Page 5 of The Simple Gift


  of driving drunk

  and a roadside gum tree.

  After the funeral

  I moved to the carriage.

  I closed the door

  to our house,

  left everything as it was

  and walked away.

  The house remains

  and I sometimes think

  I should sell it,

  or rent it,

  but the thought of a family

  within those walls,

  people I don’t know

  within those walls …

  I go there sometimes

  to sit in the backyard

  and remember.

  I mow the grass,

  then I walk back

  to the Hilton

  and get so drunk

  I sleep for days.

  I sleep, and

  I don’t dream.

  Comfort

  Back at Wentworth High

  I never talked to girls,

  I hardly talked to anyone.

  Sure, I answered questions from teachers

  and occasionally I’d talk

  to some guys I’d known for years.

  But I didn’t have any friends,

  I didn’t want any.

  I had books and Westfield Creek

  and I had days spent

  in my bedroom reading

  and avoiding my father

  attached to his lounge,

  his television

  and his smelly unkept house.

  So living in this carriage

  is special, it’s mine

  and I keep it clean

  and I read to give myself

  an education that Wentworth High

  never could

  and I think of Caitlin

  and how we fell asleep

  on the picnic

  so comfortable

  and I don’t know

  what she sees in me.

  I hope it’s

  someone to talk to

  someone to look in the eye

  knowing they’ll look back.

  Old Bill and the ghosts

  Old Bill and me are friends.

  Sometimes he comes into

  my carriage and we share a beer.

  He asks me questions

  about my day

  about the books I read,

  he never asks me about family.

  He gives me advice

  on how to live cheap,

  and how to jump trains

  late at night,

  and how to find out

  which trains are going where,

  and which trains have friendly guards.

  He encourages me to travel,

  to leave here

  and ride the freights.

  He makes it seem so special,

  so romantic,

  and I ask him

  why he doesn’t do it,

  you know,

  if it’s so special,

  and he tells me

  about his Jessie

  and his wife

  and the house he visits

  when too much drink

  has made him forget

  and how he’s afraid to forget

  because without his ghosts

  he’s afraid he’ll have nothing to live for.

  And at that moment I know

  I am listening to

  the saddest man in the world.

  Lucky

  No more taxi rides home

  after McDonald’s.

  Billy walks with me.

  Billy and the half-moon

  and perfect stars.

  We walk the long way

  down Murdoch Avenue

  and across the City Ovals.

  The dogs bark

  and each house glows

  with a television light.

  I tell Billy about school

  and Petra, Kate,

  and the drudge of exams.

  Billy has become the diary entry

  of my days. He holds the secrets

  of every long session of Maths

  and the crushing boredom

  of Science on Thursday afternoon,

  and as I tell him all this

  I don’t feel rich or poor,

  or a schoolgirl, or a McDonald’s worker,

  or anything but lucky,

  simply lucky.

  Dinner

  Dinner in our house

  is always the same.

  Mum’s perfect cooking

  and Dad’s favourite wine.

  He and Mum drink,

  talk about work,

  ask me questions about school

  which I answer quickly

  so as to change the subject.

  Once a week

  Dad brings up the topic of university

  and a career for me.

  His favourites are Law

  and Medicine,

  Mum’s are Teaching and Business.

  I tell them mine are Motherhood

  or joining the Catholic Church

  and becoming a Nun.

  This usually shuts them up.

  We eat in silence

  and I think of Billy

  in the carriage

  waiting

  for my shift to start at McDonald’s.

  I forget all about

  careers and education

  and the dreary school world.

  The weekend off

  I’ve got the weekend off.

  No McDonald’s,

  no schoolwork,

  and thankfully no parents –

  Mum has a conference interstate,

  with Dad going along

  ‘for the golf’.

  It only took three days

  of arguing to convince

  Mum and Dad that, at seventeen,

  I can be trusted on my own,

  even though I can’t.

  And what is trust anyway?

  No, I won’t burn the house down.

  No, I won’t drink all the wine.

  No, I won’t have a huge drug party.

  But

  yes, I will invite Billy over

  and yes, I will enjoy myself

  in this house,

  this big ugly five-bedroom

  million dollar brick box

  that we live in.

  Hobos like us

  Every morning

  I wake Old Bill

  with a bowl of Weet-Bix

  and a cup of coffee from McDonald’s,

  kept hot in a thermos overnight.

  I pour us both a cup

  and sit in the sunshine

  as Bill groans and complains.

  He sits with me and eats

  and tells me how he used to be

  too busy for breakfast

  when he worked,

  and he laughs,

  a bitter, mocking laugh,

  ‘Too busy for breakfast,

  too busy for sitting down

  with people I loved.

  And now I’ve got all

  the time in the world.’

  But at least he eats.

  And sometimes he comes with me

  to Bendarat River

  for a laundry and a bath.

  And when he does

  and he dives

  fully clothed into the river

  his laugh becomes real

&nb
sp; and it’s a good laugh,

  a deep belly roar.

  I laugh as well,

  sure there’s hope in the world

  even for hobos like us.

  The kid

  I like the kid.

  I like his company.

  He’s got me waking early

  and eating a decent breakfast,

  and yes

  I drank away most of the cannery money,

  but I saved some,

  just to show myself I could.

  Billy and I go to the river,

  we dive and swim

  and wash

  and for a few hours

  I almost feel young again.

  Billy deserves more

  than an old carriage

  and spending his days

  trying to keep an

  old hobo from too much drink.

  I like the kid.

  The shadows

  I knock gently,

  like I always do,

  so just Billy would hear,

  no-one else.

