âUmmm . . . yes.'
Rosie shoved Grace at him. Grace pushed her off. âOkay, okay.' She sat down next to him, looking grumpy.
âThey're making me sit next to you,' she said with her arms folded, staring away from him.
âI know,' Elliott said, without looking up from his gadget.
âHi, Rosie!' It was Tom.
Rosie spun around. âOh my God, my hair's not done!' she shrieked and raced back into the trailer, leaving him looking confused.
King Kong came back from the wilds of the water trough and scooped Lindy into his arms, dancing around the fire with her.
Luke looked across the camp, first at Grace and Elliot, then at Lawson and Lindy, then at Tom hovering outside the trailer door. âHave I missed something?'
Stan started whistling âLove Is in the Air', walked over to Mrs Arnold and tried to put his arm around her waist. She raised her frying pan at him. âBugger off, Stan.'
âOh, come on, old girl, you used to love dancing.'
Mrs Arnold dropped her pan and rolled her eyes.
âWoohoo!' said Rosie, as she stepped out of the trailer, reinvented, and saw her parents dancing. âGo for it, big daddy-o!'
Stan lifted an arm above his wife's head and sent her into a twirl.
âLet's drink a toast to Harry,' said Lawson.
The whole campsite came to a screaming halt. The Arnolds stopped dancing, the music stopped and everybody glared at Lawson.
âWhat?' said Lawson. âIt's a good and proper use for alcohol.'
âAnd cooking's not?' said Mrs Arnold, incredulous.
âNot if you don't hide it properly.' He grinned and pulled a small clay bottle from the dogbox in the trailer. âFind a mug.'
âThe bloody hide of it,' said Mrs Arnold.
It was only a small bottle, and it was by no means full, but Lawson managed to deal a dribble into each mug. Ryan politely declined, filling his cup instead with some hot coffee. They raised their odd assortment of plastic, tin and aluminium cups and banged them all together, celebrating the man who had brought them all there together like a big family, bonded by the horses, the cattle, the dust and the liquid that burned down their throats.
A breeze blew over the fire, sending sparks into the air like little fireworks. It blew the hair up off Jess's neck.
Here's to you, Harry.
She sat by the fire, snuggled into Luke's lap, dogs by her feet, listening to the soft guitar, the crickets, the cattle, smelling smoke and eucalyptus, watching the fire and the faces of her friends glowing around it. She couldn't remember feeling more happy and alive.
Luke's fingers ran absent-mindedly up and down her arm and in soft little circles. His chest rose slowly with each breath. Jess closed her eyes and breathed in time with him, letting his body rock her gently to sleep.
THE NEXT MORNING,
Jess flipped some eggs over, gave them a quick shake around the pan and tipped them onto Lindy's plate.
âWill you come and see us at Coachwood Crossing, Lindy?' she asked.
âSure will, it sounds beautiful,' answered Lindy. âJust gotta get these cattle through the sales and sort out a few things at home. What's up ahead for you?
âSchool.' Jess cracked some more eggs into the pan. âI'm a bit of a nerd, really, but don't tell anyone.'
âGood girl,' said Lindy. âI spent four years at uni â best thing I ever did.' She grabbed a chunk of bread off the table and poured tomato sauce over her eggs. âIf you want some holiday work at Longwood, come and see me, hey?'
âSure, thanks,' said Jess.
Lindy nodded over towards the ute. Three lanky pairs of legs â Tom's, Elliot's and Luke's â hung out of the open bonnet. It looked like an old yellow dinosaur getting its teeth done, especially next to Tom's late-model sleek black Holden. âI gave Luke that old ute. He's in heaven.' As Lindy walked away, she said, âSorry, Jess, but there's another woman in his life now.'
Luke pulled his head out from under the bonnet and turned around, looking for Jess. He waved her over, his grin so wide it nearly split his head in half. âCome and look,' he said excitedly. âIt's a 1973 HQ, totally original. It even has a miles-per-hour speedo!'
He leaned into the cabin. âThe cigarette lighter still works!'
âGreat, I can charge my mobile,' said Jess.
Luke poked his head back out, frowned briefly, then grinned again. âI can't believe it's mine! Lindy gave it to me for wages.'
âHe would've loved you to have it.' Jess stuck her head in the cabin. âShame the seats are all ripped.'
âYeah, but they're
bench
seats.' Luke beamed, and Jess wondered why that was so good. âI'll fix 'em up and put covers over them. I'll get her looking like new.' He ran his hand lovingly over the cracked dashboard. âCome and see under the bonnet,' he said, dragging her around to the front.
Tom was up to his armpits in the car's gizzards. âThink she needs uni joints. Rats've chewed holes in the washer bottle,' he said without raising his head.
âMost of this stuff's computerised these days,' said Elliot.
Jess listened to them talk excitedly about car bits that she'd never heard of until she eventually tuned out and found herself ogling Luke's strong forearms under his rolled-up sleeves.
He is so gorgeous and he is so mine.
He turned to her suddenly. âLet's go driving out west for a few days. Lawson doesn't need me once we get the cattle into the saleyards, and TAFE's not back for another week.'
Jess immediately imagined sitting in the front of the ute with Luke, talking and laughing, and watching the endless mulga country float by. Camping in swags under the stars and kissing him endlessly. She was more than tempted, but reality broke back in. âI can't.'
âWhy not?'
