Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Another Night in Mullet Town

    Page 3
    Prev Next


      she says,

      ‘That’s something your father would say.’

      The art of lawn mowing

      There’s a can of two-stroke

      in the plywood cupboard

      at the back of Dad’s shed.

      I shake the contents,

      and judge that it’s enough for today

      if I move quickly before the rain.

      I fill the mower,

      replace the cap,

      set the throttle

      and pull the cord.

      The mower splutters to life

      and I give it enough revs

      to wake the dwarves on Mr Crewe’s fence.

      When I was ten

      Dad taught me

      the art of lawn mowing.

      He called it ‘Zen on Saturday’.

      ‘Start from the fence,

      move forward and back

      and keep your feet clear when turning,’ he’d say.

      I remove the grass-catcher

      because I want to walk through the clippings

      kicking them as I go

      to remember how I felt as a child

      picking up piles and throwing them at Mum

      who’d brought lemonade to the back step.

      Mum would chase me around the yard

      vowing to stuff grass down my shirt.

      I’d escape her clutches,

      so she’d turn and run towards Dad,

      throwing herself into his arms.

      They’d roll around together in the grass, laughing,

      and I’d watch and wonder

      how long before they realised I was there.

      It seemed like forever.

      Mr Crewe waves at me

      and yells something over the fence.

      I bet he’s suggesting I mow his lawn

      when I’ve finished ours.

      And I just might

      because it’s never too late

      to be ten years old again.

      Business

      My phone beeps.

      I take it out of my pocket

      to find a message from Manx.

      It’s a photo of him

      holding a fishing rod

      with a mullet dancing on the line.

      The message reads:

      Third fish this morning,

      I’m going into business.

      I can’t help but smile.

      He’s signed it:

      Manx Inc.

      I text back:

      Meet you tomorrow

      and we’ll double the catch.

      I sign it:

      The Fish Brothers.

      I can see him now,

      sitting beside the lake

      laughing and swearing

      and planning on selling

      the extra fish to Mrs King,

      the old lady who lives

      a few doors down.

      In the soft light

      After spinach pie

      and mashed potato,

      with the rain echoing

      on the corrugated roof,

      and Dad somewhere

      between here and Adelaide,

      Mum sits at the kitchen table

      with a small jar of red nail polish.

      I watch as she files her nails

      to a smooth round tip.

      Delicate veins

      thread along the back of her hands.

      The fumes make my eyes water

      as Mum applies a second coat

      to the nails of her left hand

      even though

      she hasn’t touched the ones

      on her right.

      She carefully blows the polish dry,

      then hands me the jar

      and extends her right hand.

      I dip the brush into the polish

      and apply a thin smear

      to her little finger.

      We don’t speak

      all my effort focused on her nails,

      red and glowing,

      in the soft light of the evening.

      The end of the sentence

      ‘Jonah,’ Mum says

      as I finish her thumbnail

      with a deliberate flourish.

      ‘What would you think

      if I went to stay with your auntie

      at Balarang Bay?’

      I screw the cap back on the nail polish.

      ‘Just until the car gets fixed.

      My shift starts too early for the bus

      and your dad and I need to

      sort out a few things,’ she adds.

      ‘But you’ve been arguing for years,’ I say.

      I try to remember

      when it wasn’t like this.

      When I was at primary school

      and Mum didn’t work long shifts

      and Dad didn’t drink anywhere near

      what he does now.

      She touches my wrist.

      ‘You can stay with me,’ she says.

      I shake my head.

      ‘Auntie Trish looks at me like I’m Dad’s son.’

      Mum sighs.

      I thought they were meant to leave

      one another –

      not me.

      ‘I’ll borrow Trish’s car,’ Mum says.

      ‘And, when your dad’s not here,

      I’ll come and cook you dinner.’

      A vein throbs in my temple,

      like my head is about to explode.

      I know what she wants to hear,

      but I struggle to get out the words.

      ‘I’ll be okay,’ I say.

