annabel and me on the hay bales,

      stacked high.

      We can almost touch the roof.

      A bottle of wine,

      a dozen beers

      and all night

      drinking and telling stories,

      like

      your first embarrassing moment,

      the day you learnt Santa wasn’t real,

      the first time you vomited,

      the day you learnt your parents

      did more than just sleep together

      and the first time you got drunk.

      Hours of stories,

      here, above the farm

      on our hay bales.

      At midnight

      Annabel took off all her clothes

      without saying a word,

      then asked for another glass of beer, please.

      So beautiful and so well-mannered.

      What could I do?

      I took a long drink

      and undressed.

      Annabel cheered

      as we stood,

      straining to touch the roof,

      from our naked hay-bale world.

      The snake

      It was two metres long,

      brown and mean,

      and coming after the chickens.

      I nearly stepped on the thing,

      and, yes, it was probably as scared as me,

      but I jumped higher.

      And I picked up the shovel leaning against the shed

      and hit it hard,

      once, right in the middle,

      and again on its head,

      and again and again

      until I was sure,

      and again because I’d never be sure.

      And then I felt sick

      and I ran behind the shed to vomit.

      Nothing but green bile came up,

      green bile and tears.

      I walked back

      and George was inspecting it.

      A king brown.

      Annabel came out and saw it too.

      And Craig. And Beck.

      The farm dogs still barked at it,

      too late now to be of any use.

      Everyone standing out in the sun

      looking at the snake,

      except Annabel,

      who’s looking at me.

      Annabel’s snake

      All night, in the shed,

      I held Jack.

      He was sweating in the chill air,

      waking every hour, jerking his legs

      as if running.

      I held his arms tight.

      I could feel the muscles tense,

      wanting to move,

      wanting to flex,

      so I held him.

      I didn’t sleep much, maybe an hour.

      Most of the night,

      I watched Jack

      strike that snake

      a thousand times over

      and not once, in his sleep,

      did that snake die.

      Beck’s snake

      After it was all over

      I picked it up,

      took it down to the garden

      and I buried it

      deep in the ground

      where it’s quiet,

      where it’s safe,

      where the dogs can’t get it.

      Naming rights

      I’m going to call him Joseph,

      or Josephine if it’s a girl.

      Why?

      Because it’s a strong name,

      Joe, Joseph.

      You give a kid a name like Cameron

      or Alfred or something like that,

      and they end up wearing glasses

      and looking at computers for the rest of their life.

      And Matthew and Nathan

      enter school with another

      fifteen Matthews and Nathans beside them.

      So Joe it is.

      He’ll turn out strong. Strong and smart.

      And I thought of Joseph, you know,

      in the Bible.

      Him and Mary and Immaculate Conception.

      Well, I reckon my baby’s conception

      was pretty damn immaculate.

      And I couldn’t call the kid Jesus,

      could I?

      Joseph.

      Josephine.

      Cheers

      It’s six weeks since we left home.

      Our great adventure ran out of petrol

      and stopped on this farm.

      The harvest is nearly done.

      George looks happier:

      he lets me
    drive the tractor,

      he lets us finish early on Friday,

      he even let Emma come to town with us last Saturday.

      We watched the local football.

      Big farmers tackling even bigger truckies,

      and their sons stepping effortlessly

      around them all.

      A few of Emma’s friends came up to say hello.

      They all asked the same questions.

      Baby this, baby that.

      Emma only existed as the baby-carrier it seems.

      They all looked slightly guilty,

      especially the girls,

      as though a bond had been broken

      or something, I don’t know.

      We sat on the bonnet of our car

      and clapped

      when someone scored a try,

      and we all cheered whenever

      Adam Barlow got tackled.

      Emma, Annabel and I

      cheered the game,

      and cheered ourselves.

      Emma and apples

      I needed to get away from the farm,

      if only for a day.

      People say apples have no smell,

      well, even now,

      twenty kilometres away,

      I can still smell them.

      I’ll smell them when I’m dead, I reckon.

      If you stay too long on the farm

      you’ll get the same, for sure.

      It’s alright for Craig.

      He wants to be a farmer;

      he’s got apple juice for blood.

      And Beck? She’ll escape

      on her brains, I bet.

      But me? Where do I fit?

      Not on the farm,

      not in a one-pub town

      like this,

      not anywhere I guess.

      Maybe in a city,

      where I can get lost,

      get lost for good.

      Emma

      After the football on Saturday,

      when Jack, Annabel and me

      got back into the car,

      I had this urge to drive and not stop,

      to tell Jack to just keep going,

      to follow the Midland Highway forever,

      just the three of us.

      I’ve had enough of this town

      and my friends

      asking guilty, stupid questions,

      and I’ve had enough

      of the smell of our farm

      and the animals’ noise,

      and the winter winds whipping down Broken Lookout

      and rattling our house.

      I wanted to forget being pregnant

      and remember being young,

      like Jack and Annabel are with each other.

      I was thinking all this on Saturday

      in the car

      when we reached Broken Lookout,

      where Jack parked for the view,

      and Annabel said,

      ‘There’s the farm.

      It looks so beautiful at night.’

      Jack agreed,

      and I looked at the stars,

      the thousands of stars in the cold sky,

      but I couldn’t say a single word.

      Craig hates school

      I hate school.

      I hate school.

      I hate the kids in Year 8 and 9

      who come up to me at lunch

      and ask, Hey, where’s fat Emma?

      Where’s your sister? We want to try our luck.

      I hate school.

