Authors: George Ivanoff
Em laughed. Sam groaned. Dawson rolled his eyes.
âRighty-oh,' said Dad with a chuckle. âEnough animal alliteration. Time we all turned in. The sun will have us up bright and early tomorrow morning.'
Sam stared into the gloom. The moon cast eerie shadows across the canvas. Quietly, she climbed out of her sleeping bag and tiptoed past Em, who slept soundly, clutching her fluffy pink bunny. She carefully unzipped the tent, hoping the sound wouldn't wake Dawson, who shared the tent's other room with Dad.
There was no danger of disturbing Dad, who could sleep through an earthquake, but Dawson was another matter. He was a light sleeper and if he discovered her, he might follow and lecture her about how she shouldn't be sneaking out of the tent at night. Or he might even tell Dad. Dawson could be a bit of a spoilsport sometimes.
Sam often thought that Dawson didn't behave like a ten-year-old should. He was always trying to be so grown-up. Of course, his answer to that would be to remind her that he wasn't a ten-year-old â he was an
almost
-eleven-year-old. Sam nearly laughed out loud.
Slipping on her shoes, she crept out and zipped the tent up again. She paused for a moment to listen. All quiet in the tent. She smiled to herself and moved off.
The night was chilly and she wrapped her arms around herself as she walked in her shorts and t-shirt along the road to Farina.
She did this in every place they camped. Waiting until the others were asleep, she would sneak out for a private midnight
wander. It was her chance for a bit of alone-time and an opportunity to explore. And the lure of a dead-of-night visit to a ghost town was too enticing to pass up.
Reaching the edge of the town, she stopped to gaze at the moon-bathed buildings and streets. In the darkness, Sam could imagine the buildings were not falling apart, that they might have people sleeping in them. And in the surrounding night might be ⦠anything. People. More buildings. A city. What had seemed lonely and desolate and abandoned by day was mysterious and full of potential by night.
Sam breathed in deeply the evening air, smiled and took off down the main street at a sprint.
Yes, she was tired. Yes, she would be
woken early by the rising sun (or maybe even earlier by her sister). But for a few minutes at least, before she headed back to bed, this town was all hers.
âDon't mind me,' Dad shouted, âI'll just stay here and wash the dishes.' Putting his hands on his hips, he surveyed the campsite. âAnd pack up the tent ⦠and do everything else ⦠while you go and have fun.' He stared after his children and threw his arms into the air, waving them around in an exaggerated way. âThat's okay! It's not like I'm complaining!'
âThanks, Dad,' Sam called back with a cheeky laugh as she led Dawson and Em along the road to Farina.
Sam always led. Em always followed. Dawson always worried. That's just the way things were.
Em followed because she was the youngest and she worshipped her older sister. When Sam gave instructions, Em went along without question. âGo that way', âjump', ârun', âfollow me' â whatever it was, Em just did it.
Sam led. Not just because she was the oldest. Not because she was a leader. She led because it never occurred to her to follow. She saw herself as the adventurer. And adventurers didn't follow ⦠they just went off and did things. Often, without thinking.
âLast one there's a LOSER!' Sam suddenly shouted, taking off.
With a squeal of excitement, Em ran after her.
Dawson shook his head and kept walking at a steady pace. His stomach was full of stale cereal gone soggy in milk he suspected had just about gone off. He certainly didn't feel like running after a breakfast like that. Besides, it was early and he was still tired.
Dawson yawned. He wondered how Sam managed to have so much day-time energy after her night-time wanderings ⦠which she thought he didn't know about.
Rounding a bend in the road, the trees
thinned to reveal Farina. Dawson squinted into the rising sun and caught his breath. The morning light made the town seem more vibrant.
Not many tourists stopped at Farina. It wasn't a place many people had heard of, despite the efforts of a local restoration group who'd put up signs and roped off the boundaries of the crumbling buildings. They had also restored the underground bakery, which operated a few days a year, attracting tourists. But today was not a bakery day, and the town was deserted.
Farina was along the Outback Highway, a lengthy road that was sealed with bitumen most of the way, but became an unsealed, dirt and gravel road in the stretch from Leigh Creek to Marree. After Marree it led
to the famous Oodnadatta Track â a long and rocky road (responsible for countless flat tyres) that wound its way across the harshest parts of South Australia to Oodnadatta. The track finally joined onto the Stuart Highway in a little fly-speck on the Australian map called Marla.
Dawson was surprised that he remembered all this. Dad had spouted this information in the car on the way to Farina, as if he were spewing up the words from a swallowed guide book.
But Dawson liked this place. Farina was interesting. Farina was different. Farina was a ghost town ⦠which, he thought, was pretty cool.
Dawson came to the edge of the town and looked around. He couldn't see his
sisters, but he could hear shouts and squeals echoing through the buildings.
Then, in the distance, he saw Em chase Sam out from one dilapidated building into another across the road. Dawson wanted to yell out to be careful, just like Dad. But he knew it'd be useless. Sam would do whatever she wanted to do and ignore him. And Em would follow Sam.
Dawson wandered down the street to where he had last spotted his sisters and peered in through the window. Sam dashed out from a pile of rubble, slapping Dawson on the back. âDaws is it,' she cried out before disappearing into one of the buildings.
Dawson sighed and headed after his sister half-heartedly. Dad's instructions about being cautious and not running through the âbroken
building bits' was playing on his mind. But Em's giggles and Sam's excitement soon drew him into the game. It wasn't long before they were chasing each other through the streets of Farina, and in and out of the rubble.