      Mum packs the nail polish back into her bag.

      ‘Just for a while,’ she says, ‘until …’

      Both of us know there’s no

      end to that sentence.

      The line-up

      In the darkness of my bedroom

      I switch on the computer

      and bring up photos

      from my school online.

      I find the class portrait of year ten

      arranged on three tiers

      in front of the Science block –

      uniform-neat,

      girls: knees together,

      boys: collars down.

      Manx and I are up the back

      on the far left –

      neither of us smiling.

      Patrick is front and centre

      between Rachel and Harriet.

      Ella is in the middle row

      her hair tied back,

      her chin lifted just enough

      to show she doesn’t approve

      of this cattle call.

      And Angelo in the middle row

      is deliberately cross-eyed,

      tongue out –

      the class gargoyle.

      I stare at the faces as

      a storm bird calls in the garden

      and is answered by thunder.

      I count off the students

      with only one parent at home:

      six out of thirty,

      including Manx

      and Rachel.

      I close the screen

      and decide

      it’s the only time

      I don’t want to be like my friends.

      Sunday for leaving

      I shrug into a jacket, jeans

      and shoes without socks

      because I can’t find a clean pair.

      Mum is already in the kitchen,

      her suitcase beside the back door.

      She looks away when I walk in.

      I don’t feel like breakfast.

      ‘Trish will be here in a few minutes,’ Mum says.

      I take a deep breath.

      ‘I might visit Manx.’

      Mum reaches out her arms

      and we embrace.

      My head rests on her shoulder;

      I smell lilac soap

      and nail polish.

      I close my eyes.

      ‘I’ve left enough money

      for bus fares and food

      until your dad gets back,’ Mum says.

      I step away,

      suddenly a
    ngry.

      ‘He has a name, you know.’

      I stomp out the back door

      and Mum calls after me,

      but I don’t stop.

      I leap over the fence,

      run towards the track

      and up to the top of Sattlers Hill.

      Auntie Trish’s car turns the corner.

      Mum walks to the footpath

      and tosses her suitcase into the back seat,

      but doesn’t get into the car.

      She says something to Trish,

      then runs back inside.

      She’s gone for a few minutes

      until Trish sounds the horn.

      Mum hops in the front seat.

      The car rumbles down the street.

      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 –

      anything –

      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 –

      spooked by Jesus looking down on them

      as they drink wine,

      eat lamb and have sex –

      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 –

      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 –

      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,

      ‘A 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,

      ‘Your 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,

      ‘That fish took a risk –

      bit something it wasn’t sure of –

      and deserves a second chance.

      Like we all do.’

      ‘But didn’t the next fish

      also take a risk

      and the one after that?’

      I asked.

      Dad laughed.

      ‘A 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 t
    he 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 –

      spooking the verandahs,

      wandering the gardens,

      baffled in the kitchen …

      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.

      ‘You’ll go cross-eyed doing that,’ I warn.

      He tosses me the rod,

      runs into the house

      and comes back carrying an esky.

      ‘Full of ice and beer,’ he says.

      ‘You’re hoping,’ I answer.

      ‘I 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.

      ‘I’ve been thinking, Jonah,’ he says.

      ‘Does it hurt?’

      ‘You wanna hear my idea or not?’

      ‘Always, Manx.’

      He stares across the lake

      to the row of double-storey houses

      at Tipping Point.

      Counting them off, he says,

      ‘Rich, rich, for sale, Patrick’s palace, rich,

      old man Beattie, rich, rich.’

      He frowns. ‘Some of those places

      are only used on school holidays.’

      Manx narrows his eyes and grins.

      ‘They’re vacant,’

      he waits a few seconds before adding, ‘now.’

      Then he points to the weatherboard mansion

      at the end of Tipping Point and asks,

      ‘What colour is that, Jonah?’

      ‘Salmon pink,’ I say,

      ‘or delicate rose with an autumn-mist trim.’

      ‘I’d call it erect nipple with a baby-poo highlight.’

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2025