      I can’t fight the big kids,

      but I do anyway.

      I get one good kick or punch in

      before they clobber me

      or the teachers come.

      The sooner Emma has a baby, the better.

      I hate school.

      A place like this

      I go walking, early.

      Me and my baby.

      Me and my big stomach.

      We walk to the channel,

      sit on the bank,

      watch the dragonflies

      like mad helicopters cutting the surface.

      I go walking

      to avoid the kitchen

      and the smell of food –

      too early for cooking,

      Craig and Beck arguing

      and Dad looking out the window,

      thinking of money.

      I go walking to watch the trees

      and the sun’s light filtering through them.

      I talk to my baby.

      I describe the farm.

      I tell him about the apples

      and the blossoms in spring

      and the Paterson’s curse that covers the hills

      and the birds gorging on rotten fruit.

      I tell him everything

      as we walk.

      Maybe so he won’t be disappointed

      being born into

      a place like this.

      Weird

      It’s weird.

      Very weird.

      I started going to birth classes

      with Emma and Jack.

      I sat in the room, on the floor

      beside them.

      Ten couples and the three of us.

      Eleven couples holding hands, and me,

      not knowing whether to touch Emma or Jack.

      And Jack’s weird;

      he looks at me when he talks to Emma

      and looks away.

      He can’t focus.

      He’s not sure who he’s partner to.

      He wants to help Emma, I know,

      so do I.

      But I can’t help there.

      I can’t be her partner,

      neither can Jack,

      not with me around.

      So I keep away.

      I stay here in the shed.

      I think about Emma’s baby,

      and Jack.

      And where Jack and I are going,

      which is nowhere it seems,

      and it’s all too weird,

      too weird to work out.

      Craig and the cows

      Hey, you know what?

      Some Year 9 kids have painted the cows.

      Farmer Austin’s best dairy cows.

      Each cow has a red number on its side.

      Some even have sponsors!

      One’s sponsored by Nike!

      Number 23. The Shane Warne of dairy cows!

      It’s all round school.

      It’s all round town.

      There’s even a photo in the newspaper,

      old man Austin shaking his head,

      looking at his stupid cows.

      Everyone at school reckons he should

      leave it on and call them by number,

      ‘Number 12, your turn for milking.’

      ‘Number 8, stop scratching against the gum tree.’

      Our footy coach says we should adopt one

      as a mascot.

      He says we play like a bunch of cows anyway.

      It’s great.

      The town hasn’t been so happy in years.

      It’s great.

      All over a herd of painted cows!

      Annabel is ready

      I’m ready.

      The work is nearly done.

      I want to move.

      I can almost smell the road

      and hear the soft hum of tyres

      rolling through this year

      where Jack and I plan nothing.

      I’m ready. I know.

      But Jack’s dreaming.

      He sits against the shed

      reading the same page of his book

      over and over.

      He’s looking for a reason to go

      or stay.

      He walks through the house of his past,

      hoping he’ll find the right door,

      hoping he’ll find the key.

      It pisses me off.

      I want to go and shake him,

      shake that house down.

      I want to tell him he’s in the wrong house

      at the wrong time.

      I want to tell him we’ve built a new one,


      with no doors locked,

      no keys,

      just him and me and open space.

      I want to move.

      Even if it’s back to

      sleeping in the car by the highway

      with tinned food for dinner.

      I don’t care.

      I’m ready.

      Jack and the beach

      The work is nearly done.

      Once the top orchard is stripped,

      we’re finished.

      A week, maybe two.

      We’ve saved enough money

      for six months of holiday,

      camping on a beach.

      I keep thinking of the one

      I went to as a kid,

      with Mum and Dad kissing on a towel

      and my sister at the shop, talking to boys.

      I want to do nothing for a long time.

      No more apples

      or 7am starts.

      Annabel and me.

      Open fires, books to read,

      baths in the creek behind the surf

      and enough petrol in the car

      to go to town whenever we want.

      Annabel and me

      at the beach.

      And we’ll get there,

      we will,

      after the baby.

      Annabel

      Jack’s mad!

      He thinks Emma and the baby

      are his responsibility.

      Uncle Jack.

      Mad Uncle Jack.

      He’s like some crazy social worker.

      Everything he touches he can fix.

      I should remind him of the car!

      So, what’s he going to do?

      Help Emma have the baby

      and then what?

      Jack can’t save the world

      beginning on this farm.

      This is Emma’s life,

      she’ll work it out.

      Jack’s got to leave it,

      leave it to Emma,

      and George.

      They’ll work it out.

      Of that I’m sure.

      Making sense

      My mother died when I was nine.

      The last time we spoke

      was late in the afternoon

      after school.

      She was in bed, resting,

      trying to read,

      and it was a beautiful day.

      The sun shone right up to her bed

      and she told me stories,

      as well as she could –

      she was heavily drugged for the pain.

      And I told stories right back.

      Only my stories were ones in the future.

      What I planned to do.

      Me and Dad and my sister.

      I told her

      to make her know we’d stay together,

      you know, afterwards.

      I didn’t have a clue

      what would really happen,

      but I kept talking.

      And one story was about grandkids.

      About me and a wife and babies.

      I did it for her.

      I didn’t want kids, I was ten years old!

      I wanted my mother, alive and healthy.

      But I made up this story,

      and Mum smiled and listened;

      she even laughed when I promised her

      a football team of grandkids.

      Then her laughing turned to coughing

      and that awful sound she couldn’t break.

      I left her to rest.

     


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