Dawson tagged Em as she ran down the middle of the main street, her pink dress flapping about her. He then took off into what was left of the Transcontinental Hotel, the first building after the twin signs that welcomed visitors to the town â âFarina' and âest. 1878'.
He raced through the entrance and bolted down the corridor. There were crumbling doorways with frames rotted away on either side. Dawson caught a glimpse of the drop through the first doorway on the right â down into something that might
have been a cellar. He stopped part way along the corridor and looked back. Em was way behind, running her hardest, but obviously tiring. He decided that he'd let her catch him. He leaned against the wall and pretended to be too puffed to continue.
Em staggered into the corridor and stopped, trying to catch her breath. Then, as she walked towards Dawson, Sam snuck up behind her. Em had almost reached Dawson when Sam yelled out BOO! Em squealed, jumped around and chased her.
Dawson pushed off from the wall after his sisters.
Here we go again
, he thought.
Sam dashed off and jumped down through the doorway into the cellar.
Dawson gasped.
No
, he thought,
not that way. It's too dangerous.
Em, not realising there was an upcoming drop, chased after her sister.
Heart pounding, Dawson leaped forward.
Eyes widening, Em screamed as she began to topple.
Dawson grabbed her and pulled her back ⦠just in time.
Em collapsed onto the floor, breathing hard.
âYou idiot!' Dawson shouted angrily after Sam, who was clambering up through a doorway on the other side. His hands were balled up into fists and his face was beetroot-red. âDon't you think of anyone but yourself? You knew Em would follow you!'
âOh.' Sam looked guiltily into the cellar, as if only just realising what she'd done. She was lost for words.
The floorboards had rotted away years before. Bits of wood and debris were strewn across the earth floor. Anyone falling into that mess would be risking serious injury. In fact, Sam herself was lucky not to have been hurt, given she had jumped blindly down. There was a set of steps leading up to the outside of the building, but they were blocked with rubble.
âSâSorry,' Sam said meekly. She walked around through the room she was now in, and back into the corridor.
Dawson's face was returning to normal colour, but he still looked furious.
âI really am sorry,' Sam repeated, edging past Dawson and crouching down beside Em. She avoided his gaze. âI was caught up in the game. I didn't think.'
âYeah, well, we've had enough,' said Dawson, hands on hips in an imitation of Dad. âNo more chasey. Dad was right when he said no running through the ruins.'
âTAG!' shouted Em suddenly, slapping her sister's leg before jumping to her feet. âYou're it!'
She took off down the corridor, pushing past Dawson. Dawson steadied himself against the wall, worried he might now fall into the cellar.
âI promise I'll be more careful,' said Sam. With a tentative grin, she tapped her brother's arm and followed her younger sister. âYou're it,' she called over her shoulder.
âI'm not playing,' insisted Dawson, scowling as his sisters ran out through the back doorway.
Sam dashed past Em and started scrabbling up over some rubble. Em was on her tail, giggling all the way â¦
Until she slipped.
Sticking out her arm to brace herself, Em grazed it along a broken brick. She burst into tears, howling as if the arm was broken rather than simply scratched.
Within seconds, Sam was at her side, crouching down and examining the wound. She knew that loud crying might bring Dad running, and that would definitely end their games.
âJust a scrape,' she reassured as she patted Em on her back. Her younger sister didn't seem convinced.
âHey, I found something really cool before,' said Sam.
âWhat?' Em's lower lip was still sticking out, but there was a spark of interest in her eyes. Sam knew how to keep her sister under control.
âCome and see,' she said, holding out her hand.
Em jumped to her feet, took her sister's hand and allowed herself to be led off. The graze was forgotten.
Sam saw Dawson leaning in the doorway, watching them. She looked away, still embarrassed by what had happened. Then glancing back, she saw him sigh, shake his head and follow. He'd forgive her. He always did.
Sam led them across the road towards a
small box-like building. There was a locked metal gate barring the entrance.
âLook!' she announced in a hushed voice. âA jail!'
âWow,' Em gasped.
âDo you think there might be bad guys locked up in there?' asked Sam.
âOooooh!' Em was positively bursting with excitement.
âThat's not a jail,' said Dawson, walking ahead of them to the metal bars and looking through. âIt's a bakery.'
âOh yeah?' challenged Sam. âIf it's a bakery, why are there bars on the door?'
âYou haven't read any of the signs around here, have you?' answered Dawson, pointing to the words beside the building. âThey keep the
restored
bakery locked up when it's not
being used so it doesn't get damaged by tourists running through it.' He looked pointedly at Sam.
âYeah, right.' Sam remained defiant, unwilling to let Dawson spoil her fun.
A bakery was clearly nowhere near as exciting as a jail to Em. Losing interest in the building, she suddenly slapped Sam on the arm and ran off, back to the crumbling hotel.
Sam poked her tongue out at Dawson and gave chase.
Dawson sighed again, and followed with an unenthusiastic jog.
âStop!'
He looked around to see Dad walking up
the main street towards them. âI don't want you running around inside the ruins,' he called.
Dawson stopped. Sam disappeared into the building after Em.
âHey, come back!' Dad marched up to the old hotel. He walked inside, hands going to his hips. âThis isn't funny,' he shouted.
Dawson, still out the front, heard giggles from around the back. Determined to help, he jogged to the side of the building, climbed over a pile of broken bricks and quickly found his sisters hiding behind a half-collapsed wall.