  It’s Friday morning

  before school.

  I want to tell Billy

  about my parents’ weekend away.

  I knock again,

  then I hear voices

  from the next carriage

  and I’m scared.

  Maybe he’s been discovered?

  I creep around the back,

  keeping to the shadows,

  and I see Billy

  in the carriage

  with an old man

  and Billy’s pouring coffee

  and giving it to the man

  and he’s pouring milk into a bowl

  and handing this across

  and the old man coughs

  and groans and swears

  and Billy sips his own coffee

  and helps the old man

  out of the carriage

  and into the sunshine

  where they sit beside the track

  sharing breakfast.

  And I stay in the shadows

  watching

  Billy and the old man

  who’s finished his breakfast

  and Billy washes the bowl

  and pours another coffee

  for the old man

  who is fully awake now

  and the old man

  looks up at Billy

  and says ‘thanks’

  and that’s when I turn

  and run to school

  without ever leaving the shadows.

  The afternoon off

  I stopped running

  when I reached school

  and as I entered class

  I felt like a real idiot.

  I sat through Maths

  and Science

  and English

  trying to understand why I ran

  and all I can think

  is that seeing Billy

  with that old hobo

  made me think of Billy

  as a hobo

  and I was ashamed,

  ashamed of myself

  for thinking that.

  Hadn’t I known

  that’s how Billy lived?

  Hadn’t I seen him

  stealing food,

  and hadn’t I seen

  where he sleeps?

  By lunchtime

  I decided

  I was a complete fool

  and maybe I was more spoilt

  than I thought,

  maybe there was something

  of my parents in me,

  whether I liked it or not.

  And I walked through the school gates,

  and I walked slowly and deliberately

  back to the railway tracks,

  determined not to run away again.

  In the sunshine

  He was in the sunshine

  reading a book.

  He saw me coming across the tracks

  and waved,

  and he stood, closed his book,

  and he smiled,

  and said welcome,

  welcome to my sunshine,

  and he jumped into the carriage,

  brought out a pillow

  for me to sit on.

  He offered me coffee

  from the same thermos

  I’d seen this morning

  with the old hobo.

  He kept talking

  about the book,

  his favourite,

  The Grapes of Wrath,

  and the honour of poverty,

  that’s what he said,

  ‘the honour of poverty’,

  and each word he said

  made me more ashamed,

  and more determined

  to sit with him

  here

  in the bright sunshine.

  A man

  I know it was shame

  that did it,

  that made me do it,

  but I asked Billy

  and his friend, Old Bill,

  to dinner at my place tonight.

  I only wanted Billy

  but the thought of me

  running to school

  shamed me into asking.

  Billy seemed pleased

  and he told me about Old Bill,

  the saddest man in the world –

  that’s what he called him –

  and as he talked

  I understood

  what I’d seen

  this morning

  and I realised

  that Billy was sixteen years old

  and already a man

  and I was seventeen,

  nearly eighteen,

  and still a schoolgirl.

  Cooking, and eating

  I hate cooking.

  I hate touching raw meat

  and cutting it into thin slices

  and peeling vegetables is boring,

  so I do it all quickly.

  I throw the chicken,

  potatoes, beans, carrots into a pot,

  I add stock,

  and curry from a jar,

  and I let it simmer

  for hours.

  I go downstairs to Dad’s cellar

  and choose wine,

  a few bottles of red,

  one white,

  expensive wine

  for my valued guests.

  I go upstairs

  and run a hot bath,

  put some music on,

  just quietly,

  and I lie back in the full tub

  and I forget cooking.

  I think of eating.

  I love eating.

  The moon

  I almost laughed

  when they arrived.

  The two neatest hobos

  I’d ever seen,

  with their hair combed,

  slicked back,

  and their faces rubbed shiny clean.

  Old Bill called me ‘Miss’

  and offered me a box of chocolates

  he’d brought

  and he looked around the house

  as though he was visiting the moon.

  Billy saw the wine,

  already open,

  and he poured three glasses

  passed them around,

  and as we raised our glasses

  Billy said,

  ‘To the richest house in Bendarat’

  and we
laughed.

  My cooking even smelt good

  and Old Bill kept

  wandering from room to room

  discovering

  another side to the moon.

  Stories

  We couldn’t sit at the table.

  It looked too neat,

  too polished, too clean.

  We sat on the floor

  near the fireplace

  and we ate the curry

  with a fork

  and we dipped our bread

  in the sauce

  and we drank just enough

  to forget where we were.

  Billy and I talked

  and planned picnics

  and nights off from McDonald’s.

  I told them about school

  and its stupid rules

  and about Petra and Kate

  and the gossip about

  the two Physical Education teachers

  that swept the schoolyard.

  And Billy told us about Irene

  and their library deal

  and reading books beside

  Westfield Creek while jigging school.

  Old Bill sat quiet,

  a faint smile

  as he slowly drank

  Dad’s expensive wine

  and listened

  to our exaggerated

  stories.

  Simple gift

  I shook the young lady’s hand,

  and Billy’s.

  I thanked them for the meal

  and took my leave.

  I walked back

  through the rich streets of town,

  the neat gardens,

  the high timber fences,

  the solid gates with

  the double garage behind them.

  I hadn’t drunk too much,

  the wine was too good to ruin

  with drunkenness,

  and I’d listened

  to Billy and Caitlin talk

  and I’d noticed

  how they looked at each other –

  their quick, gentle smiles over the food –

  and the way they sat close,

  and I realised as I walked home

  that for a few hours

  I hadn’t thought of anything

  but how pleasant it was

  to sit with these people

  and to talk with them.