âI have to go back and see Opal,' she said. âI need to sort her out, one way or the other.'
He put his arms around her and sighed a frustrated sigh. âBut I want you all to myself.'
âI've also got school and parents who would totally freak.'
âOh yeah, I forget about that sort of thing.'
Jess put her arms around his waist. They had been together only days and yet she couldn't imagine being away from him ever again. Out here she was a part of his day-to-day life; they ate every meal together. They were wild and free â except for Mrs Arnold. Back home he would work all day while she was at school. He would seem like such an adult, and she would feel like such a schoolkid.
âI'll drive you back to the station.'
âNo, you won't,' said Mrs Arnold, walking up behind them with the large frying pan in her hand.
Jess and Luke both groaned.
Later that afternoon, the cattle were in a holding paddock near the saleyards, and the entire droving outfit was packed up and ready to head back to Blakely Downs. Luke was still messing about under the bonnet of the ute with Tom, topping up oil and water. Being unregistered, he planned to drive back along the stock route to the station, deeming the lack of a driver's side door to be too much of a âcop magnet' to take it on the highway. Elliot sat in the passenger seat of Tom's ute, quietly thumbing away at his beeping gadget while he waited.
Jess climbed into the back seat of Mrs Arnold's LandCruiser and squeezed in next to Shara.
Mrs Arnold started the engine and rolled slowly towards the gooseneck trailer. The tailgate was down, ready for loading the horses; by the cabin, Stan filled the diesel tanks from jerry cans. Nearby, Bob stood barefoot with five horses in halters behind him, like a bunch of balloons. The cuffs of his jeans were frayed where they dragged on the ground, his gnarly feet so covered in dust it was hard to know where the man ended and the earth began. Lawson took Marnie from him, led her to the ramp and both man and horse disappeared into the back of the trailer for a moment.
Jess leaned out the window. âSee ya, Bob!'
Bob walked towards the four-wheel drive and pulled something out of his pocket. âHappy birthday, Jessy.'
Jess took the small ball of grimy blue cloth, like a rag cut from an old T-shirt. A piece of string held it closed. She could feel something lumpy inside it.
âFind her spirit, catch it, and take it back to her,' Bob said softly.
âThanks,' she said, staring at the bundle in her hands.
âYou let me know when you wanna sell that old stockhorse.'
Jess smiled. âYou'll be waiting a while.'
âSee you back at the station, ay.'
Mrs Arnold let the brake off and they began to roll away.
In the car, Jess rolled the rag about in her hands, puzzled.
âWhat is it?' asked Shara, nodding at the small bundle. âOpen it.'
Jess began to pick at the string until it slipped over the rag and fell away. Then she unrolled it. Inside was a short stump of mulga wood shaped like a horse. A lumpy knot in the timber created the shape of the shoulder perfectly and, from that, the branch arched into a neck. Where the stick had snapped off the tree, the splintered timber formed the shape of two ears and a horse's head.
She turned it over, ran her finger along the neck and touched three teeny-weeny diamonds carved into its shoulder.
âDid Bob make that for you?' asked Shara, staring over her shoulder.
âIt's Opal,' said Jess, still examining it closely and noticing its long mane, like that of a mature horse rather than a foal. âHe
must
have made it.' She twisted around and looked through the billows of dust behind the car.
Bob fastened the gate. Behind him the low hills rolled away, and the mulga trees shimmered in the unrelenting sun.
Jess pushed the carving into her pocket and pulled out the Yowah nuts.
âCan we stop at a post office, Mrs A?'
An hour or so along the highway, Mrs Arnold pulled into a service station and cut the engine. Jess jumped down to stretch her legs, her friends tumbling out behind her.
âPost office is over the road,' said Mrs Arnold, jabbing her thumb over her shoulder, as she walked to the bowser.
Jess pulled her pack over her shoulder and with the nuts in her hand, ran across the road. Five minutes later, she emerged from the small timber building with a small padded envelope, addressed to David Rawlins, care of Yowah Post Office.
Jess lifted the lid on the postbox, inserted the small parcel and pushed the chute down again. âEnjoy your bad-luck stones, Dave.' Briskly brushing her hands together, she headed back to the servo.
As she crossed the road, her phone buzzed in her pocket. âHey! There must be mobile reception around here,' she said, tearing it out.
âYep,' said Mrs Arnold, pointing to two satellite towers on a nearby hill as she put the pump handle back onto the bowser.
Jess flipped it open and gasped as she saw it light up in her hand. âIt's back from the dead!'
There were four messages. She leaned against the four-wheel drive and scrolled through them while the others went into the shop for ice-creams. The first was from the day before.
BDowns: the fillys taken a bad turn, pls contact
station.
Jess felt a sudden heaviness as she realised the rest of the messages were not going to be good. She scrolled to the next one with a weighty thumb.
BDowns: ring urgently â need permission.
Twelve hours ago? She's already dead.
Guilt consumed her. She'd been gallivanting around out here while Opal had been dying. She should never have left her.
Jess couldn't help it; she sobbed.
âWhat? What is it?' asked Shara, coming out of the shop with two ice-creams in her hand. She ran to Jess.
Jess passed her the phone. âYou read the next message. I can't.'
âIs it about Opal?'
Jess nodded and looked down.
âThe next one's from your mum. It says
Happy birthday
darlin
,
I love you
,' said Shara. She kept thumbing. âOoh, there's a really mushy one from Luke.'